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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Complete Poems of Sir Thomas Moore
+by Thomas Moore et al
+
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+
+Title: The Complete Poems of Sir Thomas Moore
+
+Author: Thomas Moore et al
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8187]
+[This file was first posted on June 28, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE COMPLETE POEMS OF SIR THOMAS MOORE ***
+
+
+
+
+E-text produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon, Robert Connal, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+THE COMPLETE POEMS OF SIR THOMAS MOORE
+
+COLLECTED BY HIMSELF
+
+WITH EXPLANATORY NOTES
+
+
+
+
+WITH A BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
+
+BY WILLIAM M. ROSSETTI
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THOMAS MOORE
+
+
+Thomas Moore was born in Dublin on the 28th of May 1780. Both his parents
+were Roman-Catholics; and he was, as a matter of course, brought up in the
+same religion, and adhered to it--not perhaps with any extreme
+zeal--throughout his life. His father was a decent tradesman, a grocer and
+spirit-retailer--or "spirit-grocer," as the business is termed in Ireland.
+Thomas received his schooling from Mr. Samuel Whyte, who had been
+Sheridan's first preceptor, a man of more than average literary culture.
+He encouraged a taste for acting among the boys: and Moore, naturally
+intelligent and lively, became a favorite with his master, and a leader in
+the dramatic recreations.
+
+His aptitude for verse appeared at an early age. In 1790 he composed an
+epilogue to a piece acted at the house of Lady Borrows, in Dublin; and in
+his fourteenth year he wrote a sonnet to Mr. Whyte, which was published in
+a Dublin magazine.
+
+Like other Irish Roman-Catholics, galled by the hard and stiff collar of
+Protestant ascendancy, the parents of Thomas Moore hailed the French
+Revolution, and the prospects which it seemed to offer of some reflex
+ameliorations. In 1792 the lad was taken by his father to a dinner in
+honor of the Revolution; and he was soon launched upon a current of ideas
+and associations which might have conducted a person of more
+self-oblivious patriotism to the scaffold on which perished the friend of
+his opening manhood, Robert Emmet. Trinity College, Dublin, having been
+opened to Catholics by the Irish Parliament in 1793, Moore was entered
+there as a student in the succeeding year. He became more proficient in
+French and Italian than in the classic languages, and showed no turn for
+Latin verses. Eventually, his political proclivities, and intimacy with
+many of the chiefs of opposition, drew down upon him (after various
+interrogations, in which he honorably refused to implicate his friends) a
+severe admonition from the University authorities; but he had not joined
+in any distinctly rebellious act and no more formidable results ensued to
+him.
+
+In 1793 Moore published in the _Anthologia Hibernica_ two pieces of verse;
+and his budding talents became so far known as to earn him the proud
+eminence of Laureate to the Gastronomic Club of Dalkey, near Dublin, in
+1794. Through his acquaintance with Emmet, he joined the Oratorical
+Society, and afterwards the more important Historical Society; and he
+published _An Ode on Nothing, with Notes, by Trismegistus Rustifucius, D.
+D._, which won a party success. About the same time he wrote articles for
+_The Press_, a paper founded towards the end of 1797 by O'Connor, Addis,
+Emmet, and others. He graduated at Trinity College in November, 1799.
+
+The bar was the career which his parents, and especially his mother,
+wished Thomas to pursue; neither of them had much faith in poetry or
+literature as a resource for his subsistence. Accordingly, in 1799, he
+crossed over into England, and studied in the Middle Temple; and he was
+afterwards called to the bar, but literary pursuits withheld him from
+practicing. He had brought with him from Ireland his translations from
+Anacreon; and published these by subscription in 1800, dedicated to the
+Prince Regent (then the illusory hope of political reformers), with no
+inconsiderable success. Lord Moira, Lady Donegal, and other leaders of
+fashionable society, took him up with friendly warmth, and he soon found
+himself a well-accepted guest in the highest circles in London. No clever
+young fellow--without any advantage of birth or of person, and with
+intellectual attractions which seem to posterity to be of a rather
+middling kind--ever won his way more easily or more cheaply into that
+paradise of mean ambitions, the _beau monde_. Moore has not escaped
+the stigma which attaches to almost all men who thus succeeded under the
+like conditions--that of tuft-hunting and lowering compliances. He would
+be a bold man who should affirm that there was absolutely no sort of
+ground for the charge; or that Moore--fêted at Holland House, and
+hovered-round by the fashionable of both sexes, the men picking up his
+witticisms, and the women languishing over his songs--was capable of the
+same sturdy self-reliance and simple adhesion to principle which might
+possibly have been in him, and forthcoming from him, under different
+conditions. Who shall touch pitch and not be defiled,--who treacle, and
+not be sweetened? At the same time, it is easy to carry charges of this
+kind too far, and not always through motives the purest and most exalted.
+It may be said without unfairness on either side that the sort of talents
+which Moore possessed brought him naturally into the society which he
+frequented; that very possibly the world has got quite as much out of him
+by that development of his faculties as by any other which they could have
+been likely to receive; and that he repaid patronage in the coin of
+amusement and of bland lenitives, rather than in that of obsequious
+adulation. For we are not required nor permitted to suppose that there was
+the stuff of a hero in "little Tom Moore;" or that the lapdog of the
+drawing-room would under any circumstances have been the wolf-hound of the
+public sheepfold. In the drawing-room he is a sleeker lapdog, and lies
+upon more and choicelier-clothed laps than he would in "the two-pair
+back;" and that is about all that needs to be said or speculated in such a
+case. As a matter of fact, the demeanor of Moore among the socially great
+seems to have been that of a man who respected his company, without
+failing to respect himself also--any ill-natured caviling or ready-made
+imputations to the contrary notwithstanding.
+
+In 1802 Moore produced his first volume of original verse, the _Poetical
+Works of the late Thomas Little_ (an allusion to the author's remarkably
+small stature), for which he received £60. There are in this volume some
+erotic improprieties, not of a very serious kind either in intention or in
+harmfulness, which Moore regretted in later years. Next year Lord Moira
+procured him the post of Registrar to the Admiralty Court of Bermuda; he
+embarked on the 25th of September, and reached his destination in January
+1804. This work did not suit him much better than the business of the bar;
+in March he withdrew from personal discharge of the duties: and, leaving a
+substitute in his place, he made a tour in the United States and Canada.
+He was presented to Jefferson, and felt impressed by his republican
+simplicity. Such a quality, however, was not in Moore's line; and nothing
+perhaps shows the essential smallness of his nature more clearly than the
+fact that his visit to the United States, in their giant infancy, produced
+in him no glow of admiration or aspiration, but only a recrudescence of
+the commonest prejudices--the itch for picking little holes, the petty joy
+of reporting them, and the puny self-pluming upon fancied or factitious
+superiorities. If the washy liberal patriotism of Moore's very early years
+had any vitality at all, such as would have qualified it for a harder
+struggle than jeering at the Holy Alliance, and singing after-dinner songs
+of national sentimentalism to the applause of Whig lords and ladies, this
+American experience may beheld to have been its death-blow. He now saw
+republicans face to face; and found that they were not for him, nor he for
+them. He returned to England in 1806; and soon afterwards published his
+_Odes and Epistles_, comprising many remarks, faithfully expressive of his
+perceptions, on American society and manners.
+
+The volume was tartly criticised in the _Edinburgh Review_ by Jeffrey, who
+made some rather severe comments upon the improprieties chargeable to
+Moore's early writings. The consequence was a challenge, and what would
+have been a duel at Chalk Farm, but for unloaded pistols and police
+interference. This _fiasco_ soon led to an amicable understanding between
+Moore and Jeffrey; and a few years later, about the end of 1811, to a
+friendship of closer intimacy between the Irish songster and his great
+poetic contemporary Lord Byron. His lordship, in his youthful satire of
+_English Bards and Scotch Reviewers_, had made fun of the unbloody duel.
+This Moore resented, not so much as a mere matter of ridicule as because
+it involved an ignoring or a denial of a counter-statement of the matter
+put into print by himself. He accordingly wrote a letter to Byron on the
+1st of January 1810, calculated to lead to further hostilities. But, as
+the noble poet had then already for some months left England for his
+prolonged tour on the Continent, the missive did not reach him; and a
+little epistolary skirmishing, after his return in the following year,
+terminated in a hearty reconciliation, and a very intimate cordiality,
+almost deserving of the lofty name of friendship, on both sides.
+
+Re-settled in London, and re-quartered upon the pleasant places of
+fashion, Moore was once more a favorite at Holland House, Lansdowne House,
+and Donington House, the residence of Lord Moira. His lordship obtained a
+comfortable post to soothe the declining years of Moore's father, and held
+out to the poet himself the prospect--which was not however realized--of
+another snug berth for his own occupancy. The United Kingdom of Great
+Britain and Ireland never received the benefit of the Irish patriot's
+services in any public capacity at home--only through the hands of a
+defaulting deputy in Bermuda: it did, however, at length give him the
+money without the official money's-worth, for in 1835, under Lord
+Melbourne's ministry, an annual literary pension of £300 was bestowed upon
+the then elderly poet. Nor can it be said that Moore's worth to his party,
+whether we regard him as political sharpshooter or as national lyrist,
+deserved a less recognition from the Whigs: he had at one time, with
+creditable independence, refused to be indebted to the Tories for an
+appointment. Some obloquy has at times been cast upon him on account of
+his sarcasms against the Prince Regent, which, however well merited on
+public grounds, have been held to come with an ill grace from the man
+whose first literary effort, the _Anacreon_, had been published under the
+auspices of his Royal Highness as dedicatee, no doubt a practical
+obligation of some moment to the writer. It does not appear, however, that
+the obligation went much beyond this simple acceptance of the dedication:
+Moore himself declared that the Regent's further civilities had consisted
+simply in asking him twice to dinner, and admitting him, in 1811, to a
+fête in honor of the regency.
+
+The life of Moore for several years ensuing is one of literary success and
+social brilliancy, varied by his marrying in 1811, Miss Bessy Dyke, a lady
+who made an excellent and devoted wife, and to whom he was very
+affectionately attached, although the attractions and amenities of the
+fashionable world caused from time to time considerable inroads upon his
+domesticity. After a while, he removed from London, with his wife and
+young family, to Mayfield Cottage, near Ashbourne, Derbyshire--a somewhat
+lonely site. His _Irish Melodies_, the work by which he will continue best
+known, had their origin in 1797, when his attention was drawn to a
+publication named _Bunting's Irish Melodies_, for which he occasionally
+wrote the words. In 1807 he entered into a definite agreement with Mr.
+Power on this subject, in combination with Sir J. Stevenson, who undertook
+to compose the accompaniments. The work was prolonged up to the year 1834;
+and contributed very materially to Moore's comfort in money matters and
+his general prominence--as his own singing of the Melodies in good society
+kept up his sentimental and patriotic prestige, and his personal
+lionizing, in a remarkable degree. He played on the piano, and sang with
+taste, though in a style resembling recitative, and not with any great
+power of voice: in speaking, his voice had a certain tendency to
+hoarseness, but its quality became flute-like in singing. In 1811 he made
+another essay in the musical province; writing, at the request of the
+manager of the Lyceum Theatre, an operetta named _M.P., or the
+Bluestocking_. It was the reverse of a stage-success; and Moore, in
+collecting his poems, excluded this work, save as regards some of the
+songs comprised in it. In 1808 had appeared anonymously, the poems of
+_Intolerance and Corruption_, followed in 1809 by _The Sceptic_.
+_Intercepted Letters, or The Twopenny Postbag, by Thomas Brown the
+Younger_, came out in 1812: it was a huge success, and very intelligibly
+such, going through fourteen editions in one year. In the same year the
+project of writing an oriental poem--a class of work greatly in vogue now
+that Byron was inventing Giaours and Corsairs--was seriously entertained
+by Moore. This project took shape in _Lalla Rookh_, written chiefly at
+Mayfield Cottage--a performance for which Mr. Longman the publisher paid
+the extremely large sum of £3150 in advance: its publication hung over
+till 1817. The poem has been translated into all sorts of languages,
+including Persian, and is said to have found many admirers among its
+oriental readers. Whatever may be thought of its poetic merits--and I for
+one disclaim any scintilla of enthusiasm--or of its power in vitalizing
+the _disjecta membra_ of orientalism, the stock-in-trade of the Asiatic
+curiosity-shop, there is no doubt that Moore worked very conscientiously
+upon this undertaking: he read up to any extent,--wrote, talked, and
+perhaps thought, Islamically--and he trips up his reader with some
+allusion verse after verse, tumbling him to the bottom of the page, with
+its quagmire of explanatory footnotes. In 1815 appeared the _National
+Airs_; in 1816, _Sacred Songs, Duets, and Trios_, the music composed and
+selected by Stevenson and Moore; in 1818, _The Fudge Family in Paris_,
+again a great hit. This work was composed in Paris, which capital Moore
+had been visiting in company with his friend Samuel Rogers the poet.
+
+The easily earned money and easily discharged duties of the appointment in
+Bermuda began now to weigh heavy on Moore. Defalcations of his deputy, to
+the extent of £6000, were discovered, for which the nominal holder of the
+post was liable. Moore declined offers of assistance; and, pending a legal
+decision on the matter, he had found it apposite to revisit the Continent.
+In France, Lord John (the late Earl) Russell was his travelling companion:
+they went on together through Switzerland, and parted at Milan. Moore
+then, on the 8th of October 1819, joined in Venice his friend Byron, who
+had been absent from England since 1816. The poets met in the best of
+humor, and on terms of hearty good-fellowship--Moore staying with Byron
+for five or six days. On taking leave of him, Byron presented the Irish
+lyrist with the MS. of his autobiographical memoirs stipulating that they
+should not be published till after the donor's death: at a later date he
+became anxious that they should remain wholly unpublished. Moore sold the
+MS. in 1831 to Murray for £2100, after some negotiations with Longman, and
+consigned it to the publisher's hands. In 1824 the news arrived of Byron's
+death. Mr. (afterwards Sir Wilmot) Horton on the part of Lady Byron, Mr.
+Luttrell on that of Moore, Colonel Doyle on that of Mrs. Leigh, Lord
+Byron's half-sister, and Mr. Hobhouse (afterwards Lord Broughton) as a
+friend and executor of the deceased poet, consulted on the subject.
+Hobhouse was strong in urging the suppression of the Memoirs. The result
+was that Murray, setting aside considerations of profit, burned the MS.
+(some principal portions of which nevertheless exist in print, in other
+forms of publication); and Moore immediately afterwards, also in a
+disinterested spirit, repaid him the purchase-money of £2100. It was quite
+fair that Moore should be reimbursed this large sum by some of the persons
+in whose behoof he had made the sacrifice, this was not neglected.
+
+To resume. Bidding adieu to Byron at Venice, Moore went on to Rome with
+the sculptor Chantrey and the portrait-painter Jackson. His tour supplied
+the materials for the _Rhymes on the Road_, published, as being extracted
+from the journal of a travelling member of the Pococurante Society, in
+1820, along with the _Fables for the Holy Alliance_. Lawrence, Turner, and
+Eastlake, were also much with Moore in Rome: and here he made acquaintance
+with Canova. Hence he returned to Paris, and made that city his home up to
+1822, expecting the outcome of the Bermuda affair. He also resided partly
+at Butte Goaslin, near Sèvres, with a rich and hospitable Spanish family
+named Villamil. The debt of £6000 was eventually reduced to £750: both the
+Marquis of Lansdowne and Lord John Russell pressed Moore with their
+friendly offers, and the advance which he at last accepted was soon repaid
+out of the profits of the _Loves of the Angels_--which poem, chiefly
+written in Paris, was published in 1823. The prose tale of _The Epicurean_
+was composed about the same time, but did not issue from the press till
+1827: the _Memoirs of Captain Rock_ in 1824. He had been under an
+engagement to a bookseller to write a _Life of Sheridan_. During his stay
+in France the want of documents withheld him from proceeding with this
+work: but he ultimately took it up, and brought it out in 1825. It was not
+availed to give Moore any reputation as a biographer, though the reader in
+search of amusement will pick out of it something to suit him. George the
+Fourth is credited with having made a neat _bon mot_ upon this book. Some
+one having remarked to him that "Moore had been murdering Sheridan,"--
+"No," replied his sacred majesty, "but he has certainly attempted his
+life." A later biographical performance, published in 1830, and one of
+more enduring interest to posterity, was the _Life of Byron_. This is a
+very fascinating book; but more--which is indeed a matter of course--in
+virtue of the lavish amount of Byron's own writing which it embodies than,
+on account of the Memoir-compiler's doings. However, there is a
+considerable share of good feeling in the book, as well as matter of
+permanent value from the personal knowledge that Moore had of Byron; and
+the avoidance of "posing" and of dealing with the subject for purposes of
+effect, in the case of a man whose career and genius lent themselves so
+insidiously to such a treatment, is highly creditable to the biographer's
+good sense and taste. The _Life of Byron_ succeeded, in the list of
+Moore's writings, a _History of Ireland_, contributed in 1827 to
+_Lardner's Cyclopaedia_, and the _Travels of an Irishman in Search of a
+Religion_, published in the same year: and was followed by a _Life of Lord
+Edward Fitzgerald_, issued in 1881. This, supplemented by some minor
+productions, closes the sufficiently long list of writings of an
+industrious literary life.
+
+In his latter years Moore resided at Sloperton Cottage, near Devizes in
+Wiltshire, Where he was near the refined social circle of Lord Lansdowne
+at Bowood, as well as the lettered home of the Rev. Mr. Bowles at
+Bremhill. Domestic sorrows clouded his otherwise cheerful and comfortable
+retirement. One of his sons died in the French military service in
+Algeria; another of consumption in 1842. For some years before his own
+death, which occurred on the 25th of February 1853, his mental powers had
+collapsed. He sleeps in Bromham Cemetery, in the neighborhood of
+Sloperton.
+
+Moore had a very fair share of learning, as well as steady application,
+greatly as he sacrificed to the graces of life, and especially of "good
+society." His face was not perhaps much more impressive in its contour
+than his diminutive figure. His eyes, however, were dark and fine; his
+forehead bony, and with what a phrenologist would recognize as large bumps
+of wit; the mouth pleasingly dimpled. His manner and talk were bright,
+abounding rather in lively anecdote and point than in wit and humor,
+strictly so called. To term him amiable according to any standard, and
+estimable too as men of an unheroic fibre go, is no more than his due.
+
+No doubt the world has already seen the most brilliant days of Moore's
+poetry. Its fascinations are manifestly of the more temporary sort: partly
+through fleetingness of subject-matter and evanescence of allusion (as in
+the clever and still readable satirical poems); partly through the aroma
+of sentimental patriotism, hardly strong enough in stamina to make the
+compositions national, or to maintain their high level of popularity after
+the lyrist himself has long been at rest; partly through the essentially
+commonplace sources and forms of inspiration which belong to his more
+elaborate and ambitious works. No poetical reader of the present day is
+the poorer for knowing absolutely nothing of _Lalla Rookh_ or the _Loves
+of the Angels_. What then will be the hold or the claim of these writings
+upon a reader of the twenty-first century? If we expect the satirical
+compositions, choice in a different way, the best things of Moore are to
+be sought in the _Irish Melodies_, to which a considerable share of merit,
+and of apposite merit, is not to be denied: yet even here what deserts
+around the oases, and the oases themselves how soon exhaustible and
+forgettable! There are but few thoroughly beautiful and touching lines in
+the whole of Moore's poetry. Here is one--
+
+ "Come rest in this bosom, mine own stricken deer."
+
+A great deal has been said upon the overpowering "lusciousness" of his
+poetry, and the magical "melody" of his verse: most of this is futile.
+There is in the former as much of _fadeur_ as of lusciousness; and a
+certain tripping or trotting exactitude, not less fully reducible to the
+test of scansion than of a well-attuned ear, is but a rudimentary form of
+melody--while of harmony or rhythmic volume of sound Moore is as
+decisively destitute as any correct versifier can well be. No clearer
+proof of the incapacity of the mass of critics and readers to appreciate
+the calibre of poetical work in point of musical and general execution
+could be given than the fact that Moore has always with them passed, and
+still passes, for an eminently melodious poet. What then remains? Chiefly
+this. In one class of writing, liveliness of witty banter, along with
+neatness; and, in the other and ostensibly more permanent class, elegance,
+also along with neatness. Reduce these qualities to one denomination, and
+we come to something that may be called "Propriety": a sufficiently
+disastrous "raw material" for the purposes of a poet, and by no means
+loftily to be praised or admired even when regarded as the outer
+investiture of a nobler poetic something within. But let desert of every
+kind have its place, and welcome. In the cosmical diapason and august
+orchestra of poetry, Tom Moore's little Pan's-pipe can at odd moments be
+heard, and interjects an appreciable and rightly-combined twiddle or two.
+To be gratified with these at the instant is no more than the instrument
+justifies, and the executant claims: to think much about them when the
+organ is pealing or the violin plaining (with a Shelley performing on the
+first, or a Mrs. Browning on the second), or to be on the watch for their
+recurrences, would be equally superfluous and weak-minded.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+Advertisement.
+After the Battle.
+Alarming Intelligence.
+Alciphron: a Fragment.
+Letter I. From Alciphron at Alexandria to Cleon at Athens.
+ II. From the Same to the Same.
+ III. From the Same to the Same.
+ IV. From Orcus, High Priest of Memphis, to Decius, the Praetorian
+ Prefect.
+All in the Family Way.
+All that's Bright must Fade.
+Almighty God.
+Alone in Crowds to wander on.
+Amatory Colloquy between Bank and Government.
+Anacreon, Odes of.
+ I. I saw the Smiling Bard of Pleasure.
+ II. Give me the Harp of Epic Song.
+ III. Listen to the Muse's Lyre.
+ IV. Vulcan! hear Your Glorious Task.
+ V. Sculptor, wouldst Thou glad my Soul.
+ VI. As Late I sought the Spangled Bowers.
+ VII. The Women tell Me Every Day.
+ VIII. I care not for the Idle State.
+ IX. I pray thee, by the Gods Above.
+ X. How am I to punish Thee.
+ XI. "Tell Me, Gentle Youth, I pray Thee".
+ XII. They tell How Atys, Wild with Love.
+ XIII. I will, I will, the Conflict's past.
+ XIV. Count Me, on the Summer Trees.
+ XV. Tell Me, Why, My Sweetest Dove.
+ XVI. Thou, Whose Soft and Rosy Hues.
+ XVII. And Now with All Thy Pencil's Truth.
+ XVIII. Now the Star of Day is High.
+ XIX. Here recline You, Gentle Maid.
+ XX. One Day the Muses twined the Hands.
+ XXI. Observe When Mother Earth is Dry.
+ XXII. The Phrygian Rock, That braves the Storm.
+ XXIII. I Often wish this Languid Lyre.
+ XXIV. To All That breathe the Air of Heaven.
+ XXV. Once in Each Revolving Year.
+ XXVI. Thy Harp may sing of Troy's Alarms.
+ XXVII. We read the Flying Courser's Name.
+ XXVIII. As, by His Lemnian Forge's Flame.
+ XXIX. Yes--Loving is a Painful Thrill.
+ XXX. 'Twas in a Mocking Dream of Night.
+ XXXI. Armed with Hyacinthine Rod.
+ XXXII. Strew Me a Fragrant Bed of Leaves.
+ XXXIII. 'Twas Noon of Night, When round the Pole.
+ XXXIV. Oh Thou, of All Creation Blest.
+ XXXV. Cupid Once upon a Bed.
+ XXXVI. If Hoarded Gold possest the Power.
+ XXXVII. 'Twas Night, and Many a Circling Bowl.
+ XXXVIII. Let Us drain the Nectared Bowl.
+ XXXIX. How I love the Festive Boy.
+ XL. I know That Heaven hath sent Me Here.
+ XLI. When Spring adorns the Dewy Scene.
+ XLII. Yes, be the Glorious Revel Mine.
+ XLIII. While Our Rosy Fillets shed.
+ XLIV. Buds of Roses, Virgin Flowers.
+ XLV. Within This Goblet Rich and Deep.
+ XLVI. Behold, the Young, the Rosy Spring.
+ XLVII. 'Tis True, My Fading Years decline.
+ XLVIII. When My Thirsty Soul I steep.
+ XLIX. When Bacchus, Jove's Immortal Boy.
+ L. When Wine I quaff, before My Eyes.
+ LI. Fly Not Thus My Brow of Snow.
+ LII. Away, Away, Ye Men of Rules.
+ LIII. When I beheld the Festive Train.
+ LIV. Methinks, the Pictured Bull We see.
+ LV. While We invoke the Wreathed Spring.
+ LVI. He, Who instructs the Youthful Crew.
+ LVII. Whose was the Artist Hand That Spread.
+ LVIII. When Gold, as Fleet as Zephyr's Pinion.
+ LIX. Ripened by the Solar Beam.
+ LX. Awake to Life, My Sleeping Shell.
+ LXI. Youth's Endearing Charms are fled.
+ LXII. Fill Me, Boy, as Deep a Draught.
+ LXIII. To Love, the Soft and Blooming Child.
+ LXIV. Haste Thee, Nymph, Whose Well-aimed Spear.
+ LXV. Like Some Wanton Filly sporting.
+ LXVI. To Thee, the Queen of Nymphs Divine.
+ LXVII. Rich in Bliss, I proudly scorn.
+ LXVIII. Now Neptune's Month Our Sky deforms.
+ LXIX. They wove the Lotus Band to deck.
+ LXX. A Broken Cake, with Honey Sweet
+ LXXI. With Twenty Chords My Lyre is hung.
+ LXXII. Fare Thee Well, Perfidious Maid.
+ LXXIII. Awhile I bloomed, a Happy Flower.
+ LXXIV. Monarch Love, Resistless Boy.
+ LXXV. Spirit of Love, Whose Locks unrolled.
+ LXXVI. Hither, Gentle Muse of Mine.
+ LXXVII. Would That I were a Tuneful Lyre.
+ LXXVIII. When Cupid sees How Thickly Now.
+ Let Me resign This Wretched Breath.
+ I know Thou lovest a Brimming Measure.
+ From Dread Lucadia's Frowning Steep.
+ Mix Me, Child, a Cup Divine.
+Anacreontic.
+Anacreontic.
+Anacreontic.
+Anacreontic.
+Anacreontic.
+And doth not a Meeting Like This.
+Angel of Charity.
+Animal Magnetism.
+Anne Boleyn.
+Announcement of a New Grand Acceleration Company.
+Announcement of a New Thalaba.
+Annual Pill, The.
+Anticipated Meeting of the British Association in the Year 1836.
+As a Beam o'er the Face of the Waters may glow.
+As down in the Sunless Retreats.
+Ask not if Still I Love.
+Aspasia.
+As Slow our Ship.
+As Vanquished Erin.
+At Night.
+At the Mid Hour of Night.
+Avenging and Bright.
+Awake, arise, Thy Light is come.
+Awful Event.
+
+Ballad, A.
+Ballad for the Cambridge Election.
+Ballad Stanzas.
+Beauty and Song.
+Before the Battle.
+Behold the Sun.
+Believe Me, if All Those Endearing Young Charms.
+Black and Blue Eyes.
+Blue Love-Song, A.
+Boat Glee.
+Boy of the Alps, The.
+Boy Statesman, The.
+Bright be Thy Dreams.
+Bright Moon.
+Bring the Bright Garlands Hither.
+Brunswick Club, The.
+But Who shall see.
+By that Lake, Whose Gloomy Shore.
+
+Calm be Thy Sleep.
+Canadian Boat Song, A.
+Canonization of Saint Butterworth, The.
+Captain Rock in London.
+Case of Libel, A.
+Catalogue, The.
+Cephalus and Procris.
+Characterless, A.
+Cherries, The.
+Child's Song--From a Masque.
+Church Extension.
+Cloris and Fanny.
+Cocker, on Church Reform.
+Come, chase that Starting Tear Away.
+Come Not, oh Lord.
+Come o'er the Sea.
+Come, play Me That Simple Air Again.
+Come, rest in This Bosom.
+Come, send Round the Wine.
+Come, Ye Disconsolate.
+Common Sense and Genius.
+Consultation, The.
+Copy of An Intercepted Despatch.
+Corn and Catholics.
+Corrected Report of Some Late Speeches, A.
+Correspondence between a Lady and Gentleman.
+Corruption, an Epistle.
+Cotton and Corn.
+Country Dance and Quadrille.
+Crystal-Hunters, The.
+Cupid and Psyche.
+Cupid Armed.
+Cupid's Lottery.
+Curious Fact, A.
+
+Dance of Bishops, The.
+Dawn is breaking o'er Us, The.
+Day-Dream, The.
+Day of Love, The.
+Dear Fanny.
+Dear Harp of My Country.
+Dear? Yes.
+Desmond's Song.
+Devil among the Scholars, The.
+Dialogue between a Sovereign and a One Pound Note.
+Dick * * * *.
+Did not.
+Dog-day Reflections.
+Donkey and His Panniers, The.
+Do not say That Life is waning.
+Dost Thou Remember.
+Dream, A.
+Dreaming For Ever.
+Dream of Antiquity, A.
+Dream of Hindostan, A.
+Dream of Home, The.
+Dream of the Two Sisters, The.
+Dream of Those Days, The.
+Dream of Turtle, A.
+Dreams.
+Drink of This Cup.
+Drink to Her.
+Duke is the Lad, The.
+Dying Warrior, The.
+
+East Indian, The.
+Echo.
+Elegiac Stanzas.
+Elegiac Stanzas.
+Enigma.
+Epigram.--"I never gave a Kiss" (says Prue).
+Epigram.--"I want the Court Guide," said My Lady, "to look".
+Epigram.--What News To-day?--"Oh! Worse and Worse".
+Epigram.--Said His Highness to Ned, with That Grim Face of His.
+Epilogue.
+Epistle from Captain Rock to Lord Lyndhurst.
+Epistle from Erasmus on Earth to Cicero in the Shades.
+Epistle from Henry of Exeter to John of Tuam.
+Epistle from Tom Crib to Big Ben.
+Epistle of Condolence.
+Epitaph on a Tuft-Hunter.
+Erin, oh Erin.
+Erin! The Tear and the Smile in Thine Eyes.
+Euthanasia of Van, The.
+Eveleen's Bower.
+Evening Gun, The.
+Evenings in Greece.
+Exile, The.
+Expostulation to Lord King, An.
+Extract from a Prologue.
+Extracts from the Diary of a Politician.
+
+Fables for the Holy Alliance,
+ I. The Dissolution of the Holy Alliance.
+ II. The Looking-Glasses.
+ III. The Torch of Liberty.
+ IV. The Fly and the Bullock.
+ V. Church and State.
+ VI. The Little Grand Lama.
+ VII. The Extinguishers.
+ VIII. Louis Fourteenth's Wig.
+Fairest! put on Awhile.
+Fallen is Thy Throne.
+Fall of Hebe, The.
+Fancy.
+Fancy Fair, The.
+Fanny, Dearest.
+Fare Thee Well, Thou Lovely One.
+Farewell!--but Whenever You welcome the Hour.
+Farewell, Theresa.
+Fear not That, While Around Thee.
+Fill the Bumper Fair.
+Fire-Worshippers, The.
+First Angel's Story.
+Flow on, Thou Shining River.
+Fly not Yet.
+Fools' Paradise.
+Forget not the Field.
+For Thee Alone.
+Fortune-Teller, The.
+Fragment.
+Fragment of a Character.
+Fragment of a Mythological Hymn to Love.
+Fragments of College Exercises.
+From Life without Freedom.
+From the Hon. Henry ----, to Lady Emma ----.
+From This Hour the Pledge is given.
+Fudge Family in Paris, The.
+ Letter I. From Miss Biddy Fudge to Miss Dorothy ----, of Clonkilty, in
+ Ireland.
+ II. From Phil. Fudge, Esq., to the Lord Viscount Castlereagh.
+ III. From Mr. Bob Fudge to Richard ----, Esq.
+ IV. From Phelim Connor to ----.
+ V. From Miss Biddy Fudge to Miss Dorothy ----.
+ VI. From Phil. Fudge, Esq., to His Brother Tim Fudge, Esq., Barrister
+ at Law.
+ VII. From Phelim Connor to ----.
+ VIII. From Mr. Bob Fudge to Richard ----, Esq.
+ IX. From Phil. Fudge, Esq., to the Lord Viscount Castlereagh.
+ X. From Miss Biddy Fudge to Miss Dorothy ----.
+ XI. From Phelim Connor to ----.
+ XII. From Miss Biddy Fudge to Miss Dorothy ----.
+Fudges in England, The.
+ Letter I. From Patrick Magan, Esq., to the Rev. Richard ---- Curate of
+ ---- in Ireland.
+ II. From Miss Biddy Fudge to Mrs. Elizabeth ---- Extracts from My
+ Diary.
+ III. From Miss Fanny Fudge to her Cousin, Kitty ----.
+ IV. From Patrick Magan, Esq., to the Rev. Richard ----.
+ V. From Larry O'Branigan In England, to His Wife Judy, at Mullinafad.
+ VI. From Miss Biddy Fudge, to Mrs. Elizabeth ---- Extracts from My
+ Diary.
+ VII. From Miss Fanny Fudge, to her Cousin, Miss Kitty ----.
+ VIII. From Bob Fudge, Esq., to the Rev. Mortimer O'Mulligan.
+ IX. From Larry O'Branigan, to his Wife Judy.
+ X. From the Rev. Mortimer O'Mulligan, to the Rev. ----.
+ XI. From Patrick Magan, Esq., to the Rev. Richard ----.
+Fum and Hum, the two Birds of Royalty.
+
+Garland I send Thee, The.
+Gayly sounds the Castanet.
+Gazel.
+Gazelle, The.
+Genius and Criticism.
+Genius of Harmony, The.
+Ghost of Miltiades, The.
+Ghost Story, A.
+Go forth to the Mount.
+Go, let Me weep.
+Go, Now, and dream.
+Go, Then--'tis Vain.
+Go Where Glory waits Thee.
+Grand Dinner of Type and Co.
+Grecian Girl's Dream of the Blessed Islands, The.
+Greek of Meleager, From the.
+Guess, guess.
+
+Halcyon hangs o'er Ocean, The.
+Hark! the Vesper Hymn is stealing.
+Hark! 'Tis the Breeze.
+Harp That Once thro' Tara's Halls, The.
+Has Sorrow Thy Young Days shaded.
+Hat _versus_ Wig.
+Hear Me but Once.
+Here at Thy Tomb.
+Here sleeps the Bard.
+Here's the Bower.
+Here, take My Heart.
+Her Last Words at Parting.
+Hero and Leander.
+High-Born Ladye, The.
+High Priest of Apollo to a Virgin of Delphi, From the.
+Hip, Hip, Hurra.
+Homeward March, The.
+Hope comes Again.
+Horace:
+ Ode I. Lib. III.--I hate Thee, oh, Mob, as My Lady hates Delf.
+ Ode XI. Lib. II.--Come, Yarmouth, My Boy, Never trouble your Brains.
+ Ode XXII. Lib. I.--The Man Who keeps a Conscience Pure.
+ Ode XXXVIII. Lib. I.--Boy, tell the Cook That I hate All Nicknackeries.
+How Dear to Me the Hour.
+How Happy, Once.
+How lightly mounts the Muse's Wing.
+How Oft has the Banshee cried.
+How Oft, When watching Stars.
+How shall I woo.
+How to make a Good Politician.
+How to make One's Self a Peer.
+How to write by Proxy.
+Hush, hush.
+Hush, Sweet Lute.
+Hymn of a Virgin of Delphi.
+Hymn of Welcome after the Recess, A.
+
+I'd mourn the Hopes.
+"If" and "Perhaps".
+If in Loving, Singing.
+If Thou'lt be Mine.
+If Thou wouldst have Me sing and play.
+Ill Omens.
+I love but Thee.
+Imitation.
+Imitation of Catullus.
+Imitation of the Inferno of Dante.
+Impromptu.
+Impromptu.
+Impromptu.
+Incantation.
+Incantation, An.
+Inconstancy.
+Indian Boat, The.
+In Myrtle Wreaths.
+Insurrection of the Papers, The.
+Intended Tribute.
+Intercepted Letters, etc.
+ Letter I. From the Princess Charlotte of Wales to the Lady Barbara
+ Ashley.
+ II. From Colonel M'Mahon to Gould Francis Leckie, Esq.
+ III. From George Prince Regent to the Earl of Yarmouth.
+ IV. From the Right Hon. Patrick Duigenan to the Right Hon. Sir John
+ Nicol.
+ V. From the Countess Dowager of Cork to Lady ----.
+ VI. From Abdallah, in London, to Mohassan, in Ispahan.
+ VII. From Messrs. Lackington and Co. to Thomas Moore, Esq.
+ VIII. From Colonel Thomas to ---- Skeffington, Esq.
+ Appendix.
+In the Morning of Life.
+Intolerance, a Satire.
+Invisible Girl, To the.
+Invitation to Dinner.
+Irish Antiquities.
+Irish Peasant to His Mistress, The.
+Irish Slave, The.
+I saw from the Beach.
+I saw the Moon rise Clear.
+I saw Thy Form in Youthful Prime.
+Is it not Sweet to think. Hereafter.
+It is not the Tear at This Moment shed.
+I've a Secret to tell Thee.
+I Will, I will, the Conflict's past.
+I wish I was by That Dim Lake.
+
+Joke Versified, A.
+Joys of Youth, how fleeting.
+
+Keep Those Eyes Still Purely Mine.
+King Crack and His Idols.
+Kiss, The.
+
+Lalla Rookh.
+Lament for the Loss of Lord Bathurst's Tail.
+Language of Flowers, The.
+Late Scene at Swanage, A.
+Latest Accounts from Olympus.
+Late Tithe Case.
+Leaf and the Fountain, The.
+Legacy, The.
+Legend of Puck the Fairy, The.
+Lesbia hath a Beaming Eye.
+Les Hommes Automates.
+Let Erin remember the Days of Old.
+Let Joy Alone be remembered Now.
+Let's take This World as Some Wide Scene.
+Letter from Larry O'Branigan to the Rev. Murtagh O'Mulligan.
+Light of the Haram, The.
+Light sounds the Harp.
+Like Morning When Her Early Breeze.
+Like One Who, doomed.
+Limbo of Lost Reputations, The.
+Lines on the Death of Joseph Atkinson, Esq., of Dublin.
+Lines on the Death of Mr. Perceval.
+Lines on the Death of Sheridan.
+Lines on the Departure of Lords Castlereagh and Stewart for the Continent.
+Lines on the Entry of the Austrians into Naples.
+Lines written at the Cohos, or Falls of the Mohawk River.
+Lines written in a Storm at Sea.
+Lines written on leaving Philadelphia.
+Literary Advertisement.
+Little Man and Little Soul.
+"Living Dog" and "the Dead Lion," The.
+Long Years have past.
+Lord Henley and St. Cecilia.
+Lord, Who shall bear That Day.
+Love Alone.
+Love and Hope.
+Love and Hymen.
+Love and Marriage.
+Love and Reason.
+Love and the Novice.
+Love and the Sun-Dial.
+Love and Time.
+Love is a Hunter-Boy.
+Love's Light Summer-Cloud.
+Loves of the Angels, The.
+Love's Victory.
+Love's Young Dream.
+Love Thee.
+Love Thee, Dearest? Love Thee.
+Love, wandering Thro' the Golden Maze.
+Lusitanian War-Song.
+Lying.
+
+Mad Tory and the Comet, The.
+Magic Mirror, The.
+Meeting of the Ships, The.
+Meeting of the Waters, The.
+Melologue.
+Memorabilia of Last Week.
+Merrily Every Bosom boundeth.
+Millennium, The.
+Mind Not Tho' Daylight.
+Minstrel-Boy, The.
+Missing.
+Morality.
+Moral Positions.
+Mountain Sprite, The.
+Mr. Roger Dodsworth.
+Musical Box, The.
+Musings of an Unreformed Peer.
+Musings, suggested by the Late Promotion of Mrs. Nethercoat.
+My Birth-Day.
+My Gentle Harp.
+My Harp has One Unchanging Theme.
+My Heart and Lute.
+My Mopsa is Little.
+
+Natal Genius, The.
+Nature's Labels.
+Nay, tell Me Not, Dear.
+Ne'er ask the Hour.
+Ne'er Talk of Wisdom's Gloomy Schools.
+Nets and Cages.
+New Costume of the Ministers, The.
+New Creation of Peers.
+New-Fashioned Echoes.
+New Grand Exhibition of Models
+New Hospital for Sick Literati.
+News for Country Cousins.
+Night Dance, The.
+Nights of Music.
+Night Thought, A.
+No--leave My Heart to Rest.
+Nonsense.
+Not from Thee.
+Notions on Reform.
+Numbering of the Clergy, The.
+
+Occasional Address for the Opening of the New Theatre of St. Stephen.
+Occasional Epilogue.
+Odes to Nea.
+Ode to a Hat.
+Ode to Don Miguel.
+Ode to Ferdinand.
+Ode to the Goddess Ceres.
+Ode to the Sublime Porte.
+Ode to the Woods and Forests.
+O'Donohue's Mistress.
+Oft, in the Stilly Night.
+Oh! Arranmore, Loved Arranmore.
+Oh Banquet Not.
+Oh! Blame Not the Bard.
+Oh! Breathe Not His Name.
+Oh, call it by Some Better Name.
+Oh, come to Me When Daylight sets.
+Oh, could We do with This World of Ours.
+Oh, Days of Youth.
+Oh, do not look so Bright and Blest.
+Oh! doubt Me Not.
+Oh Fair! oh Purest.
+Oh for the Swords of Former Tim.
+Oh, guard our Affection.
+Ob! had We Some Bright Little Isle of Our Own.
+Oh, No--Not--Even. When First We loved.
+Oh, Soon return.
+Oh, teach Me to love Thee.
+Oh the Shamrock.
+Oh, the Sight Entrancing.
+Oh! think Not My Spirits are Always as Light.
+Oh Thou Who dry'st the Mourner's Tear.
+Oh, Ye Dead.
+On a Squinting Poetess.
+One Bumper at Parting.
+One Dear Smile.
+On Music.
+On the Death of a Friend.
+On the Death of a Lady.
+Origin of the Harp, The.
+O say, Thou Best and Brightest.
+Our First Young Love.
+
+Paddy's Metamorphosis.
+Paradise and the Peri.
+Parallel, The.
+Parody of a Celebrated Letter.
+Parting before the Battle, The.
+Pastoral Ballad, A.
+Peace and Glory.
+Peace be around Thee.
+Peace, Peace to Him That's gone.
+Peace to the Slumberers.
+Periwinkles and the Locusts, The.
+Petition of the Orangemen of Ireland, The.
+Philosopher Artistippus to a Lamp, The.
+Pilgrim, The.
+Poor Broken Flower.
+Poor Wounded; Heart.
+Pretty Rose-tree.
+Prince's Day, The.
+Proposals for a Gynsecocracy.
+
+Quick! We have but a Second.
+
+Reason, Folly, and Beauty.
+Recent Dialogue, A.
+Rector and His Curate, The.
+Reflection at Sea, A.
+Reflections.
+Reinforcements for Lord Wellington.
+Religion and Trade.
+Remember Thee.
+Remember the Time.
+Remonstrance.
+Resemblance, The.
+Resolutions passed at a Late Meeting of Reverends and Right Reverends.
+Reuben and Rose.
+Reverend Pamphleteer, The.
+Rhymes on the Road.
+ Introductory Rhymes.
+ Extract I. Geneva.
+ II. Geneva.
+ III. Geneva.
+ IV. Milan.
+ V. Padua.
+ VI. Venice.
+ VII. Venice.
+ VIII. Venice.
+ IX. Venice.
+ X. Mantua.
+ XI. Florence.
+ XII. Florence.
+ XIII. Rome.
+ XIV. Rome.
+ XV. Rome.
+ XVI. Les Charmettes.
+Rich and Rare were the Gems She wore.
+Rings and Seals.
+Ring, The.
+Ring, The.
+Rival Topics.
+Rondeau.
+Rose of the Desert.
+Round the World goes.
+Row Gently Here.
+Russian Lover, The.
+
+Sad Case, A.
+Sail on, sail on.
+Sale of Cupid.
+Sale of Loves, The.
+Sale of Tools, The.
+Say, What shall be Our Sport To-day.
+Say, What shall We dance.
+Scene from a Play.
+Scepticism.
+Sceptic, The.
+Second Angel's Story.
+See the Dawn from Heaven.
+Selections.
+Shall the Harp Then be Silent.
+She is Far from the Land.
+She sung of Love.
+Shield, The.
+Shine Out, Stars.
+Should Those Fond Hopes.
+Shrine, The.
+Silence is in Our Festal Halls.
+Since First Thy Word.
+Sing--sing--Music was given.
+Sing, Sweet Harp.
+Sinking Fund cried, The.
+Sir Andrew's Dream.
+Sketch of the First Act of a New Romantic Drama.
+Slumber, oh slumber.
+Snake, The.
+Snow Spirit, The.
+Some Account of the Late Dinner to Dan.
+Song.--Ah! Where are They, Who heard, in Former Hours.
+ Array Thee, Love, Array Thee, Love.
+ As by the Shore, at Break of Day.
+ As Love One Summer Eve was straying.
+ As o'er Her Loom the Lesbian Maid.
+ As Once a Grecian Maiden wove.
+ Bring Hither, bring Thy Lute, while Day is dying.
+ Calm as Beneath its Mother's eyes.
+ Fly from the World, O Bessy! to Me.
+ Have You not seen the Timid Tear.
+ Here, While the Moonlight Dim.
+ If I swear by That Eye, You'll allow.
+ If to see Thee be to love Thee.
+ I saw from Yonder Silent Cave.
+ March! nor heed Those Anna That hold Thee.
+ Mary, I believed Thee True.
+ No Life is Like the Mountaineer's.
+ Of All My Happiest Hours of Joy.
+ Oh, Memory, How Coldly.
+ Oh, Where art Thou dreaming.
+ Raise the Buckler-poise the Lance.
+ Smoothly flowing Thro' Verdant Vales.
+ Some Mortals There may be, so Wise, or so Fine.
+ Take back the Sigh, Thy Lips of Art.
+ The Wreath You wove, the Wreath You wove.
+ Think on that Look Whose Melting Ray.
+ Thou art not Dead--Thou art not Dead.
+ "'Tis the Vine! 'tis the Vine!" said the Cup-loving Boy.
+ Up and march! the Timbrel's Sound.
+ Up with the Sparkling Brimmer.
+ Weeping for Thee, My Love, Thro' the Long Day.
+ Welcome Sweet Bird, Thro' the Sunny Air winging.
+ When Evening Shades are falling.
+ When the Balaika.
+ When Time Who steals Our Years Away.
+ Where is the Heart That would not give.
+ "Who comes so Gracefully,".
+ Who'll buy?--'tis Folly's Shop, who'll buy.
+ Why does Azure deck the Sky.
+ Yes! had I leisure to sigh and mourn.
+Song and Trio.
+Song and Trio.
+Song of a Hyperborean.
+Song of Fionnuala, The.
+Song of Hercules to his Daughter.
+Song of Innisfall.
+Song of Old Puck.
+Song of O'Ruark, The.
+Song of the Battle Eve.
+Song of the Box, The.
+Song of the Departing Spirit of Tithe.
+Song of the Evil Spirit of the Woods.
+Song of the Nubian Girl.
+Song of the Olden Time, The.
+Song of the Poco-Curante Society.
+Song of the two Cupbearers.
+Songs of the Church.
+Sound the Loud Timbrel.
+Sovereign Woman.
+So Warmly We met.
+Spa, The Wellington.
+Speculation, A.
+Speech on the Umbrella Question.
+Spring and Autumn.
+Stanzas.
+Stanzas from the Banks of the Shannon.
+Stanzas written in Anticipation of Defeat.
+Steersman's Song, The.
+Still, like Dew in Silence falling.
+Still Thou fliest.
+Still When Daylight.
+St. Jerome on Earth.
+Stranger, The.
+St. Senanus and the Lady.
+Study from the Antique, A.
+Sublime was the Warning.
+Summer Fête, The.
+Summer Webs, The.
+Sunday Ethics.
+Surprise, The.
+Sweet Innisfallen.
+Sylph's Ball, The.
+Sympathy.
+
+Take Back the Virgin Page.
+Take Hence the Bowl.
+Tear, The.
+Tell Her, oh, tell Her.
+Tell-Tale Lyre, The.
+Temple to Friendship, A.
+The Bird, let Loose.
+Thee, Thee, Only Thee.
+Then, Fare Thee Well.
+Then First from Love.
+There are Sounds of Mirth.
+There comes a Time.
+There is a Bleak Desert.
+There's Something Strange.
+They know not My Heart.
+They may rail at This Life.
+They met but Once.
+They tell Me Thou'rt the Favored Guest.
+Third Angel's Story.
+This Life is All checkered with Pleasures and Woes.
+This World is All a Fleeting Show..
+Tho, Humble the Banquet.
+Tho' Lightly sounds the Song I sing.
+Those Evening Bells.
+Tho' the Last Glimpse of Erin with Sorrow I see.
+Tho' 'tis All but a Dream.
+Thou art, O God.
+Thou bidst Me sing.
+Thoughts on Mischief.
+Thoughts on Patrons, Puffs, and Other Matters.
+Thoughts on Tar Barrels.
+Thoughts on the Late Destructive Propositions of the Tories.
+Thoughts on the Present Government of Ireland.
+Thou lovest No More.
+Three Doctors, The.
+Tibullus to Sulpicia.
+Time I've lost in wooing, The.
+'Tis All for Thee.
+'Tis Gone, and For Ever.
+'Tis Sweet to think.
+'Tis the Last Rose of Summer.
+To......: And hast Thou marked the Pensive Shade.
+To......: Come, take Thy Harp--'tis vain to muse.
+To......: Never mind How the Pedagogue proses.
+To......: Put off the Vestal Veil, nor, oh.
+To......: Remember Him Thou leavest behind.
+To......: Sweet Lady, look not Thus Again.
+To......: That Wrinkle, when First I espied it.
+To......: The World had just begun to steal.
+To......: 'Tis Time, I feel, to leave Thee Now.
+To......: To be the Theme of Every Hour.
+To......: When I loved You, I can't but allow.
+To......: With All My Soul, Then, let us part.
+To......'s Picture: Go Then, if She, Whose Shade Thou art.
+To a Boy, with a Watch.
+To a Lady, with Some Manuscript Poems.
+To a Lady, on Her singing.
+To Cara, after an Interval of Absence.
+To Cara, oh the Dawning of a New Year's Day.
+To Caroline, Viscountess Valletort.
+To Cloe.
+To-Day, Dearest, is Ours.
+To George Morgan, Esq.
+To His Serene Highness the Duke of Montpensier.
+To James Corry, Esq.
+To Joseph Atkinson, Esq.
+To Julia, in Allusion to Some Illiberal Criticisms.
+To Julia: Mock me No More with Love's Beguiling Dream.
+To Julia: Though Fate, My Girl, may bid Us part.
+To Julia, on Her Birthday.
+To Julia: I saw the Peasant's Hand Unkind.
+To Julia weeping.
+To Ladies' Eyes.
+To Lady Heathcote.
+To Lady Holland.
+To Lady Jersey.
+To Lord Viscount Strangford.
+To Miss Moore.
+To Miss Susan Beckford.
+To Miss ---- on Her asking the Author Why She had Sleepless Nights.
+To Mrs. Bl----, written in Her Album.
+To Mrs. ----, on Some Calumnies against Her Character.
+To Mrs. ----: To see Thee Every Day That came.
+To Mrs. ----, on Her Beautiful Translation of Voiture's Kiss.
+To Mrs. Henry Tighe.
+To My Mother.
+To Phillis.
+To Rosa, written during Illness.
+To Rosa: And are You Then a Thing of Art.
+To Rosa. Is the Song of Rosa Mute.
+To Rosa: Like One Who trusts to Summer Skies.
+To Rosa; Say Why should the Girl of My Soul be in Tears.
+Tory Pledges.
+To Sir Hudson Lowe.
+To the Boston Frigate.
+To the Fire-Fly.
+To the Flying-Fish.
+To the Honorable W. R. Spencer.
+To the Lady Charlotte Rawdon.
+To the Large and Beautiful Miss ----.
+To the Lord Viscount Forbes.
+To the Marchioness Dowager of Donegall.
+To the Rev. Charles Overton.
+To the Reverend ----.
+To Thomas Hume, Esq., M.D.
+To the Ship in Which Lord Castlereagh sailed for the Continent.
+Tout pour la Tripe.
+To weave a Garland for the Rose.
+Translation from the Gull Language.
+Translations from Catullus.
+Trio.
+Triumph of Bigotry.
+Triumph of Farce, The.
+Turf shall be My Fragrant Shrine, The
+'Twas One of Those Dreams.
+Two Loves, The.
+Twin'st Thou with' Lofty Wreath Thy Brow.
+
+Unbind Thee, Love.
+Up, Sailor Boy, 'tis Day.
+
+Valley of the Nile, The.
+Variety.
+Veiled Prophet of Khorassan, The.
+Verses to the Poet Crabbe's Inkstand.
+Vision, A.
+Vision of Philosophy, A.
+Voice, The.
+
+Wake Thee, My Dear.
+Wake Up, Sweet Melody.
+Waltz Duet.
+Wandering Bard, The.
+War against Babylon.
+Warning, A.
+War Song.
+Watchman, The.
+Weep, Children of Israel.
+Weep not for Those.
+Weep on, weep on.
+Wellington, Lord, and the Ministers.
+Wellington Spa, The.
+We may roam through This World.
+Were not the Sinful Mary's Tears.
+What shall I sing Thee.
+What's My Thought like.
+What the Bee is to the Floweret.
+When Abroad in the World.
+When Cold in the Earth.
+When e'er I see Those Smiling Eyes.
+When First I met Thee.
+When First That Smile.
+When He, Who adores Thee.
+When Love was a Child.
+When Love, Who ruled.
+When Midst the Gay I meet.
+When Night brings the Hour.
+When on the Lip the Sigh delays.
+When the First Summer Bee.
+When the Sad Word.
+When the Wine-Cup is smiling.
+When Thou shalt wander.
+When Through the Piazzetta.
+When to Sad Music Silent You listen.
+When Twilight Dews.
+Where are the Visions.
+Where is the Slave.
+Where is Your Dwelling, Ye Sainted.
+Where shall We bury our Shame.
+While gazing on the Moon's Light.
+While History's Muse.
+Who is the Maid.
+Who'll buy My Love Knots.
+Why does She so Long delay.
+Wind Thy Horn, My Hunter Boy.
+Wine-Cup is circling, The.
+With Moonlight beaming.
+Woman.
+Wonder, The.
+World was husht.
+Wo! wo.
+Wreath and the Chain, The.
+Wreaths for the Ministers.
+Wreath the Bowl.
+Write on, write on.
+Written in a Commonplace Book.
+Written in the Blank Leaf of a Lady's Commonplace Book.
+Written on passing Deadman's Island.
+
+Yes, yes, When the Bloom.
+Young Indian Maid, The.
+Young Jessica.
+Young May Moon, The.
+Young Muleteers of Grenada, The.
+Young Rose, The.
+You remember Ellen.
+Youth and Age.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODES OF ANACREON
+
+(1800).
+
+TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH VERSE.
+
+WITH NOTES.
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS
+
+THE PRINCE OF WALES.
+
+
+SIR,--In allowing me to dedicate this Work to Your Royal Highness, you
+have conferred upon me an honor which I feel very sensibly: and I have
+only to regret that the pages which you have thus distinguished are not
+more deserving of such illustrious patronage.
+
+Believe me, SIR,
+With every sentiment of respect,
+Your Royal Highness's
+Very grateful and devoted Servant,
+
+THOMAS MOORE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+REMARKS ON ANACREON
+
+
+There is but little known, with certainty of the life of Anacreon.
+Chamaeleon Heracleotes, who wrote upon the subject, has been lost in the
+general wreck of ancient literature. The editors of the poet have
+collected the few trifling anecdotes which are scattered through the
+extant authors of antiquity, and, supplying the deficiency of materials by
+fictions of their own imagination, have arranged what they call a life of
+Anacreon. These specious fabrications are intended to indulge that
+interest which we naturally feel in the biography of illustrious men; but
+it is rather a dangerous kind of illusion, as it confounds the limits of
+history and romance, and is too often supported by unfaithful citation.
+
+Our poet was born in the city of Teos, in the delicious region of Ionia,
+and the time of his birth appears to have been in the sixth century before
+Christ. He flourished at that remarkable period when, under the polished
+tyrants Hipparchus and Polycrates, Athens and Samos were become the rival
+asylums of genius. There is nothing certain known about his family; and
+those who pretend to discover in Plato that he was a descendant of the
+monarch Codrus, show much more of zeal than of either accuracy or
+judgment.
+
+The disposition and talents of Anacreon recommended him to the monarch of
+Samos, and he was formed to be the friend of such a prince as Polycrates.
+Susceptible only to the pleasures, he felt not the corruptions, of the
+court; and while Pythagoras fled from the tyrant, Anacreon was celebrating
+his praises oh the lyre. We are told, too, by Maximus Tyrius, that, by the
+influence of his amatory songs, he softened the mind of Polycrates into a
+spirit of benevolence towards his subjects.
+
+The amours of the poet, and the rivalship of the tyrant, I shall pass
+over in silence; and there are few, I presume, who will regret the
+omission of most of those anecdotes, which the industry of some editors
+has not only promulged, but discussed. Whatever is repugnant to modesty
+and virtue is considered, in ethical science, by a supposition very
+favorable to humanity, as impossible; and this amiable persuasion should
+be much more strongly entertained where the transgression wars with nature
+as well as virtue. But why are we not allowed to indulge in the
+presumption? Why are we officiously reminded that there have been really
+such instances of depravity?
+
+Hipparchus, who now maintained at Athens the power which his father
+Pisistratus had usurped, was one of those princes who may be said to have
+polished the fetters of their subjects. He was the first, according to
+Plato, who edited the poems of Homer, and commanded them to be sung by the
+rhapsodists at the celebration of the Panathenaea. From his court, which
+was a sort of galaxy of genius, Anacreon could not long be absent.
+Hipparchus sent a barge for him; the poet readily embraced the invitation,
+and the Muses and the Loves were wafted with him to Athens.
+
+The manner of Anacreon's death was singular. We are told that in the
+eighty-fifth year of his age he was choked by a grape-stone; and however
+we may smile at their enthusiastic partiality who see in this easy and
+characteristic death a peculiar indulgence of Heaven, we cannot help
+admiring that his fate should have been so emblematic of his disposition.
+Caelius Calcagninus alludes to this catastrophe in the following epitaph
+on our poet:--
+
+ Those lips, then, hallowed sage, which poured along
+ A music sweet as any cygnet's song,
+ The grape hath closed for ever!
+ Here let the ivy kiss the poet's tomb,
+ Here let the rose he loved with laurels bloom,
+ In bands that ne'er shall sever.
+ But far be thou, oh! far, unholy vine,
+ By whom the favorite minstrel of the Nine
+ Lost his sweet vital breath;
+ Thy God himself now blushes to confess,
+ Once hallowed vine! he feels he loves thee less,
+ Since poor Anacreon's death.
+
+It has been supposed by some writers that Anacreon and Sappho were
+contemporaries; and the very thought of an intercourse between persons so
+congenial, both in warmth of passion and delicacy of genius, gives such
+play to the imagination that the mind loves to indulge in it. But the
+vision dissolves before historical truth; and Chamaeleon, and Hermesianax,
+who are the source of the supposition, are considered as having merely
+indulged in a poetical anachronism.
+
+To infer the moral dispositions of a poet from the tone of sentiment
+which pervades his works, is sometimes a very fallacious analogy; but the
+soul of Anacreon speaks so unequivocally through his odes, that we may
+safely consult them as the faithful mirrors of his heart. We find him
+there the elegant voluptuary, diffusing the seductive charm of sentiment
+over passions and propensities at which rigid morality must frown. His
+heart, devoted to indolence, seems to have thought that there is wealth
+enough in happiness, but seldom happiness in mere wealth. The
+cheerfulness, indeed, with which he brightens his old age is interesting
+and endearing; like his own rose, he is fragrant even in decay. But the
+most peculiar feature of his mind is that love of simplicity, which be
+attributes to himself so feelingly, and which breathes characteristically
+throughout all that he has sung. In truth, if we omit those few vices in
+our estimate which religion, at that time, not only connived at, but
+consecrated, we shall be inclined to say that the disposition of our poet
+was amiable; that his morality was relaxed, but not abandoned; and that
+Virtue, with her zone loosened, may be an apt emblem of the character of
+Anacreon.
+
+Of his person and physiognomy, time has preserved such uncertain
+memorials, that it were better, perhaps, to leave the pencil to fancy; and
+few can read the Odes of Anacreon without imaging to themselves the form
+of the animated old bard, crowned with roses, and singing cheerfully to
+his lyre.
+
+After the very enthusiastic eulogiums bestowed both by ancients and
+moderns upon the poems of Anacreon, we need not be diffident in expressing
+our raptures at their beauty, nor hesitate to pronounce them the most
+polished remains of antiquity. They are indeed, all beauty, all
+enchantment. He steals us so insensibly along with him, that we sympathize
+even in his excesses. In his amatory odes there is a delicacy of
+compliment not to be found in any other ancient poet. Love at that period
+was rather an unrefined emotion; and the intercourse of the sexes was
+animated more by passion than by sentiment. They knew not those little
+tendernesses which form the spiritual part of affection; their expression
+of feeling was therefore rude and unvaried, and the poetry of love
+deprived it of its most captivating graces. Anacreon, however, attained
+some ideas of this purer gallantry; and the same delicacy of mind which
+led him to this refinement, prevented him also from yielding to the
+freedom of language which has sullied the pages of all the other poets.
+His descriptions are warm; but the warmth is in the ideas, not the words.
+He is sportive without being wanton, and ardent without being licentious.
+His poetic invention is always most brilliantly displayed in those
+allegorical fictions which so many have endeavored to imitate, though all
+have confessed them to be inimitable. Simplicity is the distinguishing
+feature of these odes, and they interest by their innocence, as much as
+they fascinate by their beauty. They may be said, indeed, to be the very
+infants of the Muses, and to lisp in numbers.
+
+I shall not be accused of enthusiastic partiality by those who have read
+and felt the original; but to others, I am conscious, this should not be
+the language of a translator, whose faint reflection of such beauties can
+but ill justify his admiration of them.
+
+In the age of Anacreon music and poetry were inseparable. These kindred
+talents were for a long time associated, and the poet always sung his own
+compositions to the lyre. It is probable that they were not set to any
+regular air, but rather a kind of musical recitation, which was varied
+according to the fancy and feelings of the moment. The poems of Anacreon
+were sung at banquets as late as the time of Aulus Gellius, who tells us
+that he heard one of the odes performed at a birthday entertainment.
+
+The singular beauty of our poet's style and the apparent facility,
+perhaps, of his metre have attracted, as I have already remarked, a crowd
+of imitators. Some of these have succeeded with wonderful felicity, as may
+be discerned in the few odes which are attributed to writers of a later
+period. But none of his emulators have been half so dangerous to his fame
+as those Greek ecclesiastics of the early ages, who, being conscious of
+their own inferiority to their great prototypes, determined on removing
+all possibility of comparison, and, under a semblance of moral zeal,
+deprived the world of some of the most exquisite treasures of ancient
+times. The works of Sappho and Alcaeus were among those flowers of Grecian
+literature which thus fell beneath the rude hand of ecclesiastical
+presumption. It is true they pretended that this sacrifice of genius was
+hallowed by the interests of religion, but I have already assigned the
+most probable motive; and if Gregorius Nazianzenus had not written
+Anacreontics, we might now perhaps have the works of the Teian
+unmutilated, and be empowered to say exultingly with Horace,
+
+ _Nec si quid olim lusit Anacreon
+ delevit aetas_.
+
+The zeal by which these bishops professed to be actuated gave birth more
+innocently, indeed, to an absurd species of parody, as repugnant to piety
+as it is to taste, where the poet of voluptuousness was made a preacher of
+the gospel, and his muse, like the Venus in armor at Lacedaemon, was
+arrayed in all the severities of priestly instruction. Such was the
+"Anacreon Recantatus," by Carolus de Aquino, a Jesuit, published 1701,
+which consisted of a series of palinodes to the several songs of our poet.
+Such, too, was the Christian Anacreon of Patrignanus, another Jesuit, who
+preposterously transferred to a most sacred subject all that the Graecian
+poet had dedicated to festivity and love.
+
+His metre has frequently been adopted by the modern Latin poets; and
+Scaliger, Taubman, Barthius, and others, have shown that it is by no means
+uncongenial with that language. The Anacreontics of Scaliger, however,
+scarcely deserve the name; as they glitter all over with conceits, and,
+though often elegant, are always labored. The beautiful fictions of
+Angerianus preserve more happily than any others the delicate turn of
+those allegorical fables, which, passing so frequently through the mediums
+of version and imitation, have generally lost their finest rays in the
+transmission. Many of the Italian poets have indulged their fancies upon
+the subjects; and in the manner of Anacreon, Bernardo Tasso first
+introduced the metre, which was afterwards polished and enriched by
+Chabriera and others.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODES OF ANACREON
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE I.[1]
+
+
+I saw the smiling bard of pleasure,
+The minstrel of the Teian measure;
+'Twas in a vision of the night,
+He beamed upon my wondering sight.
+I heard his voice, and warmly prest
+The dear enthusiast to my breast.
+His tresses wore a silvery dye,
+But beauty sparkled in his eye;
+Sparkled in his eyes of fire,
+Through the mist of soft desire.
+His lip exhaled, when'er he sighed,
+The fragrance of the racy tide;
+And, as with weak and reeling feet
+He came my cordial kiss to meet,
+An infant, of the Cyprian band,
+Guided him on with tender hand.
+Quick from his glowing brows he drew
+His braid, of many a wanton hue;
+I took the wreath, whose inmost twine
+Breathed of him and blushed with wine.
+I hung it o'er my thoughtless brow,
+And ah! I feel its magic now:
+I feel that even his garland's touch
+Can make the bosom love too much.
+
+
+[1] This ode is the first of the series in the Vatican manuscript, which
+attributes it to no other poet than Anacreon. They who assert that the
+manuscript imputes it to Basilius, have been mislead. Whether it be the
+production of Anacreon or not, it has all the features of ancient
+simplicity, and is a beautiful imitation of the poet's happiest manner.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE II.
+
+
+Give me the harp of epic song,
+Which Homer's finger thrilled along;
+But tear away the sanguine string,
+For war is not the theme I sing.
+Proclaim the laws of festal right,[1]
+I'm monarch of the board to-night;
+And all around shall brim as high,
+And quaff the tide as deep as I.
+And when the cluster's mellowing dews
+Their warm enchanting balm infuse,
+Our feet shall catch the elastic bound,
+And reel us through the dance's round.
+Great Bacchus! we shall sing to thee,
+In wild but sweet ebriety;
+Flashing around such sparks of thought,
+As Bacchus could alone have taught.
+
+Then, give the harp of epic song,
+Which Homer's finger thrilled along;
+But tear away the sanguine string,
+For war is not the theme I sing.
+
+
+[1] The ancients prescribed certain laws of drinking at their festivals,
+for an account of which see the commentators. Anacreon here acts the
+symposiarch, or master of the festival.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE III.[1]
+
+
+Listen to the Muse's lyre,
+Master of the pencil's fire!
+Sketched in painting's bold display,
+Many a city first portray;
+Many a city, revelling free,
+Full of loose festivity.
+Picture then a rosy train,
+Bacchants straying o'er the plain;
+Piping, as they roam along,
+Roundelay or shepherd-song.
+Paint me next, if painting may
+Such a theme as this portray,
+All the earthly heaven of love
+These delighted mortals prove.
+
+
+[1] La Fosse has thought proper to lengthen this poem by considerable
+interpolations of his own, which he thinks are indispensably necessary to
+the completion of the description.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE IV.[1]
+
+
+Vulcan! hear your glorious task;
+I did not from your labors ask
+In gorgeous panoply to shine,
+For war was ne'er a sport of mine.
+No--let me have a silver bowl,
+Where I may cradle all my soul;
+But mind that, o'er its simple frame
+No mimic constellations flame;
+Nor grave upon the swelling side,
+Orion, scowling o'er the tide.
+
+I care not for the glittering wain,
+Nor yet the weeping sister train.
+But let the vine luxuriant roll
+Its blushing tendrils round the bowl,
+While many a rose-lipped bacchant maid
+Is culling clusters in their shade.
+Let sylvan gods, in antic shapes,
+Wildly press the gushing grapes,
+And flights of Loves, in wanton play,
+Wing through the air their winding way;
+While Venus, from her arbor green,
+Looks laughing at the joyous scene,
+And young Lyaeus by her side
+Sits, worthy of so bright a bride.
+
+
+[1] This ode, Aulus Gellius tells us, was performed at an entertainment
+where he was present.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE V.
+
+
+Sculptor, wouldst thou glad my soul,
+Grave for me an ample bowl,
+Worthy to shine in hall or bower,
+When spring-time brings the reveller's hour.
+Grave it with themes of chaste design,
+Fit for a simple board like mine.
+Display not there the barbarous rites
+In which religious zeal delights;
+Nor any tale of tragic fate
+Which History shudders to relate.
+No--cull thy fancies from above,
+Themes of heaven and themes of love.
+Let Bacchus, Jove's ambrosial boy,
+Distil the grape in drops of joy,
+And while he smiles at every tear,
+Let warm-eyed Venus, dancing near,
+With spirits of the genial bed,
+The dewy herbage deftly tread.
+Let Love be there, without his arms,
+In timid nakedness of charms;
+And all the Graces, linked with Love,
+Stray, laughing, through the shadowy grove;
+While rosy boys disporting round,
+In circlets trip the velvet ground.
+But ah! if there Apollo toys,[1]
+I tremble for the rosy boys.
+
+
+[1] An allusion to the fable that Apollo had killed his beloved boy
+Hyacinth, while playing with him at quoits. "This" (says M. La Fosse) "is
+assuredly the sense of the text, and it cannot admit of any other."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE VI.[1]
+
+
+As late I sought the spangled bowers,
+To cull a wreath of matin flowers,
+Where many an early rose was weeping,
+I found the urchin Cupid sleeping,
+I caught the boy, a goblet's tide
+Was richly mantling by my side,
+I caught him by his downy wing,
+And whelmed him in the racy spring.
+Then drank I down the poisoned bowl,
+And love now nestles in my soul.
+Oh, yes, my soul is Cupid's nest,
+I feel him fluttering in my breast.
+
+
+[1] This beautiful fiction, which the commentators have attributed to
+Julian, a royal poet, the Vatican MS. pronounces to be the genuine
+offspring of Anacreon.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE VII.
+
+
+The women tell me every day
+That all my bloom has pas past away.
+"Behold," the pretty wantons cry,
+"Behold this mirror with a sigh;
+The locks upon thy brow are few,
+And like the rest, they're withering too!"
+Whether decline has thinned my hair,
+I'm sure I neither know nor care;
+But this I know, and this I feel
+As onward to the tomb I steal,
+That still as death approaches nearer,
+The joys of life are sweeter, dearer;
+And had I but an hour to live,
+That little hour to bliss I'd give.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE VIII.[1]
+
+
+I care not for the idle state
+Of Persia's king, the rich, the great.
+I envy not the monarch's throne,
+Nor wish the treasured gold my own
+But oh! be mine the rosy wreath,
+Its freshness o'er my brow to breathe;
+Be mine the rich perfumes that flow,
+To cool and scent my locks of snow.
+To-day I'll haste to quaff my wine
+As if to-morrow ne'er would shine;
+But if to-morrow comes, why then--
+I'll haste to quaff my wine again.
+And thus while all our days are bright,
+Nor time has dimmed their bloomy light,
+Let us the festal hours beguile
+With mantling pup and cordial smile;
+And shed from each new bowl of wine,
+The richest drop on Bacchus' shrine
+For death may come, with brow unpleasant,
+May come, when least we wish him present,
+And beckon to the Sable shore,
+And grimly bid us--drink no more!
+
+
+[1] Baxter conjectures that this was written upon the occasion of our
+poet's returning the money to Polycrates, according to the anecdote in
+Stobaeus.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE IX.
+
+
+I pray thee, by the gods above,
+Give me the mighty bowl I love,
+And let me sing, in wild delight,
+"I will--I will be mad to-night!"
+Alcmaeon once, as legends tell,
+Was frenzied by the fiends of hell;
+Orestes, too, with naked tread,
+Frantic paced the mountain-head;
+And why? a murdered mother's shade
+Haunted them still where'er they strayed.
+But ne'er could I a murderer be,
+The grape alone shall bleed for me;
+Yet can I shout, with wild delight,
+"I will--I will be mad to-night."
+
+Alcides' self, in days of yore,
+Imbrued his hands in youthful gore,
+And brandished, with a maniac joy,
+The quiver of the expiring boy:
+And Ajax, with tremendous shield,
+Infuriate scoured the guiltless field.
+But I, whose hands no weapon ask,
+No armor but this joyous flask;
+The trophy of whose frantic hours
+Is but a scattered wreath of flowers,
+Ev'n I can sing, with wild delight,
+"I will--I will be mad to-night!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE X.[1]
+
+
+How am I to punish thee,
+For the wrong thou'st done to me
+Silly swallow, prating thing--
+Shall I clip that wheeling wing?
+Or, as Tereus did, of old,[2]
+(So the fabled tale is told,)
+Shall I tear that tongue away,
+Tongue that uttered such a lay?
+Ah, how thoughtless hast thou been!
+Long before the dawn was seen,
+When a dream came o'er my mind,
+Picturing her I worship, kind,
+Just when I was nearly blest,
+Loud thy matins broke my rest!
+
+
+[1] This ode is addressed to a swallow.
+
+[2] Modern poetry has conferred the name of Philomel upon the nightingale;
+but many respectable authorities among the ancients assigned this
+metamorphose to Progne, and made Philomel the swallow, as Anacreon does
+here.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XI.[1]
+
+
+"Tell me, gentle youth, I pray thee,
+What in purchase shall I pay thee
+For this little waxen toy,
+Image of the Paphian boy?"
+Thus I said, the other day,
+To a youth who past my way:
+"Sir," (he answered, and the while
+Answered all in Doric style,)
+"Take it, for a trifle take it;
+'Twas not I who dared to make it;
+No, believe me, 'twas not I;
+Oh, it has cost me many a sigh,
+And I can no longer keep
+Little Gods, who murder sleep!"
+"Here, then, here," (I said with joy,)
+"Here is silver for the boy:
+He shall be my bosom guest,
+Idol of my pious breast!"
+
+Now, young Love, I have thee mine,
+Warm me with that torch of thine;
+Make me feel as I have felt,
+Or thy waxen frame shall melt:
+I must burn with warm desire,
+Or thou, my boy--in yonder fire.[2]
+
+
+[1] It is difficult to preserve with any grace the narrative simplicity of
+this ode, and the humor of the turn with which it concludes. I feel,
+indeed, that the translation must appear vapid, if not ludicrous, to an
+English reader.
+
+[2] From this Longepierre conjectures, that, whatever Anacreon might say,
+he felt sometimes the inconveniences of old age, and here solicits from
+the power of Love a warmth which he could no longer expect from Nature.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XII.
+
+
+They tell how Atys, wild with love,
+Roams the mount and haunted grove;[1]
+Cvbele's name he howls around,
+The gloomy blast returns the sound!
+Oft too, by Claros' hallowed spring,[2]
+The votaries of the laurelled king
+Quaff the inspiring, magic stream,
+And rave in wild, prophetic dream.
+But frenzied dreams are not for me,
+Great Bacchus is my deity!
+Full of mirth, and full of him,
+While floating odors round me swim,
+While mantling bowls are full supplied,
+And you sit blushing by my side,
+I will be mad and raving too--
+Mad, my girl, with love for you!
+
+
+[1] There are many contradictory stories of the loves of Cybele and Atys.
+It is certain that he was mutilated, but whether by his own fury, or
+Cybele's jealousy, is a point upon which authors are not agreed.
+
+[2] This fountain was in a grove, consecrated to Apollo, and situated
+between Colophon and Lebedos, in Ionia. The god had an oracle there.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XIII.
+
+
+I will, I will, the conflict's past,
+And I'll consent to love at last.
+Cupid has long, with smiling art,
+Invited me to yield my heart;
+And I have thought that peace of mind
+Should not be for a smile resigned;
+And so repelled the tender lure,
+And hoped my heart would sleep secure.
+
+But, slighted in his boasted charms,
+The angry infant flew to arms;
+He slung his quiver's golden frame,
+He took his bow; his shafts of flame,
+And proudly summoned me to yield,
+Or meet him on the martial field.
+And what did I unthinking do?
+I took to arms, undaunted, too;
+Assumed the corslet, shield, and spear,
+And, like Pelides, smiled at fear.
+
+Then (hear it, All ye powers above!)
+I fought with Love! I fought with Love!
+And now his arrows all were shed,
+And I had just in terror fled--
+When, heaving an indignant sigh,
+To see me thus unwounded fly,
+And, having now no other dart,
+He shot himself into my heart![1]
+My heart--alas the luckless day!
+Received the God, and died away.
+Farewell, farewell, my faithless shield!
+Thy lord at length is forced to yield.
+Vain, vain, is every outward care,
+The foe's within, and triumphs there.
+
+
+[1] Dryden has parodied this thought in the following extravagant lines:--
+ ----I'm all o'er Love;
+ Nay, I am Love, Love shot, and shot so fast,
+ He shot himself into my breast at last.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XIV.[1]
+
+
+Count me, on the summer trees,
+Every leaf that courts the breeze;
+Count me, on the foamy deep,
+Every wave that sinks to sleep;
+Then, when you have numbered these
+Billowy tides and leafy trees,
+Count me all the flames I prove,
+All the gentle nymphs I love.
+First, of pure Athenian maids
+Sporting in their olive shades,
+You may reckon just a score,
+Nay, I'll grant you fifteen more.
+In the famed Corinthian grove,
+Where such countless wantons rove,[2]
+Chains of beauties may be found,
+Chains, by which my heart is bound;
+There, indeed, are nymphs divine,
+Dangerous to a soul like mine.
+Many bloom in Lesbos' isle;
+Many in Ionia smile;
+Rhodes a pretty swarm can boast;
+Caria too contains a host.
+Sum them all--of brown and fair
+You may count two thousand there.
+What, you stare? I pray you peace!
+More I'll find before I cease.
+Have I told you all my flames,
+'Mong the amorous Syrian dames?
+Have I numbered every one,
+Glowing under Egypt's sun?
+Or the nymphs, who blushing sweet
+Deck the shrine of Love in Crete;
+Where the God, with festal play,
+Holds eternal holiday?
+Still in clusters, still remain
+Gades' warm, desiring train:[3]
+Still there lies a myriad more
+On the sable India's shore;
+These, and many far removed,
+All are loving--all are loved!
+
+
+[1] The poet, in this catalogue of his mistresses, means nothing more,
+than, by a lively hyperbole, to inform us, that his heart, unfettered by
+any one object, was warm with devotion towards the sex in general. Cowley
+is indebted to this ode for the hint of his ballad, called "The
+Chronicle."
+
+[2] Corinth was very famous for the beauty and number of its courtesans.
+Venus was the deity principally worshipped by the people, and their
+constant prayer was, that the gods should increase the number of her
+worshippers.
+
+[3] The music of the Gaditanian females had all the voluptuous character
+of their dancing, as appears from Martial.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XV.[1]
+
+
+Tell me, why, my sweetest dove,
+Thus your humid pinions move,
+Shedding through the air in showers
+Essence of the balmiest flowers?
+Tell me whither, whence you rove,
+Tell me all, my sweetest dove.
+
+Curious stranger, I belong
+To the bard of Teian song;
+With his mandate now I fly
+To the nymph of azure eye;--
+She, whose eye has maddened many,
+But the poet more than any,
+Venus, for a hymn of love,
+Warbled in her votive grove,[2]
+('Twas, in sooth a gentle lay,)
+Gave me to the bard away.
+See me now his faithful minion,--
+Thus with softly-gliding pinion,
+To his lovely girl I bear
+Songs of passion through the air.
+Oft he blandly whispers me,
+"Soon, my bird, I'll set you free."
+But in vain he'll bid me fly,
+I shall serve him till I die.
+Never could my plumes sustain
+Ruffling winds and chilling rain,
+O'er the plains, or in the dell,
+On the mountain's savage swell,
+Seeking in the desert wood
+Gloomy shelter, rustic food.
+Now I lead a life of ease,
+Far from rugged haunts like these.
+From Anacreon's hand I eat
+Food delicious, viands sweet;
+Flutter o'er his goblet's brim,
+Sip the foamy wine with him.
+Then, when I have wantoned round
+To his lyre's beguiling sound;
+Or with gently moving-wings
+Fanned the minstrel while he sings;
+On his harp I sink in slumbers,
+Dreaming still of dulcet numbers!
+
+This is all--away--away--
+You have made me waste the day.
+How I've chattered! prating crow
+Never yet did chatter so.
+
+
+[1] The dove of Anacreon, bearing a letter from the poet to his mistress,
+is met by a stranger, with whom this dialogue, is imagined.
+
+[2] "This passage is invaluable, and I do not think that anything so
+beautiful or so delicate has ever been said. What an idea does it give of
+the poetry of the man, from whom Venus herself, the mother of the Graces
+and the Pleasures, purchases a little hymn with one of her favorite
+doves!"--LONGEPIERRE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XVI.[1]
+
+
+Thou, whose soft and rosy hues
+Mimic form and soul infuse,
+Best of painters, come portray
+The lovely maid that's far away.
+Far away, my soul! thou art,
+But I've thy beauties all by heart.
+Paint her jetty ringlets playing,
+Silky locks, like tendrils straying;[2]
+And, if painting hath the skill
+To make the spicy balm distil,
+Let every little lock exhale
+A sigh of perfume on the gale.
+Where her tresses' curly flow
+Darkles o'er the brow of snow,
+Let her forehead beam to light,
+Burnished as the ivory bright.
+Let her eyebrows smoothly rise
+In jetty arches o'er her eyes,
+Each, a crescent gently gliding,
+Just commingling, just dividing.
+
+But, hast thou any sparkles warm,
+The lightning of her eyes to form?
+Let them effuse the azure rays,
+That in Minerva's glances blaze,
+Mixt with the liquid light that lies
+In Cytherea's languid eyes.
+O'er her nose and cheek be shed
+Flushing white and softened red;
+Mingling tints, as when there glows
+In snowy milk the bashful rose.
+Then her lip, so rich in blisses,
+Sweet petitioner for kisses,
+Rosy nest, where lurks Persuasion,
+Mutely courting Love's invasion.
+Next, beneath the velvet chin,
+Whose dimple hides a Love within,
+Mould her neck with grace descending,
+In a heaven of beauty ending;
+While countless charms, above, below,
+Sport and flutter round its snow.
+Now let a floating, lucid veil,
+Shadow her form, but not conceal;[3]
+A charm may peep, a hue may beam
+And leave the rest to Fancy's dream.
+Enough--'tis she! 'tis all I seek;
+It glows, it lives, it soon will speak!
+
+
+[1] This ode and the next may be called companion-pictures; they are
+highly finished, and give us an excellent idea of the taste of the
+ancients in beauty.
+
+[2] The ancients have been very enthusiastic in their praises of the
+beauty of hair. Apuleius, in the second book of his Milesiacs, says that
+Venus herself, if she were bald, though surrounded by the Graces and the
+Loves, could not be pleasing even to her husband Vulcan.
+
+[3] This delicate art of description, which leaves imagination to complete
+the picture, has been seldom adopted in the imitations of this beautiful
+poem. Ronsard is exceptionally minute; and Politianus, in his charming
+portrait of a girl, full of rich and exquisite diction, has lifted the
+veil rather too much. The "_questa che tu m'intendi_" should be always
+left to fancy.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XVII.
+
+
+And now with all thy pencil's truth,
+Portray Bathyllus, lovely youth!
+Let his hair, in masses bright,
+Fall like floating rays of light;
+And there the raven's die confuse
+With the golden sunbeam's hues.
+Let no wreath, with artful twine.
+The flowing of his locks confine;
+But leave them loose to every breeze,
+To take what shape and course they please.
+Beneath the forehead, fair as snow,
+But flushed with manhood's early glow,
+And guileless as the dews of dawn,
+Let the majestic brows be drawn,
+Of ebon hue, enriched by gold,
+Such as dark, shining snakes unfold.
+Mix in his eyes the power alike,
+With love to win, with awe to strike;
+Borrow from Mars his look of ire,
+From Venus her soft glance of fire;
+Blend them in such expression here,
+That we by turns may hope and fear!
+
+Now from the sunny apple seek
+The velvet down that spreads his cheek;
+And there, if art so far can go,
+The ingenuous blush of boyhood show.
+While, for his mouth--but no,--in vain
+Would words its witching charm explain.
+Make it the very seat, the throne,
+That Eloquence would claim her own;
+And let the lips, though silent, wear
+A life-look, as if words were there.
+
+Next thou his ivory neck must trace,
+Moulded with soft but manly grace;
+Fair as the neck of Paphia's boy,
+Where Paphia's arms have hung in joy.
+Give him the wingèd Hermes' hand,
+With which he waves his snaky wand;
+Let Bacchus the broad chest supply,
+And Leda's son the sinewy thigh;
+While, through his whole transparent frame,
+Thou show'st the stirrings of that flame,
+Which kindles, when the first love-sigh
+Steals from the heart, unconscious why.
+
+But sure thy pencil, though so bright,
+Is envious of the eye's delight,
+Or its enamoured touch would show
+The shoulder, fair as sunless snow,
+Which now in veiling shadow lies,
+Removed from all but Fancy's eyes.
+Now, for his feet--but hold--forbear--
+I see the sun-god's portrait there:[1]
+Why paint Bathyllus? when in truth,
+There, in that god, thou'st sketched the youth.
+Enough--let this bright form be mine,
+And send the boy to Samos' shrine;
+Phoebus shall then Bathyllus be,
+Bathyllus then, the deity!
+
+
+[1] The abrupt turn here is spirited, but requires some explanation. While
+the artist is pursuing the portrait of Bathyllus, Anacreon, we must
+suppose, turns around and sees a picture of Apollo, which was intended for
+an altar at Samos. He then instantly tells the painter to cease his work;
+that this picture will serve for Bathyllus; and that, when he goes to
+Samos, he may make an Apollo of the portrait of the boy which he had
+begun.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XVIII.
+
+
+Now the star of day is high,
+Fly, my girls, in pity fly.
+Bring me wine in brimming urns
+Cool my lip, it burns, it burns!
+Sunned by the meridian fire,
+Panting, languid I expire,
+Give me all those humid flowers,
+Drop them o'er my brow in showers.
+Scarce a breathing chaplet now
+Lives upon my feverish brow;
+Every dewy rose I wear
+Sheds its tears, and withers there.[1]
+But to you, my burning heart,
+What can now relief impart?
+Can brimming bowl, or floweret's dew,
+Cool the flame that scorches you?
+
+
+[1] In the poem of Mr. Sheridan's, "Uncouth is this moss-covered grotto of
+stone," there is an idea very singularly coincident with this of
+Angerianus:--
+
+ And thou, stony grot, in thy arch may'st preserve
+ Some lingering drops of the night-fallen dew:
+ Let them fall on her bosom of snow, and they'll serve
+ As tears of my sorrow entrusted to you.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XIX.[1]
+
+
+Here recline you, gentle maid,
+Sweet is this embowering shade;
+Sweet the young, the modest trees,
+Ruffled by the kissing breeze;
+Sweet the little founts that weep,
+Lulling soft the mind to sleep;
+Hark! they whisper as they roll,
+Calm persuasion to the soul;
+Tell me, tell me, is not this
+All a stilly scene of bliss?
+"Who, my girl, would pass it by?
+Surely neither you nor I."
+
+
+[1] The description of this bower is so natural and animated, that we
+almost feel a degree of coolness and freshness while we peruse it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XX.[1]
+
+
+One day the Muses twined the hands
+Of infant Love with flowery bands;
+And to celestial Beauty gave
+The captive infant for her slave.
+His mother comes, with many a toy,
+To ransom her beloved boy;[2]
+His mother sues, but all in vain,--
+He ne'er will leave his chains again.
+Even should they take his chains away,
+The little captive still would stay.
+"If this," he cries, "a bondage be,
+Oh, who could wish for liberty?"
+
+
+[1] The poet appears, in this graceful allegory, to describe the softening
+influence which poetry holds over the mind, in making it peculiarly
+susceptible to the impressions of beauty.
+
+[2] In the first idyl of Moschus, Venus there proclaims the reward for her
+fugitive child:--
+
+ On him, who the haunts of my Cupid can show,
+ A kiss of the tenderest stamp I'll bestow;
+ But he, who can bring back the urchin in chains,
+ Shall receive even something more sweet for his pains.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXI.[1]
+
+
+Observe when mother earth is dry,
+She drinks the droppings of the sky;
+And then the dewy cordial gives
+To every thirsty plant that lives.
+The vapors, which at evening weep,
+Are beverage to the swelling deep;
+And when the rosy sun appears,
+He drinks the ocean's misty tears.
+The moon too quaffs her paly stream
+Of lustre, from the solar beam.
+Then, hence with all your sober thinking!
+Since Nature's holy law is drinking;
+I'll make the laws of nature mine,
+And pledge the universe in wine.
+
+
+[1] Those critics who have endeavored to throw the chains of precision
+over the spirit of this beautiful trifle, require too much from
+Anacreontic philosophy. Among others, Gail very sapiently thinks that the
+poet uses the epithet [Greek: melainae], because black earth absorbs
+moisture more quickly than any other; and accordingly he indulges us with
+an experimental disquisition on the subject.--See Gail's Notes.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXII.
+
+
+The Phrygian rock, that braves the storm,
+Was once a weeping matron's form;[1]
+And Progne, hapless, frantic maid,
+Is now a swallow in the shade.
+Oh! that a mirror's form were mine,
+That I might catch that smile divine;
+And like my own fond fancy be,
+Reflecting thee, and only thee;
+Or could I be the robe which holds
+That graceful form within its folds;
+Or, turned into a fountain, lave
+Thy beauties in my circling wave.
+Would I were perfume for thy hair,
+To breathe my soul in fragrance there;
+Or, better still, the zone, that lies
+Close to thy breast, and feels its sighs![2]
+Or even those envious pearls that show
+So faintly round that neck of snow--
+Yes, I would be a happy gem,
+Like them to hang, to fade like them.
+What more would thy Anacreon be?
+Oh, any thing that touches thee;
+Nay, sandals for those airy feet--
+Even to be trod by them were sweet!
+
+
+[1] The compliment of this ode is exquisitely delicate, and so singular
+for the period in which Anacreon lived, when the scale of love had not yet
+been graduated Into all its little progressive refinements, that if we
+were inclined to question the authenticity of the poem, we should find a
+much more plausible argument in the features of modern gallantry which it
+bears, than in any of those fastidious conjectures upon which some
+commentators have presumed so far.
+
+[2] The women of Greece not only wore this zone, but condemned themselves
+to fasting, and made use of certain drugs and powders for the same
+purpose. To these expedients they were compelled, in consequence of their
+inelegant fashion of compressing the waist into a very narrow compass,
+which necessarily caused an excessive tumidity in the bosom. See
+"Dioscorides," lib. v.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXIII.
+
+
+I often wish this languid lyre,
+This warbler of my soul's desire,
+Could raise the breath of song sublime,
+To men of fame, in former time.
+But when the soaring theme I try,
+Along the chords my numbers die,
+And whisper, with dissolving tone,
+"Our sighs are given to love alone!"
+Indignant at the feeble lay,
+I tore the panting chords away,
+Attuned them to a nobler swell,
+And struck again the breathing shell;
+In all the glow of epic fire,
+To Hercules I wake the lyre,
+But still its fainting sighs repeat,
+"The tale of love alone is sweet!"
+Then fare thee well, seductive dream,
+That madest me follow Glory's theme;
+For thou my lyre, and thou my heart,
+Shall never more in spirit part;
+And all that one has felt so well
+The other shall as sweetly tell!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXIV.
+
+
+To all that breathe the air of heaven,
+Some boon of strength has Nature given.
+In forming the majestic bull,
+She fenced with wreathed horns his skull;
+A hoof of strength she lent the steed,
+And winged the timorous hare with speed.
+She gave the lion fangs of terror,
+And, o'er the ocean's crystal mirror,
+Taught the unnumbered scaly throng
+To trace their liquid path along;
+While for the umbrage of the grove,
+She plumed the warbling world of love.
+
+To man she gave, in that proud hour,
+The boon of intellectual power.
+Then, what, oh woman, what, for thee,
+Was left in Nature's treasury?
+She gave thee beauty--mightier far
+Than all the pomp and power of war.
+Nor steel, nor fire itself hath power
+Like woman, in her conquering hour.
+Be thou but fair, mankind adore thee,
+Smile, and a world is weak before thee![1]
+
+
+[1] Longepierre's remark here is ingenious; "The Romans," says he, "were
+so convinced of the power of beauty, that they used a word implying
+strength in the place of the epithet beautiful".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXV.
+
+
+Once in each revolving year,
+Gentle bird! we find thee here.
+When Nature wears her summer-vest,
+Thou comest to weave thy simple nest;
+But when the chilling winter lowers.
+Again thou seekest the genial bowers
+Of Memphis, or the shores of Nile,
+Where sunny hours for ever smile.
+And thus thy pinion rests and roves,--
+Alas! unlike the swarm of Loves,
+That brood within this hapless breast,
+And never, never change their nest!
+Still every year, and all the year,
+They fix their fated dwelling here;
+And some their infant plumage try,
+And on a tender winglet fly;
+While in the shell, impregned with fires,
+Still lurk a thousand more desires;
+Some from their tiny prisons peeping,
+And some in formless embryo sleeping.
+Thus peopled, like the vernal groves,
+My breast resounds, with warbling Loves;
+One urchin imps the other's feather,
+Then twin-desires they wing together,
+And fast as they thus take their flight,
+Still other urchins spring to light.
+But is there then no kindly art,
+To chase these Cupids from my heart;
+Ah, no! I fear, in sadness fear,
+They will for ever nestle here!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXVI.
+
+
+Thy harp may sing of Troy's alarms,
+Or tell the tale of Theban arms;
+With other wars my song shall burn,
+For other wounds my harp shall mourn.
+'Twas not the crested warrior's dart,
+That drank the current of my heart;
+Nor naval arms, nor mailed steed,
+Have made this vanquished bosom bleed;
+No--'twas from eyes of liquid blue,
+A host of quivered Cupids flew;[1]
+And now my heart all bleeding lies
+Beneath that army of the eyes!
+
+
+[1] The poets abound with conceits on the archery of the eyes, but few
+have turned the thought so naturally as Anacreon. Ronsard gives to the
+eyes of his mistress _un petit camp d'amours_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXVII.
+
+
+We read the flying courser's name
+Upon his side, in marks of flame;
+And, by their turbaned brows alone,
+The warriors of the East are known.
+But in the lover's glowing eyes,
+The inlet to his bosom lies;
+Through them we see the small faint mark,
+Where Love has dropt his burning spark!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXVIII.
+
+
+As, by his Lemnian forge's flame,
+The husband of the Paphian dame
+Moulded the glowing steel, to form
+Arrows for Cupid, thrilling warm;
+And Venus, as he plied his art,
+Shed honey round each new-made dart,
+While Love, at hand, to finish all,
+Tipped every arrow's point with gall;
+It chanced the Lord of Battles came
+To visit that deep cave of flame.
+'Twas from the ranks of war he rushed,
+His spear with many a life-drop blushed;
+He saw the fiery darts, and smiled
+Contemptuous at the archer-child.
+"What!" said the urchin, "dost thou smile?
+Here, hold this little dart awhile,
+And thou wilt find, though swift of flight,
+My bolts are not so feathery light."
+
+ Mars took the shaft--and, oh, thy look,
+Sweet Venus, when the shaft he took!--
+Sighing, he felt the urchin's art,
+And cried, in agony of heart,
+"It is not light--I sink with pain!
+Take--take thy arrow back again."
+"No," said the child, "it must not be;
+That little dart was made for thee!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXIX.
+
+
+Yes--loving is a painful thrill,
+And not to love more painful still
+But oh, it is the worst of pain,
+To love and not be loved again!
+Affection now has fled from earth,
+Nor fire of genius, noble birth,
+Nor heavenly virtue, can beguile,
+From beauty's cheek one favoring smile.
+Gold is the woman's only theme,
+Gold is the woman's only dream.
+Oh! never be that wretch forgiven--
+Forgive him not, indignant heaven!
+Whose grovelling eyes could first adore,
+Whose heart could pant for sordid ore.
+Since that devoted thirst began,
+Man has forgot to feel for man;
+The pulse of social life is dead,
+And all its fonder feelings fled!
+War too has sullied Nature's charms,
+For gold provokes the world to arms;
+And oh! the worst of all its arts,
+It renders asunder loving hearts.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXX.[1]
+
+
+'Twas in a mocking dream of night--
+I fancied I had wings as light
+As a young birds, and flew as fleet;
+While Love, around whose beauteous feet,
+I knew not why, hung chains of lead,
+Pursued me, as I trembling fled;
+And, strange to say, as swift as thought,
+Spite of my pinions, I was caught!
+What does the wanton Fancy mean
+By such a strange, illusive scene?
+I fear she whispers to my breast,
+That you, sweet maid, have stolen its rest;
+That though my fancy, for a while,
+Hath hung on many a woman's smile,
+I soon dissolved each passing vow,
+And ne'er was caught by love till now!
+
+
+[1] Barnes imagines from this allegory, that our poet married very late in
+life. But I see nothing in the ode which alludes to matrimony, except it
+be the lead upon the feet of Cupid; and I agree in the opinion of Madame
+Dacier, in her life of the poet, that he was always too fond of pleasure
+to marry.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXXI.[1]
+
+
+Armed with hyacinthine rod,
+(Arms enough for such a god,)
+Cupid bade me wing my pace,
+And try with him the rapid race.
+O'er many a torrent, wild and deep,
+By tangled brake and pendent steep.
+With weary foot I panting flew,
+Till my brow dropt with chilly dew.
+And now my soul, exhausted, dying,
+To my lip was faintly flying;
+And now I thought the spark had fled,
+When Cupid hovered o'er my head,
+And fanning light his breezy pinion,
+Rescued my soul from death's dominion;[2]
+Then said, in accents half-reproving.
+"Why hast thou been a foe to loving?"
+
+
+[1] The design of this little fiction is to intimate, that much greater
+pain attends insensibility than can ever result from the tenderest
+impressions of love.
+
+[2] "The facility with which Cupid recovers him, signifies that the sweets
+of love make us easily forget any solicitudes which he may occasion."--LA
+FOSSE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXXII.[1]
+
+
+Strew me a fragrant bed of leaves,
+Where lotus with the myrtle weaves;
+And while in luxury's dream I sink,
+Let me the balm of Bacchus drink!
+In this sweet hour of revelry
+Young Love shall my attendant be--
+Drest for the task, with tunic round
+His snowy neck and shoulders bound,
+Himself shall hover by my side,
+And minister the racy tide!
+
+ Oh, swift as wheels that kindling roll,
+Our life is hurrying to the goal;
+A scanty dust, to feed the wind,
+Is all the trace 'twill leave behind.
+Then wherefore waste the rose's bloom
+Upon the cold, insensate tomb?
+Can flowery breeze, or odor's breath,
+Affect the still, cold sense of death?
+Oh no; I ask no balm to steep
+With fragrant tears my bed of sleep:
+But now, while every pulse is glowing,
+Now let me breathe the balsam flowing;
+Now let the rose, with blush of fire,
+Upon my brow in sweets expire;
+And bring the nymph whose eye hath power
+To brighten even death's cold hour.
+Yes, Cupid! ere my shade retire,
+To join the blest elysian choir;
+With wine, and love, and social cheer,
+I'll make my own elysium here!
+
+
+[1] We here have the poet, in his true attributes, reclining upon myrtles,
+with Cupid for his cup-bearer. Some interpreters have ruined the picture
+by making [Greek: Eros] the name of his slave. None but Love should fill
+the goblet of Anacreon. Sappho, in one of her fragments, has assigned this
+office to Venus.
+
+ Hither, Venus, queen of kisses.
+ This shall be the night of blisses;
+ This the night, to friendship dear.
+ Thou shalt be our Hebe here.
+ Fill the golden brimmer high,
+ Let it sparkle like thine eye;
+ Bid the rosy current gush.
+ Let it mantle like thy blush.
+ Goddess, hast thou e'er above
+ Seen a feast so rich in love?
+ Not a soul that is not mine!
+ Not a soul that is not thine!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXXIII.
+
+
+'Twas noon of night, when round the pole
+The sullen Bear is seen to roll;
+And mortals, wearied with the day,
+Are slumbering all their cares away;
+An infant, at that dreary hour,
+Came weeping to my silent bower,
+And waked me with a piteous prayer,
+To shield him from the midnight air.
+"And who art thou," I waking cry,
+"That bid'st my blissful visions fly?"
+"Ah, gentle sire!" the infant said,
+"In pity take me to thy shed;
+Nor fear deceit; a lonely child
+I wander o'er the gloomy wild.
+Chill drops the rain, and not a ray
+Illumes the drear and misty way!"
+
+ I heard the baby's tale of woe:
+I heard the bitter night-winds blow;
+And sighing for his piteous fate,
+I trimmed my lamp and oped the gate.
+'Twas Love! the little wandering sprite,
+His pinion sparkled through the night,
+I knew him by his bow and dart;
+I knew him by my fluttering heart.
+Fondly I take him in, and raise
+The dying embers' cheering blaze;
+Press from his dank and clinging hair
+The crystals of the freezing air,
+And in my hand and bosom hold
+His little fingers thrilling cold.
+
+ And now the embers' genial ray,
+Had warmed his anxious fears away;
+"I pray thee," said the wanton child,
+(My bosom trembled as he smiled,)
+"I pray thee let me try my bow,
+For through the rain I've wandered so,
+That much I fear the midnight shower
+Has injured its elastic power."
+The fatal bow the urchin drew;
+Swift from the string the arrow flew;
+As swiftly flew as glancing flame,
+And to my inmost spirit came!
+"Fare thee well," I heard him say
+As laughing wild he winged away,
+"Fare thee well, for now I know
+The rain has not relaxt my bow;
+It still can send a thrilling dart,
+As thou shalt own with all thy heart!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXXIV.[1]
+
+
+Oh thou, of all creation blest,
+Sweet insect, that delight'st to rest
+Upon the wild wood's leafy tops,
+To drink the dew that morning drops,
+And chirp thy song with such a glee,
+That happiest kings may envy thee.
+Whatever decks the velvet field,
+Whate'er the circling seasons yield,
+Whatever buds, whatever blows,
+For thee it buds, for thee it grows.
+Nor yet art thou the peasant's fear,
+To him thy friendly notes are dear;
+For thou art mild as matin dew;
+And still, when summer's flowery hue
+Begins to paint the bloomy plain,
+We hear thy sweet prophetic strain;
+Thy sweet prophetic strain we hear,
+And bless the notes and thee revere!
+The Muses love thy shrilly tone;
+Apollo calls thee all his own;
+'Twas he who gave that voice to thee,
+'Tis he who tunes thy minstrelsy.
+
+ Unworn by age's dim decline,
+The fadeless blooms of youth are thine.
+Melodious insect, child of earth,
+In wisdom mirthful, wise in mirth;
+Exempt from every weak decay,
+That withers vulgar frames away;
+With not a drop of blood to stain,
+The current of thy purer vein;
+So blest an age is past by thee,
+Thou seem'st--a little deity!
+
+
+[1] In a Latin ode addressed to the grasshopper, Rapin has preserved some
+of the thoughts of our author:--
+
+ Oh thou, that on the grassy bed
+ Which Nature's vernal hand has spread,
+ Reclinest soft, and tunest thy song,
+ The dewy herbs and leaves among!
+ Whether thou lyest on springing flowers
+ Drunk with the balmy morning-showers
+ Or, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXXV.[1]
+
+
+Cupid once upon a bed
+Of roses laid his weary head;
+Luckless urchin not to see
+Within the leaves a slumbering bee;
+The bee awaked--with anger wild
+The bee awaked, and stung the child.
+Loud and piteous are his cries;
+To Venus quick he runs, he flies;
+"Oh mother!--I am wounded through--
+I die with pain--in sooth I do!
+Stung by some little angry thing,
+Some serpent on a tiny wing--
+A bee it was--for once, I know,
+I heard a rustic call it so."
+Thus he spoke, and she the while,
+Heard him with a soothing smile;
+Then said, "My infant, if so much
+Thou feel the little wild-bee's touch,
+How must the heart, ah, Cupid be,
+The hapless heart that's stung by thee!"
+
+
+[1] Theocritus has imitated this beautiful ode in his nineteenth idyl; but
+is very inferior, I think, to his original, in delicacy of point and
+naïveté of expression. Spenser, in one of his smaller compositions, has
+sported more diffusely on the same subject. The poem to which I allude
+begins thus:--
+
+ Upon a day, as Love lay sweetly slumbering
+ All in his mother's lap;
+ A gentle bee, with his loud trumpet murmuring,
+ About him flew by hap, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXXVI.[1]
+
+
+If hoarded gold possest the power
+To lengthen life's too fleeting hour,
+And purchase from the hand of death
+A little span, a moment's breath,
+How I would love the precious ore!
+And every hour should swell my store;
+That when death came, with shadowy pinion,
+To waft me to his bleak dominion,
+I might, by bribes, my doom delay,
+And bid him call some distant day.
+But, since not all earth's golden store
+Can buy for us one bright hour more,
+Why should we vainly mourn our fate,
+Or sigh at life's uncertain date?
+Nor wealth nor grandeur can illume
+The silent midnight of the tomb.
+No--give to others hoarded treasures--
+Mine be the brilliant round of pleasures--
+The goblet rich, the board of friends,
+Whose social souls the goblet blends;[2]
+And mine, while yet I've life to live,
+Those joys that love alone can give.
+
+
+[1] Fontenelle has translated this ode, in his dialogue between Anacreon
+and Aristotle in the shades, where, on weighing the merits of both these
+personages, he bestows the prize of wisdom upon the poet.
+
+[2] The goblet rich, the board of friends.
+ Whose social soul the goblet blends.
+
+This communion Of friendship, which sweetened the bowl of Anacreon, has
+not been forgotten by the author of the following scholium, where the
+blessings of life are enumerated with proverbial simplicity:
+
+ Of mortal blessing here the first is health,
+ And next those charms by which the eye we move;
+ The third is wealth, unwounding guiltless wealth,
+ And then, sweet intercourse with those we love!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXXVII.
+
+
+'Twas night, and many a circling bowl
+Had deeply warmed my thirsty soul;
+As lulled in slumber I was laid,
+Bright visions o'er my fancy played.
+With maidens, blooming as the dawn,
+I seemed to skim the opening lawn;
+Light, on tiptoe bathed in dew,
+We flew, and sported as we flew!
+
+ Some ruddy striplings, who lookt on--
+With cheeks that like the wine-god's shone,
+Saw me chasing, free and wild,
+These blooming maids, and slyly smiled;
+Smiled indeed with wanton glee,
+Though none could doubt they envied me.
+And still I flew--and now had caught
+The panting nymphs, and fondly thought
+To gather from each rosy lip
+A kiss that Jove himself might sip--
+When sudden all my dream of joys,
+Blushing nymphs and laughing boys,
+All were gone!--"Alas!" I said,
+Sighing for the illusion fled,
+"Again, sweet sleep, that scene restore,
+Oh! let me dream it o'er and o'er!"[1]
+
+
+[1] Dr. Johnson, in his preface to Shakespeare, animadverting upon the
+commentators of that poet, who pretended, in every little coincidence of
+thought, to detect an imitation of some ancient poet, alludes in the
+following words to the line of Anacreon before us: "I have been told that
+when Caliban, after a pleasing dream says, 'I cried to sleep again,' the
+author imitates Anacreon, who had, like any other man, the same wish on
+the same occasion."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXXVIII.
+
+
+Let us drain the nectared bowl,
+Let us raise the song of soul
+To him, the god who loves so well
+The nectared bowl, the choral swell;
+The god who taught the sons of earth
+To thread the tangled dance of mirth;
+Him, who was nurst with infant Love,
+And cradled in the Paphian grove;
+Him, that the Snowy Queen of Charms
+So oft has fondled in her arms.
+Oh 'tis from him the transport flows,
+Which sweet intoxication knows;
+With him, the brow forgets its gloom,
+And brilliant graces learn to bloom.
+
+ Behold!--my boys a goblet bear,
+Whose sparkling foam lights up the air.
+Where are now the tear, the sigh?
+To the winds they fly, they fly!
+Grasp the bowl; in nectar sinking,
+Man of sorrow, drown thy thinking!
+Say, can the tears we lend to thought
+In life's account avail us aught?
+Can we discern with all our lore,
+The path we've yet to journey o'er?
+Alas, alas, in ways so dark,
+'Tis only wine can strike a spark!
+
+Then let me quaff the foamy tide,
+And through the dance meandering glide;
+Let me imbibe the spicy breath
+Of odors chafed to fragrant death;
+Or from the lips of love inhale
+A more ambrosial, richer gale!
+To hearts that court the phantom Care,
+Let him retire and shroud him there;
+While we exhaust the nectared bowl,
+And swell the choral song of soul
+To him, the god who loves so well
+The nectared bowl, the choral swell!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XXXIX.
+
+
+How I love the festive boy,
+Tripping through the dance of joy!
+How I love the mellow sage,
+Smiling through the veil of age!
+And whene'er this man of years
+In the dance of joy appears,
+Snows may o'er his head be flung,
+But his heart--his heart is young.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XL.
+
+
+I know that Heaven hath sent me here,
+To run this mortal life's career;
+The scenes which I have journeyed o'er,
+Return no more--alas! no more!
+And all the path I've yet to go,
+I neither know nor ask to know.
+Away, then, wizard Care, nor think
+Thy fetters round this soul to link;
+Never can heart that feels with me
+Descend to be a slave to thee!
+And oh! before the vital thrill,
+Which trembles at my heart is still,
+I'll gather Joy's luxuriant flowers,
+And gild with bliss my fading hours;
+Bacchus shall bid my winter bloom,
+And Venus dance me to the tomb!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XLI.
+
+When Spring adorns the dewy scene,
+How sweet to walk the velvet green,
+And hear the west wind's gentle sighs,
+As o'er the scented mead it flies!
+How sweet to mark the pouting vine,
+Ready to burst in tears of wine;
+And with some maid, who breathes but love,
+To walk, at noontide, through the grove,
+Or sit in some cool, green recess--
+Oh, is this not true happiness?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XLII.[1]
+
+
+Yes, be the glorious revel mine,
+Where humor sparkles from the wine.
+Around me, let the youthful choir
+Respond to my enlivening lyre;
+And while the red cup foams along,
+Mingle in soul as well as song.
+Then, while I sit, with flowerets crowned,
+To regulate the goblets round.
+Let but the nymph, our banquet's pride,
+Be seated smiling by my side,
+And earth has not a gift or power
+That I would envy, in that hour.
+Envy!--oh never let its blight
+Touch the gay hearts met here tonight.
+Far hence be slander's sidelong wounds,
+Nor harsh dispute, nor discord's sounds
+Disturb a scene, where all should be
+Attuned to peace and harmony.
+
+ Come, let us hear the harp's gay note
+Upon the breeze inspiring float,
+While round us, kindling into love,
+Young maidens through the light dance move.
+Thus blest with mirth, and love, and peace,
+Sure such a life should never cease!
+
+
+[1] The character of Anacreon is here very strikingly depicted. His love
+of social, harmonized pleasures, is expressed with a warmth, amiable and
+endearing.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XLIII.
+
+
+While our rosy fillets shed
+Freshness o'er each fervid head,
+With many a cup and many a smile
+The festal moments we beguile.
+And while the harp, impassioned flings
+Tuneful rapture from its strings,[1]
+Some airy nymph, with graceful bound,
+Keeps measure to the music's sound;
+Waving, in her snowy hand,
+The leafy Bacchanalian wand,
+Which, as the tripping wanton flies,
+Trembles all over to her sighs.
+A youth the while, with loosened hair,
+Floating on the listless air,
+Sings, to the wild harp's tender tone,
+A tale of woe, alas, his own;
+And oh, the sadness in his sigh.
+As o'er his lips the accents die!
+Never sure on earth has been
+Half so bright, so blest a scene.
+It seems as Love himself had come
+To make this spot his chosen home;--[2]
+And Venus, too, with all her wiles,
+And Bacchus, shedding rosy smiles,
+All, all are here, to hail with me
+The Genius of Festivity!
+
+
+[1] Respecting the barbiton a host of authorities may be collected, which,
+after all, leave us ignorant of the nature of the instrument. There is
+scarcely any point upon which we are so totally uninformed as the music of
+the ancients. The authors extant upon the subject are, I imagine, little
+understood; and certainly if one of their moods was a progression by
+quarter-tones, which we are told was the nature of the enharmonic scale,
+simplicity was by no means the characteristic of their melody; for this is
+a nicety of progression of which modern music is not susceptible. The
+invention of the barbiton is, by Athenaeus, attributed to Anacreon.
+
+[2] The introduction of these deities to the festival is merely
+allegorical. Madame Dacier thinks that the poet describes a masquerade,
+where these deities were personated by the company in masks. The
+translation will conform with either idea.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XLIV.[1]
+
+
+Buds of roses, virgin flowers,
+Culled from Cupid's balmy bowers,
+In the bowl of Bacchus steep,
+Till with crimson drops they weep.
+Twine the rose, the garland twine,
+Every leaf distilling wine;
+Drink and smile, and learn to think
+That we were born to smile and drink.
+Rose, thou art the sweetest flower
+That ever drank the amber shower;
+Rose, thou art the fondest child
+Of dimpled Spring, the wood-nymph wild.
+Even the Gods, who walk the sky,
+Are amorous of thy scented sigh.
+Cupid, too, in Paphian shades,
+His hair with rosy fillets braids,
+When with the blushing sister Graces,
+The wanton winding dance he traces.
+Then bring me, showers of roses bring,
+And shed them o'er me while I sing.
+Or while, great Bacchus, round thy shrine,
+Wreathing my brow with rose and vine,
+I lead some bright nymph through the dance,
+Commingling soul with every glance!
+
+
+[1] This spirited poem is a eulogy on the rose; and again, in the fifty-
+fifth ode, we shall find our author rich in the praises of that flower. In
+a fragment of Sappho, in the romance of Achilles Tatius, to which Barnes
+refers us, the rose is fancifully styled "the eye of flowers;" and the
+same poetess, in another fragment, calls the favors of the Muse "the roses
+of the Pleria."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XLV.
+
+
+Within this goblet, rich and deep,
+I cradle all my woes to sleep.
+Why should we breathe the sigh of fear,
+Or pour the unavailing tear?
+For death will never heed the sigh,
+Nor soften at the tearful eye;
+And eyes that sparkle, eyes that weep,
+Must all alike be sealed in sleep.
+Then let us never vainly stray,
+In search of thorns, from pleasure's way;
+But wisely quaff the rosy wave,
+Which Bacchus loves, which Bacchus gave;
+And in the goblet, rich and deep,
+Cradle our crying woes to sleep.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XLVI.[1]
+
+
+Behold, the young, the rosy Spring,
+Gives to the breeze her scented wing:
+While virgin Graces, warm with May;
+Fling roses o'er her dewy way.
+The murmuring billows of the deep
+Have languished into silent sleep;
+And mark! the flitting sea-birds lave
+Their plumes in the reflecting wave;
+While cranes from hoary winter fly
+To flutter in a kinder sky.
+Now the genial star of day
+Dissolves the murky clouds away;
+And cultured field, and winding stream,
+Are freshly glittering in his beam.
+
+ Now the earth prolific swells
+With leafy buds and flowery bells;
+Gemming shoots the olive twine,
+Clusters ripe festoon the vine;
+All along the branches creeping,
+Through the velvet foliage peeping,
+Little infant fruits we see,
+Nursing into luxury.
+
+
+[1] The fastidious affectation of some commentators has denounced this ode
+as spurious. Degen pronounces the four last lines to be the patch-work of
+some miserable versificator, and Brunck condemns the whole ode. It appears
+to me, on the contrary, to be elegantly graphical: full of delicate
+expressions and luxuriant imagery.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XLVII.
+
+
+'Tis true, my fading years decline,
+Yet can I quaff the brimming wine,
+As deep as any stripling fair,
+Whose cheeks the flush of morning wear;
+And if, amidst the wanton crew,
+I'm called to wind the dance's clue,
+Then shalt thou see this vigorous hand,
+Not faltering on the Bacchant's wand,
+But brandishing a rosy flask,
+The only thyrsus e'er I'll ask![1]
+
+ Let those, who pant for Glory's charms,
+Embrace her in the field of arms;
+While my inglorious, placid soul
+Breathes not a wish beyond this bowl.
+Then fill it high, my ruddy slave,
+And bathe me in its brimming wave.
+For though my fading years decay,
+Though manhood's prime hath past away,
+Like old Silenus, sire divine,
+With blushes borrowed from my wine.
+I'll wanton mid the dancing train,
+And live my follies o'er again!
+
+
+[1] Phornutus assigns as a reason for the consecration of the thyrsus to
+Bacchus, that inebriety often renders the support of a stick very
+necessary.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XLVIII.
+
+
+When my thirsty soul I steep,
+Every sorrow's lulled to sleep.
+Talk of monarchs! I am then
+Richest, happiest, first of men;
+Careless o'er my cup I sing,
+Fancy makes me more than king;
+Gives me wealthy Croesus' store,
+Can I, can I wish for more?
+On my velvet couch reclining,
+Ivy leaves my brow entwining,[1]
+While my soul expands with glee,
+What are kings and crowns to me?
+If before my feet they lay,
+I would spurn them all away;
+Arm ye, arm ye, men of might,
+Hasten to the sanguine fight;
+But let _me_, my budding vine!
+Spill no other blood than thine.
+Yonder brimming goblet see,
+That alone shall vanquish me--
+Who think it better, wiser far
+To fall in banquet than in war,
+
+
+[1] "The ivy was consecrated to Bacchus [says Montfaucon], because he
+formerly lay hid under that tree, or as others will have it, because its
+leaves resemble those of the vine." Other reasons for its consecration,
+and the use of it in garlands at banquets, may be found in Longepierre,
+Barnes, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE XLIX.
+
+
+When Bacchus, Jove's immortal boy,
+The rosy harbinger of joy,
+Who, with the sunshine of the bowl,
+Thaws the winter of our soul--
+When to my inmost core he glides,
+And bathes it with his ruby tides,
+A flow of joy, a lively heat,
+Fires my brain, and wings my feet,
+Calling up round me visions known
+To lovers of the bowl alone.
+
+ Sing, sing of love, let music's sound
+In melting cadence float around,
+While, my young Venus, thou and I
+Responsive to its murmurs sigh.
+Then, waking from our blissful trance,
+Again we'll sport, again we'll dance.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE L.[1]
+
+
+When wine I quaff, before my eyes
+Dreams of poetic glory rise;[2]
+And freshened by the goblet's dews,
+My soul invokes the heavenly Muse,
+When wine I drink, all sorrow's o'er;
+I think of doubts and fears no more;
+But scatter to the railing wind
+Each gloomy phantom of the mind.
+When I drink wine, the ethereal boy,
+Bacchus himself, partakes my joy;
+And while we dance through vernal bowers,
+Whose every breath comes fresh from flowers,
+In wine he makes my senses swim,
+Till the gale breathes of naught but him!
+
+ Again I drink,--and, lo, there seems
+A calmer light to fill my dreams;
+The lately ruffled wreath I spread
+With steadier hand around my head;
+Then take the lyre, and sing "how blest
+The life of him who lives at rest!"
+But then comes witching wine again,
+With glorious woman in its train;
+And, while rich perfumes round me rise,
+That seem the breath of woman's sighs,
+Bright shapes, of every hue and form.
+Upon my kindling fancy swarm,
+Till the whole world of beauty seems
+To crowd into my dazzled dreams!
+When thus I drink, my heart refines,
+And rises as the cup declines;
+Rises in the genial flow,
+That none but social spirits know,
+When, with young revellers, round the bowl,
+The old themselves grow young in soul!
+Oh, when I drink, true joy is mine,
+There's bliss in every drop of wine.
+All other blessings I have known,
+I scarcely dared to call my own;
+But this the Fates can ne'er destroy,
+Till death o'ershadows all my joy.
+
+
+[1] Faber thinks this ode spurious; but, I believe, he is singular in his
+opinion. It has all the spirit of our author. Like the wreath which he
+presented in the dream, "it smells of Anacreon."
+
+[2] Anacreon is not the only one [says Longepierre] whom wine has inspired
+with poetry. We find an epigram in the first book of the "Anthologia,"
+which begins thus:--
+
+ If with water you fill up your glasses,
+ You'll never write anything wise;
+ For wine's the true horse of Parnassus.
+ Which carries a bard to the skies!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LI.
+
+
+Fly not thus my brow of snow,
+Lovely wanton! fly not so.
+Though the wane of age is mine,
+Though youth's brilliant flush be thine,
+Still I'm doomed to sigh for thee,
+Blest, if thou couldst sigh for me!
+See, in yonder flowery braid,
+Culled for thee, my blushing maid,[1]
+How the rose, of orient glow,
+Mingles with the lily's snow;
+Mark, how sweet their tints agree,
+Just, my girl, like thee and me!
+
+
+[1] In the same manner that Anacreon pleads for the whiteness of his
+locks, from the beauty of the color in garlands, a shepherd, in
+Theocritus, endeavors to recommend his black hair.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LII.[1]
+
+
+Away, away, ye men of rules,
+What have I do with schools?
+They'd make me learn, they'd make me think,
+But would they make me love and drink?
+Teach me this, and let me swim
+My soul upon the goblet's brim;
+Teach me this, and let me twine
+Some fond, responsive heart to mine,
+For, age begins to blanch my brow,
+I've time for naught but pleasure now.
+
+ Fly, and cool, my goblet's glow
+At yonder fountain's gelid flow;
+I'll quaff, my boy, and calmly sink
+This soul to slumber as I drink.
+Soon, too soon, my jocund slave,
+You'll deck your master's grassy grave;
+And there's an end--for ah, you know
+They drink but little wine below!
+
+
+[1] "This is doubtless the work of a more modern poet than Anacreon; for
+at the period when he lived rhetoricians were not known."--DEGEN.
+
+Though this ode is found in the Vatican manuscript, I am much inclined to
+agree in this argument against its authenticity: for though the dawnings
+of the art of rhetoric might already have appeared, the first who gave it
+any celebrity was. Corax of Syracuse, and he flourished in the century
+after Anacreon.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LIII.
+
+
+When I behold the festive train
+Of dancing youth, I'm young again!
+Memory wakes her magic trance,
+And wings me lightly through the dance.
+Come, Cybeba, smiling maid!
+Cull the flower and twine the braid;
+Bid the blush of summer's rose
+Burn upon my forehead's snows;
+And let me, while the wild and young
+Trip the mazy dance along,
+Fling my heap of years away,
+And be as wild, as young as they.
+Hither haste, some cordial, soul!
+Help to my lips the brimming bowl;
+And you shall see this hoary sage
+Forget at once his locks and age.
+He still can chant the festive hymn,
+He still can kiss the goblet's brim;[1]
+As deeply quaff, as largely fill,
+And play the fool right nobly still.
+
+
+[1] Wine is prescribed by Galen, as an excellent medicine for old men:
+"_Quod frigidos et humbribus expletos calefaciut_," etc.; but Nature was
+Anacreon's physician.
+
+There is a proverb in Eriphus, as quoted by Athenaeus, which says, "that
+wine makes an old man dance, whether he will or not."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE. LIV.[1]
+
+
+Methinks, the pictured bull we see
+Is amorous Jove--it must be he!
+How fondly blest he seems to bear
+That fairest of Phoenician fair!
+How proud he breasts the foamy tide,
+And spurns the billowy surge aside!
+Could any beast of vulgar vein,
+Undaunted thus defy the main?
+No: he descends from climes above,
+He looks the God, he breathes of Jove!
+
+
+[1] "This ode is written upon., a picture which represented the rape, of
+Europa."--MADAME DACIER.
+
+It may probably have been a description of one of those coins, which the
+Sidonians struck off in honor of Europa, representing a woman carried
+across the sea by a bull. In the little treatise upon the goddess of
+Syria, attributed very' falsely to Lucian, there is mention of this coin,
+and of a temple dedicated by the Sidonians to Astarte, whom some, it
+appears, confounded with Europa.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LV.[1]
+
+
+While we invoke the wreathed spring,
+Resplendent rose! to thee we'll sing;
+Resplendent rose, the flower of flowers,
+Whose breath perfumes the Olympian bowers;
+Whose virgin blush, of chastened dye,
+Enchants so much our mortal eye.
+When pleasure's spring-tide season glows.
+The Graces love to wreathe the rose;
+And Venus, in its fresh-blown leaves,
+An emblem of herself perceives.
+Oft hath the poet's magic tongue
+The rose's fair luxuriance sung;
+And long the Muses, heavenly maids,
+Have reared it in their tuneful shades.
+When, at the early glance of morn,
+It sleeps upon the glittering thorn,
+'Tis sweet to dare the tangled fence
+To cull the timid floweret thence,
+And wipe with tender hand away
+The tear that on its blushes lay!
+'Tis sweet to hold the infant stems,
+Yet dropping with Aurora's gems,
+And fresh inhale the spicy sighs
+That from the weeping buds arise.
+
+ When revel reigns, when mirth is high,
+And Bacchus beams in every eye,
+Our rosy fillets scent exhale,
+And fill with balm the fainting gale.
+There's naught in nature bright or gay,
+Where roses do not shed their ray.
+When morning paints the orient skies,
+Her fingers burn with roseate dyes;[2]
+Young nymphs betray; the Rose's hue,
+O'er whitest arms it kindles thro'.
+In Cytherea's form it glows,
+And mingles with the living snows.
+
+ The rose distils a healing balm,
+The beating pulse of pain to calm;
+Preserves the cold inurnèd clay,[3]
+And mocks the vestige of decay:
+And when, at length, in pale decline,
+Its florid beauties fade and pine,
+Sweet as in youth, its balmy breath
+Diffuses odor even in death!
+Oh! whence could such a plant have sprung?
+Listen,--for thus the tale is sung.
+When, humid, from the silvery stream,
+Effusing beauty's warmest beam,
+Venus appeared, in flushing hues,
+Mellowed by ocean's briny dews;
+When, in the starry courts above,
+The pregnant brain of mighty Jove
+Disclosed the nymph of azure glance,
+The nymph who shakes the martial lance;--
+Then, then, in strange eventful hour,
+The earth produced an infant flower,
+Which sprung, in blushing glories drest.
+And wantoned o'er its parent breast.
+The gods beheld this brilliant birth,
+And hailed the Rose, the boon of earth!
+With nectar drops, a ruby tide,
+The sweetly orient buds they dyed,[4]
+And bade them bloom, the flowers divine
+Of him who gave the glorious vine;
+And bade them on the spangled thorn
+Expand their bosoms to the morn.
+
+
+[1] This ode is a brilliant panegyric on the rose. "All antiquity [says
+Barnes] has produced nothing more beautiful."
+
+From the idea of peculiar excellence, which the ancients attached to this
+flower, arose a pretty proverbial expression, used by Aristophanes,
+according to Suidas "You have spoken roses."
+
+[2] In the original here, he enumerates the many epithets of beauty,
+borrowed from roses, which were used by the poets. We see that poets were
+dignified in Greece with the title of sages: even the careless Anacreon,
+who lived but for love and voluptuousness, was called by Plato the wise
+Anacreon--_fuit haec sapienta quondam_.
+
+[3] He here alludes to the use of the rose in embalming; and, perhaps (as
+Barnes thinks), to the rosy unguent with which Venus anointed the corpse
+of Hector.
+
+[4] The author of the "Pervigilium Veneris" (a poem attributed to
+Catullus, the style of which appears to me to have all the labored
+luxuriance of a much later period) ascribes the tincture of the rose to
+the blood from the wound of Adonis.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LVI.
+
+
+He, who instructs the youthful crew
+To bathe them in the brimmer's dew,
+And taste, uncloyed by rich excesses,
+All the bliss that wine possesses;
+He, who inspires the youth to bound
+Elastic through the dance's round,--
+Bacchus, the god again is here,
+And leads along the blushing year;
+The blushing year with vintage teems,
+Ready to shed those cordial streams,
+Which, sparkling in the cup of mirth,
+Illuminate the sons of earth![1]
+
+Then, when the ripe and vermil wine,--
+Blest infant of the pregnant vine,
+Which now in mellow clusters swells,--
+Oh! when it bursts its roseate cells,
+Brightly the joyous stream shall flow,
+To balsam every mortal woe!
+None shall be then cast down or weak,
+For health and joy shall light each cheek;
+No heart will then desponding sigh,
+For wine shall bid despondence fly.
+Thus--till another autumn's glow
+Shall bid another vintage flow.
+
+
+[1] Madame Dacier thinks that the poet here had the nepenthe of Homer in
+his mind. Odyssey, lib. iv. This nepenthe was a something of exquisite
+charm, infused by Helen into the wine of her guests, which had the power
+of dispelling every anxiety. A French writer, De Mere, conjectures that
+this spell, which made the bowl so beguiling, was the charm of Helen's
+conversation. See Bayle, art. Helène.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LVII[1]
+
+
+Whose was the artist hand that spread
+Upon this disk the ocean's bed?
+And, in a flight of fancy, high
+As aught on earthly wing can fly,
+Depicted thus, in semblance warm,
+The Queen of Love's voluptuous form
+Floating along the silvery sea
+In beauty's naked majesty!
+Oh! he hath given the enamoured sight
+A witching banquet of delight,
+Where, gleaming through the waters clear,
+Glimpses of undreamt charms appear,
+And all that mystery loves to screen,
+Fancy, like Faith, adores unseen.[2]
+
+Light as a leaf, that on the breeze
+Of summer skims the glassy seas,
+She floats along the ocean's breast,
+Which undulates in sleepy rest;
+While stealing on, she gently pillows
+Her bosom on the heaving billows.
+Her bosom, like the dew-washed rose,
+Her neck, like April's sparkling snows,
+Illume the liquid path she traces,
+And burn within the stream's embraces.
+Thus on she moves, in languid pride,
+Encircled by the azure tide,
+As some fair lily o'er a bed
+Of violets bends its graceful head.
+
+Beneath their queen's inspiring glance,
+The dolphins o'er the green sea dance,
+Bearing in triumph young Desire,
+And infant Love with smiles of fire!
+While, glittering through the silver waves,
+The tenants of the briny caves
+Around the pomp their gambols play,
+And gleam along the watery way.
+
+
+[1] This ode is a very animated description of a picture of Venus on a
+discus, which represented the goddess in her first emergence from the
+waves. About two centuries after our poet wrote, the pencil of the artist
+Apelles embellished this subject, in his famous painting of the Venus
+Anadyomene, the model of which, as Pliny informs us, was the beautiful
+Campaspe, given to him by Alexander; though, according to Natalis Comes,
+lib. vii. cap. 16., it was Phryne who sat to Apelles for the face and
+breast of this Venus.
+
+[2] The picture here has all the delicate character of the semi-reducta
+Venus, and affords a happy specimen of what the poetry of passion
+_ought_ to be--glowing but through a veil, and stealing upon the heart
+from concealment. Few of the ancients have attained this modesty of
+description, which, like the golden cloud that hung over Jupiter and Juno,
+is impervious to every beam but that of fancy.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LVIII.
+
+
+When Gold, as fleet as zephyr's' pinion,
+Escapes like any faithless minion,[1]
+And flies me (as he flies me ever),[2]
+Do I pursue him? never, never!
+No, let the false deserter go,
+For who would court his direst foe?
+But when I feel my lightened mind
+No more by grovelling gold confined,
+Then loose I all such clinging cares,
+And cast them to the vagrant airs.
+Then feel I, too, the Muse's spell,
+And wake to life the dulcet shell,
+Which, roused once more, to beauty sings,
+While love dissolves along the strings!
+
+But, scarcely has my heart been taught
+How little Gold deserves a thought,
+When, lo! the slave returns once more,
+And with him wafts delicious store
+Of racy wine, whose genial art
+In slumber seals the anxious heart.
+Again he tries my soul to sever
+From love and song, perhaps forever!
+
+Away, deceiver! why pursuing
+Ceaseless thus my heart's undoing?
+Sweet is the song of amorous fire.
+Sweet the sighs that thrill the lyre;
+Oh! sweeter far than all the gold
+Thy wings can waft, thy mines can hold.
+Well do I know thy arts, thy wiles--
+They withered Love's young wreathèd smiles;
+And o'er his lyre such darkness shed,
+I thought its soul of song was fled!
+They dashed the wine-cup, that, by him,
+Was filled with kisses to the brim.[3]
+Go--fly to haunts of sordid men,
+But come not near the bard again.
+Thy glitter in the Muse's shade,
+Scares from her bower the tuneful maid;
+And not for worlds would I forego
+That moment of poetic glow,
+When my full soul, in Fancy's stream,
+Pours o'er the lyre, its swelling theme.
+Away, away! to worldlings hence,
+Who feel not this diviner sense;
+Give gold to those who love that pest,--
+But leave the poet poor and blest.
+
+
+[1] There is a kind of pun in these words, as Madame Dacier has already
+remarked; for Chrysos, which signifies gold, was also a frequent name for
+a slave. In one of Lucian's dialogues, there is, I think, a similar play
+upon the word, where the followers of Chrysippus are called golden fishes.
+The puns of the ancients are, in general, even more vapid than our own;
+some of the best are those recorded of Diogenes.
+
+[2] This grace of iteration has already been taken notice of. Though
+sometimes merely a playful beauty, it is peculiarly expressive of
+impassioned sentiment, and we may easily believe that it was one of the
+many sources of that energetic sensibility which breathed through the
+style of Sappho.
+
+[3] Horace has _Desiderique temperare poculum_, not figuratively, however,
+like Anacreon, but importng the love-philtres of the witches. By "cups of
+kisses" our poet may allude to a favorite gallantry among the ancients, of
+drinking when the lips of their mistresses had touched the brim;--
+
+ "Or leave a kiss within the cup And I'll not ask for wine."
+
+As In Ben Jonson's translation from Philostratus; and Lucian has a conceit
+upon the same idea, "that you may at once both drink and kiss."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LIX.
+
+
+Ripened by the solar beam,
+Now the ruddy clusters teem,
+In osier baskets borne along
+By all the festal vintage throng
+Of rosy youths and virgins fair,
+Ripe as the melting fruits they bear.
+Now, now they press the pregnant grapes,
+And now the captive stream escapes,
+In fervid tide of nectar gushing.
+And for its bondage proudly blushing
+While, round the vat's impurpled brim,
+The choral song, the vintage hymn
+Of rosy youths and virgins fair,
+Steals on the charmed and echoing air.
+Mark, how they drink, with all their eyes,
+The orient tide that sparkling flies,
+The infant Bacchus, born in mirth,
+While Love stands by, to hail the birth.
+
+When he, whose verging years decline
+As deep into the vale as mine,
+When he inhales the vintage-cup,
+His feet, new-winged, from earth spring up,
+And as he dances, the fresh air
+Plays whispering through his silvery hair.
+Meanwhile young groups whom love invites,
+To joys even rivalling wine's delights,
+Seek, arm in arm, the shadowy grove,
+And there, in words and looks of love,
+Such as fond lovers look and say,
+Pass the sweet moonlight hours away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LX.[1]
+
+
+Awake to life, my sleeping shell,
+To Phoebus let thy numbers swell;
+And though no glorious prize be thine,
+No Pythian wreath around thee twine,
+Yet every hour is glory's hour
+To him who gathers wisdom's flower.
+Then wake thee from thy voiceless slumbers,
+And to the soft and Phrygian numbers,
+Which, tremblingly, my lips repeat,
+Send echoes, from thy chord as sweet.
+'Tis thus the swan, with fading notes,
+Down the Cayster's current floats,
+While amorous breezes linger round,
+And sigh responsive sound for sound.
+
+Muse of the Lyre! illume my dream,
+Thy Phoebus is my fancy's theme;
+And hallowed is the harp I bear,
+And hallowed is the wreath I wear,
+Hallowed by him, the god of lays,
+Who modulates the choral maze.
+I sing the love which Daphne twined
+Around the godhead's yielding mind;
+I sing the blushing Daphne's flight
+From this ethereal son of Light;
+And how the tender, timid maid
+Flew trembling to the kindly shade.
+Resigned a form, alas, too fair,
+Arid grew a verdant laurel there;
+Whose leaves, with sympathetic thrill,
+In terror seemed to tremble still!
+The god pursued, with winged desire;
+And when his hopes were all on fire,
+And when to clasp the nymph he thought,
+A lifeless tree was all he caught;
+And 'stead of sighs that pleasure heaves,
+Heard but the west-wind in the leaves!
+
+But, pause, my soul, no more, no more--
+Enthusiast, whither do I soar?
+This sweetly-maddening dream of soul
+Hath hurried me beyond the goal.
+Why should I sing the mighty darts
+Which fly to wound celestial hearts,
+When ah, the song, with sweeter tone,
+Can tell the darts that wound my own?
+Still be Anacreon, still inspire
+The descant of the Teian lyre:
+Still let the nectared numbers float
+Distilling love in every note!
+And when some youth, whose glowing soul
+Has felt the Paphian star's control,
+When he the liquid lays shall hear,
+His heart will flutter to his ear,
+And drinking there of song divine,
+Banquet on intellectual wine![2]
+
+
+[1] This hymn to Apollo is supposed not to have been written by Anacreon;
+and it is undoubtedly rather a sublimer flight than the Teian wing is
+accustomed to soar. But in a poet of whose works so small a proportion has
+reached us, diversity of style is by no means a safe criterion. If we knew
+Horace but as a satirist, should we easily believe there could dwell such
+animation in his lyre? Suidas says that our poet wrote hymns, and this
+perhaps is one of them. We can perceive in what an altered and imperfect
+state his works are at present, when we find a scholiast upon Horace
+citing an ode from the third book of Anacreon.
+
+[2] Here ends the last of the odes in the Vatican MS., whose authority
+helps to confirm the genuine antiquity of them all, though a few have
+stolen among the number, which we may hesitate in attributing to Anacreon.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXI.[1]
+
+
+Youth's endearing charms are fled;
+Hoary locks deform my head;
+Bloomy graces, dalliance gay,
+All the flowers of life decay.[2]
+Withering age begins to trace
+Sad memorials o'er my face;
+Time has shed its sweetest bloom
+All the future must be gloom.
+This it is that sets me sighing;
+Dreary is the thought of dying![3]
+Lone and dismal is the road,
+Down to Pluto's dark abode;
+And, when once the journey's o'er,
+Ah! we can return no more!
+
+
+[1] The intrusion of this melancholy ode, among the careless levities of
+our poet, reminds us of the skeletons which the Egyptians used to hang up
+in the banquet-rooms, to inculcate a thought of mortality even amidst the
+dissipations of mirth. If it were not for the beauty of its numbers, the
+Teian Muse should disown this ode.
+
+[2] Horace often, with feeling and elegance, deplores the fugacity of
+human enjoyments.
+
+[3] Regnier, a libertine French poet, has written some sonnets on the
+approach of death, full of gloomy and trembling repentance. Chaulieu,
+however, supports more consistently the spirit of the Epicurean
+philosopher. See his poem, addressed to the Marquis de Lafare.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXII.[1]
+
+
+Fill me, boy, as deep a draught,
+As e'er was filled, as e'er was quaffed;
+But let the water amply flow,
+To cool the grape's intemperate glow;[2]
+Let not the fiery god be single,
+But with the nymphs in union mingle.
+For though the bowl's the grave of sadness,
+Ne'er let it be the birth of madness.
+No, banish from our board tonight
+The revelries of rude delight;
+To Scythians leave these wild excesses,
+Ours be the joy that soothes and blesses!
+And while the temperate bowl we wreathe,
+In concert let our voices breathe,
+Beguiling every hour along
+With harmony of soul and song.
+
+
+[1] This ode consists of two fragments, which are to be found in
+Athenaeus, book x., and which Barnes, from the similarity of their
+tendency, has combined into one. I think this a very justifiable liberty,
+and have adopted it in some other fragments of our poet.
+
+[2] It was Amphictyon who first taught the Greeks to mix water with their
+wine; in commemoration of which circumstance they erected altars to
+Bacchus and the nymphs.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXIII.[1]
+
+
+To Love, the soft and blooming child,
+I touch the harp in descant wild;
+To Love, the babe of Cyprian bowers,
+The boy, who breathes and blushes flowers;
+To Love, for heaven and earth adore him,
+And gods and mortals bow before him!
+
+
+[1] "This fragment is preserved in Clemens Alexandrinus, Storm, lib. vi.
+and In Arsenius, Collect. Graec."--BARNES.
+
+It appears to have been the opening of a hymn in praise of Love.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXIV.[1]
+
+
+Haste thee, nymph, whose well-aimed spear
+Wounds the fleeting mountain-deer!
+Dian, Jove's immortal child,
+Huntress of the savage wild!
+Goddess with the sun-bright hair!
+Listen to a people's prayer.
+Turn, to Lethe's river turn,
+There thy vanquished people mourn![2]
+Come to Lethe's wavy shore,
+Tell them they shall mourn no more.
+Thine their hearts, their altars thine;
+Must they, Dian--must they pine?
+
+
+[1] This hymn to Diana is extant in Hephaestion. There is an anecdote of
+our poet, which has led some to doubt whether he ever wrote any odes of
+this kind. It is related by the Scholiast upon Pindar (Isthmionic. od. ii.
+v. 1. as cited by Barnes) that Anaecreon being asked why he addressed all
+his hymns to women, and none to the deities? answered, "Because women are
+my deities."
+
+I have assumed, it will be seen, in reporting this anecdote, the same
+liberty which I have thought it right to take in translating some of the
+odes; and it were to be wished that these little infidelities were always
+allowable in interpreting the writings of the ancients.
+
+[2] Lethe, a river of Iona, according to Strabo, falling into the Meander.
+In its neighborhood was the city called Magnesia, in favor of whose
+inhabitants our poet is supposed to have addressed this supplication to
+Diana. It was written (as Madame Dacier conjectures) on the occasion of
+some battle, in which the Magnesians had been defeated.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXV.[1]
+
+
+Like some wanton filly sporting,
+Maid Of Thrace, thou flyest my courting.
+Wanton filly! tell me why
+Thou trip'st away, with scornful eye,
+And seem'st to think my doating heart
+Is novice in the bridling art?
+Believe me, girl, it is not so;
+Thou'lt find this skilful hand can throw
+The reins around that tender form,
+However wild, however warm.
+Yes--trust me I can tame thy force,
+And turn and wind thee in the course.
+Though, wasting now thy careless hours,
+Thou sport amid the herbs and flowers,
+Soon shalt thou feel the rein's control,
+And tremble at the wished-for goal!
+
+
+[1] This ode, which is addressed to some Thracian girl, exists in
+Heraclides, and has been imitated very frequently by Horace, as all the
+annotators have remarked. Madame Dacier rejects the allegory, which runs
+so obviously through the poem, and supposes it to have been addressed to a
+young mare belonging to Polycrates.
+
+Pierius, in the fourth book of his "Hieroglyphics," cites this ode, and
+informs us that the horse was the hieroglyphical emblem of pride.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXVI.[1]
+
+
+To thee, the Queen of nymphs divine,
+Fairest of all that fairest shine;
+To thee, who rulest with darts of fire
+This world of mortals, young Desire!
+And oh! thou nuptial Power, to thee
+Who bearest of life the guardian key,
+Breathing my soul in fervent praise,
+And weaving wild my votive lays,
+For thee, O Queen! I wake the lyre,
+For thee, thou blushing young Desire,
+And oh! for thee, thou nuptial Power,
+Come, and illume this genial hour.
+
+ Look on thy bride, too happy boy,
+And while thy lambent glance of joy
+Plays over all her blushing charms,
+Delay not, snatch her to thine arms,
+Before the lovely, trembling prey,
+Like a young birdling, wing away!
+Turn, Stratocles, too happy youth,
+Dear to the Queen of amorous truth,
+And dear to her, whose yielding zone
+Will soon resign her all thine own.
+Turn to Myrilla, turn thine eye,
+Breathe to Myrilla, breathe thy sigh.
+To those bewitching beauties turn;
+For thee they blush, for thee they burn.
+
+ Not more the rose, the queen of flowers,
+Outblushes all the bloom of bowers
+Than she unrivalled grace discloses,
+The sweetest rose, where all are roses.
+Oh! may the sun, benignant, shed
+His blandest influence o'er thy bed;
+And foster there an infant tree,
+To bloom like her, and tower like thee!
+
+
+[1] This ode is introduced in the Romance of Theodorus Prodromus, and is
+that kind of epithalamium which was sung like a scolium at the nuptial
+banquet.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXVII.
+
+
+Rich in bliss, I proudly scorn
+The wealth of Amalthea's horn;
+Nor should I ask to call the throne
+Of the Tartessian prince my own;[1]
+To totter through his train of years,
+The victim of declining fears.
+One little hour of joy to me
+Is worth a dull eternity!
+
+
+[1] He here alludes to Arganthonius, who lived, according to Lucian, an
+hundred and fifty years; and reigned, according to Herodotus, eighty.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXVIII.
+
+
+Now Neptune's month our sky deforms,
+The angry night-cloud teems with storms;
+And savage winds, infuriate driven,
+Fly howling in the face of heaven!
+Now, now, my friends, the gathering gloom
+With roseate rays of wine illume:
+And while our wreaths of parsley spread
+Their fadeless foliage round our head,
+Let's hymn the almighty power of wine,
+And shed libations on his shrine!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXIX.
+
+
+They wove the lotus band to deck
+And fan with pensile wreath each neck;
+And every guest, to shade his head,
+Three little fragrant chaplets spread;[1]
+And one was of the Egyptian leaf,
+The rest were roses, fair and brief:
+While from a golden vase profound,
+To all on flowery beds around,
+A Hebe, of celestial shape,
+Poured the rich droppings of the grape!
+
+
+[1] Longepierre, to give an idea of the luxurious estimation in which
+garlands were held by the ancients, relates an anecdote of a courtezan,
+who, in order to gratify three lovers, without leaving cause for Jealousy
+with any of them, gave a kiss to one, let the other drink after her, and
+put a garland on the brow of the third; so that each was satisfied with
+his favor, and flattered himself with the preference.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXX.
+
+
+A broken cake, with honey sweet,
+Is all my spare and simple treat:
+And while a generous bowl I crown
+To float my little banquet down,
+I take the soft, the amorous lyre,
+And sing of love's delicious fire:
+In mirthful measures warm and free,
+I sing, dear maid, and sing for thee!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXXI.
+
+
+With twenty chords my lyre is hung,
+ And while I wake them all for thee,
+Thou, O maiden, wild and young,
+ Disportest in airy levity.
+
+The nursling fawn, that in some shade
+ Its antlered mother leaves behind,
+Is not more wantonly afraid,
+ More timid of the rustling wind!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXXII.
+
+
+Fare thee well, perfidious maid,
+My soul, too long on earth delayed,
+Delayed, perfidious girl, by thee,
+Is on the wing for liberty.
+I fly to seek a kindlier sphere,
+Since thou hast ceased to love me here!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXXIII.
+
+
+Awhile I bloomed, a happy flower,
+Till love approached one fatal hour,
+And made my tender branches feel
+The wounds of his avenging steel.
+Then lost I fell, like some poor willow
+That falls across the wintry billow!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXXIV.
+
+
+Monarch Love, resistless boy,
+With whom the rosy Queen of Joy,
+And nymphs, whose eyes have Heaven's hue,
+Disporting tread the mountain-dew;
+Propitious, oh! receive my sighs,
+Which, glowing with entreaty, rise
+That thou wilt whisper to the breast
+Of her I love thy soft behest:
+And counsel her to learn from thee.
+That lesson thou hast taught to me.
+Ah! if my heart no flattery tell,
+Thou'lt own I've learned that lesson well!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXXV.
+
+
+Spirit of Love, whose locks unrolled,
+Stream on the breeze like floating gold;
+Come, within a fragrant cloud
+Blushing with light, thy votary shroud;
+And, on those wings that sparkling play,
+Waft, oh, waft me hence away!
+Love! my soul is full of thee,
+Alive to all thy luxury.
+But she, the nymph for whom I glow
+The lovely Lesbian mocks my woe;
+Smiles at the chill and hoary hues
+That time upon my forehead strews.
+Alas! I fear she keeps her charms,
+In store for younger, happier arms!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXXVI.
+
+
+Hither, gentle Muse of mine,
+ Come and teach thy votary old
+Many a golden hymn divine,
+ For the nymph with vest of gold.
+
+Pretty nymph, of tender age,
+ Fair thy silky looks unfold;
+Listen to a hoary sage,
+ Sweetest maid with vest of gold!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXXVII.
+
+
+Would that I were a tuneful lyre,
+ Of burnished ivory fair,
+Which, in the Dionysian choir,
+ Some blooming boy should bear!
+
+Would that I were a golden vase.
+ That some bright nymph might hold
+My spotless frame, with blushing grace,
+ Herself as pure as gold!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE LXXVIII.
+
+
+When Cupid sees how thickly now,
+The snows of Time fall o'er my brow,
+Upon his wing of golden light.
+He passes with an eaglet's flight,
+And flitting onward seems to say,
+"Fare thee well, thou'st had thy day!"
+
+Cupid, whose lamp has lent the ray,
+That lights our life's meandering way,
+That God, within this bosom stealing,
+Hath wakened a strange, mingled feeling.
+Which pleases, though so sadly teasing,
+And teases, though so sweetly pleasing!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let me resign this wretched breath
+ Since now remains to me
+No other balm than kindly death,
+ To soothe my misery!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I know thou lovest a brimming measure,
+ And art a kindly, cordial host;
+But let me fill and drink at pleasure--
+ Thus I enjoy the goblet most.
+
+I fear that love disturbs my rest,
+ Yet feel not love's impassioned care;
+I think there's madness in my breast
+ Yet cannot find that madness there!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From dread Leucadia's frowning steep,
+I'll plunge into the whitening deep:
+And there lie cold, to death resigned,
+Since Love intoxicates my mind!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mix me, child, a cup divine,
+Crystal water, ruby wine;
+Weave the frontlet, richly flushing
+O'er my wintry temples blushing.
+Mix the brimmer--Love and I
+Shall no more the contest try.
+Here--upon this holy bowl,
+I surrender all my soul!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONGS FROM THE GREEK ANTHOLOGY.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HERE AT THY TOMB.
+
+BY MELEAGER.
+
+
+Here, at thy tomb, these tears I shed,
+ Tears, which though vainly now they roll,
+Are all love hath to give the dead,
+ And wept o'er thee with all love's soul;--
+
+Wept in remembrance of that light.
+ Which naught on earth, without thee, gives,
+Hope of my heart! now quenched in night,
+ But dearer, dead, than aught that lives.
+
+Where is she? where the blooming bough
+ That once my life's sole lustre made?
+Torn off by death, 'tis withering now,
+ And all its flowers in dust are laid.
+
+Oh earth! that to thy matron breast
+ Hast taken all those angel charms,
+Gently, I pray thee, let her rest,--
+ Gently, as in a mother's arms.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SALE OF CUPID.
+
+BY MELEAGER.
+
+
+Who'll buy a little boy? Look, yonder is he,
+Fast asleep, sly rogue on his mother's knee;
+So bold a young imp 'tisn't safe to keep,
+So I'll part with him now, while he's sound asleep.
+See his arch little nose, how sharp 'tis curled,
+His wings, too, even in sleep unfurled;
+And those fingers, which still ever ready are found
+For mirth or for mischief, to tickle, or wound.
+
+He'll try with his tears your heart to beguile,
+But never you mind--he's laughing all the while;
+For little he cares, so he has his own whim,
+And weeping or laughing are all one to him.
+His eye is as keen as the lightning's flash,
+His tongue like the red bolt quick and rash;
+And so savage is he, that his own dear mother
+Is scarce more safe in his hands than another.
+
+In short, to sum up this darling's praise,
+He's a downright pest in all sorts of ways;
+And if any one wants such an imp to employ,
+He shall have a dead bargain of this little boy.
+But see, the boy wakes--his bright tears flow--
+His eyes seem to ask could I sell him? oh no,
+Sweet child no, no--though so naughty you be,
+You shall live evermore with my Lesbia and me.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO WEAVE A GARLAND FOR THE ROSE.
+
+BY PAUL, THE SILENTIARY.
+
+
+To weave a garland for the rose.
+ And think thus crown'd 'twould lovelier be,
+Were far less vain than to suppose
+ That silks and gems add grace to thee.
+Where is the pearl whose orient lustre
+ Would not, beside thee, look less bright?
+What gold could match the glossy cluster
+ Of those young ringlets full of light?
+
+Bring from the land, where fresh it gleams,
+ The bright blue gem of India's mine,
+And see how soon, though bright its beams,
+ 'Twill pale before one glance of thine:
+Those lips, too, when their sounds have blest us
+ With some divine, mellifluous air,
+Who would not say that Beauty's cestus
+ Had let loose all its witcheries there?
+
+Here, to this conquering host of charms
+ I now give up my spell-bound heart.
+Nor blush to yield even Reason's arms,
+ When thou her bright-eyed conqueror art.
+Thus to the wind all fears are given;
+ Henceforth those eyes alone I see.
+Where Hope, as in her own blue heaven,
+ Sits beckoning me to bliss and thee!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHY DOES SHE SO LONG DELAY?
+
+BY PAUL, THE SILENTIARY.
+
+
+Why does she so long delay?
+ Night is waning fast away;
+Thrice have I my lamp renewed,
+ Watching here in solitude,
+Where can she so long delay?
+ Where, so long delay?
+
+Vainly now have two lamps shone;
+ See the third is nearly gone:
+Oh that Love would, like the ray
+ Of that weary lamp, decay!
+But no, alas, it burns still on,
+ Still, still, burns on.
+
+Gods, how oft the traitress dear
+ Swore, by Venus, she'd be here!
+But to one so false as she
+ What is man or deity?
+Neither doth this proud one fear,--
+ No, neither doth she fear.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TWIN'ST THOU WITH LOFTY WREATH THY BROW?
+
+BY PAUL, THE SILENTIARY.
+
+
+Twin'st thou with lofty wreath thy brow?
+ Such glory then thy beauty sheds,
+I almost think, while awed I bow
+ 'Tis Rhea's self before me treads.
+Be what thou wilt,--this heart
+Adores whate'er thou art!
+
+Dost thou thy loosened ringlets leave,
+ Like sunny waves to wander free?
+Then, such a chain of charms they weave,
+ As draws my inmost soul from me.
+Do what thou wilt,--I must
+Be charm'd by all thou dost!
+
+Even when, enwrapt in silvery veils,
+ Those sunny locks elude the sight,--
+Oh, not even then their glory fails
+ To haunt me with its unseen light.
+Change as thy beauty may,
+It charms in every way.
+
+For, thee the Graces still attend,
+ Presiding o'er each new attire,
+And lending every dart they send
+ Some new, peculiar touch of fire,
+Be what thou wilt,--this heart
+ Adores what'er thou art!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN THE SAD WORD.
+
+BY PAUL, THE SILENTIARY.
+
+
+When the sad word, "Adieu," from my lip is nigh falling,
+ And with it, Hope passes away,
+Ere the tongue hath half breathed it, my fond heart recalling
+ That fatal farewell, bids me stay,
+For oh! 'tis a penance so weary
+ One hour from thy presence to be,
+That death to this soul were less dreary,
+ Less dark than long absence from thee.
+
+Thy beauty, like Day, o'er the dull world breaking.
+ Brings life to the heart it shines o'er,
+And, in mine, a new feeling of happiness waking,
+ Made light what was darkness before.
+But mute is the Day's sunny glory,
+While thine hath a voice, on whose breath,
+ More sweet than the Syren's sweet story,
+My hopes hang, through life and through death!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MY MOPSA IS LITTLE.
+
+BY PHILODEMUS.
+
+
+My Mopsa is little, my Mopsa is brown,
+But her cheek is as smooth as the peach's soft down,
+ And, for blushing, no rose can come near her;
+In short, she has woven such nets round my heart,
+That I ne'er from my dear little Mopsa can part,--
+ Unless I can find one that's dearer.
+
+Her voice hath a music that dwells on the ear,
+And her eye from its orb gives a daylight so clear,
+ That I'm dazzled whenever I meet her;
+Her ringlets, so curly, are Cupid's own net,
+And her lips, oh their sweetness I ne'er shall forget--
+ Till I light upon lips that are sweeter.
+
+But 'tis not her beauty that charms me alone,
+'Tis her mind, 'tis that language whose eloquent tone
+ From the depths of the grave could revive one:
+In short, here I swear, that if death were her doom,
+I would instantly join my dead love in the tomb--
+ Unless I could meet with a live
+
+
+
+
+
+
+STILL, LIKE DEW IN SILENCE FALLING.
+
+BY MELEAGER.
+
+
+Still, like dew in silence falling,
+ Drops for thee the nightly tear
+Still that voice the past recalling,
+ Dwells, like echo, on my ear,
+ Still, still!
+
+Day and night the spell hangs o'er me,
+ Here forever fixt thou art:
+As thy form first shone before me,
+ So 'tis graven on this heart,
+ Deep, deep!
+
+Love, oh Love, whose bitter sweetness,
+ Dooms me to this lasting pain.
+Thou who earnest with so much fleetness,
+Why so slow to go again?
+ Why? why?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+UP, SAILOR BOY, 'TIS DAY.
+
+
+Up, sailor boy, 'tis day!
+ The west wind blowing,
+ The spring tide flowing,
+Summon thee hence away.
+Didst thou not hear yon soaring swallow sing?
+Chirp, chirp,--in every note he seemed to say
+'Tis Spring, 'tis Spring.
+Up boy, away,--
+Who'd stay on land to-day?
+ The very flowers
+ Would from their bowers
+Delight to wing away!
+
+Leave languid youths to pine
+ On silken pillows;
+ But be the billows
+Of the great deep thine.
+Hark, to the sail the breeze sings, "Let us fly;"
+While soft the sail, replying to the breeze,
+Says, with a yielding sigh,
+"Yes, where you; please."
+Up, boy, the wind, the ray,
+ The blue sky o'er thee,
+ The deep before thee,
+All cry aloud, "Away!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IN MYRTLE WREATHS.
+
+BY ALCAEUS.
+
+
+In myrtle wreaths my votive sword I'll cover,
+ Like them of old whose one immortal blow
+Struck off the galling fetters that hung over
+ Their own bright land, and laid her tyrant low.
+Yes, loved Harmodius, thou'rt undying;
+ Still midst the brave and free,
+In isles, o'er ocean lying,
+ Thy home shall ever be.
+
+In myrtle leaves my sword shall hide its lightning,
+ Like his, the youth, whose ever-glorious blade
+Leapt forth like flame, the midnight banquet brightening;'
+ And in the dust a despot victim laid.
+Blest youths; how bright in Freedom's story
+ Your wedded names shall be;
+A tyrant's death your glory,
+ Your meed, a nation free!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+JUVENILE POEMS.
+
+1801.
+
+
+
+
+TO JOSEPH ATKINSON, ESQ.
+
+MY DEAR SIR,
+
+
+I feel a very sincere pleasure in dedicating to you the Second Edition of
+our friend LITTLE'S Poems. I am not unconscious that there are many in the
+collection which perhaps it would be prudent to have altered or omitted;
+and, to say the truth, I more than once revised them for that purpose;
+but, I know not why, I distrusted either my heart or my judgment; and the
+consequence is you have them in their original form:
+
+ _non possunt nostros multae, Faustine, liturae
+ emendare jocos; una litura potest_.
+
+I am convinced, however, that, though not quite a _casuiste relâché_, you
+have charity enough to forgive such inoffensive follies: you know that the
+pious Beza was not the less revered for those sportive Juvenilia which he
+published under a fictitious name; nor did the levity of Bembo's poems
+prevent him from making a very good cardinal.
+
+Believe me, my dear friend.
+
+With the truest esteem,
+
+Yours,
+
+T. M.
+
+_April 19, 1802_
+
+
+
+
+
+
+JUVENILE POEMS
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FRAGMENTS OF COLLEGE EXERCISES.
+
+
+ _Nobilitas sola est atque unica virtus_.--JUV.
+
+
+Mark those proud boasters of a splendid line,
+Like gilded ruins, mouldering while they shine,
+How heavy sits that weight, of alien show,
+Like martial helm upon an infant's brow;
+Those borrowed splendors whose contrasting light
+Throws back the native shades in deeper night.
+
+Ask the proud train who glory's train pursue,
+Where are the arts by which that glory grew?
+The genuine virtues with that eagle-gaze
+Sought young Renown in all her orient blaze!
+Where is the heart by chymic truth refined,
+The exploring soul whose eye had read mankind?
+Where are the links that twined, with heavenly art,
+His country's interest round the patriot's heart?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Justum bellum quibus necessarium, et pia arma quibus nulla nisi in
+ armis relinquitur spes_.--LIVY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Is there no call, no consecrating cause
+Approved by Heav'n, ordained by nature's laws,
+Where justice flies the herald of our way,
+And truth's pure beams upon the banners play?
+
+Yes, there's a call sweet as an angel's breath
+To slumbering babes or innocence in death;
+And urgent as the tongue of Heaven within,
+When the mind's balance trembles upon sin.
+
+Oh! 'tis our country's voice, whose claim should meet
+An echo in the soul's most deep retreat;
+Along the heart's responding chords should run,
+Nor let a tone there vibrate--but the one!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+VARIETY.
+
+
+Ask what prevailing, pleasing power
+ Allures the sportive, wandering bee
+To roam untired, from flower to flower,
+ He'll tell you, 'tis variety.
+
+Look Nature round; her features trace,
+ Her seasons, all her changes see;
+And own, upon Creation's face,
+ The greatest charm's variety.
+
+For me, ye gracious powers above!
+ Still let me roam, unfixt and free;
+In all things,--but the nymph I love
+ I'll change, and taste variety.
+
+But, Patty, not a world of charms
+ Could e'er estrange my heart from thee;--
+No, let me ever seek those arms.
+ There still I'll find variety.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO A BOY, WITH A WATCH,
+
+WRITTEN FOR A FRIEND
+
+
+Is it not sweet, beloved youth,
+ To rove through Erudition's bowers,
+And cull the golden fruits of truth,
+ And gather Fancy's brilliant flowers?
+
+And is it not more sweet than this,
+ To feel thy parents' hearts approving,
+And pay them back in sums of bliss
+ The dear, the endless debt of loving?
+
+It must be so to thee, my youth;
+ With this idea toil is lighter;
+This sweetens all the fruits of truth,
+ And makes the flowers of fancy brighter.
+
+The little gift we send thee, boy,
+ May sometimes teach thy soul to ponder,
+If indolence or siren joy
+ Should ever tempt that soul to wander.
+
+'Twill tell thee that the wingèd day
+ Can, ne'er be chain'd by man's endeavor;
+That life and time shall fade away,
+ While heaven and virtue bloom forever!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+If I swear by that eye, you'll allow,
+ Its look is so shifting and new,
+That the oath I might take on it now
+ The very next glance would undo.
+
+Those babies that nestle so sly
+ Such thousands of arrows have got,
+That an oath, on the glance of an eye
+ Such as yours, may be off in a shot.
+
+Should I swear by the dew on your lip,
+ Though each moment the treasure renews,
+If my constancy wishes to trip,
+ I may kiss off the oath when I choose.
+
+Or a sigh may disperse from that flower;
+ Both the dew and the oath that are there;
+And I'd make a new vow every hour,
+ To lose them so sweetly in air.
+
+But clear up the heaven of your brow,
+ Nor fancy my faith is a feather;
+On my heart I will pledge you my vow,
+ And they both must be broken together!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .......
+
+
+Remember him thou leavest behind,
+ Whose heart is warmly bound to thee,
+Close as the tenderest links can bind
+ A heart as warm as heart can be.
+
+Oh! I had long in freedom roved,
+ Though many seemed my soul to snare;
+'Twas passion when I thought I loved,
+ 'Twas fancy when I thought them fair.
+
+Even she, my muse's early theme,
+ Beguiled me only while she warmed;
+Twas young desire that fed the dream,
+ And reason broke what passion formed.
+
+But thou-ah! better had it been
+ If I had still in freedom roved,
+If I had ne'er thy beauties seen,
+ For then I never should have loved.
+
+Then all the pain which lovers feel
+ Had never to this heart been known;
+But then, the joys that lovers steal,
+ Should _they_ have ever been my own?
+
+Oh! trust me, when I swear thee this,
+ Dearest! the pain of loving thee,
+The very pain is sweeter bliss
+ Than passion's wildest ecstasy.
+
+That little cage I would not part,
+ In which my soul is prisoned now,
+For the most light and winged heart
+ That wantons on the passing vow.
+
+Still, my beloved! still keep in mind,
+ However far removed from me,
+That there is one thou leavest behind,
+ Whose heart respires for only thee!
+
+And though ungenial ties have bound
+ Thy fate unto another's care,
+That arm, which clasps thy bosom round,
+ Cannot confine the heart that's there.
+
+No, no! that heart is only mine
+ By ties all other ties above,
+For I have wed it at a shrine
+ Where we have had no priest but Love.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+When Time who steals our years away
+ Shall steal our pleasures too,
+The memory of the past will stay
+ And half our joys renew,
+Then, Julia, when thy beauty's flower
+ Shall feel the wintry air,
+Remembrance will recall the hour
+ When thou alone wert fair.
+Then talk no more of future gloom;
+ Our joys shall always last;
+For Hope shall brighten days to come,
+ And Memory gild the past.
+
+Come, Chloe, fill the genial bowl,
+ I drink to Love and thee:
+Thou never canst decay in soul,
+ Thou'lt still be young for me.
+And as thy; lips the tear-drop chase,
+ Which on my cheek they find,
+So hope shall steal away the trace
+ That sorrow leaves behind.
+Then fill the bowl--away with gloom!
+ Our joys shall always last;
+For Hope shall brighten days to come,
+ And Memory gild the past.
+
+But mark, at thought of future years
+ When love shall lose its soul,
+My Chloe drops her timid tears,
+ They mingle with my bowl.
+How like this bowl of wine, my fair,
+ Our loving life shall fleet;
+Though tears may sometimes mingle there,
+ The draught will still be sweet.
+Then fill the cup--away with gloom!
+ Our joys shall always last;
+For Hope will brighten days to come,
+ And Memory gild the past.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Have you not seen the timid tear,
+ Steal trembling from mine eye?
+Have you not marked the flush of fear,
+ Or caught the murmured sigh?
+And can you think my love is chill,
+ Nor fixt on you alone?
+And can you rend, by doubting still,
+ A heart so much your own?
+
+To you my soul's affections move,
+ Devoutly, warmly true;
+My life has been a task of love,
+ One long, long thought of you.
+If all your tender faith be o'er,
+ If still my truth you'll try;
+Alas, _I_ know but _one_ proof more--
+ I'll bless your name, and die!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+REUBEN AND ROSE.
+
+A TALE OF ROMANCE.
+
+
+The darkness that hung upon Willumberg's walls
+ Had long been remembered with awe and dismay;
+For years not a sunbeam had played in its halls,
+ And it seemed as shut out from the regions of day.
+
+Though the valleys were brightened by many a beam,
+ Yet none could the woods of that castle illume;
+And the lightning which flashed on the neighboring stream
+ Flew back, as if fearing to enter the gloom!
+
+"Oh! when shall this horrible darkness disperse!"
+ Said Willumberg's lord to the Seer of the Cave;--
+"It can never dispel," said the wizard of verse,
+ "Till the bright star of chivalry sinks in the wave!"
+
+And who was the bright star of chivalry then?
+ Who _could_ be but Reuben, the flower of the age?
+For Reuben was first in the combat of men,
+ Though Youth had scarce written his name on her page.
+
+For Willumberg's daughter his young heart had beat,
+ For Rose, who was bright as the spirit of dawn,
+When with wand dropping diamonds, and silvery feet,
+ It walks o'er the flowers of the mountain and lawn.
+
+Must Rose, then, from Reuben so fatally sever?
+ Sad, sad were the words of the Seer of the Cave,
+That darkness should cover that castle forever,
+ Or Reuben be sunk in the merciless wave!
+
+To the wizard she flew, saying, "Tell me, oh, tell?
+ Shall my Reuben no more be restored to my eyes?"
+"Yes, yes--when a spirit shall toll the great bell
+ Of the mouldering abbey, your Reuben shall rise!"
+
+Twice, thrice he repeated "Your Reuben shall rise!"
+ And Rose felt a moment's release from her pain;
+And wiped, while she listened, the tears from her eyes.
+ And hoped she might yet see her hero again.
+
+That hero could smite at the terrors of death,
+ When he felt that he died for the sire of his Rose;
+To the Oder he flew, and there, plunging beneath,
+ In the depth of the billows soon found his repose.--
+
+How strangely the order of destiny falls!
+ Not long in the waters the warrior lay,
+When a sunbeam was seen to glance over the walls,
+ And the castle of Willumberg basked in the ray!
+
+All, all but the soul of the maid was in light,
+ There sorrow and terror lay gloomy and blank:
+Two days did she wander, and all the long night,
+ In quest of her love, on the wide river's bank.
+
+Oft, oft did she pause for the toll of the bell,
+ And heard but the breathings of night in the air;
+Long, long did she gaze on the watery swell,
+ And saw but the foam of the white billow there.
+
+And often as midnight its veil would undraw,
+ As she looked at the light of the moon in the stream,
+She thought 'twas his helmet of silver she saw,
+ As the curl of the surge glittered high in the beam.
+
+And now the third night was begemming the sky;
+ Poor Rose, on the cold dewy margent reclined,
+There wept till the tear almost froze in her eye,
+ When--hark!--'twas the bell that came deep in the wind!
+
+She startled, and saw, through the glimmering shade,
+ A form o'er the waters in majesty glide;
+She knew 'twas her love, though his cheek was decayed,
+And his helmet of silver was washed by the tide.
+
+Was this what the Seer of the Cave had foretold?--
+ Dim, dim through the phantom the moon shot a gleam;
+'Twas Reuben, but, ah! he was deathly and cold,
+ And fleeted away like the spell of a dream!
+
+Twice, thrice did he rise, and as often she thought
+ From the bank to embrace him, but vain her endeavor!
+Then, plunging beneath, at a billow she caught,
+ And sunk to repose on its bosom forever!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DID NOT.
+
+
+'Twas a new feeling--something more
+Than we had dared to own before.
+ Which then we hid not;
+We saw it in each other's eye,
+And wished, in every half-breathed sigh,
+ To speak, but did not.
+
+She felt my lips' impassioned touch--
+'Twas the first time I dared so much,
+ And yet she chid not;
+But whispered o'er my burning brow,
+"Oh! do you doubt I love you now?"
+ Sweet soul! I did not.
+
+Warmly I felt her bosom thrill,
+I prest it closer, closer still,
+ Though gently bid not;
+Till--oh! the world hath seldom heard
+Of lovers, who so nearly erred,
+ And yet, who did not.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .......
+
+
+That wrinkle, when first I espied it,
+ At once put my heart out of pain;
+Till the eye, that was glowing beside it,
+ Disturbed my ideas again.
+
+Thou art just in the twilight at present,
+ When woman's declension begins;
+When, fading from all that is pleasant,
+ She bids a good night to her sins.
+
+Yet thou still art so lovely to me,
+ I would sooner, my exquisite mother!
+Repose in the sunset of thee,
+ Than bask in the noon of another.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MRS. .......
+
+ON SOME CALUMNIES AGAINST HER CHARACTER.
+
+
+Is not thy mind a gentle mind?
+Is not that heart a heart refined?
+Hast thou not every gentle grace,
+We love in woman's mind and face?
+And, oh! art _thou_ a shrine for Sin
+To hold her hateful worship in?
+
+No, no, be happy--dry that tear--
+Though some thy heart hath harbored near,
+May now repay its love with blame;
+Though man, who ought to shield thy fame,
+Ungenerous man, be first to shun thee;
+Though all the world look cold upon thee,
+Yet shall thy pureness keep thee still
+Unharmed by that surrounding chill;
+Like the famed drop, in crystal found,[1]
+Floating, while all was frozen round,--
+Unchilled unchanging shalt thou be,
+Safe in thy own sweet purity.
+
+
+[1] This alludes to a curious gem, upon which Claudian has left
+us some very elaborate epigrams. It was a drop of pure water enclosed
+within a piece of crystal. Addison mentions a curiosity of this kind at
+Milan; and adds; "It is such a rarity as this that I saw at Vendöme in
+France, which they there pretend is a tear that our Saviour shed over
+Lazarus, and was gathered up by an angel, who put it into a little crystal
+vial, and made a present of it to Mary Magdalen".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ANACREONTIC.
+
+
+ --_in lachrymas verterat omne merum_.
+ TIB. lib. i. eleg. 5.
+
+
+Press the grape, and let it pour
+Around the board its purple shower:
+And, while the drops my goblet steep,
+I'll think in woe the clusters weep.
+
+Weep on, weep on, my pouting vine!
+Heaven grant no tears, but tears of wine.
+Weep on; and, as thy sorrows flow,
+I'll taste the luxury of woe.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .......
+
+
+When I loved you, I can't but allow
+ I had many an exquisite minute;
+But the scorn that I feel for you now
+ Hath even more luxury in it.
+
+Thus, whether we're on or we're off,
+ Some witchery seems to await you;
+To love you was pleasant enough,
+ And, oh! 'tis delicious hate you!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO JULIA.
+
+IN ALLUSION TO SOME ILLIBERAL CRITICISMS.
+
+
+Why, let the stingless critic chide
+With all that fume of vacant pride
+Which mantles o'er the pendant fool,
+Like vapor on a stagnant pool.
+Oh! if the song, to feeling true,
+Can please the elect, the sacred few,
+Whose souls, by Taste and Nature taught,
+Thrill with the genuine pulse of thought--
+If some fond feeling maid like thee,
+The warm-eyed child of Sympathy,
+Shall say, while o'er my simple theme
+She languishes in Passion's dream,
+"He was, indeed, a tender soul--
+ No critic law, no chill control,
+ Should ever freeze, by timid art,
+ The flowings of so fond a heart!"
+Yes, soul of Nature! soul of Love!
+That, hovering like a snow-winged dove,
+Breathed o'er my cradle warblings wild,
+And hailed me Passion's warmest child,--
+Grant me the tear from Beauty's eye,
+From Feeling's breast the votive sigh;
+Oh! let my song, my memory find,
+A shrine within the tender mind!
+And I will smile when critics chide,
+And I will scorn the fume of pride
+Which mantles o'er the pendant fool,
+Like vapor round some stagnant pool!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO JULIA.
+
+
+Mock me no more with Love's beguiling dream,
+ A dream, I find, illusory as sweet:
+One smile of friendship, nay, of cold esteem,
+ Far dearer were than passion's bland deceit!
+
+I've heard you oft eternal truth declare;
+ Your heart was only mine, I once believed.
+Ah! shall I say that all your vows were air?
+ And _must_ I say, my hopes were all deceived?
+
+Vow, then, no longer that our souls are twined
+ That all our joys are felt with mutual zeal;
+Julia!--'tis pity, pity makes you kind;
+ You know I love, and you would _seem_ to feel.
+
+But shall I still go seek within those arms
+ A joy in which affection takes no part?
+No, no, farewell! you give me but your charms,
+ When I had fondly thought you gave your heart.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SHRINE.
+
+TO .......
+
+
+My fates had destined me to rove
+A long, long pilgrimage of love;
+And many an altar on my way
+Has lured my pious steps to stay;
+For if the saint was young and fair,
+I turned, and sung my vespers there.
+This, from a youthful pilgrim's fire,
+Is what your pretty saints require:
+To pass, nor tell a single bead,
+With them would be profane indeed!
+But, trust me, all this young devotion
+Was but to keep my zeal in motion;
+And, every humbler altar past,
+I now have reached THE SHRINE at last!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO A LADY,
+
+WITH SOME MANUSCRIPT POEMS,
+
+ON LEAVING THE COUNTRY.
+
+
+When, casting many a look behind,
+ I leave the friends I cherish here--
+Perchance some other friends to find,
+ But surely finding none so dear--
+
+Haply the little simple page,
+ Which votive thus I've traced for thee,
+May now and then a look engage,
+ And steal one moment's thought for me.
+
+But, oh! in pity let not those
+ Whose hearts are not of gentle mould,
+Let not the eye that seldom flows
+ With feeling's tear, my song behold.
+
+For, trust me, they who never melt
+ With pity, never melt with love;
+And such will frown at all I've felt,
+ And all my loving lays reprove.
+
+But if, perhaps, some gentler mind,
+ Which rather loves to praise than blame,
+Should in my page an interest find.
+ And linger kindly on my name;
+
+Tell him--or, oh! if, gentler still,
+ By female lips my name be blest:
+For where do all affections thrill
+ So sweetly as in woman's breast?--
+
+Tell her, that he whose loving themes
+ Her eye indulgent wanders o'er,
+Could sometimes wake from idle dreams,
+ And bolder flights of fancy soar;
+
+That Glory oft would claim the lay,
+ And Friendship oft his numbers move;
+But whisper then, that, "sooth to say,
+ His sweetest song was given to Love!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO JULIA.
+
+
+Though Fate, my girl, may bid us part,
+ Our souls it cannot, shall not sever;
+The heart will seek its kindred heart,
+ And cling to it as close as ever.
+
+But must we, must we part indeed?
+ Is all our dream of rapture over?
+And does not Julia's bosom bleed
+ To leave so dear, so fond a lover?
+
+Does _she_, too, mourn?--Perhaps she may;
+ Perhaps she mourns our bliss so fleeting;
+But why is Julia's eye so gay,
+ If Julia's heart like mine is beating?
+
+I oft have loved that sunny glow
+ Of gladness in her blue eye beaming--
+But can the bosom bleed with woe
+ While joy is in the glances beaming?
+
+No, no!--Yet, love, I will not chide;
+ Although your heart _were_ fond of roving,
+Nor that, nor all the world beside
+ Could keep your faithful boy from loving.
+
+You'll soon be distant from his eye,
+ And, with you, all that's worth possessing.
+Oh! then it will be sweet to die,
+ When life has lost its only blessing!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .......
+
+
+Sweet lady, look not thus again:
+ Those bright, deluding smiles recall
+A maid remember'd now with pain,
+ Who was my love, my life, my all!
+
+Oh! while this heart bewildered took
+ Sweet poison from her thrilling eye,
+Thus would she smile and lisp and look,
+ And I would hear and gaze and sigh!
+
+Yes, I did love her--wildly love--
+ She was her sex's best deceiver!
+And oft she swore she'd never rove--
+ And I was destined to believe her!
+
+Then, lady, do not wear the smile
+ Of one whose smile could thus betray;
+Alas! I think the lovely wile
+ Again could steal my heart away.
+
+For, when those spells that charmed my mind
+ On lips so pure as thine I see,
+I fear the heart which she resigned
+ Will err again and fly to thee!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NATURE'S LABELS.
+
+A FRAGMENT.
+
+
+In vain we fondly strive to trace
+The soul's reflection in the face;
+In vain we dwell on lines and crosses,
+Crooked mouth or short proboscis;
+Boobies have looked as wise and bright
+As Plato or the Stagirite:
+And many a sage and learned skull
+Has peeped through windows dark and dull.
+Since then, though art do all it can,
+We ne'er can reach the inward man,
+Nor (howsoe'er "learned Thebans" doubt)
+The inward woman, from without,
+Methinks 'twere well if nature could
+(And Nature could, if Nature would)
+Some pithy, short descriptions write
+On tablets large, in black and white,
+Which she might hang about our throttles,
+Like labels upon physic-bottles;
+And where all men might read--but stay--
+As dialectic sages say,
+The argument most apt and ample
+For common use is the example.
+For instance, then, if Nature's care
+Had not portrayed, in lines so fair,
+The inward soul of Lucy Lindon.
+_This_ is the label she'd have pinned on.
+
+LABEL FIRST.
+
+Within this form there lies enshrined
+The purest, brightest gem of mind.
+Though Feeling's hand may sometimes throw
+Upon its charms the shade of woe,
+The lustre of the gem, when veiled,
+Shall be but mellowed, not concealed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now, sirs, imagine, if you're able,
+That Nature wrote a second label,
+They're her own words--at least suppose so--
+And boldly pin it on Pomposo.
+
+LABEL SECOND.
+
+When I composed the fustian brain
+Of this redoubted Captain Vain.
+I had at hand but few ingredients,
+And so was forced to use expedients.
+I put therein some small discerning,
+A grain of sense, a grain of learning;
+And when I saw the void behind,
+I filled it up with--froth and wind!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO JULIA
+
+ON HER BIRTHDAY.
+
+
+When Time was entwining the garland of years,
+ Which to crown my beloved was given,
+Though some of the leaves might be sullied with tears,
+ Yet the flowers were all gathered in heaven.
+
+And long may this garland be sweet to the eye,
+ May its verdure forever be new;
+Young Love shall enrich it with many a sigh,
+ And Sympathy nurse it with dew.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A REFLECTION AT SEA.
+
+
+See how, beneath the moonbeam's smile,
+ Yon little billow heaves its breast,
+And foams and sparkles for awhile,--
+ Then murmuring subsides to rest.
+
+Thus man, the sport of bliss and care,
+ Rises on time's eventful sea:
+And, having swelled a moment there,
+ Thus melts into eternity!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CLORIS AND FANNY.
+
+
+Cloris! if I were Persia's king,
+ I'd make my graceful queen of thee;
+While FANNY, wild and artless thing,
+ Should but thy humble handmaid be.
+
+There is but _one_ objection in it--
+ That, verily, I'm much afraid
+I should, in some unlucky minute,
+ Forsake the mistress for the maid.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SHIELD.
+
+
+Say, did you not hear a voice of death!
+ And did you not mark the paly form
+Which rode on the silvery mist of the heath,
+ And sung a ghostly dirge in the storm?
+
+Was it the wailing bird of the gloom,
+ That shrieks on the house of woe all night?
+Or a shivering fiend that flew to a tomb,
+ To howl and to feed till the glance of light?
+
+'Twas _not_ the death-bird's cry from the wood,
+ Nor shivering fiend that hung on the blast;
+'Twas the shade of Helderic--man of blood--
+ It screams for the guilt of days that are past.
+
+See, how the red, red lightning strays,
+ And scares the gliding ghosts of the heath!
+Now on the leafless yew it plays,
+ Where hangs the shield of this son of death.
+
+That shield is blushing with murderous stains;
+ Long has it hung from the cold yew's spray;
+It is blown by storms and washed by rains,
+ But neither can take the blood away!
+
+Oft by that yew, on the blasted field,
+ Demons dance to the red moon's light;
+While the damp boughs creak, and the swinging shield
+ Sings to the raving spirit of night!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO JULIA WEEPING.
+
+
+Oh! if your tears are given to care,
+ If real woe disturbs your peace,
+Come to my bosom, weeping fair!
+ And I will bid your weeping cease.
+
+But if with Fancy's visioned fears,
+ With dreams of woe your bosom thrill;
+You look so lovely in your tears,
+ That I must bid you drop them still.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DREAMS.
+
+TO ... ....
+
+
+In slumber, I prithee how is it
+ That souls are oft taking the air,
+And paying each other a visit,
+ While bodies are heaven knows where?
+
+Last night, 'tis in vain to deny it,
+ Your soul took a fancy to roam,
+For I heard her, on tiptoe so quiet,
+ Come ask, whether _mine_ was at home.
+
+And mine let her in with delight,
+ And they talked and they laughed the time through;
+For, when souls come together at night,
+ There is no saying what they mayn't do!
+
+And _your_ little Soul, heaven bless her!
+ Had much to complain and to say,
+Of how sadly you wrong and oppress her
+ By keeping her prisoned all day.
+
+"If I happen," said she, "but to steal
+ "For a peep now and then to her eye,
+"Or, to quiet the fever I feel,
+ "Just venture abroad on a sigh;
+
+"In an instant she frightens me in
+ "With some phantom of prudence or terror,
+"For fear I should stray into sin,
+ "Or, what is still worse, into error!
+
+"So, instead of displaying my graces,
+ "By daylight, in language and mien,
+"I am shut up in corners and places,
+ "Where truly I blush to be seen!"
+
+Upon hearing this piteous confession,
+ _My_ Soul, looking tenderly at her,
+Declared, as for grace and discretion,
+ He did not know much of the matter;
+
+"But, to-morrow, sweet Spirit!" he said,
+ "Be at home, after midnight, and then
+"I will come when your lady's in bed,
+ "And we'll talk o'er the subject again."
+
+So she whispered a word in his ear,
+ I suppose to her door to direct him,
+And, just after midnight, my dear,
+ Your polite little Soul may expect him.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO ROSA.
+
+WRITTEN DURING ILLNESS.
+
+
+The wisest soul, by anguish torn,
+ Will soon unlearn the lore it knew;
+And when the shrining casket's worn,
+ The gem within will tarnish too.
+
+But love's an essence of the soul,
+ Which sinks hot with this chain of clay;
+Which throbs beyond the chill control
+ Of withering pain or pale decay.
+
+And surely, when the touch of Death
+ Dissolves the spirit's earthly ties,
+Love still attends the immortal breath,
+ And makes it purer for the skies!
+
+Oh Rosa, when, to seek its sphere,
+ My soul shall leave this orb of men,
+That love which formed its treasure here,
+ Shall be its _best_ of treasures then!
+
+And as, in fabled dreams of old,
+ Some air-born genius, child of time,
+Presided o'er each star that rolled,
+ And tracked it through its path sublime;
+
+So thou, fair planet, not unled,
+ Shalt through thy mortal orbit stray;
+Thy lover's shade, to thee still wed,
+ Shall linger round thy earthly way.
+
+Let other spirits range the sky,
+ And play around each starry gem;
+I'll bask beneath that lucid eye,
+ Nor envy worlds of suns to them.
+
+And when that heart shall cease to beat,
+ And when that breath at length is free,
+Then, Rosa, soul to soul we'll meet,
+ And mingle to eternity!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+The wreath you wove, the wreath you wove,
+ Is fair--but oh, how fair,
+If Pity's hand had stolen from Love
+One leaf, to mingle there!
+
+If every rose with gold were tied,
+ Did gems for dewdrops fall,
+One faded leaf where Love had sighed
+ Were sweetly worth them all.
+
+The wreath you wove,--the wreath you wove
+ Our emblem well may be;
+Its bloom is yours, but hopeless Love
+ Must keep its tears for me.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SALE OF LOVES.
+
+
+I dreamt that, in the Paphian groves,
+ My nets by moonlight laying,
+I caught a flight of wanton Loves,
+ Among the rose-beds playing.
+Some just had left their silvery shell,
+ While some were full in feather;
+So pretty a lot of Loves to sell,
+ Were never yet strung together.
+ Come buy my Loves,
+ Come buy my Loves,
+Ye dames and rose-lipped misses!--
+ They're new and bright,
+ The cost is light,
+For the coin of this isle is kisses.
+
+First Cloris came, with looks sedate.
+ The coin on her lips was ready;
+"I buy," quoth she, "my Love by weight,
+ "Full grown, if you please, and steady."
+"Let mine be light," said Fanny, "pray--
+ "Such lasting toys undo one;
+"A light little Love that will last to-day,--
+ "To-morrow I'll sport a new one."
+ Come buy my Loves,
+ Come buy my Loves,
+Ye dames and rose-lipped misses!--
+ There's some will keep,
+ Some light and cheap
+At from ten to twenty kisses.
+
+The learned Prue took a pert young thing,
+ To divert her virgin Muse with,
+And pluck sometimes a quill from his wing.
+ To indite her billet-doux with,
+Poor Cloe would give for a well-fledged pair
+ Her only eye, if you'd ask it;
+And Tabitha begged, old toothless fair.
+ For the youngest Love in the basket.
+ Come buy my Loves, etc.
+
+But _one_ was left, when Susan came,
+ One worth them all together;
+At sight of her dear looks of shame,
+ He smiled and pruned his feather.
+She wished the boy--'twas more than whim--
+ Her looks, her sighs betrayed it;
+But kisses were not enough for him,
+ I asked a heart and she paid it!
+ Good-by, my Loves,
+ Good-by, my Loves,
+'Twould make you smile to've seen us
+ First, trade for this
+ Sweet child of bliss,
+And then nurse the boy between us.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .... ....
+
+
+The world has just begun to steal
+ Each hope that led me lightly on;
+I felt not, as I used to feel,
+ And life grew dark and love was gone.
+
+No eye to mingle sorrow's tear,
+ No lip to mingle pleasure's breath,
+No circling arms to draw me near--
+ 'Twas gloomy, and I wished for death.
+
+But when I saw that gentle eye,
+ Oh! something seemed to tell me then,
+That I was yet too young to die,
+ And hope and bliss might bloom again.
+
+With every gentle smile that crost
+ Your kindling cheek, you lighted home
+Some feeling which my heart had lost
+ And peace which far had learned to roam.
+
+'Twas then indeed so sweet to live,
+ Hope looked so new and Love so kind.
+That, though I mourn, I yet forgive
+ The ruin they have left behind.
+
+I could have loved you--oh, so well!--
+ The dream, that wishing boyhood knows,
+Is but a bright, beguiling spell,
+ That only lives while passion glows.
+
+But, when this early flush declines,
+ When the heart's sunny morning fleets,
+You know not then how close it twines
+ Round the first kindred soul it meets.
+
+Yes, yes, I could have loved, as one
+ Who, while his youth's enchantments fall,
+Finds something dear to rest upon,
+ Which pays him for the loss of all.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .... ....
+
+
+Never mind how the pedagogue proses,
+ You want not antiquity's stamp;
+A lip, that such fragrance discloses,
+ Oh! never should smell of the lamp.
+
+Old Cloe, whose withering kiss
+ Hath long set the Loves at defiance,
+Now, done with the science of bliss,
+ May take to the blisses of science.
+
+But for _you_ to be buried in books--
+ Ah, Fanny, they're pitiful sages,
+Who could not in _one_ of your looks
+ Read more than in millions of pages.
+
+Astronomy finds in those eyes
+ Better light than she studies above;
+And Music would borrow your sighs
+ As the melody fittest for Love.
+
+Your Arithmetic only can trip
+ If to count your own charms you endeavor;
+And Eloquence glows on your lip
+ When you swear that you'll love me for ever.
+
+Thus you see, what a brilliant alliance
+ Of arts is assembled in you;--
+A course of more exquisite science
+ Man never need wish to pursue.
+
+And, oh!--if a Fellow like me
+ May confer a diploma of hearts,
+With my lip thus I seal your degree,
+ My divine little Mistress of Arts!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ON THE DEATH OF A LADY,
+
+
+Sweet spirit! if thy airy sleep
+ Nor sees my tears not hears my sighs,
+Then will I weep, in anguish weep,
+ Till the last heart's drop fills mine eyes.
+
+But if thy sainted soul can feel,
+ And mingles in our misery;
+Then, then my breaking heart I'll seal--
+ Thou shalt not hear one sigh from me.
+
+The beam of morn was on the stream,
+ But sullen clouds the day deform;
+Like thee was that young, orient beam,
+ Like death, alas, that sullen storm!
+
+Thou wert not formed for living here,
+ So linked thy soul was with the sky;
+Yet, ah, we held thee all so dear,
+ We thought thou wert not formed to die.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+INCONSTANCY.
+
+
+And do I then wonder that Julia deceives me,
+ When surely there's nothing in nature more common?
+She vows to be true, and while vowing she leaves me--
+ And could I expect any more from a woman?
+
+Oh, woman! your heart is a pitiful treasure;
+ And Mahomet's doctrine was not too severe,
+When he held that you were but materials of pleasure,
+ And reason and thinking were out of your sphere.
+
+By your heart, when the fond sighing lover can win it,
+ He thinks that an age of anxiety's paid;
+But, oh, while he's blest, let him die at the minute--
+ If he live but a _day_, he'll be surely betrayed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE NATAL GENIUS.
+
+A DREAM
+
+TO .... ....
+
+THE MORNING OF HER BIRTHDAY.
+
+
+In witching slumbers of the night,
+I dreamt I was the airy sprite
+ That on thy natal moment smiled;
+And thought I wafted on my wing
+Those flowers which in Elysium spring,
+ To crown my lovely mortal child.
+
+With olive-branch I bound thy head,
+Heart's ease along thy path I shed,
+ Which was to bloom through all thy years;
+Nor yet did I forget to bind
+Love's roses, with his myrtle twined,
+ And dewed by sympathetic tears.
+
+Such was the wild but precious boon
+Which Fancy, at her magic noon,
+ Bade me to Nona's image pay;
+And were it thus my fate to be
+Thy little guardian deity,
+ How blest around thy steps I'd play!
+
+Thy life should glide in peace along,
+Calm as some lonely shepherd's song
+ That's heard at distance in the grove;
+No cloud should ever dim thy sky,
+No thorns along thy pathway lie,
+ But all be beauty, peace and love.
+
+Indulgent Time should never bring
+To thee one blight upon his wing,
+ So gently o'er thy brow he'd fly;
+And death itself should but be felt
+Like that of daybeams, when they melt,
+ Bright to the last, in evening's sky!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ELEGIAC STANZAS.
+
+SUPPOSED TO BE WRITTEN BY JULIA,
+
+ON THE DEATH OF HER BROTHER.
+
+
+Though sorrow long has worn my heart;
+ Though every day I've, counted o'er
+Hath brought a new and, quickening smart
+ To wounds that rankled fresh before;
+
+Though in my earliest life bereft
+ Of tender links by nature tied;
+Though hope deceived, and pleasure left;
+ Though friends betrayed and foes belied;
+
+I still had hopes--for hope will stay
+ After the sunset of delight;
+So like the star which ushers day,
+ We scarce can think it heralds night!--
+
+I hoped that, after all its strife,
+ My weary heart at length should rest.
+And, feinting from the waves of life,
+ Find harbor in a brother's breast.
+
+That brother's breast was warm with truth,
+ Was bright with honor's purest ray;
+He was the dearest, gentlest youth--
+ Ah, why then was he torn away?
+
+He should have stayed, have lingered here
+ To soothe his Julia's every woe;
+He should have chased each bitter tear,
+ And not have caused those tears to flow.
+
+We saw within his soul expand
+ The fruits of genius, nurst by taste;
+While Science, with a fostering hand,
+ Upon his brow her chaplet placed.
+
+We saw, by bright degrees, his mind
+ Grow rich in all that makes men dear;
+Enlightened, social, and refined,
+ In friendship firm, in love sincere.
+
+Such was the youth we loved so well,
+ And such the hopes that fate denied;--
+We loved, but ah! could scarcely tell
+ How deep, how dearly, till he died!
+
+Close as the fondest links could strain,
+ Twined with my very heart he grew;
+And by that fate which breaks the chain,
+ The heart is almost broken too.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE LARGE AND BEAUTIFUL MISS......,
+
+IN ALLUSION TO SOME PARTNERSHIP IN A LOTTERY SHARE
+
+IMPROMPTU.
+
+
+ --_Ego Pars_--VIRG.
+
+
+In wedlock a species of lottery lies,
+ Where in blanks and in prizes we deal;
+But how comes it that you, such a capital prize,
+ Should so long have remained in the wheel?
+
+If ever, by Fortune's indulgent decree,
+ To me such a ticket should roll,
+A sixteenth, Heaven knows! were sufficient for me;
+ For what could _I_ do with the whole?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A DREAM.
+
+
+I thought this heart enkindled lay
+ On Cupid's burning shrine:
+I thought he stole thy heart away,
+ And placed it near to mine.
+
+I saw thy heart begin to melt,
+ Like ice before the sun;
+Till both a glow congenial felt,
+ And mingled into one!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .......
+
+
+With all my soul, then, let us part,
+ Since both are anxious to be free;
+And I will sand you home your heart,
+ If you will send mine back to me.
+
+We've had some happy hours together,
+ But joy must often change its wing;
+And spring would be but gloomy weather,
+ If we had nothing else but spring.
+
+'Tis not that I expect to find
+ A more devoted, fond and true one,
+With rosier cheek or sweeter mind--
+ Enough for me that she's a new one.
+
+Thus let us leave the bower of love,
+ Where we have loitered long in bliss;
+And you may down _that_ pathway rove,
+ While I shall take my way through _this_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ANACREONTIC.
+
+
+"She never looked so kind before--
+ "Yet why the wanton's smile recall?
+"I've seen this witchery o'er and o'er,
+ "'Tis hollow, vain, and heartless all!"
+
+Thus I said and, sighing drained
+ The cup which she so late had tasted;
+Upon whose rim still fresh remained
+ The breath, so oft in falsehood wasted.
+
+I took the harp and would have sung
+ As if 'twere not of her I sang;
+But still the notes on Lamia hung--
+ On whom but Lamia _could_ they hang?
+
+Those eyes of hers, that floating shine,
+ Like diamonds in some eastern river;
+That kiss, for which, if worlds were mine,
+ A world for every kiss I'd give her.
+
+That frame so delicate, yet warmed
+ With flushes of love's genial hue;
+A mould transparent, as if formed
+ To let the spirit's light shine through.
+
+Of these I sung, and notes and words
+ Were sweet, as if the very air
+From Lamia's lip hung o'er the chords,
+ And Lamia's voice still warbled there!
+
+But when, alas, I turned the theme,
+ And when of vows and oaths I spoke,
+Of truth and hope's seducing dream--
+ The chord beneath my finger broke.
+
+False harp! false woman! such, oh, such
+ Are lutes too frail and hearts too willing;
+Any hand, whate'er its touch,
+ Can set their chords or pulses thrilling.
+
+And when that thrill is most awake,
+ And when you think Heaven's joys await you,
+The nymph will change, the chord will break--
+ Oh Love, oh Music, how I hate you!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO JULIA.
+
+
+I saw the peasant's hand unkind
+ From yonder oak the ivy sever;
+They seemed in very being twined;
+ Yet now the oak is fresh as ever!
+
+Not so the widowed ivy shines:
+ Torn from its dear and only stay,
+In drooping widowhood it pines,
+ And scatters all its bloom away.
+
+Thus, Julia, did our hearts entwine,
+ Till Fate disturbed their tender ties:
+Thus gay indifference blooms in thine,
+ While mine, deserted, droops and dies!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HYMN OF A VIRGIN OF DELPHI,
+
+AT THE TOMB OF HER MOTHER.
+
+
+Oh, lost, forever lost--no more
+ Shall Vesper light our dewy way
+Along the rocks of Crissa's shore,
+ To hymn the fading fires of day;
+No more to Tempe's distant vale
+ In holy musings shall we roam,
+Through summer's glow and winter's gale,
+ To bear the mystic chaplets home.[1]
+
+'Twas then my soul's expanding zeal,
+ By nature warmed and led by thee,
+In every breeze was taught to feel
+ The breathings of a Deity.
+Guide of my heart! still hovering round.
+ Thy looks, thy words are still my own--
+I see thee raising from the ground
+ Some laurel, by the winds o'er thrown.
+And hear thee say, "This humble bough
+ Was planted for a doom divine;
+And, though it droop in languor now,
+ Shall flourish on the Delphic shrine!"
+"Thus, in the vale of earthly sense,
+ "Though sunk awhile the spirit lies,
+"A viewless hand shall cull it thence
+ "To bloom immortal in the skies!"
+
+All that the young should feel and know
+ By thee was taught so sweetly well,
+Thy words fell soft as vernal snow,
+ And all was brightness where they fell!
+Fond soother of my infant tear,
+ Fond sharer of my infant joy,
+Is not thy shade still lingering here?
+ Am I not still thy soul's employ?
+Oh yes--and, as in former days,
+ When, meeting on the sacred mount,
+Our nymphs awaked their choral lays,
+ And danced around Cassotis' fount;
+As then, 'twas all thy wish and care,
+ That mine should be the simplest mien,
+My lyre and voice the sweetest there,
+ My foot the lightest o'er the green:
+So still, each look and step to mould,
+ Thy guardian care is round me spread,
+Arranging every snowy fold
+ And guiding every mazy tread.
+And, when I lead the hymning choir,
+ Thy spirit still, unseen and free,
+Hovers between my lip and lyre,
+ And weds them into harmony.
+Flow, Plistus, flow, thy murmuring wave
+ Shall never drop its silvery tear
+Upon so pure, so blest a grave,
+ To memory so entirely dear!
+
+
+[1] The laurel, for the common uses of the temple, for adorning
+the altars and sweeping the pavement, was supplied by a tree near the
+fountain of Castalia; but upon all important occasions, they sent to Tempe
+for their laurel. We find, in Pausanias; that this valley supplied the
+branches, of which the temple was originally constructed; and Plutarch
+says, in his Dialogue on Music, "The youth who brings the Tempic laurel to
+Delphi is always attended by a player on the flute."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SYMPATHY.
+
+TO JULIA.
+
+
+ --_sine me sit nulla Venus_.
+ SULPICIA.
+
+
+Our hearts, my love, were formed to be
+The genuine twins of Sympathy,
+ They live with one sensation;
+In joy or grief, but most in love,
+Like chords in unison they move,
+ And thrill with like vibration.
+
+How oft I've beard thee fondly say,
+Thy vital pulse shall cease to play
+ When mine no more is moving;
+Since, now, to feel a joy _alone_
+Were worse to thee than feeling none,
+ So twined are we in loving!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TEAR.
+
+
+On beds of snow the moonbeam slept,
+ And chilly was the midnight gloom,
+When by the damp grave Ellen wept--
+ Fond maid! it was her Lindor's tomb!
+
+A warm tear gushed, the wintry air,
+ Congealed it as it flowed away:
+All night it lay an ice-drop there,
+ At morn it glittered in the ray.
+
+An angel, wandering from her sphere,
+ Who saw this bright, this frozen gem,
+To dew-eyed Pity brought the tear
+ And hung it on her diadem!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SNAKE.
+
+
+My love and I, the other day,
+Within a myrtle arbor lay,
+When near us, from a rosy bed,
+A little Snake put forth its head.
+
+"See," said the maid with thoughtful eyes--
+"Yonder the fatal emblem lies!
+"Who could expect such hidden harm
+"Beneath the rose's smiling charm?"
+
+Never did grave remark occur
+Less _à-propos_ than this from her.
+
+I rose to kill the snake, but she,
+Half-smiling, prayed it might not be.
+
+"No," said the maiden--and, alas,
+ Her eyes spoke volumes, while she said it--
+"Long as the snake is in the grass,
+ "One _may_, perhaps, have cause to dread it:
+"But, when its wicked eyes appear,
+ "And when we know for what they wink so,
+"One must be _very_ simple, dear,
+ "To let it wound one--don't you think so?"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO ROSA.
+
+
+Is the song of Rosa mute?
+Once such lays inspired her lute!
+Never doth a sweeter song
+Steal the breezy lyre along,
+When the wind, in odors dying,
+Woos it with enamor'd sighing.
+
+ Is my Rosa's lute unstrung?
+Once a tale of peace it sung
+To her lover's throbbing breast--
+Then was he divinely blest!
+Ah! but Rosa loves no more,
+Therefore Rosa's song is o'er;
+And her lute neglected lies;
+And her boy forgotten sighs.
+Silent lute--forgotten lover--
+Rosa's love and song are over!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ELEGIAC STANZAS.
+
+
+ _Sic juvat perire_.
+
+
+When wearied wretches sink to sleep,
+ How heavenly soft their slumbers lie!
+How sweet is death to those who weep,
+To those who weep and long to die!
+
+Saw you the soft and grassy bed,
+ Where flowrets deck the green earth's breast?
+'Tis there I wish to lay my head,
+ 'Tis there I wish to sleep at rest.
+
+Oh, let not tears embalm my tomb,--
+ None but the dews at twilight given!
+Oh, let not sighs disturb the gloom,--
+ None but the whispering winds of heaven!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AND MARRIAGE.
+
+
+ _Eque brevi verbo ferre perenne malum_.
+ SECUNDUS, eleg. vii.
+
+
+Still the question I must parry,
+ Still a wayward truant prove:
+Where I love, I must not marry;
+ Where I marry, can not love.
+
+Were she fairest of creation,
+ With the least presuming mind;
+Learned without affectation;
+ Not deceitful, yet refined;
+
+Wise enough, but never rigid;
+ Gay, but not too lightly free;
+Chaste as snow, and yet not frigid:
+ Fond, yet satisfied with me:
+
+Were she all this ten times over,
+ All that heaven to earth allows.
+I should be too much her lover
+ Ever to become her spouse.
+
+Love will never bear enslaving;
+ Summer garments suit him best;
+Bliss itself is not worth having,
+ If we're by compulsion blest.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ANACREONTIC.
+
+
+I filled to thee, to thee I drank,
+ I nothing did but drink and fill;
+The bowl by turns was bright and blank,
+ 'Twas drinking, filling, drinking still.
+
+At length I bade an artist paint
+ Thy image in this ample cup,
+That I might see the dimpled saint,
+ To whom I quaffed my nectar up.
+
+Behold, how bright that purple lip
+ Now blushes through the wave at me;
+Every roseate drop I sip
+ Is just like kissing wine from thee.
+
+And still I drink the more for this;
+ For, ever when the draught I drain,
+Thy lip invites another kiss,
+ And--in the nectar flows again.
+
+So, here's to thee, my gentle dear,
+ And may that eyelid never shine
+Beneath a darker, bitterer tear
+ Than bathes it in this bowl of mine!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SURPRISE.
+
+
+Chloris, I swear, by all I ever swore,
+That from this hour I shall not love thee more.--
+"What! love no more? Oh! why this altered vow?"
+Because I _can not_ love thee _more_
+ --than _now_!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MISS .......
+
+ON HER ASKING THE AUTHOR WHY SHE HAD SLEEPLESS NIGHTS.
+
+
+I'll ask the sylph who round thee flies,
+ And in thy breath his pinion dips,
+Who suns him in thy radiant eyes,
+ And faints upon thy sighing lips:
+
+I'll ask him where's the veil of sleep
+ That used to shade thy looks of light;
+And why those eyes their vigil keep
+ When other suns are sunk in night?
+
+And I will say--her angel breast
+ Has never throbbed with guilty sting;
+Her bosom is the sweetest nest
+ Where Slumber could repose his wing!
+
+And I will say--her cheeks that flush,
+ Like vernal roses in the sun,
+Have ne'er by shame been taught to blush,
+ Except for what her eyes have done!
+
+Then tell me, why, thou child of air!
+ Does slumber from her eyelids rove?
+What is her heart's impassioned care?
+ Perhaps, oh sylph! perhaps, 'tis _love_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WONDER.
+
+
+Come, tell me where the maid is found.
+ Whose heart can love without deceit,
+And I will range the world around,
+ To sigh one moment at her feet.
+
+Oh! tell me where's her sainted home,
+ What air receives her blessed sigh,
+A pilgrimage of years I'll roam
+ To catch one sparkle of her eye!
+
+And if her cheek be smooth and bright,
+ While truth within her bosom lies,
+I'll gaze upon her morn and night,
+ Till my heart leave me through my eyes.
+
+Show me on earth a thing so rare,
+ I'll own all miracles are true;
+To make one maid sincere and fair,
+ Oh, 'tis the utmost Heaven can do!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LYING.
+
+
+ _Che con le lor bugie pajon divini._
+ MAURO D'ARCANO.
+
+
+I do confess, in many a sigh,
+My lips have breathed you many a lie;
+And who, with such delights in view,
+Would lose them for a lie or two?
+
+ Nay,--look not thus, with brow reproving;
+Lies are, my dear, the soul of loving.
+If half we tell the girls were true,
+If half we swear to think and do,
+Were aught but lying's bright illusion,
+This world would be in strange confusion.
+If ladies' eyes were, every one,
+As lovers swear, a radiant sun,
+Astronomy must leave the skies,
+To learn her lore in ladies' eyes.
+Oh, no--believe me, lovely girl,
+When nature turns your teeth to pearl,
+Your neck to snow, your eyes to fire,
+Your amber locks to golden wire,
+Then, only then can Heaven decree,
+That you should live for only me,
+Or I for you, as night and morn,
+We've swearing kist, and kissing sworn.
+ And now, my gentle hints to clear,
+For once I'll tell you truth, my dear.
+Whenever you may chance to meet
+Some loving youth, whose love is sweet,
+Long as you're false and he believes you,
+Long as you trust and he deceives you,
+So long the blissful bond endures,
+And while he lies, his heart is yours:
+But, oh! you've wholly lost the youth
+The instant that he tells you truth.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ANACREONTIC.
+
+
+Friend of my soul, this goblet sip,
+ 'Twill chase that pensive tear;
+'Tis not so sweet as woman's lip,
+ But, oh! 'tis more sincere.
+
+ Like her delusive beam,
+ 'Twill steal away thy mind:
+ But, truer than love's dream,
+ It leaves no sting behind.
+
+Come, twine the wreath, thy brows to shade;
+ These flowers were culled at noon;--
+Like woman's love the rose will fade,
+ But, ah! not half so soon.
+ For though the flower's decayed,
+ Its fragrance is not o'er;
+ But once when love's betrayed,
+ Its sweet life blooms no more.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE PHILOSOPHER ARISTIPPUS[1]
+
+TO A LAMP WHICH HAD BEEN GIVEN HIM BY LAIS.
+
+
+ _Dulcis conscia lectuli lucerna_.
+ MARTIAL, _lib. xiv. epig. 89_.
+
+
+"Oh! love the Lamp" (my Mistress said),
+ "The faithful Lamp that, many a night,
+"Beside thy Lais' lonely bed?
+ "Has kept its little watch of light.
+
+"Full often has it seen her weep,
+ "And fix her eye upon its flame.
+"Till, weary, she has sunk to sleep,
+ "Repeating her beloved's name.
+
+"Then love the Lamp--'twill often lead
+ "Thy step through learning's sacred way;
+"And when those studious eyes shall read,
+ "At midnight, by its lonely ray,
+ "Of things sublime, of nature's birth,
+ "Of all that's bright in heaven or earth,
+ Oh, think that she, by whom 'twas given,
+"Adores thee more than earth or heaven!"
+
+Yes--dearest Lamp, by every charm
+ On which thy midnight beam has hung;
+The head reclined, the graceful arm
+ Across the brow of ivory flung;
+
+The heaving bosom, partly hid,
+ The severed lips unconscious sighs,
+The fringe that from the half-shut lid
+ Adown the cheek of roses lies;
+
+By these, by all that bloom untold,
+ And long as all shall charm my heart,
+I'll love my little Lamp of gold--
+ My Lamp and I shall never part.
+
+And often, as she smiling said,
+ In fancy's hour thy gentle rays
+Shall guide my visionary tread
+ Through poesy's enchanting maze.
+Thy flame shall light the page refined,
+ Where still we catch the Chian's breath,
+ Where still the bard though cold in death,
+Has left his soul unquenched behind.
+Or, o'er thy humbler legend shine,
+ Oh man of Ascra's dreary glades,
+To whom the nightly warbling Nine
+ A wand of inspiration gave,
+Plucked from the greenest tree, that shades
+The crystal of Castalia's wave.
+
+Then, turning to a purer lore,
+We'll cull the sage's deep-hid store,
+From Science steal her golden clue,
+And every mystic path pursue,
+Where Nature, far from vulgar eyes,
+Through labyrinths of wonder flies.
+'Tis thus my heart shall learn to know
+How fleeting is this world below,
+Where all that meets the morning light,
+Is changed before the fall of night!
+
+I'll tell thee, as I trim thy fire,
+ "Swift, swift the tide of being runs,
+"And Time, who bids thy flame expire,
+ "Will also quench yon heaven of suns."
+
+Oh, then if earth's united power
+Can never chain one feathery hour;
+If every print we leave to-day
+To-morrow's wave will sweep away;
+Who pauses to inquire of heaven
+Why were the fleeting treasures given,
+The sunny days, the shady nights,
+And all their brief but dear delights,
+Which heaven has made for man to use,
+And man should think it crime to lose?
+Who that has culled a fresh-blown rose
+Will ask it why it breathes and glows,
+Unmindful of the blushing ray,
+In which it shines its soul away;
+Unmindful of the scented sigh,
+With which it dies and loves to die.
+
+Pleasure, thou only good on earth[2]
+One precious moment given to thee--
+Oh! by my Lais' lip, 'tis worth
+ The sage's immortality.
+
+Then far be all the wisdom hence,
+ That would our joys one hour delay!
+Alas, the feast of soul and sense
+ Love calls us to in youth's bright day,
+ If not soon tasted, fleets away.
+Ne'er wert thou formed, my Lamp, to shed
+ Thy splendor on a lifeless page;--
+Whate'er my blushing Lais said
+ Of thoughtful lore and studies sage,
+'Twas mockery all--her glance of joy
+Told me thy dearest, best employ.
+And, soon, as night shall close the eye
+ Of heaven's young wanderer in the west;
+When seers are gazing on the sky,
+ To find their future orbs of rest;
+Then shall I take my trembling way,
+ Unseen but to those worlds above,
+And, led by thy mysterious ray,
+ Steal to the night-bower of my love.
+
+
+[1] It does not appear to have been very difficult to become a
+philosopher amongst the ancients. A moderate store of learning, with a
+considerable portion of confidence, and just wit enough to produce an
+occasional apophthegm, seem to have been all the qualifications necessary
+for the purpose.
+
+[2] Aristippus considered motion as the principle of happiness,
+in which idea he differed from the Epicureans, who looked to a state of
+repose as the only true voluptuousness, and avoided even the too lively
+agitations of pleasure, as a violent and ungraceful derangement of the
+senses.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MRS,---.
+
+ON HER BEAUTIFUL TRANSLATION OF VOITURE'S KISS.
+
+
+ _Mon ame sur mon lèvre étoit lors toute entière.
+ Pour savourer le miel qui sur la votre étoit;
+ Mais en me retirant, elle resta derrière,
+ Tant de ce doux plaisir l'amorce l'a restoit_.
+ VOITURE.
+
+
+How heavenly was the poet's doom,
+ To breathe his spirit through a kiss:
+And lose within so sweet a tomb
+ The trembling messenger of bliss!
+
+And, sure his soul returned to feel
+ That it _again_ could ravished be;
+For in the kiss that thou didst steal,
+ His life and soul have fled to thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+RONDEAU.
+
+
+"Good night! good night!"--And is it so?
+And must I from my Rosa go?
+Oh Rosa, say "Good night!" once more,
+And I'll repeat it o'er and o'er,
+Till the first glance of dawning light
+Shall find us saying, still, "Good night."
+
+And still "Good night," my Rosa, say--
+But whisper still, "A minute stay;"
+And I will stay, and every minute
+Shall have an age of transport in it;
+Till Time himself shall stay his flight,
+To listen to our sweet "Good night."
+
+"Good night!" you'll murmur with a sigh,
+And tell me it is time to fly:
+And I will vow, will swear to go,
+While still that sweet voice murmurs "No!"
+Till slumber seal our weary sight--
+And then, my love, my soul, "Good night!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Why does azure deck the sky?
+ 'Tis to be like thy looks of blue.
+Why is red the rose's dye?
+ Because it is thy blushes' hue.
+All that's fair, by Love's decree,
+ Has been made resembling thee!
+
+Why is falling snow so white,
+ But to be like thy bosom fair!
+Why are solar beams so bright?
+ That they may seem thy golden hair!
+All that's bright, by Love's decree,
+Has been made resembling thee!
+
+Why are nature's beauties felt?
+ Oh! 'tis thine in her we see!
+Why has music power to melt?
+ Oh! because it speaks like thee.
+All that's sweet, by Love's decree,
+Has been made resembling thee!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO ROSA.
+
+
+Like one who trusts to summer skies,
+ And puts his little bark to sea,
+Is he who, lured by smiling eyes,
+ Consigns his simple heart to thee.
+
+For fickle is the summer wind,
+ And sadly may the bark be tost;
+For thou art sure to change thy mind,
+ And then the wretched heart is lost!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WRITTEN IN A COMMONPLACE BOOK, CALLED "THE BOOK OF FOLLIES;"
+IN WHICH EVERY ONE THAT OPENED IT WAS TO CONTRIBUTE SOMETHING.
+
+TO THE BOOK OF FOLLIES.
+
+
+This tribute's from a wretched elf,
+Who hails thee, emblem of himself.
+The book of life, which I have traced,
+Has been, like thee, a motley waste
+Of follies scribbled o'er and o'er,
+One folly bringing hundreds more.
+Some have indeed been writ so neat,
+In characters so fair, so sweet,
+That those who judge not too severely,
+Have said they loved such follies dearly!
+Yet still, O book! the allusion stands;
+For these were penned by _female_ hands:
+The rest--alas! I own the truth--
+Have all been scribbled so uncouth
+That Prudence, with a withering look,
+Disdainful, flings away the book.
+Like thine, its pages here and there
+Have oft been stained with blots of care;
+And sometimes hours of peace, I own,
+Upon some fairer leaves have shone,
+White as the snowings of that heaven
+By which those hours of peace were given;
+But now no longer--such, oh, such
+The blast of Disappointment's touch!--
+No longer now those hours appear;
+Each leaf is sullied by a tear:
+Blank, blank is every page with care,
+Not even a folly brightens there.
+Will they yet brighten?--never, never!
+Then _shut the book_, O God, for ever!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO ROSA.
+
+
+Say, why should the girl of my soul be in tears
+ At a meeting of rapture like this,
+When the glooms of the past and the sorrow of years
+ Have been paid by one moment of bliss?
+
+Are they shed for that moment of blissful delight,
+ Which dwells on her memory yet?
+Do they flow, like the dews of the love-breathing night,
+ From the warmth of the sun that has set?
+
+Oh! sweet is the tear on that languishing smile,
+ That smile, which is loveliest then;
+And if such are the drops that delight can beguile,
+ Thou shalt weep them again and again.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LIGHT SOUNDS THE HARP.
+
+
+Light sounds the harp when the combat is over,
+ When heroes are resting, and joy is in bloom;
+When laurels hang loose from the brow of the lover,
+ And Cupid makes wings of the warrior's plume.
+ But, when the foe returns,
+ Again the hero burns;
+High flames the sword in his hand once more:
+ The clang of mingling arms
+ Is then the sound that charms,
+And brazen notes of war, that stirring trumpets pour;--
+Then, again comes the Harp, when the combat is over--
+ When heroes are resting, and Joy is in bloom--
+When laurels hang loose from the brow of the lover,
+ And Cupid makes wings of the warrior's plume.
+Light went the harp when the War-God, reclining,
+ Lay lulled on the white arm of Beauty to rest,
+When round his rich armor the myrtle hung twining,
+ And flights of young doves made his helmet their nest.
+ But, when the battle came,
+ The hero's eye breathed flame:
+Soon from his neck the white arm was flung;
+ While, to his waking ear,
+ No other sounds were dear
+But brazen notes of war, by thousand trumpets sung.
+But then came the light harp, when danger was ended,
+ And Beauty once more lulled the War-God to rest;
+When tresses of gold with his laurels lay blended,
+ And flights of young doves made his helmet their nest.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FROM THE GREEK OF MELEAGER.
+
+
+Fill high the cup with liquid flame,
+And speak my Heliodora's name.
+Repeat its magic o'er and o'er,
+And let the sound my lips adore,
+Live in the breeze, till every tone,
+And word, and breath, speaks her alone.
+
+Give me the wreath that withers there,
+ It was but last delicious night,
+It circled her luxuriant hair,
+ And caught her eyes' reflected light.
+Oh! haste, and twine it round my brow,
+'Tis all of her that's left me now.
+And see--each rosebud drops a tear,
+To find the nymph no longer here--
+No longer, where such heavenly charms
+As hers _should_ be--within these arms.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Fly from the world, O Bessy! to me,
+ Thou wilt never find any sincerer;
+I'll give up the world, O Bessy! for thee,
+ I can never meet any that's dearer.
+Then tell me no more, with a tear and a sigh,
+ That our loves will be censured by many;
+All, all have their follies, and who will deny
+ That ours is the sweetest of any?
+
+When your lip has met mine, in communion so sweet,
+ Have we felt as if virtue forbid it?--
+Have we felt as if heaven denied them to meet?--
+ No, rather 'twas heaven that did it.
+So innocent, love, is the joy we then sip,
+ So little of wrong is there in it,
+That I wish all my errors were lodged on your lip,
+ And I'd kiss them away in a minute.
+
+Then come to your lover, oh! fly to his shed,
+ From a world which I know thou despisest;
+And slumber will hover as light o'er our bed!
+ As e'er on the couch of the wisest.
+And when o'er our pillow the tempest is driven,
+ And thou, pretty innocent, fearest,
+I'll tell thee, it is not the chiding of heaven,
+ 'Tis only our lullaby, dearest.
+
+And, oh! while, we lie on our deathbed, my love,
+ Looking back on the scene of our errors,
+A sigh from my Bessy shall plead then above,
+ And Death be disarmed of his terrors,
+And each to the other embracing will say,
+ "Farewell! let us hope we're forgiven."
+Thy last fading glance will illumine the way,
+ And a kiss be our passport to heaven!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE RESEMBLANCE.
+
+
+ _---- vo cercand' io,
+ Donna quant' e possibile in altrui
+ La desiata vostra forma vera_.
+ PETRARC, _Sonett_. 14.
+
+
+Yes, if 'twere any common love,
+ That led my pliant heart astray,
+I grant, there's not a power above
+ Could wipe the faithless crime away.
+
+But 'twas my doom to err with one
+ In every look so like to thee
+That, underneath yon blessed sun
+ So fair there are but thou and she
+
+Both born of beauty, at a birth,
+ She held with thine a kindred sway,
+And wore the only shape on earth
+ That could have lured my soul to stray.
+
+Then blame me not, if false I be,
+ 'Twas love that waked the fond excess;
+My heart had been more true to thee,
+ Had mine eye prized thy beauty less.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FANNY, DEAREST.
+
+
+Yes! had I leisure to sigh and mourn,
+ Fanny, dearest, for thee I'd sigh;
+And every smile on my cheek should turn
+ To tears when thou art nigh.
+But, between love, and wine, and sleep,
+ So busy a life I live,
+That even the time it would take to weep
+ Is more than my heart can give.
+Then bid me not to despair and pine,
+ Fanny, dearest of all the dears!
+The Love that's ordered to bathe in wine,
+ Would be sure to take cold in tears.
+
+Reflected bright in this heart of mine,
+ Fanny, dearest, thy image lies;
+But, ah, the mirror would cease to shine,
+ If dimmed too often with sighs.
+They lose the half of beauty's light,
+ Who view it through sorrow's tear;
+And 'tis but to see thee truly bright
+ That I keep my eye-beam clear.
+Then wait no longer till tears shall flow,
+ Fanny, dearest--the hope is vain;
+If sunshine cannot dissolve thy snow,
+ I shall never attempt it with rain.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE RING.
+
+TO .... ....
+
+
+No--Lady! Lady! keep the ring:
+ Oh! think, how many a future year,
+Of placid smile and downy wing,
+ May sleep within its holy sphere.
+
+Do not disturb their tranquil dream,
+ Though love hath ne'er the mystery warmed;
+Yet heaven will shed a soothing beam,
+ To bless the bond itself hath formed.
+
+But then, that eye, that burning eye,--
+ Oh! it doth ask, with witching power,
+If heaven can ever bless the tie
+ Where love inwreaths no genial flower?
+
+Away, away, bewildering look,
+ Or all the boast of virtue's o'er;
+Go--hie thee to the sage's book,
+ And learn from him to feel no more.
+
+I cannot warn thee: every touch,
+ That brings my pulses close to thine,
+Tells me I want thy aid as much--
+ Even more, alas, than thou dost mine.
+
+Yet, stay,--one hope, one effort yet--
+ A moment turn those eyes a way,
+And let me, if I can, forget
+ The light that leads my soul astray.
+
+Thou sayest, that we were born to meet,
+ That our hearts bear one common seal;--
+Think, Lady, think, how man's deceit
+ Can seem to sigh and feign to feel.
+
+When, o'er thy face some gleam of thought,
+ Like daybeams through the morning air,
+Hath gradual stole, and I have caught
+ The feeling ere it kindled there;
+
+The sympathy I then betrayed,
+ Perhaps was but the child of art,
+The guile of one, who long hath played
+ With all these wily nets of heart.
+
+Oh! thine is not my earliest vow;
+ Though few the years I yet have told,
+Canst thou believe I've lived till now,
+ With loveless heart or senses cold?
+
+No--other nymphs to joy and pain
+ This wild and wandering heart hath moved;
+With some it sported, wild and vain,
+ While some it dearly, truly, loved.
+
+The cheek to thine I fondly lay,
+ To theirs hath been as fondly laid;
+The words to thee I warmly say,
+ To them have been as warmly said.
+
+Then, scorn at once a worthless heart,
+ Worthless alike, or fixt or free;
+Think of the pure, bright soul thou art,
+ And--love not me, oh love not me.
+
+Enough--now, turn thine eyes again;
+ What, still that look and still that sigh!
+Dost thou not feel my counsel then?
+ Oh! no, beloved,--nor do I.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE INVISIBLE GIRL.
+
+
+They try to persuade me, my dear little sprite,
+That you're not a true daughter of ether and light,
+Nor have any concern with those fanciful forms
+That dance upon rainbows and ride upon storms;
+That, in short, you're a woman; your lip and your eye
+As mortal as ever drew gods from the sky.
+But I _will_ not believe them--no, Science, to you
+I have long bid a last and a careless adieu:
+Still flying from Nature to study her laws,
+And dulling delight by exploring its cause,
+You forget how superior, for mortals below,
+Is the fiction they dream to the truth that they know.
+Oh! who, that has e'er enjoyed rapture complete,
+Would ask _how_ we feel it, or _why_ it is sweet;
+How rays are confused, or how particles fly
+Through the medium refined of a glance or a sigh;
+Is there one, who but once would not rather have known it,
+Than written, with Harvey, whole volumes upon it?
+
+ As for you, my sweet-voiced and invisible love,
+You must surely be one of those spirits, that rove
+By the bank where, at twilight, the poet reclines,
+When the star of the west on his solitude shines,
+And the magical fingers of fancy have hung
+Every breeze with a sigh, every leaf with a tongue.
+Oh! hint to him then, 'tis retirement alone
+Can hallow his harp or ennoble its tone;
+Like you, with a veil of seclusion between,
+His song to the world let him utter unseen,
+And like you, a legitimate child of the spheres,
+Escape from the eye to enrapture the ears.
+
+ Sweet spirit of mystery! how I should love,
+In the wearisome ways I am fated to rove,
+To have you thus ever invisibly nigh,
+Inhaling for ever your song and your sigh!
+Mid the crowds of the world and the murmurs of care,
+I might sometimes converse with my nymph of the air,
+And turn with distaste from the clamorous crew,
+To steal in the pauses one whisper from you.
+Then, come and be near me, for ever be mine,
+We shall hold in the air a communion divine,
+As sweet as, of old, was imagined to dwell
+In the grotto of Numa, or Socrates' cell.
+And oft, at those lingering moments of night,
+When the heart's busy thoughts have put slumber to flight,
+You shall come to my pillow and tell me of love,
+Such as angel to angel might whisper above.
+Sweet spirit!--and then, could you borrow the tone
+Of that voice, to my ear like some fairy-song known,
+The voice of the one upon earth, who has twined
+With her being for ever my heart and my mind,
+Though lonely and far from the light of her smile,
+An exile, and weary and hopeless the while,
+Could you shed for a moment her voice on my ear.
+I will think, for that moment, that Cara is near;
+That she comes with consoling enchantment to speak,
+And kisses my eyelid and breathes on my cheek,
+And tells me the night shall go rapidly by,
+For the dawn of our hope, of our heaven is nigh.
+
+Fair spirit! if such be your magical power,
+It will lighten the lapse of full many an hour;
+And, let fortune's realities frown as they will,
+Hope, fancy, and Cara may smile for me still.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE RING[1]
+
+A TALE
+
+
+ _Annulus ille viri._
+ OVID. _"Amor." lib. ii. eleg. 15_.
+
+
+The happy day at length arrived
+ When Rupert was to wed
+The fairest maid in Saxony,
+ And take her to his bed.
+
+As soon as morn was in the sky,
+ The feast and sports began;
+The men admired the happy maid,
+ The maids the happy man.
+
+In many a sweet device of mirth
+ The day was past along;
+And some the featly dance amused,
+ And some the dulcet song.
+
+The younger maids with Isabel
+ Disported through the bowers,
+And decked her robe, and crowned her head
+ With motley bridal flowers.
+
+The matrons all in rich attire,
+ Within the castle walls,
+Sat listening to the choral strains
+ That echoed, through the halls.
+
+Young Rupert and his friends repaired
+ Unto a spacious court,
+To strike the bounding tennis-ball
+ In feat and manly sport.
+
+The bridegroom on his finger wore
+ The wedding-ring so bright,
+Which was to grace the lily hand
+ Of Isabel that night.
+
+And fearing he might break the gem,
+ Or lose it in the play,
+Hie looked around the court, to see
+ Where he the ring might lay.
+
+Now, in the court a statue stood,
+ Which there full long had been;
+It might a Heathen goddess be,
+ Or else, a Heathen queen.
+
+Upon its marble finger then
+ He tried the ring to fit;
+And, thinking it was safest there,
+ Thereon he fastened it.
+
+And now the tennis sports went on,
+ Till they were wearied all,
+And messengers announced to them
+ Their dinner in the hall,
+
+Young Rupert for his wedding-ring
+ Unto the statue went;
+But, oh, how shocked was he to find
+ The marble finger bent!
+
+The hand was closed upon the ring
+ With firm and mighty clasp;
+In vain he tried and tried and tried,
+ He could not loose the grasp!
+
+Then sore surprised was Rupert's mind--
+ As well his mind might be;
+"I'll come," quoth he, "at night again,
+ "When none are here to see."
+
+He went unto the feast, and much
+ He thought upon his ring;
+And marvelled sorely what could mean
+ So very strange a thing!
+
+The feast was o'er, and to the court
+ He hied without delay,
+Resolved to break the marble hand
+ And force the ring away.
+
+But, mark a stranger wonder still--
+ The ring was there no more
+And yet the marble hand ungrasped,
+ And open as before!
+
+He searched the base, and all the court,
+ But nothing could he find;
+Then to the castle hied he back
+ With sore bewildered mind.
+
+Within he found them all in mirth,
+ The night in dancing flew:
+The youth another ring procured,
+ And none the adventure knew.
+
+And now the priest has joined their hands,
+ The hours of love advance:
+Rupert almost forgets to think
+ Upon the morn's mischance.
+
+Within the bed fair Isabel
+ In blushing sweetness lay,
+Like flowers, half-opened by the
+ dawn,
+ And waiting for the day.
+
+And Rupert, by her lovely side,
+ In youthful beauty glows,
+Like Phoebus, when he bends to cast
+ His beams upon a rose.
+
+And here my song would leave them both,
+ Nor let the rest be told,
+If 'twere not for the horrid tale
+ It yet has to unfold.
+
+Soon Rupert, 'twixt his bride and him
+ A death cold carcass found;
+He saw it not, but thought he felt
+ Its arms embrace him round.
+
+He started up, and then returned,
+ But found the phantom still;
+In vain he shrunk, it clipt him
+ round,
+ With damp and deadly chill!
+
+And when he bent, the earthy lips
+ A kiss of horror gave;
+'Twas like the smell from charnel vaults,
+ Or from the mouldering grave!
+
+Ill-fated Rupert!--wild and loud
+ Then cried he to his wife,
+"Oh! save me from this horrid fiend,
+ "My Isabel! my life!"
+
+But Isabel had nothing seen,
+ She looked around in vain;
+And much she mourned the mad conceit
+ That racked her Rupert's brain.
+
+At length from this invisible
+ These words to Rupert came:
+(Oh God! while he did hear the words
+ What terrors shook his frame!)
+
+"Husband, husband, I've the ring
+ "Thou gavest to-day to me;
+"And thou'rt to me for ever wed,
+ "As I am wed to thee!"
+
+And all the night the demon lay
+ Cold-chilling by his side,
+And strained him with such deadly grasp,
+ He thought he should have died.
+
+But when the dawn of day was near,
+ The horrid phantom fled,
+And left the affrighted youth to weep
+ By Isabel in bed.
+
+And all that day a gloomy cloud
+ Was seen on Rupert's brows;
+Fair Isabel was likewise sad,
+ But strove to cheer her spouse.
+
+And, as the day advanced, he thought
+ Of coming night with fear:
+Alas, that he should dread to view
+ The bed that should be dear!
+
+At length the second night arrived,
+ Again their couch they prest;
+Poor Rupert hoped that all was o'er,
+ And looked for love and rest.
+
+But oh! when midnight came, again
+ The fiend was at his side,
+And, as it strained him in its grasp,
+ With howl exulting cried:--
+
+"Husband, husband, I've the ring,
+ "The ring thou gavest to me;
+"And thou'rt to me for ever wed,
+ "As I am wed to thee!",
+
+In agony of wild despair,
+ He started from the bed;
+And thus to his bewildered wife
+ The trembling Rupert said;
+
+"Oh Isabel! dost thou not see
+ "A shape of horrors here,
+"That strains me to its deadly kiss,
+ "And keeps me from my dear?"
+
+"No, no, my love! my Rupert, I
+ "No shape of horrors see;
+"And much I mourn the fantasy
+ "That keeps my dear from me."
+
+This night, just like the night before,
+ In terrors past away.
+Nor did the demon vanish thence
+ Before the dawn of day.
+
+Said Rupert then, "My Isabel,
+ "Dear partner of my woe.
+"To Father Austin's holy cave
+ "This instant will I go."
+
+Now Austin was a reverend man,
+ Who acted wonders maint--
+Whom all the country round believed
+ A devil or a saint!
+
+To Father Austin's holy cave
+ Then Rupert straightway went;
+And told him all, and asked him how
+ These horrors to prevent.
+
+The father heard the youth, and then
+ Retired awhile to pray:
+And, having prayed for half an hour
+ Thus to the youth did say:
+
+"There is a place where four roads meet,
+ "Which I will tell to thee;
+"Be there this eve, at fall of night,
+ "And list what thou shalt see.
+
+"Thou'lt see a group of figures pass
+ "In strange disordered crowd,
+"Travelling by torchlight through the roads,
+ "With noises strange and loud.
+
+"And one that's high above the rest,
+ "Terrific towering o'er,
+"Will make thee know him at a glance,
+ "So I need say no more.
+
+"To him from me these tablets give,
+ "They'll quick be understood;
+"Thou need'st not fear, but give them straight,
+ "I've scrawled them with my blood!"
+
+The night-fall came, and Rupert all
+ In pale amazement went
+To where the cross-roads met, as he
+ Was by the Father sent.
+
+And lo! a group of figures came
+ In strange disordered crowd.
+Travelling by torchlight through the roads,
+ With noises strange and loud.
+
+And, as the gloomy train advanced,
+ Rupert beheld from far
+A female form of wanton mien
+ High seated on a car.
+
+And Rupert, as he gazed upon
+ The loosely-vested dame,
+Thought of the marble statue's look,
+ For hers was just the same.
+
+Behind her walked a hideous form,
+ With eyeballs flashing death;
+Whene'er he breathed, a sulphured smoke
+ Came burning in his breath.
+
+He seemed the first of all the crowd,
+ Terrific towering o'er;
+"Yes, yes," said Rupert, "this is he,
+ "And I need ask no more."
+
+Then slow he went, and to this fiend
+ The tablets trembling gave,
+Who looked and read them with a yell
+ That would disturb the grave.
+
+And when he saw the blood-scrawled name,
+ His eyes with fury shine;
+"I thought," cries he, "his time was out,
+ "But he must soon be mine!"
+
+Then darting at the youth a look
+ Which rent his soul with fear,
+He went unto the female fiend,
+ And whispered in her ear.
+
+The female fiend no sooner heard
+ Than, with reluctant look,
+The very ring that Rupert lost,
+ She from her finger took.
+
+And, giving it unto the youth,
+ With eyes that breathed of hell,
+She said, in that tremendous voice,
+ Which he remembered well:
+
+"In Austin's name take back the ring,
+ "The ring thou gavest to me;
+"And thou'rt to me no longer wed,
+ "Nor longer I to thee."
+
+He took the ring, the rabble past.
+ He home returned again;
+His wife was then the happiest fair,
+ The happiest he of men.
+
+
+[1] I should be sorry to think that my friend had any serious intentions
+of frightening the nursery by this story; I rather hope--though the manner
+of it leads me to doubt--that his design was to ridicule that distempered
+taste which prefers those monsters of the fancy to the _"speciosa
+miracula"_ of true poetic imagination.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .... ....
+
+ON SEEING HER WITH A WHITE VEIL AND A RICH GIRDLE.
+
+
+Put off the vestal Veil, nor, oh!
+ Let weeping angels View it;
+Your cheeks belie its virgin snow.
+ And blush repenting through it.
+
+Put off the fatal zone you wear;
+ The shining pearls around it
+Are tears, that fell from Virtue there,
+ The hour when Love unbound it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WRITTEN IN THE BLANK LEAF OF A LADY'S COMMONPLACE BOOK.
+
+
+Here is one leaf reserved for me,
+From all thy sweet memorials free;
+And here my simple song might tell
+The feelings thou must guess so well.
+But could I thus, within thy mind,
+One little vacant corner find,
+Where no impression yet is seen,
+Where no memorial yet hath been,
+Oh! it should be my sweetest care
+To _write my name_ for ever _there_!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MRS. BL----.
+
+WRITTEN IN HER ALBUM.
+
+
+They say that Love had once a book
+ (The urchin likes to copy you),
+Where, all who came, the pencil took,
+ And wrote, like us, a line or two.
+
+'Twas Innocence, the maid divine,
+ Who kept this volume bright and fair.
+And saw that no unhallowed line
+ Or thought profane should enter there;
+
+And daily did the pages fill
+ With fond device and loving lore,
+And every leaf she turned was still
+ More bright than that she turned before.
+
+Beneath the touch of Hope, how soft,
+ How light the magic pencil ran!
+Till Fear would come, alas, as oft,
+ And trembling close what Hope began.
+
+A tear or two had dropt from Grief,
+ And Jealousy would, now and then,
+Ruffle in haste some snow-white leaf,
+ Which Love had still to smooth again.
+
+But, ah! there came a blooming boy,
+ Who often turned the pages o'er,
+And wrote therein such words of joy,
+ That all who read them sighed for more.
+
+And Pleasure was this spirit's name,
+ And though so soft his voice and look,
+Yet Innocence, whene'er he came,
+ Would tremble for her spotless book.
+
+For, oft a Bacchant cup he bore,
+ With earth's sweet nectar sparkling bright;
+And much she feared lest, mantling o'er,
+Some drops should on the pages light.
+
+And so it chanced, one luckless night,
+ The urchin let that goblet fall
+O'er the fair book, so pure, so white,
+ And sullied lines and marge and all!
+
+In vain now, touched with shame, he tried
+ To wash those fatal stains away;
+Deep, deep had sunk the sullying tide,
+ The leaves grew darker everyday.
+
+And Fancy's sketches lost their hue,
+ And Hope's sweet lines were all effaced,
+And Love himself now scarcely knew
+ What Love himself so lately traced.
+
+At length the urchin Pleasure fled,
+ (For how, alas! could Pleasure stay?)
+And Love, while many a tear he shed,
+ Reluctant flung the book away.
+
+The index now alone remains.
+ Of all the pages spoiled by Pleasure,
+And though it bears some earthly stains,
+ Yet Memory counts the leaf a treasure.
+
+And oft, they say, she scans it o'er,
+ And oft, by this memorial aided,
+Brings back the pages now no more,
+ And thinks of lines that long have faded.
+
+I know not if this tale be true,
+ But thus the simple facts are stated;
+And I refer their truth to you,
+ Since Love and you are near related.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO CARA,
+
+AFTER AN INTERVAL OF ABSENCE.
+
+
+Concealed within the shady wood
+ A mother left her sleeping child,
+And flew, to cull her rustic food,
+ The fruitage of the forest wild.
+
+But storms upon her pathway rise,
+ The mother roams, astray and weeping;
+Far from the weak appealing cries
+ Of him she left so sweetly sleeping.
+
+She hopes, she fears; a light is seen,
+ And gentler blows the night wind's breath;
+Yet no--'tis gone--the storms are keen,
+ The infant may be chilled to death!
+
+Perhaps, even now, in darkness shrouded,
+ His little eyes lie cold and still;--
+And yet, perhaps, they are not clouded,
+ Life and love may light them still.
+
+Thus, Cara, at our last farewell,
+ When, fearful even thy hand to touch,
+I mutely asked those eyes to tell
+ If parting pained thee half so much:
+
+I thought,--and, oh! forgive the thought,
+ For none was e'er by love inspired
+Whom fancy had not also taught
+ To hope the bliss his soul desired.
+
+Yes, I _did_ think, in Cara's mind,
+ Though yet to that sweet mind unknown,
+I left one infant wish behind,
+ One feeling, which I called my own.
+
+Oh blest! though but in fancy blest,
+ How did I ask of Pity's care,
+To shield and strengthen, in thy breast,
+ The nursling I had cradled there.
+
+And, many an hour, beguiled by pleasure,
+ And many an hour of sorrow numbering,
+I ne'er forgot the new-born treasure,
+ I left within thy bosom slumbering.
+
+Perhaps, indifference has not chilled it,
+ Haply, it yet a throb may give--
+Yet, no--perhaps, a doubt has killed it;
+ Say, dearest--_does_ the feeling live?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO CARA,
+
+ON THE DAWNING OF A NEW YEAR'S DAY.
+
+
+When midnight came to close the year,
+ We sighed to think it thus should take
+The hours it gave us--hours as dear
+ As sympathy and love could make
+Their blessed moments,--every sun
+Saw us, my love, more closely one.
+
+But, Cara, when the dawn was nigh
+ Which came a new year's light to shed,
+That smile we caught from eye to eye
+ Told us, those moments were not fled:
+Oh, no,--we felt, some future sun
+Should see us still more closely one.
+
+Thus may we ever, side by side,
+From happy years to happier glide;
+And still thus may the passing sigh
+ We give to hours, that vanish o'er us,
+Be followed by the smiling eye,
+ That Hope shall shed on scenes before us!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO ......., 1801.
+
+
+To be the theme of every hour
+The heart devotes to Fancy's power,
+When her prompt magic fills the mind
+With friends and joys we've left behind,
+And joys return and friends are near,
+And all are welcomed with a tear:--
+In the mind's purest seat to dwell,
+To be remembered oft and well
+By one whose heart, though vain and wild,
+By passion led, by youth beguiled,
+Can proudly still aspire to be
+All that may yet win smiles from thee:--
+If thus to live in every part
+Of a lone, weary wanderer's heart;
+If thus to be its sole employ
+Can give thee one faint gleam of joy,
+Believe it. Mary,--oh! believe
+A tongue that never can deceive,
+Though, erring, it too oft betray
+Even more than Love should dare to say,--
+In Pleasure's dream or Sorrow's hour,
+In crowded hall or lonely bower,
+The business of my life shall be,
+For ever to remember thee.
+And though that heart be dead to mine,
+Since Love is life and wakes not thine,
+I'll take thy image, as the form
+Of one whom Love had failed to warm,
+Which, though it yield no answering thrill,
+Is not less dear, is worshipt still--
+I'll take it, wheresoe'er I stray,
+The bright, cold burden of my way.
+To keep this semblance fresh in bloom,
+My heart shall be its lasting tomb,
+And Memory, with embalming care,
+Shall keep it fresh and fadeless there.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GENIUS OF HARMONY.
+
+AN IRREGULAR ODE.
+
+
+ _Ad harmoniam canere mundum_.
+ CICERO _"de Nat. Deor." lib. iii_.
+
+
+ There lies a shell beneath the waves,
+ In many a hollow winding wreathed,
+ Such as of old
+Echoed the breath that warbling sea-maids breathed;
+ This magic shell,
+ From the white bosom of a syren fell,
+As once she wandered by the tide that laves
+ Sicilia's sands of gold.
+ It bears
+ Upon its shining side the mystic notes
+ Of those entrancing airs,[1]
+ The genii of the deep were wont to swell,
+When heaven's eternal orbs their midnight music rolled!
+ Oh! seek it, wheresoe'er it floats;
+ And, if the power
+Of thrilling numbers to thy soul be dear,
+
+ Go, bring the bright shell to my bower,
+ And I will fold thee in such downy dreams
+ As lap the Spirit of the Seventh Sphere,
+When Luna's distant tone falls faintly on his ear![2]
+ And thou shalt own,
+ That, through the circle of creation's zone,
+ Where matter slumbers or where spirit beams;
+ From the pellucid tides,[3] that whirl
+ The planets through their maze of song,
+ To the small rill, that weeps along
+ Murmuring o'er beds of pearl;
+ From the rich sigh
+Of the sun's arrow through an evening sky,[4]
+To the faint breath the tuneful osier yields
+ On Afric's burning fields;[5]
+ Thou'lt wondering own this universe divine
+ Is mine!
+ That I respire in all and all in me,
+One mighty mingled soul of boundless harmony.
+
+ Welcome, welcome, mystic shell!
+ Many a star has ceased to burn,[6]
+ Many a tear has Saturn's urn
+ O'er the cold bosom of the ocean wept,
+ Since thy aerial spell
+ Hath in the waters slept.
+ Now blest I'll fly
+ With the bright treasure to my choral sky,
+ Where she, who waked its early swell,
+ The Syren of the heavenly choir.
+Walks o'er the great string of my Orphic Lyre;
+ Or guides around the burning pole
+ The winged chariot of some blissful soul:
+ While thou--
+Oh son of earth, what dreams shall rise for thee!
+ Beneath Hispania's sun,
+ Thou'll see a streamlet run,
+ Which I've imbued with breathing melody;[7]
+And there, when night-winds down the current die,
+Thou'lt hear how like a harp its waters sigh:
+A liquid chord is every wave that flows,
+An airy plectrum every breeze that blows.
+
+ There, by that wondrous stream,
+ Go, lay thy languid brow,
+And I will send thee such a godlike dream,
+As never blest the slumbers even of him,[8]
+Who, many a night, with his primordial lyre,
+ Sate on the chill Pangaean mount,[9]
+ And, looking to the orient dim,
+Watched the first flowing of that sacred fount,
+From which his soul had drunk its fire.
+Oh think what visions, in that lonely hour,
+ Stole o'er his musing breast;
+ What pious ecstasy
+Wafted his prayer to that eternal Power,
+Whose seal upon this new-born world imprest
+The various forms of bright divinity!
+ Or, dost thou know what dreams I wove,
+ Mid the deep horror of that silent bower,[10]
+Where the rapt Samian slept his holy slumber?
+ When, free
+ From every earthly chain,
+From wreaths of pleasure and from bonds of pain,
+ His spirit flew through fields above,
+Drank at the source of nature's fontal number,
+And saw, in mystic choir, around him move
+The stars of song, Heaven's burning minstrelsy!
+ Such dreams, so heavenly bright,
+ I swear
+By the great diadem that twines my hair,
+And by the seven gems that sparkle there,
+ Mingling their beams
+ In a soft iris of harmonious light,
+Oh, mortal! such shall be thy radiant dreams.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I found her not--the chamber seemed
+ Like some divinely haunted place
+Where fairy forms had lately beamed,
+ And left behind their odorous trace!
+
+It felt as if her lips had shed
+A sigh around her, ere she fled,
+Which hung, as on a melting lute,
+When all the silver chords are mute,
+There lingers still a trembling breath
+After the note's luxurious death,
+A shade of song, a spirit air
+Of melodies which had been there.
+
+I saw the veil, which, all the day,
+ Had floated o'er her cheek of rose;
+I saw the couch, where late she lay
+ In languor of divine repose;
+And I could trace the hallowed print
+ Her limbs had left, as pure and warm,
+As if 'twere done in rapture's mint,
+ And Love himself had stamped the form.
+
+Oh my sweet mistress, where wert thou?
+ In pity fly not thus from me;
+Thou art my life, my essence now,
+ And my soul dies of wanting thee.
+
+
+[1] In the "Histoire Naturelle des Antilles," there is an account of some
+curious shells, found at Curaçoa, on the back of which were lines, filled
+with musical characters so distinct and perfect, that the writer assures
+us a very charming trio was sung from one of them. The author adds, a poet
+might imagine that these shells were used by the syrens at their concerts.
+
+[2] According to Cicero, and his commentator, Macrobius, the lunar tone is
+the gravest and faintest on the planetary heptachord.
+
+[3] Leucippus, the atomist, imagined a kind of vortices in the heavens,
+which he borrowed from Anaxagoras, and possibly suggested to Descartes.
+
+[4] Heraclides, upon the allegories of Homer, conjectures that the idea of
+the harmony of the spheres originated with this poet, who, in representing
+the solar beams as arrows, supposes them to emit a peculiar sound in the
+air.
+
+[5] In the account of Africa which D'Ablancourt has translated, there is
+mention of a tree in that country, whose branches, when shaken by the hand
+produce very sweet sounds.
+
+[6] Alluding to the extinction, or at least the disappearance, of some of
+those fixed stars, which we are taught to consider as suns, attended each
+by its system. Descartes thought that our earth might formerly have been a
+sun, which became obscured by a thick incrustation over its surface. This
+probably suggested the idea of a central fire.
+
+[7] This musical river is mentioned in the romance of Achilles Tatius.
+
+[8] Orpheus.
+
+[9] Eratosthenes, in mentioning the extreme veneration of Orpheus for
+Apollo, says that he was accustomed to go to the Pangaean mountain at
+daybreak, and there wait the rising of the sun, that he might be the first
+to hail its beams.
+
+[10] Alluding to the cave near Samos, where Pythagoras devoted the greater
+part of his days and nights to meditation and the mysteries of his
+philosophy.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MRS. HENRY TIGHE,
+
+ON READING HER "PSYCHE."
+
+
+Tell me the witching tale again,
+ For never has my heart or ear
+Hung on so sweet, so pure a strain,
+ So pure to feel, so sweet to hear.
+
+Say, Love, in all thy prime of fame,
+ When the high heaven itself was thine;
+When piety confest the flame,
+ And even thy errors were divine;
+
+Did ever Muse's hand, so fair,
+ A glory round thy temple spread?
+Did ever lip's ambrosial air
+ Such fragrance o'er thy altars shed?
+
+One maid there was, who round her lyre
+ The mystic myrtle wildly wreathed;--
+But all _her_ sighs were sighs of fire,
+ The myrtle withered as she breathed.
+
+Oh! you that love's celestial dream,
+ In all its purity, would know,
+Let not the senses' ardent beam
+ Too strongly through the vision glow.
+
+Love safest lies, concealed in night,
+ The night where heaven has bid him lie;
+Oh! shed not there unhallowed light,
+ Or, Psyche knows, the boy will fly.
+
+Sweet Psyche, many a charmed hour,
+ Through many a wild and magic waste,
+To the fair fount and blissful bower
+ Have I, in dreams, thy light foot traced!
+
+Where'er thy joys are numbered now,
+ Beneath whatever shades of rest,
+The Genius of the starry brow
+ Hath bound thee to thy Cupid's breast;
+
+Whether above the horizon dim,
+ Along whose verge our spirits stray,--
+Half sunk beneath the shadowy rim,
+ Half brightened by the upper ray,[1]--
+
+Thou dwellest in a world, all light,
+ Or, lingering here, doth love to be,
+To other souls, the guardian bright
+ That Love was, through this gloom, to thee;
+
+Still be the song to Psyche dear,
+ The song, whose gentle voice was given
+To be, on earth, to mortal ear,
+ An echo of her own, in heaven.
+
+
+[1] By this image the Platonists expressed the middle state of the soul
+between sensible and intellectual existence.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FROM THE HIGH PRIEST OF APOLLO TO A VIRGIN OF DELPHI.[1]
+
+
+ _Cum digno digna_.....
+ SULPICIA.
+
+
+"Who is the maid, with golden hair,
+"With eye of fire, and foot of air,
+"Whose harp around my altar swells,
+"The sweetest of a thousand shells?"
+'Twas thus the deity, who treads
+The arch of heaven, and proudly sheds
+Day from his eyelids--thus he spoke,
+As through my cell his glories broke.
+
+ Aphelia is the Delphic fair[2]
+With eyes of fire and golden hair,
+Aphelia's are the airy feet.
+And hers the harp divinely sweet;
+For foot so light has never trod
+The laurelled caverns of the god.
+Nor harp so soft hath ever given
+A sigh to earth or hymn to heaven.
+
+ "Then tell the virgin to unfold,
+"In looser pomp, her locks of gold,
+"And bid those eyes more fondly shine
+"To welcome down a Spouse Divine;
+"Since He, who lights the path of years--
+"Even from the fount of morning's tears
+"To where his setting splendors burn
+"Upon the western sea-maid's urn--
+"Doth not, in all his course, behold
+"Such eyes of fire, such hair of gold.
+"Tell her, he comes, in blissful pride,
+"His lip yet sparkling with the tide
+"That mantles in Olympian bowls,--
+"The nectar of eternal souls!
+"For her, for her he quits the skies,
+"And to her kiss from nectar flies.
+"Oh, he would quit his star-throned height,
+"And leave the world to pine for light,
+"Might he but pass the hours of shade,
+"Beside his peerless Delphic maid,
+"She, more than earthly woman blest,
+"He, more than god on woman's breast!"
+
+ There is a cave beneath the steep,[3]
+Where living rills of crystal weep
+O'er herbage of the loveliest hue
+That ever spring begemmed with dew:
+There oft the greensward's glossy tint
+Is brightened by the recent print
+Of many a faun and naiad's feet,--
+Scarce touching earth, their step so fleet,--
+That there, by moonlight's ray, had trod,
+In light dance, o'er the verdant sod.
+"There, there," the god, impassioned, said,
+"Soon as the twilight tinge is fled,
+"And the dim orb of lunar souls
+"Along its shadowy pathway rolls--
+"There shall we meet,--and not even He,
+"The God who reigns immortally,
+"Where Babel's turrets paint their pride
+"Upon the Euphrates' shining tide,[4]--
+"Not even when to his midnight loves
+"In mystic majesty he moves,
+"Lighted by many an odorous fire,
+"And hymned by all Chaldaea's choir,--
+"E'er yet, o'er mortal brow, let shine
+"Such effluence of Love Divine,
+"As shall to-night, blest maid, o'er thine."
+
+ Happy the maid, whom heaven allows
+To break for heaven her virgin vows!
+Happy the maid!--her robe of shame
+Is whitened by a heavenly flame,
+Whose glory, with a lingering trace,
+Shines through and deifies her race!
+
+
+[1] This poem, as well as a few others in the following volume, formed
+part of a work which I had early projected, and even announced to the
+public, but which, luckily, perhaps, for myself, had been interrupted by
+my visit to America in the year 1803.
+
+[2] In the 9th Pythic of Pindar, where Apollo, in the same manner,
+requires of Chiron some information respecting the fair Cyrene, the
+Centaur, in obeying, very gravely apologizes for telling the God what his
+omniscience must know so perfectly already.
+
+[3] The Corycian Cave, which Pausanias mentions. The inhabitants of
+Parnassus held it sacred to the Corycian nymphs, who were children of the
+river Plistus.
+
+[4] The temple of Jupiter Belus, at Babylon; in one of whose towers there
+was a large chapel set apart for these celestial assignations. "No man is
+allowed to sleep here," says Herodotus; "but the apartment is appropriated
+to a female, whom, if we believe the Chaldaean priests, the deity selects
+from the women of the country, as his favorite."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FRAGMENT.
+
+
+Pity me, love! I'll pity thee,
+If thou indeed hast felt like me.
+All, all my bosom's peace is o'er!
+At night, which _was_ my hour of calm,
+When from the page of classic lore,
+From the pure fount of ancient lay
+My soul has drawn the placid balm,
+Which charmed its every grief away,
+Ah! there I find that balm no more.
+Those spells, which make us oft forget
+The fleeting troubles of the day,
+In deeper sorrows only whet
+The stings they cannot tear away.
+When to my pillow racked I fly,
+With weary sense and wakeful eye.
+While my brain maddens, where, oh, where
+Is that serene consoling prayer,
+Which once has harbingered my rest,
+When the still soothing voice of Heaven
+Hath seemed to whisper in my breast,
+"Sleep on, thy errors are forgiven!"
+No, though I still in semblance pray,
+My thoughts are wandering far away,
+And even the name of Deity
+Is murmured out in sighs for thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A NIGHT THOUGHT.
+
+
+How oft a cloud, with envious veil,
+ Obscures yon bashful light,
+Which seems so modestly to steal
+ Along the waste of night!
+
+'Tis thus the world's obtrusive wrongs
+ Obscure with malice keen
+Some timid heart, which only longs
+ To live and die unseen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE KISS.
+
+
+Grow to my lip, thou sacred kiss,
+On which my soul's beloved swore
+That there should come a time of bliss,
+When she would mock my hopes no more.
+And fancy shall thy glow renew,
+In sighs at morn, and dreams at night,
+And none shall steal thy holy dew
+Till thou'rt absolved by rapture's rite.
+Sweet hours that are to make me blest,
+Fly, swift as breezes, to the goal,
+And let my love, my more than soul,
+Come blushing to this ardent breast.
+Then, while in every glance I drink
+The rich overflowing of her mind,
+Oh! let her all enamored sink
+In sweet abandonment resigned,
+Blushing for all our struggles past,
+And murmuring, "I am thine at last!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Think on that look whose melting ray
+ For one sweet moment mixt with mine,
+And for that moment seemed to say,
+ "I dare not, or I would be thine!"
+
+Think on thy every smile and glance,
+ On all thou hast to charm and move;
+And then forgive my bosom's trance,
+ Nor tell me it is sin to love.
+
+Oh, _not_ to love thee were the sin;
+ For sure, if Fate's decrees be done,
+Thou, thou art destined still to win,
+ As I am destined to be won!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE CATALOGUE.
+
+
+"Come, tell me," says Rosa, as kissing and kist,
+ One day she reclined on my breast;
+"Come, tell me the number, repeat me the list
+ "Of the nymphs you have loved and carest."--
+Oh Rosa! 'twas only my fancy that roved,
+ My heart at the moment was free;
+But I'll tell thee, my girl, how many I've loved,
+ And the number shall finish with thee.
+
+My tutor was Kitty; in infancy wild
+ She taught me the way to be blest;
+She taught me to love her, I loved like a child,
+ But Kitty could fancy the rest.
+This lesson of dear and enrapturing lore
+ I have never forgot, I allow:
+I have had it _by rote_ very often before,
+ But never _by heart_ until now.
+
+Pretty Martha was next, and my soul was all flame,
+ But my head was so full of romance
+That I fancied her into some chivalry dame,
+ And I was her knight of the lance.
+But Martha was not of this fanciful school,
+ And she laughed at her poor little knight;
+While I thought her a goddess, she thought me a fool,
+ And I'll swear _she_ was most in the right.
+
+My soul was now calm, till, by Cloris's looks,
+ Again I was tempted to rove;
+But Cloris, I found, was so learned in books
+ That she gave me more logic than love.
+So I left this young Sappho, and hastened to fly
+ To those sweeter logicians in bliss,
+Who argue the point with a soul-telling eye,
+ And convince us at once with a kiss.
+
+Oh! Susan was then all the world unto me,
+ But Susan was piously given;
+And the worst of it was, we could never agree
+ On the road that was shortest to Heaven.
+"Oh, Susan!" I've said, in the moments of mirth,
+ "What's devotion to thee or to me?
+"I devoutly believe there's a heaven on earth,
+ "And believe that that heaven's in _thee_!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IMITATION OF CATULLUS.
+
+TO HIMSELF.
+
+
+ _Miser Catulle, desinas ineptire_, etc.
+
+
+Cease the sighing fool to play;
+Cease to trifle life away;
+Nor vainly think those joys thine own,
+Which all, alas, have falsely flown.
+What hours, Catullus, once were thine.
+How fairly seemed thy day to shine,
+When lightly thou didst fly to meet
+The girl whose smile was then so sweet--
+The girl thou lovedst with fonder pain
+Than e'er thy heart can feel again.
+
+ Ye met--your souls seemed all in one,
+Like tapers that commingling shone;
+Thy heart was warm enough for both,
+And hers, in truth, was nothing loath.
+
+ Such were the hours that once were thine;
+But, ah! those hours no longer shine.
+For now the nymph delights no more
+In what she loved so much before;
+And all Catullus now can do,
+Is to be proud and frigid too;
+
+Nor follow where the wanton flies,
+Nor sue the bliss that she denies.
+False maid! he bids farewell to thee,
+To love, and all love's misery;
+The heyday of his heart is o'er,
+Nor will he court one favor more.
+
+ Fly, perjured girl!--but whither fly?
+Who now will praise thy cheek and eye?
+Who now will drink the syren tone,
+Which tells him thou art all his own?
+Oh, none:--and he who loved before
+Can never, never love thee more.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _"Neither do I condemn thee; go, and sin no more_!"
+ --ST. JOHN, chap. viii.
+
+Oh woman, if through sinful wile
+ Thy soul hath strayed from honor's track,
+'Tis mercy only can beguile,
+ By gentle ways, the wanderer back.
+
+The stain that on thy virtue lies,
+ Washed by those tears, not long will stay;
+As clouds that sully morning skies
+ May all be wept in showers away.
+
+Go, go, be innocent,--and live;
+ The tongues of men may wound thee sore;
+But Heaven in pity can forgive,
+ And bids thee "go, and sin no more!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NONSENSE.
+
+
+Good reader! if you e'er have seen,
+ When Phoebus hastens to his pillow,
+The mermaids, with their tresses green,
+ Dancing upon the western billow:
+If you have seen, at twilight dim,
+When the lone spirit's vesper hymn
+ Floats wild along the winding shore,
+If you have seen, through mist of eve,
+The fairy train their ringlets weave,
+Glancing along the spangled green:--
+ If you have seen all this, and more,
+God bless me, what a deal you've seen!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EPIGRAM.
+
+FROM THE FRENCH.
+
+
+"I never gave a kiss (says Prue),
+ "To naughty man, for I abhor it."
+She will not _give_ a kiss, 'tis true;
+ She'll _take_ one though, and thank you for it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ON A SQUINTING POETESS.
+
+
+To no _one_ Muse does she her glance confine,
+But has an eye, at once, to _all the Nine_!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .... ....
+
+
+ _Maria pur quando vuol, non è bisogna mutar ni faccia ni voce per
+ esser un Angelo_.[1]
+
+
+Die when you will, you need not wear
+At Heaven's Court a form more fair
+ Than Beauty here on earth has given;
+Keep but the lovely looks we see--
+The voice we hear--and you will be
+ An angel ready-made for Heaven!
+
+
+[1] The words addressed by Lord Herbert of Cherbury to the beautiful Nun
+at Murano.--_See his Life_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO ROSA.
+
+
+ _A far conserva, e cumulo d'amanti.
+ "Past. Fid_."
+
+
+And are you then a thing of art,
+ Seducing all, and loving none;
+And have I strove to gain a heart
+ Which every coxcomb thinks his own?
+
+Tell me at once if this be true,
+ And I will calm my jealous breast;
+Will learn to join the dangling crew,
+ And share your simpers with the rest.
+
+But if your heart be _not_ so free,--
+ Oh! if another share that heart,
+Tell not the hateful tale to me,
+ But mingle mercy with your art.
+
+I'd rather think you "false as hell,"
+ Than find you to be all divine,--
+Than know that heart could love so well,
+ Yet know that heart would not be mine!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO PHILLIS.
+
+
+Phillis, you little rosy rake,
+ That heart of yours I long to rifle;
+Come, give it me, and do not make
+ So much ado about a _trifle_!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO A LADY.
+
+ON HER SINGING.
+
+
+Thy song has taught my heart to feel
+ Those soothing thoughts of heavenly love,
+Which o'er the sainted spirits steal
+ When listening to the spheres above!
+
+When, tired of life and misery,
+ I wish to sigh my latest breath,
+Oh, Emma! I will fly to thee,
+ And thou shalt sing me into death.
+
+And if along thy lip and cheek
+ That smile of heavenly softness play,
+Which,--ah! forgive a mind that's weak,--
+ So oft has stolen my mind away.
+
+Thou'lt seem an angel of the sky,
+ That comes to charm me into bliss:
+I'll gaze and die--Who would not die,
+ If death were half so sweet as this?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+ON THE BIRTHDAY OF MRS. ----.
+
+WRITTEN IN IRELAND. 1799.
+
+
+Of all my happiest hours of joy,
+ And even I have had my measure,
+When hearts were full, and every eye
+ Hath kindled with the light of pleasure,
+An hour like this I ne'er was given,
+ So full of friendship's purest blisses;
+Young Love himself looks down from heaven,
+ To smile on such a day as this is.
+ Then come, my friends, this hour improve,
+ Let's feel as if we ne'er could sever;
+And may the birth of her we love
+Be thus with joy remembered ever!
+
+Oh! banish every thought to-night,
+ Which could disturb our soul's communion;
+Abandoned thus to dear delight,
+ We'll even for once forget the Union!
+On that let statesmen try their powers,
+ And tremble o'er the rights they'd die for;
+The union of the soul be ours,
+ And every union else we sigh for.
+ Then come, my friends, etc.
+
+In every eye around I mark
+ The feelings of the heart o'er-flowing;
+From every soul I catch the spark
+ Of sympathy, in friendship glowing.
+Oh! could such moments ever fly;
+ Oh! that we ne'er were doomed to lose 'em;
+And all as bright as Charlotte's eye,
+ And all as pure as Charlotte's bosom.
+ Then come, my friends, etc.
+
+For me, whate'er my span of years,
+ Whatever sun may light my roving;
+Whether I waste my life in tears,
+ Or live, as now, for mirth and loving;
+This day shall come with aspect kind,
+ Wherever fate may cast your rover;
+He'll think of those he left behind,
+ And drink a health to bliss that's over!
+ Then come, my friends, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG.[1]
+
+
+Mary, I believed thee true,
+ And I was blest in thus believing
+But now I mourn that e'er I knew
+ A girl so fair and so deceiving.
+ Fare thee well.
+
+Few have ever loved like me,--
+ Yes, I have loved thee too sincerely!
+And few have e'er deceived like thee.--
+ Alas! deceived me too severely.
+
+Fare thee well!--yet think awhile
+ On one whose bosom bleeds to doubt thee:
+Who now would rather trust that smile,
+ And die with thee than live without thee.
+
+Fare thee well! I'll think of thee.
+ Thou leavest me many a bitter token;
+For see, distracting woman, see,
+ My peace is gone, my heart is broken!--
+ Fare thee well!
+
+
+[1] These words were written to the pathetic Scotch air "Galla Water."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MORALITY.
+
+A FAMILIAR EPISTLE.
+
+ADDRESSED TO J. ATKINSON, ESQ. M. R. I. A.
+
+
+Though long at school and college dozing.
+O'er books of verse and books of prosing,
+And copying from their moral pages
+Fine recipes for making sages;
+Though long with' those divines at school,
+Who think to make us good by rule;
+Who, in methodic forms advancing,
+Teaching morality like dancing,
+Tell us, for Heaven or money's sake.
+What _steps_ we are through life to take:
+Though thus, my friend, so long employed,
+With so much midnight oil destroyed,
+I must confess my searches past,
+I've only learned _to doubt_ at last
+I find the doctors and the sages
+Have differed in all climes and ages,
+And two in fifty scarce agree
+On what is pure morality.
+'Tis like the rainbow's shifting zone,
+And every vision makes its own.
+
+ The doctors of the Porch advise,
+As modes of being great and wise,
+That we should cease to own or know
+The luxuries that from feeling flow;
+"Reason alone must claim direction,
+"And Apathy's the soul's perfection.
+"Like a dull lake the heart must lie;
+"Nor passion's gale nor pleasure's sigh,
+"Though Heaven the breeze, the breath, supplied,
+"Must curl the wave or swell the tide!"
+
+ Such was the rigid Zeno's plan
+To form his philosophic man;
+Such were the modes _he_ taught mankind
+To weed the garden of the mind;
+They tore from thence some weeds, 'tis true,
+But all the flowers were ravaged too!
+
+ Now listen to the wily strains,
+Which, on Cyrene's sandy plains,
+When Pleasure, nymph with loosened zone,
+Usurped the philosophic throne,--
+Hear what the courtly sage's[1] tongue
+To his surrounding pupils sung:--
+"Pleasure's the only noble end
+"To which all human powers should tend,
+"And Virtue gives her heavenly lore,
+"But to make Pleasure please us more.
+"Wisdom and she were both designed
+"To make the senses more refined,
+"That man might revel, free from cloying,
+"Then most a sage when most enjoying!"
+
+ Is this morality?--Oh, no!
+Even I a wiser path could show.
+The flower within this vase confined,
+The pure, the unfading flower of mind,
+Must not throw all its sweets away
+Upon a mortal mould of clay;
+No, no,--its richest breath should rise
+In virtue's incense to the skies.
+
+ But thus it is, all sects we see
+Have watchwords of morality:
+Some cry out Venus, others Jove;
+Here 'tis Religion, there 'tis Love.
+But while they thus so widely wander,
+While mystics dream and doctors ponder:
+And some, in dialectics firm,
+Seek virtue in a middle term;
+While thus they strive, in Heaven's defiance,
+To chain morality with science;
+The plain good man, whose action teach
+More virtue than a sect can preach
+Pursues his course, unsagely blest
+His tutor whispering in his breast;
+Nor could he act a purer part,
+Though he had Tully all by heart.
+And when he drops the tear on woe,
+He little knows or cares to know
+That Epictetus blamed that tear,
+By Heaven approved, to virtue dear!
+
+ Oh! when I've seen the morning beam
+Floating within the dimpled stream;
+While Nature, wakening from the night,
+Has just put on her robes of light,
+Have I, with cold optician's gaze,
+Explored the _doctrine_ of those rays?
+No, pedants, I have left to you
+Nicely to separate hue from hue.
+Go, give that moment up to art,
+When Heaven and nature claim the heart;
+And, dull to all their best attraction,
+Go--measure _angles of refraction_.
+While I, in feeling's sweet romance,
+Look on each daybeam as a glance
+From the great eye of Him above,
+Wakening his world with looks of love!
+
+
+[1] Aristippus.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TELL-TALE LYRE.
+
+
+I've heard, there was in ancient days
+ A Lyre of most melodious spell;
+'Twas heaven to hear its fairy lays,
+ If half be true that legends tell.
+
+'Twas played on by the gentlest sighs,
+ And to their breath it breathed again
+In such entrancing melodies
+ As ear had never drunk till then!
+
+Not harmony's serenest touch
+ So stilly could the notes prolong;
+They were not heavenly song so much
+ As they were dreams of heavenly song!
+
+If sad the heart, whose murmuring air
+ Along the chords in languor stole,
+The numbers it awakened there
+ Were eloquence from pity's soul.
+
+Or if the sigh, serene and light,
+ Was but the breath of fancied woes,
+The string, that felt its airy flight,
+ Soon whispered it to kind repose.
+
+And when young lovers talked alone,
+ If, mid their bliss, that Lyre was near,
+It made their accents all its own,
+ And sent forth notes that heaven might hear.
+
+There was a nymph, who long had loved,
+ But dared not tell the world how well:
+The shades, where she at evening roved,
+ Alone could know, alone could tell.
+
+'Twas there, at twilight time, she stole,
+ When the first star announced the night,--
+With him who claimed her inmost soul,
+ To wander by that soothing light.
+
+It chanced that, in the fairy bower
+ Where blest they wooed each other's smile,
+This Lyre, of strange and magic power,
+ Hung whispering o'er their head the while.
+
+And as, with eyes commingling fire,
+ They listened to each other's vow,
+The youth full oft would make the Lyre
+ A pillow for the maiden's brow!
+
+And, while the melting words she breathed
+ Were by its echoes wafted round,
+Her locks had with the chords so wreathed,
+ One knew not which gave forth the sound.
+
+Alas, their hearts but little thought,
+ While thus they talked the hours away,
+That every sound the Lyre was taught
+ Would linger long, and long betray.
+
+So mingled with its tuneful soul
+ Were all the tender murmurs grown,
+That other sighs unanswered stole,
+ Nor words it breathed but theirs alone.
+
+Unhappy nymph! thy name was sung
+ To every breeze that wandered by;
+The secrets of thy gentle tongue
+ Were breathed in song to earth and sky.
+
+The fatal Lyre, by Envy's hand
+ Hung high amid the whispering groves,
+To every gale by which 'twas fanned,
+ Proclaimed the mystery of your loves.
+
+Nor long thus rudely was thy name
+ To earth's derisive echoes given;
+Some pitying spirit downward came.
+ And took the Lyre and thee to heaven.
+
+There, freed from earth's unholy wrongs,
+ Both happy in Love's home shall be;
+Thou, uttering naught but seraph songs,
+ And that sweet Lyre still echoing thee!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PEACE AND GLORY.
+
+WRITTEN ON THE APPROACH OF WAR.
+
+
+Where is now the smile, that lightened
+ Every hero's couch of rest?
+Where is now the hope, that brightened
+ Honor's eye and Pity's breast?
+Have we lost the wreath we braided
+ For our weary warrior men?
+Is the faithless olive faded?
+ Must the bay be plucked again?
+
+Passing hour of sunny weather,
+ Lovely, in your light awhile,
+Peace and Glory, wed together,
+ Wandered through our blessed isle.
+And the eyes of Peace would glisten,
+ Dewy as a morning sun,
+When the timid maid would listen
+ To the deeds her chief had done.
+
+Is their hour of dalliance over?
+ Must the maiden's trembling feet
+Waft her from her warlike lover
+ To the desert's still retreat?
+Fare you well! with sighs we banish
+ Nymph so fair and guests so bright;
+Yet the smile, with which you vanish,
+ Leaves behind a soothing light;--
+
+Soothing light, that long shall sparkle
+ O'er your warrior's sanguined way,
+Through the field where horrors darkle,
+ Shedding hope's consoling ray.
+Long the smile his heart will cherish,
+ To its absent idol true;
+While around him myriads perish,
+ Glory still will sigh for you!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Take back the sigh, thy lips of art
+ In passion's moment breathed to me;
+Yet, no--it must not, will not part,
+ 'Tis now the life-breath of my heart,
+And has become too pure for thee.
+
+Take back the kiss, that faithless sigh
+ With all the warmth of truth imprest;
+Yet, no--the fatal kiss may lie,
+Upon _thy_ lip its sweets would die,
+ Or bloom to make a rival blest.
+
+Take back the vows that, night and day,
+ My heart received, I thought, from thine;
+Yet, no--allow them still to stay,
+They might some other heart betray,
+ As sweetly as they've ruined mine.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AND REASON.
+
+
+ _Quand l'homme commence à raissonner,
+ il cesse de sentir_.--J. J. ROUSSEAU.
+
+
+'Twas in the summer time so sweet,
+ When hearts and flowers are both in season,
+That--who, of all the world, should meet,
+ One early dawn, but Love and Reason!
+
+Love told his dream of yesternight,
+ While Reason talked about the weather;
+The morn, in sooth, was fair and bright,
+ And on they took their way together.
+
+The boy in many a gambol flew,
+ While Reason, like a Juno, stalked,
+And from her portly figure threw
+ A lengthened shadow, as she walked.
+
+No wonder Love, as on they past,
+ Should find that sunny morning chill,
+For still the shadow Reason cast
+ Fell o'er the boy, and cooled him still.
+
+In vain he tried his wings to warm.
+ Or find a pathway not so dim
+For still the maid's gigantic form
+ Would stalk between the sun and him.
+
+"This must not be," said little Love--
+ "The sun was made for more than you."
+So, turning through a myrtle grove,
+ He bid the portly nymph adieu.
+
+Now gayly roves the laughing boy
+ O'er many a mead, by many a stream;
+In every breeze inhaling joy,
+ And drinking bliss in every beam.
+
+From all the gardens, all the bowers,
+ He culled the many sweets they shaded,
+And ate the fruits and smelled the flowers,
+ Till taste was gone and odor faded.
+
+But now the sun, in pomp of noon,
+ Looked blazing o'er the sultry plains;
+Alas! the boy grew languid soon,
+ And fever thrilled through all his veins.
+
+The dew forsook his baby brow,
+ No more with healthy bloom he smiled--
+Oh! where was tranquil Reason now,
+ To cast her shadow o'er the child?
+
+Beneath a green and aged palm,
+ His foot at length for shelter turning,
+He saw the nymph reclining calm,
+ With brow as cool as his was burning.
+
+"Oh! take me to that bosom cold,"
+ In murmurs at her feet he said;
+And Reason oped her garment's fold,
+ And flung it round his fevered head.
+
+He felt her bosom's icy touch,
+ And soon it lulled his pulse to rest;
+For, ah! the chill was quite too much,
+ And Love expired on Reason's breast!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nay, do not weep, my Fanny dear;
+ While in these arms you lie.
+This world hath not a wish, a fear,
+That ought to cost that eye a tear.
+ That heart, one single sigh.
+
+The world!--ah, Fanny, Love must shun
+ The paths where many rove;
+One bosom to recline upon,
+One heart to be his only--one,
+ Are quite enough for Love.
+
+What can we wish, that is not here
+ Between your arms and mine?
+Is there, on earth, a space so dear
+As that within the happy sphere
+ Two loving arms entwine?
+
+For me, there's not a lock of jet
+ Adown your temples curled,
+Within whose glossy, tangling net,
+My soul doth not, at once, forget
+ All, all this worthless world.
+
+'Tis in those eyes, so full of love,
+ My only worlds I see;
+Let but _their_ orbs in sunshine move,
+And earth below and skies above
+ May frown or smile for me.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ASPASIA.
+
+
+'Twas in the fair Aspasia's bower,
+That Love and Learning, many an hour,
+In dalliance met; and Learning smiled
+With pleasure on the playful child,
+Who often stole, to find a nest
+Within the folds of Learning's vest.
+
+ There, as the listening statesman hung
+In transport on Aspasia's tongue,
+The destinies of Athens took
+Their color from Aspasia's look.
+Oh happy time, when laws of state
+When all that ruled the country's fate,
+Its glory, quiet, or alarms,
+Was planned between two snow-white arms!
+
+ Blest times! they could not always last--
+And yet, even now, they _are_ not past,
+Though we have lost the giant mould.
+In which their men were cast of old,
+Woman, dear woman, still the same,
+While beauty breathes through soul or frame,
+While man possesses heart or eyes,
+Woman's bright empire never dies!
+
+ No, Fanny, love, they ne'er shall say,
+That beauty's charm hath past away;
+Give but the universe a soul
+Attuned to woman's soft control,
+And Fanny hath the charm, the skill,
+To wield a universe at will.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GRECIAN GIRL'S DREAM OF THE BLESSED ISLANDS.[1]
+
+TO HER LOVER.
+
+
+Was it the moon, or was it morning's ray,
+That call'd thee, dearest, from these arms away?
+Scarce hadst thou left me, when a dream of night
+Came o'er my spirit so distinct and bright,
+That, while I yet can vividly recall
+Its witching wonders, thou shall hear them all.
+Methought I saw, upon the lunar beam,
+Two winged boys, such as thy muse might dream,
+Descending from above, at that still hour,
+And gliding, with smooth step, into my bower.
+Fair as the beauteous spirits that, all day.
+In Amatha's warm founts imprisoned stay,
+But rise at midnight, from the enchanted rill,
+To cool their plumes upon some moonlight hill.
+
+ At once I knew their mission:--'twas to bear
+My spirit upward, through the paths of air,
+To that elysian realm, from whence stray beams
+So oft, in sleep, had visited my dreams.
+Swift at their touch dissolved the ties, that clung
+All earthly round me, and aloft I sprung;
+While, heavenward guides, the little genii flew
+Thro' paths of light, refreshed by heaven's own dew,
+And fanned by airs still fragrant with the breath
+Of cloudless climes and worlds that know not death.
+
+ Thou knowest, that, far beyond our nether sky,
+And shown but dimly to man's erring eye,
+A mighty ocean of blue ether rolls,[2]
+Gemmed with bright islands, where the chosen souls,
+Who've past in lore and love their earthly hours,
+Repose for ever in unfading bowers.
+That very moon, whose solitary light
+So often guides thee to my bower at night,
+Is no chill planet, but an isle of love,
+Floating in splendor through those seas above,
+And peopled with bright forms, aerial grown,
+Nor knowing aught of earth but love alone.
+Thither, I thought, we winged our airy way:--
+Mild o'er its valleys streamed a silvery day,
+While, all around, on lily beds of rest,
+Reclined the spirits of the immortal Blest.
+Oh! there I met those few congenial maids,
+Whom love hath warmed, in philosophic shades;
+There still Leontium,[3] on her sage's breast,
+Found lore and love, was tutored and carest;
+And there the clasp of Pythia's[4]gentle arms
+Repaid the zeal which deified her charms.
+The Attic Master,[5] in Aspasia's eyes,
+Forgot the yoke of less endearing ties;
+While fair Theano,[6] innocently fair,
+Wreathed playfully her Samian's flowing hair,
+Whose soul now fixt, its transmigrations past,
+Found in those arms a resting-place, at last;
+And smiling owned, whate'er his dreamy thought
+In mystic numbers long had vainly sought,
+The One that's formed of Two whom love hath bound,
+Is the best number gods or men e'er found.
+
+ But think, my Theon, with what joy I thrilled,
+When near a fount, which through the valley rilled,
+My fancy's eye beheld a form recline,
+Of lunar race, but so resembling thine
+That, oh! 'twas but fidelity in me,
+To fly, to clasp, and worship it for thee.
+No aid of words the unbodied soul requires,
+To waft a wish or embassy desires;
+But by a power, to spirits only given,
+A deep, mute impulse, only felt in heaven,
+Swifter than meteor shaft through summer skies,
+From soul to soul the glanced idea flies.
+
+ Oh, my beloved, how divinely sweet
+Is the pure joy, when kindred spirits meet!
+Like him, the river-god,[7]whose waters flow,
+With love their only light, through caves below,
+Wafting in triumph all the flowery braids,
+And festal rings, with which Olympic maids
+Have decked his current, as an offering meet
+To lay at Arethusa's shining feet.
+
+Think, when he meets at last his fountain-bride,
+What perfect love must thrill the blended tide!
+Each lost in each, till, mingling into one,
+Their lot the same for shadow or for sun,
+A type of true love, to the deep they run.
+'Twas thus--
+ But, Theon, 'tis an endless theme,
+And thou growest weary of my half-told dream.
+
+Oh would, my love, we were together now.
+And I would woo sweet patience to thy brow,
+And make thee smile at all the magic tales
+Of starlight bowers and planetary vales,
+Which my fond soul, inspired by thee and love,
+In slumber's loom hath fancifully wove.
+But no; no more--soon as tomorrow's ray
+O'er soft Ilissus shall have died away,
+I'll come, and, while love's planet in the west
+Shines o'er our meeting, tell thee all the rest.
+
+
+[1] It was imagined by some of the ancients that there is an
+ethereal ocean above us, and that the sun and moon are two floating,
+luminous islands, in which the spirits of the blest reside.
+
+[2] This belief of an ocean in the heavens, or "waters above the
+firmament," was one of the many physical errors In which the early fathers
+bewildered themselves.
+
+[3] The pupil and mistress of Epicurus, who called her his "dear
+little Leontium" as appears by a fragment of one of his letters in
+Laertius. This Leontium was a woman of talent; "she had the impudence
+(says Cicero) to write against Theophrastus;" and Cicero, at the same
+time, gives her a name which is neither polite nor translatable.
+
+[4] Pythia was a woman whom Aristotle loved, and to whom after
+her death he paid divine honors, solemnizing her memory by the same
+sacrifices which the Athenians offered to the Goddess Ceres.
+
+[5] Socrates, who used to console himself in the society of
+Aspasia for those "less endearing ties" which he found at home with
+Xantippe.
+
+[6] There are some sensible letters extant under the name of
+this fair Pythagorean. They are addressed to her female friends upon the
+education of children, the treatment of servants, etc.
+
+[7] The river Alpheus, which flowed by Pisa or Olympia, and into
+which it was customary to throw offerings of different kinds, during the
+celebration of the Olympic games. In the pretty romance of Clitophon and
+Leucippe, the river is supposed to carry these offerings as bridal gifts
+to the fountain Arethusa.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO CLOE.
+
+IMITATED FROM MARTIAL.
+
+
+I could resign that eye of blue.
+ How e'er its splendor used to thrill me;
+And even that cheek of roseate hue,--
+ To lose it, Cloe, scarce would kill me.
+
+That snowy neck I ne'er should miss,
+ However much I've raved about it;
+And sweetly as that lip can kiss,
+ I _think_ I could exist without it.
+
+In short, so well I've learned to fast,
+ That, sooth my love, I know not whether
+I might not bring myself at last,
+ To--do without you altogether.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WREATH AND THE CHAIN.
+
+
+I bring thee, love, a golden chain,
+ I bring thee too a flowery wreath;
+The gold shall never wear a stain,
+ The flowerets long shall sweetly breathe.
+Come, tell me which the tie shall be,
+To bind thy gentle heart to me.
+
+The Chain is formed of golden threads,
+ Bright as Minerva's yellow hair,
+When the last beam of evening sheds
+ Its calm and sober lustre there.
+The Wreath's of brightest myrtle wove,
+ With sunlit drops of bliss among it,
+And many a rose-leaf, culled by Love,
+ To heal his lip when bees have stung it.
+Come, tell me which the tie shall be,
+To bind thy gentle heart to me.
+
+Yes, yes, I read that ready eye,
+ Which answers when the tongue is loath,
+Thou likest the form of either tie,
+ And spreadest thy playful hands for both.
+Ah!--if there were not something wrong,
+ The world would see them blended oft;
+The Chain would make the Wreath so strong!
+ The Wreath would make the Chain so soft!
+Then might the gold, the flowerets be
+Sweet fetters for my love and me.
+
+But, Fanny, so unblest they twine,
+ That (heaven alone can tell the reason)
+When mingled thus they cease to shine,
+ Or shine but for a transient season.
+Whether the Chain may press too much,
+ Or that the Wreath is slightly braided,
+Let but the gold the flowerets touch,
+ And all their bloom, their glow is faded!
+Oh! better to be always free.
+Than thus to bind my love to me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The timid girl now hung her head,
+ And, as she turned an upward glance,
+I saw a doubt its twilight spread
+ Across her brow's divine expanse
+Just then, the garland's brightest rose
+ Gave one of its love-breathing sighs--
+Oh! who can ask how Fanny chose,
+ That ever looked in Fanny's eyes!
+"The Wreath, my life, the Wreath shall be
+"The tie to bind my soul to thee."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .... ....
+
+
+And hast thou marked the pensive shade,
+ That many a time obscures my brow,
+Midst all the joys, beloved maid.
+ Which thou canst give, and only thou?
+
+Oh! 'tis not that I then forget
+ The bright looks that before me shine;
+For never throbbed a bosom yet
+ Could feel their witchery, like mine.
+
+When bashful on my bosom hid,
+ And blushing to have felt so blest,
+Thou dost but lift thy languid lid
+ Again to close it on my breast;--
+
+Yes,--these are minutes all thine own,
+ Thine own to give, and mine to feel;
+Yet even in them, my heart has known
+ The sigh to rise, the tear to steal.
+
+For I have thought of former hours,
+ When he who first thy soul possest,
+Like me awaked its witching powers,
+ Like me was loved, like me was blest.
+
+Upon _his_ name thy murmuring tongue
+ Perhaps hath all as sweetly dwelt;
+Upon his words thine ear hath hung,
+ With transport all as purely felt.
+
+For him--yet why the past recall,
+ To damp and wither present bliss?
+Thou'rt now my own, heart, spirit, all,
+ And heaven could grant no more than this!
+
+Forgive me, dearest, oh! forgive;
+ I would be first, be sole to thee,
+Thou shouldst have but begun to live,
+ The hour that gave thy heart to me.
+
+Thy book of life till then effaced,
+ Love should have kept that leaf alone
+On which he first so brightly traced
+ That thou wert, soul and all, my own.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .......'S PICTURE.
+
+
+Go then, if she, whose shade thou art,
+ No more will let thee soothe my pain;
+Yet, tell her, it has cost this heart
+ Some pangs, to give thee back again.
+
+Tell her, the smile was not so dear,
+ With which she made the semblance mine,
+As bitter is the burning tear,
+ With which I now the gift resign.
+
+Yet go--and could she still restore,
+ As some exchange for taking thee.
+The tranquil look which first I wore,
+ When her eyes found me calm and free;
+
+Could she give back the careless flow,
+ The spirit that my heart then knew--
+Yet, no, 'tis vain--go, picture, go--
+ Smile at me once, and then--adieu!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FRAGMENT OF A MYTHOLOGICAL HYMN TO LOVE.[1]
+
+
+ Blest infant of eternity!
+ Before the day-star learned to move,
+In pomp of fire, along his grand career,
+ Glancing the beamy shafts of light
+
+From his rich quiver to the farthest sphere,
+ Thou wert alone, oh Love!
+ Nestling beneath the wings of ancient Night,
+ Whose horrors seemed to smile in shadowing thee.
+No form of beauty soothed thine eye,
+ As through the dim expanse it wandered wide;
+No kindred spirit caught thy sigh,
+ As o'er the watery waste it lingering died.
+
+Unfelt the pulse, unknown the power,
+ That latent in his heart was sleeping,--
+Oh Sympathy! that lonely hour
+ Saw Love himself thy absence weeping.
+
+But look, what glory through the darkness beams!
+Celestial airs along the water glide:--
+What Spirit art thou, moving o'er the tide
+ So beautiful? oh, not of earth,
+ But, in that glowing hour, the birth
+Of the young Godhead's own creative dreams.
+ 'Tis she!
+Psyche, the firstborn spirit of the air.
+ To thee, oh Love, she turns,
+
+ On thee her eyebeam burns:
+ Blest hour, before all worlds ordained to be!
+ They meet--
+ The blooming god--the spirit fair
+ Meet in communion sweet.
+ Now, Sympathy, the hour is thine;
+ All Nature feels the thrill divine,
+ The veil of Chaos is withdrawn,
+And their first kiss is great Creation's dawn!
+
+
+[1] Love and Psyche are here considered as the active and passive
+principles of creation, and the universe is supposed to have received its
+first harmonizing impulse from the nuptial sympathy between these two
+powers. A marriage is generally the first step in cosmogony. Timaeus held
+Form to be the father, and Matter the mother of the World.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO HIS SERENE HIGHNESS THE DUKE OF MONTPENSIER
+ON HIS PORTRAIT OF THE LADY ADELAIDE FORBES.
+
+_Donington Park, 1802_
+
+
+To catch the thought, by painting's spell,
+ Howe'er remote, howe'er refined,
+And o'er the kindling canvas tell
+ The silent story of the mind;
+
+O'er nature's form to glance the eye,
+ And fix, by mimic light and shade,
+Her morning tinges ere they fly,
+ Her evening blushes, ere they fade;
+
+Yes, these are Painting's proudest powers,
+ The gift, by which her art divine
+Above all others proudly towers,--
+ And these, oh Prince! are richly thine.
+
+And yet, when Friendship sees thee trace,
+ In almost living truth exprest,
+This bright memorial of a face
+ On which her eye delights to rest;
+
+While o'er the lovely look serene,
+ The smile of peace, the bloom of youth,
+The cheek, that blushes to be seen.
+ The eye that tells the bosom's truth;
+
+While o'er each line, so brightly true,
+ Our eyes with lingering pleasure rove,
+Blessing the touch whose various hue
+ Thus brings to mind the form we love;
+
+We feel the magic of thy art,
+ And own it with a zest, a zeal,
+A pleasure, nearer to the heart
+ Than critic taste can _ever_ feel.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FALL OF HEBE.
+
+A DITHYRAMBIC ODE.
+
+
+ 'Twas on a day
+When the immortals at their banquet lay;
+ The bowl
+ Sparkled with starry dew,
+The weeping of those myriad urns of light,
+ Within whose orbs, the Almighty Power,
+ At nature's dawning hour,
+Stored the rich fluid of ethereal soul.
+ Around,
+Soft odorous clouds, that upward wing their flight
+ From eastern isles
+(Where they have bathed them in the orient ray,
+And with rich fragrance all their bosoms filled).
+In circles flew, and, melting as they flew,
+A liquid daybreak o'er the board distilled.
+
+ All, all was luxury!
+ All _must_ be luxury, where Lyaeus smiles.
+ His locks divine
+ Were crowned
+ With a bright meteor-braid,
+Which, like an ever-springing wreath of vine,
+ Shot into brilliant leafy shapes,
+And o'er his brow in lambent tendrils played:
+ While mid the foliage hung,
+ Like lucid grapes,
+A thousand clustering buds of light,
+Culled from the garden of the galaxy.
+
+Upon his bosom Cytherea's head
+Lay lovely, as when first the Syrens sung
+ Her beauty's dawn,
+And all the curtains of the deep, undrawn,
+Revealed her sleeping in its azure bed.
+ The captive deity
+ Hung lingering on her eyes and lip,
+ With looks of ecstasy.
+ Now, on his arm,
+ In blushes she reposed,
+ And, while he gazed on each bright charm,
+To shade his burning eyes her hand in dalliance stole.
+
+And now she raised her rosy mouth to sip
+ The nectared wave
+ Lyaeus gave,
+And from her eyelids, half-way closed,
+ Sent forth a melting gleam,
+ Which fell like sun-dew in the bowl:
+While her bright hair, in mazy flow
+ Of gold descending
+Adown her cheek's luxurious glow,
+ Hung o'er the goblet's side,
+And was reflected in its crystal tide,
+ Like a bright crocus flower,
+ Whose sunny leaves, at evening hour
+ With roses of Cyrene blending,[1]
+Hang o'er the mirror of some silvery stream.
+
+ The Olympian cup
+ Shone in the hands
+ Of dimpled Hebe, as she winged her feet
+ Up
+ The empyreal mount,
+To drain the soul-drops at their stellar fount;[2]
+ And still
+ As the resplendent rill
+ Gushed forth into the cup with mantling heat,
+ Her watchful care
+ Was still to cool its liquid fire
+With snow-white sprinklings of that feathery air
+The children of the Pole respire,
+ In those enchanted lands.[3]
+Where life is all a spring, and
+ north winds never blow.
+
+ But oh!
+ Bright Hebe, what a tear,
+ And what a blush were thine,
+ When, as the breath of every Grace
+Wafted thy feet along the studded sphere,
+ With a bright cup for Jove himself to drink,
+ Some star, that shone beneath thy tread,
+ Raising its amorous head
+ To kiss those matchless feet,
+ Checked thy career too fleet,
+ And all heaven's host of eyes
+ Entranced, but fearful all,
+Saw thee, sweet Hebe, prostrate fall
+ Upon the bright floor of the azure skies;
+ Where, mid its stars, thy beauty lay,
+ As blossom, shaken from the spray
+ Of a spring thorn,
+Lies mid the liquid sparkles of the morn.
+Or, as in temples of the Paphian shade,
+The worshippers of Beauty's queen behold
+An image of their rosy idol, laid
+ Upon a diamond shrine.
+
+ The wanton wind,
+ Which had pursued the flying fair,
+ And sported mid the tresses unconfined
+ Of her bright hair,
+Now, as she fell,--oh wanton breeze!
+Ruffled the robe, whose graceful flow
+Hung o'er those limbs of unsunned snow,
+ Purely as the Eleusinian veil
+ Hangs o'er the Mysteries!
+
+ The brow of Juno flushed--
+ Love blest the breeze!
+ The Muses blushed;
+And every cheek was hid behind a lyre,
+While every eye looked laughing through the strings.
+But the bright cup? the nectared draught
+Which Jove himself was to have quaffed?
+ Alas, alas, upturned it lay
+ By the fallen Hebe's side;
+While, in slow lingering drops, the ethereal tide,
+As conscious of its own rich essence, ebbed away.
+
+Who was the Spirit that remembered Man,
+ In that blest hour,
+ And, with a wing of love,
+ Brushed off the goblet's scattered tears,
+As, trembling near the edge of heaven they ran,
+And sent them floating to our orb below?
+ Essence of immortality!
+ The shower
+ Fell glowing through the spheres;
+While all around new tints of bliss,
+ New odors and new light,
+ Enriched its radiant flow.
+ Now, with a liquid kiss,
+ It stole along the thrilling wire
+ Of Heaven's luminous Lyre,
+ Stealing the soul of music in its flight:
+ And now, amid the breezes bland,
+That whisper from the planets as they roll,
+ The bright libation, softly fanned
+ By all their sighs, meandering stole.
+ They who, from Atlas' height,
+ Beheld this rosy flame
+ Descending through the waste of night,
+Thought 'twas some planet, whose empyreal frame
+ Had kindled, as it rapidly revolved
+Around its fervid axle, and dissolved
+ Into a flood so bright!
+
+ The youthful Day,
+ Within his twilight bower,
+ Lay sweetly sleeping
+On the flushed bosom of a lotos-flower;[4]
+ When round him, in profusion weeping,
+ Dropt the celestial shower,
+ Steeping
+ The rosy clouds, that curled
+ About his infant head,
+Like myrrh upon the locks of Cupid shed.
+ But, when the waking boy
+Waved his exhaling tresses through the sky,
+ O morn of joy!
+ The tide divine,
+ All glorious with the vermil dye
+ It drank beneath his orient eye,
+ Distilled, in dews, upon the world,
+And every drop was wine, was heavenly WINE!
+ Blest be the sod, and blest the flower
+ On which descended first that shower,
+All fresh from Jove's nectareous springs;--
+ Oh far less sweet the flower, the sod,
+ O'er which the Spirit of the Rainbow flings
+ The magic mantle of her solar God![5]
+
+
+[1] We learn from Theopbrastus, that the roses of Cyrene were particularly
+fragrant.
+
+[2] Heraclitus (Physicus) held the soul to be a spark of the stellar
+essence.
+
+[3] The country of the Hyperboreans. These people were supposed to be
+placed so far north that the north wind could not affect them; they lived
+longer than any other mortals; passed their whole time in music and
+dancing, etc.
+
+[4] The Egyptians represented the dawn of day by a young boy seated upon a
+lotos. Observing that the lotos showed its head above water at sunrise,
+and sank again at his setting, they conceived the idea of consecrating
+this flower to Osiris, or the sun.
+
+[5] The ancients esteemed those flowers and trees the sweetest upon which
+the rainbow had appeared to rest; and the wood they chiefly burned in
+sacrifices, was that which the smile of Iris had consecrated.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+RINGS AND SEALS.
+
+
+"Go!" said the angry, weeping maid,
+"The charm is broken!--once betrayed,
+"Never can this wronged heart rely
+"On word or look, on oath or sigh.
+"Take back the gifts, so fondly given,
+"With promised faith and vows to heaven;
+"That little ring which, night and morn,
+"With wedded truth my hand hath worn;
+"That seal which oft, in moments blest,
+"Thou hast upon my lip imprest,
+"And sworn its sacred spring should be
+"A fountain sealed[1] for only thee:
+"Take, take them back, the gift and vow,
+"All sullied, lost and hateful now!"
+
+ I took the ring--the seal I took,
+While, oh, her every tear and look
+Were such as angels look and shed,
+When man is by the world misled.
+Gently I whispered, "Fanny, dear!
+"Not half thy lover's gifts are here:
+"Say, where are all the kisses given,
+"From morn to noon, from noon to even,--
+"Those signets of true love, worth more
+"Than Solomon's own seal of yore,--
+"Where are those gifts, so sweet, so many?
+"Come, dearest,--give back all, if any."
+ While thus I whispered, trembling too,
+Lest all the nymph had sworn was true,
+I saw a smile relenting rise
+Mid the moist azure of her eyes,
+Like daylight o'er a sea of blue,
+While yet in mid-air hangs the dew
+She let her cheek repose on mine,
+She let my arms around her twine;
+One kiss was half allowed, and then--
+The ring and seal were hers again.
+
+
+[1] "There are gardens, supposed to be those of King Solomon, in the
+neighborhood of Bethlehem. The friars show a fountain, which, they say, is
+the sealed fountain, to which the holy spouse in the Canticles is
+compared; and they pretend a tradition, that Solomon shut up these springs
+and put his signet upon the door, to keep them for his own
+drinking."--_Maundrell's Travels_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MISS SUSAN BECKFORD.[1]
+
+ON HER SINGING.
+
+
+I more than once have heard at night
+ A song like those thy lip hath given,
+And it was sung by shapes of light,
+ Who looked and breathed, like thee, of heaven.
+
+But this was all a dream of sleep.
+ And I have said when morning shone:--
+"Why should the night-witch, Fancy, keep
+ "These wonders for herself alone?"
+
+I knew not then that fate had lent
+ Such tones to one of mortal birth;
+I knew not then that Heaven had sent
+ A voice, a form like thine on earth.
+
+And yet, in all that flowery maze
+ Through which my path of life has led,
+When I have heard the sweetest lays
+ From lips of rosiest lustre shed;
+
+When I have felt the warbled word
+ From Beauty's lip, in sweetness vying
+With music's own melodious bird;
+ When on the rose's bosom lying
+
+Though form and song at once combined
+ Their loveliest bloom and softest thrill,
+My heart hath sighed, my ear hath pined
+ For something lovelier, softer still:--
+
+Oh, I have found it all, at last,
+ In thee, thou sweetest living lyre,
+Through which the soul of song e'er past,
+ Or feeling breathed its sacred fire.
+
+All that I e'er, in wildest flight
+ Of fancy's dreams could hear or see
+Of music's sigh or beauty's light
+ Is realized, at once, in thee!
+
+
+[1] Afterward Duchess of Hamilton.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IMPROMPTU,
+
+ON LEAVING SOME FRIENDS.
+
+
+ _o dulces comitum valete coetus_!
+ CATULLUS.
+
+
+No, never shall my soul forget
+ The friends I found so cordial-hearted;
+Dear shall be the day we met,
+ And dear shall be the night we parted.
+
+If fond regrets, however sweet,
+ Must with the lapse of time decay,
+Yet stall, when thus in mirth you meet,
+ Fill high to him that's far away!
+
+Long be the light of memory found
+ Alive within your social glass;
+Let that be still the magic round.
+ O'er which Oblivion, dare not pass.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A WARNING.
+
+TO .......
+
+
+Oh, fair as heaven and chaste as light!
+Did nature mould thee all so bright.
+That thou shouldst e'er be brought to weep
+O'er languid virtue's fatal sleep,
+O'er shame extinguished, honor fled,
+Peace lost, heart withered, feeling dead?
+
+No, no! a star was born with thee,
+Which sheds eternal purity.
+Thou hast, within those sainted eyes,
+So fair a transcript of the skies,
+In lines of light such heavenly lore
+That men should read them and adore.
+Yet have I known a gentle maid
+Whose mind and form were both arrayed
+In nature's purest light, like thine;--
+Who wore that clear, celestial sign
+Which seems to mark the brow that's fair
+For destiny's peculiar care;
+Whose bosom, too, like Dian's own,
+Was guarded by a sacred zone,
+Where the bright gem of virtue shone;
+Whose eyes had in their light a charm
+Against all wrong and guile and harm.
+Yet, hapless maid, in one sad hour
+These spells have lost their guardian power;
+The gem has been beguiled away;
+Her eyes have lost their chastening ray;
+The modest pride, the guiltless shame,
+The smiles that from reflection came,
+All, all have fled and left her mind
+A faded monument behind;
+The ruins of a once pure shrine,
+No longer fit for guest divine,
+Oh! 'twas a sight I wept to see--
+Heaven keep the lost one's fate from thee!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .......
+
+
+'Tis time, I feel, to leave thee now,
+ While yet my soul is something free;
+While yet those dangerous eyes allow
+ One minute's thought to stray from thee.
+
+Oh! thou becom'st each moment dearer;
+ Every chance that brings me nigh thee
+Brings my ruin nearer, nearer,--
+ I am lost, unless I fly thee.
+
+Nay, if thou dost not scorn and hate me,
+ Doom me not thus so soon to fall
+Duties, fame, and hopes await me,--
+ But that eye would blast them all!
+
+For, thou hast heart as false and cold
+ As ever yet allured and swayed,
+And couldst, without a sigh, behold
+ The ruin which thyself had made.
+
+Yet,--_could_ I think that, truly fond,
+ That eye but once would smile on me,
+Even as thou art, how far beyond
+ Fame, duty, wealth, that smile would be!
+
+Oh! but to win it, night and day,
+ Inglorious at thy feet reclined,
+I'd sigh my dreams of fame away,
+ The world for thee forgot, resigned.
+
+But no, 'tis o'er, and--thus we part,
+ Never to meet again--no, never,
+False woman, what a mind and heart
+ Thy treachery has undone forever.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WOMAN.
+
+
+Away, away--you're all the same,
+ A smiling, fluttering, jilting throng;
+And, wise too late, I burn with shame,
+ To think I've been your slave so long.
+
+Slow to be won, and quick to rove,
+ From folly kind, from cunning loath,
+Too cold for bliss, too weak for love,
+ Yet feigning all that's best in both;
+
+Still panting o'er a crowd to reign,--
+ More joy it gives to woman's breast
+To make ten frigid coxcombs vain,
+ Than one true, manly lover blest.
+
+Away, away--your smile's a curse--
+ Oh! blot me from the race of men,
+Kind, pitying Heaven, by death or worse,
+ If e'er I love such things again.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO .......
+
+
+Come, take thy harp--'tis vain to muse
+ Upon the gathering ills we see;
+Oh! take thy harp and let me lose
+ All thoughts of ill in hearing thee.
+
+Sing to me, love!--Though death were near,
+ Thy song could make my soul forget--
+Nay, nay, in pity, dry that tear,
+ All may be well, be happy yet.
+
+Let me but see that snowy arm
+ Once more upon the dear harp lie,
+And I will cease to dream of harm,
+ Will smile at fate, while thou art nigh.
+
+Give me that strain of mournful touch
+ We used to love long, long ago,
+Before our hearts had known as much
+ As now, alas! they bleed to know.
+
+Sweet notes! they tell of former peace,
+ Of all that looked so smiling then,
+Now vanished, lost--oh, pray thee cease,
+ I cannot bear those sounds again.
+
+Art _thou_, too, wretched? Yes, thou art;
+ I see thy tears flow fast with mine--
+Come, come to this devoted heart,
+ 'Tis breaking, but it still is thine!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A VISION OF PHILOSOPHY.
+
+
+'Twas on the Red Sea coast, at morn, we met
+The venerable man;[1] a healthy bloom
+Mingled its softness with the vigorous thought
+That towered upon his brow; and when he spoke
+'Twas language sweetened into song--such holy sounds
+As oft, they say, the wise and virtuous hear,
+Prelusive to the harmony of heaven,
+When death is nigh; and still, as he unclosed[2]
+His sacred lips, an odor, all as bland
+As ocean-breezes gather from the flowers
+That blossom in Elysium, breathed around,
+With silent awe we listened, while he told
+Of the dark veil which many an age had hung
+O'er Nature's form, till, long explored by man,
+The mystic shroud grew thin and luminous,
+And glimpses of that heavenly form shone through:--
+Of magic wonders, that were known and taught
+By him (or Cham or Zoroaster named)
+Who mused amid the mighty cataclysm,
+O'er his rude tablets of primeval lore;
+And gathering round him, in the sacred ark,
+The mighty secrets of that former globe,
+Let not the living star of science sink
+Beneath the waters, which ingulfed a world!--
+Of visions, by Calliope revealed
+To him,[3]who traced upon his typic lyre
+The diapason of man's mingled frame,
+And the grand Doric heptachord of heaven.
+With all of pure, of wondrous and arcane,
+Which the grave sons of Mochus, many a night,
+Told to the young and bright-haired visitant
+Of Carmel's sacred mount.--Then, in a flow
+Of calmer converse, he beguiled us on
+Through many a Maze of Garden and of Porch,
+Through many a system, where the scattered light
+Of heavenly truth lay, like a broken beam
+From the pure sun, which, though refracted all
+Into a thousand hues, is sunshine still,[4]
+And bright through every change!--he spoke of Him,
+The lone, eternal One, who dwells above,
+And of the soul's untraceable descent
+From that high fount of spirit, through the grades
+Of intellectual being, till it mix
+With atoms vague, corruptible, and dark;
+Nor yet even then, though sunk in earthly dross,
+Corrupted all, nor its ethereal touch
+Quite lost, but tasting of the fountain still.
+As some bright river, which has rolled along
+Through meads of flowery light and mines of gold,
+When poured at length into the dusky deep,
+Disdains to take at once its briny taint,
+Or balmy freshness, of the scenes it left.
+But keeps unchanged awhile the lustrous tinge,
+And here the old man ceased--a winged train
+Of nymphs and genii bore him from our eyes.
+The fair illusion fled! and, as I waked,
+'Twas clear that my rapt soul had roamed, the while,
+To that bright realm of dreams, that spirit-world,
+Which mortals know by its long track of light
+O'er midnight's sky, and call the Galaxy.[5]
+
+
+[1] In Plutarch's Essay on the Decline of the Oracles, Cleombrotus, one of
+the interlocutors, describes an extraordinary man whom he had met with,
+after long research, upon the banks of the Red Sea. Once in every year
+this supernatural personage appeared to mortals and conversed with them;
+the rest of his time he passed among the Genii and the Nymphs.
+
+[2] The celebrated Janus Dousa, a little before his death, imagined that
+he heard a strain of music in the air.
+
+[3] Orpheus.--Paulinus, in his "_Hebdomades_, cap. 2, _lib_. iii, has
+endeavored to show, after the Platonists, that man is a diapason, or
+octave, made up of a diatesseron, which is his soul, and a dispente, which
+is his body. Those frequent allusions to music, by which the ancient
+philosophers illustrated their sublime theories, must have tended very
+much to elevate the character of the art, and to enrich it with
+associations of the grandest and most interesting nature.
+
+[4] Lactantius asserts that all the truths of Christianity may be found
+dispersed through the ancient philosophical sects, and that any one who
+would collect these scattered fragments of orthodoxy might form a code in
+no respect differing from that of the Christian.
+
+[5] According to Pythagoras, the people of Dreams are souls collected
+together in the Galaxy.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MRS. .......
+
+
+To see thee every day that came,
+And find thee still each day the same;
+In pleasure's smile or sorrow's tear
+To me still ever kind and dear;--
+To meet thee early, leave thee late,
+Has been so long my bliss, my fate,
+That life, without this cheering ray,
+Which came, like sunshine, every day,
+And all my pain, my sorrow chased,
+Is now a lone, a loveless waste.
+
+Where are the chords she used to touch?
+The airs, the songs she loved so much?
+Those songs are hushed, those chords are still,
+And so, perhaps, will every thrill
+Of feeling soon be lulled to rest,
+Which late I waked in Anna's breast.
+Yet, no--the simple notes I played
+From memory's tablet soon may fade;
+The songs, which Anna loved to hear,
+May vanish from her heart and ear;
+But friendship's voice shall ever find
+An echo in that gentle mind,
+Nor memory lose nor time impair
+The sympathies that tremble there.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO LADY HEATHCOTE,
+
+ON AN OLD RING FOUND AT TUNBRIDGE-WELLS.
+
+
+ _"Tunnebridge est à la même distance de Londres, que Fontainebleau
+ l'est de Paris. Ce qu'il y a de beau et de galant dans l'un et dans
+ l'autre sexe s'y rassemble au terns des eaux. La compagnie,"_ etc.
+ --See _Memoires de Grammont_, Second Part, chap. iii.
+
+
+_Tunbridge Wells_.
+
+
+When Grammont graced these happy springs,
+ And Tunbridge saw, upon her Pantiles,
+The merriest wight of all the kings
+ That ever ruled these gay, gallant isles;
+
+Like us, by day, they rode, they walked,
+ At eve they did as we may do,
+And Grammont just like Spencer talked,
+ And lovely Stewart smiled like you.
+
+The only different trait is this,
+ That woman then, if man beset her,
+Was rather given to saying "yes,"
+ Because,--as yet, she knew no better.
+
+Each night they held a coterie,
+ Where, every fear to slumber charmed,
+Lovers were all they ought to be,
+ And husbands not the least alarmed.
+
+Then called they up their school-day pranks,
+ Nor thought it much their sense beneath
+To play at riddles, quips, and cranks,
+ And lords showed wit, and ladies teeth.
+
+As--"Why are husbands like the mint?"
+ Because, forsooth, a husband's duty
+Is but to set the name and print
+ That give a currency to beauty.
+
+"Why is a rose in nettles hid
+ Like a young widow, fresh and fair?"
+Because 'tis sighing to be rid
+ Of weeds, that "have no business there!"
+
+And thus they missed and thus they hit,
+ And now they struck and now they parried;
+And some lay in of full grown wit.
+ While others of a pun miscarried,
+
+'Twas one of those facetious nights
+ That Grammont gave this forfeit ring
+For breaking grave conundrumrites,
+ Or punning ill, or--some such thing;--
+
+From whence it can be fairly traced,
+ Through many a branch and many a bough,
+From twig to twig, until it graced
+ The snowy hand that wears it now.
+
+All this I'll prove, and then, to you
+ Oh Tunbridge! and your springs ironical,
+I swear by Heathcote's eye of blue
+ To dedicate the important chronicle.
+
+Long may your ancient inmates give
+ Their mantles to your modern lodgers,
+And Charles's loves in Heathcote live,
+ And Charles's bards revive in Rogers.
+
+Let no pedantic fools be there;
+ For ever be those fops abolished,
+With heads as wooden as thy ware,
+ And, heaven knows! not half so polished.
+
+But still receive the young, the gay.
+ The few who know the rare delight
+Of reading Grammont every day,
+ And acting Grammont every night.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DEVIL AMONG THE SCHOLARS,
+
+A FRAGMENT.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But, whither have these gentle ones,
+These rosy nymphs and black-eyed nuns,
+With all of Cupid's wild romancing,
+Led by truant brains a-dancing?
+Instead of studying tomes scholastic,
+Ecclesiastic, or monastic,
+Off I fly, careering far
+In chase of Pollys, prettier far
+Than any of their namesakes are,--
+The Polymaths and Polyhistors,
+Polyglots and all their sisters.
+
+So have I known a hopeful youth
+Sit down in quest of lore and truth,
+With tomes sufficient to confound him,
+Like Tohu Bohu, heapt around him,--
+Mamurra[1] stuck to Theophrastus,
+And Galen tumbling o'er Bombastus.[2]
+When lo! while all that's learned and wise
+Absorbs the boy, he lifts his eyes,
+And through the window of his study
+Beholds some damsel fair and ruddy,
+With eyes, as brightly turned upon him as
+The angel's[3] were on Hieronymus.
+Quick fly the folios, widely scattered,
+Old Homer's laureled brow is battered,
+And Sappho, headlong sent, flies just in
+The reverend eye of St. Augustin.
+Raptured he quits each dozing sage,
+Oh woman, for thy lovelier page:
+Sweet book!--unlike the books of art,--
+Whose errors are thy fairest part;
+In whom the dear errata column
+Is the best page in all the volume![4]
+But to begin my subject rhyme--
+'Twas just about this devilish time,
+When scarce there happened any frolics
+That were not done by Diabolics,
+A cold and loveless son of Lucifer,
+Who woman scorned, nor saw the use of her,
+A branch of Dagon's family,
+(Which Dagon, whether He or She,
+Is a dispute that vastly better is
+Referred to Scaliger[5] _et coeteris_,)
+Finding that, in this cage of fools,
+The wisest sots adorn the schools,
+Took it at once his head Satanic in,
+To grow a great scholastic manikin,--
+A doctor, quite as learned and fine as
+Scotus John or Tom Aquinas,
+Lully, Hales Irrefragabilis,
+Or any doctor of the rabble is.
+In languages, the Polyglots,
+Compared to him, were Babelsots:
+He chattered more than ever Jew did;--
+Sanhedrim and Priest included,
+Priest and holy Sanhedrim
+Were one-and-seventy fools to him.
+But chief the learned demon felt a
+Zeal so strong for gamma, delta,
+That, all for Greek and learning's glory,[6]
+He nightly tippled "Graeco more,"
+And never paid a bill or balance
+Except upon the Grecian Kalends:--
+From whence your scholars, when they want tick,
+Say, to be Attic's to be _on_ tick.
+In logics, he was quite Ho Panu;
+Knew as much as ever man knew.
+He fought the combat syllogistic
+With so much skill and art eristic,
+That though you were the learned Stagyrite,
+At once upon the hip he had you right.
+In music, though he had no ears
+Except for that amongst the spheres,
+(Which most of all, as he averred it,
+He dearly loved, 'cause no one heard it,)
+Yet aptly he, at sight, could read
+Each tuneful diagram in Bede,
+And find, by Euclid's corollaria,
+The ratios of a jig or aria.
+But, as for all your warbling Delias,
+Orpheuses and Saint Cecilias,
+He owned he thought them much surpast
+By that redoubted Hyaloclast[7]
+Who still contrived by dint of throttle,
+Where'er he went to crack a bottle.
+
+ Likewise to show his mighty knowledge, he,
+On things unknown in physiology,
+Wrote many a chapter to divert us,
+(Like that great little man Albertus,)
+Wherein he showed the reason why,
+When children first are heard to cry,
+If boy the baby chance to be.
+He cries O A!--if girl, O E!--
+Which are, quoth he, exceeding fair hints
+Respecting their first sinful parents;
+"Oh Eve!" exclaimeth little madam,
+While little master cries "Oh Adam!"
+
+ But, 'twas in Optics and Dioptrics,
+Our daemon played his first and top tricks.
+He held that sunshine passes quicker
+Through wine than any other liquor;
+And though he saw no great objection
+To steady light and clear reflection,
+He thought the aberrating rays,
+Which play about a bumper's blaze,
+Were by the Doctors looked, in common, on,
+As a more rare and rich phenomenon.
+He wisely said that the sensorium
+Is for the eyes a great emporium,
+To which these noted picture-stealers
+Send all they can and meet with dealers.
+In many an optical proceeding
+The brain, he said, showed great good breeding;
+For instance, when we ogle women
+(A trick which Barbara tutored him in),
+Although the dears are apt to get in a
+Strange position on the retina,
+Yet instantly the modest brain
+Doth set them on their legs again!
+
+ Our doctor thus, with "stuft sufficiency"
+Of all omnigenous omnisciency,
+Began (as who would not begin
+That had, like him, so much within?)
+To let it out in books of all sorts,
+Folios, quartos, large and small sorts;
+Poems, so very deep and sensible
+That they were quite incomprehensible
+Prose, which had been at learning's Fair,
+And bought up all the trumpery there,
+The tattered rags of every vest,
+In which the Greeks and Romans drest,
+And o'er her figure swollen and antic
+Scattered them all with airs so frantic,
+That those, who saw what fits she had,
+Declared unhappy Prose was mad!
+Epics he wrote and scores of rebuses,
+All as neat as old Turnebus's;
+Eggs and altars, cyclopaedias,
+Grammars, prayer-books--oh! 'twere tedious,
+Did I but tell thee half, to follow me:
+Not the scribbling bard of Ptolemy,
+No--nor the hoary Trismegistus,
+(Whose writings all, thank heaven! have missed us,)
+E'er filled with lumber such a wareroom
+As this great "_porcus literarum_!"
+
+
+[1] Mamurra, a dogmatic philosopher, who never doubted about
+anything, except who was his father.
+
+[2] Bombastus was one of the names of that great scholar and
+quack Paracelsus. He used to fight the devil every night with a
+broadsword, to the no small terror of his pupil Oporinus, who has recorded
+the circumstance.
+
+[3] The angel, who scolded St. Jerome for reading Cicero, as
+Gratian tells the story in his "_concordantia discordantium Canonum_," and
+says, that for this reason bishops were not allowed to read the Classics.
+
+[4] The idea of the Rabbins, respecting the origin of woman, is
+not a little singular. They think that man was originally formed with a
+tail, like a monkey, but that the Deity cut off this appendage, and made
+woman of it.
+
+[5] Scaliger.--Dagon was thought by others to be a certain
+sea-monster, who came every day out of the Red Sea to teach the Syrians
+husbandry.
+
+[6] It is much to be regretted that Martin Luther, with all his
+talents for reforming, should yet be vulgar enough to laugh at Camerarius
+for writing to him in Greek, "Master Joachim (says he) has sent me some
+dates and some raisins, and has also written me two letters in Greek. As
+soon as I am recovered, I shall answer them in Turkish, that he too may
+have the pleasure of reading what he does not understand."
+
+[7] Or Glass-breaker--Morhofius has given an account of this
+extraordinary man, in a work, published 1682.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+POEMS RELATING TO AMERICA
+
+
+
+
+TO FRANCIS, EARL OF MOIRA.
+
+GENERAL IN HIS MAJESTY'S FORCES, MASTER-GENERAL OF THE ORDNANCE,
+CONSTABLE OF THE TOWER, ETC.
+
+MY LORD,
+
+
+It is impossible to think of addressing a Dedication to your Lordship
+without calling to mind the well-known reply of the Spartan to a
+rhetorician, who proposed to pronounce an eulogium on Hercules. "Oh
+Hercules!" said the honest Spartan, "who ever thought of blaming
+Hercules?" In a similar manner the concurrence of public opinion has left
+to the panegyrist of your Lordship a very superfluous task. I shall,
+therefore, be silent on the subject, and merely entreat your indulgence to
+the very humble tribute of gratitude which I have here the honor to
+present.
+
+I am, my Lord,
+With every feeling of attachment and respect,
+Your Lordship's very devoted Servant,
+
+THOMAS MOORE.
+
+_37 Bury Street, St. James's,
+April 10, 1806_.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.[1]
+
+
+The principal poems in the following collection were written during an
+absence of fourteen months from Europe. Though curiosity was certainly not
+the motive of my voyage to America, yet it happened that the gratification
+of curiosity was the only advantage which I derived from it. Finding
+myself in the country of a new people, whose infancy had promised so much,
+and whose progress to maturity has been an object of such interesting
+speculation, I determined to employ the short period of time, which my
+plan of return to Europe afforded me, in travelling through a few of the
+States, and acquiring some knowledge of the inhabitants.
+
+The impression which my mind received from the character and manners of
+these republicans, suggested the Epistles which are written from the city
+of Washington and Lake Erie.[2] How far I was right in thus assuming the
+tone of a satirist against a people whom I viewed but as a stranger and a
+visitor, is a doubt which my feelings did not allow me time to
+investigate. All I presume to answer for is the fidelity of the picture
+which I have given; and though prudence might have dictated gentler
+language, truth, I think, would have justified severer.
+
+I went to America with prepossessions by no means unfavorable, and indeed
+rather indulged in many of those illusive ideas, with respect to the
+purity of the government and the primitive happiness of the people, which
+I had early imbibed In my native country, where, unfortunately, discontent
+at home enhances every distant temptation, and the western world has long
+been looked to as a retreat from real or imaginary oppression; as, in
+short, the elysian Atlantis, where persecuted patriots might find their
+visions realized, and be welcomed by kindred spirits to liberty and
+repose. In all these flattering expectations I found myself completely
+disappointed, and felt inclined to say to America, as Horace says to his
+mistress, "_intentata nites_." Brissot, in the preface to his travels,
+observes, that "freedom in that country is carried to so high a degree as
+to border upon a state of nature;" and there certainly is a close
+approximation to savage life not only in the liberty which they enjoy, but
+in the violence of party spirit and of private animosity which results
+from it. This illiberal zeal imbitters all social intercourse; and, though
+I scarcely could hesitate in selecting the party, whose views appeared to
+me the more pure and rational, yet I was sorry to observe that, in
+asserting their opinions, they both assume an equal share of intolerance;
+the Democrats consistently with their principles, exhibiting a vulgarity
+of rancor, which the Federalists too often are so forgetful of their cause
+as to imitate.
+
+The rude familiarity of the lower orders, and indeed the unpolished state
+of society in general, would neither surprise nor disgust if they seemed
+to flow from that simplicity of character, that honest ignorance of the
+gloss of refinement which may be looked for in a new and inexperienced
+people. But, when we find them arrived at maturity in most of the vices,
+and all the pride of civilization, while they are still so far removed
+from its higher and better characteristics, it is impossible not to feel
+that this youthful decay, this crude anticipation of the natural period of
+corruption, must repress every sanguine hope of the future energy and
+greatness of America.
+
+I am conscious that, in venturing these few remarks, I have said just
+enough to offend, and by no means sufficient to convince; for the limits
+of a preface prevent me from entering into a justification of my opinions,
+and I am committed on the subject as effectually as if I had written
+volumes in their defence. My reader, however, is apprised of the very
+cursory observation upon which these opinions are founded, and can easily
+decide for himself upon the degree of attention or confidence which they
+merit.
+
+With respect to the poems in general, which occupy the following pages, I
+know not in what manner to apologize to the public for intruding upon
+their notice such a mass of unconnected trifles, such a world of epicurean
+atoms as I have here brought in conflict together. To say that I have been
+tempted by the liberal offers of my bookseller, is an excuse which can
+hope for but little indulgence from the critic; yet I own that, without
+this seasonable inducement, these poems very possibly would never have
+been submitted to the world. The glare of publication is too strong for
+such imperfect productions: they should be shown but to the eye of
+friendship, in that dim light of privacy which is as favorable to poetical
+as to female beauty, and serves as a veil for faults, while it enhances
+every charm which it displays. Besides, this is not a period for the idle
+occupations of poetry, and times like the present require talents more
+active and more useful. Few have now the leisure to read such trifles, and
+I most sincerely regret that I have had the leisure to write them.
+
+
+[1] This Preface, as well as the Dedication which precedes it, were
+prefixed originally to the miscellaneous volume entitled "Odes and
+Epistles," of which, hitherto, the poems relating to my American tour have
+formed a part.
+
+[2] Epistles VI., VII., and VIII.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+POEMS RELATING TO AMERICA.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO LORD VISCOUNT STRANGFORD.
+
+ABOARD THE PHAETON FRIGATE, OFF THE AZORES, BY MOONLIGHT.
+
+
+Sweet Moon! if, like Crotona's sage,[1]
+ By any spell my hand could dare
+To make thy disk its ample page,
+ And write my thoughts, my wishes there;
+How many a friend, whose careless eye
+Now wanders o'er that starry sky,
+Should smile, upon thy orb to meet
+The recollection, kind and sweet,
+The reveries of fond regret,
+The promise, never to forget,
+And all my heart and soul would send
+To many a dear-loved, distant friend.
+
+How little, when we parted last,
+I thought those pleasant times were past,
+For ever past, when brilliant joy
+Was all my vacant heart's employ:
+When, fresh from mirth to mirth again,
+ We thought the rapid hours too few;
+Our only use for knowledge then
+ To gather bliss from all we knew.
+Delicious days of whim and soul!
+ When, mingling lore and laugh together,
+We leaned the book on Pleasure's bowl,
+ And turned the leaf with Folly's feather.
+Little I thought that all were fled,
+That, ere that summer's bloom was shed,
+My eye should see the sail unfurled
+That wafts me to the western world.
+
+And yet, 'twas time;--in youth's sweet days,
+To cool that season's glowing rays,
+The heart awhile, with wanton wing,
+May dip and dive in Pleasure's spring;
+But, if it wait for winter's breeze,
+The spring will chill, the heart will freeze.
+And then, that Hope, that fairy Hope,--
+ Oh! she awaked such happy dreams,
+And gave my soul such tempting scope
+ For all its dearest, fondest schemes,
+_That not Verona's child of song_,
+ When flying from the Phrygian shore,
+With lighter heart could bound along,
+ Or pant to be a wanderer more!
+
+ Even now delusive hope will steal
+Amid the dark regrets I feel,
+Soothing, as yonder placid beam
+ Pursues the murmurers of the deep,
+And lights them with consoling gleam,
+ And smiles them into tranquil sleep.
+Oh! such a blessed night as this,
+ I often think, if friends were near,
+How we should feel, and gaze with bliss
+ Upon the moon-bright scenery here!
+The sea is like a silvery lake,
+ And, o'er its calm the vessel glides
+Gently, as if it feared to wake
+ The slumber of the silent tides.
+The only envious cloud that lowers
+ Hath hung its shade on Pico's height,[2]
+Where dimly, mid the dusk, he towers,
+ And scowling at this heaven of light,
+Exults to see the infant storm
+ Cling darkly round his giant form!
+
+Now, could I range those verdant isles,
+ Invisible, at this soft hour,
+And see the looks, the beaming smiles,
+ That brighten many an orange bower;
+And could I lift each pious veil,
+ And see the blushing cheek it shades,--
+Oh! I should have full many a tale,
+ To tell of young Azorian maids.[3]
+Yes, Strangford, at this hour, perhaps,
+ Some lover (not too idly blest,
+Like those, who in their ladies' laps
+ May cradle every wish to rest,)
+Warbles, to touch his dear one's soul,
+ Those madrigals, of breath divine,
+Which Camoens' harp from Rapture stole
+ And gave, all glowing warm, to thine.[4]
+Oh! could the lover learn from thee,
+ And breathe them with thy graceful tone,
+Such sweet, beguiling minstrelsy
+ Would make the coldest nymph his own.
+
+ But, hark!--the boatswain's pipings tell
+'Tis time to bid my dream farewell:
+Eight bells:--the middle watch is set;
+Good night, my Strangford!--ne'er forget
+That far beyond the western sea
+Is one whose heart remembers thee.
+
+
+[1] Pythagoras; who was supposed to have a power of writing upon the Moon
+by the means of a magic mirror.--See _Boyle_, art. _Pythag_.
+
+[2] A very high mountain on one of the Azores, from which the island
+derives its name. It is said by some to be as high as the Peak of
+Teneriffe.
+
+[3] I believe it is Gutherie who says, that the inhabitants of the Azores
+are much addicted to gallantry. This is an assertion in which even
+Gutherie may be credited.
+
+[4] These islands belong to the Portuguese.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+STANZAS.
+
+
+A beam of tranquillity smiled in the west,
+ The storms of the morning pursued us no more;
+And the wave, while it welcomed the moment of rest.
+ Still heaved, as remembering ills that were o'er.
+
+Serenely my heart took the hue of the hour,
+ Its passions were sleeping, were mute as the dead;
+And the spirit becalmed but remembered their power,
+ As the billow the force of the gale that was fled.
+
+I thought of those days, when to pleasure alone
+ My heart ever granted a wish or a sigh;
+When the saddest emotion my bosom had known,
+ Was pity for those who were wiser than I.
+
+I reflected, how soon in the cup of Desire
+ The pearl of the soul may be melted away;
+How quickly, alas, the pure sparkle of fire
+ We inherit from heaven, may be quenched in the clay;
+
+And I prayed of that Spirit who lighted the flame,
+ That Pleasure no more might its purity dim;
+So that, sullied but little, or brightly the same,
+ I might give back the boon I had borrowed from Him.
+
+How blest was the thought! it appeared as if Heaven
+ Had already an opening to Paradise shown;
+As if, passion all chastened and error forgiven,
+ My heart then began to be purely its own.
+
+I looked to the west, and the beautiful sky
+ Which morning had clouded, was clouded no more:
+"Oh! thus," I exclaimed, "may a heavenly eye
+ "Shed light on the soul that was darkened before."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE FLYING-FISH.[1]
+
+
+When I have seen thy snow-white wing
+From the blue wave at evening spring,
+And show those scales of silvery white,
+So gayly to the eye of light,
+As if thy frame were formed to rise,
+And live amid the glorious skies;
+Oh! it has made me proudly feel,
+How like thy wing's impatient zeal
+Is the pure soul, that rests not, pent
+Within this world's gross element,
+But takes the wing that God has given,
+And rises into light and heaven!
+
+But, when I see that wing, so bright,
+Grow languid with a moment's flight,
+Attempt the paths of air in vain,
+And sink into the waves again;
+Alas! the flattering pride is o'er;
+Like thee, awhile, the soul may soar,
+But erring man must blush to think,
+Like thee, again, the soul may sink.
+
+Oh Virtue! when thy clime I seek,
+Let not my spirit's flight be weak;
+Let me not, like this feeble thing,
+With brine still dropping from its wing,
+Just sparkle in the solar glow
+And plunge again to depths below;
+But, when I leave the grosser throng
+With whom my soul hath dwelt so long,
+Let me, in that aspiring day,
+Cast every lingering stain away,
+And, panting for thy purer air,
+Fly up at once and fix me there.
+
+
+[1] It is the opinion of St. Austin upon Genesis, and I believe of nearly
+all the Fathers, that birds, like fish, were originally produced from the
+waters; in defence of which idea they have collected every fanciful
+circumstance which can tend to prove a kindred similitude between them.
+With this thought in our minds, when we first see the Flying-Fish, we
+could almost fancy, that we are present at the moment of creation, and
+witness the birth of the first bird from the waves.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MISS MOORE.
+
+FROM NORFOLK, IN VIRGINIA, NOVEMBER, 1803.
+
+
+In days, my Kate, when life was new,
+When, lulled with innocence and you,
+I heard, in home's beloved shade,
+The din the world at distance made;
+When, every night my weary head
+Sunk on its own unthorned bed,
+And, mild as evening's matron hour,
+Looks on the faintly shutting flower,
+A mother saw our eyelids close,
+And blest them into pure repose;
+Then, haply if a week, a day,
+I lingered from that home away,
+How long the little absence seemed!
+How bright the look of welcome beamed,
+As mute you heard, with eager smile,
+My tales of all that past the while!
+
+Yet now, my Kate, a gloomy sea
+Bolls wide between that home and me;
+The moon may thrice be born and die,
+Ere even that seal can reach mine eye.
+Which used so oft, so quick to come,
+Still breathing all the breath of home,--
+As if, still fresh, the cordial air
+From lips beloved were lingering there.
+But now, alas,--far different fate!
+It comes o'er ocean, slow and late,
+When the dear hand that filled its fold
+With words of sweetness may lie cold.
+
+But hence that gloomy thought! at last,
+Beloved Kate, the waves are past;
+I tread on earth securely now,
+And the green cedar's living bough
+Breathes more refreshment to my eyes
+Than could a Claude's divinest dyes.
+At length I touch the happy sphere
+To liberty and virtue dear,
+Where man looks up, and, proud to claim
+His rank within the social frame,
+Sees a grand system round him roll,
+Himself its centre, sun, and soul!
+Far from the shocks of Europe--far
+From every wild, elliptic star
+That, shooting with a devious fire,
+Kindled by heaven's avenging ire,
+So oft hath into chaos hurled
+The systems of the ancient world.
+
+The warrior here, in arms no more
+Thinks of the toil, the conflict o'er,
+And glorying in the freedom won
+For hearth and shrine, for sire and son,
+Smiles on the dusky webs that hide
+His sleeping sword's remembered pride.
+While Peace, with sunny cheeks of toil,
+Walks o'er the free, unlorded soil,
+Effacing with her splendid share
+The drops that war had sprinkled there.
+Thrice happy land! where he who flies
+From the dark ills of other skies,
+From scorn, or want's unnerving woes.
+May shelter him in proud repose;
+Hope sings along the yellow sand
+His welcome to a patriot land:
+The mighty wood, with pomp, receives
+The stranger in its world of leaves,
+Which soon their barren glory yield
+To the warm shed and cultured field;
+And he, who came, of all bereft,
+To whom malignant fate had left
+Nor hope nor friends nor country dear,
+Finds home and friends and country here.
+
+Such is the picture, warmly such,
+That Fancy long, with florid touch.
+Had painted to my sanguine eye
+Of man's new world of liberty.
+Oh! ask me not, if Truth have yet
+Her seal on Fancy's promise set;
+If even a glimpse my eyes behold
+Of that imagined age of gold;--
+Alas, not yet one gleaming trace![1]
+Never did youth, who loved a face
+As sketched by some fond pencil's skill,
+And made by fancy lovelier still,
+Shrink back with more of sad surprise,
+When the live model met his eyes,
+Than I have felt, in sorrow felt,
+To find a dream on which I've dwelt
+From boyhood's hour, thus fade and flee
+At touch of stern reality!
+
+But, courage, yet, my wavering heart!
+Blame not the temple's meanest part,[2]
+Till thou hast traced the fabric o'er;--
+As yet, we have beheld no more
+Than just the porch to Freedom's fame;
+And, though a sable spot may stain
+The vestibule, 'tis wrong, 'tis sin
+To doubt the godhead reigns within!
+So here I pause--and now, my Kate,
+To you, and those dear friends, whose fate
+Touches more near this home-sick soul
+Than all the Powers from pole to pole,
+One word at parting,--in the tone
+Most sweet to you, and most my own,
+The simple strain I send you here,
+Wild though it be, would charm your ear,
+Did you but know the trance of thought
+In which my mind its numbers caught.
+'Twas one of those half-waking dreams,
+That haunt me oft, when music seems
+To bear my soul in sound along,
+And turn its feelings all to song.
+I thought of home, the according lays
+Came full of dreams of other days;
+Freshly in each succeeding note
+I found some young remembrance float,
+Till following, as a clue, that strain
+I wandered back to home, again.
+
+Oh! love the song, and let it oft
+Live on your lip, in accents soft.
+Say that it tells you, simply well,
+All I have bid its wild notes tell,--
+Of Memory's dream, of thoughts that yet
+Glow with the light of joy that's set,
+And all the fond heart keeps in store
+Of friends and scenes beheld no more.
+And now, adieu!--this artless air,
+With a few rhymes, in transcript fair,
+Are all the gifts I yet can boast
+To send you from Columbia's coast;
+But when the sun, with warmer smile.
+Shall light me to my destined isle.[3]
+You shall have many a cowslip-bell,
+Where Ariel slept, and many a shell,
+In which that gentle spirit drew
+From honey flowers the morning dew.
+
+
+[1] Such romantic works as "The American Farmer's Letters," and the
+account of Kentucky by Imlay, would seduce us into a belief, that
+innocence, peace, and freedom had deserted the rest of the world for
+Martha's Vineyard and the banks of the Ohio.
+
+[2] Norfolk, it must be owned, presents an unfavorable specimen of
+America. The characteristics of Virginia in general are not such as can
+delight either the politician or the moralist, and at Norfolk they are
+exhibited in their least attractive form. At the time when we arrived the
+yellow fever had not yet disappeared, and every odor that assailed us in
+the streets very strongly accounted for its visitation.
+
+[3] Bermuda.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A BALLAD.
+
+THE LAKE OF THE DISMAL SWAMP.
+
+WRITTEN AT NORFOLK, IN VIRGINIA.
+
+
+ "They tell of a young man, who lost his mind upon the death of a girl
+ he loved, and who, suddenly disappearing from his friends, was never
+ afterwards heard of. As he had frequently said, in his ravings, that
+ the girl was not dead, but gone to the Dismal Swamp, it is supposed he
+ had wandered into that dreary wilderness, and had died of hunger, or
+ been lost in some of its dreadful morasses."--Anon.
+
+
+ _"La Poesie a ses monstres comme la nature."_
+ D'ALEMBERT.
+
+
+"They made her a grave, too cold and damp
+ "For a soul so warm and true;
+"And she's gone to the Lake of the Dismal Swamp,[1]
+ "Where, all night long, by a firefly lamp,
+"She paddles her white canoe.
+
+"And her fire-fly lamp I soon shall see,
+ "And her paddle I soon shall hear;
+"Long and loving our life shall be,
+"And I'll hide the maid in a cypress tree,
+ "When the footstep of death is near."
+
+Away to the Dismal Swamp he speeds--
+ His path was rugged and sore,
+Through tangled juniper, beds of reeds,
+Through many a fen, where the serpent feeds,
+ And man never trod before.
+
+And, when on the earth he sunk to sleep
+ If slumber his eyelids knew,
+He lay, where the deadly vine doth weep
+Its venomous tear and nightly steep
+ The flesh with blistering dew!
+
+And near him the she-wolf stirred the brake,
+ And the copper-snake breathed in his ear,
+Till he starting cried, from his dream awake,
+"Oh! when shall I see the dusky Lake,
+ "And the white canoe of my dear?"
+
+He saw the Lake, and a meteor bright
+ Quick over its surface played--
+"Welcome," he said, "my dear one's light!"
+And the dim shore echoed, for many a night,
+ The name of the death-cold maid.
+
+Till he hollowed a boat of the birchen bark,
+ Which carried him off from shore;
+Far, far he followed the meteor spark,
+The wind was high and the clouds were dark,
+ And the boat returned no more.
+
+But oft, from the Indian hunter's camp
+ This lover and maid so true
+Are seen at the hour of midnight damp
+To cross the Lake by a fire-fly lamp,
+ And paddle their white canoe!
+
+
+[1] The Great Dismal Swamp is ten or twelve miles distant from
+Norfolk, and the Lake in the middle of it (about seven miles long) is
+called Drummond's Pond.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE MARCHIONESS DOWAGER OF DONEGALL.
+
+FROM BERMUDA, JANUARY, 1804.
+
+
+Lady! where'er you roam, whatever land
+Woos the bright touches of that artist hand;
+Whether you sketch the valley's golden meads,
+Where mazy Linth his lingering current leads;[1]
+Enamored catch the mellow hues that sleep,
+At eve, on Meillerie's immortal steep;
+Or musing o'er the Lake, at day's decline,
+Mark the last shadow on that holy shrine,[2]
+Where, many a night, the shade of Tell complains
+Of Gallia's triumph and Helvetia's chains;
+Oh! lay the pencil for a moment by,
+Turn from the canvas that creative eye,
+And let its splendor, like the morning ray
+Upon a shepherd's harp, illume my lay.
+
+Yet, Lady, no--for song so rude as mine,
+Chase not the wonders of your art divine;
+Still, radiant eye, upon the canvas dwell;
+Still, magic finger, weave your potent spell;
+And, while I sing the animated smiles
+Of fairy nature in these sun-born isles,
+Oh, might the song awake some bright design,
+Inspire a touch, or prompt one happy line,
+Proud were my soul, to see its humble thought
+On painting's mirror so divinely caught;
+While wondering Genius, as he leaned to trace
+The faint conception kindling into grace,
+Might love my numbers for the spark they threw,
+And bless the lay that lent a charm to you.
+
+Say, have you ne'er, in nightly vision, strayed
+To those pure isles of ever-blooming shade,
+Which bards of old, with kindly fancy, placed
+For happy spirits in the Atlantic waste?
+There listening, while, from earth, each breeze that came
+Brought echoes of their own undying fame,
+In eloquence of eye, and dreams of song,
+They charmed their lapse of nightless hours along:--
+Nor yet in song, that mortal ear might suit,
+For every spirit was itself a lute,
+Where Virtue wakened, with elysian breeze,
+Pure tones of thought and mental harmonies.
+
+Believe me, Lady, when the zephyrs bland
+Floated our bark to this enchanted land,--
+These leafy isles upon the ocean thrown,
+Like studs of emerald o'er a silver zone,--
+Not all the charm, that ethnic fancy gave
+To blessed arbors o'er the western wave,
+Could wake a dream, more soothing or sublime,
+Of bowers ethereal, and the Spirit's clime.
+
+ Bright rose the morning, every wave was still,
+When the first perfume of a cedar hill
+Sweetly awaked us, and, with smiling charms,
+The fairy harbor woo'd us to its arms.[3]
+Gently we stole, before the whispering wind,
+Through plaintain shades, that round, like awnings, twined
+And kist on either side the wanton sails,
+Breathing our welcome to these vernal vales;
+While, far reflected o'er the wave serene,
+Each wooded island shed so soft a green
+That the enamored keel, with whispering play,
+Through liquid herbage seemed to steal its way.
+
+ Never did weary bark more gladly glide,
+Or rest its anchor in a lovelier tide!
+Along the margin, many a shining dome,
+White as the palace of a Lapland gnome,
+Brightened the wave;--in every myrtle grove
+Secluded bashful, like a shrine of love,
+Some elfin mansion sparkled through the shade;
+And, while the foliage interposing played,
+Lending the scene an ever-changing grace,
+Fancy would love, in glimpses vague, to trace
+The flowery capital, the shaft, the porch,[4]
+And dream of temples, till her kindling torch
+Lighted me back to all the glorious days
+Of Attic genius; and I seemed to gaze
+On marble, from the rich Pentelio mount,
+Gracing the umbrage of some Naiad's fount.
+
+ Then thought I, too, of thee, most sweet of all
+The spirit race that come at poet's call,
+Delicate Ariel! who, in brighter hours,
+Lived on the perfume of these honied bowers,
+In velvet buds, at evening, loved to lie,
+And win with music every rose's sigh.
+Though weak the magic of my humble strain
+To charm your spirit from its orb again,
+Yet, oh, for her, beneath whose smile I sing,
+For her (whose pencil, if your rainbow wing
+Were dimmed or ruffled by a wintry sky.
+Could smooth its feather and relume its dye.)
+Descend a moment from your starry sphere,
+And, if the lime-tree grove that once was dear,
+The sunny wave, the bower, the breezy hill,
+The sparkling grotto can delight you still,
+Oh cull their choicest tints, their softest light,
+Weave all these spells into one dream of night,
+And, while the lovely artist slumbering lies,
+Shed the warm picture o'er her mental eyes;
+Take for the task her own creative spells,
+And brightly show what song but faintly tells.
+
+
+[1] Lady Donegall, I had reason to suppose, was at this time still in
+Switzerland, where the well-known powers of her pencil must have been
+frequently awakened.
+
+[2] The chapel of William Tell on the Lake of Lucerne.
+
+[3] Nothing can be more romantic than the little harbor of St. George's.
+The number of beautiful islets, the singular clearness of the water, and
+the animated play of the graceful little boats, gliding for ever between
+the islands, and seeming to sail from one cedar-grove into another, formed
+altogether as lovely a miniature of nature's beauties as can be imagined.
+
+[4] This is an illusion which, to the few who are fanciful enough to
+indulge in it, renders the scenery of Bermuda particularly interesting. In
+the short but beautiful twilight of their spring evenings, the white
+cottages, scattered over the islands, and but partially seen through the
+trees that surround them, assume often the appearance of little Grecian
+temples; and a vivid fancy may embellish the poor fisherman's hut with
+columns such as the pencil of a Claude might imitate. I had one favorite
+object of this kind in my walks, which the hospitality of its owner robbed
+me of, by asking me to visit him. He was a plain good man, and received me
+well and warmly, but I could never turn his house into a Grecian temple
+again.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO GEORGE MORGAN, ESQ. OF NORFOLK, VIRGINIA.
+
+FROM BERMUDA, JANUARY, 1804.
+
+
+Oh, what a sea of storm we've past!--
+ High mountain waves and foamy showers,
+And battling winds whose savage blast
+ But ill agrees with one whose hours
+ Have past in old Anacreon's bowers,
+Yet think not poesy's bright charm
+Forsook me in this rude alarm;[1]--
+When close they reefed the timid sail,
+ When, every plank complaining loud,
+We labored in the midnight gale;
+And even our haughty mainmast bowed,
+Even then, in that unlovely hour,
+The Muse still brought her soothing power,
+And, midst the war of waves and wind,
+In song's Elysium lapt my mind.
+Nay, when no numbers of my own
+Responded to her wakening tone,
+She opened, with her golden key,
+ The casket where my memory lays
+Those gems of classic poesy,
+ Which time has saved from ancient days.
+Take one of these, to Lais sung,--
+I wrote it while my hammock swung,
+As one might write a dissertation
+Upon "Suspended Animation!"
+
+Sweet is your kiss, my Lais dear,
+But, with that kiss I feel a tear
+Gush from your eyelids, such as start
+When those who've dearly loved must part.
+Sadly you lean your head to mine,
+And mute those arms around me twine,
+Your hair adown my bosom spread,
+All glittering with the tears you shed.
+In vain I've kist those lids of snow,
+For still, like ceaseless founts they flow,
+Bathing our cheeks, whene'er they meet.
+Why is it thus? Do, tell me, sweet!
+Ah, Lais! are my bodings right?
+Am I to lose you? Is to-night
+Our last--go, false to heaven and me!
+Your very tears are treachery.
+
+Such, while in air I floating hung,
+ Such was the strain, Morgante mio!
+The muse and I together sung,
+ With Boreas to make out the trio.
+But, bless the little fairy isle!
+ How sweetly after all our ills.
+We saw the sunny morning smile
+ Serenely o'er its fragrant hills;
+And felt the pure, delicious flow
+Of airs that round this Eden blow
+Freshly as even the gales that come
+O'er our own healthy hills at home.
+
+Could you but view the scenery fair,
+ That now beneath my window lies,
+You'd think, that nature lavished there
+ Her purest wave, her softest skies,
+To make a heaven for love to sigh in,
+For bards to live and saints to die in.
+Close to my wooded bank below,
+ In grassy calm the waters sleep,
+And to the sunbeam proudly show
+ The coral rocks they love to steep.[2]
+The fainting breeze of morning fails;
+ The drowsy boat moves slowly past,
+And I can almost touch its sails
+ As loose they flap around the mast.
+The noontide sun a splendor pours
+That lights up all these leafy shores;
+While his own heaven, its clouds
+and beams,
+ So pictured in the waters lie,
+That each small bark, in passing, seems
+ To float along a burning sky.
+
+Oh for the pinnace lent to thee,[3]
+ Blest dreamer, who in vision bright,
+Didst sail o'er heaven's solar sea
+ And touch at all its isles of light.
+Sweet Venus, what a clime he found
+Within thy orb's ambrosial round--
+There spring the breezes, rich and warm,
+ That sigh around thy vesper car;
+And angels dwell, so pure of form
+ That each appears a living star.
+These are the sprites, celestial queen!
+ Thou sendest nightly to the bed
+Of her I love, with touch unseen
+ Thy planet's brightening tints to shed;
+To lend that eye a light still clearer,
+ To give that cheek one rose-blush more.
+And bid that blushing lip be dearer,
+ Which had been all too dear before.
+
+But, whither means the muse to roam?
+'Tis time to call the wanderer home.
+Who could have thought the nymph would perch her
+Up in the clouds with Father Kircher?
+So, health and love to all your mansion!
+ Long may the bowl that pleasures bloom in,
+The flow of heart, the soul's expansion,
+ Mirth and song, your board illumine.
+At all your feasts, remember too,
+ When cups are sparkling to the brim,
+That here is one who drinks to you,
+ And, oh! as warmly drink to him.
+
+
+[1] We were seven days on our passage from Norfolk to Bermuda, during
+three of which we were forced to lay-to in a gale of wind. The Driver
+sloop of war, in which I went, was built at Bermuda of cedar, and is
+accounted an excellent sea-boat. She was then commanded by my very
+regretted friend Captain Compton, who in July last was killed aboard the
+Lily in an action with a French privateer. Poor Compton! he fell a victim
+to the strange impolicy of allowing such a miserable thing as the Lily to
+remain in the service: so small, crank, and unmanageable, that a
+well-manned merchantman was at any time a match for her.
+
+[2] The water is so clear around the island, that the rocks are seen
+beneath to a very great depth; and, as we entered the harbor, they
+appeared to us so near the surface that it seemed impossible we should not
+strike on them. There is no necessity, of course, for having the lead; and
+the negro pilot, looking down at the rocks from the bow of the ship, takes
+her through this difficult navigation, with a skill and confidence which
+seem to astonish some of the oldest sailors.
+
+[3] In Kircher's "Ecstatic Journey to Heaven." Cosmel, the genius of the
+world, gives Theodidacticus a boat of asbestos, with which he embarks into
+the regions of the sun.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LINES WRITTEN IN A STORM AT SEA.
+
+
+That sky of clouds is not the sky
+To light a lover to the pillow
+ Of her he loves--
+The swell of yonder foaming billow
+Resembles not the happy sigh
+ That rapture moves.
+
+Yet do I feel more tranquil far
+Amid the gloomy wilds of ocean,
+ In this dark hour,
+Than when, in passion's young emotion,
+I've stolen, beneath the evening star,
+ To Julia's bower.
+
+Oh! there's a holy calm profound
+In awe like this, that ne'er was given
+ To pleasure's thrill;
+'Tis as a solemn voice from heaven,
+And the soul, listening to the sound,
+ Lies mute and still.
+
+'Tis true, it talks of danger nigh,
+Of slumbering with the dead tomorrow
+ In the cold deep,
+Where pleasure's throb or tears of sorrow
+No more shall wake the heart or eye,
+ But all must sleep.
+
+Well!--there are some, thou stormy bed,
+To whom thy sleep would be a treasure;
+ Oh! most to him,
+Whose lip hath drained life's cup of pleasure,
+Nor left one honey drop to shed
+ Round sorrow's brim.
+
+Yes--_he_ can smile serene at death:
+Kind heaven, do thou but chase the weeping
+ Of friends who love him;
+Tell them that he lies calmly sleeping
+Where sorrow's sting or envy's breath
+ No more shall move him.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODES TO NEA;
+
+WRITTEN AT BERMUDA.
+
+
+ [Greek: NEA turannei]
+ EURPID. "_Medea_," v. 967.
+
+
+Nay, tempt me not to love again,
+ There was a time when love was sweet;
+Dear Nea! had I known thee then,
+ Our souls had not been slow to meet.
+But, oh, this weary heart hath run,
+ So many a time, the rounds of pain,
+Not even for thee, thou lovely one,
+ Would I endure such pangs again.
+
+ If there be climes, where never yet
+The print of beauty's foot was set,
+Where man may pass his loveless nights,
+Unfevered by her false delights,
+Thither my wounded soul would fly,
+Where rosy cheek or radiant eye
+Should bring no more their bliss, or pain,
+Nor fetter me to earth again.
+Dear absent girl! whose eyes of light,
+ Though little prized when all my own,
+Now float before me, soft and bright
+ As when they first enamoring shone,--
+What hours and days have I seen glide,
+While fit, enchanted, by thy side,
+Unmindful of the fleeting day,
+I've let life's dream dissolve away.
+O bloom of youth profusely shed!
+O moments I simply, vainly sped,
+Yet sweetly too--or Love perfumed
+The flame which thus my life consumed;
+And brilliant was the chain of flowers,
+In which he led my victim-hours.
+
+ Say, Nea, say, couldst thou, like her,
+When warm to feel and quick to err,
+Of loving fond, of roving fonder,
+This thoughtless soul might wish to wander,--
+Couldst thou, like her, the wish reclaim,
+ Endearing still, reproaching never,
+Till even this heart should burn with shame,
+ And be thy own more fixt than ever,
+No, no--on earth there's only one
+ Could bind such faithless folly fast;
+And sure on earth but one alone
+ Could make such virtue false at last!
+
+Nea, the heart which she forsook,
+ For thee were but a worthless shrine--
+Go, lovely girl, that angel look
+ Must thrill a soul more pure than mine.
+Oh! thou shalt be all else to me,
+That heart can feel or tongue can feign;
+I'll praise, admire, and worship thee,
+ But must not, dare not, love again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ --_tale iter omne cave. _
+ PROPERT. _lib. iv. eleg. 8_.
+
+I pray you, let us roam no more
+Along that wild and lonely shore,
+ Where late we thoughtless strayed;
+'Twas not for us, whom heaven intends
+To be no more than simple friends,
+ Such lonely walks were made.
+
+That little Bay, where turning in
+From ocean's rude and angry din,
+ As lovers steal to bliss,
+The billows kiss the shore, and then
+Flow back into the deep again,
+ As though they did not kiss.
+
+Remember, o'er its circling flood
+In what a dangerous dream we stood--
+ The silent sea before us,
+Around us, all the gloom of grove,
+That ever lent its shade to love,
+ No eye but heaven's o'er us!
+
+I saw you blush, you felt me tremble,
+In vain would formal art dissemble
+ All we then looked and thought;
+'Twas more than tongue could dare reveal,
+'Twas every thing that young hearts feel,
+ By Love and Nature taught.
+
+I stopped to cull, with faltering hand,
+A shell that, on the golden sand,
+ Before us faintly gleamed;
+I trembling raised it, and when you
+Had kist the shell, I kist it too--
+ How sweet, how wrong it seemed!
+
+Oh, trust me, 'twas a place, an hour,
+The worst that e'er the tempter's power
+ Could tangle me or you in;
+Sweet Nea, let us roam no more
+Along that wild and lonely shore.
+ Such walks may be our ruin.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You read it in these spell-bound eyes,
+ And there alone should love be read;
+You hear me say it all in sighs,
+ And thus alone should love be said.
+
+Then dread no more; I will not speak;
+ Although my heart to anguish thrill,
+I'll spare the burning of your cheek,
+ And look it all in silence still.
+
+Heard you the wish I dared to name,
+ To murmur on that luckless night,
+When passion broke the bonds of shame,
+ And love grew madness in your sight?
+
+Divinely through the graceful dance,
+ You seemed to float in silent song,
+Bending to earth that sunny glance,
+ As if to light your steps along.
+
+Oh! how could others dare to touch
+ That hallowed form with hand so free,
+When but to look was bliss too much,
+ Too rare for all but Love and me!
+
+With smiling eyes, that little thought,
+How fatal were the beams they threw,
+My trembling hands you lightly caught,
+ And round me, like a spirit, flew.
+
+Heedless of all, but you alone,--
+ And _you_, at least, should not condemn.
+If, when such eyes before me shone,
+ My soul forgot all eyes but them,--
+
+I dared to whisper passion's vow,--
+ For love had even of thought bereft me,--
+Nay, half-way bent to kiss that brow,
+ But, with a bound, you blushing left me.
+
+Forget, forget that night's offence,
+ Forgive it, if, alas! you can;
+'Twas love, 'twas passion--soul and sense--
+ 'Twas all that's best and worst in man.
+
+That moment, did the assembled eyes
+Of heaven and earth my madness view,
+I should have seen, thro' earth and skies,
+ But you alone--but only you.
+
+Did not a frown from you reprove.
+ Myriads of eyes to me were none;
+Enough for me to win your love,
+ And die upon the spot, when won.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A DREAM OF ANTIQUITY.
+
+
+I just had turned the classic page.
+ And traced that happy period over,
+When blest alike were youth and age,
+And love inspired the wisest sage,
+ And wisdom graced the tenderest lover.
+
+Before I laid me down to sleep
+ Awhile I from the lattice gazed
+Upon that still and moonlight deep,
+ With isles like floating gardens raised,
+For Ariel there his sports to keep;
+While, gliding 'twixt their leafy shores
+The lone night-fisher plied his oars.
+
+I felt,--so strongly fancy's power
+Came o'er me in that witching hour,--
+As if the whole bright scenery there
+ Were lighted by a Grecian sky,
+And I then breathed the blissful air
+ That late had thrilled to Sappho's sigh.
+
+Thus, waking, dreamt I,--and when Sleep
+ Came o'er my sense, the dream went on;
+Nor, through her curtain dim and deep,
+ Hath ever lovelier vision shone.
+I thought that, all enrapt, I strayed
+Through that serene, luxurious shade,
+Where Epicurus taught the Loves
+ To polish virtue's native brightness,--
+As pearls, we're told, that fondling doves
+ Have played with, wear a smoother whiteness.[1]
+'Twas one of those delicious nights
+ So common in the climes of Greece,
+When day withdraws but half its lights,
+ And all is moonshine, balm, and peace.
+And thou wert there, my own beloved,
+And by thy side I fondly roved
+Through many a temple's reverend gloom,
+And many a bower's seductive bloom,
+Where Beauty learned what Wisdom taught.
+And sages sighed and lovers thought;
+Where schoolmen conned no maxims stern,
+ But all was formed to soothe or move,
+To make the dullest love to learn,
+ To make the coldest learn to love.
+
+And now the fairy pathway seemed
+ To lead us through enchanted ground,
+Where all that bard has ever dreamed
+ Of love or luxury bloomed around.
+Oh! 'twas a bright, bewildering scene--
+Along the alley's deepening green
+Soft lamps, that hung like burning flowers,
+And scented and illumed the bowers,
+Seemed, as to him, who darkling roves,
+Amid the lone Hercynian groves,
+Appear those countless birds of light,
+That sparkle in the leaves at night,
+And from their wings diffuse a ray
+Along the traveller's weary way.
+
+'Twas light of that mysterious kind.
+ Through which the soul perchance may roam,
+When it has left this world behind,
+ And gone to seek its heavenly home.
+And, Nea, thou wert by my side,
+Through all this heavenward path my guide.
+
+But, lo, as wandering thus we ranged
+That upward path, the vision changed;
+And now, methought, we stole along
+ Through halls of more voluptuous glory
+Than ever lived in Teian song,
+ Or wantoned in Milesian story.[2]
+
+And nymphs were there, whose very eyes
+Seemed softened o'er with breath of sighs;
+Whose every ringlet, as it wreathed,
+A mute appeal to passion breathed.
+
+Some flew, with amber cups, around,
+ Pouring the flowery wines of Crete;
+And, as they passed with youthful bound,
+ The onyx shone beneath their feet.[3]
+While others, waving arms of snow
+ Entwined by snakes of burnished gold,[4]
+And showing charms, as loth to show,
+ Through many a thin, Tarentian fold,
+Glided among the festal throng
+Bearing rich urns of flowers along
+Where roses lay, in languor breathing,
+And the young beegrape, round them wreathing,
+Hung on their blushes warm and meek,
+Like curls upon a rosy cheek.
+
+Oh, Nea! why did morning break
+ The spell that thus divinely bound me?
+Why did I wake? how _could_ I wake
+ With thee my own and heaven around me!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Well--peace to thy heart, though another's it be,
+And health to that cheek, though it bloom not for me!
+To-morrow I sail for those cinnamon groves,
+Where nightly the ghost of the Carribee roves,
+And, far from the light of those eyes, I may yet
+Their allurements forgive and their splendor forget.
+
+Farewell to Bermuda,[5] and long may the bloom
+Of the lemon and myrtle its valleys perfume;
+May spring to eternity hallow the shade,
+Where Ariel has warbled and Waller has strayed.
+
+And thou--when, at dawn, thou shalt happen to roam
+Through the lime-covered alley that leads to thy home,
+Where oft, when the dance and the revel were done,
+And the stars were beginning to fade in the sun,
+I have led thee along, and have told by the way
+What my heart all the night had been burning to say--
+Oh! think of the past--give a sigh to those times,
+And a blessing for me to that alley of limes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If I were yonder wave, my dear,
+ And thou the isle it clasps around,
+I would not let a foot come near
+ My land of bliss, my fairy ground.
+
+If I were yonder couch of gold,
+ And thou the pearl within it placed,
+I would not let an eye behold
+ The sacred gem my arms embraced.
+
+If I were yonder orange-tree,
+ And thou the blossom blooming there,
+I would not yield a breath of thee
+ To scent the most imploring air.
+
+Oh! bend not o'er the water's brink,
+ Give not the wave that odorous sigh,
+Nor let its burning mirror drink
+ The soft reflection of thine eye.
+
+That glossy hair, that glowing cheek,
+ So pictured in the waters seem,
+That I could gladly plunge to seek
+ Thy image in the glassy stream.
+
+Blest fate! at once my chilly grave
+ And nuptial bed that stream might be;
+I'll wed thee in its mimic wave.
+ And die upon the shade of thee.
+
+Behold the leafy mangrove, bending
+ O'er the waters blue and bright,
+Like Nea's silky lashes, lending
+ Shadow to her eyes of light.
+
+Oh, my beloved! where'er I turn,
+ Some trace of thee enchants mine eyes:
+In every star thy glances burn;
+ Thy blush on every floweret lies.
+
+Nor find I in creation aught
+ Of bright or beautiful or rare,
+Sweet to the sense of pure to thought,
+ But thou art found reflected there.
+
+
+[1] This method of polishing pearls, by leaving them awhile to be played
+with by doves, is mentioned by the fanciful Cardanus.
+
+[2] The Milesiacs, or Milesian fables, had their origin in Miletus, a
+luxurious town of Ionia. Aristides was the most celebrated author of these
+licentious fictions.
+
+[3] It appears that in very splendid mansions the floor or pavement was
+frequently of onyx.
+
+[4] Bracelets of this shape were a favorite ornament among the women of
+antiquity.
+
+[5] The inhabitants pronounce the name as if it were written Bermooda. I
+wonder it did not occur to some of those all-reading gentlemen that,
+possibly, the discoverer of this "island of hogs and devils" might have
+been no less a personage than the great John Bermudez, who, about the same
+period (the beginning of the sixteenth century), was sent Patriarch of the
+Latin church to Ethiopia, and has left us most wonderful stories of the
+Amazons and the Griffins which he encountered.--_Travels of the Jesuits_,
+vol. i.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SNOW SPIRIT.
+
+
+No, ne'er did the wave in its element steep
+ An island of lovelier charms;
+It blooms in the giant embrace of the deep,
+ Like Hebe in Hercules' arms.
+The blush of your bowers is light to the eye,
+ And their melody balm to the ear;
+But the fiery planet of day is too nigh,
+ And the Snow Spirit never comes here.
+
+The down from his wing is as white as the pearl
+ That shines through thy lips when they part,
+And it falls on the green earth as melting, my girl,
+ As a murmur of thine on the heart.
+Oh! fly to the clime, where he pillows the death,
+ As he cradles the birth of the year;
+Bright are your bowers and balmy their breath,
+ But the Snow Spirit cannot come here.
+
+How sweet to behold him when borne on the gale,
+ And brightening the bosom of morn,
+He flings, like the priest of Diana, a veil
+ O'er the brow of each virginal thorn.
+Yet think not the veil he so chillingly casts
+ Is the veil of a vestal severe;
+No, no, thou wilt see, what a moment it lasts,
+ Should the Snow Spirit ever come here.
+
+But fly to his region--lay open thy zone,
+ And he'll weep all his brilliancy dim,
+To think that a bosom, as white as his own,
+ Should not melt in the daybeam like him.
+Oh! lovely the print of those delicate feet
+ O'er his luminous path will appear--
+Fly, my beloved! this island is sweet,
+ But the Snow Spirit cannot come here.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I stole along the flowery bank,
+While many a bending seagrape[1] drank
+The sprinkle of the feathery oar
+That winged me round this fairy shore.
+
+ 'Twas noon; and every orange bud
+Hung languid o'er the crystal flood,
+Faint as the lids of maiden's eyes
+When love-thoughts in her bosom rise.
+Oh, for a naiad's sparry bower,
+To shade me in that glowing hour!
+
+ A little dove, of milky hue,
+Before me from a plantain flew,
+And, light along the water's brim,
+I steered my gentle bark by him;
+For fancy told me, Love had sent
+This gentle bird with kind intent
+To lead my steps, where I should meet--
+I knew not what, but something sweet.
+
+ And--bless the little pilot dove!
+He had indeed been sent by Love,
+To guide me to a scene so dear
+As fate allows but seldom here;
+One of those rare and brilliant hours.
+That, like the aloe's lingering flowers,
+May blossom to the eye of man
+But once in all his weary span.
+
+ Just where the margin's opening shade
+A vista from the waters made,
+My bird reposed his silver plume
+Upon a rich banana's bloom.
+Oh vision bright! oh spirit fair!
+What spell, what magic raised her there?
+'Twas Nea! slumbering calm and mild,
+And bloomy as the dimpled child,
+Whose spirit in elysium keeps
+Its playful sabbath, while he sleeps.
+
+ The broad banana's green embrace
+Hung shadowy round each tranquil grace;
+One little beam alone could win
+The leaves to let it wander in.
+And, stealing over all her charms,
+From lip to cheek, from neck to arms,
+New lustre to each beauty lent,--
+Itself all trembling as it went!
+
+ Dark lay her eyelid's jetty fringe
+Upon that cheek whose roseate tinge
+Mixt with its shade, like evening's light
+Just touching on the verge of night.
+Her eyes, though thus in slumber hid,
+Seemed glowing through the ivory lid,
+And, as I thought, a lustre threw
+Upon her lip's reflecting dew,--
+Such as a night-lamp, left to shine
+Alone on some secluded shrine,
+May shed upon the votive wreath,
+Which pious hands have hung beneath.
+
+ Was ever vision half so sweet!
+Think, think how quick my heart-pulse beat,
+As o'er the rustling bank I stole;--
+Oh! ye, that know the lover's soul,
+It is for you alone to guess,
+That moment's trembling happiness.
+
+
+[1] The seaside or mangrove grape, a native of the West Indies.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A STUDY FROM THE ANTIQUE.
+
+
+Behold, my love, the curious gem
+ Within this simple ring of gold;
+'Tis hallow'd by the touch of them
+ Who lived in classic hours of old.
+
+Some fair Athenian girl, perhaps,
+ Upon her hand this gem displayed,
+Nor thought that time's succeeding lapse
+ Should see it grace a lovelier maid.
+
+Look, dearest, what a sweet design!
+ The more we gaze, it charms the more;
+Come--closer bring that cheek to mine,
+ And trace with me its beauties o'er.
+
+Thou seest, it is a simple youth
+ By some enamored nymph embraced--
+Look, as she leans, and say in sooth
+ Is not that hand most fondly placed?
+
+Upon his curled head behind
+ It seems in careless play to lie,
+Yet presses gently, half inclined
+ To bring the truant's lip more nigh.
+
+Oh happy maid! Too happy boy!
+ The one so fond and little loath,
+The other yielding slow to joy--
+ Oh rare, indeed, but blissful both.
+
+Imagine, love, that I am he,
+ And just as warm as he is chilling;
+Imagine, too, that thou art she,
+ But quite as coy as she is willing:
+
+So may we try the graceful way
+ In which their gentle arms are twined,
+And thus, like her, my hand I lay
+ Upon thy wreathed locks behind:
+
+And thus I feel thee breathing sweet,
+ As slow to mine thy head I move;
+And thus our lips together meet,
+ And thus,--and thus,--I kiss thee, love.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There's not a look, a word of thine,
+ My soul hath e'er forgot;
+Thou ne'er hast bid a ringlet shine,
+Nor given thy locks one graceful twine
+ Which I remember not.
+
+There never yet a murmur fell
+ From that beguiling tongue,
+Which did not, with a lingering spell,
+Upon thy charmed senses dwell,
+ Like songs from Eden sung.
+
+Ah! that I could, at once, forget
+ All, all that haunts me so--
+And yet, thou witching girl,--and yet,
+To die were sweeter than to let
+ The loved remembrance go.
+
+No; if this slighted heart must see
+ Its faithful pulse decay,
+Oh let it die, remembering thee,
+And, like the burnt aroma, be
+ Consumed in sweets away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO JOSEPH ATKINSON, ESQ.
+
+FROM BERMUDA.[1]
+
+
+"The daylight is gone--but, before we depart,
+"One cup shall go round to the friend of my heart,
+"The kindest, the dearest--oh! judge by the tear
+"I now shed while I name him, how kind and how dear."
+
+ 'Twas thus in the shade of the Calabash-Tree,
+With a few, who could feel and remember like me,
+The charm that, to sweeten my goblet, I threw
+Was a sigh to the past and a blessing on you.
+
+ Oh! say, is it thus, in the mirth-bringing hour,
+When friends are assembled, when wit, in full flower,
+Shoots forth from the lip, under Bacchus's dew,
+In blossoms of thought ever springing and new--
+Do you sometimes remember, and hallow the brim
+Of your cup with a sigh, as you crown it to him
+Who is lonely and sad in these valleys so fair,
+And would pine in elysium, if friends were not there!
+
+ Last night, when we came from the Calabash-Tree,
+When my limbs were at rest and my spirit was free,
+The glow of the grape and the dreams of the day
+Set the magical springs of my fancy in play,
+And oh,--such a vision as haunted me then
+I would slumber for ages to witness again.
+The many I like, and the few I adore,
+The friends who were dear and beloved before.
+But never till now so beloved and dear,
+At the call of my Fancy, surrounded me here;
+And soon,--oh, at once, did the light of their smiles
+To a paradise brighten this region of isles;
+More lucid the wave, as they looked on it, flowed,
+And brighter the rose, as they gathered it, glowed.
+Not the valleys Heraean (though watered by rills
+Of the pearliest flow, from those pastoral hills.[2]
+Where the Song of the Shepherd, primeval and wild,
+Was taught to the nymphs by their mystical child,)
+Could boast such a lustre o'er land and o'er wave
+As the magic of love to this paradise gave.
+
+ Oh magic of love! unembellished by you,
+Hath the garden a blush or the landscape a hue?
+Or shines there a vista in nature or art,
+Like that which Love opes thro' the eye to the heart?
+
+ Alas, that a vision so happy should fade!
+That, when morning around me in brilliancy played,
+The rose and the stream I had thought of at night
+Should still be before me, unfadingly bright;
+While the friends, who had seemed to hang over the stream,
+And to gather the roses, had fled with my dream.
+
+ But look, where, all ready, in sailing array,
+The bark that's to carry these pages away,[3]
+Impatiently flutters her wing to the wind,
+And will soon leave these islets of Ariel behind.
+What billows, what gales is she fated to prove,
+Ere she sleep in the lee of the land that I love!
+Yet pleasant the swell of the billows would be,
+And the roar of those gales would be music to me.
+Not the tranquillest air that the winds ever blew,
+Not the sunniest tears of the summer-eve dew,
+Were as sweet as the storm, or as bright as the foam
+Of the surge, that would hurry your wanderer home.
+
+
+[1] Pinkerton has said that "a good history and description of the
+Bermudas might afford a pleasing addition to the geographical library;"
+but there certainly are not materials for such a work. The island, since
+the time of its discovery, has experienced so very few vicissitudes, the
+people have been so indolent, and their trade so limited, that there is
+but little which the historian could amplify into importance; and, with
+respect to the natural productions of the country, the few which the
+inhabitants can be induced to cultivate are so common in the West Indies,
+that they have been described by every naturalist who has written any
+account of those islands.
+
+[2] Mountains of Sicily, upon which Daphnis, the first Inventor of bucolic
+poetry, was nursed by the nymphs.
+
+[3] A ship, ready to sail for England.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE STEERMAN'S SONG,
+
+WRITTEN ABOARD THE BOSTON FRIGATE
+
+28TH APRIL.[1]
+
+
+When freshly blows the northern gale,
+ And under courses snug we fly;
+Or when light breezes swell the sail,
+ And royals proudly sweep the sky;
+'Longside the wheel, unwearied still
+ I stand, and, as my watchful eye
+Doth mark the needle's faithful thrill,
+ I think of her I love, and cry,
+ Port, my boy! port.
+
+When calms delay, or breezes blow
+ Right from the point we wish to steer;
+When by the wind close-hauled we go.
+ And strive in vain the port to near;
+I think 'tis thus the fates defer
+ My bliss with one that's far away,
+And while remembrance springs to her,
+ I watch the sails and sighing say,
+ Thus, my boy! thus.
+
+But see the wind draws kindly aft,
+ All hands are up the yards to square,
+And now the floating stu'n-sails waft
+ Our stately ship thro' waves and air.
+Oh! then I think that yet for me
+ Some breeze of fortune thus may spring,
+Some breeze to waft me, love, to thee--
+ And in that hope I smiling sing,
+ Steady, boy! so.
+
+
+[1] I left Bermuda in the Boston about the middle of April, in
+company with the Cambrian and Leander, aboard the latter of which was the
+Admiral Sir Andrew Mitchell, who divides his year between Halifax and
+Bermuda, and is the very soul of society and good-fellowship to both. We
+separated in a few days, and the Boston after a short cruise proceeded to
+New York.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE FIRE-FLY.[1]
+
+
+At morning, when the earth and sky
+ Are glowing with the light of spring,
+We see thee not, thou humble fly!
+ Nor think upon thy gleaming wing.
+
+But when the skies have lost their hue,
+ And sunny lights no longer play,
+Oh then we see and bless thee too
+ For sparkling o'er the dreary way.
+
+Thus let me hope, when lost to me
+ The lights that now my life illume,
+Some milder joys may come, like thee,
+ To cheer, if not to warm, the gloom!
+
+
+[1] The lively and varying illumination, with which these fire-flies light
+up the woods at night, gives quite an idea of enchantment.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE LORD VISCOUNT FORBES.
+
+FROM THE CITY OP WASHINGTON.
+
+
+If former times had never left a trace
+Of human frailty in their onward race,
+Nor o'er their pathway written, as they ran,
+One dark memorial of the crimes of man;
+If every age, in new unconscious prime,
+Rose, like a phenix, from the fires of time,
+To wing its way unguided and alone,
+The future smiling and the past unknown;
+Then ardent man would to himself be new,
+Earth at his foot and heaven within his view:
+Well might the novice hope, the sanguine scheme
+Of full perfection prompt his daring dream,
+Ere cold experience, with her veteran lore,
+Could tell him, fools had dreamt as much before.
+But, tracing as we do, through age and clime,
+The plans of virtue midst the deeds of crime,
+The thinking follies and the reasoning rage
+Of man, at once the idiot and the sage;
+When still we see, through every varying frame
+Of arts and polity, his course the same,
+And know that ancient fools but died, to make
+A space on earth for modern fools to take;
+'Tis strange, how quickly we the past forget;
+That Wisdom's self should not be tutored yet,
+Nor tire of watching for the monstrous birth
+Of pure perfection midst the sons of earth!
+
+ Oh! nothing but that soul which God has given,
+Could lead us thus to look on earth for heaven;
+O'er dross without to shed the light within,
+And dream of virtue while we see but sin.
+
+ Even here, beside the proud Potowmac's stream,
+Might sages still pursue the flattering theme
+Of days to come, when man shall conquer fate,
+Rise o'er the level of his mortal state,
+Belie the monuments of frailty past,
+And plant perfection in this world at last!
+"Here," might they say, "shall power's divided reign
+"Evince that patriots have not bled in vain.
+"Here godlike liberty's herculean youth,
+"Cradled in peace, and nurtured up by truth
+"To full maturity of nerve and mind,
+"Shall crush the giants that bestride mankind.
+"Here shall religion's pure and balmy draught
+"In form no more from cups of state be quaft,
+"But flow for all, through nation, rank, and sect,
+"Free as that heaven its tranquil waves reflect.
+"Around the columns of the public shrine
+"Shall growing arts their gradual wreath intwine,
+"Nor breathe corruption from the flowering braid,
+"Nor mine that fabric which they bloom to shade,
+"No longer here shall Justice bound her view,
+"Or wrong the many, while she rights the few;
+"But take her range through all the social frame,
+"Pure and pervading as that vital flame
+"Which warms at once our best and meanest part,
+"And thrills a hair while it expands a heart!"
+
+ Oh golden dream! what soul that loves to scan
+The bright disk rather than the dark of man,
+That owns the good, while smarting with the ill,
+And loves the world with all its frailty still,--
+What ardent bosom does not spring to meet
+The generous hope, with all that heavenly heat,
+Which makes the soul unwilling to resign
+The thoughts of growing, even on earth, divine!
+Yes, dearest friend, I see thee glow to think
+The chain of ages yet may boast a link
+Of purer texture than the world has known,
+And fit to bind us to a Godhead's throne.
+
+ But, is it thus? doth even the glorious dream
+Borrow from truth that dim, uncertain gleam,
+Which tempts us still to give such fancies scope,
+As shock not reason, while they nourish hope?
+No, no, believe me, 'tis not so--even now,
+While yet upon Columbia's rising brow
+The showy smile of young presumption plays,
+Her bloom is poisoned and her heart decays.
+Even now, in dawn of life, her sickly breath
+Burns with the taint of empires near their death;
+And, like the nymphs of her own withering clime,
+She's old in youth, she's blasted in her prime,[1]
+
+ Already has the child of Gallia's school
+The foul Philosophy that sins by rule,
+With all her train of reasoning, damning arts,
+Begot by brilliant heads on worthless hearts,
+Like things that quicken after Nilus' flood,
+The venomed birth of sunshine and of mud,--
+Already has she poured her poison here
+O'er every charm that makes existence dear;
+Already blighted, with her blackening trace,
+The opening bloom of every social grace,
+And all those courtesies, that love to shoot
+Round virtue's stem, the flowerets of her fruit.
+
+ And, were these errors but the wanton tide
+Of young luxuriance or unchastened pride;
+The fervid follies and the faults of such
+As wrongly feel, because they feel too much;
+Then might experience make the fever less,
+Nay, graft a virtue on each warm excess.
+But no; 'tis heartless, speculative ill,
+All youth's transgression with all age's chill;
+The apathy of wrong, the bosom's ice,
+A slow and cold stagnation into vice.
+
+ Long has the love of gold, that meanest rage,
+And latest folly of man's sinking age,
+Which, rarely venturing in the van of life,
+While nobler passions wage their heated strife,
+Comes skulking last, with selfishness and fear,
+And dies, collecting lumber in the rear,--
+Long has it palsied every grasping hand
+And greedy spirit through this bartering land;
+Turned life to traffic, set the demon gold
+So loose abroad that virtue's self is sold,
+And conscience, truth, and honesty are made
+To rise and fall, like other wares of trade.
+
+ Already in this free, this virtuous state,
+Which, Frenchmen tell us, was ordained by fate,
+To show the world, what high perfection springs
+From rabble senators, and merchant kings,--
+Even here already patriots learn to steal
+Their private perquisites from public weal,
+And, guardians of the country's sacred fire,
+Like Afric's priests, let out the flame for hire.
+Those vaunted demagogues, who nobly rose
+From England's debtors to be England's foes,
+Who could their monarch in their purse forget,
+And break allegiance, but to cancel debt,
+Have proved at length, the mineral's tempting hue,
+Which makes a patriot, can un-make him too.[2]
+Oh! Freedom, Freedom, how I hate thy cant!
+Not Eastern bombast, not the savage rant
+Of purpled madmen, were they numbered all
+From Roman Nero down to Russian Paul,
+Could grate upon my ear so mean, so base,
+As the rank jargon of that factious race,
+Who, poor of heart and prodigal of words,
+Formed to be slaves, yet struggling to be lords,
+Strut forth, as patriots, from their negro-marts,
+And shout for rights, with rapine in their hearts.
+ Who can, with patience, for a moment see
+The medley mass of pride and misery,
+Of whips and charters, manacles and rights,
+Of slaving blacks and democratic whites,
+And all the piebald polity that reigns
+In free confusion o'er Columbia's plains?
+To think that man, thou just and gentle God!
+Should stand before thee with a tyrant's rod
+O'er creatures like himself, with souls from thee,
+Yet dare to boast of perfect liberty;
+Away, away--I'd rather hold my neck
+By doubtful tenure from a sultan's beck,
+In climes, where liberty has scarce been named,
+Nor any right but that of ruling claimed,
+Than thus to live, where bastard Freedom waves
+Her fustian flag in mockery over slaves;
+Where--motley laws admitting no degree
+Betwixt the vilely slaved and madly free--
+Alike the bondage and the license suit
+The brute made ruler and the man made brute.
+
+ But, while I thus, my friend, in flowerless song,
+So feebly paint, what yet I feel so strong,
+The ills, the vices of the land, where first
+Those rebel fiends, that rack the world, were nurst,
+Where treason's arm by royalty was nerved,
+And Frenchmen learned to crush the throne they served--
+Thou, calmly lulled in dreams of classic thought,
+By bards illumined and by sages taught,
+Pant'st to be all, upon this mortal scene,
+That bard hath fancied or that sage hath been.
+Why should I wake thee? why severely chase
+The lovely forms of virtue and of grace,
+That dwell before thee, like the pictures spread
+By Spartan matrons round the genial bed,
+Moulding thy fancy, and with gradual art
+Brightening the young conceptions of thy heart.
+
+ Forgive me, Forbes--and should the song destroy
+One generous hope, one throb of social joy,
+One high pulsation of the zeal for man,
+Which few can feel, and bless that few who can,--
+Oh! turn to him, beneath those kindred eyes
+Thy talents open and thy virtues rise,
+Forget where nature has been dark or dim,
+And proudly study all her lights in him.
+Yes, yes, in him the erring world forget,
+And feel that man _may_ reach perfection yet.
+
+
+[1] "What will be the old age of this government, if it is thus
+early decrepit!" Such was the remark of Fauchet, the French minister at
+Philadelphia, in that famous despatch to his government, which was
+intercepted by one of our cruisers in the year 1794. This curious memorial
+may be found in Porcupine's Works, vol. i. p. 279. It remains a striking
+monument of republican intrigue on one side and republican profligacy on
+the other; and I would recommend the perusal of it to every honest
+politician, who may labor under a moment's delusion with respect to the
+purity of American patriotism.
+
+[2] See Porcupine's account of the Pennsylvania Insurrection in
+1794. In short, see Porcupine's works throughout, for ample corroboration
+of every sentiment which I have ventured to express. In saying this, I
+refer less to the comments of that writer than to the occurrences which he
+has related and the documents which he has preserved. Opinion may be
+suspected of bias, but facts speak for themselves.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THOMAS HUME, ESQ., M. D.
+
+FROM THE CITY OF WASHINGTON.
+
+
+'Tis evening now; beneath the western star
+Soft sighs the lover through his sweet cigar,
+And fills the ears of some consenting she
+With puffs and vows, with smoke and constancy.
+
+The patriot, fresh from Freedom's councils come,
+Now pleased retires to lash his slaves at home;
+Or woo, perhaps, some black Aspasia's charms,
+And dream of freedom in his bondsmaid's arms.
+
+ In fancy now, beneath the twilight gloom,
+Come, let me lead thee o'er this "second Rome!"[1]
+Where tribunes rule, where dusky Davi bow,
+And what was Goose-Creek once is Tiber now:[2]--
+This embryo capital, where Fancy sees
+Squares in morasses, obelisks in trees;
+Which second-sighted seers, even now, adorn
+With shrines unbuilt and heroes yet unborn,
+Though naught but woods[3] and Jefferson they see,
+Where streets should run and sages _ought_ to be.
+
+ And look, how calmly in yon radiant wave,
+The dying sun prepares his golden grave.
+Oh mighty river! oh ye banks of shade!
+Ye matchless scenes, in nature's morning made,
+While still, in all the exuberance of prime,
+She poured her wonders, lavishly sublime,
+Nor yet had learned to stoop, with humbler care,
+From grand to soft, from wonderful to fair;--
+Say, were your towering hills, your boundless floods,
+Your rich savannas and majestic woods,
+Where bards should meditate and heroes rove,
+And woman charm, and man deserve her love,--
+Oh say, was world so bright, but born to grace
+Its own half-organized, half-minded race[4]
+Of weak barbarians, swarming o'er its breast,
+Like vermin gendered on the lion's crest?
+Were none but brutes to call that soil their home,
+Where none but demigods should dare to roam?
+Or worse, thou wondrous world! oh! doubly worse,
+Did heaven design thy lordly land to nurse
+The motley dregs of every distant clime,
+Each blast of anarchy and taint of crime
+Which Europe shakes from her perturbed sphere,
+In full malignity to rankle here?
+
+ But hold,--observe yon little mount of pines,
+Where the breeze murmurs and the firefly shines.
+There let thy fancy raise, in bold relief,
+The sculptured image of that veteran chief[5]
+Who lost the rebel's in the hero's name,
+And climb'd o'er prostrate royalty to fame;
+Beneath whose sword Columbia's patriot train
+Cast off their monarch that their mob might reign.
+
+ How shall we rank thee upon glory's page?
+Thou more than soldier and just less than sage!
+Of peace too fond to act the conqueror's part,
+Too long in camps to learn a statesman's art,
+Nature designed thee for a hero's mould,
+But, ere she cast thee, let the stuff grow cold.
+
+ While loftier souls command, nay, make their fate,
+Thy fate made thee and forced thee to be great.
+Yet Fortune, who so oft, so blindly sheds
+Her brightest halo round the weakest heads,
+Found _thee_ undazzled, tranquil as before,
+Proud to be useful, scorning to be more;
+Less moved by glory's than by duty's claim,
+Renown the meed, but self-applause the aim;
+All that thou _wert_ reflects less fame on thee,
+Far less, than all thou didst _forbear to be_.
+Nor yet the patriot of one land alone,--
+For, thine's a name all nations claim their own;
+And every shore, where breathed the good and brave,
+Echoed the plaudits thy own country gave.
+
+ Now look, my friend, where faint the moonlight falls
+On yonder dome, and, in those princely halls,--
+If thou canst hate, as sure that soul must hate,
+Which loves the virtuous, and reveres the great,
+If thou canst loathe and execrate with me
+The poisoning drug of French philosophy,
+That nauseous slaver of these frantic times,
+With which false liberty dilutes her crimes,
+If thou has got, within thy free-born breast,
+One pulse that beats more proudly than the rest,
+With honest scorn for that inglorious soul,
+Which creeps and whines beneath a mob's control,
+Which courts the rabble's smile, the rabble's nod,
+And makes, like Egypt, every beast its god,
+There, in those walls--but, burning tongue forbear!
+Rank must be reverenced, even the rank that's there:
+So here I pause--and now, dear Hume, we part:
+But oft again, in frank exchange of heart,
+Thus let us meet, and mingle converse dear
+By Thames at home, or by Potowmac here.
+O'er lake and marsh, through fevers and through fogs,
+'Midst bears and yankees, democrats and frogs,
+Thy foot shall follow me, thy heart and eyes
+With me shall wonder, and with me despise.
+While I, as oft, in fancy's dream shall rove,
+With thee conversing, through that land I love,
+Where, like the air that fans her fields of green,
+Her freedom spreads, unfevered and serene;
+And sovereign man can condescend to see
+The throne and laws more sovereign still than he.
+
+
+[1] "On the original location of the ground now allotted for the seat of
+the Federal City [says Mr. Weld] the identical spot on which the capitol
+now stands was called Rome. This anecdote is related by many as a certain
+prognostic of the future magnificence of this city, which is to be, as it
+were, a second Rome."--_Weld's Travels_, letter iv.
+
+[2] A little stream runs through the city, which, with intolerable
+affectation, they have styled the Tiber. It was originally called Goose-
+Creek.
+
+[3] "To be under the necessity of going through a deep wood for one or two
+miles, perhaps, in order to see a next-door neighbor, and in the same
+city, is a curious and I believe, a novel circumstance."--_Weld_, letter
+iv.
+
+The Federal City (if it, must be called a city), has hot been much
+increased since Mr. Weld visited it.
+
+[4] The picture which Buffon and De Pauw have drawn of the American
+Indian, though very humiliating, is, as far as I can judge, much more
+correct than the flattering representations which Mr. Jefferson has given
+us. See the Notes on Virginia, where this gentleman endeavors to disprove
+in general the opinion maintained so strongly by some philosophers that
+nature (as Mr. Jefferson expresses it) _belittles_ her productions in
+the western world.
+
+[5] On a small hill near the capital there is to be an equestrian statue
+of General Washington.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LINES WRITTEN ON LEAVING PHILADELPHIA.
+
+
+Alone by the Schuylkill a wanderer roved,
+ And bright were its flowery banks to his eye;
+But far, very far were the friends that he loved,
+ And he gazed on its flowery banks with a sigh.
+
+Oh Nature, though blessed and bright are thy rays,
+ O'er the brow of creation enchantingly thrown,
+Yet faint are they all to the lustre that plays
+ In a smile from the heart that is fondly our own.
+
+Nor long did the soul of the stranger remain
+ Unblest by the smile he had languished to meet;
+Though scarce did he hope it would soothe him again,
+ Till the threshold of home had been pressed by his feet.
+
+But the lays of his boyhood had stolen to their ear,
+And they loved what they knew of so humble a name;
+And they told him, with flattery welcome and dear,
+That they found in his heart something better than fame.
+
+Nor did woman--oh woman! Whose form and whose soul
+ Are the spell and the life of each path we pursue;
+Whether sunned in the tropics or chilled at the pole,
+ If woman be there, there is happiness too:--
+
+Nor did she her enamoring magic deny,--
+ That magic his heart had relinquished so long,--
+Like eyes he had loved was _her_ eloquent eye,
+ Like them did it soften and weep at his song.
+
+Oh, blest be the tear, and in memory oft
+ May its sparkle be shed o'er the wanderer's dream;
+Thrice blest be that eye, and may passion as soft,
+ As free from a pang, ever mellow its beam!
+
+The stranger is gone--but he will not forget,
+ When at home he shall talk of the toils he has known,
+To tell, with a sigh, what endearments he met,
+ As he strayed by the wave of the Schuylkill alone.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LINES WRITTEN AT THE COHOS, OR FALLS OF THE MOHAWK KIVER.[1]
+
+
+ _Gia era in loco ove s'udia l'rimbombo
+ Dell' acqua_. DANTE.
+
+
+From rise of morn till set of sun
+I've seen the mighty Mohawk run;
+And as I markt the woods of pine
+Along his mirror darkly shine,
+Like tall and gloomy forms that pass
+Before the wizard's midnight glass:
+And as I viewed the hurrying pace
+With which he ran his turbid race,
+Rushing, alike untried and wild,
+Through shades that frowned and flowers that smiled,
+Flying by every green recess
+That wooed him to its calm caress,
+Yet, sometimes turning with the wind,
+As if to leave one look behind,--
+Oft have I thought, and thinking sighed,
+How like to thee, thou restless tide,
+May be the lot, the life of him
+Who roams along thy water's brim;
+Through what alternate wastes of woe
+And flowers of joy my path may go;
+How many a sheltered, calm retreat
+May woo the while my weary feet,
+While still pursuing, still unblest,
+I wander on, nor dare to rest;
+But, urgent as the doom that calls
+Thy water to its destined falls,
+I feel the world's bewildering force
+Hurry my heart's devoted course
+From lapse to lapse, till life be done,
+And the spent current cease to run.
+
+ One only prayer I dare to make,
+As onward thus my course I take;--
+Oh, be my falls as bright as thine!
+May heaven's relenting rainbow shine
+Upon the mist that circles me,
+As soft as now it hangs o'er thee!
+
+
+[1] There is a dreary and savage character in the country immediately
+about these Falls, which is much more in harmony with the wildness of such
+a scene than the cultivated lands in the neighborhood of Niagara.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE EVIL SPIRIT OF THE WOODS.[1]
+
+
+ _qua via difficilis, quaque est via nulla_
+ OVID _Metam. lib_ iii. v. 227.
+
+
+Now the vapor, hot and damp,
+Shed by day's expiring lamp,
+Through the misty ether spreads
+Every ill the white man dreads;
+Fiery fever's thirsty thrill,
+Fitful ague's shivering chill!
+
+Hark! I hear the traveller's song,
+As he winds the woods along;--
+Christian, 'tis the song of fear;
+Wolves are round thee, night is near,
+And the wild thou dar'st to roam--
+Think, 'twas once the Indian's home![2]
+
+Hither, sprites, who love to harm,
+Wheresoe'er you work your charm,
+By the creeks, or by the brakes,
+Where the pale witch feeds her snakes,
+And the cayman[3] loves to creep,
+Torpid, to his wintry sleep:
+Where the bird of carrion flits,
+And the shuddering murderer sits,[4]
+Lone beneath a roof of blood;
+While upon his poisoned food,
+From the corpse of him he slew
+Drops the chill and gory dew.
+
+Hither bend ye, turn ye hither,
+Eyes that blast and wings that wither
+Cross the wandering Christian's way,
+Lead him, ere the glimpse of day,
+Many a mile of maddening error
+Through the maze of night and terror,
+Till the morn behold him lying
+On the damp earth, pale and dying.
+Mock him, when his eager sight
+Seeks the cordial cottage-light;
+Gleam then, like the lightning-bug,
+Tempt him to the den that's dug
+For the foul and famished brood
+Of the she wolf, gaunt for blood;
+Or, unto the dangerous pass
+O'er the deep and dark morass,
+Where the trembling Indian brings
+Belts of porcelain, pipes, and rings,
+Tributes, to be hung in air,
+To the Fiend presiding there![5]
+
+ Then, when night's long labor past,
+Wildered, faint, he falls at last,
+Sinking where the causeway's edge
+Moulders in the slimy sedge,
+There let every noxious thing
+Trail its filth and fix its sting;
+Let the bull-toad taint him over,
+Round him let mosquitoes hover,
+In his ears and eyeballs tingling,
+With his blood their poison mingling,
+Till, beneath the solar fires,
+Rankling all, the wretch expires!
+
+
+[1] The idea of this poem occurred to me in passing through the very
+dreary wilderness between Batavia, a new settlement in the midst of the
+woods, and the little village of Buffalo upon Lake Erie. This is the most
+fatiguing part of the route, in travelling through the Genesee country to
+Niagara.
+
+[2] "The Five Confederated Nations (of Indians) were settled along the
+banks of the Susquehannah and the adjacent country, until the year 1779,
+when General Sullivan, with an army of 4000 men drove them from their
+country to Niagara, where, being obliged to live on salted provisions, to
+which they were unaccustomed, great numbers of them died. Two hundred of
+them, it is said, were buried in one grave, where they had encamped."--
+_Morse's American Geography_.
+
+[3] The alligator, who is supposed to lie in a torpid state all the
+winter, in the bank of some creek or pond, having previously swallowed a
+large number of pine-knots, which are his only sustenance during the time.
+
+[4] This was the mode of punishment for murder (as Charlevoix tells us)
+among the Hurons. "They laid the dead body upon poles at the top of a
+cabin, and the murderer was obliged to remain several days together, and
+to receive all that dropped from the carcass, not only on himself but on
+his food."
+
+[5] "We find also collars of porcelain, tobacco, ears of maize, skins,
+etc., by the side of difficult and dangerous ways, on rocks, or by the
+side of the falls; and these are so many offerings made to the spirits
+which preside in these places."--See _Charlevoix's Letter on the
+Traditions and the Religion of the Savages of Canada_.
+
+Father Hennepin too mentions this ceremony; he also says, "We took notice
+of one barbarian, who made a kind of sacrifice upon an oak at the Cascade
+of St. Anthony of Padua upon the river Mississippi."--See _Hennepin's
+Voyage into North America_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE HONORABLE W. R. SPENCER.
+
+FROM BUFFALO, UPON LAKE ERIE.
+
+
+ _nec venit ad duros musa vocata Getas_.
+ OVID. _ex Ponto, lib. 1. ep. 5_.
+
+
+Thou oft hast told me of the happy hours
+Enjoyed by thee in fair Italia's bowers,
+Where, lingering yet, the ghost of ancient wit
+Midst modern monks profanely dares to flit.
+And pagan spirits, by the Pope unlaid,
+Haunt every stream and sing through every shade.
+There still the bard who (if his numbers be
+His tongue's light echo) must have talked like thee,--
+The courtly bard, from whom thy mind has caught
+Those playful, sunshine holidays of thought,
+In which the spirit baskingly reclines,
+Bright without effort, resting while it shines,--
+There still he roves, and laughing loves to see
+How modern priests with ancient rakes agree:
+How, 'neath the cowl, the festal garland shines,
+And Love still finds a niche in Christian shrines.
+
+ There still, too, roam those other souls of song,
+With whom thy spirit hath communed so long,
+That, quick as light, their rarest gems of thought,
+By Memory's magic to thy lip are brought.
+But here, alas! by Erie's stormy lake,
+As, far from such bright haunts my course I take,
+No proud remembrance o'er the fancy plays,
+No classic dream, no star of other days
+Hath left that visionary light behind,
+That lingering radiance of immortal mind,
+Which gilds and hallows even the rudest scene,
+The humblest shed, where Genius once has been!
+
+ All that creation's varying mass assumes
+Of grand or lovely, here aspires and blooms;
+Bold rise the mountains, rich the gardens glow,
+Bright lakes expand, and conquering[1] rivers flow;
+But mind, immortal mind, without whose ray,
+This world's a wilderness and man but clay,
+Mind, mind alone, in barren, still repose,
+Nor blooms, nor rises, nor expands, nor flows.
+Take Christians, Mohawks, democrats, and all
+From the rude wigwam to the congress-hall,
+From man the savage, whether slaved or free,
+To man the civilized, less tame than he,--
+'Tis one dull chaos, one unfertile strife
+Betwixt half-polished and half-barbarous life;
+Where every ill the ancient world could brew
+Is mixt with every grossness of the new;
+Where all corrupts, though little can entice,
+And naught is known of luxury but its vice!
+
+ Is this the region then, is this the clime
+For soaring fancies? for those dreams sublime,
+Which all their miracles of light reveal
+To heads that meditate and hearts that feel?
+Alas! not so--the Muse of Nature lights
+Her glories round; she scales the mountain heights,
+And roams the forests; every wondrous spot
+Burns with her step, yet man regards it not.
+She whispers round, her words are in the air,
+But lost, unheard, they linger freezing there,[2]
+Without one breath of soul, divinely strong,
+One ray of mind to thaw them into song.
+
+ Yet, yet forgive me, oh ye sacred few,
+Whom late by Delaware's green banks I knew;
+Whom, known and loved through many a social eve,
+'Twas bliss to live with, and 'twas pain to leave.[3]
+Not with more joy the lonely exile scanned
+The writing traced upon the desert's sand,
+Where his lone heart but little hoped to find
+One trace of life, one stamp of human kind,
+Than did I hail the pure, the enlightened zeal,
+The strength to reason and the warmth to feel,
+The manly polish and the illumined taste,
+Which,--mid the melancholy, heartless waste
+My foot has traversed,--oh you sacred few!
+I found by Delaware's green banks with you.
+
+ Long may you loathe the Gallic dross that runs
+Through your fair country and corrupts its sons;
+Long love the arts, the glories which adorn
+Those fields of freedom, where your sires were born.
+Oh! if America can yet be great,
+If neither chained by choice, nor doomed by fate
+To the mob-mania which imbrutes her now,
+She yet can raise the crowned, yet civic brow
+Of single majesty,--can add the grace
+Of Rank's rich capital to Freedom's base,
+Nor fear the mighty shaft will feebler prove
+For the fair ornament that flowers above;--
+If yet released from all that pedant throng,
+So vain of error and so pledged to wrong,
+Who hourly teach her, like themselves, to hide
+Weakness in vaunt and barrenness in pride,
+She yet can rise, can wreathe the Attic charms
+Of soft refinement round the pomp of arms,
+And see her poets flash the fires of song,
+To light her warriors' thunderbolts along;--
+It is to you, to souls that favoring heaven
+Has made like yours, the glorious task is given:--
+Oh! but for _such_, Columbia's days were done;
+Rank without ripeness, quickened without sun,
+Crude at the surface, rotten at the core,
+Her fruits would fall, before her spring were o'er.
+
+ Believe me, Spencer, while I winged the hours
+Where Schuylkill winds his way through banks of flowers,
+Though few the days, the happy evenings few;
+So warm with heart, so rich with mind they flew,
+That my charmed soul forgot its wish to roam,
+And rested there, as in a dream of home.
+And looks I met, like looks I'd loved before,
+And voices too, which, as they trembled o'er
+The chord of memory, found full many a tone
+Of kindness there in concord with their own.
+Yes,--we had nights of that communion free,
+That flow of heart, which I have known with thee
+So oft, so warmly; nights of mirth and mind,
+
+Of whims that taught, and follies that refined.
+When shall we both renew them? when, restored
+To the gay feast and intellectual board,
+Shall I once more enjoy with thee and thine
+Those whims that teach, those follies that refine?
+Even now, as, wandering upon Erie's shore,
+I hear Niagara's distant cataract roar,
+I sigh for home,--alas! these weary feet
+Have many a mile to journey, ere we meet.
+
+
+[1] This epithet was suggested by Charlevoix's striking description of the
+confluence of the Missouri with the Mississippi.
+
+[2] Alluding to the fanciful notion of "words congealed in northern air."
+
+[3] In the society of Mr. Dennie and his friends, at Philadelphia, I
+passed the few agreeable moments which my tour through the States afforded
+me. Mr. Dennie has succeeded in diffusing through this cultivated little
+circle that love for good literature and sound politics which he feels so
+zealously himself, and which is so very rarely the characteristic of his
+countrymen. They will not, I trust, accuse me of illiberality for the
+picture which I have given of the ignorance and corruption that surround
+them. If I did not hate, as I ought, the rabble to which they are opposed,
+I could not value, as I do, the spirit with which they defy it; and in
+learning from them what Americans _can be_, I but see with the more
+indignation what Americans _are_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BALLAD STANZAS.
+
+I knew by the smoke, that so gracefully curled
+ Above the green elms, that a cottage was near.
+And I said, "If there's peace to be found in the world,
+ "A heart that was humble might hope for it here!"
+It was noon, and on flowers that languished around
+ In silence reposed the voluptuous bee;
+Every leaf was at rest, and I heard not a sound
+ But the woodpecker tapping the hollow beech-tree.
+
+And, "Here in this lone little wood," I exclaimed,
+ "With a maid who was lovely to soul and to eye,
+"Who would blush when I praised her, and weep if I blamed,
+ How blest could I live, and how calm could I die!
+
+"By the shade of yon sumach, whose red berry dips
+ "In the gush of the fountain, how sweet to recline,
+"And to know that I sighed upon innocent lips,
+ "Which had never been sighed on by any but mine!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A CANADIAN BOAT SONG.
+
+WRITTEN ON THE RIVER ST. LAWRENCE.[1]
+
+
+ _et remigem cantus hortatur_.
+ QUINTILIAN.
+
+
+Faintly as tolls the evening chime
+Our voices keep tune and our oars keep time.
+Soon as the woods on shore look dim,
+We'll sing at St. Ann's our parting hymn.[2]
+Row, brothers, row, the stream runs fast,
+The Rapids are near and the daylight's past.
+
+ Why should we yet our sail unfurl?
+There is not a breath the blue wave to curl,
+But, when the wind blows off the shore,
+Oh! sweetly we'll rest our weary oar.
+Blow, breezes, blow, the stream runs fast,
+The Rapids are near and the daylight's past.
+
+ Utawas' tide! this trembling moon
+Shall see us float over thy surges soon.
+Saint of this green isle! hear our prayers,
+Oh, grant us cool heavens and favoring airs.
+Blow, breezes, blow, the stream runs fast,
+The Rapids are near and the daylight's past.
+
+
+[1] I wrote these words to an air which our boatmen sung to us frequently.
+The wind was so unfavorable that they were obliged to row all the way, and
+we were five days in descending the river from Kingston to Montreal,
+exposed to an intense sun during the day, and at night forced to take
+shelter from the dews in any miserable hut upon the banks that would
+receive us. But the magnificent scenery of the St. Lawrence repays all
+such difficulties.
+
+[2] "At the Rapid of St. Ann they are obliged to take out part, if not the
+whole, of their lading. It is from this spot Canadians consider they take
+their departure, as it possesses the last church on the island, which is
+dedicated to the tutelar saint of voyagers."--_Mackenzie, General History
+of the Fur Trade_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE LADY CHARLOTTE RAWDON.
+
+FROM THE BANKS OF THE ST. LAWRENCE.
+
+
+Not many months have now been dreamed away
+Since yonder sun, beneath whose evening ray
+Our boat glides swiftly past these wooded shores,
+Saw me where Trent his mazy current pours,
+And Donington's old oaks, to every breeze,
+Whisper the tale of by-gone centuries;--
+Those oaks, to me as sacred as the groves,
+Beneath whose shade the pious Persian roves,
+And hears the spirit-voice of sire, or chief,
+Or loved mistress, sigh in every leaf.
+There, oft, dear Lady, while thy lip hath sung
+My own unpolished lays, how proud I've hung
+On every tuneful accent! proud to feel.
+That notes like mine should have the fate to steal,
+As o'er thy hallowing lip they sighed along.
+Such breath of passion and such soul of song.
+Yes,--I have wondered, like some peasant boy
+Who sings, on Sabbath-eve, his strains of joy,
+And when he hears the wild, untutored note
+Back to his ear on softening echoes float,
+Believes it still some answering spirit's tone,
+And thinks it all too sweet to be his own!
+
+ I dreamt not then that, ere the rolling year
+Had filled its circle, I should wander here
+In musing awe; should tread this wondrous world,
+See all its store of inland waters hurled
+In one vast volume down Niagara's steep,
+Or calm behold them, in transparent sleep,
+Where the blue hills of old Toronto shed
+Their evening shadows o'er Ontario's bed;
+Should trace the grand Cadaraqui, and glide
+Down the white rapids of his lordly tide
+Through massy woods, mid islets flowering fair,
+And blooming glades, where the first sinful pair
+For consolation might have weeping trod,
+When banished from the garden of their God,
+Oh, Lady! these are miracles, which man,
+Caged in the bounds of Europe's pigmy span,
+Can scarcely dream of,--which his eye must see
+To know how wonderful this world can be!
+
+ But lo,--the last tints of the west decline,
+And night falls dewy o'er these banks of pine.
+Among the reeds, in which our idle boat
+Is rocked to rest, the wind's complaining note
+Dies like a half-breathed whispering of flutes;
+Along the wave the gleaming porpoise shoots,
+And I can trace him, like a watery star,[1]
+Down the steep current, till he fades afar
+Amid the foaming breakers' silvery light.
+Where yon rough rapids sparkle through the night.
+Here, as along this shadowy bank I stray,
+And the smooth glass-snake,[2] glid-o'er my way,
+Shows the dim moonlight through his scaly form,
+Fancy, with all the scene's enchantment warm,
+Hears in the murmur of the nightly breeze
+Some Indian Spirit warble words like these:--
+
+ From the land beyond the sea,
+ Whither happy spirits flee;
+ Where, transformed to sacred doves,[3]
+ Many a blessed Indian roves
+ Through the air on wing, as white
+ As those wondrous stones of light,[4]
+ Which the eye of morning counts
+ On the Apalachian mounts,--
+ Hither oft my flight I take
+ Over Huron's lucid lake,
+ Where the wave, as clear as dew,
+ Sleeps beneath the light canoe,
+ Which, reflected, floating there,
+ Looks as if it hung in air.
+
+ Then, when I have strayed a while
+Through the Manataulin isle,[5]
+Breathing all its holy bloom,
+Swift I mount me on the plume
+Of my Wakon-Bird,[6] and fly
+Where, beneath a burning sky,
+O'er the bed of Erie's lake
+Slumbers many a water-snake,
+Wrapt within the web of leaves,
+Which the water-lily weaves.[7]
+Next I chase the floweret-king
+Through his rosy realm of spring;
+See him now, while diamond hues
+Soft his neck and wings suffuse,
+In the leafy chalice sink,
+Thirsting for his balmy drink;
+Now behold him all on fire,
+Lovely in his looks of ire,
+Breaking every infant stem,
+Scattering every velvet gem,
+Where his little tyrant lip
+Had not found enough to sip.
+
+ Then my playful hand I steep
+Where the gold-thread loves to creep,
+Cull from thence a tangled wreath,
+Words of magic round it breathe,
+And the sunny chaplet spread
+O'er the sleeping fly-bird's head,
+Till, with dreams of honey blest,
+Haunted, in his downy nest,
+By the garden's fairest spells,
+Dewy buds and fragrant bells,
+Fancy all his soul embowers
+In the fly-bird's heaven of flowers.
+
+ Oft, when hoar and silvery flakes
+Melt along the ruffled lakes,
+When the gray moose sheds his horns,
+When the track, at evening, warns
+Weary hunters of the way
+To the wigwam's cheering ray,
+Then, aloft through freezing air,
+With the snow-bird soft and fair
+As the fleece that heaven flings
+O'er his little pearly wings,
+Light above the rocks I play,
+Where Niagara's starry spray,
+Frozen on the cliff, appears
+Like a giant's starting tears.
+There, amid the island-sedge,
+Just upon the cataract's edge,
+Where the foot of living man
+Never trod since time began,
+Lone I sit, at close of day,
+While, beneath the golden ray,
+Icy columns gleam below,
+Feathered round with falling snow,
+And an arch of glory springs,
+Sparkling as the chain of rings
+Round the neck of virgins hung,--
+Virgins, who have wandered young
+O'er the waters of the west
+To the land where spirits rest!
+
+Thus have I charmed, with visionary lay,
+The lonely moments of the night away;
+And now, fresh daylight o'er the water beams!
+Once more, embarked upon the glittering streams,
+Our boat flies light along the leafy shore,
+Shooting the falls, without a dip of oar
+Or breath of zephyr, like the mystic bark
+The poet saw, in dreams divinely dark,
+Borne, without sails, along the dusky flood,
+While on its deck a pilot angel stood,
+And, with his wings of living light unfurled,
+Coasted the dim shores of another world!
+
+Yet, oh! believe me, mid this mingled maze
+Of Nature's beauties, where the fancy strays
+From charm to charm, where every floweret's hue
+Hath something strange, and every leaf is new,--
+I never feel a joy so pure and still
+So inly felt, as when some brook or hill,
+Or veteran oak, like those remembered well,
+Some mountain echo or some wild-flower's smell,
+(For, who can say by what small fairy ties
+The memory clings to pleasure as it flies?)
+Reminds my heart of many a silvan dream
+I once indulged by Trent's inspiring stream;
+Of all my sunny morns and moonlight nights
+On Donington's green lawns and breezy heights.
+
+Whether I trace the tranquil moments o'er
+When I have seen thee cull the fruits of lore,
+With him, the polished warrior, by thy side,
+A sister's idol and a nation's pride!
+When thou hast read of heroes, trophied high
+In ancient fame, and I have seen thine eye
+Turn to the living hero, while it read,
+For pure and brightening comments on the dead;--
+Or whether memory to my mind recalls
+The festal grandeur of those lordly halls,
+When guests have met around the sparkling board,
+And welcome warmed the cup that luxury poured;
+When the bright future Star of England's throne,
+With magic smile, hath o'er the banquet shone,
+Winning respect, nor claiming what he won,
+But tempering greatness, like an evening sun
+Whose light the eye can tranquilly admire,
+Radiant, but mild, all softness, yet all fire;--
+Whatever hue my recollections take,
+Even the regret, the very pain they wake
+Is mixt with happiness;--but, ah! no more--
+Lady! adieu--my heart has lingered o'er
+Those vanished times, till all that round me lies,
+Stream, banks, and bowers have faded on my eyes!
+
+
+[1] Anburey, in his Travels, has noticed this shooting illumination which
+porpoises diffuse at night through the river St. Lawrence,--Vol. i. p. 29.
+
+[2] The glass-snake is brittle and transparent.
+
+[3] "The departed spirit goes into the Country of Souls, where, according
+to some, it is transformed into a dove."--_Charlevoix upon the
+Traditions and the Religion of the Savages of Canada_.
+
+[4] "The mountains appeared to be sprinkled with white stones, which
+glistened in the sun, and were called by the Indians manetoe aseniah, or
+spirit-stones."--_Mackenzie's Journal_.
+
+[5] Manataulin signifies a Place of Spirits, and this island in Lake Huron
+is held sacred by the Indians.
+
+[6] "The Wakon-Bird, which probably is of the same species with the bird
+of Paradise, receives its name from the ideas the Indians have of its
+superior excellence; the Wakon-Bird being, in their language, the Bird of
+the Great Spirit."--_Morse_.
+
+[7] The islands of Lake Erie are surrounded to a considerable distance by
+the large pond-lily, whose leaves spread thickly over the surface of the
+lake, and form a kind of bed for the water-snakes in summer.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IMPROMPTU.
+
+AFTER A VISIT TO MRS. ----, OF MONTREAL.
+
+
+'Twas but for a moment--and yet in that time
+ She crowded the impressions of many an hour:
+Her eye had a glow, like the sun of her clime,
+ Which waked every feeling at once into flower.
+
+Oh! could we have borrowed from Time but a day,
+ To renew such impressions again and again,
+The things we should look and imagine and say
+ Would be worth all the life we had wasted till then.
+
+What we had not the leisure or language to speak,
+ We should find some more spiritual mode of revealing,
+And, between us, should feel just as much in a week
+ As others would take a millennium in feeling.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WRITTEN
+
+ON PASSING DEADMAN'S ISLAND,
+IN THE GULF OF ST. LAWRENCE,[1]
+LATE IN THE EVENING, SEPTEMBER, 1804.
+
+See you, beneath yon cloud so dark,
+Fast gliding along a gloomy bark?
+Her sails are full,--though the wind is still,
+And there blows not a breath her sails to fill!
+
+Say, what doth that vessel of darkness bear?
+The silent calm of the grave is there,
+Save now and again a death-knell rung,
+And the flap of the sails with night-fog hung.
+
+There lieth a wreck on the dismal shore
+Of cold and pitiless Labrador;
+Where, under the moon, upon mounts of frost,
+Full many a mariner's bones are tost.
+
+Yon shadowy bark hath been to that wreck,
+And the dim blue fire, that lights her deck,
+Doth play on as pale and livid a crew,
+As ever yet drank the churchyard dew.
+
+To Deadman's Isle, in the eye of the blast,
+To Deadman's Isle, she speeds her fast;
+By skeleton shapes her sails are furled,
+And the hand that steers is not of this world!
+
+Oh! hurry thee on-oh! hurry thee on,
+Thou terrible bark, ere the night be gone,
+Nor let morning look on so foul a sight
+As would blanch for ever her rosy light!
+
+[1] This is one of the Magdalen Islands, and, singularly enough, is the
+property of Sir Isaac Coffin. The above lines were suggested by a
+superstition very common among sailors, who called this ghost-ship, I
+think, "The Flying Dutchman."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE BOSTON FRIGATE, ON LEAVING HALIFAX FOR ENGLAND,[1]
+
+OCTOBER, 1804.
+
+
+With triumph, this morning, oh Boston! I hail
+The stir of thy deck and the spread of thy sail,
+For they tell me I soon shall be wafted, in thee,
+To the flourishing isle of the brave and the free,
+And that chill Nova-Scotia's unpromising strand
+Is the last I shall tread of American land.
+Well--peace to the land! may her sons know, at length,
+That in high-minded honor lies liberty's strength,
+That though man be as free as the fetterless wind,
+As the wantonest air that the north can unbind,
+Yet, if health do not temper and sweeten the blast,
+If no harvest of mind ever sprung where it past,
+Then unblest is such freedom, and baleful its might,--
+Free only to ruin, and strong but to blight!
+
+Farewell to the few I have left with regret:
+May they sometimes recall, what I cannot forget;
+The delight of those evenings,--too brief a delight!
+When in converse and song we have stolen on the night;
+When they've asked me the manners, the mind, or the mien,
+Of some bard I had known or some chief I had seen,
+Whose glory, though distant, they long had adored,
+Whose name had oft hallowed the wine-cup they poured;
+And still as, with sympathy humble but true,
+I have told of each bright son of fame all I knew,
+They have listened, and sighed that the powerful stream
+Of America's empire should pass like a dream,
+Without leaving one relic of genius, to say,
+How sublime was the tide which had vanished away!
+Farewell to the few--though we never may meet
+On this planet again, it is soothing and sweet
+To think that, whenever my song or my name
+Shall recur to their ear, they'll recall me the same
+I have been to them now, young, unthoughtful, and blest,
+Ere hope had deceived me or sorrow deprest.
+
+But, Douglas! while thus I recall to my mind
+The elect of the land we shall soon leave behind,
+I can read in the weather-wise glance of thine eye
+As it follows the rack flitting over the sky,
+That the faint coming breeze would be fair for our flight,
+And shall steal us away, ere the falling of night.
+Dear Douglas! thou knowest, with thee by my side,
+With thy friendship to soothe me, thy courage to guide,
+There is not a bleak isle in those summerless seas,
+Where the day comes in darkness, or shines but to freeze,
+Not a tract of the line, not a barbarous shore,
+That I could not with patience, with pleasure explore!
+Oh think then how gladly I follow thee now,
+When Hope smooths the billowy path of our prow,
+And each prosperous sigh of the west-springing wind
+Takes me nearer the home where my heart is inshrined;
+Where the smile of a father shall meet me again,
+And the tears of a mother turn bliss into pain;
+Where the kind voice of sisters shall steal to my heart,
+And ask it, in sighs, how we ever could part?--
+
+But see!--the bent top sails are ready to swell--
+To the boat--I am with thee--Columbia, farewell!
+
+
+[1] Commanded by Captain J. E. Douglas, with whom I returned to England,
+and to whom I am indebted for many, many kindnesses.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IRISH MELODIES
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+TO THE MARCHIONESS DOWAGER OF DONEGAL.
+
+
+It is now many years since, in, a Letter prefixed to the Third Number of
+the Irish Melodies, I had the pleasure of inscribing the Poems of that
+work to your Ladyship, as to one whose character reflected honor on the
+country to which they relate, and whose friendship had long been the pride
+and happiness of their Author. With the same feelings of affection and
+respect, confirmed if not increased by the experience of every succeeding
+year, I now place those Poems in their present new form under your
+protection, and am,
+
+With perfect Sincerity,
+Your Ladyship's ever attached friend,
+
+THOMAS MOORE.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+Though an edition of the Poetry of the Irish Melodies, separate from the
+Music, has long been called for, yet, having, for many reasons, a strong
+objection to this sort of divorce, I should with difficulty have consented
+to a disunion of the words from the airs, had it depended solely upon me
+to keep them quietly and indissolubly together. But, besides the various
+shapes in which these, as well as my other lyrical writings, have been
+published throughout America, they are included, of course, in all the
+editions of my works printed on the Continent, and have also appeared, in
+a volume full of typographical errors, in Dublin. I have therefore readily
+acceded to the wish expressed by the Proprietor of the Irish Melodies, for
+a revised and complete edition of the poetry of the Work, though well
+aware that my verses must lose even more than the "_animae dimidium_" in
+being detached from the beautiful airs to which it was their good fortune
+to be associated.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IRISH MELODIES
+
+
+
+
+
+
+GO WHERE GLORY WAITS THEE.
+
+
+Go where glory waits thee,
+But while fame elates thee,
+ Oh! still remember me.
+When the praise thou meetest
+To thine ear is sweetest,
+ Oh! then remember me.
+Other arms may press thee,
+Dearer friends caress thee,
+All the joys that bless thee,
+ Sweeter far may be;
+But when friends are nearest,
+And when joys are dearest,
+ Oh! then remember me!
+
+When, at eve, thou rovest
+By the star thou lovest,
+ Oh! then remember me.
+Think, when home returning,
+Bright we've seen it burning,
+ Oh! thus remember me.
+Oft as summer closes,
+When thine eye reposes
+On its lingering roses,
+ Once so loved by thee,
+Think of her who wove them,
+Her who made thee love them,
+ Oh! then, remember me.
+
+When, around thee dying,
+Autumn leaves are lying,
+ Oh! then remember me.
+And, at night, when gazing
+On the gay hearth blazing,
+ Oh! still remember me.
+Then should music, stealing
+All the soul of feeling,
+To thy heart appealing,
+ Draw one tear from thee;
+Then let memory bring thee
+Strains I used to sing thee,--
+ Oh! then remember me.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WAR SONG.
+
+REMEMBER THE GLORIES OF BRIEN THE BRAVE.[1]
+
+
+Remember the glories of Brien the brave,
+ Tho' the days of the hero are o'er;
+Tho' lost to Mononia and cold in the grave,[2]
+ He returns to Kinkora no more.[3]
+That star of the field, which so often hath poured
+ Its beam on the battle, is set;
+But enough of its glory remains on each sword,
+ To light us to victory yet.
+
+Mononia! when Nature embellished the tint
+ Of thy fields, and thy mountains so fair,
+Did she ever intend that a tyrant should print
+ The footstep of slavery there?
+No! Freedom, whose smile we shall never resign,
+ Go, tell our invaders, the Danes,
+That 'tis sweeter to bleed for an age at thy shrine,
+ Than to sleep but a moment in chains.
+
+Forget not our wounded companions, who stood[4]
+ In the day of distress by our side;
+While the moss of the valley grew red with their blood,
+ They stirred not, but conquered and died.
+That sun which now blesses our arms with his light,
+ Saw them fall upon Ossory's plain;--
+Oh! let him not blush, when he leaves us to-night,
+ To find that they fell there in vain.
+
+
+[1] Brien Boromhe, the great monarch of Ireland, who was killed at the
+battle of Clontarf, in the beginning of the 11th century, after having
+defeated the Danes in twenty-five engagements.
+
+[2] Munster.
+
+[3] The palace of Brien.
+
+[4] This alludes to an interesting circumstance related of the Dalgais,
+the favorite troops of Brien, when they were interrupted in their return
+from the battle of Clontarf, by Fitzpatrick, prince of Ossory. The wounded
+men entreated that they might be allowed to fight with the rest,--"_Let
+stakes_[they said] _be stuck in the ground, and suffer each of us to be
+tied to and supported by one of these stakes, to be placed in his rank by
+the side of a sound man_." "Between seven and eight hundred men (adds
+O'Halloran) pale, emaciated, and supported in this manner, appeared mixed
+with the foremost of the troops;--never was such another sight
+exhibited."--_"History of Ireland_," book xii. chap i.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ERIN! THE TEAR AND THE SMILE IN THINE EYES.
+
+
+Erin, the tear and the smile in thine eyes,
+Blend like the rainbow that hangs in thy skies!
+ Shining through sorrow's stream,
+ Saddening through pleasure's beam,
+ Thy suns with doubtful gleam,
+ Weep while they rise.
+
+Erin, thy silent tear never shall cease,
+Erin, thy languid smile ne'er shall increase,
+ Till, like the rainbow's light,
+ Thy various tints unite,
+ And form in heaven's sight
+ One arch of peace!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH! BREATHE NOT HIS NAME.
+
+
+Oh! breathe not his name, let it sleep in the shade,
+Where cold and unhonored his relics are laid:
+Sad, silent, and dark, be the tears that we shed,
+As the night-dew that falls on the grass o'er his head.
+But the night-dew that falls, tho' in silence it weeps,
+Shall brighten with verdure the grave where he sleeps;
+And the tear that we shed, tho' in secret it rolls,
+Shall long keep his memory green in our souls.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN HE, WHO ADORES THEE.
+
+
+When he, who adores thee, has left but the name
+ Of his fault and his sorrows behind,
+Oh! say wilt thou weep, when they darken the fame
+ Of a life that for thee was resigned?
+Yes, weep, and however my foes may condemn,
+ Thy tears shall efface their decree;
+For Heaven can witness, tho' guilty to them,
+ I have been but too faithful to thee.
+
+With thee were the dreams of my earliest love;
+ Every thought of my reason was thine;
+In my last humble prayer to the Spirit above,
+ Thy name shall be mingled with mine.
+Oh! blest are the lovers and friend who shall live
+ The days of thy glory to see;
+But the next dearest blessing that Heaven can give
+ Is the pride of thus dying for thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE HARP THAT ONCE THRO' TARA'S HALLS.
+
+
+The harp that once thro' Tara's halls
+ The soul of music shed,
+Now hangs as mute on Tara's walls.
+ As if that soul were fled.--
+So sleeps the pride of former days,
+ So glory's thrill is o'er,
+And hearts, that once beat high for praise,
+ Now feel that pulse no more.
+
+No more to chiefs and ladies bright
+ The harp of Tara swells;
+The chord alone, that breaks at night,
+ Its tale of ruin tells.
+Thus Freedom now so seldom wakes,
+ The only throbs she gives,
+Is when some heart indignant breaks.
+ To show that still she lives.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FLY NOT YET.
+
+
+Fly not yet, 'tis just the hour,
+When pleasure, like the midnight flower
+That scorns the eye of vulgar light,
+Begins to bloom for sons of night,
+ And maids who love the moon.
+'Twas but to bless these hours of shade
+That beauty and the moon were made;
+'Tis then their soft attractions glowing
+Set the tides and goblets flowing.
+ Oh! stay,--Oh! stay,--
+Joy so seldom weaves a chain
+Like this to-night, and oh, 'tis pain
+ To break its links so soon.
+
+Fly not yet, the fount that played
+In times of old through Ammon's shade,
+Though icy cold by day it ran,
+Yet still, like souls of mirth, began
+ To burn when night was near.
+And thus, should woman's heart and looks,
+At noon be cold as winter brooks,
+Nor kindle till the night, returning,
+Brings their genial hour for burning.
+ Oh! stay,--Oh! stay,--
+When did morning ever break,
+And find such beaming eyes awake
+ As those that sparkle here?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH! THINK NOT MY SPIRITS ARE ALWAYS AS LIGHT.
+
+
+Oh! think not my spirits are always as light,
+ And as free from a pang as they seem to you now;
+Nor expect that the heart-beaming smile of to-night
+ Will return with to morrow to brighten my brow.
+No!--life is a waste of wearisome hours,
+ Which seldom the rose of enjoyment adorns;
+And the heart that is soonest awake to the flowers,
+ Is always the first to be touched by the thorns.
+But send round the bowl, and be happy awhile--
+ May we never meet worse, in our pilgrimage here,
+Than the tear that enjoyment may gild with a smile,
+ And the smile that compassion can turn to a tear.
+
+The thread of our life would be dark, Heaven knows!
+ If it were not with friendship and love intertwined:
+And I care not how soon I may sink to repose,
+ When these blessings shall cease to be dear to my mind.
+But they who have loved the fondest, the purest.
+ Too often have wept o'er the dream they believed;
+And the heart that has slumbered in friendship, securest,
+ Is happy indeed if 'twas never deceived.
+But send round the bowl; while a relic of truth
+ Is in man or in woman, this prayer shall be mine,--
+That the sunshine of love may illumine our youth,
+ And the moonlight of friendship console our decline.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THO' THE LAST GLIMPSE OF ERIN WITH SORROW I SEE.
+
+
+Tho' the last glimpse of Erin with sorrow I see,
+Yet wherever thou art shall seem Erin to me;
+In exile thy bosom shall still be my home,
+And thine eyes make my climate wherever we room.
+
+To the gloom of some desert or cold rocky shore,
+Where the eye of the stranger can haunt us no more,
+I will fly with my Coulin, and think the rough wind
+Less rude than the foes we leave frowning behind.
+
+And I'll gaze on thy gold hair as graceful it wreathes;
+And hang o'er thy soft harp, as wildly it breathes;
+Nor dread that the cold-hearted Saxon will tear
+One chord from that harp, or one lock from that hair.[1]
+
+
+[1] "In the twenty-eighth year of the reign of Henry VIII, an Act was made
+respecting the habits, and dress in general, of the Irish, whereby all
+persons were restrained from being shorn or shaven above the ears, or from
+wearing Glibbes, or _Coulins_ (long locks), on their heads, or hair on
+their upper lip, called _Crommeal_. On this occasion a song was written by
+one of our bards, in which an Irish virgin is made to give the preference
+to her dear _Coulin_ (or the youth with the flowing locks) to all
+strangers (by which the English were meant), or those who wore their
+habits. Of this song, the air alone has reached us, and is universally
+admired."--"_Walker's "Historical Memoirs of Irish Bards_," p. 184. Mr.
+Walker informs us also, that, about the same period, there were some harsh
+measures taken against the Irish Minstrels.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+RICH AND RARE WERE THE GEMS SHE WORE.[1]
+
+
+Rich and rare were the gems she wore,
+And a bright gold ring on her wand she bore;
+But oh! her beauty was far beyond
+Her sparkling gems, or snow-white wand.
+
+"Lady! dost thou not fear, to stray,
+"So lone and lovely through this bleak way?
+"Are Erin's sons so good or so cold,
+"As not to be tempted by woman or gold?"
+
+"Sir Knight! I feel not the least alarm,
+"No son of Erin will offer me harm:--
+"For though they love woman and golden store,
+"Sir Knight! they love honor and virtue more!"
+
+On she went and her maiden smile
+In safety lighted her round the green isle;
+And blest for ever is she who relied
+Upon Erin's honor, and Erin's pride.
+
+
+[1] This ballad is founded upon the following anecdote:--"The people were
+inspired with such a spirit of honor, virtue, and religion, by the great
+example of Brien, and by his excellent administration, that, as a proof of
+it, we are informed that a young lady of great beauty, adorned with jewels
+and a costly dress, undertook a journey alone, from one end of the kingdom
+to the other, with a wand only in her hand, at the top of which was a ring
+of exceeding great value; and such an impression had the laws and
+government of this Monarch made on the minds of all the people, that no
+attempt was made upon her honor, nor was she robbed of her clothes or
+jewels."--_Warner's "History of Ireland_," vol i, book x.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AS A BEAM O'ER THE FACE OF THE WATERS MAY GLOW.
+
+
+As a beam o'er the face of the waters may glow
+While the tide runs in darkness and coldness below,
+So the cheek may be tinged with a warm sunny smile,
+Though the cold heart to ruin runs darkly the while.
+
+One fatal remembrance, one sorrow that throws
+Its bleak shade alike o'er our joys and our woes.
+To which life nothing darker or brighter can bring
+For which joy has no balm and affliction no sting--
+
+Oh! this thought in the midst of enjoyment will stay,
+Like a dead, leafless branch in the summer's bright ray;
+The beams of the warm sun play round it in vain,
+It may smile in his light, but it blooms not again.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MEETING OF THE WATERS.[1]
+
+
+There is not in the wide world a valley so sweet
+As that vale in whose bosom the bright waters meet;[2]
+Oh! the last rays of feeling and life must depart,
+Ere the bloom of that valley shall fade from my heart.
+
+Yet it _was_ not that nature had shed o'er the scene
+Her purest of crystal and brightest of green;
+'Twas _not_ her soft magic of streamlet or hill,
+Oh! no,--it was something more exquisite still.
+
+'Twas that friends, the beloved of my bosom, were near,
+Who made every dear scene of enchantment more dear,
+And who felt how the best charms of nature improve,
+When we see them reflected from looks that we love.
+
+Sweet vale of Avoca! how calm could I rest
+In thy bosom of shade, with the friends I love best.
+Where the storms that we feel in this cold world should cease,
+And our hearts, like thy waters, be mingled in peace.
+
+
+[1] "The Meeting of the Waters" forms a part of that beautiful scenery
+which lies between Rathdrum and Arklow, in the county of Wicklow, and
+these lines were suggested by a visit to this romantic spot, in the summer
+of the year 1807.
+
+[2] The rivers Avon and Avoca.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HOW DEAR TO ME THE HOUR.
+
+
+How dear to me the hour when daylight dies,
+ And sunbeams melt along the silent sea,
+For then sweet dreams of other days arise,
+ And memory breathes her vesper sigh to thee.
+
+And, as I watch the line of light, that plays
+ Along the smooth wave toward the burning west,
+I long to tread that golden path of rays,
+ And think 'twould lead to some bright isle of rest.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TAKE BACK THE VIRGIN PAGE.
+
+WRITTEN ON RETURNING A BLANK BOOK.
+
+
+Take back the virgin page,
+ White and unwritten still;
+Some hand, more calm and sage,
+ The leaf must fill.
+Thoughts come, as pure as light
+ Pure as even _you_ require:
+But, oh! each word I write
+ Love turns to fire.
+
+Yet let me keep the book:
+ Oft shall my heart renew,
+When on its leaves I look,
+ Dear thoughts of you.
+Like you, 'tis fair and bright;
+ Like you, too bright and fair
+To let wild passion write
+ One wrong wish there.
+
+Haply, when from those eyes
+ Far, far away I roam.
+Should calmer thoughts arise
+ Towards you and home;
+Fancy may trace some line,
+ Worthy those eyes to meet,
+Thoughts that not burn, but shine,
+ Pure, calm, and sweet.
+
+And as, o'er ocean, far,
+ Seamen their records keep,
+Led by some hidden star
+ Thro' the cold deep;
+So may the words I write
+ Tell thro' what storms I stray--
+ _You_ still the unseen light,
+ Guiding my way.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LEGACY.
+
+
+When in death I shall calmly recline,
+ O bear my heart to my mistress dear;
+Tell her it lived upon smiles and wine
+ Of the brightest hue, while it lingered here.
+Bid her not shed one tear of sorrow
+ To sully a heart so brilliant and light;
+But balmy drops of the red grape borrow,
+ To bathe the relic from morn till night.
+
+When the light of my song is o'er,
+ Then take my harp to your ancient hall;
+Hang it up at that friendly door,
+ Where weary travellers love to call.[1]
+Then if some bard, who roams forsaken,
+ Revive its soft note in passing along,
+Oh! let one thought of its master waken
+ Your warmest smile for the child of song.
+Keep this cup, which is now o'er-flowing,
+ To grace your revel, when I'm at rest;
+Never, oh! never its balm bestowing
+ On lips that beauty has seldom blest.
+But when some warm devoted lover
+ To her he adores shall bathe its brim,
+Then, then my spirit around shall hover,
+ And hallow each drop that foams for him.
+
+
+[1] "In every house was one or two harps, free to all travellers, who were
+the more caressed, the more they excelled in music."--_O'Halloran_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HOW OFT HAS THE BANSHEE CRIED.
+
+
+ How oft has the Banshee cried,
+ How oft has death untied
+ Bright links that Glory wove,
+ Sweet bonds entwined by Love!
+Peace to each manly soul that sleepeth;
+Rest to each faithful eye that weepeth;
+ Long may the fair and brave
+ Sigh o'er the hero's grave.
+
+ We're fallen upon gloomy days![1]
+ Star after star decays,
+ Every bright name, that shed
+ Light o'er the land, is fled.
+Dark falls the tear of him who mourneth
+Lost joy, or hope that ne'er returneth;
+ But brightly flows the tear,
+ Wept o'er a hero's bier.
+
+ Quenched are our beacon lights--
+ Thou, of the Hundred Fights![2]
+ Thou, on whose burning tongue
+ Truth, peace, and freedom hung!
+Both mute,--but long as valor shineth,
+Or Mercy's soul at war repineth,
+ So long shall Erin's pride
+ Tell how they lived and died.
+
+
+[1] I have endeavored here, without losing that Irish character, which it
+is my object to preserve throughout this work, to allude to the sad and
+ominous fatality, by which England has been deprived of so many great and
+good men, at a moment when she most requires all the aids of talent and
+integrity.
+
+[2] This designation, which has been before applied to Lord Nelson, is the
+title given to a celebrated Irish Hero, in a Poem by O'Guive, the bard of
+O'Niel, which is quoted in the "Philosophical Survey of the South of
+Ireland," page 433. "Con, of the hundred Fights, sleep in thy grass-grown
+tomb, and upbraid not our defeats with thy victories."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WE MAY ROAM THROUGH THIS WORLD.
+
+
+We may roam thro' this world, like a child at a feast,
+ Who but sips of a sweet, and then flies to the rest;
+And, when pleasure begins to grow dull in the east,
+ We may order our wings and be off to the west;
+But if hearts that feel, and eyes that smile,
+ Are the dearest gifts that heaven supplies,
+We never need leave our own green isle,
+ For sensitive hearts, and for sun-bright eyes.
+Then remember, wherever your goblet is crowned,
+ Thro' this world, whether eastward or westward you roam,
+When a cup to the smile of dear woman goes round,
+ Oh! remember the smile which adorns her at home.
+
+In England, the garden of Beauty is kept
+ By a dragon of prudery placed within call;
+But so oft this unamiable dragon has slept,
+ That the garden's but carelessly watched after all.
+Oh! they want the wild sweet-briery fence,
+ Which round the flowers of Erin dwells;
+Which warns the touch, while winning the sense,
+ Nor charms us least when it most repels.
+Then remember, wherever your goblet is crowned,
+ Thro' this world, whether eastward or westward you roam,
+When a cup to the smile of dear woman goes round,
+ Oh! remember the smile that adorns her at home.
+
+In France, when the heart of a woman sets sail,
+ On the ocean of wedlock its fortune to try,
+Love seldom goes far in a vessel so frail,
+ But just pilots her off, and then bids her good-by.
+While the daughters of Erin keep the boy,
+ Ever smiling beside his faithful oar,
+Thro' billows of woe, and beams of joy,
+ The same as he looked when he left the shore.
+Then remember, wherever your goblet is crowned,
+ Thro' this world, whether eastward or westward you roam,
+When a cup to the smile of dear woman goes round,
+ Oh! remember the smile that adorns her at home.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EVELEEN'S BOWER.
+
+
+ Oh! weep for the hour,
+ When to Eveleen's bower
+The Lord of the Valley with false vows came;
+ The moon hid her light
+ From the heavens that night.
+And wept behind her clouds o'er the maiden's shame.
+
+ The clouds past soon
+ From the chaste cold moon,
+And heaven smiled again with her vestal flame:
+ But none will see the day,
+ When the clouds shall pass away,
+Which that dark hour left upon Eveleen's fame.
+
+ The white snow lay
+ On the narrow path-way,
+When the Lord of the Valley crost over the moor;
+ And many a deep print
+ On the white snow's tint
+Showed the track of his footstep to Eveleen's door.
+
+ The next sun's ray
+ Soon melted away
+Every trace on the path where the false Lord came;
+ But there's a light above,
+ Which alone can remove
+That stain upon the snow of fair Eveleen's fame.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LET ERIN REMEMBER THE DAYS OF OLD.
+
+
+Let Erin remember the days of old.
+ Ere her faithless sons betrayed her;
+When Malachi wore the collar of gold,[1]
+Which he won from her proud invader.
+When her kings, with standard of green unfurled,
+ Led the Red-Branch Knights to danger;[2]
+Ere the emerald gem of the western world
+ Was set in the crown of a stranger.
+
+On Lough Neagh's bank as the fisherman strays,
+ When the clear cold eve's declining,
+He sees the round towers of other days
+ In the wave beneath him shining:
+Thus shall memory often, in dreams sublime,
+ Catch a glimpse of the days that are over;
+Thus, sighing, look thro' the waves of time
+For the long-faded glories they cover.[3]
+
+
+[1] "This brought on an encounter between Malachi (the Monarch of Ireland
+in the tenth century) and the Danes, in which Malachi defeated two of
+their champions, whom he encountered successively, hand to hand, taking a
+collar of gold from the neck of one, and carrying off the sword of the
+other, as trophies of his victory."--_Warner's "History of Ireland,"_
+vol. i. book ix.
+
+[2] "Military orders of knights were very early established in Ireland;
+long before the birth of Christ we find an hereditary order of Chivalry in
+Ulster, called _Curaidhe na Craiobhe ruadh_, or the Knights of the
+Red Branch, from their chief seat in Emania, adjoining to the palace of
+the Ulster kings, called _Teagh na Craiobhe ruadh_, or the Academy of
+the Red Branch; and contiguous to which was a large hospital, founded for
+the sick knights and soldiers, called _Bronbhearg_, or the House of
+the Sorrowful Soldier."--_O'Halloran's Introduction_, etc., part 1,
+chap. 5.
+
+[3] It was an old tradition, in the time of Giraldus, that Lough Neagh had
+been originally a fountain, by whose sudden overflowing the country was
+inundated, and a whole region, like the Atlantis of Plato, overwhelmed. He
+says that the fishermen, in clear weather, used to point out to strangers
+the tall ecclesiastical towers under the water.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SONG OF FIONNUALA.[1]
+
+
+Silent, oh Moyle, be the roar of thy water,
+ Break not, ye breezes, your chain of repose,
+While, murmuring mournfully, Lir's lonely daughter
+ Tells to the night-star her tale of woes.
+When shall the swan, her death-note singing,
+Sleep, with wings in darkness furled?
+When will heaven, its sweet bell ringing,
+Call my spirit from this stormy world?
+
+Sadly, oh Moyle, to thy winter wave weeping,
+Fate bids me languish long ages away;
+Yet still in her darkness doth Erin lie sleeping,
+Still doth the pure light its dawning delay.
+When will that day-star, mildly springing,
+Warm our isle with peace and love?
+When will heaven, its sweet bell ringing,
+Call my spirit to the fields above?
+
+
+[1] To make this story intelligible in a song would require a much greater
+number of verses than any one is authorized to inflict upon an audience at
+once; the reader must therefore be content to learn, in a note, that
+Fionnuala, the daughter of Lir, was, by some supernatural power,
+transformed into a swan, and condemned to wander, for many hundred years,
+over certain lakes and rivers in Ireland, till the coming of Christianity,
+when the first sound of the mass-bell was to be the signal of her
+release,--I found this fanciful fiction among some manuscript translations
+from the Irish, which were begun under the direction of that enlightened
+friend of Ireland, the late Countess of Moira.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+COME, SEND ROUND THE WINE.
+
+
+Come, send round the wine, and leave points of belief
+To simpleton sages, and reasoning fools;
+This moment's a flower too fair and brief,
+To be withered and stained by the dust of the schools.
+Your glass may be purple, and mine may be blue,
+But, while they are filled from the same bright bowl,
+The fool, who would quarrel for difference of hue,
+Deserves not the comfort they shed o'er the soul.
+Shall I ask the brave soldier, who fights by my side
+In the cause of mankind, if our creeds agree?
+Shall I give up the friend I have valued and tried,
+If he kneel not before the same altar with me?
+From the heretic girl of my soul should I fly,
+To seek somewhere else a more orthodox kiss?
+No, perish the hearts, and the laws that try
+Truth, valor, or love, by a standard like this!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SUBLIME WAS THE WARNING.
+
+
+Sublime was the warning that Liberty spoke,
+And grand was the moment when Spaniards awoke
+Into life and revenge from the conqueror's chain.
+Oh, Liberty! let not this Spirit have rest,
+Till it move, like a breeze, o'er the waves of the west--
+Give the light of your look to each sorrowing spot,
+Nor, oh, be the Shamrock of Erin forgot
+While you add to your garland the Olive of Spain!
+
+If the fame of our fathers, bequeathed with their rights,
+Give to country its charm, and to home its delights,
+If deceit be a wound, and suspicion a stain,
+Then, ye men of Iberia; our cause is the same!
+And oh! may his tomb want a tear and a name,
+Who would ask for a nobler, a holier death,
+Than to turn his last sigh into victory's breath,
+For the Shamrock of Erin and Olive of Spain!
+
+Ye Blakes and O'Donnels, whose fathers resigned
+The green hills of their youth, among strangers to find
+That repose which, at home, they had sighed for in vain,
+Join, join in our hope that the flame, which you light,
+May be felt yet in Erin, as calm, and as bright,
+And forgive even Albion while blushing she draws,
+Like a truant, her sword, in the long-slighted cause
+ Of the Shamrock of Erin and Olive of Spain!
+
+God prosper the cause!--oh, it cannot but thrive,
+While the pulse of one patriot heart is alive.
+ Its devotion to feel, and its rights to maintain;
+Then, how sainted by sorrow, its martyrs will die!
+The finger of Glory shall point where they lie;
+While, far from the footstep of coward or slave.
+The young spirit of Freedom shall shelter their grave
+ Beneath Shamrocks of Erin and Olives of Spain!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BELIEVE ME IF ALL THOSE ENDEARING YOUNG CHARMS.
+
+
+Believe me, if all those endearing young charms,
+ Which I gaze on so fondly today,
+Were to change by to-morrow, and fleet in my arms,
+ Like fairy-gifts fading away,
+Thou wouldst still be adored, as this moment thou art.
+ Let thy loveliness fade as it will.
+And around the dear ruin each wish of my heart
+ Would entwine itself verdantly still.
+
+It is not while beauty and youth are thine own,
+ And thy cheeks unprofaned by a tear,
+That the fervor and faith of a soul can be known,
+ To which time will but make thee more dear;
+No, the heart that has truly loved never forgets,
+ But as truly loves on to the close,
+As the sun-flower turns on her god, when he sets,
+ The same look which she turned when he rose.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ERIN, OH ERIN.
+
+
+Like the bright lamp, that shone in Kildare's holy fane,[1]
+ And burn'd thro' long ages of darkness and storm,
+Is the heart that sorrows have frowned on in vain,
+ Whose spirit outlives them, unfading and warm.
+Erin, oh Erin, thus bright thro' the tears
+Of a long night of bondage, thy spirit appears.
+
+The nations have fallen, and thou still art young,
+ Thy sun is but rising, when others are set;
+And tho' slavery's cloud o'er thy morning hath hung,
+ The full noon of freedom shall beam round thee yet.
+Erin, oh Erin, tho' long in the shade,
+Thy star will shine out when the proudest shall fade.
+
+Unchilled by the rain, and unwaked by the wind,
+ The lily lies sleeping thro' winter's cold hour,
+Till Spring's light touch her fetters unbind,
+ And daylight and liberty bless the young flower.
+Thus Erin, oh Erin, _thy_ winter is past,
+And the hope that lived thro' it shall blossom at last.
+
+
+[1] The inextinguishable fire of St. Bridget, at Kildare, which Giraldus
+mentions.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DRINK TO HER.
+
+
+Drink to her, who long,
+ Hath waked the poet's sigh.
+The girl, who gave to song
+ What gold could never buy.
+Oh! woman's heart was made
+ For minstrel hands alone;
+By other fingers played,
+ It yields not half the tone.
+Then here's to her, who long
+ Hath waked the poet's sigh,
+The girl who gave to song
+ What gold could never buy.
+
+At Beauty's door of glass,
+ When Wealth and Wit once stood,
+They asked her '_which_ might pass?"
+ She answered, "he, who could."
+With golden key Wealth thought
+ To pass--but 'twould not do:
+While Wit a diamond brought,
+ Which cut his bright way through.
+So here's to her, who long
+ Hath waked the poet's sigh,
+The girl, who gave to song
+ What gold could never buy.
+
+The love that seeks a home
+ Where wealth or grandeur shines,
+Is like the gloomy gnome,
+ That dwells in dark gold mines.
+But oh! the poet's love
+ Can boast a brighter sphere;
+Its native home's above,
+ Tho' woman keeps it here.
+Then drink to her, who long
+ Hath waked the poet's sigh,
+The girl, who gave to song
+ What gold could never buy.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH! BLAME NOT THE BARD.[1]
+
+
+Oh! blame not the bard, if he fly to the bowers,
+ Where Pleasure lies, carelessly smiling at Fame;
+He was born for much more, and in happier hours
+ His soul might have burned with a holier flame.
+The string, that now languishes loose o'er the lyre,
+ Might have bent a proud bow to the warrior's dart;[2]
+And the lip, which now breathes but the song of desire,
+ Might have poured the full tide of a patriot's heart.
+
+But alas for his country!--her pride is gone by,
+ And that spirit is broken, which never would bend;
+O'er the ruin her children in secret must sigh,
+ For 'tis treason to love her, and death to defend.
+Unprized are her sons, till they've learned to betray;
+ Undistinguished they live, if they shame not their sires;
+And the torch, that would light them thro' dignity's way,
+ Must be caught from the pile, where their country expires.
+
+Then blame not the bard, if in pleasure's soft dream,
+ He should try to forget, what he never can heal:
+Oh! give but a hope--let a vista but gleam
+ Thro' the gloom of his country, and mark how he'll feel!
+That instant, his heart at her shrine would lay down
+ Every passion it nurst, every bliss it adored;
+While the myrtle, now idly entwined with his crown,
+ Like the wreath of Harmodius, should cover his sword.
+
+But tho' glory be gone, and tho' hope fade away,
+ Thy name, loved Erin, shall live in his songs;
+Not even in the hour, when his heart is most gay,
+ Will he lose the remembrance of thee and thy wrongs.
+The stranger shall hear thy lament on his plains;
+ The sigh of thy harp shall be sent o'er the deep,
+Till thy masters themselves, as they rivet thy chains,
+ Shall pause at the song of their captive, and weep!
+
+
+[1] We may suppose this apology to have been uttered by one of those
+wandering bards, whom Spenser so severely, and perhaps, truly, describes
+in his State of Ireland, and whose poems, he tells us, "were sprinkled
+with some pretty flowers of their natural device, which have good grace
+and comeliness unto them, the which it is great pity to see abused to the
+gracing of wickedness and vice, which, with good usage, would serve to
+adorn and beautify virtue."
+
+[2] It is conjectured by Wormius, that the name of Ireland is derived from
+Yr, the Runic for a _bow_ in the use of which weapon the Irish were once
+very expert. This derivation is certainly more creditable to us than the
+following: "So that Ireland, called the land of _Ire_, from the constant
+broils therein for 400 years, was now become the land of concord."
+_Lloyd's "State Worthies_," art. _The Lord Grandison_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHILE GAZING ON THE MOON'S LIGHT.
+
+
+While gazing on the moon's light,
+ A moment from her smile I turned,
+To look at orbs, that, more bright,
+ In lone and distant glory burned.
+ But _too_ far
+ Each proud star,
+ For me to feel its warming flame;
+ Much more dear
+ That mild sphere.
+ Which near our planet smiling came;
+Thus, Mary, be but thou my own;
+ While brighter eyes unheeded play,
+I'll love those moonlight looks alone,
+ That bless my home and guide my way.
+
+The day had sunk in dim showers,
+ But midnight now, with lustre meet.
+Illumined all the pale flowers,
+ Like hope upon a mourner's cheek.
+ I said (while
+ The moon's smile
+ Played o'er a stream, in dimpling bliss,)
+ "The moon looks
+ "On many brooks,
+ "The brook can see no moon but this;"[1]
+And thus, I thought, our fortunes run,
+ For many a lover looks to thee,
+While oh! I feel there is but _one_,
+ _One_ Mary in the world for me.
+
+
+[1] This image was suggested by the following thought, which occurs
+somewhere In Sir William Jones's works: "The moon looks upon many night-
+flowers, the night flower sees but one moon."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ILL OMENS.
+
+
+When daylight was yet sleeping under the billow,
+ And stars in the heavens still lingering shone.
+Young Kitty, all blushing, rose up from her pillow,
+ The last time she e'er was to press it alone.
+For the youth! whom she treasured her heart and her soul in,
+ Had promised to link the last tie before noon;
+And when once the young heart of a maiden is stolen
+ The maiden herself will steal after it soon.
+
+As she looked in the glass, which a woman ne'er misses.
+ Nor ever wants time for a sly glance or two,
+A butterfly,[1] fresh from the night-flower's kisses.
+ Flew over the mirror, and shaded her view.
+Enraged with the insect for hiding her graces,
+ She brushed him--he fell, alas; never to rise:
+"Ah! such," said the girl, "is the pride of our faces,
+ "For which the soul's innocence too often dies."
+
+While she stole thro' the garden, where heart's-ease was growing,
+ She culled some, and kist off its night-fallen dew;
+And a rose, further on, looked so tempting and glowing,
+ That, spite of her haste, she must gather it too:
+But while o'er the roses too carelessly leaning,
+ Her zone flew in two, and the
+ heart's-ease was lost:
+ "Ah! this means," said the girl
+ (and she sighed at its meaning),
+ "That love is scarce worth the
+ repose it will cost!"
+
+
+[1] An emblem of the soul.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BEFORE THE BATTLE.
+
+
+By the hope within us springing,
+ Herald of to-morrow's strife;
+By that sun, whose light is bringing
+ Chains or freedom, death or life--
+ Oh! remember life can be
+No charm for him, who lives not free!
+ Like the day-star in the wave,
+ Sinks a hero in his grave,
+Midst the dew-fall of a nation's tears.
+
+ Happy is he o'er whose decline
+ The smiles of home may soothing shine
+And light him down the steep of years:--
+ But oh, how blest they sink to rest,
+ Who close their eyes on victory's breast!
+
+O'er his watch-fire's fading embers
+ Now the foeman's cheek turns white,
+When his heart that field remembers,
+ Where we tamed his tyrant might.
+Never let him bind again
+A chain; like that we broke from then.
+ Hark! the horn of combat calls--
+ Ere the golden evening falls,
+May we pledge that horn in triumph round![1]
+ Many a heart that now beats high,
+ In slumber cold at night shall lie,
+Nor waken even at victory's sound--
+ But oh, how blest that hero's sleep,
+ O'er whom a wondering world shall weep!
+
+
+[1] "The Irish Corna was not entirely devoted to martial purposes. In the
+heroic ages, our ancestors quaffed Meadh out of them, as the Danish
+hunters do their beverage at this day."--_Walker_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AFTER THE BATTLE.
+
+
+Night closed around the conqueror's way,
+ And lightnings showed the distant hill,
+Where those who lost that dreadful day,
+ Stood few and faint, but fearless still.
+The soldier's hope, the patriot's zeal,
+ For ever dimmed, for ever crost--
+Oh! who shall say what heroes feel,
+ When all but life and honor's lost?
+
+The last sad hour of freedom's dream,
+ And valor's task, moved slowly by,
+While mute they watcht, till morning's beam
+ Should rise and give them light to die.
+There's yet a world, where souls are free,
+ Where tyrants taint not nature's bliss;--
+If death that world's bright opening be,
+ Oh! who would live a slave in this?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+'TIS SWEET TO THINK.
+
+
+'Tis sweet to think, that, where'er we rove,
+ We are sure to find something blissful and dear.
+And that, when we're far from the lips we love,
+ We've but to make love to the lips, we are near.
+The heart, like a tendril, accustomed to cling,
+ Let it grow where it will, can not flourish alone,
+But will lean to the nearest and loveliest thing
+ It can twine with itself and make closely its own.
+
+Then oh! what pleasure, where'er we rove,
+ To be sure to find something still that is dear,
+And to know, when far from the lips we love,
+ We've but to make love to the lips we are near.
+
+'Twere a shame, when flowers around us rise.
+ To make light of the rest, if the rose isn't there;
+And the world's so rich in resplendent eyes,
+ 'Twere a pity to limit one's love to a pair.
+Love's wing and the peacock's are nearly alike,
+ They are both of them bright, but they're changeable too,
+And, wherever a new beam of beauty can strike,
+ It will tincture Love's plume with a different hue.
+Then oh! what pleasure, where'er we rove,
+ To be sure to find something still that is dear,
+And to know, when far from the lips we love,
+ We've but to make love to the lips we are near.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE IRISH PEASANT TO HIS MISTRESS.[1]
+
+
+Thro' grief and thro' danger thy smile hath cheered my way,
+Till hope seemed to bud from each thorn that round me lay;
+The darker our fortune, the brighter our pure love burned,
+Till shame into glory, till fear into zeal was turned;
+Yes, slave as I was, in thy arms my spirit felt free,
+And blest even the sorrows that made me more dear to thee.
+
+Thy rival was honored, while thou wert wronged and scorned,
+Thy crown was of briers, while gold her brows adorned;
+She wooed me to temples, while thou lay'st hid in caves,
+Her friends were all masters, while thine, alas! were slaves;
+Yet cold in the earth, at thy feet, I would rather be,
+Than wed what I loved not, or turn one thought from thee.
+
+They slander thee sorely, who say thy vows are frail--
+Hadst thou been a false one, thy cheek had looked less pale.
+They say, too, so long thou hast worn those lingering chains,
+That deep in thy heart they have printed their servile stains--
+Oh! foul is the slander,--no chain could that soul subdue--
+Where shineth _thy_ spirit, there liberty shineth too![2]
+
+
+[1] Meaning, allegorically, the ancient Church of Ireland.
+
+[2] "Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty"--_St. Paul's
+Corinthians_ ii., l7.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ON MUSIC.
+
+
+When thro' life unblest we rove,
+ Losing all that made life dear,
+Should some notes we used to love,
+ In days of boyhood, meet our ear,
+Oh! how welcome breathes the strain!
+ Wakening thoughts that long have slept;
+Kindling former smiles again
+ In faded eyes that long have wept.
+
+Like the gale, that sighs along
+ Beds of oriental flowers,
+Is the grateful breath of song,
+ That once was heard in happier hours;
+Filled with balm, the gale sighs on,
+ Tho' the flowers have sunk in death;
+So, when pleasure's dream is gone,
+ Its memory lives in Music's breath.
+
+Music, oh how faint, how weak,
+ Language fades before thy spell!
+Why should Feeling ever speak,
+ When thou canst breathe her soul so well?
+Friendship's balmy words may feign,
+ Love's are even more false than they;
+Oh! 'tis only music's strain
+ Can sweetly soothe, and not betray.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IT IS NOT THE TEAR AT THIS MOMENT SHED.[1]
+
+
+It is not the tear at this moment shed,
+ When the cold turf has just been laid o'er him,
+That can tell how beloved was the friend that's fled,
+ Or how deep in our hearts we deplore him.
+'Tis the tear, thro' many a long day wept,
+ 'Tis life's whole path o'ershaded;
+'Tis the one remembrance, fondly kept,
+ When all lighter griefs have faded.
+
+Thus his memory, like some holy light,
+ Kept alive in our hearts, will improve them,
+For worth shall look fairer, and truth more bright,
+ When we think how we lived but to love them.
+And, as fresher flowers the sod perfume
+ Where buried saints are lying,
+So our hearts shall borrow a sweetening bloom
+ From the image he left there in dying!
+
+
+[1] These lines were occasioned by the loss of a very near and
+dear relative, who had died lately at Madeira.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE ORIGIN OF THE HARP.
+
+
+'Tis believed that this Harp, which I wake now for thee,
+Was a Siren of old, who sung under the sea;
+And who often, at eve, thro' the bright waters roved,
+To meet, on the green shore, a youth whom she loved.
+
+But she loved him in vain, for he left her to weep,
+And in tears, all the night, her gold tresses to steep;
+Till heaven looked with pity on true-love so warm,
+And changed to this soft Harp the sea-maiden's form.
+
+Still her bosom rose fair--still her cheeks smiled the same--
+While her sea-beauties gracefully formed the light frame;
+And her hair, as, let loose, o'er her white arm it fell,
+Was changed to bright chords uttering melody's spell.
+
+Hence it came, that this soft Harp so long hath been known
+To mingle love's language with sorrow's sad tone;
+Till _thou_ didst divide them, and teach the fond lay
+To speak love when I'm near thee, and grief when away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE'S YOUNG DREAM.
+
+
+Oh! the days are gone, when Beauty bright
+ My heart's chain wove;
+When my dream of life, from morn till night,
+ Was love, still love.
+ New hope may bloom,
+ And days may come,
+
+ Of milder, calmer beam,
+But there's nothing half so sweet in life
+ As love's young dream;
+No, there's nothing half so sweet in life
+ As love's young dream.
+
+Tho' the bard to purer fame may soar,
+ When wild youth's past;
+Tho' he win the wise, who frowned before,
+ To smile at last;
+ He'll never meet
+ A joy so sweet,
+ In all his noon of fame,
+As when first he sung to woman's ear
+ His soul-felt flame,
+And, at every close, she blushed to hear
+ The one lov'd name.
+
+No,--that hallowed form is ne'er forgot
+ Which first love traced;
+Still it lingering haunts the greenest spot
+ On memory's waste.
+ 'Twas odor fled
+ As soon as shed;
+ 'Twas morning's winged dream;
+'Twas a light, that ne'er can shine again
+ On life's dull stream:
+Oh! 'twas light that ne'er can shine again
+ On life's dull stream.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE PRINCE'S DAY.[1]
+
+
+Tho' dark are our sorrows, to-day we'll forget them,
+ And smile thro' our tears, like a sunbeam in showers:
+There never were hearts, if our rulers would let them,
+ More formed to be grateful and blest than ours.
+ But just when the chain
+ Has ceased to pain,
+ And hope has enwreathed it round with flowers,
+ There comes a new link
+ Our spirits to sink--
+Oh! the joy that we taste, like the light of the poles,
+ Is a flash amid darkness, too brilliant to stay;
+But, tho' 'twere the last little spark in our souls,
+ We must light it up now, on our Prince's Day.
+
+Contempt on the minion, who calls you disloyal!
+ Tho' fierce to your foe, to your friends you are true;
+And the tribute most high to a head that is royal,
+ Is love from a heart that loves liberty too.
+ While cowards, who blight
+ Your fame, your right,
+Would shrink from the blaze of the battle array,
+ The Standard of Green
+ In front would be seen,--
+Oh, my life on your faith! were you summoned this minute,
+ You'd cast every bitter remembrance away,
+And show what the arm of old Erin has in it,
+ When roused by the foe, on her Prince's Day.
+
+He loves the Green Isle, and his love is recorded
+ In hearts, which have suffered too much to forget;
+And hope shall be crowned, and attachment rewarded,
+ And Erin's gay jubilee shine out yet.
+ The gem may be broke
+ By many a stroke,
+ But nothing can cloud its native ray:
+ Each fragment will cast
+ A light, to the last,--
+And thus, Erin, my country tho' broken thou art,
+ There's a lustre within thee that ne'er will decay;
+A spirit, which beams thro' each suffering part,
+ And now smiles at all pain on the Prince's Day.
+
+
+[1] This song was written for a _fête_ in honor of the Prince of
+Wales's Birthday, given by my friend, Major Bryan, at his seat in the
+county of Kilkenny.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WEEP ON, WEEP ON.
+
+
+Weep on, weep on, your hour is past;
+ Your dreams of pride are o'er;
+The fatal chain is round you cast,
+ And you are men no more.
+In vain the hero's heart hath bled;
+ The sage's tongue hath warned in vain;--
+Oh, Freedom! once thy flame hath fled,
+ It never lights again.
+
+Weep on--perhaps in after days,
+ They'll learn to love your name;
+When many a deed may wake in praise
+ That long hath slept in blame.
+And when they tread the ruined isle,
+ Where rest, at length, the lord and slave,
+They'll wondering ask, how hands so vile
+ Could conquer hearts so brave?
+
+"'Twas fate," they'll say, "a wayward fate
+ "Your web of discord wove;
+"And while your tyrants joined in hate,
+ "You never joined in love.
+"But hearts fell off, that ought to twine,
+ "And man profaned what God had given;
+"Till some were heard to curse the shrine,
+ "Where others knelt to heaven!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LESBIA HATH A BEAMING EYE.
+
+
+Lesbia hath a beaming eye,
+ But no one knows for whom it beameth;
+Right and left its arrows fly,
+ But what they aim at no one dreameth.
+Sweeter 'tis to gaze upon
+ My Nora's lid that seldom rises;
+Few its looks, but every one,
+ Like unexpected light, surprises!
+ Oh, My Nora Creina, dear,
+ My gentle, bashful Nora Creina,
+ Beauty lies
+ In many eyes,
+ But love in yours, My Nora Creina.
+
+Lesbia wears a robe of gold,
+ But all so close the nymph hath laced it,
+Not a charm of beauty's mould
+ Presumes to stay where nature placed it.
+Oh! my Nora's gown for me,
+ That floats as wild as mountain breezes,
+Leaving every beauty free
+ To sink or swell as Heaven pleases.
+ Yes, my Nora Creina, dear.
+ My simple, graceful Nora Creina,
+ Nature's dress
+ Is loveliness--
+ The dress _you_ wear, my Nora Creina.
+
+Lesbia hath a wit refined,
+ But, when its points are gleaming round us,
+Who can tell if they're designed
+ To dazzle merely, or to wound us?
+Pillowed on my Nora's heart,
+ In safer slumber Love reposes--
+Bed of peace! whose roughest part
+ Is but the crumpling of the roses.
+ Oh! my Nora Creina dear,
+ My mild, my artless Nora Creina,
+ Wit, though bright,
+ Hath no such light,
+ As warms your eyes, my Nora Creina.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+I SAW THY FORM IN YOUTHFUL PRIME.
+
+
+I saw thy form in youthful prime,
+ Nor thought that pale decay
+Would steal before the steps of Time,
+ And waste its bloom away, Mary!
+
+Yet still thy features wore that light,
+ Which fleets not with the breath;
+And life ne'er looked more truly bright
+ Than in thy smile of death, Mary!
+
+As streams that run o'er golden mines,
+ Yet humbly, calmly glide,
+Nor seem to know the wealth that shines
+ Within their gentle tide, Mary!
+So veiled beneath the simplest guise,
+ Thy radiant genius shone,
+And that, which charmed all other eyes,
+ Seemed worthless in thy own, Mary!
+
+If souls could always dwell above,
+ Thou ne'er hadst left that sphere;
+Or could we keep the souls we love,
+ We ne'er had lost thee here, Mary!
+Though many a gifted mind we meet,
+ Though fairest forms we see,
+To live with them is far less sweet,
+ Than to remember thee, Mary!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BY THAT LAKE, WHOSE GLOOMY SHORE.[1]
+
+
+By that Lake, whose gloomy shore
+Sky-lark never warbles o'er,[2]
+Where the cliff hangs high and steep,
+Young St. Kevin stole to sleep.
+"Here, at least," he calmly said,
+"Woman ne'er shall find my bed."
+Ah! the good Saint little knew
+What that wily sex can do."
+
+'Twas from Kathleen's eyes he flew,--
+Eyes of most unholy blue!
+She had loved him well and long
+Wished him hers, nor thought it wrong.
+Wheresoe'er the Saint would fly,
+Still he heard her light foot nigh;
+East or west, where'er he turned,
+Still her eyes before him burned.
+
+On the bold cliff's bosom cast,
+Tranquil now, he sleeps at last;
+Dreams of heaven, nor thinks that e'er
+Woman's smile can haunt him there.
+But nor earth nor heaven is free,
+From her power, if fond she be:
+Even now, while calm he sleeps,
+Kathleen o'er him leans and weeps.
+
+Fearless she had tracked his feet
+To this rocky, wild retreat;
+And when morning met his view,
+Her mild glances met it, too.
+Ah, your Saints have cruel hearts!
+Sternly from his bed he starts,
+And with rude, repulsive shock,
+Hurls her from the beetling rock.
+
+Glendalough, thy gloomy wave
+Soon was gentle Kathleen's grave!
+Soon the Saint (yet ah! too late,)
+Felt her love, and mourned her fate.
+When he said, "Heaven rest her soul!"
+Round the Lake light music stole;
+And her ghost was seen to glide,
+Smiling o'er the fatal tide.
+
+
+[1] This ballad is founded upon one of the many stories related of St.
+Kevin, whose bed in the rock is to be seen at Glendalough, a most gloomy
+and romantic spot in the county of Wicklow.
+
+[2] There are many other curious traditions concerning this Lake, which
+may be found in Giraldus, Colgan, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SHE IS FAR FROM THE LAND.
+
+
+She is far from the land where her young hero sleeps,
+ And lovers are round her, sighing:
+But coldly she turns from their gaze, and weeps,
+ For her heart in his grave is lying.
+
+She sings the wild song of her dear native plains,
+ Every note which he loved awaking;--
+Ah! little they think who delight in her strains,
+ How the heart of the Minstrel is breaking.
+
+He had lived for his love, for his country he died,
+ They were all that to life had entwined him;
+Nor soon shall the tears of his country be dried,
+ Nor long will his love stay behind him.
+
+Oh! make her a grave where the sunbeams rest,
+ When they promise a glorious morrow;
+They'll shine o'er her sleep, like a smile from the West,
+ From her own loved island of sorrow.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NAY, TELL ME NOT, DEAR.
+
+
+Nay, tell me not, dear, that the goblet drowns
+ One charm of feeling, one fond regret;
+Believe me, a few of thy angry frowns
+ Are all I've sunk in its bright wave yet.
+ Ne'er hath a beam
+ Been lost in the stream
+ That ever was shed from thy form or soul;
+ The spell of those eyes,
+ The balm of thy sighs,
+ Still float on the surface, and hallow my bowl,
+Then fancy not, dearest, that wine can steal
+ One blissful dream of the heart from me;
+Like founts that awaken the pilgrim's zeal,
+ The bowl but brightens my love for thee.
+
+They tell us that love in his fairy bower,
+ Had two blush-roses of birth divine;
+He sprinkled the one with a rainbow shower,
+ But bathed the other with mantling wine.
+ Soon did the buds,
+ That drank of the floods
+ Distilled by the rainbow, decline and fade;
+ While those which the tide
+ Of ruby had dyed
+ All blushed into beauty, like thee, sweet maid!
+Then fancy not, dearest, that wine can steal
+ One blissful dream of the heart from me;
+Like founts, that awaken the pilgrim's zeal,
+ The bowl but brightens my love for thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AVENGING AND BRIGHT.
+
+
+Avenging and bright fall the swift sword of Erin[1]
+ On him who the brave sons of Usna betrayed!
+For every fond eye he hath wakened a tear in,
+ A drop from his heart-wounds shall weep o'er her blade.
+
+By the red cloud that hung over Conor's dark dwelling,[2]
+ When Ulad's[3] three champions lay sleeping in gore--
+By the billows of war, which so often, high swelling,
+ Have wafted these heroes to victory's shore--
+
+We swear to revenge them!--no joy shall be tasted,
+ The harp shall be silent, the maiden unwed,
+Our halls shall be mute and our fields shall lie wasted,
+ Till vengeance is wreaked on the murderer's head.
+
+Yes, monarch! tho' sweet are our home recollections,
+ Tho' sweet are the tears that from tenderness fall;
+Tho' sweet are our friendships, our hopes, our affections,
+ Revenge on a tyrant is sweetest of all!
+
+
+[1] The words of this song were suggested by the very ancient Irish story
+called "Deirdri, or the Lamentable Fate of the Sons of Usnach." The
+treachery of Conor, King of Ulster, in putting to death the three sons of
+Usna, was the cause of a desolating war against Ulster, which terminated
+in the destruction of Eman.
+
+[2] "Oh Nasi! view that cloud that I here see in the sky! I see over
+Eman-green a chilling cloud of blood-tinged red."--_Deirdri's Song_.
+
+[3] Ulster.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHAT THE BEE IS TO THE FLOWERET.
+
+
+HE.
+
+What the bee is to the floweret,
+ When he looks for honey-dew,
+Thro' the leaves that close embower it,
+ That, my love, I'll be to you.
+
+SHE.
+
+What the bank, with verdure glowing,
+ Is to waves that wander near,
+Whispering kisses, while they're going,
+ That I'll be to you, my dear.
+
+SHE.
+
+But they say, the bee's a rover,
+ Who will fly, when sweets are gone;
+And, when once the kiss is over,
+ Faithless brooks will wander on.
+
+HE.
+
+Nay, if flowers _will_ lose their looks,
+ If sunny banks _will_ wear away,
+Tis but right that bees and brooks
+ Should sip and kiss them while they may.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AND THE NOVICE.
+
+
+"Here we dwell, in holiest bowers,
+ "Where angels of light o'er our orisons bend;
+"Where sighs of devotion and breathings of flowers
+ "To heaven in mingled odor ascend.
+ "Do not disturb our calm, oh Love!
+ "So like is thy form to the cherubs above,
+"It well might deceive such hearts as ours."
+
+Love stood near the Novice and listened,
+ And Love is no novice in taking a hint;
+His laughing blue eyes soon with piety glistened;
+ His rosy wing turned to heaven's own tint.
+ "Who would have thought," the urchin cries,
+ "That Love could so well, so gravely disguise
+"His wandering wings and wounding eyes?"
+
+Love now warms thee, waking and sleeping,
+ Young Novice, to him all thy orisons rise.
+_He_ tinges the heavenly fount with his weeping,
+ _He_ brightens the censer's flame with his sighs.
+ Love is the Saint enshrined in thy breast,
+ And angels themselves would admit such a guest,
+If he came to them clothed in Piety's vest.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THIS LIFE IS ALL CHECKERED WITH PLEASURES AND WOES
+
+
+This life is all checkered with pleasures and woes,
+ That chase one another like waves of the deep,--
+Each brightly or darkly, as onward it flows,
+ Reflecting our eyes, as they sparkle or weep.
+So closely our whims on our miseries tread,
+ That the laugh is awaked ere the tear can be dried;
+And, as fast as the rain-drop of Pity is shed.
+ The goose-plumage of Folly can turn it aside.
+But pledge me the cup--if existence would cloy,
+ With hearts ever happy, and heads ever wise,
+Be ours the light Sorrow, half-sister to Joy,
+ And the light, brilliant Folly that flashes and dies.
+When Hylas was sent with his urn to the fount,
+ Thro' fields full of light, and with heart full of play,
+Light rambled the boy, over meadow and mount,
+ And neglected his task for the flowers on the way.
+Thus many, like me, who in youth should have tasted
+ The fountain that runs by Philosophy's shrine,
+Their time with the flowers on the margin have wasted,
+ And left their light urns all as empty as mine.
+But pledge me the goblet;--while Idleness weaves
+ These flowerets together, should Wisdom but see
+One bright drop or two that has fallen on the leaves
+ From her fountain divine, 'tis sufficient for me.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH THE SHAMROCK.
+
+
+ Thro' Erin's Isle,
+ To sport awhile,
+As Love and Valor wandered,
+ With Wit, the sprite,
+ Whose quiver bright
+A thousand arrows squandered.
+ Where'er they pass,
+ A triple grass[1]
+Shoots up, with dew-drops streaming.
+ As softly green
+ As emeralds seen
+Thro' purest crystal gleaming.
+Oh the Shamrock, the green, immortal Shamrock!
+ Chosen leaf.
+ Of Bard and Chief,
+Old Erin's native Shamrock!
+
+ Says Valor, "See,
+ "They spring for me,
+"Those leafy gems of morning!"--
+ Says Love, "No, no,
+ "For _me_ they grow,
+"My fragrant path adorning."
+ But Wit perceives
+ The triple leaves,
+And cries, "Oh! do not sever
+ "A type, that blends
+ "Three godlike friends,
+"Love, Valor, Wit, for ever!"
+Oh the Shamrock, the green, immortal Shamrock!
+ Chosen leaf
+ Of Bard and Chief,
+Old Erin's native Shamrock!
+
+ So firmly fond
+ May last the bond,
+They wove that morn together,
+ And ne'er may fall
+ One drop of gall
+On Wit's celestial feather.
+ May Love, as twine
+ His flowers divine.
+Of thorny falsehood weed 'em;
+ May Valor ne'er
+ His standard rear
+Against the cause of Freedom!
+Oh the Shamrock, the green, immortal Shamrock!
+ Chosen leaf
+ Of Bard and Chief,
+Old Erin's native Shamrock!
+
+
+[1] It is said that St. Patrick, when preaching the Trinity to the Pagan
+Irish, used to illustrate his subject by reference to that species of
+trefoil called in Ireland by the name of the Shamrock; and hence, perhaps,
+the Island of Saints adopted this plant as her national emblem. Hope,
+among the ancients, was sometimes represented as a beautiful child,
+standing upon tiptoes, and a trefoil or three-colored grass in her hand.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AT THE MID HOUR OF NIGHT
+
+
+At the mid hour of night, when stars are weeping, I fly
+To the lone vale we loved, when life shone warm in thine eye;
+And I think oft, if spirits can steal from the regions of air,
+To revisit past scenes of delight, thou wilt come to me there,
+And tell me our love is remembered, even in the sky.
+
+Then I sing the wild song 'twas once such pleasure to hear
+When our voices commingling breathed, like one, on the ear;
+And, as Echo far off thro' the vale my sad orison rolls,
+I think, oh my love! 'tis thy voice from the Kingdom of Souls,[1]
+Faintly answering still the notes that once were so dear.
+
+
+[1] "There are countries." says Montaigne, "where they believe the souls
+of the happy live in all manner of liberty, in delightful fields; and
+there it is those souls, repeating the words we utter, which we call
+Echo."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ONE BUMPER AT PARTING.
+
+
+One bumper at parting!--tho' many
+ Have circled the board since we met,
+The fullest, the saddest of any
+ Remains to be crowned by us yet.
+The sweetness that pleasure hath in it,
+ Is always so slow to come forth,
+That seldom, alas, till the minute
+ It dies, do we know half its worth.
+But come,--may our life's happy measure
+ Be all of such moments made up;
+They're born on the bosom of Pleasure,
+ They die midst the tears of the cup.
+
+'Tis onward we journey, how pleasant
+ To pause and inhabit awhile
+Those few sunny spots, like the present,
+ That mid the dull wilderness smile!
+But Time, like a pitiless master,
+ Cries "Onward!" and spurs the gay hours--
+Ah, never doth Time travel faster,
+ Than when his way lies among flowers.
+But come--may our life's happy measure
+ Be all of such moments made up;
+They're born on the bosom of Pleasure,
+ They die midst the tears of the cup.
+
+We saw how the sun looked in sinking,
+ The waters beneath him how bright;
+And now, let our farewell of drinking
+ Resemble that farewell of light.
+You saw how he finished, by darting
+ His beam o'er a deep billow's brim--
+So, fill up, let's shine at our parting,
+ In full liquid glory, like him.
+And oh! may our life's happy measure
+ Of moments like this be made up,
+'Twas born on the bosom of Pleasure,
+ It dies mid the tears of the cup.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+'TIS THE LAST ROSE OF SUMMER.
+
+
+'Tis the last rose of summer
+ Left blooming alone;
+All her lovely companions
+ Are faded and gone;
+No flower of her kindred,
+ No rose-bud is nigh,
+To reflect back her blushes,
+ Or give sigh for sigh.
+
+I'll not leave thee, thou lone one!
+ To pine on the stem;
+Since the lovely are sleeping.
+ Go, sleep thou with them.
+Thus kindly I scatter
+ Thy leaves o'er the bed,
+Where thy mates of the garden
+ Lie scentless and dead.
+
+So soon may _I_ follow,
+ When friendships decay,
+And from Love's shining circle
+ The gems drop away.
+When true hearts lie withered,
+ And fond ones are flown,
+Oh! who would inhabit
+ This bleak world alone?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE YOUNG MAY MOON.
+
+
+The young May moon is beaming, love,
+The glow-worm's lamp is gleaming, love,
+ How sweet to rove
+ Through Morna's grove,
+When the drowsy world is dreaming, love!
+Then awake!--the heavens look bright, my dear,
+'Tis never too late for delight, my dear,
+ And the best of all ways
+ To lengthen our days,
+Is to steal a few hours from the night, my dear!
+
+Now all the world is sleeping, love,
+But the Sage, his star-watch keeping, love,
+ And I, whose star,
+ More glorious far,
+Is the eye from that casement peeping, love.
+Then awake!--till rise of sun, my dear,
+The Sage's glass we'll shun, my dear,
+ Or, in watching the flight
+ Of bodies of light,
+He might happen to take thee for one, my dear.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MINSTREL-BOY.
+
+
+The Minstrel-Boy to the war is gone,
+ In the ranks of death you'll find him;
+His father's sword he has girded on.
+ And his wild harp slung behind him.
+"Land of song!" said the warrior-bard,
+ "Tho' all the world betrays thee,
+"_One_ sword, at least, thy rights shall guard,
+ "_One_ faithful harp shall praise thee!"
+
+The Minstrel fell!--but the foeman's chain
+ Could not bring his proud soul under;
+The harp he loved ne'er spoke again,
+ For he tore its chords asunder;
+And said, "No chains shall sully thee,
+ "Thou soul of love and bravery!
+"Thy songs were made for the pure and free,
+ "They shall never sound in slavery."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SONG OF O'RUARK,
+
+PRINCE OF BREFFNI.[1]
+
+
+The valley lay smiling before me,
+ Where lately I left her behind;
+Yet I trembled, and something hung o'er me,
+ That saddened the joy of my mind.
+I looked for the lamp which, she told me,
+ Should shine, when her Pilgrim returned;
+But, tho' darkness began to infold me,
+ No lamp from the battlements burned!
+
+I flew to her chamber--'twas lonely,
+ As if the loved tenant lay dead;--
+Ah, would it were death, and death only!
+ But no, the young false one had fled.
+And there hung the lute that could soften
+ My very worst pains into bliss;
+While the hand, that had waked it so often,
+ Now throbbed to a proud rival's kiss.
+
+There _was_ a time, falsest of women,
+ When Breffni's good sword would have sought
+That man, thro' a million of foe-men,
+ Who dared but to wrong thee _in thought_!
+While now--oh degenerate daughter
+ Of Erin, how fallen is thy fame!
+And thro' ages of bondage and slaughter,
+ Our country shall bleed for thy shame.
+
+Already, the curse is upon her,
+ And strangers her valleys profane;
+They come to divide, to dishonor,
+ And tyrants they long will remain.
+But onward!--the green banner rearing,
+ Go, flesh every sword to the hilt;
+On _our_ side is Virtue and Erin,
+ On _theirs_ is the Saxon and Guilt.
+
+
+[1] These stanzas are founded upon an event of most melancholy importance
+to Ireland; if, as we are told by our Irish historians, it gave England
+the first opportunity of profiting by our divisions and subduing us. The
+following are the circumstances, as related by O'Halloran:--"The king of
+Leinster had long conceived a violent affection for Dearbhorgil, daughter
+to the king of Meath, and though she had been for some time married to
+O'Ruark, prince of Breffni, yet it could not restrain his passion. They
+carried on a private correspondence, and she informed him that O'Ruark,
+intended soon to go on a pilgrimage (an act of piety frequent in those
+days), and conjured him to embrace that opportunity of conveying her from
+a husband she detested to a lover she adored. MacMurchad too punctually
+obeyed the summons, and had the lady conveyed to his capital of Ferns."--
+The monarch Roderick espoused the cause of O'Ruark, while MacMurchad fled
+to England, and obtained the assistance of Henry II.
+
+"Such," adds Giraldus Cambrensis (as I find him in an old translation)
+"is the variable and fickle nature of woman, by whom all mischief in the
+world (for the most part) do happen and come, as may appear by Marcus
+Antonius, and by the destruction of Troy."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH! HAD WE SOME BRIGHT LITTLE ISLE OF OUR OWN.
+
+
+Oh! had we some bright little isle of our own,
+In a blue summer ocean, far off and alone,
+Where a leaf never dies in the still blooming bowers,
+And the bee banquets on thro' a whole year of flowers;
+ Where the sun loves to pause
+ With so fond a delay,
+ That the night only draws
+ A thin veil o'er the day;
+Where simply to feel that we breathe, that we live,
+Is worth the best joy that life elsewhere can give.
+
+There, with souls ever ardent and pure as the clime,
+We should love, as they loved in the first golden time;
+The glow of the sunshine, the balm of the air,
+Would steal to our hearts, and make all summer there.
+ With affection as free
+ From decline as the bowers,
+ And, with hope, like the bee,
+ Living always on flowers,
+Our life should resemble a long day of light,
+And our death come on, holy and calm as the night.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FAREWELL!--BUT WHENEVER YOU WELCOME THE HOUR.
+
+
+Farewell!--but whenever you welcome the hour.
+That awakens the night-song of mirth in your bower,
+Then think of the friend who once welcomed it too,
+And forgot his own griefs to be happy with you.
+His griefs may return, not a hope may remain
+Of the few that have brightened his pathway of pain.
+But he ne'er will forget the short vision, that threw
+Its enchantment around him, while lingering with you.
+And still on that evening, when pleasure fills up
+To the highest top sparkle each heart and each cup,
+Where'er my path lies, be it gloomy or bright,
+My soul, happy friends, shall be with you that night;
+
+
+Shall join in your revels, your sports, and your wiles,
+And return to me, beaming all o'er with your smiles--
+Too blest, if it tells me that, mid the gay cheer
+Some kind voice had murmured, "I wish he were here!"
+
+Let Fate do her worst, there are relics of joy,
+Bright dreams of the past, which she cannot destroy;
+Which come in the night-time of sorrow and care,
+And bring back the features that joy used to wear.
+Long, long be my heart with such memories filled!
+Like the vase, in which roses have once been distilled--
+You may break, you may shatter the vase, if you will,
+But the scent of the roses will hang round it still.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH! DOUBT ME NOT.
+
+
+ Oh! doubt me not--the season
+ Is o'er, when Folly made me rove,
+ And now the vestal, Reason,
+ Shall watch the fire awaked by love.
+Altho' this heart was early blown,
+ And fairest hands disturbed the tree,
+They only shook some blossoms down,
+ Its fruit has all been kept for thee.
+ Then doubt me not--the season
+ Is o'er, when Folly made me rove,
+ And now the vestal, Reason,
+ Shall watch the fire awaked by Love.
+
+ And tho' my lute no longer
+ May sing of Passion's ardent spell,
+ Yet, trust me, all the stronger
+ I feel the bliss I do not tell.
+The bee thro' many a garden roves,
+ And hums his lay of courtship o'er,
+But when he finds the flower he loves,
+ He settles there, and hums no more.
+ Then doubt me not--the season
+ Is o'er, when Folly kept me free,
+ And now the vestal, Reason,
+ Shall guard the flame awaked by thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+YOU REMEMBER ELLEN.
+
+
+You remember Ellen, our hamlet's pride,
+ How meekly she blest her humble lot,
+When the stranger, William, had made her his bride,
+ And love was the light of their lowly cot.
+Together they toiled through winds and rains,
+ Till William, at length, in sadness said,
+"We must seek our fortune on other plains;"--
+ Then, sighing, she left her lowly shed.
+
+They roamed a long and a weary way,
+ Nor much was the maiden's heart at ease,
+When now, at close of one stormy day,
+ They see a proud castle among the trees.
+"To-night," said the youth, "we'll shelter there;
+ "The wind blows cold, the hour is late:"
+So he blew the horn with a chieftain's air,
+ And the Porter bowed, as they past the gate.
+
+"Now, welcome, Lady," exclaimed the youth,--
+ "This castle is thine, and these dark woods all!"
+She believed him crazed, but his words were truth,
+ For Ellen is Lady of Rosna Hall!
+And dearly the Lord of Rosna loves
+ What William the stranger wooed and wed;
+And the light of bliss, in these lordly groves,
+ Shines pure as it did in the lowly shed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+I'D MOURN THE HOPES.
+
+
+I'd mourn the hopes that leave me,
+ If thy smiles had left me too;
+I'd weep when friends deceive me,
+ If thou wert, like them, untrue.
+But while I've thee before me,
+ With heart so warm and eyes so bright,
+No clouds can linger o'er me,
+ That smile turns them all to light.
+
+'Tis not in fate to harm me,
+ While fate leaves thy love to me;
+'Tis not in joy to charm me,
+ Unless joy be shared with thee.
+One minute's dream about thee
+ Were worth a long, an endless year
+Of waking bliss without thee,
+ My own love, my only dear!
+
+And tho' the hope be gone, love,
+ That long sparkled o'er our way,
+Oh! we shall journey on, love,
+ More safely, without its ray.
+Far better lights shall win me
+ Along the path I've yet to roam:--
+The mind that burns within me,
+ And pure smiles from thee at home.
+
+Thus, when the lamp that lighted
+ The traveller at first goes out,
+He feels awhile benighted.
+ And looks round in fear and doubt.
+But soon, the prospect clearing,
+ By cloudless starlight on he treads,
+And thinks no lamp so cheering
+ As that light which Heaven sheds.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+COME O'ER THE SEA.
+
+
+ Come o'er the sea,
+ Maiden, with me,
+ Mine thro' sunshine, storm, and snows;
+ Seasons may roll,
+ But the true soul
+ Burns the same, where'er it goes.
+Let fate frown on, so we love and part not;
+'Tis life where _thou_ art, 'tis death where thou art not.
+ Then come o'er the sea,
+ Maiden, with me,
+ Come wherever the wild wind blows;
+ Seasons may roll,
+ But the true soul
+ Burns the same, where'er it goes.
+
+ Was not the sea
+ Made for the Free,
+ Land for courts and chains alone?
+ Here we are slaves,
+ But, on the waves,
+ Love and Liberty's all our own.
+No eye to watch, and no tongue to wound us,
+All earth forgot, and all heaven around us--
+ Then come o'er the sea,
+ Maiden, with me,
+ Mine thro' sunshine, storm, and snows;
+ Seasons may roll,
+ But the true soul
+ Burns the same, where'er it goes.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HAS SORROW THY YOUNG DAYS SHADED.
+
+
+Has sorrow thy young days shaded,
+ As clouds o'er the morning fleet?
+Too fast have those young days faded,
+ That, even in sorrow, were sweet?
+Does Time with his cold wing wither
+ Each feeling that once was dear?--
+Then, child of misfortune, come hither,
+ I'll weep with thee, tear for tear.
+
+Has love to that soul, so tender,
+ Been like our Lagenian mine,[1]
+Where sparkles of golden splendor
+ All over the surface shine--
+But, if in pursuit we go deeper,
+ Allured by the gleam that shone,
+Ah! false as the dream of the sleeper,
+ Like Love, the bright ore is gone.
+
+Has Hope, like the bird in the story,[2]
+ That flitted from tree to tree
+With the talisman's glittering glory--
+ Has Hope been that bird to thee?
+On branch after branch alighting,
+ The gem did she still display,
+And, when nearest and most inviting.
+ Then waft the fair gem away?
+
+If thus the young hours have fleeted,
+ When sorrow itself looked bright;
+If thus the fair hope hath cheated,
+ That led thee along so light;
+If thus the cold world now wither
+ Each feeling that once was dear:--
+Come, child of misfortune, come hither,
+ I'll weep with thee, tear for tear.
+
+
+[1] Our Wicklow Gold Mines, to which this verse alludes, deserve, I fear,
+but too well the character here given of them.
+
+[2] "The bird, having got its prize, settled not far off, with the
+talisman in his mouth. The prince drew near it, hoping it would drop it:
+but as he approached, the bird took wing, and settled again,"
+etc.--"_Arabian Nights_."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NO, NOT MORE WELCOME.
+
+
+No, not more welcome the fairy numbers
+ Of music fall on the sleeper's ear,
+When half-awaking from fearful slumbers,
+ He thinks the full choir of heaven is near,--
+Than came that voice, when, all forsaken.
+ This heart long had sleeping lain,
+Nor thought its cold pulse would ever waken
+ To such benign, blessed sounds again.
+
+Sweet voice of comfort! 'twas like the stealing
+ Of summer wind thro' some wreathed shell--
+Each secret winding, each inmost feeling
+ Of my soul echoed to its spell.
+'Twas whispered balm--'twas sunshine spoken!--
+ I'd live years of grief and pain
+To have my long sleep of sorrow broken
+ By such benign, blessed sounds again.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN FIRST I MET THEE.
+
+
+When first I met thee, warm and young,
+ There shone such truth about thee.
+And on thy lip such promise hung,
+ I did not dare to doubt thee.
+I saw the change, yet still relied,
+ Still clung with hope the fonder,
+And thought, tho' false to all beside,
+ From me thou couldst not wander.
+ But go, deceiver! go,
+ The heart, whose hopes could make it
+ Trust one so false, so low,
+ Deserves that thou shouldst break it.
+
+When every tongue thy follies named,
+ I fled the unwelcome story;
+Or found, in even the faults they blamed,
+ Some gleams of future glory.
+_I_ still was true, when nearer friends
+ Conspired to wrong, to slight thee;
+The heart that now thy falsehood rends,
+ Would then have bled to right thee,
+ But go, deceiver! go,--
+ Some day, perhaps, thou'lt waken
+ From pleasure's dream, to know
+ The grief of hearts forsaken.
+
+Even now, tho' youth its bloom has shed,
+ No lights of age adorn thee:
+The few, who loved thee once, have fled,
+ And they who flatter scorn thee.
+Thy midnight cup is pledged to slaves,
+ No genial ties enwreath it;
+The smiling there, like light on graves,
+ Has rank cold hearts beneath it.
+ Go--go--tho' worlds were thine,
+ I would not now surrender
+ One taintless tear of mine
+ For all thy guilty splendor!
+
+And days may come, thou false one! yet,
+ When even those ties shall sever;
+When thou wilt call, with vain regret,
+ On her thou'st lost for ever;
+On her who, in thy fortune's fall,
+ With smiles had still received thee,
+And gladly died to prove thee all
+ Her fancy first believed thee.
+ Go--go--'tis vain to curse,
+ 'Tis weakness to upbraid thee;
+ Hate cannot wish thee worse
+ Than guilt and shame have made thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHILE HISTORY'S MUSE.
+
+
+While History's Muse the memorial was keeping
+ Of all that the dark hand of Destiny weaves,
+Beside her the Genius of Erin stood weeping,
+ For hers was the story that blotted the leaves.
+But oh! how the tear in her eyelids grew bright,
+When, after whole pages of sorrow and shame,
+ She saw History write,
+ With a pencil of light
+That illumed the whole volume, her Wellington's name.
+
+"Hail, Star of my Isle!" said the Spirit, all sparkling
+ With beams, such as break from her own dewy skies--
+"Thro' ages of sorrow, deserted and darkling,
+ "I've watched for some glory like thine to arise.
+"For, tho' heroes I've numbered, unblest was their lot,
+"And unhallowed they sleep in the crossways of Fame;--
+ "But oh! there is not
+ "One dishonoring blot
+"On the wreath that encircles my Wellington's name.
+
+"Yet still the last crown of thy toils is remaining,
+ "The grandest, the purest, even _thou_ hast yet known;
+"Tho' proud was thy task, other nations unchaining,
+ "Far prouder to heal the deep wounds of thy own.
+"At the foot of that throne, for whose weal thou hast stood,
+"Go, plead for the land that first cradled thy fame,
+ "And, bright o'er the flood
+ "Of her tears and her blood,
+"Let the rainbow of Hope be her Wellington's name!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TIME I'VE LOST IN WOOING.
+
+
+The time I've lost in wooing,
+In watching and pursuing
+ The light, that lies
+ In woman's eyes,
+Has been my heart's undoing.
+Tho' Wisdom oft has sought me,
+I scorned the lore she brought me,
+ My only books
+ Were woman's looks,
+And folly's all they've taught me.
+
+Her smile when Beauty granted,
+I hung with gaze enchanted,
+ Like him the Sprite,[1]
+ Whom maids by night
+Oft meet in glen that's haunted.
+Like him, too, Beauty won me,
+But while her eyes were on me,
+ If once their ray
+ Was turned away,
+O! winds could not outrun me.
+
+And are those follies going?
+And is my proud heart growing
+ Too cold or wise
+ For brilliant eyes
+Again to set it glowing?
+No, vain, alas! the endeavor
+From bonds so sweet to sever;
+ Poor Wisdom's chance
+ Against a glance
+Is now as weak as ever.
+
+
+[1] This alludes to a kind of Irish fairy, which is to be met with, they
+say, in the fields at dusk. As long as you keep your eyes upon him, he is
+fixed, and in your power;--but the moment you look away (and he is
+ingenious in furnishing some inducement) he vanishes. I had thought that
+this was the sprite which we call the Leprechaun; but a high authority
+upon such subjects, Lady Morgan, (in a note upon her national and
+interesting novel, O'Donnel), has given a very different account of that
+goblin.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHERE IS THE SLAVE.
+
+
+Oh, where's the slave so lowly,
+Condemned to chains unholy,
+ Who, could he burst
+ His bonds at first,
+Would pine beneath them slowly?
+What soul, whose wrongs degrade it,
+Would wait till time decayed it,
+ When thus its wing
+ At once may spring
+To the throne of Him who made it?
+
+Farewell, Erin.--farewell, all,
+Who live to weep our fall!
+
+Less dear the laurel growing,
+Alive, untouched and blowing,
+ Than that, whose braid
+ Is plucked to shade
+The brows with victory glowing
+We tread the land that bore us,
+Her green flag glitters o'er us,
+ The friends we've tried
+ Are by our side,
+And the foe we hate before us.
+
+Farewell, Erin,--farewell, all,
+Who live to weep our fall!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+COME, REST IN THIS BOSOM.
+
+
+Come, rest in this bosom, my own stricken deer,
+Tho' the herd have fled from thee, thy home is still here;
+Here still is the smile, that no cloud can o'ercast,
+And a heart and a hand all thy own to the last.
+
+Oh! what was love made for, if 'tis not the same
+Thro' joy and thro' torment, thro' glory and shame?
+I know not, I ask not, if guilt's in that heart,
+I but know that I love thee, whatever thou art.
+
+Thou hast called me thy Angel in moments of bliss,
+And thy Angel I'll be, mid the horrors of this,--
+Thro' the furnace, unshrinking, thy steps to pursue,
+And shield thee, and save thee,--or perish there too!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+'TIS GONE, AND FOR EVER.
+
+
+'Tis gone, and for ever, the light we saw breaking,
+ Like Heaven's first dawn o'er the sleep of the dead--
+When Man, from the slumber of ages awaking,
+ Looked upward, and blest the pure ray, ere it fled.
+'Tis gone, and the gleams it has left of its burning
+But deepen the long night of bondage and mourning,
+That dark o'er the kingdoms of earth is returning,
+ And darkest of all, hapless Erin, o'er thee.
+
+For high was thy hope, when those glories were darting
+ Around thee, thro' all the gross clouds of the world;
+When Truth, from her fetters indignantly starting,
+ At once, like a Sun-burst, her banner unfurled.[1]
+Oh! never shall earth see a moment so splendid!
+Then, then--had one Hymn of Deliverance blended
+The tongues of all nations--how sweet had ascended
+ The first note of Liberty, Erin, from thee!
+
+But, shame on those tyrants, who envied the blessing!
+ And shame on the light race, unworthy its good,
+Who, at Death's reeking altar, like furies, caressing
+ The young hope of Freedom, baptized it in blood.
+Then vanished for ever that fair, sunny vision,
+Which, spite of the slavish, the cold heart's derision,
+Shall long be remembered, pure, bright, and elysian,
+ As first it arose, my lost Erin, on thee.
+
+
+[1] "The Sun-burst" was the fanciful name given by the ancient Irish to
+the Royal Banner.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+I SAW FROM THE BEACH.
+
+
+I saw from the beach, when the morning was shining,
+ A bark o'er the waters move gloriously on;
+I came when the sun o'er that beach was declining,
+ The bark was still there, but the waters were gone.
+
+And such is the fate of our life's early promise,
+ So passing the spring-tide of joy we have known;
+Each wave, that we danced on at morning, ebbs from us,
+ And leaves us, at eve, on the bleak shore alone.
+
+Ne'er tell me of glories, serenely adorning
+ The close of our day, the calm eve of our night;--
+Give me back, give me back the wild freshness of Morning,
+ Her clouds and her tears are worth Evening's best light.
+
+Oh, who would not welcome that moment's returning,
+ When passion first waked a new life thro' his frame,
+And his soul, like the wood, that grows precious in burning,
+ Gave out all its sweets to love's exquisite flame.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FILL THE BUMPER FAIR.
+
+
+Fill the bumper fair!
+ Every drop we sprinkle
+O'er the brow of Care
+ Smooths away a wrinkle.
+Wit's electric flame
+ Ne'er so swiftly passes,
+As when thro' the frame
+ It shoots from brimming glasses.
+Fill the bumper fair!
+ Every drop we sprinkle
+O'er the brow of Care
+ Smooths away a wrinkle.
+
+Sages can, they say,
+ Grasp the lightning's pinions,
+And bring down its ray
+ From the starred dominions:--
+So we, Sages, sit,
+ And, mid bumpers brightening,
+From the Heaven of Wit
+ Draw down all its lightning.
+
+Wouldst thou know what first
+ Made our souls inherit
+This ennobling thirst
+ For wine's celestial spirit?
+It chanced upon that day,
+ When, as bards inform us,
+Prometheus stole away
+ The living fires that warm us:
+
+The careless Youth, when up
+ To Glory's fount aspiring,
+Took nor urn nor cup
+ To hide the pilfered fire in.--
+But oh his joy, when, round
+ The halls of Heaven spying,
+Among the stars he found
+ A bowl of Bacchus lying!
+
+Some drops were in the bowl,
+ Remains of last night's pleasure,
+With which the Sparks of Soul
+ Mixt their burning treasure.
+Hence the goblet's shower
+ Hath such spells to win us;
+Hence its mighty power
+ O'er that flame within us.
+Fill the bumper fair!
+ Every drop we sprinkle
+O'er the brow of Care
+ Smooths away a wrinkle.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DEAR HARP OF MY COUNTRY.
+
+
+Dear Harp of my Country! in darkness I found thee,
+ The cold chain of silence had hung o'er thee long,[1]
+When proudly, my own Island Harp, I unbound thee,
+ And gave all thy chords to light, freedom, and song!
+The warm lay of love and the light note of gladness
+ Have wakened thy fondest, thy liveliest thrill;
+But, so oft hast thou echoed the deep sigh of sadness,
+ That even in thy mirth it will steal from thee still.
+Dear Harp of my country! farewell to thy numbers,
+ This sweet wreath of song is the last we shall twine!
+Go, sleep with the sunshine of Fame on thy slumbers,
+ Till touched by some hand less unworthy than mine;
+If the pulse of the patriot, soldier, or lover,
+ Have throbbed at our lay, 'tis thy glory alone;
+I was _but_ as the wind, passing heedlessly over,
+ And all the wild sweetness I waked was thy own.
+
+
+[1] The chain of Silence was a sort of practical figure of rhetoric among
+the ancient Irish. Walker tells us of "a celebrated contention for
+precedence between Finn and Gaul, near Finn's palace at Almhaim, where the
+attending Bards anxious, if possible, to produce a cessation of
+hostilities, shook the chain of Silence, and flung themselves among the
+ranks."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MY GENTLE HARP.
+
+
+My gentle harp, once more I waken
+ The sweetness of thy slumbering strain;
+In tears our last farewell was taken,
+ And now in tears we meet again.
+No light of joy hath o'er thee broken,
+ But, like those Harps whose heavenly skill
+Of slavery, dark as thine, hath spoken,
+ Thou hang'st upon the willows still.
+
+And yet, since last thy chord resounded,
+ An hour of peace and triumph came,
+And many an ardent bosom bounded
+ With hopes--that now art turned to shame.
+Yet even then, while Peace was singing
+ Her halcyon song o'er land and sea,
+Tho' joy and hope to others bringing,
+ She only brought new tears to thee.
+
+Then, who can ask for notes of pleasure,
+ My drooping Harp, from chords like thine?
+Alas, the lark's gay morning measure
+ As ill would suit the swan's decline!
+Or how shall I, who love, who bless thee,
+ Invoke thy breath for Freedom's strains,
+When even the wreaths in which I dress thee,
+ Are sadly mixt--half flowers, half chains?
+
+But come--if yet thy frame can borrow
+ One breath of joy, oh, breathe for me,
+And show the world, in chains and sorrow,
+ How sweet thy music still can be;
+How gaily, even mid gloom surrounding,
+ Thou yet canst wake at pleasure's thrill--
+Like Memnon's broken image sounding,
+ Mid desolation tuneful still!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IN THE MORNING OF LIFE.
+
+
+In the morning of life, when its cares are unknown,
+ And its pleasures in all their new lustre begin,
+When we live in a bright-beaming world of our own,
+ And the light that surrounds us is all from within;
+Oh 'tis not, believe me, in that happy time
+ We can love, as in hours of less transport we may;--
+Of our smiles, of our hopes, 'tis the gay sunny prime,
+ But affection is truest when these fade away.
+
+When we see the first glory of youth pass us by,
+ Like a leaf on the stream that will never return;
+When our cup, which had sparkled with pleasure so high,
+ First tastes of the _other_, the dark-flowing urn;
+Then, then is the time when affection holds sway
+ With a depth and a tenderness joy never knew;
+Love, nursed among pleasures, is faithless as they,
+ But the love born of Sorrow, like Sorrow, is true.
+
+In climes full of sunshine, tho' splendid the flowers,
+ Their sighs have no freshness, their odor no worth;
+'Tis the cloud and the mist of our own Isle of showers,
+ That call the rich spirit of fragrancy forth.
+So it is not mid splendor, prosperity, mirth,
+ That the depth of Love's generous spirit appears;
+To the sunshine of smiles it may first owe its birth,
+ But the soul of its sweetness is drawn out by tears.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AS SLOW OUR SHIP.
+
+
+As slow our ship her foamy track
+ Against the wind was cleaving,
+Her trembling pennant still looked back
+ To that dear isle 'twas leaving.
+So loathe we part from all we love.
+ From all the links that bind us;
+So turn our hearts as on we rove,
+ To those we've left behind us.
+
+When, round the bowl, of vanished years
+ We talk, with joyous seeming,--
+With smiles that might as well be tears,
+ So faint, so sad their beaming;
+While memory brings us back again
+ Each early tie that twined us,
+Oh, sweet's the cup that circles then
+ To those we've left behind us.
+
+And when, in other climes, we meet
+ Some isle, or vale enchanting,
+Where all looks flowery, wild, and sweet,
+ And naught but love is wanting;
+We think how great had been our bliss,
+ If heaven had but assigned us
+To live and die in scenes like this,
+ With some we've left behind us!
+
+As travellers oft look back at eve,
+ When eastward darkly going,
+To gaze upon that light they leave
+ Still faint behind them glowing,--
+So, when the close of pleasure's day
+ To gloom hath near consigned us,
+We turn to catch one fading ray
+ Of joy that's left behind us.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN COLD IN THE EARTH.
+
+
+When cold in the earth lies the friend thou hast loved,
+ Be his faults and his follies forgot by thee then;
+Or, if from their slumber the veil be removed,
+ Weep o'er them in silence, and close it again.
+And oh! if 'tis pain to remember how far
+ From the pathways of light he was tempted to roam,
+Be it bliss to remember that thou wert the star
+ That arose on his darkness and guided him home.
+
+From thee and thy innocent beauty first came
+ The revealings, that taught him true love to adore,
+To feel the bright presence, and turn him with shame
+ From the idols he blindly had knelt to before.
+O'er the waves of a life, long benighted and wild,
+ Thou camest, like a soft golden calm o'er the sea;
+And if happiness purely and glowingly smiled
+ On his evening horizon, the light was from thee.
+
+And tho', sometimes, the shades of past folly might rise,
+ And tho' falsehood again would allure him to stray,
+He but turned to the glory that dwelt in those eyes,
+ And the folly, the falsehood, soon vanished away.
+As the Priests of the Sun, when their altar grew dim,
+ At the day-beam alone could its lustre repair,
+So, if virtue a moment grew languid in him,
+ He but flew to that smile and rekindled it there.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+REMEMBER THEE.
+
+
+Remember thee? yes, while there's life in this heart,
+It shall never forget thee, all lorn as thou art;
+More dear in thy sorrow, thy gloom, and thy showers,
+Than the rest of the world in their sunniest hours.
+
+Wert thou all that I wish thee, great, glorious, and free,
+First flower of the earth, and first gem of the sea,
+I might hail thee with prouder, with happier brow,
+But oh! could I love thee more deeply than now?
+
+No, thy chains as they rankle, thy blood as it runs,
+But make thee more painfully dear to thy sons--
+Whose hearts, like the young of the desert-bird's nest,
+Drink love in each life-drop that flows from thy breast.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WREATH THE BOWL.
+
+
+ Wreath the bowl
+ With flowers of soul,
+The brightest wit can find us;
+ We'll take a flight
+ Towards heaven to-night,
+And leave dull earth behind us.
+ Should Love amid
+ The wreaths be hid,
+That joy, the enchanter, brings us,
+ No danger fear,
+ While wine is near,
+We'll drown him if he stings us,
+ Then, wreath the bowl
+ With flowers of soul,
+The brightest wit can find us;
+ We'll take a flight
+ Towards heaven to-night,
+And leave dull earth behind us.
+
+ 'Twas nectar fed
+ Of old, 'tis said,
+Their Junos, Joves, Apollos;
+ And man may brew
+ His nectar too,
+The rich receipt's as follows:
+ Take wine like this,
+ Let looks of bliss
+Around it well be blended,
+ Then bring wit's beam
+ To warm the stream,
+And there's your nectar, splendid!
+ So wreath the bowl
+ With flowers of soul,
+The brightest wit can find us;
+ We'll take a flight
+ Towards heaven to-night,
+And leave dull earth behind us.
+
+ Say, why did Time
+ His glass sublime
+Fill up with sands unsightly,
+ When wine, he knew,
+ Runs brisker through,
+And sparkles far more brightly?
+ Oh, lend it us,
+ And, smiling thus,
+The glass in two we'll sever,
+ Make pleasure glide
+ In double tide,
+And fill both ends for ever!
+ Then wreath the bowl
+ With flowers of soul
+The brightest wit can find us;
+ We'll take a flight
+ Towards heaven to-night,
+And leave dull earth behind us.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHENE'ER I SEE THOSE SMILING EYES.
+
+
+Whene'er I see those smiling eyes,
+ So full of hope, and joy, and light,
+As if no cloud could ever rise,
+ To dim a heaven so purely bright--
+I sigh to think how soon that brow
+ In grief may lose its every ray,
+And that light heart, so joyous now,
+ Almost forget it once was gay.
+
+For time will come with all its blights,
+ The ruined hope, the friend unkind,
+And love, that leaves, where'er it lights,
+ A chilled or burning heart behind:--
+While youth, that now like snow appears,
+ Ere sullied by the darkening rain,
+When once 'tis touched by sorrow's tears
+ Can ever shine so bright again.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IF THOU'LT BE MINE.
+
+
+If thou'lt be mine, the treasures of air,
+ Of earth, and sea, shall lie at thy feet;
+Whatever in Fancy's eye looks fair,
+ Or in Hope's sweet music sounds _most_ sweet,
+Shall be ours--if thou wilt be mine, love!
+
+Bright flowers shall bloom wherever we rove,
+ A voice divine shall talk in each stream;
+The stars shall look like worlds of love,
+ And this earth be all one beautiful dream
+ In our eyes--if thou wilt be mine, love!
+
+And thoughts, whose source is hidden and high,
+ Like streams, that come from heavenward hills,
+Shall keep our hearts, like meads, that lie
+ To be bathed by those eternal rills,
+ Ever green, if thou wilt be mine, love!
+
+All this and more the Spirit of Love
+ Can breathe o'er them, who feel his spells;
+That heaven, which forms his home above,
+ He can make on earth, wherever he dwells,
+ As thou'lt own.--if thou wilt be mine, love!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO LADIES' EYES.
+
+
+To Ladies' eyes around, boy,
+ We can't refuse, we can't refuse,
+Tho' bright eyes so abound, boy,
+ 'Tis hard to choose, 'tis hard to choose.
+For thick as stars that lighten
+ Yon airy bowers, yon airy bowers,
+The countless eyes that brighten
+ This earth of ours, this earth of ours.
+But fill the cup--where'er, boy,
+ Our choice may fall, our choice may fall,
+We're sure to find Love there, boy,
+ So drink them all! so drink them all!
+
+Some looks there are so holy,
+ They seem but given, they seem but given,
+As shining beacons, solely,
+ To light to heaven, to light to heaven.
+While some--oh! ne'er believe them--
+ With tempting ray, with tempting ray,
+Would lead us (God forgive them!)
+ The other way, the other way.
+But fill the cup--where'er, boy,
+ Our choice may fall, our choice may fall,
+We're sure to find Love there, boy,
+ So drink them all! so drink them all!
+
+In some, as in a mirror,
+ Love seems portrayed, Love seems portrayed,
+But shun the flattering error,
+ 'Tis but his shade, 'tis but his shade.
+Himself has fixt his dwelling
+ In eyes we know, in eyes we know,
+And lips--but this is telling--
+ So here they go! so here they go!
+Fill up, fill up--where'er, boy,
+ Our choice may fall, our choice may fall,
+We're sure to find Love there, boy,
+ So drink them all! so drink them all!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FORGET NOT THE FIELD.
+
+
+Forget not the field where they perished,
+ The truest, the last of the brave,
+All gone--and the bright hope we cherished
+ Gone with them, and quenched in their grave!
+
+Oh! could we from death but recover
+ Those hearts as they bounded before,
+In the face of high heaven to fight over
+ That combat for freedom once more;--
+
+Could the chain for an instant be riven
+ Which Tyranny flung round us then,
+No, 'tis not in Man, nor in Heaven,
+ To let Tyranny bind it again!
+
+But 'tis past--and, tho' blazoned in story
+ The name of our Victor may be,
+Accurst is the march of that glory
+ Which treads o'er the hearts of the free.
+
+Far dearer the grave or the prison,
+ Illumed by one patriot name,
+Than the trophies of all, who have risen
+ On Liberty's ruins to fame.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THEY MAY RAIL AT THIS LIFE.
+
+
+They may rail at this life--from the hour I began it,
+ I found it a life full of kindness and bliss;
+And, until they can show me some happier planet,
+ More social and bright, I'll content me with this.
+As long as the world has such lips and such eyes,
+ As before me this moment enraptured I see,
+They may say what they will of their orbs in the skies,
+ But this earth is the planet for you, love, and me.
+
+In Mercury's star, where each moment can bring them
+ New sunshine and wit from the fountain on high,
+Tho' the nymphs may have livelier poets to sing them,
+ They've none, even there, more enamored than I.
+And as long as this harp can be wakened to love,
+ And that eye its divine inspiration shall be,
+They may talk as they will of their Edens above,
+ But this earth is the planet for you, love, and me.
+
+In that star of the west, by whose shadowy splendor,
+ At twilight so often we've roamed thro' the dew,
+There are maidens, perhaps, who have bosoms as tender,
+ And look, in their twilights, as lovely as you.
+But tho' they were even more bright than the queen
+ Of that isle they inhabit in heaven's blue sea,
+As I never those fair young celestials have seen,
+ Why--this earth is the planet for you, love, and me.
+
+As for those chilly orbs on the verge of creation,
+ Where sunshine and smiles must be equally rare,
+Did they want a supply of cold hearts for that station,
+ Heaven knows we have plenty on earth we could spare,
+Oh! think what a world we should have of it here,
+ If the haters of peace, of affection and glee,
+Were to fly up to Saturn's comfortless sphere,
+ And leave earth to such spirits as you, love, and me.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH FOR THE SWORDS OF FORMER TIME!
+
+
+Oh for the swords of former time!
+ Oh for the men who bore them,
+When armed for Right, they stood sublime,
+ And tyrants crouched before them:
+When free yet, ere courts began
+ With honors to enslave him,
+The best honors worn by Man
+ Were those which Virtue gave him.
+Oh for the swords, etc.
+
+Oh for the kings who flourished then!
+ Oh for the pomp that crowned them,
+When hearts and hands of freeborn men
+ Were all the ramparts round them.
+When, safe built on bosoms true,
+ The throne was but the centre,
+Round which Love a circle drew,
+ That Treason durst not enter.
+Oh for the kings who flourished then!
+ Oh for the pomp that crowned them,
+When hearts and hands of freeborn men
+ Were all the ramparts round them!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ST. SENANUS AND THE LADY.
+
+
+ST. SENANUS.[1]
+
+"Oh! haste and leave this sacred isle,
+Unholy bark, ere morning smile;
+For on thy deck, though dark it be,
+ A female form I see;
+And I have sworn this sainted sod
+Shall ne'er by woman's feet be trod."
+
+THE LADY.
+
+"Oh! Father, send not hence my bark,
+Thro' wintry winds and billows dark:
+I come with humble heart to share
+ Thy morn and evening prayer;
+Nor mine the feet, oh! holy Saint,
+The brightness of thy sod to taint."
+
+The Lady's prayer Senanus spurned;
+The winds blew fresh, the bark returned;
+But legends hint, that had the maid
+ Till morning's light delayed,
+And given the saint one rosy smile,
+She ne'er had left his lonely isle.
+
+
+[1] In a metrical life of St. Senanus, which is taken from an old Kilkenny
+MS., and may be found among the "_Acta Sanctorum Hiberniae_," we are told
+of his flight to the island of Scattery, and his resolution not to admit
+any woman of the party; he refused to receive even a sister saint, St.
+Cannera, whom an angel had taken to the island for the express purpose of
+introducing her to him.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NE'ER ASK THE HOUR.
+
+Ne'er ask the hour--what is it to us
+ How Time deals out his treasures?
+The golden moments lent us thus,
+ Are not _his_ coin, but Pleasure's.
+If counting them o'er could add to their blisses,
+ I'd number each glorious second:
+But moments of joy are, like Lesbia's kisses,
+ Too quick and sweet to be reckoned.
+Then fill the cup--what is it to us
+ How time his circle measures?
+The fairy hours we call up thus,
+ Obey no wand but Pleasure's.
+
+Young Joy ne'er thought of counting hours,
+ Till Care, one summer's morning,
+Set up, among his smiling flowers,
+ A dial, by way of warning.
+But Joy loved better to gaze on the sun,
+ As long as its light was glowing,
+Than to watch with old Care how the shadows stole on,
+ And how fast that light was going.
+So fill the cup--what is it to us
+ How Time his circle measures?
+The fairy hours we call up thus,
+ Obey no wand but Pleasure's.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SAIL ON, SAIL ON.
+
+
+Sail on, sail on, thou fearless bark--
+ Wherever blows the welcome wind,
+It cannot lead to scenes more dark,
+ More sad than those we leave behind.
+Each wave that passes seems to say,
+ "Tho' death beneath our smile may be,
+ Less cold we are, less false than they,
+ Whose smiling wrecked thy hopes and thee."
+Sail on, sail on,--thro' endless space--
+ Thro' calm--thro' tempest--stop no more:
+The stormiest sea's a resting place
+ To him who leaves such hearts on shore.
+Or--if some desert land we meet,
+ Where never yet false-hearted men
+Profaned a world, that else were sweet,--
+ Then rest thee, bark, but not till then.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE PARALLEL.
+
+
+Yes, sad one of Sion,[1] if closely resembling,
+ In shame and in sorrow, thy withered-up heart--
+If drinking deep, deep, of the same "cup of trembling"
+ Could make us thy children, our parent thou art,
+
+Like thee doth our nation lie conquered and broken,
+ And fallen from her head is the once royal crown;
+In her streets, in her halls, Desolation hath spoken,
+ And "while it is day yet, her sun hath gone down."[2]
+
+Like thine doth her exile, mid dreams of returning,
+ Die far from the home it were life to behold;
+Like thine do her sons, in the day of their mourning,
+ Remember the bright things that blest them of old.
+
+Ah, well may we call her, like thee "the Forsaken,"[3]
+ Her boldest are vanquished, her proudest are slaves;
+And the harps of her minstrels, when gayest they waken,
+ Have tones mid their mirth like the wind over graves!
+
+Yet hadst thou thy vengeance--yet came there the morrow,
+ That shines out, at last, on the longest dark night,
+When the sceptre, that smote thee with slavery and sorrow,
+ Was shivered at once, like a reed, in thy sight.
+
+When that cup, which for others the proud Golden City[4]
+ Had brimmed full of bitterness, drenched her own lips;
+And the world she had trampled on heard, without pity,
+ The howl in her halls, and the cry from her ships.
+
+When the curse Heaven keeps for the haughty came over
+ Her merchants rapacious, her rulers unjust,
+And, a ruin, at last, for the earthworm to cover,[5]
+ The Lady of Kingdoms[6] lay low in the dust.
+
+
+[1] These verses were written after the perusal of a treatise by Mr.
+Hamilton, professing to prove that the Irish were originally Jews.
+
+[2] 1 "Her sun is gone down while it was yet day."--_Jer_. xv. 9.
+
+[3] "Thou shalt no more be termed Forsaken."--_Isaiah_, lxii. 4.
+
+[4] "How hath the oppressor ceased! the golden city ceased!"--
+_Isaiah_, xiv. 4.
+
+[5] "Thy pomp is brought down to the grave . . . and the worms cover
+thee."--_Isaiah_, xiv. 11.
+
+[6] "Thou shalt no more be called the Lady of Kingdoms."--_Isaiah_,
+xlvil. 5.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DRINK OF THIS CUP.
+
+
+Drink of this cup;--you'll find there's a spell in
+ Its every drop 'gainst the ills of mortality;
+Talk of the cordial that sparkled for Helen!
+ Her cup was a fiction, but this is reality.
+Would you forget the dark world we are in,
+ Just taste of the bubble that gleams on the top of it;
+But would you rise above earth, till akin
+ To Immortals themselves, you must drain every drop of it;
+Send round the cup--for oh there's a spell in
+ Its every drop 'gainst the ills of mortality;
+Talk of the cordial that sparkled for Helen!
+ Her cup was a fiction, but this is reality.
+
+Never was philter formed with such power
+ To charm and bewilder as this we are quaffing;
+Its magic began when, in Autumn's rich hour,
+ A harvest of gold in the fields it stood laughing.
+There having, by Nature's enchantment, been filled
+ With the balm and the bloom of her kindliest weather,
+This wonderful juice from its core was distilled
+ To enliven such hearts as are here brought together.
+Then drink of the cup--you'll find there's a spell in
+ Its every drop 'gainst the ills of mortality;
+Talk of the cordial that sparkled for Helen!
+ Her cup was a fiction, but this is reality.
+
+And tho' perhaps--but breathe it to no one--
+ Like liquor the witch brews at midnight so awful,
+This philter in secret was first taught to flow on,
+ Yet 'tisn't less potent for being unlawful.
+And, even tho' it taste of the smoke of that flame,
+ Which in silence extracted its virtue forbidden--
+Fill up--there's a fire in some hearts I could name,
+ Which may work too its charm, tho' as lawless and hidden.
+So drink of the cup--for oh there's a spell in
+ Its every drop 'gainst the ills of mortality;
+Talk of the cordial that sparkled for Helen!
+ Her cup was a fiction, but this is reality.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FORTUNE-TELLER.
+
+
+Down in the valley come meet me to-night,
+ And I'll tell you your fortune truly
+As ever 'twas told, by the new-moon's light,
+ To a young maiden, shining as newly.
+
+But, for the world, let no one be nigh,
+ Lest haply the stars should deceive me;
+Such secrets between you and me and the sky
+ Should never go farther, believe me.
+
+If at that hour the heavens be not dim,
+ My science shall call up before you
+A male apparition,--the image of him
+ Whose destiny 'tis to adore you.
+
+And if to that phantom you'll be kind,
+ So fondly around you he'll hover,
+You'll hardly, my dear, any difference find
+ 'Twixt him and a true living lover.
+
+Down at your feet, in the pale moonlight,
+ He'll kneel, with a warmth of devotion--
+An ardor, of which such an innocent sprite
+ You'd scarcely believe had a notion.
+
+What other thoughts and events may arise,
+ As in destiny's book I've not seen them,
+Must only be left to the stars and your eyes
+ To settle, ere morning, between them.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH, YE DEAD!
+
+
+Oh, ye Dead! oh, ye Dead![1] whom we know by the light you give
+From your cold gleaming eyes, tho' you move like men who live,
+ Why leave you thus your graves,
+ In far off fields and waves,
+Where the worm and the sea-bird only know your bed,
+ To haunt this spot where all
+ Those eyes that wept your fall,
+And the hearts that wailed you, like your own, lie dead?
+
+It is true, it is true, we are shadows cold and wan;
+And the fair and the brave whom we loved on earth are gone;
+ But still thus even in death,
+ So sweet the living breath
+Of the fields and the flowers in our youth we wander'd o'er,
+ That ere, condemned, we go
+ To freeze mid Hecla's snow,
+We would taste it awhile, and think we live once more!
+
+
+[1] Paul Zealand mentions that there is a mountain in some part of
+Ireland, where the ghosts of persons who have died in foreign lands walk
+about and converse with those they meet, like living people. If asked why
+they do not return to their homes, they say they are obliged to go to
+Mount Hecla, and disappear immediately.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+O'DONOHUE'S MISTRESS.
+
+
+Of all the fair months, that round the sun
+In light-linked dance their circles run,
+ Sweet May, shine thou for me;
+For still, when thy earliest beams arise,
+That youth, who beneath the blue lake lies,
+ Sweet May, returns to me.
+
+Of all the bright haunts, where daylight leaves
+Its lingering smile on golden eyes,
+ Fair Lake, thou'rt dearest to me;
+For when the last April sun grows dim,
+Thy Naïads prepare his steed[1] for him
+ Who dwells, bright Lake, in thee.
+
+Of all the proud steeds, that ever bore
+Young plumed Chiefs on sea or shore,
+ White Steed, most joy to thee;
+Who still, with the first young glance of spring,
+From under that glorious lake dost bring
+ My love, my chief, to me.
+
+While, white as the sail some bark unfurls,
+When newly launched, thy long mane[2] curls,
+ Fair Steed, as white and free;
+And spirits, from all the lake's deep bowers,
+Glide o'er the blue wave scattering flowers,
+ Around my love and thee.
+
+Of all the sweet deaths that maidens die,
+Whose lovers beneath the cold wave lie,
+ Most sweet that death will be,
+Which, under the next May evening's light,
+When thou and thy steed are lost to sight,
+Dear love, I'll die for thee.
+
+
+[1] The particulars of the tradition respecting Donohue and his White
+Horse, may be found in Mr. Weld's Account of Killarney, or more fully
+detailed in Derrick's Letters. For many years after his death, the spirit
+of this hero is supposed to have been seen on the morning of Mayday,
+gliding over the lake on his favorite white horse to the sound of sweet
+unearthly music, and preceded by groups of youths and maidens, who flung
+wreaths of delicate spring flowers in his path.
+
+[2] The boatmen at Killarney call those waves which come on a windy day,
+crested with foam, "O'Donohue's White Horses."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ECHO.
+
+
+How sweet the answer Echo makes
+ To music at night,
+When, roused by lute or horn, she wakes,
+And far away, o'er lawns and lakes,
+ Goes answering light.
+
+Yet Love hath echoes truer far,
+ And far more sweet,
+Than e'er beneath the moonlight star,
+Of horn or lute, or soft guitar,
+ The songs repeat.
+
+'Tis when the sigh, in youth sincere,
+ And only then,--
+The sigh that's breath'd for one to hear,
+Is by that one, that only dear,
+ Breathed back again!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH BANQUET NOT.
+
+
+Oh banquet not in those shining bowers,
+ Where Youth resorts, but come to me:
+For mine's a garden of faded flowers,
+ More fit for sorrow, for age, and thee.
+And there we shall have our feast of tears,
+ And many a cup in silence pour;
+Our guests, the shades of former years,
+ Our toasts to lips that bloom no more.
+
+There, while the myrtle's withering boughs
+ Their lifeless leaves around us shed,
+We'll brim the bowl to broken vows,
+ To friends long lost, the changed, the dead.
+Or, while some blighted laurel waves
+ Its branches o'er the dreary spot,
+We'll drink to those neglected graves,
+ Where valor sleeps, unnamed, forgot.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THEE, THEE, ONLY THEE.
+
+
+The dawning of morn, the daylight's sinking,
+The night's long hours still find me thinking
+ Of thee, thee, only thee.
+When friends are met, and goblets crowned,
+ And smiles are near, that once enchanted,
+Unreached by all that sunshine round,
+ My soul, like some dark spot, is haunted
+ By thee, thee, only thee.
+
+Whatever in fame's high path could waken
+My spirit once, is now forsaken
+ For thee, thee, only thee.
+Like shores, by which some headlong bark
+ To the ocean hurries, resting never,
+Life's scenes go by me, bright or dark,
+ I know not, heed not, hastening ever
+ To thee, thee, only thee.
+
+I have not a joy but of thy bringing,
+And pain itself seems sweet when springing
+ From thee, thee, only thee.
+Like spells, that naught on earth can break,
+ Till lips, that know the charm, have spoken,
+This heart, howe'er the world may wake
+ Its grief, its scorn, can but be broken
+ By thee, thee, only thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SHALL THE HARP THEN BE SILENT.
+
+
+Shall the Harp then be silent, when he who first gave
+ To our country a name, is withdrawn from all eyes?
+Shall a Minstrel of Erin stand mute by the grave,
+ Where the first--where the last of her Patriots lies?
+
+No--faint tho' the death-song may fall from his lips,
+ Tho' his Harp, like his soul, may with shadows be crost,
+Yet, yet shall it sound, mid a nation's eclipse,
+ And proclaim to the world what a star hath been lost;--[1]
+
+What a union of all the affections and powers
+ By which life is exalted, embellished, refined,
+Was embraced in that spirit--whose centre was ours,
+ While its mighty circumference circled mankind.
+
+Oh, who that loves Erin, or who that can see,
+ Thro' the waste of her annals, that epoch sublime--
+Like a pyramid raised in the desert--where he
+ And his glory stand out to the eyes of all time;
+
+That _one_ lucid interval, snatched from the gloom
+ And the madness of ages, when filled with his soul,
+A Nation o'erleaped the dark bounds of her doom,
+ And for _one_ sacred instant, touched Liberty's goal?
+
+Who, that ever hath heard him--hath drank at the source
+ Of that wonderful eloquence, all Erin's own,
+In whose high-thoughted daring, the fire, and the force,
+ And the yet untamed spring of her spirit are shown?
+
+An eloquence rich, wheresoever its wave
+ Wandered free and triumphant, with thoughts that shone thro',
+As clear as the brook's "stone of lustre," and gave,
+ With the flash of the gem, its solidity too.
+
+Who, that ever approached him, when free from the crowd,
+ In a home full of love, he delighted to tread
+'Mong the trees which a nation had given, and which bowed,
+ As if each brought a new civic crown for his head--
+
+Is there one, who hath thus, thro' his orbit of life
+ But at distance observed him--thro' glory, thro' blame,
+In the calm of retreat, in the grandeur of strife,
+ Whether shining or clouded, still high and the same,--
+
+Oh no, not a heart, that e'er knew him, but mourns
+ Deep, deep o'er the grave, where such glory is shrined--
+O'er a monument Fame will preserve, 'mong the urns
+ Of the wisest, the bravest, the best of mankind!
+
+
+[1] These lines were written on the death of our great patriot, Grattan,
+in the year 1820. It is only the two first verses that are either intended
+or fitted to be sung.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH, THE SIGHT ENTRANCING.
+
+
+Oh, the sight entrancing,
+When morning's beam is glancing,
+ O'er files arrayed
+ With helm and blade,
+And plumes, in the gay wind dancing!
+When hearts are all high beating,
+And the trumpet's voice repeating
+ That song, whose breath
+ May lead to death,
+But never to retreating.
+Oh the sight entrancing,
+When morning's beam is glancing
+ O'er files arrayed
+ With helm and blade,
+And plumes, in the gay wind dancing.
+
+Yet, 'tis not helm or feather--
+For ask yon despot, whether
+ His plumed bands
+ Could bring such hands
+And hearts as ours together.
+Leave pomps to those who need 'em--
+Give man but heart and freedom,
+ And proud he braves
+ The gaudiest slaves
+That crawl where monarchs lead 'em.
+The sword may pierce the beaver,
+Stone walls in time may sever,
+ 'Tis mind alone,
+ Worth steel and stone,
+That keeps men free for ever.
+Oh that sight entrancing,
+When the morning's beam is glancing,
+ O'er files arrayed
+ With helm and blade,
+And in Freedom's cause advancing!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SWEET INNISFALLEN.
+
+
+Sweet Innisfallen, fare thee well,
+ May calm and sunshine long be thine!
+How fair thou art let others tell,--
+ To _feel_ how fair shall long be mine.
+
+Sweet Innisfallen, long shall dwell
+ In memory's dream that sunny smile,
+Which o'er thee on that evening fell,
+ When first I saw thy fairy isle.
+
+'Twas light, indeed, too blest for one,
+ Who had to turn to paths of care--
+Through crowded haunts again to run,
+ And leave thee bright and silent there;
+
+No more unto thy shores to come,
+ But, on the world's rude ocean tost,
+Dream of thee sometimes, as a home
+ Of sunshine he had seen and lost.
+
+Far better in thy weeping hours
+ To part from thee, as I do now,
+When mist is o'er thy blooming bowers,
+ Like sorrow's veil on beauty's brow.
+
+For, though unrivalled still thy grace,
+ Thou dost not look, as then, _too_ blest,
+But thus in shadow, seem'st a place
+ Where erring man might hope to rest--
+
+Might hope to rest, and find in thee
+ A gloom like Eden's on the day
+He left its shade, when every tree,
+ Like thine, hung weeping o'er his way.
+
+Weeping or smiling, lovely isle!
+ And all the lovelier for thy tears--
+For tho' but rare thy sunny smile,
+ 'Tis heaven's own glance when it appears.
+
+Like feeling hearts, whose joys are few,
+ But, when _indeed_ they come divine--
+The brightest light the sun e'er threw
+ Is lifeless to one gleam of thine!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+'TWAS ONE OF THOSE DREAMS.[1]
+
+
+'Twas one of those dreams, that by music are brought,
+Like a bright summer haze, o'er the poet's warm thought--
+When, lost in the future, his soul wanders on,
+And all of this life, but its sweetness, is gone.
+
+The wild notes he heard o'er the water were those
+He had taught to sing Erin's dark bondage and woes,
+And the breath of the bugle now wafted them o'er
+From Dinis' green isle, to Glenà's wooded shore.
+
+He listened--while, high o'er the eagle's rude nest,
+The lingering sounds on their way loved to rest;
+And the echoes sung back from their full mountain choir,
+As if loath to let song so enchanting expire.
+
+It seemed as if every sweet note, that died here,
+Was again brought to life in some airier sphere,
+Some heaven in those hills, where the soul of the strain
+They had ceased upon earth was awaking again!
+
+Oh forgive, if, while listening to music, whose breath
+Seemed to circle his name with a charm against death,
+He should feel a proud Spirit within him proclaim,
+"Even so shalt thou live in the echoes of Fame:
+
+"Even so, tho' thy memory should now die away,
+'Twill be caught up again in some happier day,
+And the hearts and the voices of Erin prolong,
+Through the answering Future, thy name and thy song."
+
+
+[1] Written during a visit to Lord Kenmare, at Killarney.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FAIREST! PUT ON AWHILE.
+
+
+Fairest! put on awhile
+ These pinions of light I bring thee,
+And o'er thy own green isle
+ In fancy let me wing thee.
+Never did Ariel's plume,
+ At golden sunset hover
+O'er scenes so full of bloom,
+ As I shall waft thee over.
+
+Fields, where the Spring delays
+ And fearlessly meets the ardor
+Of the warm Summer's gaze,
+ With only her tears to guard her.
+Rocks, thro' myrtle boughs
+ In grace majestic frowning;
+Like some bold warrior's brows
+ That Love hath just been crowning.
+
+Islets, so freshly fair,
+ That never hath bird come nigh them,
+But from his course thro' air
+ He hath been won down by them;--[1]
+Types, sweet maid, of thee,
+ Whose look, whose blush inviting,
+Never did Love yet see
+ From Heaven, without alighting.
+
+Lakes, where the pearl lies hid,[2]
+ And caves, where the gem is sleeping,
+Bright as the tears thy lid
+ Lets fall in lonely weeping.
+Glens,[3] where Ocean comes,
+ To 'scape the wild wind's rancor,
+And harbors, worthiest homes
+ Where Freedom's fleet can anchor.
+
+Then, if, while scenes so grand,
+ So beautiful, shine before thee,
+Pride for thy own dear land
+ Should haply be stealing o'er thee,
+Oh, let grief come first,
+ O'er pride itself victorious--
+Thinking how man hath curst
+ What Heaven had made so glorious!
+
+
+[1] In describing the Skeligs (islands of the Barony of Forth), Dr.
+Keating says, "There is a certain attractive virtue in the soil which
+draws down all the birds that attempt to fly over it, and obliges them to
+light upon the rock."
+
+[2] "Nennius, a British writer of the ninth century, mentions the
+abundance of pearls in Ireland. Their princes, he says, hung them behind
+their ears: and this we find confirmed by a present made A.C. 1094, by
+Gilbert, Bishop of Limerick, to Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, of a
+considerable quantity of Irish pearls."--_O'Halloran_.
+
+[3] Glengariff.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+QUICK! WE HAVE BUT A SECOND.
+
+
+Quick! we have but a second,
+ Fill round the cup, while you may;
+For Time, the churl, hath beckoned,
+ And we must away, away!
+Grasp the pleasure that's flying,
+ For oh, not Orpheus' strain
+Could keep sweet hours from dying,
+ Or charm them to life again.
+ Then, quick! we have but a second,
+ Fill round the cup while you may;
+ For Time, the churl, hath beckoned,
+ And we must away, away!
+
+See the glass, how it flushes.
+ Like some young Hebe's lip,
+And half meets thine, and blushes
+ That thou shouldst delay to sip.
+Shame, oh shame unto thee,
+ If ever thou see'st that day,
+When a cup or lip shall woo thee,
+ And turn untouched away!
+ Then, quick! we have but a second,
+ Fill round, fill round, while you may;
+ For Time, the churl, hath beckoned,
+ And we must away, away!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AND DOTH NOT A MEETING LIKE THIS.
+
+
+And doth not a meeting like this make amends,
+ For all the long years I've been wandering away--
+To see thus around me my youth's early friends,
+ As smiling and kind as in that happy day?
+Tho' haply o'er some of your brows, as o'er mine,
+ The snow-fall of time may be stealing--what then?
+Like Alps in the sunset, thus lighted by wine,
+ We'll wear the gay tinge of youth's roses again.
+
+What softened remembrances come o'er the heart,
+ In gazing on those we've been lost to so long!
+The sorrows, the joys, of which once they were part,
+ Still round them, like visions of yesterday, throng,
+As letters some hand hath invisibly traced,
+ When held to the flame will steal out on the sight,
+So many a feeling, that long seemed effaced,
+ The warmth of a moment like this brings to light.
+
+And thus, as in memory's bark we shall glide,
+ To visit the scenes of our boyhood anew,
+Tho' oft we may see, looking down on the tide,
+ The wreck of full many a hope shining thro';
+Yet still, as in fancy we point to the flowers,
+ That once made a garden of all the gay shore,
+Deceived for a moment, we'll think them still ours,
+ And breathe the fresh air of life's morning once more.
+
+So brief our existence, a glimpse, at the most,
+ Is all we can have of the few we hold dear;
+And oft even joy is unheeded and lost,
+ For want of some heart, that could echo it, near.
+Ah, well may we hope, when this short life is gone,
+ To meet in some world of more permanent bliss,
+For a smile, or a grasp of the hand, hastening on,
+ Is all we enjoy of each other in this.
+
+But, come, the more rare such delights to the heart,
+ The more we should welcome and bless them the more;
+They're ours, when we meet,--they are lost when we part,
+ Like birds that bring summer, and fly when 'tis o'er.
+Thus circling the cup, hand in hand, ere we drink,
+ Let Sympathy pledge us, thro' pleasure, thro' pain,
+That, fast as a feeling but touches one link,
+ Her magic shall send it direct thro' the chain.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MOUNTAIN SPRITE.
+
+
+In yonder valley there dwelt, alone,
+A youth, whose moments had calmly flown,
+Till spells came o'er him, and, day and night,
+He was haunted and watched by a Mountain Sprite.
+
+As once, by moonlight, he wander'd o'er
+The golden sands of that island shore,
+A foot-print sparkled before his sight--
+'Twas the fairy foot of the Mountain Sprite!
+
+Beside a fountain, one sunny day,
+As bending over the stream he lay,
+There peeped down o'er him two eyes of light,
+And he saw in that mirror the Mountain Sprite.
+
+He turned, but, lo, like a startled bird,
+That spirit fled!--and the youth but heard
+Sweet music, such as marks the flight
+Of some bird of song, from the Mountain Sprite.
+
+One night, still haunted by that bright look,
+The boy, bewildered, his pencil took,
+And, guided only by memory's light,
+Drew the once-seen form of the Mountain Sprite.
+
+"Oh thou, who lovest the shadow," cried
+A voice, low whispering by his side,
+"Now turn and see,"--here the youth's delight
+Sealed the rosy lips of the Mountain Sprite.
+
+"Of all the Spirits of land and sea,"
+Then rapt he murmured, "there's none like thee,
+"And oft, oh oft, may thy foot thus light
+"In this lonely bower, sweet Mountain Sprite!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AS VANQUISHED ERIN.
+
+
+As vanquished Erin wept beside
+ The Boyne's ill-fated river,
+She saw where Discord, in the tide,
+ Had dropt his loaded quiver.
+"Lie hid," she cried, "ye venomed darts,
+ "Where mortal eye may shun you;
+"Lie hid--the stain of manly hearts,
+ "That bled for me, is on you."
+
+But vain her wish, her weeping vain,--
+ As Time too well hath taught her--
+Each year the Fiend returns again,
+ And dives into that water;
+And brings, triumphant, from beneath
+ His shafts of desolation,
+And sends them, winged with worse than death,
+ Through all her maddening nation.
+
+Alas for her who sits and mourns,
+ Even now, beside that river--
+Unwearied still the Fiend returns,
+ And stored is still his quiver.
+"When will this end, ye Powers of Good?"
+ She weeping asks for ever;
+But only hears, from out that flood,
+ The Demon answer, "Never!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DESMOND'S SONG.[1]
+
+
+By the Feal's wave benighted,
+ No star in the skies,
+To thy door by Love lighted,
+ I first saw those eyes.
+Some voice whispered o'er me,
+ As the threshold I crost,
+There was ruin before me,
+ If I loved, I was lost.
+
+Love came, and brought sorrow
+ Too soon in his train;
+Yet so sweet, that to-morrow
+ 'Twere welcome again.
+Though misery's full measure
+ My portion should be,
+I would drain it with pleasure,
+ If poured out by thee.
+
+You, who call it dishonor
+ To bow to this flame,
+If you've eyes, look but on her,
+ And blush while you blame.
+Hath the pearl less whiteness
+ Because of its birth?
+Hath the violet less brightness
+ For growing near earth?
+
+No--Man for his glory
+ To ancestry flies;
+But Woman's bright story
+ Is told in her eyes.
+
+While the Monarch but traces
+ Thro' mortals his line,
+Beauty, born of the Graces,
+ Banks next to Divine!
+
+
+[1] "Thomas, the heir of the Desmond family, had accidentally been so
+engaged in the chase, that he was benighted near Tralee, and obliged to
+take shelter at the Abbey of Feal, in the house of one of his dependents,
+called Mac Cormac. Catherine, a beautiful daughter of his host, instantly
+inspired the Earl with a violent passion, which he could not subdue. He
+married her, and by this inferior alliance alienated his followers, whose
+brutal pride regarded this indulgence of his love as an unpardonable
+degradation of his family."--_Leland_, vol. ii.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THEY KNOW NOT MY HEART.
+
+
+They know not my heart, who believe there can be
+One stain of this earth in its feelings for thee;
+Who think, while I see thee in beauty's young hour,
+As pure as the morning's first dew on the flower,
+I could harm what I love,--as the sun's wanton ray
+But smiles on the dew-drop to waste it away.
+
+No--beaming with light as those young features are,
+There's a light round thy heart which is lovelier far:
+It is not that cheek--'tis the soul dawning clear
+Thro' its innocent blush makes thy beauty so dear:
+As the sky we look up to, tho' glorious and fair,
+Is looked up to the more, because Heaven lies there!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+I WISH I WAS BY THAT DIM LAKE.
+
+
+I wish I was by that dim Lake,[1]
+Where sinful souls their farewell take
+Of this vain world, and half-way lie
+In death's cold shadow, ere they die.
+There, there, far from thee,
+Deceitful world, my home should be;
+Where, come what might of gloom and pain,
+False hope should ne'er deceive again.
+
+The lifeless sky, the mournful sound
+Of unseen waters falling round;
+The dry leaves, quivering o'er my head,
+Like man, unquiet even when dead!
+These, ay, these shall wean
+My soul from life's deluding scene,
+And turn each thought, o'ercharged with gloom,
+Like willows, downward towards the tomb.
+
+As they, who to their couch at night
+Would win repose, first quench the light,
+So must the hopes, that keep this breast
+Awake, be quenched, ere it can rest.
+Cold, cold, this heart must grow,
+Unmoved by either joy or woe,
+Like freezing founts, where all that's thrown
+Within their current turns to stone.
+
+
+[1] These verses are meant to allude to that ancient haunt of
+superstition, called Patrick's Purgatory. "In the midst of these gloomy
+regions of Donegall (says Dr. Campbell) lay a lake, which was to become
+the mystic theatre of this fabled and intermediate state. In the lake were
+several islands; but one of them was dignified with that called the Mouth
+of Purgatory, which, during the dark ages, attracted the notice of all
+Christendom, and was the resort of penitents and pilgrims from almost
+every country in Europe."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SHE SUNG OF LOVE.
+
+
+She sung of Love, while o'er her lyre
+ The rosy rays of evening fell,
+As if to feed with their soft fire
+ The soul within that trembling shell.
+The same rich light hung o'er her cheek,
+ And played around those lips that sung
+And spoke, as flowers would sing and speak,
+ If Love could lend their leaves a tongue.
+
+But soon the West no longer burned,
+ Each rosy ray from heaven withdrew;
+And, when to gaze again I turned,
+ The minstrel's form seemed fading too.
+As if _her_ light and heaven's were one,
+ The glory all had left that frame;
+And from her glimmering lips the tone,
+ As from a parting spirit, came.
+
+Who ever loved, but had the thought
+ That he and all he loved must part?
+Filled with this fear, I flew and caught
+ The fading image to my heart--
+And cried, "Oh Love! is this thy doom?
+ "Oh light of youth's resplendent day!
+"Must ye then lose your golden bloom,
+ "And thus, like sunshine, die away?"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SING--SING--MUSIC WAS GIVEN.
+
+
+Sing--sing--Music was given,
+ To brighten the gay, and kindle the loving;
+Souls here, like planets in Heaven,
+ By harmony's laws alone are kept moving.
+Beauty may boast of her eyes and her cheeks,
+ But Love from the lips his true archery wings;
+And she, who but feathers the dart when she speaks,
+ At once sends it home to the heart when she sings.
+ Then sing--sing--Music was given,
+ To brighten the gay, and kindle the loving;
+ Souls here, like planets in Heaven,
+ By harmony's laws alone are kept moving.
+
+When Love, rocked by his mother,
+ Lay sleeping as calm as slumber could make him,
+"Hush, hush," said Venus, "no other
+ "Sweet voice but his own is worthy to wake him."
+Dreaming of music he slumbered the while
+ Till faint from his lip a soft melody broke,
+And Venus, enchanted, looked on with a smile,
+ While Love to his own sweet singing awoke.
+ Then sing--sing--Music was given,
+ To brighten the gay, and kindle the loving;
+ Souls here, like planets in Heaven,
+ By harmony's laws alone are kept moving.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THO' HUMBLE THE BANQUET.
+
+
+Tho' humble the banquet to which I invite thee,
+ Thou'lt find there the best a poor bard can command:
+Eyes, beaming with welcome, shall throng round, to light thee,
+ And Love serve the feast with his own willing hand.
+
+And tho' Fortune may seem to have turned from the dwelling
+ Of him thou regardest her favoring ray,
+Thou wilt find there a gift, all her treasures excelling,
+ Which, proudly he feels, hath ennobled his way.
+
+'Tis that freedom of mind, which no vulgar dominion
+ Can turn from the path a pure conscience approves;
+Which, with hope in the heart, and no chain on the pinion,
+ Holds upwards its course to the light which it loves.
+
+'Tis this makes the pride of his humble retreat,
+ And, with this, tho' of all other treasures bereaved,
+The breeze of his garden to him is more sweet
+ Than the costliest incense that Pomp e'er received.
+
+Then, come,--if a board so untempting hath power
+ To win thee from grandeur, its best shall be thine;
+And there's one, long the light of the bard's happy bower,
+ Who, smiling, will blend her bright welcome with mine.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SING, SWEET HARP.
+
+
+Sing, sweet Harp, oh sing to me
+ Some song of ancient days,
+Whose sounds, in this sad memory,
+ Long buried dreams shall raise;--
+Some lay that tells of vanished fame,
+ Whose light once round us shone;
+Of noble pride, now turned to shame,
+ And hopes for ever gone.--
+Sing, sad Harp, thus sing to me;
+ Alike our doom is cast,
+Both lost to all but memory,
+ We live but in the past.
+
+How mournfully the midnight air
+ Among thy chords doth sigh,
+As if it sought some echo there
+ Of voices long gone by;--
+Of Chieftains, now forgot, who seemed
+ The foremost then in fame;
+Of Bards who, once immortal deemed,
+ Now sleep without a name.--
+In vain, sad Harp, the midnight air
+ Among thy chords doth sigh;
+In vain it seeks an echo there
+ Of voices long gone by.
+
+Couldst thou but call those spirits round.
+ Who once, in bower and hall,
+Sat listening to thy magic sound,
+ Now mute and mouldering all;--
+But, no; they would but wake to weep
+ Their children's slavery;
+Then leave them in their dreamless sleep,
+ The dead, at least, are free!--
+Hush, hush, sad Harp, that dreary tone,
+ That knell of Freedom's day;
+Or, listening to its death-like moan,
+ Let me, too, die away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE BATTLE EVE.
+
+TIME--THE NINTH CENTURY.
+
+
+To-morrow, comrade, we
+On the battle-plain must be,
+ There to conquer, or both lie low!
+The morning star is up,--
+But there's wine still in the cup,
+ And we'll take another quaff, ere we go, boy, go;
+ We'll take another quaff, ere we go.
+
+'Tis true, in manliest eyes
+A passing tear will rise,
+ When we think of the friends we leave lone;
+But what can wailing do?
+See, our goblet's weeping too!
+ With its tears we'll chase away our own, boy, our own;
+ With its tears we'll chase away our own.
+
+But daylight's stealing on;--
+The last that o'er us shone
+ Saw our children around us play;
+The next--ah! where shall we
+And those rosy urchins be?
+ But--no matter--grasp thy sword and away, boy, away;
+ No matter--grasp thy sword and away!
+
+Let those, who brook the chain
+Of Saxon or of Dane,
+ Ignobly by their firesides stay;
+One sigh to home be given,
+One heartfelt prayer to heaven,
+ Then, for Erin and her cause, boy, hurra! hurra! hurra!
+ Then, for Erin and her cause, hurra!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WANDERING BARD.
+
+
+What life like that of the bard can be--
+The wandering bard, who roams as free
+As the mountain lark that o'er him sings,
+And, like that lark, a music brings
+Within him, where'er he comes or goes,--
+A fount that for ever flows!
+The world's to him like some playground,
+Where fairies dance their moonlight round;--
+If dimmed the turf where late they trod,
+The elves but seek some greener sod;
+So, when less bright his scene of glee,
+To another away flies he!
+
+Oh, what would have been young Beauty's doom,
+Without a bard to fix her bloom?
+They tell us, in the moon's bright round,
+Things lost in this dark world are found;
+So charms, on earth long past and gone,
+In the poet's lay live on.--
+Would ye have smiles that ne'er grow dim?
+You've only to give them all to him.
+Who, with but a touch of Fancy's wand,
+Can lend them life, this life beyond,
+And fix them high, in Poesy's sky,--
+Young stars that never die!
+
+Then, welcome the bard where'er he comes,--
+For, tho' he hath countless airy homes,
+To which his wing excursive roves,
+Yet still, from time to time, he loves
+To light upon earth and find such cheer
+As brightens our banquet here.
+No matter how far, how fleet he flies,
+You've only to light up kind young eyes,
+Such signal-fires as here are given,--
+And down he'll drop from Fancy's heaven,
+The minute such call to love or mirth
+Proclaims he's wanting on earth!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ALONE IN CROWDS TO WANDER ON.
+
+
+Alone in crowds to wander on,
+And feel that all the charm is gone
+Which voices dear and eyes beloved
+Shed round us once, where'er we roved--
+This, this the doom must be
+Of all who've loved, and lived to see
+The few bright things they thought would stay
+For ever near them, die away.
+
+Tho' fairer forms around us throng,
+Their smiles to others all belong,
+And want that charm which dwells alone
+Round those the fond heart calls its own.
+Where, where the sunny brow?
+The long-known voice--where are they now?
+Thus ask I still, nor ask in vain,
+The silence answers all too plain.
+
+Oh, what is Fancy's magic worth,
+If all her art can not call forth
+One bliss like those we felt of old
+From lips now mute, and eyes now cold?
+No, no,--her spell is vain,--
+As soon could she bring back again
+Those eyes themselves from out the grave,
+As wake again one bliss they gave.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+I'VE A SECRET TO TELL THEE.
+
+
+I've a secret to tell thee, but hush! not here,--
+ Oh! not where the world its vigil keeps:
+I'll seek, to whisper it in thine ear,
+ Some shore where the Spirit of Silence sleeps;
+Where summer's wave unmurmuring dies,
+ Nor fay can hear the fountain's gush;
+Where, if but a note her night-bird sighs,
+ The rose saith, chidingly, "Hush, sweet, hush!"
+
+There, amid the deep silence of that hour,
+ When stars can be heard in ocean dip,
+Thyself shall, under some rosy bower,
+ Sit mute, with thy finger on thy lip:
+Like him, the boy,[1] who born among
+ The flowers that on the Nile-stream blush,
+Sits ever thus,--his only song
+ To earth and heaven, "Hush, all, hush!"
+
+
+[1] The God of Silence, thus pictured by the Egyptians.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF INNISFAIL.
+
+
+They came from a land beyond the sea,
+ And now o'er the western main
+Set sail, in their good ships, gallantly,
+ From the sunny land of Spain.
+"Oh, where's the Isle we've seen in dreams,
+ Our destined home or grave?"[1]
+Thus sung they as, by the morning's beams,
+ They swept the Atlantic wave.
+
+And, lo, where afar o'er ocean shines
+ A sparkle of radiant green,
+As tho' in that deep lay emerald mines,
+ Whose light thro' the wave was seen.
+"'Tis Innisfail[2]--'tis Innisfail!"
+ Rings o'er the echoing sea;
+While, bending to heaven, the warriors hail
+ That home of the brave and free.
+
+Then turned they unto the Eastern wave,
+ Where now their Day-God's eye
+A look of such sunny-omen gave
+ As lighted up sea and sky.
+Nor frown was seen thro' sky or sea,
+ Nor tear o'er leaf or sod,
+When first on their Isle of Destiny
+ Our great forefathers trod.
+
+
+[1] Milesius remembered the remarkable prediction of the principal Druid,
+who foretold that the posterity of Gadelus should obtain the possession of
+a Western Island (which was Ireland), and there inhabit.--_Keating_.
+
+[2] The Island of Destiny, one of the ancient names of Ireland.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE NIGHT DANCE.
+
+
+Strike the gay harp! see the moon is on high,
+ And, as true to her beam as the tides of the ocean,
+Young hearts, when they feel the soft light of her eye,
+ Obey the mute call and heave into motion.
+Then, sound notes--the gayest, the lightest,
+ That ever took wing, when heaven looked brightest!
+ Again! Again!
+
+Oh! could such heart-stirring music be heard
+ In that City of Statues described by romancers,
+So wakening its spell, even stone would be stirred,
+ And statues themselves all start into dancers!
+
+Why then delay, with such sounds in our ears,
+ And the flower of Beauty's own garden before us,--
+While stars overhead leave the song of their spheres,
+ And listening to ours, hang wondering o'er us?
+Again, that strain!--to hear it thus sounding
+ Might set even Death's cold pulses bounding--
+ Again! Again!
+
+Oh, what delight when the youthful and gay,
+ Each with eye like a sunbeam and foot like a feather,
+Thus dance, like the Hours to the music of May,
+ And mingle sweet song and sunshine together!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THERE ARE SOUNDS OF MIRTH.
+
+
+There are sounds of mirth in the night-air ringing,
+ And lamps from every casement shown;
+While voices blithe within are singing,
+ That seem to say "Come," in every tone.
+Ah! once how light, in Life's young season,
+ My heart had leapt at that sweet lay;
+Nor paused to ask of graybeard Reason
+ Should I the syren call obey.
+
+And, see--the lamps still livelier glitter,
+ The syren lips more fondly sound;
+No, seek, ye nymphs, some victim fitter
+ To sink in your rosy bondage bound.
+Shall a bard, whom not the world in arms
+ Could bend to tyranny's rude control,
+Thus quail at sight of woman's charms
+ And yield to a smile his freeborn soul?
+
+Thus sung the sage, while, slyly stealing,
+ The nymphs their fetters around him cast,
+And,--their laughing eyes, the while, concealing,--
+ Led Freedom's Bard their slave at last.
+For the Poet's heart, still prone to loving,
+Was like that rack of the Druid race,[1]
+Which the gentlest touch at once set moving,
+ But all earth's power couldn't cast from its base.
+
+
+[1] The Rocking Stones of the Druids, some of which no force is able to
+dislodge from their stations.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH, ARRANMORE, LOVED ARRANMORE.
+
+
+Oh! Arranmore, loved Arranmore,
+ How oft I dream of thee,
+And of those days when, by thy shore,
+ I wandered young and free.
+Full many a path I've tried, since then,
+ Thro' pleasure's flowery maze,
+But ne'er could find the bliss again
+ I felt in those sweet days.
+
+How blithe upon thy breezy cliffs,
+ At sunny morn I've stood,
+With heart as bounding as the skiffs
+ That danced along thy flood;
+Or, when the western wave grew bright
+ With daylight's parting wing,
+Have sought that Eden in its light,
+ Which dreaming poets sing;[1]--
+
+That Eden where the immortal brave
+ Dwell in a land serene,--
+Whose bowers beyond the shining wave,
+ At sunset, oft are seen.
+Ah dream too full of saddening truth!
+ Those mansions o'er the main
+Are like the hopes I built in youth,--
+ As sunny and as vain!
+
+
+[1] "The inhabitants of Arranmore are still persuaded that, in a clear
+day, they can see from this coast Hy Brysail or the Enchanted Island, the
+paradise of the Pagan Irish, and concerning which they relate a number of
+romantic stories",--_Beaufort's "Ancient Topography of Ireland_."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LAY HIS SWORD BY HIS SIDE.
+
+
+Lay his sword by his side,[1]--it hath served him too well
+ Not to rest near his pillow below;
+To the last moment true, from his hand ere it fell,
+ Its point was still turned to a flying foe.
+Fellow-laborers in life, let them slumber in death,
+ Side by side, as becomes the reposing brave,--
+That sword which he loved still unbroke in its sheath,
+ And himself unsubdued in his grave.
+
+Yet pause--for, in fancy, a still voice I hear,
+ As if breathed from his brave heart's remains;--
+Faint echo of that which, in Slavery's ear,
+ Once sounded the war-word, "Burst your chains!"
+And it cries from the grave where the hero lies deep,
+ "Tho' the day of your Chieftain for ever hath set,
+"Oh leave not his sword thus inglorious to sleep,--
+ "It hath victory's life in it yet!"
+
+"Should some alien, unworthy such weapon to wield,
+ "Dare to touch thee, my own gallant sword,
+"Then rest in thy sheath, like a talisman sealed,
+ Or return to the grave of thy chainless lord.
+But, if grasped by a hand that hath learned the proud use
+ Of a falchion, like thee, on the battle-plain,--
+Then, at Liberty's summons, like lightning let loose,
+ Leap forth from thy dark sheath again!"
+
+
+[1] It was the custom of the ancient Irish, in the manner of the
+Scythians, to bury the favorite swords of their heroes along with them.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH, COULD WE DO WITH THIS WORLD OF OURS.
+
+
+Oh, could we do with this world of ours
+As thou dost with thy garden bowers,
+Reject the weeds and keep the flowers,
+ What a heaven on earth we'd make it!
+So bright a dwelling should be our own,
+So warranted free from sigh or frown,
+That angels soon would be coming down,
+ By the week or month to take it.
+
+Like those gay flies that wing thro' air,
+And in themselves a lustre bear,
+A stock of light, still ready there,
+ Whenever they wish to use it;
+So, in this world I'd make for thee,
+Our hearts should all like fire-flies be,
+And the flash of wit or poesy
+ Break forth whenever we choose it.
+
+While every joy that glads our sphere
+Hath still some shadow hovering near,
+In this new world of ours, my dear,
+ Such shadows will all be omitted:--
+Unless they're like that graceful one,
+Which, when thou'rt dancing in the sun.
+Still near thee, leaves a charm upon
+ Each spot where it hath flitted.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WINE-CUP IS CIRCLING.
+
+
+The wine-cup is circling in Almhin's hall,[1]
+ And its Chief, mid his heroes reclining,
+Looks up with a sigh, to the trophied wall,
+ Where his sword hangs idly shining.
+ When, hark! that shout
+ From the vale without,--
+ "Arm ye quick, the Dane, the Dane is nigh!"
+ Every Chief starts up
+ From his foaming cup,
+ And "To battle, to battle!" is the Finian's cry.
+
+The minstrels have seized their harps of gold,
+ And they sing such thrilling numbers,
+'Tis like the voice of the Brave, of old,
+ Breaking forth from the place of slumbers!
+ Spear to buckler rang,
+ As the minstrels sang,
+ And the Sun-burst[2] o'er them floated wide;
+ While remembering the yoke
+ Which their father's broke,
+ "On for liberty, for liberty!" the Finians cried.
+
+Like clouds of the night the Northmen came,
+ O'er the valley of Almhin lowering;
+While onward moved, in the light of its fame,
+ That banner of Erin, towering.
+ With the mingling shock
+ Rung cliff and rock,
+ While, rank on rank, the invaders die:
+ And the shout, that last,
+ O'er the dying past,
+ Was "victory! victory!"--the Finian's cry.
+
+
+[1] The Palace of Fin Mac-Cumhal (the Fingal of Macpherson) in Leinster.
+It was built on the top of the hill, which has retained from thence the
+name of the Hill of Allen, in the county of Kildare. The Finians, or
+Fenii, were the celebrated National Militia of Ireland, which this chief
+commanded. The introduction of the Danes in the above song is an
+anachronism common to most of the Finian and Ossianic legends.
+
+[2] The name given to the banner of the Irish.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DREAM OF THOSE DAYS.
+
+
+The dream of those days when first I sung thee is o'er,
+Thy triumph hath stained the charm thy sorrows then wore;
+And even of the light which Hope once shed o'er thy chains,
+Alas, not a gleam to grace thy freedom remains.
+
+Say, is it that slavery sunk so deep in thy heart,
+That still the dark brand is there, though chainless thou art;
+And Freedom's sweet fruit, for which thy spirit long burned,
+Now, reaching at last thy lip, to ashes hath turned?
+
+Up Liberty's steep by Truth and Eloquence led,
+With eyes on her temple fixt, how proud was thy tread!
+Ah, better thou ne'er hadst lived that summit to gain
+Or died in the porch than thus dishonor the fane.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FROM THIS HOUR THE PLEDGE IS GIVEN.
+
+
+From this hour the pledge is given,
+ From this hour my soul is thine:
+Come what will, from earth or heaven,
+ Weal or woe, thy fate be mine.
+When the proud and great stood by thee,
+ None dared thy rights to spurn;
+And if now they're false and fly thee,
+ Shall I, too, basely turn?
+No;--whate'er the fires that try thee,
+ In the same this heart shall burn.
+
+Tho' the sea, where thou embarkest,
+ Offers now no friendly shore,
+Light may come where all looks darkest,
+ Hope hath life when life seems o'er.
+And, of those past ages dreaming,
+ When glory decked thy brow,
+Oft I fondly think, tho' seeming
+ So fallen and clouded now,
+Thou'lt again break forth, all beaming,--
+ None so bright, so blest as thou!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SILENCE IS IN OUR FESTAL HALLS.[1]
+
+
+Silence is in our festal halls,--
+ Sweet Son of Song! thy course is o'er;
+In vain on thee sad Erin calls,
+ Her minstrel's voice responds no more;--
+All silent as the Eolian shell
+ Sleeps at the close of some bright day,
+When the sweet breeze that waked its swell
+ At sunny morn hath died away.
+
+Yet at our feasts thy spirit long
+ Awakened by music's spell shall rise;
+For, name so linked with deathless song
+ Partakes its charm and never dies:
+And even within the holy fane
+ When music wafts the soul to heaven,
+One thought to him whose earliest strain
+ Was echoed there shall long be given.
+
+But, where is now the cheerful day.
+ The social night when by thy side
+He who now weaves this parting lay
+ His skilless voice with thine allied;
+And sung those songs whose every tone,
+ When bard and minstrel long have past,
+Shall still in sweetness all their own
+ Embalmed by fame, undying last.
+
+Yes, Erin, thine alone the fame,--
+ Or, if thy bard have shared the crown,
+From thee the borrowed glory came,
+ And at thy feet is now laid down.
+Enough, if Freedom still inspire
+ His latest song and still there be.
+As evening closes round his lyre,
+ One ray upon its chords from thee.
+
+
+[1] It is hardly necessary, perhaps, to inform the reader, that these
+lines are meant as a tribute of sincere friendship to the memory of an old
+and valued colleague in this work, Sir John Stevenson.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NATIONAL AIRS
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+
+It is Cicero, I believe, who says "_naturâ, ad modes ducimur;_" and the
+abundance of wild, indigenous airs, which almost every country, except
+England, possesses, sufficiently proves the truth of his assertion. The
+lovers of this simple, but interesting kind of music, are here presented
+with the first number of a collection, which, I trust, their contributions
+will enable us to continue. A pretty air without words resembles one of
+those _half_ creatures of Plato, which are described as wandering in
+search of the remainder of themselves through the world. To supply this
+other half, by uniting with congenial words the many fugitive melodies
+which have hitherto had none,--or only such as are unintelligible to the
+generality of their hearers,--it is the object and ambition of the present
+work. Neither is it our intention to confine ourselves to what are
+strictly called National Melodies, but, wherever we meet with any
+wandering and beautiful air, to which poetry has not yet assigned a worthy
+home, we shall venture to claim it as an _estray_ swan, and enrich our
+humble Hippocrene with its song.
+
+
+T.M.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NATIONAL AIRS
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A TEMPLE TO FRIENDSHIP.
+
+(SPANISH AIR.)
+
+
+"A Temple to Friendship;" said Laura, enchanted,
+ "I'll build in this garden,--the thought is divine!"
+Her temple was built and she now only wanted
+ An image of Friendship to place on the shrine.
+She flew to a sculptor, who set down before her
+ A Friendship, the fairest his art could invent;
+But so cold and so dull, that the youthful adorer
+ Saw plainly this was not the idol she meant.
+
+"Oh! never," she cried, "could I think of enshrining
+ "An image whose looks are so joyless and dim;--
+"But yon little god, upon roses reclining,
+ "We'll make, if you please, Sir, a Friendship of him."
+So the bargain was struck; with the little god laden
+ She joyfully flew to her shrine in the grove:
+"Farewell," said the sculptor, "you're not the first maiden
+ "Who came but for Friendship and took away Love."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FLOW ON, THOU SHINING RIVER.
+
+(PORTUGUESE AIR.)
+
+
+Flow on, thou shining river;
+ But ere thou reach the sea
+Seek Ella's bower and give her
+ The wreaths I fling o'er thee
+And tell her thus, if she'll be mine
+ The current of our lives shall be,
+With joys along their course to shine,
+ Like those sweet flowers on thee.
+
+But if in wandering thither
+ Thou find'st she mocks my prayer,
+Then leave those wreaths to wither
+ Upon the cold bank there;
+And tell her thus, when youth is o'er,
+ Her lone and loveless Charms shall be
+Thrown by upon life's weedy shore.
+ Like those sweet flowers from thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ALL THAT'S BRIGHT MUST FADE.
+
+(INDIAN AIR.)
+
+
+All that's bright must fade,--
+ The brightest still the fleetest;
+All that's sweet was made
+ But to be lost when sweetest.
+Stars that shine and fall;--
+ The flower that drops in springing;--
+These, alas! are types of all
+ To which our hearts are clinging.
+All that's bright must fade,--
+ The brightest still the fleetest;
+All that's sweet was made
+ But to be lost when sweetest?
+
+Who would seek our prize
+ Delights that end in aching?
+Who would trust to ties
+ That every hour are breaking?
+Better far to be
+ In utter darkness lying,
+Than to be blest with light and see
+ That light for ever flying.
+All that's bright must fade,--
+ The brightest still the fleetest;
+All that's sweet was made
+ But to be lost when sweetest!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SO WARMLY WE MET.
+
+(HUNGARIAN AIR.)
+
+
+So warmly we met and so fondly we parted,
+ That which was the sweeter even I could not tell,--
+That first look of welcome her sunny eyes darted,
+ Or that tear of passion, which blest our farewell.
+To meet was a heaven and to part thus another,--
+ Our joy and our sorrow seemed rivals in bliss;
+Oh! Cupid's two eyes are not liker each other
+ In smiles and in tears than that moment to this.
+
+The first was like day-break, new, sudden, delicious,--
+ The dawn of a pleasure scarce kindled up yet;
+The last like the farewell of daylight, more precious,
+ More glowing and deep, as 'tis nearer its set.
+Our meeting, tho' happy, was tinged by a sorrow
+ To think that such happiness could not remain;
+While our parting, tho' sad, gave a hope that to-morrow
+ Would bring back the blest hour of meeting again.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THOSE EVENING BELLS.
+
+(AIR.--THE BELLS OF ST. PETERSBURGH.)
+
+
+Those evening bells! those evening bells!
+How many a tale their music tells,
+Of youth and home and that sweet time
+When last I heard their soothing chime.
+
+Those joyous hours are past away:
+And many a heart, that then was gay.
+Within the tomb now darkly dwells,
+And hears no more those evening bells.
+
+And so 'twill be when I am gone:
+That tuneful peal will still ring on,
+While other bards shall walk these dells,
+And sing your praise, sweet evening bells!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SHOULD THOSE FOND HOPES.
+
+(PORTUGUESE AIR.)
+
+
+Should those fond hopes e'er forsake thee,
+ Which now so sweetly thy heart employ:
+Should the cold world come to wake thee
+ From all thy visions of youth and joy;
+Should the gay friends, for whom thou wouldst banish
+ Him who once thought thy young heart his own,
+All, like spring birds, falsely vanish,
+ And leave thy winter unheeded and lone;--
+
+Oh! 'tis then that he thou hast slighted
+ Would come to cheer thee, when all seem'd o'er;
+Then the truant, lost and blighted,
+ Would to his bosom be taken once more.
+Like that dear bird we both can remember,
+ Who left us while summer shone round,
+But, when chilled by bleak December,
+ On our threshold a welcome still found.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+REASON, FOLLY, AND BEAUTY.
+
+(ITALIAN AIR.)
+
+
+Reason and Folly and Beauty, they say,
+Went on a party of pleasure one day:
+ Folly played
+ Around the maid,
+The bells of his cap rung merrily out;
+ While Reason took
+ To his sermon-book--
+Oh! which was the pleasanter no one need doubt,
+Which was the pleasanter no one need doubt.
+
+Beauty, who likes to be thought very sage.
+Turned for a moment to Reason's dull page,
+ Till Folly said,
+ "Look here, sweet maid!"--
+The sight of his cap brought her back to herself;
+ While Reason read
+ His leaves of lead,
+With no one to mind him, poor sensible elf!
+No,--no one to mind him, poor sensible elf!
+
+Then Reason grew jealous of Folly's gay cap;
+Had he that on, he her heart might entrap--
+ "There it is,"
+ Quoth Folly, "old quiz!"
+(Folly was always good-natured, 'tis said,)
+ "Under the sun
+ There's no such fun,
+As Reason with my cap and bells on his head!"
+"Reason with my cap and bells on his head!"
+
+But Reason the head-dress so awkwardly wore,
+That Beauty now liked him still less than before;
+ While Folly took
+ Old Reason's book,
+And twisted the leaves in a cap of such _ton_,
+ That Beauty vowed
+ (Tho' not aloud),
+She liked him still better in that than his own,
+Yes,--liked him still better in that than his own.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FARE THEE WELL, THOU LOVELY ONE!
+
+(SICILIAN AIR.)
+
+
+Fare thee well, thou lovely one!
+ Lovely still, but dear no more;
+Once his soul of truth is gone,
+ Love's sweet life is o'er.
+Thy words, what e'er their flattering spell,
+ Could scarce have thus deceived;
+But eyes that acted truth so well
+ Were sure to be believed.
+Then, fare thee well, thou lovely one!
+ Lovely still, but dear no more;
+Once his soul of truth is gone,
+ Love's sweet life is o'er.
+
+Yet those eyes look constant still,
+ True as stars they keep their light;
+Still those cheeks their pledge fulfil
+ Of blushing always bright.
+'Tis only on thy changeful heart
+ The blame of falsehood lies;
+Love lives in every other part,
+ But there, alas! he dies.
+Then, fare thee well, thou lovely one!
+ Lovely still, but dear no more;
+Once his soul of truth is gone,
+ Love's sweet life is o'er.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DOST THOU REMEMBER.
+
+(PORTUGUESE AIR.)
+
+
+Dost thou remember that place so lonely,
+A place for lovers and lovers only,
+ Where first I told thee all my secret sighs?
+When, as the moonbeam that trembled o'er thee
+Illumed thy blushes, I knelt before thee,
+ And read my hope's sweet triumph in those eyes?
+Then, then, while closely heart was drawn to heart,
+Love bound us--never, never more to part!
+
+And when I called thee by names the dearest[1]
+That love could fancy, the fondest, nearest,--
+ "My life, my only life!" among the rest;
+In those sweet accents that still enthral me,
+Thou saidst, "Ah!" wherefore thy life thus call me?
+ "Thy soul, thy soul's the name I love best;
+"For life soon passes,--but how blest to be
+"That Soul which never, never parts from thee!"
+
+
+[1] The thought in this verse is borrowed from the original Portuguese
+words.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH, COME TO ME WHEN DAYLIGHT SETS.
+
+(VENETIAN AIR.)
+
+
+Oh, come to me when daylight sets;
+ Sweet! then come to me,
+When smoothly go our gondolets
+ O'er the moonlight sea.
+When Mirth's awake, and Love begins,
+ Beneath that glancing ray,
+With sound of lutes and mandolins,
+ To steal young hearts away.
+Then, come to me when daylight sets;
+ Sweet! then come to me,
+When smoothly go our gondolets
+ O'er the moonlight sea.
+
+Oh, then's the hour for those who love,
+ Sweet, like thee and me;
+When all's so calm below, above,
+ In Heaven and o'er the sea.
+When maiden's sing sweet barcarolles,
+ And Echo sings again
+So sweet, that all with ears and souls
+ Should love and listen then.
+So, come to me when daylight sets;
+ Sweet! then come to me,
+When smoothly go our gondolets
+ O'er the moonlight sea.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OFT, IN THE STILLY NIGHT.
+
+(SCOTCH AIR.)
+
+
+Oft in the stilly night,
+ Ere Slumber's chain has bound me,
+Fond Memory brings the light
+ Of other days around me;
+ The smiles, the tears,
+ Of boyhood's years,
+ The words of love then spoken;
+ The eyes that shone,
+ Now dimmed and gone,
+ The cheerful hearts now broken!
+Thus, in the stilly night,
+ Ere Slumber's chain has bound me,
+Sad Memory brings the light
+ Of other days around me.
+
+When I remember all
+ The friends, so linked together,
+I've seen around me fall,
+ Like leaves in wintry weather;
+ I feel like one,
+ Who treads alone,
+ Some banquet-hall deserted,
+ Whose lights are fled,
+ Whose garlands dead,
+ And all but he departed!
+Thus, in the stilly night,
+ Ere Slumber's chain has bound me,
+Sad Memory brings the light
+ Of other days around me.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HARK! THE VESPER HYMN IS STEALING.
+
+(RUSSIAN AIR.)
+
+
+Hark! the vesper hymn is stealing
+ O'er the waters soft and clear;
+Nearer yet and nearer pealing,
+ And now bursts upon the ear:
+ Jubilate, Amen.
+Farther now, now farther stealing
+ Soft it fades upon the ear:
+ Jubilate, Amen.
+
+Now, like moonlight waves retreating
+ To the shore it dies along;
+Now, like angry surges meeting,
+ Breaks the mingled tide of song
+ Jubilate, Amen.
+Hush! again, like waves, retreating
+ To the shore, it dies along:
+ Jubilate, Amen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AND HOPE.
+
+(SWISS AIR.)
+
+
+At morn, beside yon summer sea,
+ Young Hope and Love reclined;
+But scarce had noon-tide come, when he
+Into his bark leapt smilingly,
+ And left poor Hope behind.
+
+"I go," said Love, "to sail awhile
+ "Across this sunny main;"
+And then so sweet, his parting smile,
+That Hope, who never dreamt of guile,
+ Believed he'd come again.
+
+She lingered there till evening's beam
+ Along the waters lay;
+And o'er the sands, in thoughtful dream,
+Oft traced his name, which still the stream
+ As often washed away.
+
+At length a sail appears in sight,
+ And toward the maiden moves!
+'Tis Wealth that comes, and gay and bright,
+His golden bark reflects the light,
+ But ah! it is not Love's.
+
+Another sail--'twas Friendship showed
+ Her night-lamp o'er the sea;
+And calm the light that lamp bestowed;
+But Love had lights that warmer glowed,
+ And where, alas! was he?
+
+Now fast around the sea and shore
+ Night threw her darkling chain;
+The sunny sails were seen no more,
+Hope's morning dreams of bliss were o'er--
+ Love never came again!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THERE COMES A TIME.
+
+(GERMAN AIR.)
+
+
+There comes a time, a dreary time,
+ To him whose heart hath flown
+O'er all the fields of youth's sweet prime,
+ And made each flow its own.
+'Tis when his soul must first renounce
+ Those dreams so bright, so fond;
+Oh! then's the time to die at once.
+ For life has naught beyond.
+
+When sets the sun on Afric's shore,
+ That instant all is night;
+And so should life at once be o'er.
+ When Love withdraws his light;--
+Nor, like our northern day, gleam on
+ Thro' twilight's dim delay,
+The cold remains of lustre gone,
+ Of fire long past away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MY HARP HAS ONE UNCHANGING THEME.
+
+(SWEDISH AIR.)
+
+
+My harp has one unchanging theme,
+ One strain that still comes o'er
+Its languid chord, as 'twere a dream
+ Of joy that's now no more.
+In vain I try, with livelier air,
+ To wake the breathing string;
+That voice of other times is there,
+ And saddens all I sing.
+
+Breathe on, breathe on, thou languid strain,
+ Henceforth be all my own;
+Tho' thou art oft so full of pain
+ Few hearts can bear thy tone.
+Yet oft thou'rt sweet, as if the sigh,
+ The breath that Pleasure's wings
+Gave out, when last they wantoned by.
+ Were still upon thy strings.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH, NO--NOT EVEN WHEN FIRST WE LOVED.
+
+(CASHMERIAN AIR.)
+
+
+Oh, no--not even when first we loved,
+ Wert thou as dear as now thou art;
+Thy beauty then my senses moved,
+ But now thy virtues bind my heart.
+What was but Passion's sigh before,
+ Has since been turned to Reason's vow;
+And, though I then might love thee _more_,
+ Trust me, I love thee _better_ now.
+
+Altho' my heart in earlier youth
+ Might kindle with more wild desire,
+Believe me, it has gained in truth
+ Much more than it has lost in fire.
+The flame now warms my inmost core,
+ That then but sparkled o'er my brow,
+And, though I seemed to love thee more,
+ Yet, oh, I love thee better now.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PEACE BE AROUND THEE.
+
+(SCOTCH AIR.)
+
+
+Peace be around thee, wherever thou rov'st;
+ May life be for thee one summer's day,
+And all that thou wishest and all that thou lov'st
+ Come smiling around thy sunny way!
+If sorrow e'er this calm should break,
+ May even thy tears pass off so lightly,
+Like spring-showers, they'll only make
+ The smiles, that follow shine more brightly.
+
+May Time who sheds his blight o'er all
+ And daily dooms some joy to death
+O'er thee let years so gently fall,
+ They shall not crush one flower beneath.
+As half in shade and half in sun
+ This world along its path advances.
+May that side the sun's upon
+ Be all that e'er shall meet thy glances!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+COMMON SENSE AND GENIUS.
+
+(FRENCH AIR.)
+
+
+While I touch the string,
+ Wreathe my brows with laurel,
+For the tale I sing
+ Has, for once, a moral.
+Common Sense, one night,
+ Tho' not used to gambols,
+Went out by moonlight,
+ With Genius, on his rambles.
+ While I touch the string, etc.
+
+Common Sense went on,
+ Many wise things saying;
+While the light that shone
+ Soon set Genius straying.
+_One_ his eye ne'er raised
+ From the path before him;
+T'_other_ idly gazed
+ On each night-cloud o'er him.
+ While I touch the string, etc.
+
+So they came, at last,
+ To a shady river;
+Common Sense soon past,
+ Safe, as he doth ever;
+While the boy, whose look
+ Was in Heaven that minute.
+Never saw the brook,
+ But tumbled headlong in it!
+ While I touch the string, etc.
+
+How the Wise One smiled,
+ When safe o'er the torrent,
+At that youth, so wild,
+ Dripping from the current!
+Sense went home to bed;
+ Genius, left to shiver
+On the bank, 'tis said,
+ Died of that cold river!
+ While I touch the string, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THEN, FARE THEE WELL.
+
+(OLD ENGLISH AIR.)
+
+
+Then, fare thee well, my own dear love,
+ This world has now for us
+No greater grief, no pain above
+ The pain of parting thus,
+ Dear love!
+ The pain of parting thus.
+
+Had we but known, since first we met,
+ Some few short hours of bliss,
+We might, in numbering them, forget
+ The deep, deep pain of this,
+ Dear love!
+ The deep, deep pain of this.
+
+But no, alas, we've never seen
+ One glimpse of pleasure's ray,
+But still there came some cloud between,
+ And chased it all away,
+ Dear love!
+ And chased it all away.
+
+Yet, even could those sad moments last,
+ Far dearer to my heart
+Were hours of grief, together past,
+ Than years of mirth apart,
+ Dear love!
+ Than years of mirth apart.
+
+Farewell! our hope was born in fears,
+ And nurst mid vain regrets:
+Like winter suns, it rose in tears,
+ Like them in tears it sets,
+ Dear love!
+ Like them in tears it sets.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+GAYLY SOUNDS THE CASTANET.
+
+(MALTESE AIR.)
+
+
+Gayly sounds the castanet,
+ Beating time to bounding feet,
+When, after daylight's golden set,
+ Maids and youths by moonlight meet.
+Oh, then, how sweet to move
+ Thro' all that maze of mirth,
+Led by light from eyes we love
+ Beyond all eyes on earth.
+
+Then, the joyous banquet spread
+ On the cool and fragrant ground,
+With heaven's bright sparklers overhead,
+ And still brighter sparkling round.
+Oh, then, how sweet to say
+ Into some loved one's ear,
+Thoughts reserved thro' many a day
+ To be thus whispered here.
+
+When the dance and feast are done,
+ Arm in arm as home we stray,
+How sweet to see the dawning sun
+ O'er her cheek's warm blushes play!
+Then, too, the farewell kiss--
+ The words, whose parting tone
+Lingers still in dreams of bliss,
+ That haunt young hearts alone.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE IS A HUNTER-BOY.
+
+(LANGUEDOCIAN AIR.)
+
+
+Love is a hunter-boy,
+ Who, makes young hearts his prey,
+And in his nets of joy
+ Ensnares them night and day.
+In vain concealed they lie--
+ Love tracks them every where;
+In vain aloft they fly--
+ Love shoots them flying there.
+
+But 'tis his joy most sweet,
+ At early dawn to trace
+The print of Beauty's feet,
+ And give the trembler chase.
+And if, thro' virgin snow,
+ He tracks her footsteps fair,
+How sweet for Love to know
+ None went before him there.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+COME, CHASE THAT STARTING TEAR AWAY.
+
+(FRENCH AIR.)
+
+
+Come, chase that starting tear away,
+ Ere mine to meet it springs;
+To-night, at least, to-night be gay,
+ Whate'er to-morrow brings.
+Like sunset gleams, that linger late
+ When all is darkening fast,
+Are hours like these we snatch from Fate--
+ The brightest, and the last.
+ Then, chase that starting tear, etc.
+
+To gild the deepening gloom, if Heaven
+ But one bright hour allow,
+Oh, think that one bright hour is given,
+ In all its splendor, now.
+Let's live it out--then sink in night,
+ Like waves that from the shore
+One minute swell, are touched with light,
+ Then lost for evermore!
+ Come, chase that starting tear, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+JOYS OF YOUTH, HOW FLEETING!
+
+(PORTUGUESE AIR.)
+
+
+Whisperings, heard by wakeful maids,
+ To whom the night-stars guide us;
+Stolen walks thro' moonlight shades,
+ With those we love beside us,
+ Hearts beating,
+ At meeting;
+ Tears starting,
+ At parting;
+Oh, sweet youth, how soon it fades!
+ Sweet joys of youth, how fleeting!
+
+Wanderings far away from home,
+ With life all new before us;
+Greetings warm, when home we come,
+ From hearts whose prayers watched o'er us.
+ Tears starting,
+ At parting;
+ Hearts beating,
+ At meeting;
+Oh, sweet youth, how lost on some!
+ To some, how bright and fleeting!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HEAR ME BUT ONCE.
+
+(FRENCH AIR.)
+
+
+Hear me but once, while o'er the grave,
+ In which our Love lies cold and dead,
+I count each flattering hope he gave
+ Of joys now lost and charms now fled.
+
+Who could have thought the smile he wore
+ When first we met would fade away?
+Or that a chill would e'er come o'er
+ Those eyes so bright thro' many a day?
+ Hear me but once, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN LOVE WAS A CHILD
+
+(SWEDISH AIR.)
+
+
+When Love was a child, and went idling round,
+ 'Mong flowers the whole summer's day,
+One morn in the valley a bower he found,
+ So sweet, it allured him to stay.
+
+O'erhead, from the trees, hung a garland fair,
+ A fountain ran darkly beneath;--
+'Twas Pleasure had hung up the flowerets there;
+ Love knew it, and jumped at the wreath.
+
+But Love didn't know--and, at _his_ weak years,
+ What urchin was likely to know?--
+That Sorrow had made of her own salt tears
+ The fountain that murmured below.
+
+He caught at the wreath--but with too much haste,
+ As boys when impatient will do--
+It fell in those waters of briny taste,
+ And the flowers were all wet through.
+
+This garland he now wears night and day;
+ And, tho' it all sunny appears
+With Pleasure's own light, each leaf, they say,
+ Still tastes of the Fountain of Tears.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SAY, WHAT SHALL BE OUR SPORT TO-DAY?
+
+(SICILIAN AIR.)
+
+
+Say, what shall be our sport today?
+ There's nothing on earth, in sea, or air,
+Too bright, too high, too wild, too gay
+ For spirits like mine to dare!
+'Tis like the returning bloom
+ Of those days, alas, gone by,
+When I loved, each hour--I scarce knew whom--
+ And was blest--I scarce knew why.
+
+Ay--those were days when life had wings,
+ And flew, oh, flew so wild a height
+That, like the lark which sunward springs,
+ 'Twas giddy with too much light.
+And, tho' of some plumes bereft,
+ With that sun, too, nearly set,
+I've enough of light and wing still left
+ For a few gay soarings yet.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BRIGHT BE THY DREAMS.
+
+(WELSH AIR.)
+
+
+Bright be thy dreams--may all thy weeping
+Turn into smiles while thou art sleeping.
+ May those by death or seas removed,
+The friends, who in thy springtime knew thee,
+ All thou hast ever prized or loved,
+In dreams come smiling to thee!
+
+There may the child, whose love lay deepest,
+Dearest of all, come while thou sleepest;
+ Still as she was--no charm forgot--
+No lustre lost that life had given;
+ Or, if changed, but changed to what
+Thou'lt find her yet in Heaven!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+GO, THEN--'TIS VAIN.
+
+(SICILIAN AIR.)
+
+
+Go, then--'tis vain to hover
+ Thus round a hope that's dead;
+At length my dream is over;
+ 'Twas sweet--'twas false--'tis fled!
+Farewell! since naught it moves thee,
+ Such truth as mine to see--
+Some one, who far less loves thee,
+ Perhaps more blest will be.
+
+Farewell, sweet eyes, whose brightness
+ New life around me shed;
+Farewell, false heart, whose lightness
+ Now leaves me death instead.
+Go, now, those charms surrender
+ To some new lover's sigh--
+One who, tho' far less tender,
+ May be more blest than I.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE CRYSTAL-HUNTERS.
+
+(SWISS AIR.)
+
+
+ O'er mountains bright
+ With snow and light,
+ We Crystal-Hunters speed along;
+ While rocks and caves,
+ And icy wares,
+ Each instant echo to our song;
+And, when we meet with store of gems,
+We grudge not kings their diadems.
+ O'er mountains bright
+ With snow and light,
+We Crystal-Hunters speed along;
+ While grots and caves,
+ And icy waves,
+Each instant echo to our song.
+
+Not half so oft the lover dreams
+ Of sparkles from his lady's eyes,
+As we of those refreshing gleams
+ That tell where deep the crystal lies;
+Tho', next to crystal, we too grant,
+That ladies' eyes may most enchant.
+ O'er mountains bright, etc.
+
+Sometimes, when on the Alpine rose
+ The golden sunset leaves its ray,
+So like a gem the floweret glows,
+ We hither bend our headlong way;
+And, tho' we find no treasure there,
+We bless the rose that shines so fair.
+ O'er mountains bright
+ With snow and light,
+We Crystal-Hunters speed along;
+ While rocks and caves,
+ And icy waves,
+Each instant echo to our song,
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ROW GENTLY HERE.
+
+(VENETIAN AIR.)
+
+
+ Row gently here,
+ My gondolier,
+ So softly wake the tide,
+ That not an ear.
+ On earth, may hear,
+ But hers to whom we glide.
+Had Heaven but tongues to speak, as well
+ As starry eyes to see,
+Oh, think what tales 'twould have to tell
+ Of wandering youths like me!
+
+ Now rest thee here.
+ My gondolier;
+ Hush, hush, for up I go,
+ To climb yon light
+ Balcony's height,
+ While thou keep'st watch below.
+Ah! did we take for Heaven above
+ But half such pains as we
+Take, day and night, for woman's love,
+ What' Angels we should be.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH, DAYS OF YOUTH.
+
+(FRENCH AIR.)
+
+
+Oh, days of youth and joy, long clouded,
+ Why thus for ever haunt my view?
+When in the grave your light lay shrouded,
+ Why did not Memory die there too?
+Vainly doth hope her strain now sing me,
+ Telling of joys that yet remain--
+No, never more can this life bring me
+ One joy that equals youth's sweet pain.
+
+Dim lies the way to death before me,
+ Cold winds of Time blow round my brow;
+Sunshine of youth! that once fell o'er me,
+ Where is your warmth, your glory now?
+_'Tis_ not that then no pain could sting me;
+ 'Tis not that now no joys remain;
+Oh, 'tis that life no more can bring me
+ One joy so sweet as that worst pain.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN FIRST THAT SMILE.
+
+(VENETIAN AIR.)
+
+
+When first that smile, like sunshine, blest my sight,
+ Oh what a vision then came o'er me!
+Long years of love, of calm and pure delight,
+ Seemed in that smile to pass before me.
+Ne'er did the peasant dream of summer skies,
+ Of golden fruit and harvests springing,
+With fonder hope than I of those sweet eyes,
+ And of the joy their light was bringing.
+
+Where now are all those fondly-promised hours?
+ Ah! woman's faith is like her brightness--
+Fading as fast as rainbows or day-flowers,
+ Or aught that's known for grace and lightness.
+Short as the Persian's prayer, at close of day,
+ Should be each vow of Love's repeating;
+Quick let him worship Beauty's precious ray--
+ Even while he kneels, that ray is fleeting!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PEACE TO THE SLUMBERERS!
+
+(CATALONIAN AIR.)
+
+
+Peace to the slumberers!
+ They lie on the battle-plain.
+With no shroud to cover them;
+ The dew and the summer rain
+Are all that weep over them.
+ Peace to the slumberers!
+
+Vain was their bravery!--
+ The fallen oak lies where it lay,
+Across the wintry river;
+ But brave hearts, once swept away,
+Are gone, alas! forever.
+ Vain was their bravery!
+
+Woe to the conqueror!
+ Our limbs shall lie as cold as theirs
+Of whom his sword bereft us.
+ Ere we forget the deep arrears
+Of vengeance they have left us!
+ Woe to the conqueror!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN THOU SHALT WANDER.
+
+(SICILIAN AIR.)
+
+
+When thou shalt wander by that sweet light
+ We used to gaze on so many an eve,
+When love was new and hope was bright,
+ Ere I could doubt or thou deceive--
+Oh, then, remembering how swift went by
+Those hours of transport, even _thou_ may'st sigh.
+
+Yes, proud one! even thy heart may own
+ That love like ours was far too sweet
+To be, like summer garments thrown
+ Aside, when past the summer's heat;
+And wish in vain to know again
+Such days, such nights, as blest thee then.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHO'LL BUY MY LOVE-KNOTS?
+
+(PORTUGUESE AIR.)
+
+
+Hymen, late, his love-knots selling,
+Called at many a maiden's dwelling:
+None could doubt, who saw or knew them,
+Hymen's call was welcome to them.
+ "Who'll buy my love-knots?
+ "Who'll buy my love-knots?"
+Soon as that sweet cry resounded
+How his baskets were surrounded!
+
+Maids, who now first dreamt of trying
+These gay knots of Hymen's tying;
+Dames, who long had sat to watch him
+Passing by, but ne'er could catch him;--
+ "Who'll buy my love-knots?
+ "Who'll buy my love-knots?"--
+All at that sweet cry assembled;
+Some laughed, some blushed, and some trembled.
+
+"Here are knots," said Hymen, taking
+Some loose flowers, "of Love's own making;
+"Here are gold ones--you may trust 'em"--
+(These, of course, found ready custom).
+ "Come, buy my love-knots!
+ "Come, buy my love-knots!
+"Some are labelled 'Knots to tie men--
+"Love the maker--Bought of Hymen.'"
+
+Scarce their bargains were completed,
+When the nymphs all cried, "We're cheated!
+"See these flowers--they're drooping sadly;
+"This gold-knot, too, ties but badly--
+ "Who'd buy such love-knots?
+ "Who'd buy such love-knots?
+"Even this tie, with Love's name round it--
+"All a sham--He never bound it."
+
+Love, who saw the whole proceeding,
+Would have laughed, but for good breeding;
+While Old Hymen, who was used to
+Cries like that these dames gave loose to--
+ "Take back our love-knots!
+ "Take back our love-knots!"
+Coolly said, "There's no returning
+"Wares on Hymen's hands--Good morning!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SEE, THE DAWN FROM HEAVEN.
+
+(TO AN AIR SUNG AT ROME, ON CHRISTMAS EVE.)
+
+
+See, the dawn from Heaven is breaking
+ O'er our sight,
+And Earth from sin awaking,
+ Hails the light!
+See those groups of angels, winging
+ From the realms above,
+On their brows, from Eden, bringing
+ Wreaths of Hope and Love.
+
+Hark, their hymns of glory pealing
+ Thro' the air,
+To mortal ears revealing
+ Who lies there!
+In that dwelling, dark and lowly,
+ Sleeps the Heavenly Son,
+He, whose home's above,--the Holy,
+ Ever Holy One!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NETS AND CAGES.[1]
+
+(SWEDISH AIR.)
+
+
+Come, listen to my story, while
+ Your needle task you ply:
+At what I sing some maids will smile,
+ While some, perhaps, may sigh.
+Though Love's the theme, and Wisdom blames
+ Such florid songs as ours,
+
+Yet Truth sometimes, like eastern dames,
+ Can speak her thoughts by flowers.
+ Then listen, maids, come listen, while
+ Your needle's task you ply;
+ At what I sing there's some may smile,
+ While some, perhaps, will sigh.
+
+Young Cloe, bent on catching Loves,
+ Such nets had learned to frame,
+That none, in all our vales and groves,
+ E'er caught so much small game:
+But gentle Sue, less given to roam,
+ While Cloe's nets were taking
+Such lots of Loves, sat still at home,
+ One little Love-cage making.
+ Come, listen, maids, etc.
+
+Much Cloe laughed at Susan's task;
+ But mark how things went on:
+These light-caught Loves, ere you could ask
+ Their name and age, were gone!
+So weak poor Cloe's nets were wove,
+ That, tho' she charm'd into them
+New game each hour, the youngest Love
+ Was able to break thro' them.
+ Come, listen, maids, etc.
+
+Meanwhile, young Sue, whose cage was wrought
+ Of bars too strong to sever,
+One Love with golden pinions caught.
+ And caged him there for ever;
+Instructing, thereby, all coquettes,
+ Whate'er their looks or ages,
+That, tho 'tis pleasant weaving Nets,
+ 'Tis wiser to make Cages.
+
+Thus, maidens, thus do I beguile
+ The task your fingers ply.--
+May all who hear like Susan smile,
+ And not, like Cloe, sigh!
+
+
+[1] Suggested by the following remark of Swift's;--"The reason why so few
+marriages are happy, is, because young ladies spend their time in making
+nets, not in making cages."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN THROUGH THE PIAZZETTA.
+
+(VENETIAN AIR.)
+
+
+When thro' the Piazzetta
+ Night breathes her cool air,
+Then, dearest Ninetta,
+ I'll come to thee there.
+Beneath thy mask shrouded,
+ I'll know thee afar,
+As Love knows tho' clouded
+ His own Evening Star.
+
+In garb, then, resembling
+ Some gay gondolier,
+I'll whisper thee, trembling,
+ "Our bark, love, is near:
+"Now, now, while there hover
+ "Those clouds o'er the moon,
+"'Twill waft thee safe over
+ "Yon silent Lagoon."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+GO, NOW, AND DREAM.
+
+(SICILIAN AIR.)
+
+
+Go, now, and dream o'er that joy in thy slumber--
+Moments so sweet again ne'er shalt thou number.
+Of Pain's bitter draught the flavor ne'er flies,
+While Pleasure's scarce touches the lip ere it dies.
+ Go, then, and dream, etc.
+
+That moon, which hung o'er your parting, so splendid,
+Often will shine again, bright as she then did--
+But, never more will the beam she saw burn
+In those happy eyes, at your meeting, return.
+ Go, then, and dream, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TAKE HENCE THE BOWL.
+
+(NEAPOLITAN AIR.)
+
+
+Take hence the bowl;--tho' beaming
+ Brightly as bowl e'er shone,
+Oh, it but sets me dreaming
+ Of happy days now gone.
+There, in its clear reflection,
+ As in a wizard's glass,
+Lost hopes and dead affection,
+ Like shades, before me pass.
+
+Each cup I drain brings hither
+ Some scene of bliss gone by;--
+Bright lips too bright to wither,
+ Warm hearts too warm to die.
+Till, as the dream comes o'er me
+ Of those long vanished years,
+Alas, the wine before me
+ Seems turning all to tears!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FAREWELL, THERESA!
+
+(VENETIAN AIR.)
+
+
+Farewell, Theresa! yon cloud that over
+ Heaven's pale night-star gathering we see,
+Will scarce from that pure orb have past ere thy lover
+Swift o'er the wide wave shall wander from thee.
+
+Long, like that dim cloud, I've hung around thee,
+ Darkening thy prospects, saddening thy brow;
+With gay heart, Theresa, and bright cheek I found thee;
+ Oh, think how changed, love, how changed art thou now!
+
+But here I free thee: like one awaking
+ From fearful slumber, thou break'st the spell;
+'Tis over--the moon, too, her bondage is breaking--
+Past are the dark clouds; Theresa, farewell!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HOW OFT, WHEN WATCHING STARS.
+
+(SAVOYARD AIR.)
+
+
+Oft, when the watching stars grow pale,
+ And round me sleeps the moonlight scene,
+To hear a flute through yonder vale
+ I from my casement lean.
+"Come, come, my love!" each note then seems to say,
+"Oh, come, my love! the night wears fast away!"
+ Never to mortal ear
+ Could words, tho' warm they be,
+ Speak Passion's language half so clear
+ As do those notes to me!
+
+Then quick my own light lute I seek,
+ And strike the chords with loudest swell;
+And, tho' they naught to others speak,
+ _He_ knows their language well.
+"I come, my love!" each note then seems to say,
+"I come, my love!--thine, thine till break of day."
+ Oh, weak the power of words,
+ The hues of painting dim
+ Compared to what those simple chords
+ Then say and paint to him!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN THE FIRST SUMMER BEE.
+
+(GERMAN AIR.)
+
+
+ When the first summer bee
+ O'er the young rose shall hover,
+ Then, like that gay rover,
+ I'll come to thee.
+He to flowers, I to lips, full of sweets to the brim--
+What a meeting, what a meeting for me and for him!
+ When the first summer bee, etc.
+
+ Then, to every bright tree
+ In the garden he'll wander;
+ While I, oh, much fonder,
+ Will stay with thee.
+In search of new sweetness thro' thousands he'll run,
+While I find the sweetness of thousands in one.
+ Then, to every bright tree, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THO' 'TIS ALL BUT A DREAM.
+
+(FRENCH AIR.)
+
+
+Tho' 'tis all but a dream at the best,
+ And still, when happiest, soonest o'er,
+Yet, even in a dream, to be blest
+ Is so sweet, that I ask for no more.
+ The bosom that opes
+ With earliest hopes,
+ The soonest finds those hopes untrue:
+ As flowers that first
+ In spring-time burst
+ The earliest wither too!
+ Ay--'tis all but a dream, etc.
+
+Tho' by friendship we oft are deceived,
+ And find love's sunshine soon o'ercast,
+Yet friendship will still be believed.
+ And love trusted on to the last.
+ The web 'mong the leaves
+ The spider weaves
+Is like the charm Hope hangs o'er men;
+ Tho' often she sees
+ 'Tis broke by the breeze,
+She spins the bright tissue again.
+ Ay--'tis all but a dream, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN THE WINE-CUP IS SMILING.
+
+(ITALIAN AIR.)
+
+
+When the wine-cup is smiling before us,
+ And we pledge round to hearts that are true, boy, true,
+Then the sky of this life opens o'er us,
+ And Heaven gives a glimpse of its blue.
+Talk of Adam in Eden reclining,
+ We are better, far better off thus, boy, thus;
+For _him_ but _two_ bright eyes were shining--
+ See, what numbers are sparkling for us!
+
+When on _one_ side the grape-juice is dancing,
+ While on t'other a blue eye beams, boy, beams,
+'Tis enough, 'twixt the wine and the glancing,
+ To disturb even a saint from his dreams.
+Yet, tho' life like a river is flowing,
+ I care not how fast it goes on, boy, on,
+So the grape on its bank is still growing,
+ And Love lights the waves as they run.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHERE SHALL WE BURY OUR SHAME?
+
+(NEAPOLITAN AIR.)
+
+
+Where shall we bury our shame?
+ Where, in what desolate place,
+Hide the last wreck of a name
+ Broken and stained by disgrace?
+Death may dissever the chain,
+ Oppression will cease when we're gone;
+But the dishonor, the stain,
+ Die as we may, will live on.
+
+Was it for this we sent out
+ Liberty's cry from our shore?
+Was it for this that her shout
+ Thrilled to the world's very core?
+Thus to live cowards and slaves!--
+ Oh, ye free hearts that lie dead,
+Do you not, even in your graves,
+ Shudder, as o'er you we tread?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NE'ER TALK OF WISDOM'S GLOOMY SCHOOLS.
+
+(MAHRATTA AIR.)
+
+
+Ne'er talk of Wisdom's gloomy schools;
+ Give me the sage who's able
+To draw his moral thoughts and rules
+ From the study of the table;--
+Who learns how lightly, fleetly pass
+ This world and all that's in it.
+From the bumper that but crowns his glass,
+ And is gone again next minute!
+
+The diamond sleeps within the mine,
+ The pearl beneath the water;
+While Truth, more precious, dwells in wine.
+ The grape's own rosy daughter.
+And none can prize her charms like him,
+ Oh, none like him obtain her,
+Who thus can, like Leander, swim
+ Thro' sparkling floods to gain her!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HERE SLEEPS THE BARD.
+
+(HIGHLAND AIR.)
+
+
+Here sleeps the Bard who knew so well
+All the sweet windings of Apollo's shell;
+Whether its music rolled like torrents near.
+Or died, like distant streamlets, on the ear.
+Sleep, sleep, mute bard; alike unheeded now
+The storm and zephyr sweep thy lifeless brow;--
+That storm, whose rush is like thy martial lay;
+That breeze which, like thy love-song, dies away!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DO NOT SAY THAT LIFE IS WANING.
+
+
+Do not say that life is waning,
+ Or that hope's sweet day is set;
+While I've thee and love remaining,
+ Life is in the horizon yet.
+
+Do not think those charms are flying,
+ Tho' thy roses fade and fall;
+Beauty hath a grace undying,
+ Which in thee survives them all.
+
+Not for charms, the newest, brightest,
+ That on other cheeks may shine,
+Would I change the least, the slightest.
+ That is lingering now o'er thine.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GAZELLE.
+
+
+Dost thou not hear the silver bell,
+ Thro' yonder lime-trees ringing?
+'Tis my lady's light gazelle;
+ To me her love thoughts bringing,--
+All the while that silver bell
+ Around his dark neck ringing.
+
+See, in his mouth he bears a wreath,
+ My love hath kist in tying;
+Oh, what tender thoughts beneath
+ Those silent flowers are lying,--
+Hid within the mystic wreath,
+ My love hath kist in trying!
+
+Welcome, dear gazelle, to thee,
+ And joy to her, the fairest.
+Who thus hath breathed her soul to me.
+ In every leaf thou bearest;
+Welcome, dear gazelle, to thee,
+ And joy to her the fairest!
+
+Hail ye living, speaking flowers,
+ That breathe of her who bound ye;
+Oh, 'twas not in fields, or bowers;
+ 'Twas on her lips, she found ye;--
+Yes, ye blushing, speaking flowers,
+ 'Twas on her lips she found ye.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NO--LEAVE MY HEART TO REST.
+
+
+No--leave my heart to rest, if rest it may,
+When youth, and love, and hope, have past away.
+Couldst thou, when summer hours are fled,
+To some poor leaf that's fallen and dead,
+Bring back the hue it wore, the scent it shed?
+No--leave this heart to rest, if rest it may,
+When youth, and love, and hope, have past away.
+
+Oh, had I met thee then, when life was bright,
+Thy smile might still have fed its tranquil light;
+But now thou comest like sunny skies,
+Too late to cheer the seaman's eyes,
+When wrecked and lost his bark before him lies!
+No--leave this heart to rest, if rest it may,
+Since youth, and love, and hope have past away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHERE ARE THE VISIONS.
+
+
+"Where are the visions that round me once hovered,
+ "Forms that shed grace from their shadows alone;
+"Looks fresh as light from a star just discovered,
+ "And voices that Music might take for her own?"
+Time, while I spoke, with his wings resting o'er me,
+ Heard me say, "Where are those visions, oh where?"
+And pointing his wand to the sunset before me,
+ Said, with a voice like the hollow wind, "There."
+
+Fondly I looked, when the wizard had spoken,
+ And there, mid the dim-shining ruins of day,
+Saw, by their light, like a talisman broken,
+ The last golden fragments of hope melt away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WIND THY HORN, MY HUNTER BOY.
+
+
+Wind thy horn, my hunter boy,
+ And leave thy lute's inglorious sighs;
+Hunting is the hero's joy,
+ Till war his nobler game supplies.
+Hark! the hound-bells ringing sweet,
+While hunters shout and the, woods repeat,
+ Hilli-ho! Hilli-ho!
+
+Wind again thy cheerful horn,
+ Till echo, faint with answering, dies:
+Burn, bright torches, burn till morn,
+ And lead us where the wild boar lies.
+Hark! the cry, "He's found, he's found,"
+While hill and valley our shouts resound.
+ Hilli-ho! Hilli-ho!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH, GUARD OUR AFFECTION.
+
+
+Oh, guard our affection, nor e'er let it feel
+The blight that this world o'er the warmest will steal:
+While the faith of all round us is fading or past,
+Let ours, ever green, keep its bloom to the last.
+
+Far safer for Love 'tis to wake and to weep,
+As he used in his prime, than go smiling to sleep;
+For death on his slumber, cold death follows fast,
+White the love that is wakeful lives on to the last.
+
+And tho', as Time gathers his clouds o'er our head,
+A shade somewhat darker o'er life they may spread,
+Transparent, at least, be the shadow they cast,
+So that Love's softened light may shine thro' to the last.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SLUMBER, OH SLUMBER.
+
+
+"Slumber, oh slumber; if sleeping thou mak'st
+"My heart beat so wildly, I'm lost if thou wak'st."
+ Thus sung I to a maiden,
+ Who slept one summer's day,
+ And, like a flower overladen
+ With too much sunshine, lay.
+ Slumber, oh slumber, etc.
+
+"Breathe not, oh breathe not, ye winds, o'er her cheeks;
+"If mute thus she charm me, I'm lost when she speaks."
+ Thus sing I, while, awaking,
+ She murmurs words that seem
+ As if her lips were taking
+ Farewell of some sweet dream.
+ Breathe not, oh breathe not, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BRING THE BRIGHT GARLANDS HITHER.
+
+
+Bring the bright garlands hither,
+ Ere yet a leaf is dying;
+If so soon they must wither.
+ Ours be their last sweet sighing.
+Hark, that low dismal chime!
+'Tis the dreary voice of Time.
+Oh, bring beauty, bring roses,
+ Bring all that yet is ours;
+Let life's day, as it closes,
+ Shine to the last thro' flowers.
+
+Haste, ere the bowl's declining,
+ Drink of it now or never;
+Now, while Beauty is shining,
+ Love, or she's lost for ever.
+Hark! again that dull chime,
+'Tis the dreary voice of Time.
+Oh, if life be a torrent,
+ Down to oblivion going,
+Like this cup be its current,
+ Bright to the last drop flowing!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IF IN LOVING, SINGING.
+
+
+If in loving, singing, night and day
+We could trifle merrily life away,
+Like atoms dancing in the beam,
+Like day-flies skimming o'er the stream,
+Or summer blossoms, born to sigh
+Their sweetness out, and die--
+How brilliant, thoughtless, side by side,
+Thou and I could make our minutes glide!
+No atoms ever glanced so bright,
+No day-flies ever danced so light,
+Nor summer blossoms mixt their sigh,
+So close, as thou and I!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THOU LOVEST NO MORE.
+
+
+Too plain, alas, my doom is spoken
+ Nor canst thou veil the sad truth o'er;
+Thy heart is changed, thy vow is broken,
+ Thou lovest no more--thou lovest no more.
+
+Tho' kindly still those eyes behold me,
+ The smile is gone, which once they wore;
+Tho' fondly still those arms enfold me,
+ 'Tis not the same--thou lovest no more.
+
+Too long my dream of bliss believing,
+ I've thought thee all thou wert before;
+But now--alas! there's no deceiving,
+ 'Tis all too plain, thou lovest no more.
+
+Oh, thou as soon the dead couldst waken,
+ As lost affection's life restore,
+Give peace to her that is forsaken,
+ Or bring back him who loves no more.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN ABROAD IN THE WORLD.
+
+
+When abroad in the world thou appearest.
+ And the young and the lovely are there,
+To my heart while of all thou'rt the dearest.
+ To my eyes thou'rt of all the most fair.
+ They pass, one by one,
+ Like waves of the sea,
+ That say to the Sun,
+ "See, how fair we can be."
+ But where's the light like thine,
+ In sun or shade to shine?
+No--no, 'mong them all, there is nothing like thee,
+ Nothing like thee.
+
+Oft, of old, without farewell or warning,
+ Beauty's self used to steal from the skies;
+Fling a mist round her head, some fine morning,
+ And post down to earth in disguise;
+ But, no matter what shroud
+ Around her might be,
+ Men peeped through the cloud,
+ And whispered, "'Tis She."
+ So thou, where thousands are,
+ Shinest forth the only star,--
+Yes, yes, 'mong them all, there is nothing like thee,
+ Nothing like thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+KEEP THOSE EYES STILL PURELY MINE.
+
+
+Keep those eyes still purely mine,
+ Tho' far off I be:
+When on others most they shine,
+ Then think they're turned on me.
+
+Should those lips as now respond
+ To sweet minstrelsy,
+When their accents seem most fond,
+ Then think they're breathed for me.
+
+Make what hearts thou wilt thy own,
+ If when all on thee
+Fix their charmed thoughts alone,
+ Thou think'st the while on me.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HOPE COMES AGAIN.
+
+
+Hope comes again, to this heart long a stranger,
+ Once more she sings me her flattering strain;
+But hush, gentle syren--for, ah, there's less danger
+ In still suffering on, than in hoping again.
+
+Long, long, in sorrow, too deep for repining,
+ Gloomy, but tranquil, this bosom hath lain:
+And joy coming now, like a sudden light shining
+ O'er eyelids long darkened, would bring me but pain.
+
+Fly then, ye visions, that Hope would shed o'er me;
+ Lost to the future, my sole chance of rest
+Now lies not in dreaming of bliss that's before me.
+ But, ah--in forgetting how once I was blest.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+O SAY, THOU BEST AND BRIGHTEST.
+
+
+O say, thou best and brightest,
+ My first love and my last.
+When he, whom now thou slightest,
+ From life's dark scene hath past,
+Will kinder thoughts then move thee?
+ Will pity wake one thrill
+For him who lived to love thee,
+ And dying loved thee still?
+
+If when, that hour recalling
+ From which he dates his woes,
+Thou feel'st a tear-drop falling,
+ Ah, blush not while it flows;
+But, all the past forgiving,
+ Bend gently o'er his shrine,
+And say, "This heart, when living,
+ "With all its faults, was mine."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN NIGHT BRINGS THE HOUR.
+
+
+When night brings the hour
+ Of starlight and joy,
+There comes to my bower
+ A fairy-winged boy;
+With eyes so bright,
+ So full of wild arts,
+Like nets of light,
+ To tangle young hearts;
+With lips, in whose keeping
+ Love's secret may dwell,
+Like Zephyr asleep in
+ Some rosy sea-shell.
+Guess who he is,
+ Name but his name,
+And his best kiss
+ For reward you may claim.
+
+Where'er o'er the ground
+ He prints his light feet.
+The flowers there are found
+ Most shining and sweet:
+His looks, as soft
+ As lightning in May,
+Tho' dangerous oft,
+ Ne'er wound but in play:
+And oh, when his wings
+ Have brushed o'er my lyre,
+You'd fancy its strings
+ Were turning to fire.
+Guess who he is,
+ Name but his name,
+And his best kiss
+ For reward you may claim.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LIKE ONE WHO, DOOMED.
+
+
+Like one who, doomed o'er distant seas
+ His weary path to measure,
+When home at length, with favoring breeze,
+ He brings the far-sought treasure;
+
+His ship, in sight of shore, goes down,
+ That shore to which he hasted;
+And all the wealth he thought his own
+ Is o'er the waters wasted!
+
+Like him, this heart, thro' many a track
+ Of toil and sorrow straying,
+One hope alone brought fondly back,
+ Its toil and grief repaying.
+
+Like him, alas, I see that ray
+ Of hope before me perish,
+And one dark minute sweep away
+ What years were given to cherish.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FEAR NOT THAT, WHILE AROUND THEE.
+
+
+Fear not that, while around thee
+ Life's varied blessings pour,
+One sigh of hers shall wound thee,
+ Whose smile thou seek'st no more.
+No, dead and cold for ever
+ Let our past love remain;
+Once gone, its spirit never
+ Shall haunt thy rest again.
+
+May the new ties that bind thee
+ Far sweeter, happier prove,
+Nor e'er of me remind thee,
+ But by their truth and love.
+Think how, asleep or waking,
+ Thy image haunts me yet;
+But, how this heart is breaking
+ For thy own peace forget.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN LOVE IS KIND.
+
+
+When Love is kind,
+ Cheerful and free,
+Love's sure to find
+ Welcome from me.
+
+But when Love brings
+ Heartache or pang,
+Tears, and such things--
+ Love may go hang!
+
+If Love can sigh
+ For one alone,
+Well pleased am I
+ To be that one,
+
+But should I see
+ Love given to rove
+To two or three,
+ Then--good by Love!
+
+Love must, in short,
+ Keep fond and true,
+Thro' good report,
+ And evil too.
+
+Else, here I swear,
+ Young Love may go.
+For aught I care--
+ To Jericho.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GARLAND I SEND THEE.
+
+
+The Garland I send thee was culled from those bowers
+Where thou and I wandered in long vanished hours;
+Not a leaf or a blossom its bloom here displays,
+But bears some remembrance of those happy days.
+
+The roses were gathered by that garden gate,
+Where our meetings, tho' early, seemed always too late;
+Where lingering full oft thro' a summer-night's moon,
+Our partings, tho' late, appeared always too soon.
+
+The rest were all culled from the banks of that glade,
+Where, watching the sunset, so often we've strayed,
+And mourned, as the time went, that Love had no power
+To bind in his chain even one happy hour.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HOW SHALL I WOO?
+
+
+If I speak to thee in friendship's name,
+ Thou think'st I speak too coldly;
+If I mention Love's devoted flame,
+ Thou say'st I speak too boldly.
+Between these two unequal fires,
+ Why doom me thus to hover?
+I'm a friend, if such thy heart requires,
+ If more thou seek'st, a lover.
+Which shall it be? How shall I woo?
+ Fair one, choose between the two.
+
+Tho' the wings of Love will brightly play,
+ When first he comes to woo thee,
+There's a chance that he may fly away,
+ As fast as he flies _to_ thee.
+While Friendship, tho' on foot she come,
+ No flights of fancy trying,
+Will, therefore, oft be found at home,
+ When Love abroad is flying.
+Which shall it be? How shall I woo?
+ Dear one, choose between the two.
+
+If neither feeling suits thy heart
+ Let's see, to please thee, whether
+We may not learn some precious art
+ To mix their charms together;
+One feeling, still more sweet, to form
+ From two so sweet already--
+A friendship that like love is warm,
+ A love like friendship steady.
+Thus let it be, thus let me woo,
+ Dearest, thus we'll join the two.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SPRING AND AUTUMN.
+
+
+Every season hath its pleasures;
+ Spring may boast her flowery prime,
+Yet the vineyard's ruby treasures
+ Brighten Autumn's soberer time.
+So Life's year begins and closes;
+ Days tho' shortening still can shine;
+What tho' youth gave love and roses,
+ Age still leaves us friends and wine.
+
+Phillis, when she might have caught me,
+ All the Spring looked coy and shy,
+Yet herself in Autumn sought me,
+ When the flowers were all gone by.
+Ah, too late;--she found her lover
+ Calm and free beneath his vine,
+Drinking to the Spring-time over,
+ In his best autumnal wine.
+
+Thus may we, as years are flying,
+ To their flight our pleasures suit,
+Nor regret the blossoms dying,
+ While we still may taste the fruit,
+Oh, while days like this are ours,
+ Where's the lip that dares repine?
+Spring may take our loves and flowers,
+ So Autumn leaves us friends and wine.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE ALONE.
+
+
+If thou wouldst have thy charms enchant our eyes,
+First win our hearts, for there thy empire lies:
+Beauty in vain would mount a heartless throne,
+Her Right Divine is given by Love alone.
+
+What would the rose with all her pride be worth,
+Were there no sun to call her brightness forth?
+Maidens, unloved, like flowers in darkness thrown,
+Wait but that light which comes from Love alone.
+
+Fair as thy charms in yonder glass appear,
+Trust not their bloom, they'll fade from year to year:
+Wouldst thou they still should shine as first they shone,
+Go, fix thy mirror in Love's eyes alone.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SACRED SONGS
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+EDWARD TUITE DALTON, ESQ.
+
+THE FIRST NUMBER
+
+OF
+
+SACRED SONGS
+
+IS INSCRIBED,
+
+BY HIS SINCERE AND AFFECTIONATE FRIEND,
+
+THOMAS MOORE.
+
+_Mayfield Cottage, Ashbourne_,
+ _May, 1816_
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SACRED SONGS
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THOU ART, O GOD.
+
+(Air.--Unknown.)[1]
+
+
+ "The day is thine, the night is also thine: thou hast prepared the
+ light and the sun.
+
+ "Thou hast set all the borders of the earth: thou hast made summer and
+ winter."
+ --_Psalm_ lxxiv. 16, 17.
+
+
+Thou art, O God, the life and light
+ Of all this wondrous world we see;
+Its glow by day, its smile by night,
+ Are but reflections caught from Thee.
+Where'er we turn, thy glories shine,
+ And all things fair and bright are Thine!
+
+When Day, with farewell beam, delays
+ Among the opening clouds of Even,
+And we can almost think we gaze
+ Thro' golden vistas into Heaven--
+Those hues, that make the Sun's decline
+So soft, so radiant, LORD! are Thine.
+
+When Night, with wings of starry gloom,
+ O'ershadows all the earth and skies,
+Like some dark, beauteous bird, whose plume
+ Is sparkling with unnumbered eyes--
+That sacred gloom, those fires divine,
+So grand, so countless, LORD! are Thine.
+
+When youthful Spring around us breathes,
+ Thy Spirit warms her fragrant sigh;
+And every flower the Summer wreaths
+ Is born beneath that kindling eye.
+Where'er we turn, thy glories shine,
+And all things fair and bright are Thine.
+
+
+[1] I have heard that this air is by the late Mrs. Sheridan. It is sung to
+the beautiful old words, "I do confess thou'rt smooth and fair."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BIRD, LET LOOSE.
+
+(AIR.--BEETHOVEN.)
+
+
+The bird, let loose in eastern skies,[1]
+ When hastening fondly home,
+Ne'er stoops to earth her wing, nor flies
+ Where idle warblers roam.
+But high she shoots thro' air and light,
+ Above all low delay,
+Where nothing earthly bounds her flight,
+ Nor shadow dims her way.
+
+So grant me, GOD, from every care
+ And stain of passion free,
+Aloft, thro' Virtue's purer air,
+ To hold my course to Thee!
+No sin to cloud, no lure to stay
+ My Soul, as home she springs;--
+
+Thy Sunshine on her joyful way,
+ Thy Freedom in her wings!
+
+
+[1] The carrier-pigeon, it is well known, flies at an elevated pitch, in
+order to surmount every obstacle between her and the place to which she is
+destined.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FALLEN IS THY THRONE.
+
+(AIR.--MARTINI.)
+
+
+Fallen is thy Throne, oh Israel!
+ Silence is o'er thy plains;
+Thy dwellings all lie desolate,
+ Thy children weep in chains.
+Where are the dews that fed thee
+ On Etham's barren shore?
+That fire from Heaven which led thee,
+ Now lights thy path no more.
+
+LORD! thou didst love Jerusalem--
+ Once she was all thy own;
+Her love thy fairest heritage,[1]
+ Her power thy glory's throne.[2]
+Till evil came, and blighted
+ Thy long-loved olive-tree;[3]--
+And Salem's shrines were lighted
+ For other gods than Thee.
+
+Then sunk the star of Solyma--
+ Then past her glory's day,
+Like heath that, in the wilderness,[4]
+ The wild wind whirls away.
+Silent and waste her bowers,
+ Where once the mighty trod,
+And sunk those guilty towers,
+ While Baal reign'd as God.
+
+"Go"--said the LORD--"Ye Conquerors!
+ "Steep in her blood your swords,
+"And raze to earth her battlements,[5]
+ "For they are not the LORD'S.
+"Till Zion's mournful daughter
+ "O'er kindred bones shall tread,
+"And Hinnom's vale of slaughter[6]
+ "Shall hide but half her dead!"
+
+
+[1] "I have left mine heritage; I have given the clearly beloved of my
+soul into the hands of her enemies."--_Jeremiah_, xii. 7.
+
+[2] "Do not disgrace the throne of thy glory."--_Jer_. xiv. 21.
+
+[3] "The LORD called by name a green olive-tree; fair, and of goodly
+fruit," etc.--_Jer_. xi. 16.
+
+[4] "For he shall be like the heath in the desert."--_Jer_. xvii, 6.
+
+[5] "Take away her battlements; for they are not the LORD'S."--_Jer_. v.
+10.
+
+[6] "Therefore, behold, the days come, saith the LORD, that it shall no
+more be called Tophet, nor the Valley of the Son of Hinnom, but the Valley
+or Slaughter; for they shall bury in Tophet till there be no place."--
+_Jer_. vii. 32.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHO IS THE MAID?
+
+ST. JEROME'S LOVE.
+
+(AIR.--BEETHOVEN.)
+
+
+Who is the Maid my spirit seeks,
+ Thro' cold reproof and slander's blight?
+Has _she_ Love's roses on her cheeks?
+ Is _hers_ an eye of this world's light?
+No--wan and sunk with midnight prayer
+ Are the pale looks of her I love;
+Or if at times a light be there,
+ Its beam is kindled from above.
+
+I chose not her, my heart's elect,
+ From those who seek their Maker's shrine
+In gems and garlands proudly decked,
+ As if themselves were things divine.
+No--Heaven but faintly warms the breast
+ That beats beneath a broidered veil;
+And she who comes in glittering vest
+ To mourn her frailty, still is frail.
+
+Not so the faded form I prize
+ And love, because its bloom is gone;
+The glory in those sainted eyes
+ Is all the grace _her_ brow puts on.
+And ne'er was Beauty's dawn so bright,
+ So touching as that form's decay,
+Which, like the altar's trembling light,
+ In holy lustre wastes away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THIS WORLD IS ALL A FLEETING SHOW.
+
+(AIR.--STEVENSON.)
+
+
+This world is all a fleeting show,
+ For man's illusion given;
+The smiles of joy, the tears of woe,
+Deceitful shine, deceitful flow--
+ There's nothing true but Heaven!
+
+And false the light on glory's plume,
+ As fading hues of even;
+And love and hope, and beauty's bloom,
+Are blossoms gathered for the tomb--
+ There's nothing bright but Heaven!
+
+Poor wanderers of a stormy day,
+ From wave to wave we're driven,
+And fancy's flash and reason's ray
+Serve but to light the troubled way--
+ There's nothing calm but Heaven!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH THOU WHO DRY'ST THE MOURNER'S TEAR.
+
+(AIR.--HAYDN.)
+
+
+ "He healeth the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds,"
+ --_Psalm_. cxlvii. 3.
+
+
+Oh Thou who dry'st the mourner's tear,
+ How dark this world would be,
+If, when deceived and wounded here,
+ We could not fly to Thee.
+The friends who in our sunshine live,
+ When winter comes, are flown;
+And he who has but tears to give,
+ Must weep those tears alone.
+But Thou wilt heal that broken heart,
+ Which, like the plants that throw
+Their fragrance from the wounded part,
+ Breathes sweetness out of woe.
+
+When joy no longer soothes or cheers,
+ And even the hope that threw
+A moment's sparkle o'er our tears
+ Is dimmed and vanished too,
+Oh, who would bear life's stormy doom,
+ Did not thy Wing of Love
+Come, brightly wafting thro' the gloom
+ Our Peace-branch from above?
+Then sorrow, touched by Thee, grows bright
+ With more than rapture's ray;
+As darkness shows us worlds of light
+ We never saw by day!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WEEP NOT FOR THOSE.
+
+(AIR.--AVISON.)
+
+
+Weep not for those whom the veil of the tomb,
+ In life's happy morning, hath hid from our eyes,
+Ere sin threw a blight o'er the spirit's young bloom,
+ Or earth had profaned what was born for the skies.
+Death chilled the fair fountain, ere sorrow had stained it;
+ 'Twas frozen in all the pure light of its course,
+And but sleeps till the sunshine of Heaven has unchained it,
+ To water that Eden where first was its source.
+Weep not for those whom the veil of the tomb,
+ In life's happy morning, hath hid from our eyes,
+Ere sin threw a blight o'er the spirit's young bloom,
+ Or earth had profaned what was born for the skies.
+
+Mourn not for her, the young Bride of the Vale,[1]
+ Our gayest and loveliest, lost to us now,
+Ere life's early lustre had time to grow pale,
+ And the garland of Love was yet fresh on her brow.
+Oh, then was her moment, dear spirit, for flying
+ From this gloomy world, while its gloom was unknown--
+And the wild hymns she warbled so sweetly, in dying,
+ Were echoed in Heaven by lips like her own.
+Weep not for her--in her springtime she flew
+ To that land where the wings of the soul are unfurled;
+And now, like a star beyond evening's cold dew,
+ Looks radiantly down on the tears of this world.
+
+
+[1] This second verse, which I wrote long after the first, alludes to the
+fate of a very lovely and amiable girl, the daughter of the late Colonel
+Bainbrigge, who was married in Ashbourne church, October 81, 1815, and
+died of a fever in a few weeks after. The sound of her marriage-bells
+seemed scarcely out of our ears when we heard of her death. During her
+last delirium she sung several hymns, in a voice even clearer and sweeter
+than usual, and among them were some from the present collection,
+(particularly, "There's nothing bright but Heaven,") which this very
+interesting girl had often heard me sing during the summer.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TURF SHALL BE MY FRAGRANT SHRINE.
+
+(AIR.--STEVENSON.)
+
+
+The turf shall be my fragrant shrine;
+My temple, LORD! that Arch of thine;
+My censer's breath the mountain airs,
+And silent thoughts my only prayers.
+
+My choir shall be the moonlight waves,
+When murmuring homeward to their caves,
+Or when the stillness of the sea,
+Even more than music dreams of Thee!
+
+I'll seek, by day, some glade unknown,
+All light and silence, like thy Throne;
+And the pale stars shall be, at night,
+The only eyes that watch my rite.
+
+Thy Heaven, on which 'tis bliss to look,
+Shall be my pure and shining book,
+Where I shall read, in words of flame,
+The glories of thy wondrous name.
+
+I'll read thy anger in the rack
+That clouds awhile the day-beam's track;
+Thy mercy in the azure hue
+Of sunny brightness, breaking thro'.
+
+There's nothing bright, above, below,
+From flowers that bloom to stars that glow,
+But in its light my soul can see
+Some feature of thy Deity:
+
+There's nothing dark, below, above,
+But in its gloom I trace thy Love,
+And meekly wait that moment, when
+Thy touch shall turn all bright again!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SOUND THE LOUD TIMBREL.
+
+MIRIAM'S SONG.
+
+(AlR.--AVISON.)[1]
+
+
+ "And Miriam, the Prophetess, the sister of Aaron, took a timbrel in
+ her band; and all the women went out after her with timbrels and with
+ dances."
+ --_Exod_. xv. 20.
+
+
+Sound the loud Timbrel o'er Egypt's dark sea!
+JEHOVAH has triumphed--his people are free.
+Sing--for the pride of the Tyrant is broken,
+ His chariots, his horsemen, all splendid and brave--
+How vain was their boast, for the LORD hath but spoken,
+ And chariots and horsemen are sunk in the wave.
+Sound the loud Timbrel o'er Egypt's dark sea;
+JEHOVAH has triumphed--his people are free.
+
+Praise to the Conqueror, praise to the LORD!
+His word was our arrow, his breath was our sword--
+Who shall return to tell Egypt the story
+ Of those she sent forth in the hour of her pride?
+For the LORD hath looked out from his pillar of glory,[2]
+ And all her brave thousands are dashed in the tide.
+Sound the loud Timbrel o'er Egypt's dark sea,
+JEHOVAH has triumphed--his people are free!
+
+
+[1] I have so much altered the character of this air, which is from the
+beginning of one of Avison's old-fashioned concertos, that, without this
+acknowledgment, it could hardly, I think, be recognized.
+
+[2] "And it came to pass, that, in the morning watch the LORD looked unto
+the host of the Egyptians, through the pillar of fire and of the cloud,
+and troubled the host of the Egyptians."--_Exod_. xiv. 24.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+GO, LET ME WEEP.
+
+(AIR.--STEVENSON.)
+
+
+Go, let me weep--there's bliss in tears,
+When he who sheds them inly feels
+Some lingering stain of early years
+ Effaced by every drop that steals.
+The fruitless showers of worldly woe
+Fall dark to earth and never rise;
+While tears that from repentance flow,
+ In bright exhalement reach the skies.
+ Go, let me weep.
+
+Leave me to sigh o'er hours that flew
+More idly than the summer's wind,
+And, while they past, a fragrance threw,
+But left no trace of sweets behind.--
+The warmest sigh that pleasure heaves
+Is cold, is faint to those that swell
+The heart where pure repentance grieves
+ O'er hours of pleasure, loved too well.
+ Leave me to sigh.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+COME NOT, OH LORD.
+
+(AIR.--HAYDN.)
+
+
+Come not, oh LORD, in the dread robe of splendor
+ Thou worest on the Mount, in the day of thine ire;
+Come veiled in those shadows, deep, awful, but tender,
+ Which Mercy flings over thy features of fire!
+
+LORD, thou rememberest the night, when thy Nation[1]
+ Stood fronting her Foe by the red-rolling stream;
+O'er Egypt thy pillar shed dark desolation,
+ While Israel basked all the night in its beam.
+
+So, when the dread clouds of anger enfold Thee,
+ From us, in thy mercy, the dark side remove;
+While shrouded in terrors the guilty behold Thee,
+ Oh, turn upon us the mild light of thy Love!
+
+
+[1] "And it came between the camp of the Egyptians and the camp of Israel;
+and it was a cloud and darkness to them, but it gave light by night to
+these"--_Exod_. xiv. 20.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WERE NOT THE SINFUL MARY'S TEARS.
+
+(AIR.--STEVENSON.)
+
+
+Were not the sinful Mary's tears
+ An offering worthy Heaven,
+When, o'er the faults of former years,
+ She wept--and was forgiven?
+
+When, bringing every balmy sweet
+ Her day of luxury stored,
+She o'er her Saviour's hallowed feet
+ The precious odors poured;--
+And wiped them with that golden hair,
+ Where once the diamond shone;
+Tho' now those gems of grief were there
+ Which shine for GOD alone!
+
+Were not those sweets, so humbly shed--
+ That hair--those weeping eyes--
+And the sunk heart, that inly bled--
+ Heaven's noblest sacrifice?
+
+Thou that hast slept in error's sleep,
+ Oh, would'st thou wake in Heaven,
+Like Mary kneel, like Mary weep,
+ "Love much" and be forgiven![1]
+
+
+[1] "Her sins, which are many, are forgiven; for she loved much."--St.
+Luke, vii.47.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AS DOWN IN THE SUNLESS RETREATS.
+
+(AIR.--HAYDN.)
+
+
+As down in the sunless retreats of the Ocean,
+ Sweet flowers are springing no mortal can see,
+So, deep in my soul the still prayer of devotion,
+ Unheard by the world, rises silent to Thee,
+ My God! silent to Thee--
+ Pure, warm, silent, to Thee,
+
+As still to the star of its worship, tho' clouded,
+ The needle points faithfully o'er the dim sea,
+So, dark as I roam, in this wintry world shrouded,
+ The hope of my spirit turns trembling to Thee,
+ My GOD! trembling to Thee--
+ True, fond, trembling, to Thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BUT WHO SHALL SEE.
+
+(AIR.--STEVENSON.)
+
+
+But who shall see the glorious day
+ When, throned on Zion's brow,
+The LORD shall rend that veil away
+ Which hides the nations now?[1]
+When earth no more beneath the fear
+ Of this rebuke shall lie;[2]
+When pain shall cease, and every tear
+ Be wiped from every eye.[3]
+
+Then, Judah, thou no more shall mourn
+ Beneath the heathen's chain;
+Thy days of splendor shall return,
+ And all be new again.[4]
+
+The Fount of Life shall then be quaft
+ In peace, by all who come;[5]
+And every wind that blows shall waft
+ Some long-lost exile home.
+
+
+[1] "And he will destroy, in this mountain, the face of the covering cast
+over all people, and the vail that is spread over all nations."--Isaiah,
+xxv. 7.
+
+[2] "The rebuke of his people shall he take away from off all the
+earth."--Isaiah, xxv. 8.
+
+[3] "And GOD shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; neither shall
+there be any more pain."--Rev. xxi:4.
+
+[4] "And he that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I make all things
+new."--Rev. xxi. 5.
+
+[5] "And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely."--Rev.
+xxii. 17.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ALMIGHTY GOD!
+
+CHORUS OF PRIESTS.
+
+(AIR.--MOZART.)
+
+
+Almighty GOD! when round thy shrine
+The Palm-tree's heavenly branch we twine,[1]
+(Emblem of Life's eternal ray,
+And Love that "fadeth not away,")
+We bless the flowers, expanded all,[2]
+We bless the leaves that never fall,
+
+And trembling say,--"In Eden thus
+"The Tree of Life may flower for us!"
+When round thy Cherubs--smiling calm,
+Without their flames--we wreathe the Palm.
+Oh God! we feel the emblem true--
+Thy Mercy is eternal too,
+Those Cherubs, with their smiling eyes,
+That crown of Palm which never dies,
+Are but the types of Thee above--
+Eternal Life, and Peace, and Love!
+
+
+[1] "The Scriptures having declared that the Temple of Jerusalem was a
+type of the Messiah, it is natural to conclude that the Palms, which made
+so conspicuous a figure in that structure, represented that Life and
+Immortality which were brought to light by the Gospel."--"Observations on
+the Palm, as a sacred Emblem," by W. Tighe.
+
+[2] "And he carved all the walls of the house round about with carved
+figures of cherubim, and palm-trees, and _open flowers_."--1 Kings,
+VI. 29.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH FAIR! OH PUREST!
+
+SAINT AUGUSTINE TO HIS SISTER.
+
+(AIR.--MOORE)
+
+
+Oh fair! oh purest! be thou the dove
+That flies alone to some sunny grove,
+And lives unseen, and bathes her wing,
+All vestal white, in the limpid spring.
+There, if the hovering hawk be near,
+That limpid spring in its mirror clear
+Reflects him ere he reach his prey
+And warns the timorous bird away,
+ Be thou this dove;
+Fairest, purest, be thou this dove,
+
+The sacred pages of God's own book
+Shall be the spring, the eternal brook,
+In whose holy mirror, night and day,
+Thou'lt study Heaven's reflected ray;--
+And should the foes of virtue dare,
+With gloomy wing, to seek thee there,
+Thou wilt see how dark their shadows lie
+Between Heaven and thee, and trembling fly!
+ Be thou that dove;
+Fairest, purest, be thou that dove.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ANGEL OF CHARITY.
+
+(AIR.--HANDEL)
+
+
+Angel of Charity, who, from above,
+ Comest to dwell a pilgrim here,
+Thy voice is music, thy smile is love,
+ And Pity's soul is in thy tear.
+When on the shrine of God were laid
+ First-fruits of all most good and fair,
+That ever bloomed in Eden's shade,
+ Thine was the holiest offering there.
+
+Hope and her sister, Faith, were given
+ But as our guides to yonder sky;
+Soon as they reach the verge of heaven,
+ There, lost in perfect bliss, they die.
+But, long as Love, Almighty Love,
+ Shall on his throne of thrones abide,
+Thou, Charity, shalt dwell above,
+ Smiling for ever by His side!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BEHOLD THE SUN.
+
+(AIR.--LORD MORNINGTON.)
+
+
+Behold the Sun, how bright
+ From yonder East he springs,
+As if the soul of life and light
+ Were breathing from his wings.
+
+So bright the Gospel broke
+ Upon the souls of men;
+So fresh the dreaming world awoke
+ In Truth's full radiance then.
+
+Before yon Sun arose,
+ Stars clustered thro' the sky--
+But oh how dim, how pale were those,
+ To His one burning eye!
+
+So Truth lent many a ray,
+ To bless the Pagan's night--
+But, Lord, how weak, how cold were they
+ To Thy One glorious Light!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LORD, WHO SHALL BEAR THAT DAY.
+
+(AIR.--DR. BOYCE.)
+
+
+Lord, who shall bear that day, so dread, so splendid,
+ When we shall see thy Angel hovering o'er
+This sinful world with hand to heaven extended,
+ And hear him swear by Thee that time's no more?[1]
+When Earth shall feel thy fast consuming ray--
+Who, Mighty God, oh who shall bear that day?
+
+When thro' the world thy awful call hath sounded--
+ "Wake, all ye Dead, to judgment wake, ye Dead!"
+And from the clouds, by seraph eyes surrounded,
+ The Saviour shall put forth his radiant head;[2]
+While Earth and Heaven before Him pass away[3]--
+Who, Mighty God, oh who shall bear that day?
+
+
+When, with a glance, the Eternal Judge shall sever
+ Earth's evil spirits from the pure and bright,
+And say to _those_, "Depart from me for ever!"
+ To _these_, "Come, dwell with me in endless light!"[4]
+When each and all in silence take their way--
+Who, Mighty God, oh who shall bear that day?
+
+
+[1] And the angel which I saw stand upon the sea and upon the earth,
+lifted up his hand to heaven, and swear by Him that liveth for ever and
+ever...that there should be time no longer."--_Rev_. x. 5, 6.
+
+[2] "They shall see the Son of Man coming in the clouds of heaven--and all
+the angels with him."--_Matt_. xxiv. 90, and xxv. 80.
+
+[3] "From whose face the earth and the heaven fled away."--_Rev_. xx. ii.
+
+[4] "And before Him shall be gathered all nations, and He shall separate
+them one from another.
+
+"Then shall the King say unto them on his right hand, Come, ye blessed of
+my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you, etc.
+
+"Then shall He say also unto them on the left hand, Depart from me, ye
+cursed, etc.
+
+"And these shall go away into everlasting punishment; but the righteous
+into life eternal."
+
+--_Matt_ xxv. 32, _et seq_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH, TEACH ME TO LOVE THEE.
+
+(AIR.--HAYDN.)
+
+
+Oh, teach me to love Thee, to feel what thou art,
+Till, filled with the one sacred image, my heart
+ Shall all other passions disown;
+Like some pure temple that shines apart,
+ Reserved for Thy worship alone.
+
+In joy and in sorrow, thro' praise and thro' blame,
+Thus still let me, living and dying the same,
+ In _Thy_ service bloom and decay--
+Like some lone altar whose votive flame
+ In holiness wasteth away.
+
+Tho' born in this desert, and doomed by my birth
+To pain and affliction, to darkness and dearth,
+ On Thee let my spirit rely--
+Like some rude dial, that, fixt on earth,
+ Still looks for its light from the sky.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WEEP, CHILDREN OF ISRAEL.
+
+(AIR.--STEVENSON.)
+
+
+Weep, weep for him, the Man of God--[1]
+ In yonder vale he sunk to rest;
+But none of earth can point the sod[2]
+ That flowers above his sacred breast.
+ Weep, children of Israel, weep!
+
+His doctrine fell like Heaven's rain.[3]
+ His words refreshed like Heaven's dew--
+Oh, ne'er shall Israel see again
+ A Chief, to GOD and her so true.
+ Weep, children of Israel, weep!
+
+Remember ye his parting gaze,
+ His farewell song by Jordan's tide,
+When, full of glory and of days,
+ He saw the promised land--and died.[4]
+ Weep, children of Israel, weep!
+
+Yet died he not as men who sink,
+ Before our eyes, to soulless clay;
+But, changed to spirit, like a wink
+ Of summer lightning, past away.[5]
+ Weep, children of Israel, weep!
+
+
+[1] "And the children of Israel wept for Moses in the plains of Moab."--
+_Deut_. xxxiv, 8.
+
+[2] "And, he buried him in a valley in the land of Moab...but no man
+knoweth of his sepulchre unto this day."--_Ibid_. ver. 6.
+
+[3] "My doctrine shall drop as the rain, my speech shall distil as the
+dew."--_Moses' Song_.
+
+[4] "I have caused thee to see it with thine eyes, but thou shalt not go
+over thither."--_Deut_. xxxiv. 4.
+
+[5] "As he was going to embrace Eleazer and Joshua, and was still
+discoursing with them, a cloud stood over him on the sudden, and he
+disappeared in a certain valley, although he wrote in the Holy Books that
+he died, which was done out of fear, lest they should venture to say that,
+because of his extraordinary virtue, he went to GOD."--_Josephus_,
+book iv. chap. viii.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LIKE MORNING, WHEN HER EARLY BREEZE.
+
+(AIR. BEETHOVEN.)
+
+
+Like morning, when her early breeze
+Breaks up the surface of the seas,
+That, in those furrows, dark with night,
+Her hand may sow the seeds of light--
+
+Thy Grace can send its breathings o'er
+The Spirit, dark and lost before,
+And, freshening all its depths, prepare
+For Truth divine to enter there.
+
+Till David touched his sacred lyre.
+In silence lay the unbreathing wire;
+But when he swept its chords along,
+Even Angels stooped to hear that song.
+
+So sleeps the soul, till Thou, oh LORD,
+Shalt deign to touch its lifeless chord--
+Till, waked by Thee, its breath shall rise
+In music, worthy of the skies!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+COME, YE DISCONSOLATE.
+
+(AIR.--GERMAN.)
+
+
+Come, ye disconsolate, where'er you languish,
+ Come, at God's altar fervently kneel;
+Here bring your wounded hearts, here tell your anguish--
+ Earth has no sorrow that Heaven cannot heal.
+
+Joy of the desolate, Light of the straying,
+ Hope, when all others die, fadeless and pure,
+Here speaks the Comforter, in GOD'S name saying--
+ "Earth has no sorrow that Heaven cannot cure."
+
+Go, ask the infidel, what boon he brings us
+ What charm for aching hearts _he_ can reveal,
+Sweet as that heavenly promise Hope sings us--
+ "Earth has no sorrow that GOD cannot heal."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AWAKE, ARISE, THY LIGHT IS COME.
+
+(AIR.--STEVENSON.)
+
+
+Awake, arise, thy light is come;[1]
+ The nations, that before outshone thee,
+Now at thy feet lie dark and dumb--
+ The glory of the Lord is on thee!
+
+Arise--the Gentiles to thy ray,
+ From every nook of earth shall cluster;
+And kings and princes haste to pay
+ Their homage to thy rising lustre.[2]
+
+Lift up thine eyes around, and see
+ O'er foreign fields, o'er farthest waters,
+Thy exiled sons return to thee,
+ To thee return thy home-sick daughters.[3]
+
+And camels rich, from Midians' tents,
+ Shall lay their treasures down before thee;
+And Saba bring her gold and scents,
+ To fill thy air and sparkle o'er thee.[4]
+
+See, who are these that, like a cloud,[5]
+ Are gathering from all earth's dominions,
+Like doves, long absent, when allowed
+ Homeward to shoot their trembling pinions.
+
+Surely the isles shall wait for me,[6]
+ The ships of Tarshish round will hover,
+To bring thy sons across the sea,
+ And waft their gold and silver over.
+
+And Lebanon thy pomp shall grace[7]--
+ The fir, the pine, the palm victorious
+Shall beautify our Holy Place,
+ And make the ground I tread on glorious.
+
+No more shall dischord haunt thy ways,[8]
+ Nor ruin waste thy cheerless nation;
+But thou shalt call thy portal Praise,
+ And thou shalt name thy walls Salvation.
+
+The sun no more shall make thee bright,[9]
+ Nor moon shall lend her lustre to thee;
+But God, Himself, shall be thy Light,
+ And flash eternal glory thro' thee.
+
+Thy sun shall never more go down;
+ A ray from heaven itself descended
+Shall light thy everlasting crown--
+ Thy days of mourning all are ended.[10]
+
+My own, elect, and righteous Land!
+ The Branch, for ever green and vernal,
+Which I have planted with this hand--
+ Live thou shalt in Life Eternal.[11]
+
+
+[1] "Arise, shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is
+risen upon thee."--_Isaiah_, xl.
+
+[2] "And the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness
+of thy rising."--_Isaiah_, xl.
+
+[3] "Lift up thine eyes round about, and see; all they gather themselves
+together, they come to thee: thy sons shall come from afar, and thy
+daughters shall be nursed at thy side."--_Isaiah_, lx.
+
+[4] "The multitude of camels shall cover thee; the dromedaries of Midian
+and Ephah; all they from Sheba shall come; they shall bring gold and
+incense."--_Ib_.
+
+[5] "Who are these that fly as a cloud and as the doves to their
+windows?"--_Ib_.
+
+[6] "Surely the isles shall wait for me, and the ships of Tarshish first,
+to bring thy sons from far, their silver and their gold with
+them."--_Ib_.
+
+[7] "The glory of Lebanon shall come unto thee; the fir-tree, the
+pine-tree, and the box together, to beautify the place of my sanctuary;
+and I will make the place of my feet glorious."--_Ib_.
+
+[8] "Violence shall no more be heard in thy land, wasting nor destruction
+within thy borders; but thou shalt call thy walls, Salvation, and thy
+gates, Praise.--_Isaiah_, lx.
+
+[9] "Thy sun shall be no more thy light by day; neither for brightness
+shall the moon give light unto thee: but the Lord shall be unto thee an
+everlasting light, and thy God thy glory."--_Ib_.
+
+[10] "Thy sun shall no more go down...for the Lord shall be thine
+everlasting light, and the days of thy mourning shall be
+ended."--_Ib_.
+
+[11] "Thy people also shall be all righteous; they shall inherit the land
+for ever, the branch of my planting, the work of my hands."--_Ib_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THERE IS A BLEAK DESERT.
+
+(AIR.--CRESCENTINI.)
+
+
+There is a bleak Desert, where daylight grows weary
+Of wasting its smile on a region so dreary--
+ What may that Desert be?
+'Tis Life, cheerless Life, where the few joys that come
+Are lost, like that daylight, for 'tis not their home.
+
+There is a lone Pilgrim, before whose faint eyes
+The water he pants for but sparkles and flies--
+ Who may that Pilgrim be?
+'Tis Man, hapless Man, thro' this life tempted on
+By fair shining hopes, that in shining are gone.
+
+There is a bright Fountain, thro' that Desert stealing
+To pure lips alone its refreshment revealing--
+ What may that Fountain be?
+'Tis Truth, holy Truth, that, like springs under ground,
+By the gifted of Heaven alone can be found.
+
+There is a fair Spirit whose wand hath the spell
+To point where those waters in secrecy dwell--
+ Who may that Spirit be?
+'Tis Faith, humble Faith, who hath learned that where'er
+Her wand bends to worship the Truth must be there!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SINCE FIRST THY WORD.
+
+(AIR.--NICHOLAS FREEMAN.)
+
+
+Since first Thy Word awaked my heart,
+Like new life dawning o'er me,
+Where'er I turn mine eyes, Thou art,
+ All light and love before me.
+Naught else I feel, or hear or see--
+ All bonds of earth I sever--
+Thee, O God, and only Thee
+ I live for, now and ever.
+
+Like him whose fetters dropt away
+ When light shone o'er his prison,[1]
+My spirit, touched by Mercy's ray,
+ Hath from her chains arisen.
+And shall a soul Thou bidst be free,
+ Return to bondage?--never!
+Thee, O God, and only Thee
+ I live for, now and ever.
+
+
+[1] "And, behold, the angel of the Lord came upon him, and a light shined
+in the prison...and his chains fell off from his hands."--_Acts_,
+xii. 7.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HARK! 'TIS THE BREEZE.
+
+(AIR.--ROUSSEAU.)
+
+
+Hark! 'tis the breeze of twilight calling;
+ Earth's weary children to repose;
+While, round the couch of Nature falling,
+ Gently the night's soft curtains close.
+Soon o'er a world, in sleep reclining,
+ Numberless stars, thro' yonder dark,
+Shall look, like eyes of Cherubs shining
+ From out the veils that hid the Ark.
+
+Guard us, oh Thou, who never sleepest,
+ Thou who in silence throned above,
+Throughout all time, unwearied, keepest
+ Thy watch of Glory, Power, and Love.
+Grant that, beneath thine eye, securely,
+ Our souls awhile from life withdrawn
+May in their darkness stilly, purely,
+ Like "sealed fountains," rest till dawn.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHERE IS YOUR DWELLING, YE SAINTED?
+
+(AIR.--HASSE.)
+
+
+Where is your dwelling, ye Sainted?
+ Thro' what Elysium more bright
+Than fancy or hope ever painted,
+ Walk ye in glory and light?
+Who the same kingdom inherits?
+ Breathes there a soul that may dare
+Look to that world of Spirits,
+ Or hope to dwell with you there?
+
+Sages! who even in exploring
+ Nature thro' all her bright ways,
+Went like the Seraphs adoring,
+ And veiled your eyes in the blaze--
+Martyrs! who left for our reaping
+ Truths you had sown in your blood--
+Sinners! whom, long years of weeping
+ Chastened from evil to good--
+
+Maidens! who like the young Crescent,
+ Turning away your pale brows
+From earth and the light of the Present,
+ Looked to your Heavenly Spouse--
+Say, thro' what region enchanted
+ Walk ye in Heaven's sweet air?
+Say, to what spirits 'tis granted,
+ Bright, souls, to dwell with you there?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HOW LIGHTLY MOUNTS THE MUSE'S WING.
+
+(AIR--ANONYMOUS.)
+
+
+How lightly mounts the Muse's wing,
+ Whose theme is in the skies--
+Like morning larks that sweeter sing
+ The nearer Heaven they rise,
+
+Tho' love his magic lyre may tune,
+ Yet ah, the flowers he round it wreathes,
+Were plucked beneath pale Passion's moon,
+ Whose madness in their ode breathes.
+
+How purer far the sacred lute,
+ Round which Devotion ties
+Sweet flowers that turn to heavenly fruit,
+ And palm that never dies.
+
+Tho' War's high-sounding harp may be.,
+ Most welcome to the hero's ears,
+Alas, his chords of victory
+ Are wet, all o'er, with human tears.
+
+How far more sweet their numbers run,
+ Who hymn like Saints above,
+No victor but the Eternal One,
+ No trophies but of Love!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+GO FORTH TO THE MOUNT,
+
+(AIR.--STEVENSON.)
+
+
+Go forth to the Mount; bring the olive-branch home,[1]
+And rejoice; for the day of our freedom is come!
+From that time,[2] when the moon upon Ajalon's vale,
+ Looking motionless down,[3] saw the kings of the earth,
+In the presence of God's mighty champion grow pale--
+ Oh, never had Judah an hour of such mirth!
+Go forth to the Mount--bring the olive-branch home,
+And rejoice, for the day of our freedom is come!
+
+Bring myrtle and palm--bring the boughs of each tree
+That's worthy to wave o'er the tents of the Free.[4]
+From that day when the footsteps of Israel shone
+ With a light not their own, thro' the Jordan's deep tide,
+Whose waters shrunk back as the ark glided on[5]--
+ Oh, never had Judah an hour of such pride!
+Go forth to the Mount--bring the olive-branch home,
+And rejoice, for the day of our Freedom is come!
+
+
+[1] And that they should publish and proclaim in all their cities, and in
+Jerusalem, saying, "Go forth unto the mount, and fetch olive-branches,'!
+etc.--_Neh_. viii. 15.
+
+[2] "For since the days of Joshua the son of Nun unto that day had not the
+children of Israel done so; and there was very great gladness."--
+_Ib_. 17.
+
+[3] "Sun, stand thou still upon Gibeon and thou Moon, in the valley of
+Ajalon."--_Josh_. x. 12.
+
+[4] "Fetch olive-branches, and pine-branches, and myrtle-branches, and
+palm-branches, and branches of thick trees, to make booths."
+
+--_Neh_. viii. 15.
+
+[5] "And the priests that bare the ark of the covenant of the Lord stood
+firm on dry ground in the midst of Jordan, and all the Israelites passed
+over on dry ground."--_Josh_. iii. 17.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IS IT NOT SWEET TO THINK, HEREAFTER.
+
+(AIR.--HAYDN.)
+
+
+Is it not sweet to think, hereafter,
+ When the Spirit leaves this sphere.
+Love, with deathless wing, shall waft her
+ To those she long hath mourned for here?
+
+Hearts from which 'twas death to sever.
+ Eyes this world can ne'er restore,
+There, as warm, as bright as ever,
+ Shall meet us and be lost no more.
+
+When wearily we wander, asking
+ Of earth and heaven, where are they,
+Beneath whose smile we once lay basking,
+ Blest and thinking bliss would stay?
+
+Hope still lifts her radiant finger
+ Pointing to the eternal Home,
+Upon whose portal yet they linger,
+ Looking back for us to come.
+
+Alas, alas--doth Hope deceive us?
+ Shall friendship--love--shall all those ties
+That bind a moment, and then leave us,
+ Be found again where nothing dies?
+
+Oh, if no other boon were given,
+ To keep our hearts from wrong and stain,
+Who would not try to win a Heaven
+ Where all we love shall live again?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WAR AGAINST BABYLON.
+
+(AIR.--NOVELLO.)
+
+
+"War against Babylon!" shout we around,
+ Be our banners through earth unfurled;
+Rise up, ye nations, ye kings, at the sound--
+ "War against Babylon!" shout thro' the world!
+Oh thou, that dwellest on many waters,[1]
+ Thy day of pride is ended now;
+And the dark curse of Israel's daughters
+ Breaks like a thundercloud over thy brow!
+ War, war, war against Babylon!
+
+Make bright the arrows, and gather the shields,[2]
+ Set the standard of God on high;
+Swarm we, like locusts, o'er all her fields.
+ "Zion" our watchword, and "vengeance" our cry!
+Woe! woe!--the time of thy visitation[3]
+ Is come, proud land, thy doom is cast--
+And the black surge of desolation
+ Sweeps o'er thy guilty head, at last!
+ War, war, war against Babylon!
+
+
+[1] "Oh thou that dwellest upon many waters...thine end is
+come."--_Jer_. li. 13.
+
+[2] "Make bright the arrows; gather the shields...set up the standard upon
+the walls of Babylon"--_Jer_. li. 11, 12.
+
+[3] "Woe unto them! for their day is come, the time of their
+visitation!"--_Jer_. l. 27.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A MELOLOGUE UPON NATIONAL MUSIC.
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+
+These verses were written for a Benefit at the Dublin Theatre, and were
+spoken by Miss Smith, with a degree of success, which they owed solely to
+her admirable manner of reciting them. I wrote them in haste; and it very
+rarely happens that poetry which has cost but little labor to the writer
+is productive of any great pleasure to the reader. Under this impression,
+I certainly should not have published them if they had not found their way
+into some of the newspapers with such an addition of errors to their own
+original stock, that I thought it but fair to limit their responsibility
+to those faults alone which really belong to them.
+
+With respect to the title which I have invented for this Poem, I feel even
+more than the scruples of the Emperor Tiberius, when he humbly asked
+pardon of the Roman Senate for using "the outlandish term, _monopoly_."
+But the truth is, having written the Poem with the sole view of serving a
+Benefit, I thought that an unintelligible word of this kind would not be
+without its attraction for the multitude, with whom, "If 'tis not sense,
+at least 'tis Greek." To some of my readers, however, it may not be
+superfluous to say, that by "Melologue," I mean that mixture of recitation
+of music, which is frequently adopted in the performance of Collins's Ode
+on the Passions, and of which the most striking example I can remember is
+the prophetic speech of Joad in the Athalie of Racine.
+
+T.M.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MELOLOGUE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A SHORT STRAIN OF MUSIC FROM THE ORCHESTRA.
+
+
+_There_ breathes a language known and felt
+ Far as the pure air spreads its living zone;
+Wherever rage can rouse, or pity melt,
+ That language of the soul is felt and known.
+ From those meridian plains,
+ Where oft, of old, on some high tower
+The soft Peruvian poured his midnight strains,
+And called his distant love with such sweet power,
+ That, when she heard the lonely lay,
+Not worlds could keep her from his arms away,[1]
+ To the bleak climes of polar night,
+ Where blithe, beneath a sunless sky,
+The Lapland lover bids his reindeer fly,
+And sings along the lengthening waste of snow,
+ Gayly as if the blessed light
+ Of vernal Phoebus burned upon his brow;
+ Oh Music! thy celestial claim
+ Is still resistless, still the same;
+ And, faithful as the mighty sea
+ To the pale star that o'er its realm presides,
+ The spell-bound tides
+Of human passion rise and fall for thee!
+
+
+[1] "A certain Spaniard, one night late, met an Indian woman in the
+streets of Cozco, and would have taken her to his home, but she cried out,
+'For God's sake, Sir, let me go; for that pipe, which you hear in yonder
+tower, calls me with great passion, and I cannot refuse the summons; for
+love constrains me to go, that I may be his wife, and he my
+husband.'"--"_Garcilasso de la Véga_," in Sir Paul Ryeaut's translation.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+GREEK AIR
+
+
+ List! 'tis a Grecian maid that sings,
+ While, from Ilissus' silvery springs,
+ She draws the cool lymph in her graceful urn;
+And by her side, in Music's charm dissolving,
+Some patriot youth, the glorious past revolving,
+ Dreams of bright days that never can return;
+ When Athens nurst her olive bough
+ With hands by tyrant power unchained;
+ And braided for the muse's brow
+ A wreath by tyrant touch unstained.
+ When heroes trod each classic field
+ Where coward feet now faintly falter;
+ When every arm was Freedom's shield,
+ And every heart was Freedom's altar!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FLOURISH OF TRUMPETS.
+
+
+ Hark, 'tis the sound that charms
+ The war-steed's wakening ears!--
+ Oh! many a mother folds her arms
+Round her boy-soldier when that call she hears;
+ And, tho' her fond heart sink with fears,
+ Is proud to feel his young pulse bound
+ With valor's fever at the sound.
+ See, from his native hills afar
+ The rude Helvetian flies to war;
+ Careless for what, for whom he fights,
+ For slave or despot, wrongs or rights:
+ A conqueror oft--a hero never--
+ Yet lavish of his life-blood still,
+ As if 'twere like his mountain rill,
+ And gushed forever!
+
+ Yes, Music, here, even here,
+ Amid this thoughtless, vague career,
+Thy soul-felt charm asserts its wondrous power.--
+ There's a wild air which oft, among the rocks
+Of his own loved land, at evening hour,
+ Is heard, when shepherds homeward pipe their flocks,
+Whose every note hath power to thrill his mind
+ With tenderest thoughts; to bring around his knees
+The rosy children whom he left behind,
+ And fill each little angel eye
+ With speaking tears, that ask him why
+ He wandered from his hut for scenes like these.
+Vain, vain is then the trumpet's brazen roar;
+ Sweet notes of home, of love, are all he hears;
+And the stern eyes that looked for blood before
+ Now melting, mournful, lose themselves in tears.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SWISS AIR.--"RANZ DES VACHES."
+
+
+ But wake, the trumpet's blast again,
+ And rouse the ranks of warrior-men!
+ Oh War, when Truth thy arm employs,
+And Freedom's spirit guides the laboring storm,
+'Tis then thy vengeance takes a hallowed form,
+And like Heaven's lightning sacredly destroys.
+Nor, Music, thro' thy breathing sphere,
+Lives there a sound more grateful to the ear
+ Of Him who made all harmony,
+ Than the blest sound of fetters breaking,
+ And the first hymn that man awaking
+ From Slavery's slumber breathes to Liberty.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SPANISH CHORUS.
+
+
+ Hark! from Spain, indignant Spain,
+ Burst the bold, enthusiast strain,
+ Like morning's music on the air;
+ And seems in every note to swear
+ By Saragossa's ruined streets,
+ By brave Gerona's deathful story,
+ That, while _one_ Spaniard's life-blood beats,
+ That blood shall stain the conqueror's glory.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SPANISH AIR.--"YA DESPERTO."
+
+ But ah! if vain the patriot's zeal,
+If neither valor's force nor wisdom's light
+Can break or melt that blood-cemented seal
+Which shuts so close the books of Europe's right--
+ What song shall then in sadness tell
+ Of broken pride, of prospects shaded,
+ Of buried hopes, remembered well
+ Of ardor quenched, and honor faded?
+ What muse shall mourn the breathless brave,
+ In sweetest dirge at Memory's shrine?
+ What harp shall sigh o'er Freedom's grave?
+ Oh Erin, Thine!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SET OF GLEES,
+
+MUSIC BY MOORE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MEETING OF THE SHIPS.
+
+
+When o'er the silent seas alone,
+For days and nights we've cheerless gone,
+Oh they who've felt it know how sweet,
+Some sunny morn a sail to meet.
+
+Sparkling at once is every eye,
+"Ship ahoy!" our joyful cry;
+While answering back the sounds we hear,
+"Ship ahoy!" what cheer? what...cheer?
+
+
+Then sails are backed, we nearer come,
+Kind words are said of friends and home;
+And soon, too soon, we part with pain,
+To sail o'er silent seas again.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HIP, HIP, HURRA!
+
+
+Come, fill round a bumper, fill up to the brim,
+He who shrinks from a bumper I pledge not to him;
+Here's the girl that each loves, be her eye of what hue,
+Or lustre, it may, so her heart is but true.
+ Charge! (drinks) hip, hip, hurra, hurra!
+
+Come charge high, again, boy, nor let the full wine
+Leave a space in the brimmer, where daylight may shine;
+Here's "the friends of our youth--tho' of some we're bereft,
+May the links that are lost but endear what are left!"
+ Charge! (drinks) hip, hip, hurra, hurra!
+
+Once more fill a bumper--ne'er talk of the hour;
+On hearts thus united old Time has no power.
+May our lives, tho', alas! like the wine of to-night,
+They must soon have an end, to the last flow as bright.
+ Charge! (drinks) hip, hip, hurra, hurra!
+
+Quick, quick, now, I'll give you, since Time's glass will run
+Even faster than ours doth, three bumpers in one;
+Here's the poet who sings--here's the warrior who fights--
+Here's the, statesman who speaks, in the cause of men's rights!
+ Charge! (drinks) hip, hip, hurra, hurra!
+
+Come, once more, a bumper!--then drink as you please,
+Tho', _who_ could fill half-way to toast such as these?
+Here's our next joyous meeting--and oh when we meet,
+May our wine be as bright and our union as sweet!
+ Charge! (drinks) hip, hip, hurra, hurra!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HUSH, HUSH!
+
+
+"Hush, hush!"--how well
+That sweet word sounds,
+When Love, the little sentinel,
+ Walks his night-rounds;
+Then, if a foot but dare
+ One rose-leaf crush,
+Myriads of voices in the air
+ Whisper, "Hush, hush!"
+
+"Hark, hark, 'tis he!"
+ The night elves cry,
+And hush their fairy harmony,
+ While he steals by;
+But if his silvery feet
+ One dew-drop brush,
+Voices are heard in chorus sweet,
+ Whispering, "Hush, hush!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE PARTING BEFORE THE BATTLE.
+
+
+HE.
+
+On to the field, our doom is sealed,
+ To conquer or be slaves:
+This sun shall see our nation free,
+ Or set upon our graves.
+
+SHE.
+
+Farewell, oh farewell, my love,
+ May heaven thy guardian be,
+And send bright angels from above
+ To bring thee back to me.
+
+HE.
+
+On to the field, the battle-field,
+ Where freedom's standard waves,
+This sun shall see our tyrant yield,
+ Or shine upon our graves.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WATCHMAN.
+
+A TRIO.
+
+
+WATCHMAN.
+
+Past twelve o'clock--past twelve.
+
+Good night, good night, my dearest--
+ How fast the moments fly!
+'Tis time to part, thou hearest
+That hateful watchman's cry.
+
+WATCHMAN.
+
+Past one o'clock--past one.
+
+Yet stay a moment longer--
+ Alas! why is it so,
+The wish to stay grows stronger,
+ The more 'tis time to go?
+
+WATCHMAN.
+
+Past two o'clock--past two.
+
+Now wrap thy cloak about thee--
+ The hours must sure go wrong,
+For when they're past without thee,
+ They're, oh, ten times as long.
+
+WATCHMAN.
+
+Past three o'clock--past three.
+
+Again that dreadful warning!
+ Had ever time such flight?
+And see the sky, 'tis morning--
+ So now, _indeed_, good night.
+
+WATCHMAN.
+
+Past three o'clock--past three.
+
+Goodnight, good night.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SAY, WHAT SHALL WE DANCE?
+
+
+ Say, what shall we dance?
+Shall we bound along the moonlight plain,
+To music of Italy, Greece, or Spain?
+ Say, what shall we dance?
+Shall we, like those who rove
+Thro' bright Grenada's grove,
+To the light Bolero's measures move?
+Or choose the Guaracia's languishing lay,
+And thus to its sound die away?
+
+ Strike the gay chords,
+Let us hear each strain from every shore
+That music haunts, or young feet wander o'er.
+Hark! 'tis the light march, to whose measured time,
+The Polish lady, by her lover led,
+Delights thro' gay saloons with step untried to tread,
+Or sweeter still, thro' moonlight walks
+Whose shadows serve to hide
+The blush that's raised by who talks
+Of love the while by her side,
+Then comes the smooth waltz, to whose floating sound
+Like dreams we go gliding around,
+Say, which shall we dance? which shall we dance?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE EVENING GUN.
+
+
+Remember'st thou that setting sun,
+ The last I saw with thee,
+When loud we heard the evening gun
+Peal o'er the twilight sea?
+Boom!--the sounds appeared to sweep
+ Far o'er the verge of day,
+
+Till, into realms beyond the deep,
+ They seemed to die away.
+Oft, when the toils of day are done,
+ In pensive dreams of thee,
+I sit to hear that evening gun,
+ Peal o'er the stormy sea.
+Boom!--and while, o'er billows curled.
+ The distant sounds decay,
+I weep and wish, from this rough world
+ Like them to die away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LEGENDARY BALLADS.
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+THE MISS FEILDINGS,
+
+THIS VOLUME
+
+IS INSCRIBED
+
+BY
+
+THEIR FAITHFUL FRIEND AND SERVANT,
+
+THOMAS MOORE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LEGENDARY BALLADS
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE VOICE.
+
+
+It came o'er her sleep, like a voice of those days,
+When love, only love was the light of her ways;
+And, soft as in moments of bliss long ago,
+It whispered her name from the garden below.
+
+"Alas," sighed the maiden, "how fancy can cheat!
+"The world once had lips that could whisper thus sweet;
+"But cold now they slumber in yon fatal deep.
+"Where, oh that beside them this heart too could sleep!"
+
+She sunk on her pillow--but no, 'twas in vain
+To chase the illusion, that Voice came again!
+She flew to the casement--but, husht as the grave,
+In moonlight lay slumbering woodland and wave.
+
+"Oh sleep, come and shield me," in anguish she said,
+"From that call of the buried, that cry of the Dead!"
+And sleep came around her--but, starting, she woke,
+For still from the garden that spirit Voice spoke!
+
+"I come," she exclaimed, "be thy home where it may,
+"On earth or in Heaven, that call I obey;"
+Then forth thro' the moonlight, with heart beating fast
+And loud as a death-watch, the pale maiden past.
+
+Still round her the scene all in loneliness shone;
+And still, in the distance, that Voice led her on;
+But whither she wandered, by wave or by shore,
+None ever could tell, for she came back no more.
+
+No, ne'er came she back,--but the watchman who stood,
+That night, in the tower which o'ershadows the flood,
+Saw dimly, 'tis said, o'er the moonlighted spray,
+A youth on a steed bear the maiden away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CUPID AND PSYCHE.
+
+
+They told her that he, to whose vows she had listened
+ Thro' night's fleeting hours, was a spirit unblest;--
+Unholy the eyes, that beside her had glistened,
+ And evil the lips she in darkness had prest.
+
+"When next in thy chamber the bridegroom reclineth,
+ "Bring near him thy lamp, when in slumber he lies;
+"And there, as the light, o'er his dark features shineth,
+ "Thou'lt see what a demon hath won all thy sighs!"
+
+Too fond to believe them, yet doubting, yet fearing,
+ When calm lay the sleeper she stole with her light;
+And saw--such a vision!--no image, appearing
+ To bards in their day-dreams, was ever so bright.
+
+A youth, but just passing from childhood's sweet morning,
+ While round him still lingered its innocent ray;
+Tho' gleams, from beneath his shut eyelids gave warning
+ Of summer-noon lightnings that under them lay.
+
+His brow had a grace more than mortal around it,
+ While, glossy as gold from a fairy-land mine,
+His sunny hair hung, and the flowers that crowned it
+ Seemed fresh from the breeze of some garden divine.
+
+Entranced stood the bride, on that miracle gazing,
+ What late was but love is idolatry now;
+But, ah--in her tremor the fatal lamp raising--
+ A sparkle flew from it and dropt on his brow.
+
+All's lost--with a start from his rosy sleep waking;
+ The Spirit flashed o'er her his glances of fire;
+Then, slow from the clasp of her snowy arms breaking,
+ Thus said, in a voice more of sorrow than ire:
+
+"Farewell--what a dream thy suspicion hath broken!
+ "Thus ever. Affection's fond vision is crost;
+"Dissolved are her spells when a doubt is but spoken,
+ "And love, once distrusted, for ever is lost!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HERO AND LEANDER.
+
+
+"The night wind is moaning with mournful sigh,
+"There gleameth no moon in the misty sky
+ "No star over Helle's sea;
+"Yet, yet, there is shining one holy light,
+"One love-kindled star thro' the deep of night,
+ "To lead me, sweet Hero, to thee!"
+
+Thus saying, he plunged in the foamy stream,
+Still fixing his gaze on that distant beam
+ No eye but a lover's could see;
+And still, as the surge swept over his head,
+"To night," he said tenderly, "living or dead,
+ "Sweet Hero, I'll rest with thee!"
+
+But fiercer around him, the wild waves speed;
+Oh, Love! in that hour of thy votary's need,
+ Where, where could thy Spirit be?
+He struggles--he sinks--while the hurricane's breath
+Bears rudely away his last farewell in death--
+ "Sweet Hero, I die for thee!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LEAF AND THE FOUNTAIN.
+
+
+"Tell me, kind Seer, I pray thee,
+"So may the stars obey thee
+ "So may each airy
+ "Moon-elf and fairy
+"Nightly their homage pay thee!
+"Say, by what spell, above, below,
+"In stars that wink or flowers that blow,
+ "I may discover,
+ "Ere night is over,
+"Whether my love loves me, or no,
+"Whether my love loves me."
+
+"Maiden, the dark tree nigh thee
+"Hath charms no gold could buy thee;
+ "Its stem enchanted.
+ "By moon-elves planted,
+"Will all thou seek'st supply thee.
+"Climb to yon boughs that highest grow,
+"Bring thence their fairest leaf below;
+ "And thou'lt discover,
+ "Ere night is over,
+"Whether thy love loves thee or no,
+"Whether thy love loves thee."
+
+"See, up the dark tree going,
+"With blossoms round me blowing,
+ "From thence, oh Father,
+ "This leaf I gather,
+"Fairest that there is growing.
+"Say, by what sign I now shall know
+"If in this leaf lie bliss or woe
+ "And thus discover
+ "Ere night is over,
+"Whether my love loves me or no,
+"Whether my love loves me."
+
+"Fly to yon fount that's welling
+"Where moonbeam ne'er had dwelling,
+ "Dip in its water
+ "That leaf, oh Daughter,
+"And mark the tale 'tis telling;[1]
+"Watch thou if pale or bright it glow,
+"List thou, the while, that fountain's flow,
+ "And thou'lt discover
+ "Whether thy lover,
+"Loved as he is, loves thee or no,
+"Loved as he is, loves thee."
+
+Forth flew the nymph, delighted,
+To seek that fount benighted;
+ But, scarce a minute
+ The leaf lay in it,
+When, lo, its bloom was blighted!
+And as she asked, with voice of woe--
+Listening, the while, that fountain's flow--
+ "Shall I recover
+ "My truant lover?"
+The fountain seemed to answer, "No;"
+The fountain answered, "No."
+
+
+[1] The ancients had a mode of divination somewhat similar to this; and we
+find the Emperor Adrian, when he went to consult the Fountain of Castalia,
+plucking a bay leaf, and dipping it into the sacred water.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CEPHALUS AND PROCRIS.
+
+
+A hunter once in that grove reclined,
+ To shun the noon's bright eye,
+And oft he wooed the wandering wind,
+ To cool his brow with its sigh,
+While mute lay even the wild bee's hum,
+ Nor breath could stir the aspen's hair,
+His song was still "Sweet air, oh come?"
+ While Echo answered, "Come, sweet Air!"
+
+But, hark, what sounds from the thicket rise!
+ What meaneth that rustling spray?
+"'Tis the white-horned doe," the Hunter cries,
+ "I have sought since break of day."
+Quick o'er the sunny glade he springs,
+ The arrow flies from his sounding bow,
+"Hilliho-hilliho!" he gayly sings,
+ While Echo sighs forth "Hilliho!"
+
+Alas, 'twas not the white-horned doe
+ He saw in the rustling grove,
+But the bridal veil, as pure as snow,
+ Of his own young wedded love.
+And, ah, too sure that arrow sped,
+ For pale at his feet he sees her lie;--
+"I die, I die," was all she said,
+ While Echo murmured. "I die, I die!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+YOUTH AND AGE.
+
+
+"Tell me, what's Love?" said Youth, one day,
+To drooping Age, who crest his way.--
+"It is a sunny hour of play,
+"For which repentance dear doth pay;
+ "Repentance! Repentance!
+"And this is Love, as wise men say."
+"Tell me, what's Love?" said Youth once more,
+Fearful, yet fond, of Age's lore.--
+"Soft as a passing summer's wind,
+"Wouldst know the blight it leaves behind?
+ "Repentance! Repentance!
+"And this is Love--when love is o'er."
+
+"Tell me, what's Love? "said Youth again,
+Trusting the bliss, but not the pain.
+"Sweet as a May tree's scented air--
+"Mark ye what bitter fruit 'twill bear,
+ "Repentance! Repentance!
+"This, this is Love--sweet Youth, beware."
+
+Just then, young Love himself came by,
+And cast on Youth a smiling eye;
+Who could resist that glance's ray?
+In vain did Age his warning say,
+ "Repentance! Repentance!"
+Youth laughing went with Love away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DYING WARRIOR.
+
+
+A wounded Chieftain, lying
+ By the Danube's leafy side,
+Thus faintly said, in dying,
+ "Oh! bear, thou foaming tide.
+ "This gift to my lady-bride."
+
+'Twas then, in life's last quiver,
+ He flung the scarf he wore
+Into the foaming river,
+ Which, ah too quickly, bore
+ That pledge of one no more!
+
+With fond impatience burning,
+ The Chieftain's lady stood,
+To watch her love returning
+ In triumph down the flood,
+ From that day's field of blood.
+
+But, field, alas, ill-fated!
+ The lady saw, instead
+Of the bark whose speed she waited,
+ Her hero's scarf, all red
+With the drops his heart had shed.
+
+One shriek--and all was over--
+ Her life-pulse ceased to beat;
+The gloomy waves now cover
+ That bridal-flower so sweet.
+ And the scarf is her winding sheet!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MAGIC MIRROR.
+
+
+"Come, if thy magic Glass have power
+ "To call up forms we sigh to see;
+"Show me my, love, in that, rosy bower,
+ "Where last she pledged her truth to me."
+
+The Wizard showed him his Lady bright,
+ Where lone and pale in her bower she lay;
+"True-hearted maid," said the happy Knight,
+ "She's thinking of one, who is far away."
+
+But, lo! a page, with looks of joy,
+ Brings tidings to the Lady's ear;
+"'Tis," said the Knight, "the same bright boy,
+ "Who used to guide me to my dear."
+The Lady now, from her favorite tree,
+ Hath, smiling, plucked a rosy flower:
+"Such," he exclaimed, "was the gift that she
+ "Each morning sent me from that bower!"
+
+She gives her page the blooming rose,
+ With looks that say, "Like lightning, fly!"
+"Thus," thought the Knight, "she soothes her woes,
+ "By fancying, still, her true-love nigh."
+But the page returns, and--oh, what a sight,
+ For trusting lover's eyes to see!--
+Leads to that bower another Knight,
+ As young and, alas, as loved as he!
+
+"Such," quoth the Youth, "is Woman's love!"
+ Then, darting forth, with furious bound,
+Dashed at the Mirror his iron glove,
+ And strewed it all in fragments round.
+
+MORAL.
+
+Such ills would never have come to pass,
+ Had he ne'er sought that fatal view;
+The Wizard would still have kept his Glass,
+ And the Knight still thought his Lady true.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE PILGRIM.
+
+
+Still thus, when twilight gleamed,
+Far off his Castle seemed,
+ Traced on the sky;
+And still, as fancy bore him.
+To those dim towers before him,
+He gazed, with wishful eye;
+ And thought his home was nigh.
+
+"Hall of my Sires!" he said,
+"How long, with weary tread,
+ "Must I toil on?
+"Each eve, as thus I wander,
+"Thy towers seem rising yonder,
+"But, scarce hath daylight shone,
+ "When, like a dream, thou'rt gone!"
+
+So went the Pilgrim still,
+Down dale and over hill,
+ Day after day;
+That glimpse of home, so cheering,
+At twilight still appearing,
+But still, with morning's ray,
+ Melting, like mist, away!
+
+Where rests the Pilgrim now?
+Here, by this cypress bough,
+ Closed his career;
+That dream, of fancy's weaving,
+No more his steps deceiving,
+Alike past hope and fear,
+ The Pilgrim's home is here.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE HIGH-BORN LADYE.
+
+
+In vain all the Knights to the Underwald wooed her,
+ Tho' brightest of maidens, the proudest was she;
+Brave chieftains they sought, and young minstrels they sued her,
+ But worthy were none of the high-born Ladye.
+
+"Whosoever I wed," said this maid, so excelling,
+ "That Knight must the conqueror of conquerors be;
+"He must place me in halls fit for monarchs to dwell in:--
+ "None else shall be Lord of the high-born Ladye!
+
+Thus spoke the proud damsel, with scorn looking round her
+ On Knights and on Nobles of highest degree;
+Who humbly and hopelessly left as they found her,
+ And worshipt at distance the high-born Ladye.
+
+At length came a Knight, from a far land to woo her,
+ With plumes on his helm like the foam of the sea;
+His visor was down--but, with voice that thrilled thro her,
+ He whispered his vows to the high-born Ladye.
+
+"Proud maiden! I come with high spousals to grace thee,
+ "In me the great conqueror of conquerors see;
+"Enthroned in a hall fit for monarchs I'll place thee,
+ "And mine, thou'rt for ever, thou high-born Ladye!"
+
+The maiden she smiled, and in jewels arrayed her,
+ Of thrones and tiaras already dreamt she;
+And proud was the step, as her bridegroom conveyed her
+ In pomp to his home, of that highborn Ladye.
+
+"But whither," she, starting, exclaims, "have you, led me?
+ "Here's naught but a tomb and a dark cypress tree;
+"Is _this_ the bright palace in which thou wouldst wed me?"
+ With scorn in her glance said the high-born Ladye.
+
+"Tis the home," he replied, "of earth's loftiest creatures"--
+ Then lifted his helm for the fair one to see;
+But she sunk on the ground--'twas a skeleton's features
+ And Death was the Lord of the high-born Ladye!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE INDIAN BOAT.
+
+
+ 'Twas midnight dark,
+ The seaman's bark,
+Swift o'er the waters bore him,
+ When, thro' the night,
+ He spied a light
+Shoot o'er the wave before him.
+"A sail! a sail!" he cries;
+ "She comes from the Indian shore
+"And to-night shall be our prize,
+ "With her freight of golden ore;
+ "Sail on! sail on!"
+ When morning shone
+He saw the gold still clearer;
+ But, though so fast
+ The waves he past
+That boat seemed never the nearer.
+
+ Bright daylight came,
+ And still the same
+Rich bark before him floated;
+ While on the prize
+ His wishful eyes
+Like any young lover's doted:
+"More sail! more sail!" he cries,
+ While the waves overtop the mast;
+And his bounding galley flies,
+ Like an arrow before the blast.
+ Thus on, and on,
+ Till day was gone,
+And the moon thro' heaven did hie her,
+ He swept the main,
+ But all in vain,
+That boat seemed never the nigher.
+
+ And many a day
+ To night gave way,
+And many a morn succeeded:
+ While still his flight,
+ Thro day and night,
+That restless mariner speeded.
+Who knows--who knows what seas
+ He is now careering o'er?
+Behind, the eternal breeze,
+ And that mocking bark, before!
+ For, oh, till sky
+ And earth shall die,
+And their death leave none to rue it,
+ That boat must flee
+ O'er the boundless sea,
+And that ship in vain pursue it.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE STRANGER.
+
+
+Come list, while I tell of the heart-wounded Stranger
+ Who sleeps her last slumber in this haunted ground;
+Where often, at midnight, the lonely wood-ranger
+ Hears soft fairy music re-echo around.
+
+None e'er knew the name of that heart-stricken lady,
+ Her language, tho' sweet, none could e'er understand;
+But her features so sunned, and her eyelash so shady,
+ Bespoke her a child of some far Eastern land.
+
+'Twas one summer night, when the village lay sleeping,
+ A soft strain of melody came o'er our ears;
+So sweet, but so mournful, half song and half weeping,
+ Like music that Sorrow had steeped in her tears.
+
+We thought 'twas an anthem some angel had sung us;--
+ But, soon as the day-beams had gushed from on high,
+With wonder we saw this bright stranger among us,
+ All lovely and lone, as if strayed from the sky.
+
+Nor long did her life for this sphere seem intended,
+ For pale was her cheek, with that spirit-like hue,
+Which comes when the day of this world is nigh ended,
+ And light from another already shines through.
+
+Then her eyes, when she sung--oh, but once to have seen them--
+ Left thoughts in the soul that can never depart;
+While her looks and her voice made a language between them,
+ That spoke more than holiest words to the heart.
+
+But she past like a day-dream, no skill could restore her--
+ Whate'er was her sorrow, its ruin came fast;
+She died with the same spell of mystery o'er her.
+ That song of past days on her lips to the last.
+
+Not even in the grave is her sad heart reposing--
+ Still hovers the spirit of grief round her tomb;
+For oft, when the shadows of midnight are closing,
+ The same strain of music is heard thro' the gloom.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BALLADS, SONGS, ETC.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO-DAY, DEAREST! IS OURS.
+
+
+To-day, dearest! is ours;
+ Why should Love carelessly lose it?
+This life shines or lowers
+ Just as we, weak mortals, use it.
+'Tis time enough, when its flowers decay,
+ To think of the thorns of Sorrow
+And Joy, if left on the stem to-day,
+ May wither before to-morrow.
+
+Then why, dearest! so long
+ Let the sweet moments fly over?
+Tho' now, blooming and young
+ Thou hast me devoutly thy lover;
+Yet Time from both, in his silent lapse,
+ Some treasure may steal or borrow;
+Thy charms may be less in bloom, perhaps,
+ Or I less in love to-morrow.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN ON THE LIP THE SIGH DELAYS.
+
+
+When on the lip the sigh delays,
+ As if 'twould linger there for ever;
+When eyes would give the world to gaze,
+ Yet still look down and venture never;
+When, tho' with fairest nymphs we rove,
+ There's one we dream of more than any--
+If all this is not real love,
+ 'Tis something wondrous like it, Fanny!
+
+To think and ponder, when apart,
+ On all we've got to say at meeting;
+And yet when near, with heart to heart,
+ Sit mute and listen to their beating:
+To see but one bright object move,
+ The only moon, where stars are many--
+If all this is not downright love,
+ I prithee say what _is_, my Fanny!
+
+When Hope foretells the brightest, best,
+ Tho' Reason on the darkest reckons;
+When Passion drives us to the west,
+ Tho' Prudence to the eastward beckons;
+When all turns round, below, above,
+ And our own heads the most of any--
+If this is not stark, staring love,
+ Then you and I are sages, Fanny.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HERE, TAKE MY HEART.
+
+
+Here, take my heart--'twill be safe in thy keeping,
+ While I go wandering o'er land and o'er sea;
+Smiling or sorrowing, waking or sleeping,
+ What need I care, so my heart is with thee?
+
+If in the race we are destined to run, love,
+ They who have light hearts the happiest be,
+Then happier still must be they who have none, love.
+ And that will be _my_ case when mine is with thee.
+
+It matters not where I may now be a rover,
+ I care not how many bright eyes I may see;
+Should Venus herself come and ask me to love her,
+ I'd tell her I couldn't--my heart is with thee.
+
+And there let it lie, growing fonder and, fonder--
+ For, even should Fortune turn truant to me,
+Why, let her go--I've a treasure beyond her,
+ As long as my heart's out at interest With thee!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH, CALL IT BY SOME BETTER NAME.
+
+
+Oh, call it by some better name,
+ For Friendship sounds too cold,
+While Love is now a worldly flame,
+ Whose shrine must be of gold:
+And Passion, like the sun at noon,
+ That burns o'er all he sees,
+Awhile as warm will set as soon--
+ Then call it none of these.
+
+Imagine something purer far,
+ More free from stain of clay
+Than Friendship, Love, or Passion are,
+ Yet human, still as they:
+And if thy lip, for love like this,
+ No mortal word can frame,
+Go, ask of angels what it is,
+ And call it by that name!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+POOR WOUNDED HEART
+
+
+ Poor wounded heart, farewell!
+ Thy hour of rest is come;
+ Thou soon wilt reach thy home,
+ Poor wounded heart, farewell!
+The pain thou'lt feel in breaking
+ Less bitter far will be,
+Than that long, deadly aching,
+ This life has been to thee.
+
+ There--broken heart, farewell!
+ The pang is o'er--
+ The parting pang is o'er;
+ Thou now wilt bleed no more.
+ Poor broken heart, farewell!
+No rest for thee but dying--
+ Like waves whose strife is past,
+On death's cold shore thus lying,
+ Thou sleepst in peace at last--
+ Poor broken heart, farewell!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE EAST INDIAN.
+
+
+Come, May, with all thy flowers,
+ Thy sweetly-scented thorn,
+Thy cooling evening showers,
+ The fragrant breath at morn:
+When, May-flies haunt the willow,
+ When May-buds tempt the bee,
+Then o'er the shining billow
+ My love will come to me.
+
+From Eastern Isles she's winging
+ Thro' watery wilds her way,
+And on her cheek is bringing
+ The bright sun's orient ray:
+Oh, come and court her hither,
+ Ye breezes mild and warm--
+One winter's gale would wither
+ So soft, so pure a form.
+
+The fields where she was straying
+ Are blest with endless light,
+With zephyrs always playing
+ Thro' gardens always bright.
+Then now, sweet May! be sweeter
+ Than e'er, thou'st been before;
+Let sighs from roses meet her
+ When she comes near our shore.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+POOR BROKEN FLOWER.
+
+
+Poor broken flower! what art can now recover thee?
+ Torn from the stem that fed thy rosy breath--
+ In vain the sunbeams seek
+ To warm that faded cheek;
+The dews of heaven, that once like balm fell over thee;
+ Now are but tears, to weep thy early death.
+
+So droops the maid whose lover hath forsaken her,--
+ Thrown from his arms, as lone and lost as thou;
+ In vain the smiles of all
+ Like sunbeams round her fall:
+The only smile that could from death awaken her,
+ That smile, alas! is gone to others now.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE PRETTY ROSE-TREE.
+
+
+ Being weary of love,
+ I flew to the grove,
+And chose me a tree of the fairest;
+ Saying, "Pretty Rose-tree,
+ "Thou my mistress shall be,
+ "And I'll worship each bud thou bearest.
+ "For the hearts of this world are hollow,
+ "And fickle the smiles we follow;
+ "And 'tis sweet, when all
+ "Their witcheries pall
+"To have a pure love to fly to:
+ "So, my pretty Rose-tree,
+ "Thou my mistress shalt be,
+"And the only one now I shall sigh to."
+
+ When the beautiful hue
+ Of thy cheek thro' the dew
+Of morning is bashfully peeping,
+ "Sweet tears," I shall say
+ (As I brush them away),
+ "At least there's no art in this weeping"
+ Altho thou shouldst die to-morrow;
+ 'Twill not be from pain or sorrow;
+ And the thorns of thy stem
+ Are not like them
+With which men wound each other;
+ So, my pretty Rose-tree,
+ Thou my mistress shalt be
+And I'll never again sigh to another.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SHINE OUT, STARS!
+
+
+Shine out, Stars! let Heaven assemble
+ Round us every festal ray,
+Lights that move not, lights that tremble,
+ All to grace this Eve of May.
+Let the flower-beds all lie waking,
+ And the odors shut up there,
+From their downy prisons breaking,
+ Fly abroad thro sea and air.
+
+And Would Love, too, bring his sweetness,
+ With our other joys to weave,
+Oh what glory, what completeness,
+ Then would crown this bright May Eve!
+Shine out, Stars! let night assemble
+ Round us every festal ray,
+Lights that move not, lights that tremble,
+ To adorn this Eve of May.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE YOUNG MULETEERS OF GRENADA.
+
+Oh, the joys of our evening posada,
+ Where, resting, at close of day,
+We, young Muleteers of Grenada,
+ Sit and sing the sunshine away;
+So merry, that even the slumbers
+ That round us hung seem gone;
+Till the lute's soft drowsy numbers
+ Again beguile them on.
+ Oh the joys, etc.
+
+Then as each to his loved sultana
+ In sleep still breathes the sigh,
+The name of some black-eyed Tirana,
+ Escapes our lips as we lie.
+Till, with morning's rosy twinkle,
+ Again we're up and gone--
+While the mule-bell's drowsy tinkle
+ Beguiles the rough way on.
+Oh the joys of our merry posada,
+ Where, resting at close of day,
+We, young Muleteers of Grenada,
+ Thus sing the gay moments away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TELL HER, OH, TELL HER.
+
+
+Tell her, oh, tell her, the lute she left lying
+Beneath the green arbor is still lying there;
+And breezes like lovers around it are sighing,
+But not a soft whisper replies to their prayer.
+
+Tell her, oh, tell her, the tree that, in going,
+Beside the green arbor she playfully set,
+As lovely as, ever is blushing and blowing,
+And not a, bright leaflet has fallen from it yet.
+
+So while away from that arbor forsaken,
+The maiden is wandering, still let her be
+As true as the lute that no sighing can waken
+And blooming for ever, unchanged as the tree!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NIGHTS OF MUSIC.
+
+
+Nights of music, nights of loving,
+ Lost too soon, remembered long.
+When we went by moonlight roving,
+ Hearts all love and lips all song.
+When this faithful lute recorded
+ All my spirit felt to thee;
+And that smile the song rewarded--
+ Worth Whole years of fame to me!
+
+Nights of song, and nights of splendor,
+Filled with joys too sweet to last--
+Joys that, like the star-light, tender,
+While they shore no shadow cast.
+Tho' all other happy hours
+ From my fading memory fly,
+Of, that starlight, of those bowers,
+ Not a beam, a leaf may die!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OUR FIRST YOUNG LOVE.
+
+
+Our first young love resembles
+ That short but brilliant ray,
+Which smiles and weeps and trembles
+Thro' April's earliest day.
+And not all life before us,
+ Howe'er its lights may play,
+Can shed a lustre o'er us
+ Like that first April ray.
+
+Our summer sun may squander
+A blaze serener, grander;
+ Our autumn beam
+ May, like a dream
+ Of heaven, die calm away;
+But no--let life before us
+ Bring all the light it may,
+'Twill ne'er shed lustre o'er us
+ Like that first youthful ray.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BLACK AND BLUE EYES.
+
+
+ The brilliant black eye
+ May in triumph let fly
+All its darts without Caring who feels 'em;
+ But the soft eye of blue,
+ Tho' it scatter wounds too,
+Is much better pleased when it heals 'em--
+ Dear Fanny!
+Is much better pleased when it heals 'em.
+
+ The black eye may say,
+ "Come and worship my ray--
+"By adoring, perhaps you may move me!"
+ But the blue eye, half hid,
+ Says from under its lid,
+"I love and am yours, if you love me!"
+ Yes, Fanny!
+ The blue eye, half hid,
+ Says, from under its lid,
+"I love and am yours, if you love me!"
+
+ Come tell me, then, why
+ In that lovely blue eye
+Not a charm of its tint I discover;
+ Oh why should you wear
+ The only blue pair
+That ever said "No" to a lover?
+ Dear Fanny!
+ Oh, why should you wear
+ The only blue pair
+That ever said "No" to a lover?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DEAR FANNY.
+
+
+"She has beauty, but still you must keep your heart cool;
+ "She has wit, but you mustn't be caught, so;"
+Thus Reason advises, but Reason's a fool,
+ And 'tis not the first time I have thought so,
+ Dear Fanny.
+ 'Tis not the first time I have thought so.
+
+"She is lovely; then love her, nor let the bliss fly;
+ "'Tis the charm of youth's vanishing season;"
+Thus Love has advised me and who will deny
+ That Love reasons much better than Reason,
+ Dear Fanny?
+ Love reasons much better than Reason.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FROM LIFE WITHOUT FREEDOM.
+
+
+From life without freedom, say, who would not fly?
+For one day of freedom, oh! who would not die?
+Hark!--hark! 'tis the trumpet! the call of the brave,
+The death-song of tyrants, the dirge of the slave.
+Our country lies bleeding--haste, haste to her aid;
+One arm that defends is worth hosts that invade.
+
+In death's kindly bosom our last hope remains--
+The dead fear no tyrants, the grave has no chains.
+On, on to the combat! the heroes that bleed
+For virtue and mankind are heroes indeed.
+And oh, even if Freedom from _this_ world be driven,
+Despair not--at least we shall find her in heaven.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HERE'S THE BOWER.
+
+
+Here's the bower she loved so much,
+ And the tree she planted;
+Here's the harp she used to touch--
+ Oh, how that touch enchanted!
+Roses now unheeded sigh;
+ Where's the hand to wreathe them?
+Songs around neglected lie;
+ Where's the lip to breathe them?
+ Here's the bower, etc.
+
+Spring may bloom, but she we loved
+ Ne'er shall feel its sweetness;
+Time, that once so fleetly moved,
+ Now hath lost its fleetness.
+Years were days, when here she strayed,
+ Days were moments near her;
+Heaven ne'er formed a brighter maid,
+ Nor Pity wept a dearer!
+ Here's the bower, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+I SAW THE MOON RISE CLEAR.
+
+A FINLAND LOVE SONG.
+
+
+I saw the moon rise clear
+ O'er hills and vales of snow
+Nor told my fleet reindeer
+ The track I wished to go.
+Yet quick he bounded forth;
+ For well my reindeer knew
+I've but one path on earth--
+ The path which leads to you.
+
+The gloom that winter cast,
+ How soon the heart forgets,
+When summer brings, at last,
+ Her sun that never sets!
+So dawned my love for you;
+ So, fixt thro' joy and pain,
+Than summer sun more true,
+ 'Twill never set again.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AND THE SUN-DIAL.
+
+
+Young Love found a Dial once in a dark shade
+Where man ne'er had wandered nor sunbeam played;
+"Why thus in darkness lie?" whispered young Love,
+"Thou, whose gay hours in sunshine should move."
+"I ne'er," said the Dial, "have seen the warm sun,
+"So noonday and midnight to me, Love, are one."
+
+Then Love took the Dial away from the shade,
+And placed her where Heaven's beam warmly played.
+There she reclined, beneath Love's gazing eye,
+While, marked all with sunshine, her hours flew by.
+"Oh, how," said the Dial, "can any fair maid
+"That's born to be shone upon rest in the shade?"
+
+But night now comes on and the sunbeam's o'er,
+And Love stops to gaze on the Dial no more.
+Alone and neglected, while bleak rain and winds
+Are storming around her, with sorrow she finds
+That Love had but numbered a few sunny hours,--
+Then left the remainder to darkness and showers!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AND TIME.
+
+
+'Tis said--but whether true or not
+ Let bards declare who've seen 'em--
+That Love and Time have only got
+ One pair of wings between 'em.
+In Courtship's first delicious hour,
+ The boy full oft can spare 'em;
+So, loitering in his lady's bower,
+ He lets the gray-beard wear 'em.
+ Then is Time's hour of play;
+ Oh, how be flies, flies away!
+
+But short the moments, short as bright,
+ When he the wings can borrow;
+If Time to-day has had his flight,
+ Love takes his turn to-morrow.
+Ah! Time and Love, your change is then
+ The saddest and most trying,
+When one begins to limp again,
+ And t'other takes to flying.
+ Then is Love's hour to stray;
+ Oh, how he flies, flies away!
+
+But there's a nymph, whose chains I feel,
+ And bless the silken fetter,
+Who knows, the dear one, how to deal
+ With Love and Time much better.
+So well she checks their wanderings,
+ So peacefully she pairs 'em,
+That Love with her ne'er thinks of wings,
+ And Time for ever wears 'em.
+ This is Time's holiday;
+ Oh, how he flies, flies away!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE'S LIGHT SUMMER-CLOUD.
+
+
+Pain and sorrow shall vanish before us--
+ Youth may wither, but feeling will last;
+All the shadow that e'er shall fall o'er us
+ Love's light summer-cloud only shall cast.
+ Oh, if to love thee more
+ Each hour I number o'er--
+ If this a passion be
+ Worthy of thee,
+Then be happy, for thus I adore thee.
+ Charms may wither, but feeling shall last:
+All the shadow that e'er shall fall o'er thee,
+ Love's light summer-cloud sweetly shall cast.
+Rest, dear bosom, no sorrows shall pain thee,
+ Sighs of pleasure alone shalt thou steal;
+Beam, bright eyelid, no weeping shall stain thee,
+ Tears of rapture alone shalt thou feel.
+ Oh, if there be a charm,
+ In love, to banish harm--
+ If pleasure's truest spell
+ Be to love well,
+Then be happy, for thus I adore thee,
+ Charms may wither, but feeling shall last;
+All the shadow that e'er shall fall o'er thee.
+ Love's light summer-cloud sweetly shall cast.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE, WANDERING THRO' THE GOLDEN MAZE.
+
+
+Love, wandering through the golden maze
+ Of my beloved's hair,
+Traced every lock with fond delays,
+ And, doting, lingered there.
+And soon he found 'twere vain to fly;
+ His heart was close confined,
+For, every ringlet was a tie--
+ A chain by beauty twined.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MERRILY EVERY BOSOM BOUNDETH.
+
+(THE TYROLESE SONG OF LIBERTY.)
+
+
+Merrily every bosom boundeth,
+ Merrily, oh!
+Where the song of Freedom soundeth,
+ Merrily oh!
+ There the warrior's arms
+ Shed more splendor;
+ There the maiden's charm's
+ Shine more tender;
+Every joy the land surroundeth,
+ Merrily, oh! merrily, oh!
+
+Wearily every bosom pineth,
+ Wearily, oh!
+Where the bond of slavery twineth
+ Wearily, oh
+ There the warrior's dart
+ Hath no fleetness;
+ There the maiden's heart
+ Hath no sweetness--
+Every flower of life declineth,
+ Wearily, oh! wearily, oh!
+
+Cheerily then from hill and valley,
+ Cheerily, oh!
+Like your native fountain sally,
+ Cheerily, oh!
+ If a glorious death,
+ Won by bravery,
+ Sweeter be than breath
+ Sighed in slavery,
+Round the flag of Freedom rally,
+ Cheerily, oh! cheerily, oh!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+REMEMBER THE TIME.
+
+(THE CASTILIAN MAID.)
+
+
+Remember the time, in La Mancha's shades,
+ When our moments so blissfully flew;
+When you called me the flower of Castilian maids,
+ And I blushed to be called so by you;
+When I taught you to warble the gay seguadille.
+ And to dance to the light castanet;
+Oh, never, dear youth, let you roam where you will,
+ The delight of those moments forget.
+
+They tell me, you lovers from Erin's green isle,
+ Every hour a new passion can feel;
+And that soon, in the light of some lovelier smile.
+ You'll forget the poor maid of Castile.
+But they know not how brave in battle you are,
+ Or they never could think you would rove;
+For 'tis always the spirit most gallant in war
+ That is fondest and truest in Love.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH, SOON RETURN.
+
+
+Our white sail caught the evening ray,
+ The wave beneath us seemed to burn,
+When all the weeping maid could say,
+ Was, "Oh, soon return!"
+Thro' many a clime our ship was driven
+O'er many a billow rudely thrown;
+Now chilled beneath a northern heaven,
+ Now sunned in summer's zone:
+And still, where'er we bent our way,
+ When evening bid the west wave burn,
+I fancied still I heard her say,
+ "Oh, soon return!"
+
+If ever yet my bosom found
+ Its thoughts one moment turned from thee,
+'Twas when the combat raged around,
+ And brave men looked to me.
+But tho' the war-field's wild alarm
+ For gentle love was all unmeet,
+He lent to glory's brow the charm,
+ Which made even danger sweet.
+And still, when victory's calm came o'er
+ The hearts where rage had ceased to burn,
+Those parting words I heard once more,
+ "Oh, soon return!--Oh, soon return!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE THEE?
+
+
+Love thee?--so well, so tenderly
+ Thou'rt loved, adored by me,
+Fame, fortune, wealth, and liberty,
+ Were worthless without thee.
+Tho' brimmed with blessings, pure and rare,
+ Life's cup before me lay,
+Unless thy love were mingled there,
+ I'd spurn the draft away.
+Love thee?--so well, so tenderly,
+ Thou'rt loved, adored by me,
+Fame, fortune, wealth, and liberty,
+ Are worthless without thee.
+
+Without thy smile, the monarch's lot
+ To me were dark and lone,
+While, _with_ it, even the humblest cot
+ Were brighter than his throne.
+Those worlds for which the conqueror sighs
+ For me would have no charms;
+My only world thy gentle eyes--
+ My throne thy circling arms!
+Oh, yes, so well, so tenderly
+ Thou'rt loved, adored by me,
+Whole realms of light and liberty
+ Were worthless without thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ONE DEAR SMILE.
+
+
+Couldst thou look as dear as when
+ First I sighed for thee;
+Couldst thou make me feel again
+Every wish I breathed thee then,
+ Oh, how blissful life would be!
+Hopes that now beguiling leave me,
+ Joys that lie in slumber cold--
+All would wake, couldst thou but give me
+ One dear smile like those of old.
+
+No--there's nothing left us now,
+ But to mourn the past;
+Vain was every ardent vow--
+Never yet did Heaven allow
+ Love so warm, so wild, to last.
+Not even hope could now deceive me--
+ Life itself looks dark and cold;
+Oh, thou never more canst give me
+ One dear smile like those of old
+
+
+
+
+
+
+YES, YES, WHEN THE BLOOM.
+
+
+Yes, yes, when, the bloom of Love's boyhood is o'er,
+ He'll turn into friendship that feels no decay;
+And, tho' Time may take from him the wings he once wore,
+The charms that remain will be bright as before,
+ And he'll lose but his young trick of flying away.
+Then let it console thee, if Love should not stay,
+ That Friendship our last happy moments will crown:
+Like the shadows of morning, Love lessens away,
+While Friendship, like those at the closing of day,
+ Will linger and lengthen as life's sun goes down.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DAY OF LOVE.
+
+
+ The beam of morning trembling
+ Stole o'er the mountain brook,
+ With timid ray resembling
+ Affection's early look.
+Thus love begins--sweet morn of love!
+
+ The noon-tide ray ascended,
+ And o'er the valley's stream
+ Diffused a glow as splendid
+ As passion's riper dream.
+Thus love expands--warm noon of love!
+
+ But evening came, o'ershading
+ The glories of the sky,
+ Like faith and fondness fading
+ From passion's altered eye.
+Thus love declines--cold eve of love!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LUSITANIAN WAR-SONG.
+
+
+The song of war shall echo thro' our mountains,
+ Till not one hateful link remains
+ Of slavery's lingering chains;
+ Till not one tyrant tread our plains,
+Nor traitor lip pollute our fountains.
+ No! never till that glorious day
+ Shall Lusitania's sons be gay,
+ Or hear, oh Peace, thy welcome lay
+Resounding thro' her sunny mountains.
+
+The song of war shall echo thro' our mountains,
+ Till Victory's self shall, smiling, say,
+ "Your cloud of foes hath past away,
+ "And Freedom comes with new-born ray
+"To gild your vines and light your fountains."
+ Oh, never till that glorious day
+ Shall Lusitania's sons be gay,
+ Or hear, sweet Peace, thy welcome lay
+Resounding thro' her sunny mountains.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE YOUNG ROSE.
+
+
+The young rose I give thee, so dewy and bright,
+Was the floweret most dear to the sweet bird of night,
+Who oft, by the moon, o'er her blushes hath hung,
+And thrilled every leaf with the wild lay he sung.
+
+Oh, take thou this young rose, and let her life be
+Prolonged by the breath she will borrow from thee;
+For, while o'er her bosom thy soft notes shall thrill,
+She'll think the sweet night-bird is courting her still.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN MIDST THE GAY I MEET.
+
+
+When midst the gay I meet
+ That gentle smile of thine,
+Tho' still on me it turns most sweet,
+ I scarce can call it mine:
+But when to me alone
+ Your secret tears you show,
+Oh, then I feel those tears my own,
+ And claim them while they flow.
+Then still with bright looks bless
+ The gay, the cold, the free;
+Give smiles to those who love you less,
+ But keep your tears for me.
+
+The snow on Jura's steep
+ Can smile in many a beam,
+Yet still in chains of coldness sleep.
+ How bright soe'er it seem.
+But, when some deep-felt ray
+ Whose touch is fire appears,
+Oh, then the smile is warmed away,
+ And, melting, turns to tears.
+Then still with bright looks bless
+ The gay, the cold, the free;
+Give smiles to those who love you less,
+ But keep your tears for me.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN TWILIGHT DEWS.
+
+
+When twilight dews are falling soft
+ Upon the rosy sea, love,
+I watch the star, whose beam so oft
+ Has lighted me to thee, love.
+And thou too, on that orb so dear,
+ Dost often gaze at even,
+And think, tho' lost for ever here,
+ Thou'lt yet be mine in heaven.
+
+There's not a garden walk I tread,
+ There's not a flower I see, love,
+But brings to mind some hope that's fled,
+ Some joy that's gone with thee, Love.
+And still I wish that hour was near,
+ When, friends and foes forgiven,
+The pains, the ills we've wept thro' here
+ May turn to smiles in heaven.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+YOUNG JESSICA.
+
+
+Young Jessica sat all the day,
+ With heart o'er idle love-thoughts pining;
+Her needle bright beside her lay,
+ So active once!--now idly shining.
+Ah, Jessy, 'tis in idle hearts
+ That love and mischief are most nimble;
+The safest shield against the darts
+ Of Cupid is Minerva's thimble.
+
+The child who with a magnet plays
+ Well knowing all its arts, so wily,
+The tempter near a needle lays.
+ And laughing says, "We'll steal it slily."
+The needle, having naught to do,
+ Is pleased to let the magnet wheedle;
+Till closer, closer come the two,
+ And--off, at length, elopes the needle.
+
+Now, had this needle turned its eye
+ To some gay reticule's construction,
+It ne'er had strayed from duty's tie,
+ Nor felt the magnet's sly seduction.
+Thus, girls, would you keep quiet hearts,
+ Your snowy fingers must be nimble;
+The safest shield against the darts
+ Of Cupid is Minerva's thimble.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HOW HAPPY, ONCE.
+
+
+_How_ happy, once, tho' winged with sighs,
+ My moments flew along,
+While looking on those smiling eyes,
+ And listening to thy magic song!
+But vanished now, like summer dreams,
+ Those moments smile no more;
+For me that eye no longer beams,
+ That song for me is o'er.
+Mine the cold brow,
+ That speaks thy altered vow,
+While others feel thy sunshine now.
+
+Oh, could I change my love like thee,
+ One hope might yet be mine--
+Some other eyes as bright to see,
+ And hear a voice as sweet as thine:
+But never, never can this heart
+ Be waked to life again;
+With thee it lost its vital part,
+ And withered then!
+Cold its pulse lies,
+And mute are even its sighs,
+All other grief it now defies.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+I LOVE BUT THEE.
+
+
+If, after all, you still will doubt and fear me,
+ And think this heart to other loves will stray,
+If I must swear, then, lovely doubter, hear me;
+ By every dream I have when thou'rt away,
+By every throb I feel when thou art near me,
+ I love but thee--I love but thee!
+
+By those dark eyes, where light is ever playing,
+ Where Love in depth of shadow holds his throne,
+And by those lips, which give whate'er thou'rt saying,
+ Or grave or gay, a music of its own,
+A music far beyond all minstrel's playing,
+ I love but thee--I love but thee!
+
+By that fair brow, where Innocence reposes,
+ As pure as moonlight sleeping upon snow,
+And by that cheek, whose fleeting blush discloses
+ A hue too bright to bless this world below,
+And only fit to dwell on Eden's roses,
+ I love but thee--I love but thee!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LET JOY ALONE BE REMEMBERED NOW.
+
+
+Let thy joys alone be remembered now,
+ Let thy sorrows go sleep awhile;
+Or if thought's dark cloud come o'er thy brow,
+ Let Love light it up with his smile,
+For thus to meet, and thus to find,
+ That Time, whose touch can chill
+Each flower of form, each grace of mind,
+ Hath left thee blooming still,
+Oh, joy alone should be thought of now,
+ Let our sorrows go sleep awhile;
+Or, should thought's dark cloud come o'er thy brow,
+ Let Love light it up with his smile.
+
+When the flowers of life's sweet garden fade,
+ If but _one_ bright leaf remain,
+Of the many that once its glory made,
+ It is not for us to complain.
+But thus to meet and thus to wake
+ In all Love's early bliss;
+Oh, Time all other gifts may take,
+ So he but leaves us this!
+Then let joy alone be remembered now,
+ Let our sorrows go sleep awhile;
+Or if thought's dark cloud come o'er the brow,
+ Let Love light it up with his smile!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE THEE, DEAREST? LOVE THEE?
+
+
+Love thee, dearest? love thee?
+ Yes, by yonder star I swear,
+Which thro' tears above thee
+ Shines so sadly fair;
+Tho' often dim,
+With tears, like him,
+Like him my truth will shine,
+ And--love thee, dearest? love thee?
+Yes, till death I'm thine.
+
+Leave thee, dearest? leave thee?
+ No, that star is not more true;
+When my vows deceive thee,
+ _He_ will wander too.
+A cloud of night
+May veil his light,
+And death shall darken mine--
+ But--leave thee, dearest? leave thee?
+No, till death I'm thine.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MY HEART AND LUTE.
+
+
+I give thee all--I can no more--
+ Tho' poor the offering be;
+My heart and lute are all the store
+ That I can bring to thee.
+A lute whose gentle song reveals
+ The soul of love full well;
+And, better far, a heart that feels
+ Much more than lute could tell.
+
+Tho' love and song may fail, alas!
+ To keep life's clouds away,
+At least 'twill make them lighter pass,
+ Or gild them if they stay.
+And even if Care at moments flings
+ A discord o'er life's happy strain,
+Let Love but gently touch the strings,
+ 'Twill all be sweet again!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PEACE, PEACE TO HIM THAT'S GONE!
+
+
+ When I am dead.
+ Then lay my head
+In some lone, distant dell,
+ Where voices ne'er
+ Shall stir the air,
+Or break its silent spell.
+
+ If any sound
+ Be heard around,
+Let the sweet bird alone,
+ That weeps in song,
+ Sing all night long,
+"Peace, peace, to him that's gone!"
+
+ Yet, oh, were mine
+ One sigh of thine,
+One pitying word from thee,
+ Like gleams of heaven,
+ To sinners given,
+Would be that word to me.
+
+ Howe'er unblest,
+ My shade would rest
+While listening to that tone;--
+ Enough 'twould be
+ To hear from thee,
+"Peace, peace, to him that gone."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ROSE OF THE DESERT
+
+
+Rose of the Desert! thou, whose blushing ray,
+Lonely and lovely, fleets unseen away;
+No hand to cull thee, none to woo thy sigh,--
+In vestal silence left to live and die.--
+Rose of the Desert! thus should woman be,
+Shining uncourted, lone and safe, like thee.
+
+Rose of the Garden, how, unlike thy doom!
+Destined for others, not thyself, to bloom;
+Culled ere thy beauty lives thro' half its day;
+A moment cherished, and then cast away;
+Rose of the Garden! such is woman's lot,--
+Worshipt while blooming--when she fades, forgot.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+'TIS ALL FOR THEE.
+
+
+If life for me hath joy or light,
+ 'Tis all from thee,
+My thoughts by day, my dreams by night,
+ Are but of thee, of only thee.
+Whate'er of hope or peace I know,
+My zest in joy, my balm in woe,
+To those dear eyes of thine I owe,
+ 'Tis all from thee.
+
+My heart, even ere I saw those eyes,
+ Seemed doomed to thee;
+Kept pure till then from other ties,
+ 'Twas all for thee, for only thee.
+Like plants that sleep till sunny May
+Calls forth their life my spirit lay,
+Till, touched by Love's awakening ray,
+ It lived for thee, it lived for thee.
+
+When Fame would call me to her heights,
+ She speaks by thee;
+And dim would shine her proudest lights,
+ Unshared by thee, unshared by thee.
+Whene'er I seek the Muse's shrine,
+Where Bards have hung their wreaths divine,
+And wish those wreaths of glory mine,
+ 'Tis all for thee, for only thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SONG OF THE OLDEN TIME.
+
+
+There's a song of the olden time,
+ Falling sad o'er the ear,
+Like the dream of some village chime,
+ Which in youth we loved to hear.
+And even amidst the grand and gay,
+ When Music tries her gentlest art
+I never hear so sweet a lay,
+ Or one that hangs so round my heart,
+As that song of the olden time,
+ Falling sad o'er the ear,
+Like the dream of some village chime,
+ Which in youth we loved to hear,
+
+And when all of this life is gone,--
+ Even the hope, lingering now,
+Like the last of the leaves left on
+ Autumn's sere and faded bough,--
+'Twill seem as still those friends were near,
+ Who loved me in youth's early day,
+If in that parting hour I hear
+ The same sweet notes and die away,--
+To that song of the olden time,
+ Breathed, like Hope's farewell strain,
+To say, in some brighter clime,
+ Life and youth will shine again!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WAKE THEE, MY DEAR.
+
+
+Wake thee, my dear--thy dreaming
+ Till darker hours will keep;
+While such a moon is beaming,
+ 'Tis wrong towards Heaven to sleep.
+
+Moments there are we number,
+ Moments of pain and care,
+Which to oblivious slumber
+ Gladly the wretch would spare.
+
+But now,--who'd think of dreaming
+ When Love his watch should keep?
+While such a moon is beaming,
+ 'Tis wrong towards Heaven to sleep.
+
+If e'er the fates should sever
+ My life and hopes from thee, love,
+The sleep that lasts for ever
+ Would then be sweet to me, love;
+But now,--away with dreaming!
+ Till darker hours 'twill keep;
+While such a moon is beaming,
+ 'Tis wrong towards Heaven to sleep.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BOY OF THE ALPS.
+
+
+Lightly, Alpine rover,
+Tread the mountains over;
+Rude is the path thou'st yet to go;
+ Snow cliffs hanging o'er thee,
+ Fields of ice before thee,
+While the hid torrent moans below.
+Hark, the deep thunder,
+Thro' the vales yonder!
+'Tis the huge avalanche downward cast;
+ From rock to rock
+ Rebounds the shock.
+But courage, boy! the danger's past.
+ Onward, youthful rover,
+ Tread the glacier over,
+Safe shalt thou reach thy home at last.
+On, ere light forsake thee,
+Soon will dusk o'ertake thee:
+O'er yon ice-bridge lies thy way!
+ Now, for the risk prepare thee;
+ Safe it yet may bear thee,
+Tho' 'twill melt in morning's ray.
+
+Hark, that dread howling!
+'Tis the wolf prowling,--
+Scent of thy track the foe hath got;
+ And cliff and shore
+ Resound his roar.
+But courage, boy,--the danger's past!
+
+ Watching eyes have found thee,
+ Loving arms are round thee,
+Safe hast thou reached thy father's cot.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FOR THEE ALONE.
+
+
+For thee alone I brave the boundless deep,
+Those eyes my light through every distant sea;
+My waking thoughts, the dream that gilds my sleep,
+ The noon-tide revery, all are given to thee,
+ To thee alone, to thee alone.
+
+Tho' future scenes present to Fancy's eye
+ Fair forms of light that crowd the distant air,
+When nearer viewed, the fairy phantoms fly,
+ The crowds dissolve, and thou alone art there,
+ Thou, thou alone.
+
+To win thy smile, I speed from shore to shore,
+ While Hope's sweet voice is heard in every blast,
+Still whispering on that when some years are o'er,
+ One bright reward shall crown my toil at last,
+ Thy smile alone, thy smile alone,
+
+Oh place beside the transport of that hour
+ All earth can boast of fair, of rich, and bright,
+Wealth's radiant mines, the lofty thrones of power,--
+ Then ask where first thy lover's choice would light?
+ On thee alone, on thee alone.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HER LAST WORDS, AT PARTING.
+
+
+Her last words, at parting, how _can_ I forget?
+ Deep treasured thro' life, in my heart they shall stay;
+Like music, whose charm in the soul lingers yet,
+ When its sounds from the ear have long melted away.
+Let Fortune assail me, her threatenings are vain;
+ Those still-breathing words shall my talisman be,--
+"Remember, in absence, in sorrow, and pain,
+ "There's one heart, unchanging, that beats but for thee."
+
+From the desert's sweet well tho' the pilgrim must hie,
+ Never more of that fresh-springing fountain to taste,
+He hath still of its bright drops a treasured supply,
+ Whose sweetness lends life to his lips thro' the waste.
+So, dark as my fate is still doomed to remain,
+ These words shall my well in the wilderness be,--
+ "Remember, in absence, in sorrow, and pain,
+ "There's one heart, unchanging, that beats but for thee."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LET'S TAKE THIS WORLD AS SOME WIDE SCENE.
+
+
+Let's take this world as some wide scene.
+ Thro' which in frail but buoyant boat,
+With skies now dark and now serene,
+ Together thou and I must float;
+Beholding oft on either shore
+ Bright spots where we should love to stay;
+But Time plies swift his flying oar,
+ And away we speed, away, away.
+
+Should chilling winds and rains come on,
+ We'll raise our awning 'gainst the shower;
+Sit closer till the storm is gone,
+ And, smiling, wait a sunnier hour.
+And if that sunnier hour should shine,
+ We'll know its brightness cannot stay,
+But happy while 'tis thine and mine,
+
+ Complain not when it fades away.
+So shall we reach at last that Fall
+ Down which life's currents all must go,--
+The dark, the brilliant, destined all
+ To sink into the void below.
+Nor even that hour shall want its charms,
+ If, side by side, still fond we keep,
+And calmly, in each other's arms
+ Together linked, go down the steep.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE'S VICTORY.
+
+
+Sing to Love--for, oh, 'twas he
+ Who won the glorious day;
+Strew the wreaths of victory
+ Along the conqueror's way.
+Yoke the Muses to his car,
+ Let them sing each trophy won;
+While his mother's joyous star
+ Shall light the triumph on.
+
+Hail to Love, to mighty Love,
+ Let spirits sing around;
+While the hill, the dale, and grove,
+ With "mighty Love" resound;
+Or, should a sigh of sorrow steal
+ Amid the sounds thus echoed o'er,
+'Twill but teach the god to feel
+ His victories the more.
+
+See his wings, like amethyst
+ Of sunny Ind their hue;
+Bright as when, by Psyche kist,
+ They trembled thro' and thro'.
+Flowers spring beneath his feet;
+ Angel forms beside him run;
+While unnumbered lips repeat
+ "Love's victory is won!"
+ Hail to Love, to mighty Love,
+ etc,
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF HERCULES TO HIS DAUGHTER.[1]
+
+
+"I've been, oh, sweet daughter,
+ "To fountain and sea,
+"To seek in their water
+ "Some bright gem for thee.
+"Where diamonds were sleeping,
+ "Their sparkle I sought,
+"Where crystal was weeping,
+ "Its tears I have caught.
+
+"The sea-nymph I've courted
+ "In rich coral halls;
+"With Naiads have sported
+ "By bright waterfalls.
+"But sportive or tender,
+ "Still sought I around
+"That gem, with whose splendor
+ "Thou yet shalt be crowned.
+
+"And see, while I'm speaking,
+ "Yon soft light afar;--
+"The pearl I've been seeking
+ "There floats like a star!
+"In the deep Indian Ocean
+ "I see the gem shine,
+"And quick as light's motion
+ "Its wealth shall be thine."
+
+Then eastward, like lightning,
+ The hero-god flew,
+His sunny looks brightening
+ The air he went thro'.
+And sweet was the duty,
+ And hallowed the hour,
+Which saw thus young Beauty
+ Embellished by Power.
+
+
+[1] Founded on the fable reported by Arrian (in Indicis) of Hercules
+having searched the Indian Ocean, to find the pearl with which he adorned
+his daughter Pandaea.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DREAM OF HOME.
+
+
+Who has not felt how sadly sweet
+ The dream of home, the dream of home,
+Steals o'er the heart, too soon to fleet,
+ When far o'er sea or land we roam?
+Sunlight more soft may o'er us fall,
+ To greener shores our bark may come;
+But far more bright, more dear than all,
+ That dream of home, that dream of home.
+
+Ask the sailor youth when far
+ His light bark bounds o'er ocean's foam,
+What charms him most, when evening's star
+ Smiles o'er the wave? to dream of home.
+Fond thoughts of absent friends and loves
+ At that sweet hour around him come;
+His heart's best joy where'er he roves,
+ That dream of home, that dream of home.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THEY TELL ME THOU'RT THE FAVORED GUEST.
+
+
+They tell me thou'rt the favored guest
+ Of every fair and brilliant throng;
+No wit like thine to wake the jest,
+ No voice like thine to breathe the song;
+And none could guess, so gay thou art,
+That thou and I are far apart.
+
+Alas! alas! how different flows
+ With thee and me the time away!
+Not that I wish thee sad--heaven knows--
+ Still if thou canst, be light and gay;
+I only know, that without thee
+The sun himself is dark to me.
+
+Do I thus haste to hall and bower,
+ Among the proud and gay to shine?
+Or deck my hair with gem and flower,
+ To flatter other eyes than thine?
+Ah, no, with me love's smiles are past
+Thou hadst the first, thou hadst the last.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE YOUNG INDIAN MAID.
+
+
+ There came a nymph dancing
+ Gracefully, gracefully,
+ Her eye a light glancing
+ Like the blue sea;
+ And while all this gladness
+ Around her steps hung,
+ Such sweet notes of sadness
+ Her gentle lips sung,
+That ne'er while I live from my memory shall fade
+The song or the look of that young Indian maid.
+
+ Her zone of bells ringing
+ Cheerily, cheerily,
+ Chimed to her singing
+ Light echoes of glee;
+ But in vain did she borrow
+ Of mirth the gay tone,
+ Her voice spoke of sorrow,
+ And sorrow alone.
+Nor e'er while I live from my memory shall fade
+The song or the look of that young Indian maid.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE HOMEWARD MARCH.
+
+
+Be still my heart: I hear them come:
+ Those sounds announce my lover near:
+The march that brings our warriors home
+ Proclaims he'll soon be here.
+
+ Hark, the distant tread,
+ O'er the mountain's head,
+While hills and dales repeat the sound;
+ And the forest deer
+ Stand still to hear,
+As those echoing steps ring round.
+
+Be still my heart. I hear them come,
+ Those sounds that speak my soldier near;
+Those joyous steps seem winged fox home.--
+ Rest, rest, he'll soon be here.
+
+But hark, more faint the footsteps grow,
+ And now they wind to distant glades;
+Not here their home,--alas, they go
+ To gladden happier maids!
+
+ Like sounds in a dream,
+ The footsteps seem,
+As down the hills they die away;
+ And the march, whose song
+ So pealed along,
+Now fades like a funeral lay.
+
+'Tis past, 'tis o'er,--hush, heart, thy pain!
+ And tho' not here, alas, they come,
+Rejoice for those, to whom that strain
+ Brings sons and lovers home.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WAKE UP, SWEET MELODY.
+
+
+ Wake up, sweet melody!
+ Now is the hour
+ When young and loving hearts
+ Feel most thy power,
+One note of music, by moonlight's soft ray--
+Oh, 'tis worth thousands heard coldly by day.
+ Then wake up, sweet melody!
+ Now is the hour
+ When young and loving hearts
+ Feel most thy power.
+
+ Ask the fond nightingale,
+ When his sweet flower
+ Loves most to hear his song,
+ In her green bower?
+Oh, he will tell thee, thro' summer-nights long,
+Fondest she lends her whole soul to his song.
+ Then wake up, sweet melody!
+ Now is the hour
+ When young and loving hearts
+ Feel most thy power.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CALM BE THY SLEEP.
+
+
+Calm be thy sleep as infant's slumbers!
+ Pure as angel thoughts thy dreams!
+May every joy this bright world numbers
+ Shed o'er thee their mingled beams!
+Or if, where Pleasure's wing hath glided,
+ There ever must some pang remain,
+Still be thy lot with me divided,--
+ Thine all the bliss and mine the pain!
+
+Day and night my thoughts shall hover
+ Round thy steps where'er they stray;
+As, even when clouds his idol cover,
+ Fondly the Persian tracks its ray.
+If this be wrong, if Heaven offended
+ By worship to its creature be,
+Then let my vows to both be blended,
+ Half breathed to Heaven and half to thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE EXILE.
+
+
+Night waneth fast, the morning star
+ Saddens with light the glimmering sea,
+Whose waves shall soon to realms afar
+ Waft me from hope, from love, and thee.
+Coldly the beam from yonder sky
+ Looks o'er the waves that onward stray;
+But colder still the stranger's eye
+ To him whose home is far away
+
+Oh, not at hour so chill and bleak,
+ Let thoughts of me come o'er thy breast;
+But of the lost one think and speak,
+ When summer suns sink calm to rest.
+So, as I wander, Fancy's dream
+ Shall bring me o'er the sunset seas,
+Thy look in every melting beam,
+ Thy whisper in each dying breeze.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FANCY FAIR.
+
+
+Come, maids and youths, for here we sell
+ All wondrous things of earth and air;
+Whatever wild romancers tell,
+ Or poets sing, or lovers swear,
+ You'll find at this our Fancy Fair.
+
+Here eyes are made like stars to shine,
+ And kept for years in such repair,
+That even when turned of thirty-nine,
+ They'll hardly look the worse for wear,
+ If bought at this our Fancy Fair.
+
+We've lots of tears for bards to shower,
+ And hearts that such ill usage bear,
+That, tho' they're broken every hour,
+ They'll still in rhyme fresh breaking bear,
+ If purchased at our Fancy Fair.
+
+As fashions change in every thing,
+ We've goods to suit each season's air,
+Eternal friendships for the spring,
+ And endless loves for summer wear,--
+ All sold at this our Fancy Fair.
+
+We've reputations white as snow,
+ That long will last if used with care,
+Nay, safe thro' all life's journey go,
+ If packed and marked as "brittle ware,"--
+ Just purchased at the Fancy Fair.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IF THOU WOULDST HAVE ME SING AND PLAY.
+
+
+If thou wouldst have me sing and play,
+ As once I played and sung,
+First take this time-worn lute away,
+ And bring one freshly strung.
+Call back the time when pleasure's sigh
+First breathed among the strings;
+And Time himself, in flitting by.
+ Made music with his wings.
+
+But how is this? tho' new the lute,
+ And shining fresh the chords,
+Beneath this hand they slumber mute,
+ Or speak but dreamy words.
+In vain I seek the soul that dwelt
+ Within that once sweet shell,
+Which told so warmly what it felt,
+ And felt what naught could tell.
+
+Oh, ask not then for passion's lay,
+ From lyre so coldly strung;
+With this I ne'er can sing or play,
+ As once I played and sung.
+No, bring that long-loved lute again,--
+ Tho' chilled by years it be,
+If _thou_ wilt call the slumbering strain,
+ 'Twill wake again for thee.
+
+Tho' time have frozen the tuneful stream
+ Of thoughts that gushed along,
+One look from thee, like summer's beam,
+ Will thaw them into song.
+Then give, oh give, that wakening ray,
+ And once more blithe and young,
+Thy bard again will sing and play,
+ As once he played and sung.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+STILL WHEN DAYLIGHT.
+
+
+Still when daylight o'er the wave
+Bright and soft its farewell gave,
+I used to hear, while light was falling,
+O'er the wave a sweet voice calling,
+ Mournfully at distance calling.
+
+Ah! once how blest that maid would come,
+To meet her sea-boy hastening home;
+And thro' the night those sounds repeating,
+Hail his bark with joyous greeting,
+ Joyously his light bark greeting.
+
+But, one sad night, when winds were high,
+Nor earth, nor heaven could hear her cry.
+She saw his boat come tossing over
+Midnight's wave,--but not her lover!
+ No, never more her lover.
+
+And still that sad dream loath to leave,
+She comes with wandering mind at eve,
+And oft we hear, when night is falling,
+Faint her voice thro' twilight calling,
+ Mournfully at twilight calling.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SUMMER WEBS.
+
+
+The summer webs that float and shine,
+ The summer dews that fall,
+Tho' light they be, this heart of mine
+ Is lighter still than all.
+It tells me every cloud is past
+ Which lately seemed to lour;
+That Hope hath wed young Joy at last,
+ And now's their nuptial hour!
+
+With light thus round, within, above,
+ With naught to wake one sigh,
+Except the wish that all we love
+ Were at this moment nigh,--
+It seems as if life's brilliant sun
+ Had stopt in full career,
+To make this hour its brightest one,
+And rest in radiance here.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MIND NOT THO' DAYLIGHT.
+
+
+Mind not tho' daylight around us is breaking,--
+Who'd think now of sleeping when morn's but just waking?
+Sound the merry viol, and daylight or not,
+Be all for one hour in the gay dance forgot.
+
+See young Aurora up heaven's hill advancing,
+Tho' fresh from her pillow, even she too is dancing:
+While thus all creation, earth, heaven, and sea.
+Are dancing around us, oh, why should not we?
+
+Who'll say that moments we use thus are wasted?
+Such sweet drops of time only flow to be tasted;
+While hearts are high beating and harps full in tune,
+The fault is all morning's for coming so soon.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THEY MET BUT ONCE.
+
+
+They met but once, in youth's sweet hour,
+ And never since that day
+Hath absence, time, or grief had power
+ To chase that dream away.
+They've seen the suns of other skies,
+ On other shores have sought delight;
+But never more to bless their eyes
+ Can come a dream so bright!
+They met but once,--a day was all
+ Of Love's young hopes they knew;
+And still their hearts that day recall
+ As fresh as then it flew.
+
+Sweet dream of youth! oh, ne'er again
+ Let either meet the brow
+They left so smooth and smiling then,
+ Or see what it is now.
+For, Youth, the spell was only thine,
+ From thee alone the enchantment flows,
+That makes the world around thee shine
+ With light thyself bestows.
+They met but once,--oh, ne'er again
+ Let either meet the brow
+They left so smooth and smiling then,
+ Or see what it is now.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WITH MOONLIGHT BEAMING.
+
+
+With moonlight beaming
+ Thus o'er the deep,
+Who'd linger dreaming
+ In idle sleep?
+Leave joyless souls to live by day,--
+Our life begins with yonder ray;
+And while thus brightly
+ The moments flee,
+Our barks skim lightly
+ The shining sea.
+
+To halls of splendor
+ Let great ones hie;
+Thro' light more tender
+ Our pathways lie.
+While round, from banks of brook or lake,
+Our company blithe echoes make;
+And as we lend 'em
+ Sweet word or strain,
+Still back they send 'em
+ More sweet again.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHILD'S SONG.
+
+FROM A MASQUE.
+
+
+I have a garden of my own,
+ Shining with flowers of every hue;
+I loved it dearly while alone,
+ But I shall love it more with you:
+And there the golden bees shall come,
+ In summer-time at break of morn,
+And wake us with their busy hum
+ Around the Siha's fragrant thorn.
+
+I have a fawn from Aden's land,
+ On leafy buds and berries nurst;
+And you shall feed him from your hand,
+ Though he may start with fear at first.
+And I will lead you where he lies
+ For shelter in the noontide heat;
+And you may touch his sleeping eyes,
+ And feel his little silvery feet.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE HALCYON HANGS O'ER OCEAN.
+
+
+The halcyon hangs o'er ocean,
+ The sea-lark skims the brine;
+This bright world's all in motion,
+ No heart seems sad but mine.
+
+To walk thro' sun-bright places,
+ With heart all cold the while;
+To look in smiling faces,
+ When we no more can smile;
+
+To feel, while earth and heaven
+ Around thee shine with bliss,
+To thee no light is given,--
+ Oh, what a doom is this!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD WAS HUSHT.
+
+
+The world was husht, the moon above
+ Sailed thro' ether slowly,
+When near the casement of my love,
+ Thus I whispered lowly,--
+"Awake, awake, how canst thou sleep?
+ "The field I seek to-morrow
+"Is one where man hath fame to reap,
+ "And woman gleans but sorrow."
+
+"Let battle's field be what it may.
+ Thus spoke a voice replying,
+"Think not thy love, while thou'rt away,
+ "Will sit here idly sighing.
+"No--woman's soul, if not for fame,
+ "For love can brave all danger!
+Then forth from out the casement came
+ A plumed and armed stranger.
+
+A stranger? No; 'twas she, the maid,
+ Herself before me beaming,
+With casque arrayed and falchion blade
+ Beneath her girdle gleaming!
+Close side by side, in freedom's fight,
+ That blessed morning found us;
+In Victory's light we stood ere night,
+ And Love the morrow crowned us!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TWO LOVES.
+
+
+There are two Loves, the poet sings,
+ Both born of Beauty at a birth:
+The one, akin to heaven, hath wings,
+ The other, earthly, walks on earth.
+With _this_ thro' bowers below we play,
+ With _that_ thro' clouds above we soar;
+With both, perchance, may lose our way:--
+ Then, tell me which,
+ Tell me which shall we adore?
+
+The one, when tempted down from air,
+ At Pleasure's fount to lave his lip,
+Nor lingers long, nor oft will dare
+ His wing within the wave to dip.
+While plunging deep and long beneath,
+ The other bathes him o'er and o'er
+In that sweet current, even to death:--
+ Then, tell me which,
+ Tell me which shall we adore?
+
+The boy of heaven, even while he lies
+ In Beauty's lap, recalls his home;
+And when most happy, inly sighs
+ For something happier still to come.
+While he of earth, too fully blest
+ With this bright world to dream of more,
+Sees all his heaven on Beauty's breast:--
+ Then, tell me which,
+ Tell me which shall we adore?
+
+The maid who heard the poet sing
+ These twin-desires of earth and sky,
+And saw while one inspired his string,
+ The other glistened in his eye,--
+To name the earthlier boy ashamed,
+ To chose the other fondly loath,
+At length all blushing she exclaimed,--
+ "Ask not which,
+ "Oh, ask not which--we'll worship both.
+
+"The extremes of each thus taught to shun,
+ "With hearts and souls between them given,
+"When weary of this earth with one,
+ "We'll with the other wing to heaven."
+Thus pledged the maid her vow of bliss;
+And while _one_ Love wrote down the oath,
+The other sealed it with a kiss;
+ And Heaven looked on,
+ Heaven looked on and hallowed both.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LEGEND OF PUCK THE FAIRY.
+
+
+Wouldst know what tricks, by the pale moonlight,
+ Are played by me, the merry little Sprite,
+Who wing thro' air from the camp to the court,
+From king to clown, and of all make sport;
+ Singing, I am the Sprite
+ Of the merry midnight,
+Who laugh at weak mortals and love the moonlight.
+
+To a miser's bed, where he snoring slept
+And dreamt of his cash, I slyly crept;
+Chink, chink o'er his pillow like money I rang,
+And he waked to catch--but away I sprang,
+ Singing, I am the Sprite, etc.
+
+I saw thro' the leaves, in a damsel's bower,
+She was waiting her love at that starlight hour:
+"Hist--hist!" quoth I, with an amorous sigh,
+And she flew to the door, but away flew I,
+ Singing, I am the Sprite, etc.
+
+While a bard sat inditing an ode to his love,
+Like a pair of blue meteors I stared from above,
+And he swooned--for he thought 'twas the ghost, poor man!
+Of his lady's eyes, while away I ran,
+ Singing, I am the Sprite, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BEAUTY AND SONG.
+
+
+Down in yon summer vale,
+ Where the rill flows.
+Thus said a Nightingale
+ To his loved Rose:--
+"Tho' rich the pleasures
+"Of song's sweet measures,
+"Vain were its melody,
+"Rose, without thee."
+
+Then from the green recess
+ Of her night-bower,
+Beaming with bashfulness,
+ Spoke the bright flower:--
+"Tho' morn should lend her
+"Its sunniest splendor,
+"What would the Rose be,
+"Unsung by thee?"
+
+Thus still let Song attend
+ Woman's bright way;
+Thus still let woman lend
+ Light to the lay.
+Like stars thro' heaven's sea
+Floating in harmony
+Beauty should glide along
+Circled by Song.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN THOU ART NIGH.
+
+
+When thou art nigh, it seems
+ A new creation round;
+The sun hath fairer beams,
+ The lute a softer sound.
+Tho' thee alone I see,
+ And hear alone thy sigh,
+'Tis light, 'tis song to me,
+ Tis all--when thou art nigh.
+
+When thou art nigh, no thought
+ Of grief comes o'er my heart;
+I only think--could aught
+ But joy be where thou art?
+Life seems a waste of breath,
+ When far from thee I sigh;
+And death--ay, even death
+ Were sweet, if thou wert nigh.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF A HYPERBOREAN.
+
+
+I come from a land in the sun bright deep,
+ Where golden gardens grow;
+Where the winds of the north, be calmed in sleep,
+ Their conch-shells never blow.[1]
+ Haste to that holy Isle with me,
+ Haste--haste!
+
+So near the track of the stars are we,
+ That oft on night's pale beams
+The distant sounds of their harmony
+ Come to our ear, like dreams.
+ Then haste to that holy Isle with me, etc.
+
+The Moon too brings her world so nigh,
+ That when the night-seer looks
+To that shadowless orb, in a vernal sky,
+ He can number its hills and brooks.
+ Then, haste, etc.
+
+To the Sun-god all our hearts and lyres[2]
+ By day, by night, belong;
+And the breath we draw from his living fires,
+ We give him back in song.
+ Then, haste, etc.
+
+From us descends the maid who brings
+ To Delos gifts divine;
+And our wild bees lend their rainbow wings
+ To glitter on Delphi's shrine.
+ Then haste to that holy Isle with me,
+ Haste--haste!
+
+
+[1] On the Tower of the Winds, at Athens, there is a conch shell placed in
+the hands of Boreas.--See _Stuart's Antiquities_. "The north wind," says
+Herodotus, in speaking of the Hyperboreans, "never blows with them."
+
+[2] Hecataeus tells us, that this Hyperborean island was dedicated to
+Apollo; and most of the inhabitants were either priests or songsters.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THOU BIDST ME SING.
+
+
+Thou bidst me sing the lay I sung to thee
+ In other days ere joy had left this brow;
+But think, tho' still unchanged the notes may be,
+ How different feels the heart that breathes them now!
+The rose thou wearst to-night is still the same
+ We saw this morning on its stem so gay;
+But, ah! that dew of dawn, that breath which came
+ Like life o'er all its leaves, hath past away.
+
+Since first that music touched thy heart and mine,
+ How many a joy and pain o'er both have past,--
+The joy, a light too precious long to shine,--
+ The pain, a cloud whose shadows always last.
+And tho' that lay would like the voice of home
+ Breathe o'er our ear, 'twould waken now a sigh--
+Ah! not, as then, for fancied woes to come,
+ But, sadder far, for real bliss gone by.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CUPID ARMED.
+
+
+ Place the helm on thy brow,
+ In thy hand take the spear;--
+ Thou art armed, Cupid, now,
+ And thy battle-hour is near.
+March on! march on! thy shaft and bow
+ Were weak against such charms;
+March on! march on! so proud a foe
+ Scorns all but martial arms.
+
+ See the darts in her eyes,
+ Tipt with scorn, how they shine!
+ Every shaft, as it flies,
+ Mocking proudly at thine.
+March on! march on! thy feathered darts
+ Soft bosoms soon might move;
+But ruder arms to ruder hearts
+ Must teach what 'tis to love.
+ Place the helm on thy brow;
+ In thy hand take the spear,--
+ Thou art armed, Cupid, now,
+ And thy battle-hour is near.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ROUND THE WORLD GOES.
+
+
+Round the world goes, by day and night,
+ While with it also round go we;
+And in the flight of one day's light
+ An image of all life's course we see.
+Round, round, while thus we go round,
+ The best thing a man can do,
+Is to make it, at least, a _merry_-go-round,
+ By--sending the wine round too.
+
+Our first gay stage of life is when
+ Youth in its dawn salutes the eye--
+Season of bliss! Oh, who wouldn't then
+ Wish to cry, "Stop!" to earth and sky?
+But, round, round, both boy and girl
+ Are whisked thro' that sky of blue;
+And much would their hearts enjoy the whirl,
+If--their heads didn't whirl round too.
+
+Next, we enjoy our glorious noon,
+ Thinking all life a life of light;
+But shadows come on, 'tis evening soon,
+ And ere we can say, "How short!"--'tis night.
+Round, round, still all goes round,
+ Even while I'm thus singing to you;
+And the best way to make it a _merry_-go-round,
+ Is to--chorus my song round too.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OH, DO NOT LOOK SO BRIGHT AND BLEST.
+
+
+Oh, do not look so bright and blest,
+ For still there comes a fear,
+When brow like thine looks happiest,
+ That grief is then most near.
+There lurks a dread in all delight,
+ A shadow near each ray,
+That warns us then to fear their flight,
+ When most we wish their stay.
+Then look not thou so bright and blest,
+ For ah! there comes a fear,
+When brow like thine looks happiest,
+ That grief is then most near.
+
+Why is it thus that fairest things
+ The soonest fleet and die?--
+That when most light is on their wings,
+ They're then but spread to fly!
+And, sadder still, the pain will stay--
+ The bliss no more appears;
+As rainbows take their light away,
+ And leave us but the tears!
+Then look not thou so bright and blest,
+ For ah! there comes a fear,
+When brow like thine looks happiest,
+ That grief is then most near.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MUSICAL BOX.
+
+
+"Look here," said Rose, with laughing eyes,
+ "Within this box, by magic hid,
+"A tuneful Sprite imprisoned lies,
+ "Who sings to me whene'er he's bid.
+"Tho' roving once his voice and wing,
+ "He'll now lie still the whole day long;
+"Till thus I touch the magic spring--
+ "Then hark, how sweet and blithe his song!"
+ _(A symphony.)_
+
+"Ah, Rose," I cried, "the poet's lay
+ "Must ne'er even Beauty's slave become;
+"Thro' earth and air his song may stray,
+ "If all the while his heart's at home.
+"And tho' in freedom's air he dwell,
+ "Nor bond nor chain his spirit knows,
+"Touch but the spring thou knowst so well,
+ "And--hark, how sweet the love-song flows!"
+ _(A symphony.)_
+
+Thus pleaded I for freedom's right;
+ But when young Beauty takes the field,
+And wise men seek defence in flight,
+ The doom of poets is to yield.
+No more my heart the enchantress braves,
+ I'm now in Beauty's prison hid;
+The Sprite and I are fellow slaves,
+ And I, too, sing whene'er I'm bid.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN TO SAD MUSIC SILENT YOU LISTEN.
+
+
+When to sad Music silent you listen,
+ And tears on those eyelids tremble like dew,
+Oh, then there dwells in those eyes as they glisten
+ A sweet holy charm that mirth never knew.
+But when some lively strain resounding
+ Lights up the sunshine of joy on that brow,
+Then the young reindeer o'er the hills bounding
+ Was ne'er in its mirth so graceful as thou.
+
+When on the skies at midnight thou gazest.
+ A lustre so pure thy features then wear,
+That, when to some star that bright eye thou raisest,
+ We feel 'tis thy home thou'rt looking for there.
+But when the word for the gay dance is given,
+ So buoyant thy spirit, so heartfelt thy mirth,
+Oh then we exclaim, "Ne'er leave earth for heaven,
+ "But linger still here, to make heaven of earth."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS.
+
+
+Fly swift, my light gazelle,
+ To her who now lies waking,
+To hear thy silver bell
+ The midnight silence breaking.
+And, when thou com'st, with gladsome feet,
+ Beneath her lattice springing,
+Ah, well she'll know how sweet
+ The words of love thou'rt bringing.
+
+Yet, no--not words, for they
+ But half can tell love's feeling;
+Sweet flowers alone can say
+ What passion fears revealing.
+A once bright rose's withered leaf,
+ A towering lily broken,--
+Oh these may paint a grief
+ No words could e'er have spoken.
+
+Not such, my gay gazelle,
+ The wreath thou speedest over
+Yon moonlight dale, to tell
+ My lady how I love her.
+And, what to her will sweeter be
+ Than gems the richest, rarest,--
+From Truth's immortal tree[1]
+ One fadeless leaf thou bearest.
+
+
+[1] The tree called in the East, Amrita, or the Immortal.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DAWN IS BREAKING O'ER US.
+
+
+The dawn is breaking o'er us,
+ See, heaven hath caught its hue!
+We've day's long light before us,
+What sport shall we pursue?
+The hunt o'er hill and lea?
+The sail o'er summer sea?
+Oh let not hour so sweet
+Unwinged by pleasure fleet.
+The dawn is breaking o'er us,
+ See, heaven hath caught its hue!
+We've days long light before us,
+ What sport shall we pursue?
+
+But see, while we're deciding,
+ What morning sport to play,
+The dial's hand is gliding,
+ And morn hath past away!
+Ah, who'd have thought that noon
+ Would o'er us steal so soon,--
+That morn's sweet hour of prime
+ Would last so short a time?
+But come, we've day before us,
+ Still heaven looks bright and blue;
+Quick, quick, ere eve comes o'er us,
+ What sport shall we pursue?
+
+Alas! why thus delaying?
+ We're now at evening's hour;
+Its farewell beam is playing
+ O'er hill and wave and bower.
+That light we thought would last,
+Behold, even now 'tis past;
+And all our morning dreams
+Have vanisht with its beams
+But come! 'twere vain to borrow
+ Sad lessons from this lay,
+For man will be to-morrow--
+ Just what he's been to-day.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+UNPUBLISHED SONGS.
+
+ETC.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ASK NOT IF STILL I LOVE.
+
+
+Ask not if still I love,
+ Too plain these eyes have told thee;
+Too well their tears must prove
+ How near and dear I hold thee.
+If, where the brightest shine,
+To see no form but thine,
+To feel that earth can show
+ No bliss above thee,--
+If this be love, then know
+ That thus, that thus, I love thee.
+
+'Tis not in pleasure's idle hour
+That thou canst know affection's power.
+No, try its strength in grief or pain;
+ Attempt as now its bonds to sever,
+Thou'lt find true love's a chain
+ That binds forever!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DEAR? YES.
+
+
+Dear? yes, tho' mine no more,
+ Even this but makes thee dearer;
+And love, since hope is o'er,
+ But draws thee nearer.
+
+Change as thou wilt to me,
+The same thy charm must be;
+New loves may come to weave
+ Their witchery o'er thee,
+Yet still, tho' false, believe
+ That I adore thee, yes, still adore thee.
+Think'st thou that aught but death could end
+A tie not falsehood's self can rend?
+No, when alone, far off I die,
+ No more to see, no more cares thee,
+Even then, my life's last sigh
+ Shall be to bless thee, yes, still to bless thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+UNBIND THEE, LOVE.
+
+
+Unbind thee, love, unbind thee, love,
+ From those dark ties unbind thee;
+Tho' fairest hand the chain hath wove,
+ Too long its links have twined thee.
+Away from earth!--thy wings were made
+ In yon mid-sky to hover,
+With earth beneath their dove-like shade,
+ And heaven all radiant over.
+
+Awake thee, boy, awake thee, boy,
+ Too long thy soul is sleeping;
+And thou mayst from this minute's joy
+ Wake to eternal weeping.
+Oh, think, this world is not for thee;
+ Tho' hard its links to sever;
+Tho' sweet and bright and dear they be,
+ Break or thou'rt lost for ever.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THERE'S SOMETHING STRANGE.
+
+A BUFFALO SONG.
+
+
+There's something strange, I know not what,
+ Come o'er me,
+Some phantom I've for ever got
+ Before me.
+I look on high and in the sky
+ 'Tis shining;
+On earth, its light with all things bright
+ Seems twining.
+In vain I try this goblin's spells
+ To sever;
+Go where I will, it round me dwells
+ For ever.
+
+And then what tricks by day and night
+ It plays me;
+In every shape the wicked sprite
+ Waylays me.
+Sometimes like two bright eyes of blue
+ 'Tis glancing;
+Sometimes like feet, in slippers neat,
+ Comes dancing.
+By whispers round of every sort
+ I'm taunted.
+Never was mortal man, in short,
+ So haunted.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NOT FROM THEE.
+
+
+Not from thee the wound should come,
+ No, not from thee.
+Care not what or whence my doom,
+ So not from thee!
+Cold triumph! first to make
+ This heart thy own;
+And then the mirror break
+ Where fixt thou shin'st alone.
+Not from thee the wound should come,
+ Oh, not from thee.
+I care not what, or whence, my doom,
+ So not from thee.
+
+Yet no--my lips that wish recall;
+ From thee, from thee--
+If ruin o'er this head must fall,
+ 'Twill welcome be.
+Here to the blade I bare
+ This faithful heart;
+Wound deep--thou'lt find that there,
+ In every pulse thou art.
+Yes from thee I'll bear it all:
+ If ruin be
+The doom that o'er this heart must fall,
+ 'Twere sweet from thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+GUESS, GUESS.
+
+
+I love a maid, a mystic maid,
+ Whose form no eyes but mine can see;
+She comes in light, she comes in shade,
+ And beautiful in both is she.
+Her shape in dreams I oft behold,
+ And oft she whispers in my ear
+Such words as when to others told,
+ Awake the sigh, or wring the tear;
+Then guess, guess, who she,
+The lady of my love, may be.
+
+I find the lustre of her brow,
+ Come o'er me in my darkest ways;
+And feel as if her voice, even now,
+ Were echoing far off my lays.
+There is no scene of joy or woe
+ But she doth gild with influence bright;
+And shed o'er all so rich a glow
+ As makes even tears seem full of light:
+Then guess, guess, who she,
+The lady of my love, may be.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN LOVE, WHO RULED.
+
+
+When Love, who ruled as Admiral o'er
+Has rosy mother's isles of light,
+Was cruising off the Paphian shore,
+ A sail at sunset hove in sight.
+"A chase, a chase! my Cupids all,"
+Said Love, the little Admiral.
+
+Aloft the winged sailors sprung,
+ And, swarming up the mast like bees,
+The snow-white sails expanding flung,
+ Like broad magnolias to the breeze.
+"Yo ho, yo ho, my Cupids all!"
+Said Love, the little Admiral.
+
+The chase was o'er--the bark was caught,
+ The winged crew her freight explored;
+And found 'twas just as Love had thought,
+ For all was contraband aboard.
+"A prize, a prize, my Cupids all!"
+Said Love, the little Admiral.
+
+Safe stowed in many a package there,
+ And labelled slyly o'er, as "Glass,"
+Were lots of all the illegal ware,
+ Love's Custom-House forbids to pass.
+"O'erhaul, o'erhaul, my Cupids all,"
+Said Love, the little Admiral.
+
+False curls they found, of every hue,
+ With rosy blushes ready made;
+And teeth of ivory, good as new,
+ For veterans in the smiling trade.
+"Ho ho, ho ho, my Cupids all,"
+Said Love, the little Admiral.
+
+Mock sighs, too,--kept in bags for use,
+ Like breezes bought of Lapland seers,--
+Lay ready here to be let loose,
+ When wanted, in young spinsters' ears.
+"Ha ha, ha ha, my Cupids all,"
+Said Love, the little Admiral.
+
+False papers next on board were found,
+ Sham invoices of flames and darts,
+Professedly for Paphos bound,
+ But meant for Hymen's golden marts.
+"For shame, for shame, my Cupids all!"
+Said Love, the little Admiral.
+
+Nay, still to every fraud awake,
+ Those pirates all Love's signals knew,
+And hoisted oft his flag, to make
+ Rich wards and heiresses _bring-to_.[1]
+"A foe, a foe, my Cupids all!"
+Said Love, the little Admiral.
+
+"This must not be," the boy exclaims,
+ "In vain I rule the Paphian seas,
+"If Love's and Beauty's sovereign names
+ "Are lent to cover frauds like these.
+"Prepare, prepare, my Cupids all!"
+Said Love, the little Admiral.
+
+Each Cupid stood with lighted match--
+ A broadside struck the smuggling foe,
+And swept the whole unhallowed batch
+ Of Falsehood to the depths below.
+"Huzza, huzza! my Cupids all!"
+Said Love the little Admiral.
+
+
+[1] "_To Bring-to_, to check the course of a ship."--_Falconer_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+STILL THOU FLIEST.
+
+
+Still thou fliest, and still I woo thee,
+ Lovely phantom,--all in vain;
+Restless ever, my thoughts pursue thee,
+ Fleeting ever, thou mock'st their pain.
+Such doom, of old, that youth betided,
+ Who wooed, he thought, some angel's charms,
+But found a cloud that from him glided,--
+ As thou dost from these outstretched arms.
+
+Scarce I've said, "How fair thou shinest,"
+ Ere thy light hath vanished by;
+And 'tis when thou look'st divinest
+ Thou art still most sure to fly.
+Even as the lightning, that, dividing
+ The clouds of night, saith, "Look on me,"
+Then flits again, its splendor hiding.--
+ Even such the glimpse I catch of thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THEN FIRST FROM LOVE.
+
+
+Then first from Love, in Nature's bowers,
+ Did Painting learn her fairy skill,
+And cull the hues of loveliest flowers,
+ To picture woman lovelier still.
+For vain was every radiant hue,
+ Till Passion lent a soul to art,
+And taught the painter, ere he drew,
+ To fix the model in his heart.
+
+Thus smooth his toil awhile went on,
+ Till, lo, one touch his art defies;
+The brow, the lip, the blushes shone,
+ But who could dare to paint those eyes?
+'Twas all in vain the painter strove;
+ So turning to that boy divine,
+"Here take," he said, "the pencil, Love,
+ "No hand should paint such eyes but thine."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HUSH, SWEET LUTE.
+
+
+Hush, sweet Lute, thy songs remind me
+ Of past joys, now turned to pain;
+Of ties that long have ceased to bind me,
+ But whose burning marks remain.
+In each tone, some echo falleth
+ On my ear of joys gone by;
+Every note some dream recalleth
+ Of bright hopes but born to die.
+
+Yet, sweet Lute, though pain it bring me,
+ Once more let thy numbers thrill;
+Tho' death were in the strain they sing me,
+ I must woo its anguish still.
+Since no time can e'er recover
+ Love's sweet light when once 'tis set,--
+Better to weep such pleasures over,
+ Than smile o'er any left us yet.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BRIGHT MOON.
+
+
+Bright moon, that high in heaven art shining,
+ All smiles, as if within thy bower to-night
+Thy own Endymion lay reclining,
+ And thou wouldst wake him with a kiss of light!--
+By all the bliss thy beam discovers,
+ By all those visions far too bright for day,
+Which dreaming bards and waking lovers
+ Behold, this night, beneath thy lingering ray,--
+
+I pray thee, queen of that bright heaven,
+ Quench not to-night thy love-lamp in the sea,
+Till Anthe, in this bower, hath given
+ Beneath thy beam, her long-vowed kiss to me.
+Guide hither, guide her steps benighted,
+ Ere thou, sweet moon, thy bashful crescent hide;
+Let Love but in this bower be lighted,
+ Then shroud in darkness all the world beside.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LONG YEARS HAVE PAST.
+
+
+Long years have past, old friend, since we
+ First met in life's young day;
+And friends long loved by thee and me,
+ Since then have dropt away;--
+But enough remain to cheer us on,
+ And sweeten, when thus we're met,
+The glass we fill to the many gone,
+ And the few who're left us yet.
+Our locks, old friend, now thinly grow,
+ And some hang white and chill;
+While some, like flowers mid Autumn's snow,
+ Retain youth's color still.
+And so, in our hearts, tho' one by one,
+ Youth's sunny hopes have set,
+Thank heaven, not all their light is gone,--
+ We've some to cheer us yet.
+
+Then here's to thee, old friend, and long
+ May thou and I thus meet,
+To brighten still with wine and song
+ This short life, ere it fleet.
+And still as death comes stealing on,
+ Let's never, old friend, forget,
+Even while we sigh o'er blessings gone,
+ How many are left us yet.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DREAMING FOR EVER.
+
+
+Dreaming for ever, vainly dreaming,
+ Life to the last, pursues its flight;
+Day hath its visions fairly beaming,
+ But false as those of night.
+The one illusion, the other real,
+ But both the same brief dreams at last;
+And when we grasp the bliss ideal,
+ Soon as it shines, 'tis past.
+
+Here, then, by this dim lake reposing,
+ Calmly I'll watch, while light and gloom
+Flit o'er its face till night is closing--
+ Emblem of life's short doom!
+But tho', by turns, thus dark and shining,
+ 'Tis still unlike man's changeful day,
+Whose light returns not, once declining,
+ Whose cloud, once come, will stay.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THO' LIGHTLY SOUNDS THE SONG I SING.
+
+A SONG OF THE ALPS.
+
+
+Tho' lightly sounds the song I sing to thee,
+Tho' like the lark's its soaring music be,
+Thou'lt find even here some mournful note that tells
+How near such April joy to weeping dwells.
+'Tis 'mong the gayest scenes that oftenest steal
+Those saddening thoughts we fear, yet love to feel;
+And music never half so sweet appears,
+As when her mirth forgets itself in tears.
+
+Then say not thou this Alpine song is gay--
+It comes from hearts that, like their mountain-lay,
+Mix joy with pain, and oft when pleasure's breath
+Most warms the surface feel most sad beneath.
+The very beam in which the snow-wreath wears
+Its gayest smile is that which wins its tears,--
+And passion's power can never lend the glow
+Which wakens bliss, without some touch of woe.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE RUSSIAN LOVER.
+
+
+Fleetly o'er the moonlight snows
+ Speed we to my lady's bower;
+Swift our sledge as lightning goes,
+ Nor shall stop till morning's hour.
+Bright, my steed, the northern star
+ Lights us from yon jewelled skies;
+But to greet us, brighter far,
+ Morn shall bring my lady's eyes.
+Lovers, lulled in sunny bowers,
+ Sleeping out their dream of time,
+Know not half the bliss that's ours,
+ In this snowy, icy clime.
+Like yon star that livelier gleams
+ From the frosty heavens around,
+Love himself the keener beams
+ When with snows of coyness crowned.
+Fleet then on, my merry steed,
+ Bound, my sledge, o'er hill and dale;--
+What can match a lover's speed?
+ See, 'tis daylight, breaking pale!
+Brightly hath the northern star
+ Lit us from yon radiant Skies;
+But, behold, how brighter far
+ Yonder shine my lady's eyes!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A SELECTION FROM THE SONGS IN
+
+M. P.; OR, THE BLUE-STOCKING:
+
+A COMIC OPERA IN THREE ACTS.
+
+1811.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BOAT GLEE.
+
+
+The song that lightens the languid way,
+ When brows are glowing,
+ And faint with rowing,
+Is like the spell of Hope's airy lay,
+To whose sound thro' life we stray;
+The beams that flash on the oar awhile,
+ As we row along thro' the waves so clear,
+Illume its spray, like the fleeting smile
+ That shines o'er sorrow's tear.
+
+Nothing is lost on him who sees
+ With an eye that feeling gave;--
+For him there's a story in every breeze,
+ And a picture in every wave.
+Then sing to lighten the languid way;
+ When brows are glowing,
+ And faint with rowing,
+'Tis like the spell of Hope's airy lay,
+To whose sound thro' life we stray.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+'Tis sweet to behold when the billows are sleeping,
+ Some gay-colored bark moving gracefully by;
+No damp on her deck but the eventide's weeping,
+ No breath in her sails but the summer wind's sigh.
+Yet who would not turn with a fonder emotion,
+ To gaze on the life-boat, tho' rugged and worn.
+Which often hath wafted o'er hills of the ocean
+ The lost light of hope to the seaman forlorn!
+
+Oh! grant that of those who in life's sunny slumber
+ Around us like summer-barks idly have played,
+When storms are abroad we may find in the number
+ One friend, like the life-boat, to fly to our aid.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When Lelia touched the lute,
+ Not _then_ alone 'twas felt,
+But when the sounds were mute,
+ In memory still they dwelt.
+Sweet lute! in nightly slumbers
+Still we heard thy morning numbers.
+
+Ah, how could she who stole
+ Such breath from simple wire,
+Be led, in pride of soul,
+ To string with gold her lyre?
+Sweet lute! thy chords she breaketh;
+Golden now the strings she waketh!
+
+But where are all the tales
+ Her lute so sweetly told?
+In lofty themes she fails,
+ And soft ones suit not gold.
+Rich lute! we see thee glisten,
+But, alas! no more we listen!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Young Love lived once in a humble shed,
+ Where roses breathing
+ And woodbines wreathing
+Around the lattice their tendrils spread,
+As wild and sweet as the life he led.
+ His garden flourisht,
+ For young Hope nourisht.
+The infant buds with beams and showers;
+But lips, tho' blooming, must still be fed,
+ And not even Love can live on flowers.
+
+Alas! that Poverty's evil eye
+ Should e'er come hither,
+ Such sweets to wither!
+The flowers laid down their heads to die,
+And Hope fell sick as the witch drew nigh.
+ She came one morning.
+ Ere Love had warning,
+ And raised the latch, where the young god lay;
+"Oh ho!" said Love--"is it you? good-by;"
+ So he oped the window and flew away!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Spirit of Joy, thy altar lies
+ In youthful hearts that hope like mine;
+And 'tis the light of laughing eyes
+ That leads us to thy fairy shrine.
+
+There if we find the sigh, the tear,
+ They are not those to sorrow known;
+But breathe so soft, and drop so clear,
+ That bliss may claim them for her own.
+Then give me, give me, while I weep,
+ The sanguine hope that brightens woe,
+And teaches even our tears to keep
+ The tinge of pleasure as they flow.
+
+The child who sees the dew of night
+ Upon the spangled hedge at morn,
+Attempts to catch the drops of light,
+ But wounds his finger with the thorn.
+Thus oft the brightest joys we seek,
+ Are lost when touched, and turned to pain;
+The flush they kindle leaves the cheek,
+ The tears they waken long remain.
+But give me, give me, etc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To sigh, yet feel no pain.
+ To weep, yet scarce know why;
+To sport an hour with Beauty's chain,
+ Then throw it idly by;
+To kneel at many a shrine,
+ Yet lay the heart on none;
+To think all other charms divine,
+ But those we just have won;
+This is love, careless love,
+Such as kindleth hearts that rove.
+
+To keep one sacred flame,
+ Thro' life unchilled, unmoved,
+To love in wintry age the same
+ As first in youth we loved;
+To feel that we adore
+ To such refined excess.
+That tho' the heart would break with _more_,
+ We could not live with _less_;
+This is love, faithful love,
+Such as saints might feel above.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dear aunt, in the olden time of love,
+ When women like slaves were spurned,
+A maid gave her heart, as she would her glove,
+ To be teased by a fop, and returned!
+But women grow wiser as men improve.
+And, tho' beaux, like monkeys, amuse us,
+Oh! think not we'd give such a delicate gem
+As the heart to be played with or sullied by them;
+ No, dearest aunt, excuse us.
+
+We may know by the head on Cupid's seal
+ What impression the heart will take;
+If shallow the head, oh! soon we feel
+ What a poor impression 'twill make!
+Tho' plagued, Heaven knows! by the foolish zeal
+Of the fondling fop who pursues me,
+Oh, think not I'd follow their desperate rule,
+Who get rid of the folly by wedding the fool;
+ No, dearest aunt! excuse me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When Charles was deceived by the maid he loved,
+ We saw no cloud his brow o'er-casting,
+But proudly he smiled as if gay and unmoved,
+ Tho' the wound in his heart was deep and lasting.
+And oft at night when the tempest rolled
+ He sung as he paced the dark deck over--
+"Blow, wind, blow! thou art not so cold
+As the heart of a maid that deceives her lover."
+
+Yet he lived with the happy and seemed to be gay,
+ Tho' the wound but sunk more deep for concealing;
+And Fortune threw many a thorn in his way,
+ Which, true to one anguish, he trod without feeling!
+And still by the frowning of Fate unsubdued
+ He sung as if sorrow had placed him above her--
+"Frown, Fate, frown! thou art not so rude
+ As the heart of a maid that deceives her lover."
+
+At length his career found a close in death,
+ The close he long wished to his cheerless roving,
+For Victory shone on his latest breath,
+ And he died in a cause of his heart's approving.
+But still he remembered his sorrow,--and still
+ He sung till the vision of life was over--
+"Come, death, come! thou art not so chill
+ As the heart of a maid that deceives her lover."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When life looks lone and dreary,
+ What light can dispel the gloom?
+When Time's swift wing grows weary,
+ What charm can refresh his plume?
+'Tis woman whose sweetness beameth
+ O'er all that we feel or see;
+And if man of heaven e'er dreameth,
+ 'Tis when he thinks purely of thee,
+ O woman!
+
+Let conquerors fight for glory,
+ Too dearly the meed they gain;
+Let patriots live in story--
+ Too often they die in vain;
+Give kingdoms to those who choose 'em,
+ This world can offer to me
+No throne like Beauty's bosom,
+ No freedom like serving thee,
+ O woman!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CUPID'S LOTTERY.
+
+
+A lottery, a Lottery,
+In Cupid's court there used to be;
+ Two roguish eyes
+ The highest prize
+In Cupid's scheming Lottery;
+ And kisses, too,
+ As good as new,
+Which weren't very hard to win,
+ For he who won
+ The eyes of fun
+Was sure to have the kisses in
+ A Lottery, a Lottery, etc.
+
+This Lottery, this Lottery,
+In Cupid's court went merrily,
+ And Cupid played
+ A Jewish trade
+In this his scheming Lottery;
+ For hearts, we're told,
+ In _shares_ he sold
+To many a fond believing drone,
+ And cut the hearts
+ In sixteen parts
+So well, each thought the whole his own.
+ _Chor_.--A Lottery, a Lottery, etc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Tho' sacred the tie that our country entwineth,
+ And dear to the heart her remembrance remains,
+Yet dark are the ties where no liberty shineth,
+ And sad the remembrance that slavery stains.
+O thou who wert born in the cot of the peasant,
+ But diest in languor in luxury's dome,
+Our vision when absent--our glory, when present--
+ Where thou art, O Liberty! there is my home.
+
+Farewell to the land where in childhood I've wandered!
+ In vain is she mighty, in vain, is she brave!
+Unblest is the blood that for tyrants is squandered,
+ And fame has no wreaths for the brow of the slave.
+But hail to thee, Albion! who meet'st the commotion.
+ Of Europe as calm as thy cliffs meet the foam!
+With no bonds but the law, and no slave but the ocean,
+ Hail, Temple of Liberty! thou art my home.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Oh think, when a hero is sighing,
+ What danger in such an adorer!
+What woman can dream' of denying
+ The hand that lays laurels before her?
+No heart is so guarded around,
+ But the smile of the victor will take it;
+No bosom can slumber so sound,
+ But the trumpet of glory will wake it.
+
+Love sometimes is given to sleeping,
+ And woe to the heart that allows him;
+For oh, neither smiling nor weeping
+ Has power at those moments to rouse him.
+But tho' he was sleeping so fast,
+ That the life almost seemed to forsake him,
+Believe me, one soul-thrilling blast
+ From the trumpet of glory would wake him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. Orator Puff had two tones in his voice,
+ The one squeaking thus, and the other down so!
+In each sentence he uttered he gave you your choice,
+ For one was B alt, and the rest G below.
+Oh! oh, Orator Puff!
+One voice for one orator's surely enough.
+
+But he still talked away spite of coughs and of frowns,
+So distracting all ears with his ups and his downs,
+That a wag once on hearing the orator say,
+"My voice is for war," asked him, "Which of them, pray?"
+ Oh! oh! etc.
+
+Reeling homewards one evening, top-heavy with gin,
+And rehearsing his speech on the weight of the crown,
+He tript near a sawpit, and tumbled right in,
+"Sinking Fund," the last words as his noddle came down.
+ Oh! oh, etc.
+
+"Help! help!" he exclaimed, in his he and she tones,
+"Help me out! help me out--I have broken my bones!"
+"Help you out?" said a Paddy who passed, "what a bother!
+Why, there's two of you there, can't you help one another?"
+ Oh I oh! etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OCCASIONAL EPILOGUE.
+
+SPOKEN BY MR. COBBY, IN THE CHARACTER OF VAPID, AFTER THE PLAY OF THE
+DRAMATIST, AT THE KILKENNY THEATRE.
+
+
+(_Entering as if to announce the Play_.)
+
+Ladies and Gentlemen, on Monday night,
+For the ninth time--oh accents of delight
+To the poor author's ear, when _three times three_
+With a full bumper crowns, his Comedy!
+When, long by money, and the muse, forsaken,
+He finds at length his jokes and boxes taken,
+And sees his play-bill circulate--alas,
+The only bill on which his name will pass!
+Thus, Vapid, thus shall Thespian scrolls of fame
+Thro' box and gallery waft your well-known name,
+While critic eyes the happy cast shall con,
+And learned ladies spell your _Dram. Person_.
+
+'Tis said our worthy Manager[1]intends
+To help my night, and _he_, ye know, has friends.
+Friends, did I say? for fixing friends, or _parts_,
+Engaging actors, or engaging hearts,
+There's nothing like him! wits, at his request.
+Are turned to fools, and dull dogs learn to jest;
+Soldiers, for him, good "trembling cowards" make,
+And beaus, turned clowns, look ugly for his sake;
+For him even lawyers talk without a fee,
+For him (oh friendship) _I_ act tragedy!
+In short, like Orpheus, his persuasive tricks
+Make _boars_ amusing, and put life in _sticks_.
+
+With _such_ a manager we can't but please,
+Tho' London sent us all her loud O. P.'s,[2]
+Let them come on, like snakes, all hiss and rattle,
+Armed with a thousand fans, we'd give them battle;
+You, on our side, R. P.[3]upon our banners,
+Soon should we teach the saucy O. P.'s manners:
+And show that, here--howe'er John Bull may doubt--
+In all _our_ plays, the Riot-Act's cut out;
+And, while we skim the cream of many a jest,
+Your well-timed thunder never sours its zest.
+
+Oh gently thus, when three short weeks are past,
+At Shakespeare's altar,[4] shall we breathe our last;
+And, ere this long-loved dome to ruin nods,
+Die all, die nobly, die like demigods!
+
+
+[1] The late Mr. Richard Power.
+
+[2] The brief appellation by which these persons were distinguished who,
+at the opening of the new theatre of Convent Garden, clamored for the
+continuance of the old prices of admission.
+
+[3] The initials of our manager's name.
+
+[4] This alludes to a scenic representation then preparing for the last
+night of the performances.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT.
+
+FROM A PROLOGUE WRITTEN AND SPOKEN BY THE AUTHOR, AT THE OPENING OF THE
+KILKENNY THEATRE, OCTOBER, 1809.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yet, even here, tho' Fiction rules the hour,
+There shine some genuine smiles, beyond her power;
+And there are tears, too--tears that Memory sheds
+Even o'er the feast that mimic fancy spreads,
+When her heart misses one lamented guest,[1]
+Whose eye so long threw light o'er all the rest!
+There, there, indeed, the Muse forgets her task,
+And drooping weeps behind Thalia's mask.
+
+Forgive this gloom--forgive this joyless strain,
+Too sad to welcome pleasure's smiling train.
+But, meeting thus, our hearts will part the lighter,
+As mist at dawn but makes the setting brighter;
+Gay Epilogue will shine where Prologue fails--
+As glow-worms keep their splendor for their tails.
+
+I know not why--but time, methinks, hath past
+More fleet than usual since we parted last.
+It seems but like a dream of yesternight.
+Whose charm still hangs, with fond, delaying light;
+And, ere the memory lose one glowing hue
+Of former joy, we come to kindle new.
+Thus ever may the flying moments haste
+With trackless foot along life's vulgar waste,
+But deeply print and lingeringly move,
+When thus they reach the sunny spots we love.
+Oh yes, whatever be our gay career,
+Let this be still the solstice of the year,
+Where Pleasure's sun shall at its height remain,
+And slowly sink to level life again.
+
+
+[1] The late Mr. John Lyster, one of the oldest members and best actors of
+the Kilkenny Theatrical Society.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SYLPH'S BALL.
+
+
+A sylph, as bright as ever sported
+ Her figure thro' the fields of air,
+By an old swarthy Gnome was courted.
+ And, strange to say, he won the fair.
+
+The annals of the oldest witch
+ A pair so sorted could not show,
+But how refuse?--the Gnome was rich,
+ The Rothschild of the world below;
+
+And Sylphs, like other pretty creatures,
+ Are told, betimes, they must consider
+Love as an auctioneer of features,
+ Who knocks them down to the best bidder.
+
+Home she was taken to his Mine--
+ A Palace paved with diamonds all--
+And, proud as Lady Gnome to shine,
+ Sent out her tickets for a ball.
+
+The _lower_ world of course was there,
+ And all the best; but of the _upper_
+The sprinkling was but shy and rare,--
+A few old Sylphids who loved supper.
+
+As none yet knew the wondrous Lamp
+Of DAVY, that renowned Aladdin,
+And the Gnome's Halls exhaled a damp
+Which accidents from fire were had in;
+
+The chambers were supplied with light
+By many strange but safe devices;
+Large fire-flies, such as shine at night
+Among the Orient's flowers and spices;--
+
+Musical flint-mills--swiftly played
+ By elfin hands--that, flashing round,
+Like certain fire-eyed minstrel maids,
+Gave out at once both light and sound.
+
+Bologna stones that drink the sun;
+ And water from that Indian sea,
+Whose waves at night like wildfire run--
+Corked up in crystal carefully.
+
+Glow-worms that round the tiny dishes
+Like little light-houses, were set up;
+And pretty phosphorescent fishes
+ That by their own gay light were eat up.
+
+'Mong the few guests from Ether came
+That wicked Sylph whom Love we call--
+My Lady knew him but by name,
+ My Lord, her husband, not at all.
+
+Some prudent Gnomes, 'tis said, apprised
+That he was coming, and, no doubt
+Alarmed about his torch, advised
+ He should by all means be kept out.
+
+But others disapproved this plan,
+ And by his flame tho' somewhat frighted,
+Thought Love too much a gentleman
+In such a dangerous place to light it.
+
+However, _there_ he was--and dancing
+ With the fair Sylph, light as a feather;
+They looked like two fresh sunbeams glancing
+At daybreak down to earth together.
+
+And all had gone off safe and well,
+ But for that plaguy torch whose light,
+Though not _yet_ kindled--who could tell
+How soon, how devilishly, it _might_?
+
+And so it chanced--which, in those dark
+ And fireless halls was quite amazing;
+Did we not know how small a spark
+ Can set the torch of Love a-blazing.
+
+Whether it came (when close entangled
+ In the gay waltz) from her bright eyes,
+Or from the _lucciole_, that spangled
+ Her locks of jet--is all surmise;
+
+But certain 'tis the ethereal girl
+ _Did_ drop a spark at some odd turning,
+Which by the waltz's windy whirl
+ Was fanned up into actual burning.
+
+Oh for that Lamp's metallic gauze,
+ That curtain of protecting wire,
+Which DAVY delicately draws
+ Around illicit, dangerous fire!--
+
+The wall he sets 'twixt Flame and Air,
+ (Like that which barred young Thisbe's bliss,)
+Thro' whose small holes this dangerous pair
+ May see each other but not kiss.
+
+At first the torch looked rather bluely,--
+ A sign, they say, that no good boded--
+Then quick the gas became unruly.
+ And, crack! the ball-room all exploded.
+
+Sylphs, gnomes, and fiddlers mixt together,
+ With all their aunts, sons, cousins, nieces,
+Like butterflies in stormy weather,
+ Were blown--legs, wings, and tails--to pieces!
+
+While, mid these victims of the torch,
+ The Sylph, alas, too, bore her part--
+Found lying with a livid scorch
+ As if from lightning o'er her heart!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Well done"--a laughing Goblin said--
+ Escaping from this gaseous strife--
+"'Tis not the _first_ time Love has made
+ "A _blow-up_ in connubial life!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+REMONSTRANCE.
+
+
+_After a Conversation with Lord John Russell, in which he had intimated
+some Idea of giving up all political Pursuits. _
+
+
+What! _thou_, with thy genius, thy youth, and thy name--
+ Thou, born of a Russell--whose instinct to run
+The accustomed career of thy sires, is the same
+ As the eaglet's, to soar with his eyes on the sun!
+
+Whose nobility comes to thee, stampt with a seal,
+ Far, far more ennobling than monarch e'er set;
+With the blood of thy race, offered up for the weal
+ Of a nation that swears by that martyrdom yet!
+
+Shalt _thou_ be faint-hearted and turn from the strife,
+ From the mighty arena, where all that is grand
+And devoted and pure and adorning in life,
+ 'Tis for high-thoughted spirits like thine to command?
+
+Oh no, never dream it--while good men despair
+ Between tyrants and traitors, and timid men bow,
+Never think for an instant thy country can spare
+ Such a light from her darkening horizon as thou.
+
+With a spirit, as meek as the gentlest of those
+ Who in life's sunny valley lie sheltered and warm;
+Yet bold and heroic as ever yet rose
+ To the top cliffs of Fortune and breasted her storm;
+
+With an ardor for liberty fresh as in youth
+ It first kindles the bard and gives life to his lyre;
+Yet mellowed, even now, by that mildness of truth
+ Which tempers but chills not the patriot fire;
+
+With an eloquence--not like those rills from a height,
+ Which sparkle and foam and in vapor are o'er;
+But a current that works out its way into light
+ Thro' the filtering recesses of thought and of lore.
+
+Thus gifted, thou never canst sleep in the shade;
+ If the stirrings of Genius, the music of fame,
+And the charms of thy cause have not power to persuade,
+ Yet think how to Freedom thou'rt pledged by thy Name.
+
+Like the boughs of that laurel by Delphi's decree
+ Set apart for the Fane and its service divine,
+So the branches that spring from the old Russell tree
+ Are by Liberty _claimed_ for the use of her Shrine.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MY BIRTH-DAY.
+
+
+"My birth-day"--what a different sound
+ That word had in my youthful ears!
+And how, each time the day comes round,
+ Less and less white its mark appears!
+
+"When first our scanty years are told,
+It seems like pastime to grow old;
+And as Youth counts the shining links
+ That Time around him binds so fast,
+Pleased with the task, he little thinks
+ How hard that chain will press at last.
+Vain was the man, and false as vain,
+ Who said--"were he ordained to run
+"His long career of life again,
+ "He would do all that he _had_ done."--
+Ah, 'tis not thus the voice that dwells
+ In sober birth-days speaks to me;
+Far otherwise--of time it tells,
+ Lavished unwisely, carelessly:
+Of counsel mockt; of talents made
+ Haply for high and pure designs,
+But oft, like Israel's incense, laid
+ Upon unholy, earthly shrines;
+Of nursing many a wrong desire,
+ Of wandering after Love too far,
+And taking every meteor fire
+ That crost my pathway, for his star.--
+All this it tells, and, could I trace
+ The imperfect picture o'er again.
+With power to add, retouch, efface
+ The lights and shades, the joy and pain,
+How little of the past would stay!
+How quickly all should melt away--
+All--but that Freedom of the Mind
+ Which hath been more than wealth to me;
+Those friendships, in my boyhood twined,
+ And kept till now unchangingly,
+And that dear home, that saving ark,
+ Where Love's true light at last I've found,
+Cheering within, when all grows dark
+ And comfortless and stormy round!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FANCY.
+
+
+The more I've viewed this world, the more I've found,
+That filled as 'tis with scenes and creatures rare,
+Fancy commands within her own bright round
+ A world of scenes and creatures far more fair.
+Nor is it that her power can call up there
+ A single charm, that's not from Nature won,--
+No more than rainbows in their pride can wear
+ A single tint unborrowed from the sun;
+But 'tis the mental medium; it shines thro',
+That lends to Beauty all its charm and hue;
+As the same light that o'er the level lake
+ One dull monotony of lustre flings,
+Will, entering in the rounded raindrop, make
+Colors as gay as those on angels' wings!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+FANNY, DEAREST.
+
+
+Yes! had I leisure to sigh and mourn,
+ Fanny dearest, for thee I'd sigh;
+And every smile on my cheek should turn
+ To tears when thou art nigh.
+But between love and wine and sleep,
+ So busy a life I live,
+That even the time it would take to weep
+ Is more than my heart can give.
+Then wish me not to despair and pine,
+ Fanny, dearest of all the dears!
+The Love that's ordered to bathe in wine,
+ Would be sure to take cold in tears.
+
+Reflected bright in this heart of mine,
+ Fanny dearest, thy image lies;
+But ah! the mirror would cease to shine,
+ If dimmed too often with sighs.
+They lose the half of beauty's light,
+ Who view it thro' sorrow's tear;
+And 'tis but to see thee truly bright
+ That I keep my eye-beams clear.
+Then wait no longer till tears shall flow--
+
+ Fanny, dearest! the hope is vain;
+If sunshine cannot dissolve thy snow,
+ I shall never attempt it with rain.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSLATIONS FROM CATULLUS.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CARM. 70.
+
+ _dicebas quondam, etc_.
+
+TO LESBIA.
+
+
+Thou told'st me, in our days of love,
+ That I had all that heart of thine;
+That, even to share the couch of Jove,
+ Thou wouldst not, Lesbia, part from mine.
+
+How purely wert thou worshipt then!
+ Not with the vague and vulgar fires
+Which Beauty wakes in soulless men,--
+ But loved, as children by their sires.
+
+That flattering dream, alas, is o'er;--
+ I know thee now--and tho' these eyes
+Doat on thee wildly as before,
+ Yet, even in doating, I despise.
+
+Yes, sorceress--mad as it may seem--
+ With all thy craft, such spells adorn thee,
+That passion even outlives esteem.
+ And I at once adore--and scorn thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CARM. II.
+
+
+ _pauca nunciate meae puellae_.
+
+
+Comrades and friends! with whom, where'er
+ The fates have willed thro' life I've roved,
+Now speed ye home, and with you bear
+ These bitter words to her I've loved.
+
+Tell her from fool to fool to run,
+ Where'er her vain caprice may call;
+Of all her dupes not loving one,
+ But ruining and maddening all.
+
+Bid her forget--what now is past--
+ Our once dear love, whose rain lies
+Like a fair flower, the meadow's last.
+ Which feels the ploughshare's edge and dies!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CARM. 29.
+
+
+ _peninsularum Sirmio, insularumque ocelle_.
+
+
+Sweet Sirmio! thou, the very eye
+ Of all peninsulas and isles,
+That in our lakes of silver lie,
+ Or sleep enwreathed by Neptune's smiles--
+
+How gladly back to thee I fly!
+ Still doubting, asking--_can_ it be
+That I have left Bithynia's sky,
+ And gaze in safety upon thee?
+
+Oh! what is happier than to find
+ Our hearts at ease, our perils past;
+When, anxious long, the lightened mind
+ Lays down its load of care at last:
+
+When tired with toil o'er land and deep,
+ Again we tread the welcome floor
+Of our own home, and sink to sleep
+ On the long-wished-for bed once more.
+
+This, this it is that pays alone
+ The ills of all life's former track.--
+Shine out, my beautiful, my own
+ Sweet Sirmio, greet thy master back.
+
+And thou, fair Lake, whose water quaffs
+ The light of heaven like Lydia's sea,
+Rejoice, rejoice--let all that laughs
+ Abroad, at home, laugh out for me!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TIBULLUS TO SULPICIA.
+
+
+ _nulla tuum nobis subducet femina lectum, etc.,
+ Lib. iv. Carm. 13_.
+
+
+"Never shall woman's smile have power
+ "To win me from those gentle charms!"--
+Thus swore I, in that happy hour,
+ When Love first gave thee to my arms.
+
+And still alone thou charm'st my sight--
+ Still, tho' our city proudly shine
+With forms and faces, fair and bright,
+ I see none fair or bright but thine.
+
+Would thou wert fair for only me,
+ And couldst no heart but mine allure!--
+To all men else unpleasing be,
+ So shall I feel my prize secure.
+
+Oh, love like mine ne'er wants the zest
+ Of others' envy, others' praise;
+But, in its silence safely blest,
+ Broods o'er a bliss it ne'er betrays.
+
+Charm of my life! by whose sweet power
+ All cares are husht, all ills subdued--
+My light in even the darkest hour,
+ My crowd in deepest solitude!
+
+No, not tho' heaven itself sent down
+ Some maid of more than heavenly charms,
+With bliss undreamt thy bard to crown,
+ Would he for her forsake those arms!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IMITATION.
+
+FROM THE FRENCH.
+
+
+With women and apples both Paris and Adam
+ Made mischief enough in their day:--
+God be praised that the fate of mankind, my dear Madam,
+ Depends not on _us_, the same way.
+For, weak as I am with temptation to grapple,
+ The world would have doubly to rue thee:
+
+Like Adam, I'd gladly take _from_ thee the apple,
+ Like Paris, at once give it _to_ thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+INVITATION TO DINNER.
+
+ADDRESSED TO LORD LANSDOWNE.
+
+September, 1818.
+
+
+Some think we bards have nothing real;
+ That poets live among the stars so,
+Their very dinners are ideal,--
+ (And, heaven knows, too oft they _are_ so,)--
+For instance, that we have, instead
+ Of vulgar chops and stews and hashes,
+First course--a Phoenix, at the head.
+ Done in its own celestial ashes;
+At foot, a cygnet which kept singing
+All the time its neck was wringing.
+Side dishes, thus--Minerva's owl,
+Or any such like learned fowl:
+Doves, such as heaven's poulterer gets,
+When Cupid shoots his mother's pets.
+Larks stewed in Morning's roseate breath,
+ Or roasted by a sunbeam's splendor;
+And nightingales, berhymed to death--
+ Like young pigs whipt to make them tender.
+
+Such fare may suit those bards, who are able
+To banquet at Duke Humphrey's table;
+But as for me, who've long been taught
+ To eat and drink like other people;
+And can put up with mutton, bought
+ Where Bromham[1] rears its ancient steeple--
+If Lansdowne will consent to share
+My humble feast, tho' rude the fare,
+Yet, seasoned by that salt he brings
+From Attica's salinest springs,
+'Twill turn to dainties;--while the cup,
+Beneath his influence brightening up,
+Like that of Baucis, touched by Jove,
+Will sparkle fit for gods above!
+
+
+[1] A picturesque village in sight of my cottage, and from which it is
+separated out by a small verdant valley.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+VERSES TO THE POET CRABBE'S INKSTAND.[1]
+
+(WRITTEN MAY, 1832.)
+
+
+All, as he left it!--even the pen,
+ So lately at that mind's command,
+Carelessly lying, as if then
+ Just fallen from his gifted hand.
+
+Have we then lost him? scarce an hour,
+ A little hour, seems to have past,
+Since Life and Inspiration's power
+ Around that relic breathed their last.
+
+Ah, powerless now--like talisman
+ Found in some vanished wizard's halls,
+Whose mighty charm with him began,
+ Whose charm with him extinguisht falls.
+
+Yet, tho', alas! the gifts that shone
+ Around that pen's exploring track,
+Be now, with its great master, gone,
+ Nor living hand can call them back;
+
+Who does not feel, while thus his eyes
+ Rest on the enchanter's broken wand,
+Each earth-born spell it worked arise
+ Before him in succession grand?
+
+Grand, from the Truth that reigns o'er all;
+ The unshrinking truth that lets her light
+Thro' Life's low, dark, interior fall,
+ Opening the whole, severely bright:
+
+Yet softening, as she frowns along,
+ O'er scenes which angels weep to see--
+Where Truth herself half veils the Wrong,
+ In pity of the Misery.
+
+True bard!--and simple, as the race
+ Of true-born poets ever are,
+When, stooping from their starry place,
+ They're children near, tho' gods afar.
+
+How freshly doth my mind recall,
+ 'Mong the few days I've known with thee,
+One that, most buoyantly of all,
+ Floats in the wake of memory;[2]
+
+When he, the poet, doubly graced,
+ In life, as in his perfect strain,
+With that pure, mellowing power of Taste,
+ Without which Fancy shines in vain;
+
+Who in his page will leave behind,
+ Pregnant with genius tho' it be,
+But half the treasures of a mind,
+ Where Sense o'er all holds mastery:--
+
+Friend of long years! of friendship tried
+ Thro' many a bright and dark event;
+In doubts, my judge--in taste, my guide--
+ In all, my stay and ornament!
+
+He, too, was of our feast that day,
+ And all were guests of one whose hand
+Hath shed a new and deathless ray
+ Around the lyre of this great land;
+
+In whose sea-odes--as in those shells
+ Where Ocean's voice of majesty
+Seems still to sound--immortal dwells
+ Old Albion's Spirit of the Sea.
+
+Such was our host; and tho', since then,
+ Slight clouds have risen 'twixt him and me,
+Who would not grasp such hand again,
+ Stretched forth again in amity?
+
+Who can, in this short life, afford
+ To let such mists a moment stay,
+When thus one frank, atoning word,
+ Like sunshine, melts them all away?
+
+Bright was our board that day--tho' _one_
+ Unworthy brother there had place;
+As 'mong the horses of the Sun,
+ One was, they say, of earthly race.
+
+Yet, _next_ to Genius is the power
+ Of feeling where true Genius lies;
+And there was light around that hour
+ Such as, in memory, never dies;
+
+Light which comes o'er me as I gaze,
+ Thou Relic of the Dead, on thee,
+Like all such dreams of vanisht days,
+ Brightly, indeed--but mournfully!
+
+
+[1] Soon after Mr. Crabbe's death, the sons of that gentleman did me the
+honor of presenting to me the inkstand, pencil, etc., which their
+distinguished father had long been in the habit of using.
+
+[2] The lines that follow allude to a day passed in company with Mr.
+Crabbe, many years since, when a party, consisting only of Mr. Rogers, Mr.
+Crabbe, and the author of these verses, had the pleasure of dining with
+Mr. Thomas Campbell, at his house at Sydenham.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO CAROLINE, VISCOUNTESS VALLETORT.
+
+WRITTEN AT LACOCK ABBEY, JANUARY, 1832.
+
+
+When I would sing thy beauty's light,
+Such various forms, and all so bright,
+I've seen thee, from thy childhood, wear,
+I know not which to call most fair,
+Nor 'mong the countless charms that spring
+For ever round thee, _which_ to sing.
+
+ When I would paint thee as thou _art_,
+Then all thou _wert_ comes o'er my heart--
+The graceful child in Beauty's dawn
+Within the nursery's shade withdrawn,
+Or peeping out--like a young moon
+Upon a world 'twill brighten soon.
+Then next in girlhood's blushing hour,
+As from thy own loved Abbey-tower
+I've seen thee look, all radiant, down,
+With smiles that to the hoary frown
+Of centuries round thee lent a ray,
+Chasing even Age's gloom away;--
+Or in the world's resplendent throng,
+As I have markt thee glide along,
+Among the crowds of fair and great
+A spirit, pure and separate,
+To which even Admiration's eye
+Was fearful to approach too nigh;--
+A creature circled by a spell
+Within which nothing wrong could dwell;
+And fresh and clear as from the source.
+Holding through life her limpid course,
+Like Arethusa thro' the sea,
+Stealing in fountain purity.
+
+ Now, too, another change of light!
+As noble bride, still meekly bright
+Thou bring'st thy Lord a dower above
+All earthly price, pure woman's love;
+And showd'st what lustre Rank receives,
+When with his proud Corinthian leaves
+Her rose this high-bred Beauty weaves.
+
+ Wonder not if, where all's so fair,
+To choose were more than bard can dare;
+Wonder not if, while every scene
+I've watched thee thro' so bright hath been,
+The enamored muse should, in her quest
+Of beauty, know not where to rest,
+But, dazzled, at thy feet thus fall,
+Hailing thee beautiful in all!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A SPECULATION.
+
+
+Of all speculations the market holds forth,
+ The best that I know for a lover of pelf,
+Is to buy Marcus up, at the price he is worth,
+ And then sell him at that which he sets on himself.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MY MOTHER.
+
+WRITTEN IN A POCKET BOOK, 1822.
+
+
+They tell us of an Indian tree,
+ Which, howsoe'er the sun and sky
+May tempt its boughs to wander free,
+ And shoot and blossom wide and high,
+Far better loves to bend its arms
+ Downward again to that dear earth,
+From which the life that, fills and warms
+ Its grateful being, first had birth.
+'Tis thus, tho' wooed by flattering friends,
+ And fed with fame (_if_ fame it be)
+This heart, my own dear mother, bends,
+ With love's true instinct, back to thee!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LOVE AND HYMEN.
+
+
+Love had a fever--ne'er could close
+ His little eyes till day was breaking;
+And wild and strange enough, Heaven knows,
+ The things he raved about while waking.
+
+To let him pine so were a sin;--
+ One to whom all the world's a debtor--
+So Doctor Hymen was called in,
+ And Love that night slept rather better.
+
+Next day the case gave further hope yet,
+ Tho' still some ugly fever latent;--
+"Dose, as before"--a gentle opiate.
+ For which old Hymen has a patent.
+
+After a month of daily call,
+ So fast the dose went on restoring,
+That Love, who first ne'er slept at all,
+ Now took, the rogue! to downright snoring.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LINES ON THE ENTRY OF THE AUSTRIANS INTO NAPLES, 1821.
+
+
+ _carbone notati_.
+
+
+Ay--down to the dust with them, slaves as they are,
+ From this hour let the blood in their dastardly veins,
+That shrunk at the first touch of Liberty's war,
+ Be wasted for tyrants, or stagnate in chains.
+
+On, on like a cloud, thro' their beautiful vales,
+ Ye locusts of tyranny, blasting them o'er--
+Fill, fill up their wide sunny waters, ye sails
+ From each slave-mart of Europe and shadow their shore!
+
+Let their fate be a mock-word--let men of all lands
+ Laugh out with a scorn that shall ring to the poles,
+When each sword that the cowards let fall from their hands
+ Shall be forged into fetters to enter their souls.
+
+And deep, and more deep, as the iron is driven,
+ Base slaves! let the whet of their agony be,
+To think--as the Doomed often think of that heaven
+ They had once within reach--that they _might_ have been free.
+
+Oh shame! when there was not a bosom whose heat
+ Ever rose 'bove the _zero_ of Castlereagh's heart.
+That did not, like echo, your war-hymn repeat,
+ And send all its prayers with your Liberty's start;
+
+When the world stood in hope--when a spirit that breathed
+ The fresh air of the olden time whispered about;
+And the swords of all Italy, halfway unsheathed,
+ But waited one conquering cry to flash out!
+
+When around you the shades of your Mighty in fame,
+ FILICAJAS and PETRARCHS, seemed bursting to view,
+And their words and their warnings, like tongues of bright flame
+ Over Freedom's apostles, fell kindling on you!
+
+Oh shame! that in such a proud moment of life
+ Worth the history of ages, when, had you but hurled
+One bolt at your tyrant invader, that strife
+ Between freemen and tyrants had spread thro' the world--
+
+That then--oh! disgrace upon manhood--even then,
+ You should falter, should cling to your pitiful breath;
+Cower down into beasts, when you might have stood men,
+ And prefer the slave's life of prostration to death.
+
+It is strange, it is dreadful:--shout, Tyranny, shout
+ Thro' your dungeons and palaces, "Freedom is o'er;"--
+If there lingers one spark of her light, tread it out,
+ And return to your empire of darkness once more.
+
+For if _such_ are the braggarts that claim to be free,
+ Come, Despot of Russia, thy feet let me kiss;
+Far nobler to live the brute bondman of thee,
+ Than to sully even chains by a struggle like this!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SCEPTICISM.
+
+
+Ere Psyche drank the cup that shed
+ Immortal Life into her soul,
+Some evil spirit poured, 'tis said,
+ One drop of Doubt into the bowl--
+
+Which, mingling darkly with the stream,
+ To Psyche's lips--she knew not why--
+Made even that blessed nectar seem
+ As tho' its sweetness soon would die.
+
+Oft, in the very arms of Love,
+ A chill came o'er her heart--a fear
+That Death might, even yet, remove
+ Her spirit from that happy sphere.
+
+"Those sunny ringlets," she exclaimed.
+ Twining them round her snowy fingers;
+"That forehead, where a light unnamed,
+ "Unknown on earth, for ever lingers;
+
+"Those lips, thro' which I feel the breath
+ "Of Heaven itself, whene'er they sever--
+"Say, are they mine, beyond all death,
+ "My own, hereafter, and for ever?
+
+"Smile not--I know that starry brow,
+ "Those ringlets, and bright lips of thine,
+"Will always shine, as they do now--
+ "But shall _I_ live to see them shine?"
+
+In vain did Love say, "Turn thine eyes
+ "On all that sparkles round thee here--
+"Thou'rt now in heaven where nothing dies,
+ "And in these arms--what _canst_ thou fear?"
+
+In vain--the fatal drop, that stole
+ Into that cup's immortal treasure,
+Had lodged its bitter near her soul.
+ And gave a tinge to every pleasure.
+
+And, tho' there ne'er was transport given
+ Like Psyche's with that radiant boy,
+Here is the only face in heaven,
+ That wears a cloud amid its joy.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A JOKE VERSIFIED.
+
+
+"Come, come," said Tom's father, "at your time of life,
+ "There's no longer excuse for thus playing the rake--
+"It is time you should think, boy, of taking a wife"--
+ "Why, so it is, father--whose wife shall I take?"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND.
+
+
+Pure as the mantle, which, o'er him who stood
+ By Jordan's stream, descended from the sky,
+Is that remembrance which the wise and good
+ Leave in the hearts that love them, when they die.
+
+So pure, so precious shall the memory be,
+Bequeathed, in dying, to our souls by thee--
+So shall the love we bore thee, cherisht warm
+ Within our souls thro' grief and pain and strife,
+Be, like Elisha's cruse, a holy charm,
+ Wherewith to "heal the waters" of this life!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO JAMES CORRY, ESQ.
+
+ON HIS MAKING ME A PRESENT OF A WINE STRAINER.
+
+BRIGHTON, JUNE, 1825.
+
+
+This life, dear Corry, who can doubt?--
+ Resembles much friend Ewart's[1] wine,
+When _first_ the rosy drops come out,
+ How beautiful, how clear they shine!
+And thus awhile they keep their tint,
+ So free from even a shade with some,
+That they would smile, did you but hint,
+ That darker drops would _ever_ come.
+
+But soon the ruby tide runs short,
+ Each minute makes the sad truth plainer,
+Till life, like old and crusty port,
+ When near its close, requires a strainer.
+
+_This_ friendship can alone confer,
+ Alone can teach the drops to pass,
+If not as bright as _once_ they were,
+ At least unclouded, thro' the glass.
+
+Nor, Corry, could a boon be mine.
+ Of which this heart were fonder, vainer,
+Than thus, if life grow like old wine,
+ To have _thy_ friendship for its strainer.
+
+
+[1] A wine-merchant.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FRAGMENT OF A CHARACTER.
+
+
+Here lies Factotum Ned at last;
+ Long as he breathed the vital air,
+Nothing throughout all Europe past
+ In which Ned hadn't some small share.
+
+Whoe'er was _in_, whoe'er was _out_,
+ Whatever statesmen did or said,
+If not exactly brought about,
+ 'Twas all, at least, contrived by Ned.
+
+With Nap, if Russia went to war,
+ 'Twas owing, under Providence,
+To certain hints Ned gave the Tsar--
+ (Vide his pamphlet--price, sixpence.)
+
+If France was beat at Waterloo--
+ As all but Frenchmen think she was--
+To Ned, as Wellington well knew,
+ Was owing half that day's applause.
+
+Then for his news--no envoy's bag
+ E'er past so many secrets thro' it;
+Scarcely a telegraph could wag
+ Its wooden finger, but Ned knew it.
+
+Such tales he had of foreign plots,
+ With foreign names, one's ear to buzz in!
+From Russia, _shefs_ and _ofs_ in lots,
+ From Poland, _owskis_ by the dozen.
+
+When George, alarmed for England's creed,
+ Turned out the last Whig ministry,
+And men asked--who advised the deed?
+ Ned modestly confest 'twas he.
+
+For tho', by some unlucky miss,
+ He had not downright _seen_ the King,
+He sent such hints thro' Viscount _This_,
+ To Marquis _That_, as clenched the thing.
+
+The same it was in science, arts,
+ The Drama, Books, MS. and printed--
+Kean learned from Ned his cleverest parts,
+ And Scott's last work by him was hinted.
+
+Childe Harold in the proofs he read,
+ And, here and there infused some soul in't--
+Nay, Davy's Lamp, till seen by Ned,
+ Had--odd enough--an awkward hole in't.
+
+'Twas thus, all-doing and all-knowing,
+ Wit, statesman, boxer, chymist, singer,
+Whatever was the best pie going,
+ In _that_ Ned--trust him--had his finger.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHAT SHALL I SING THEE?
+
+TO ----.
+
+
+What shall I sing thee? Shall I tell
+Of that bright hour, remembered well
+As tho' it shone but yesterday,
+
+When loitering idly in the ray
+Of a spring sun I heard o'er-head,
+My name as by some spirit said,
+And, looking up, saw two bright eyes
+ Above me from a casement shine,
+Dazzling my mind with such surprise
+ As they, who sail beyond the Line,
+Feel when new stars above them rise;--
+And it was thine, the voice that spoke,
+ Like Ariel's, in the mid-air then;
+And thine the eye whose lustre broke--
+ Never to be forgot again!
+
+What shall I sing thee? Shall I weave
+A song of that sweet summer-eve,
+(Summer, of which the sunniest part
+Was that we, each, had in the heart,)
+When thou and I, and one like thee,
+ In life and beauty, to the sound
+Of our own breathless minstrelsy.
+ Danced till the sunlight faded round,
+Ourselves the whole ideal Ball,
+Lights, music, company, and all?
+
+Oh, 'tis not in the languid strain
+ Of lute like mine, whose day is past,
+To call up even a dream again
+ Of the fresh light those moments cast.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+COUNTRY DANCE AND QUADRILLE.
+
+
+One night the nymph called country dance--
+ (Whom folks, of late, have used so ill,
+Preferring a coquette from France,
+ That mincing thing, _Mamselle_ quadrille)--
+
+Having been chased from London down
+ To that most humble haunt of all
+She used to grace--a Country Town--
+ Went smiling to the New-Year's Ball.
+
+"Here, here, at least," she cried, tho' driven
+ "From London's gay and shining tracks--
+"Tho', like a Peri cast from heaven,
+ "I've lost, for ever lost, Almack's--
+
+"Tho' not a London Miss alive
+ "Would now for her acquaintance own me;
+"And spinsters, even, of forty-five,
+ "Upon their honors ne'er have known me;
+
+"Here, here, at least, I triumph still,
+ "And--spite of some few dandy Lancers.
+"Who vainly try to preach Quadrille--
+ "See naught but _true-blue_ Country Dancers,
+
+"Here still I reign, and, fresh in charms,
+ "My throne, like Magna Charta, raise
+"'Mong sturdy, free-born legs and arms,
+ "That scorn the threatened _chaine anglaise_."
+
+'Twas thus she said, as mid the din
+ Of footmen, and the town sedan,
+She lighted at the King's Head Inn,
+ And up the stairs triumphant ran.
+
+The Squires and their Squiresses all,
+ With young Squirinas, just _come out_,
+And my Lord's daughters from the Hall,
+ (Quadrillers in their hearts no doubt,)--
+
+All these, as light she tript upstairs,
+ Were in the cloak-room seen assembling--
+When, hark! some new outlandish airs,
+ From the First Fiddle, set her trembling.
+
+She stops--she listens--_can_ it be?
+ Alas, in vain her ears would 'scape it--
+It _is "Di tanti palpiti"_
+ As plain as English bow can scrape it.
+
+"Courage!" however--in she goes,
+ With her best, sweeping country grace;
+When, ah too true, her worst of foes,
+ Quadrille, there meets her, face to face.
+
+Oh for the lyre, or violin,
+ Or kit of that gay Muse, Terpsichore,
+To sing the rage these nymphs were in,
+ Their looks and language, airs and trickery.
+
+There stood Quadrille, with cat-like face
+ (The beau-ideal of French beauty),
+A band-box thing, all art and lace
+ Down from her nose-tip to her shoe-tie.
+
+Her flounces, fresh from _Victorine_--
+ From _Hippolyte_, her rouge and hair--
+Her poetry, from _Lamartine_--
+ Her morals, from--the Lord knows where.
+
+And, when she danced--so slidingly,
+ So near the ground she plied her art,
+You'd swear her mother-earth and she
+ Had made a compact ne'er to part.
+
+Her face too, all the while, sedate,
+ No signs of life or motion showing.
+Like a bright _pendule's_ dial-plate--
+ So still, you'd hardly think 'twas _going_.
+
+Full fronting her stood Country Dance--
+ A fresh, frank nymph, whom you would know
+For English, at a single glance--
+ English all o'er, from top to toe.
+
+A little _gauche_, 'tis fair to own,
+ And rather given to skips and bounces;
+Endangering thereby many a gown,
+ And playing, oft, the devil with flounces.
+
+Unlike _Mamselle_--who would prefer
+ (As morally a lesser ill)
+A thousand flaws of character,
+ To one vile rumple of a frill.
+
+No rouge did She of Albion wear;
+ Let her but run that two-heat race
+She calls a _Set_, not Dian e'er
+ Came rosier from the woodland chase.
+
+Such was the nymph, whose soul had in't
+ Such anger now--whose eyes of blue
+(Eyes of that bright, victorious tint,
+ Which English maids call "Waterloo")--
+
+Like summer lightnings, in the dusk
+ Of a warm evening, flashing broke.
+While--to the tune of "Money Musk,"[1]
+ Which struck up now--she proudly spoke--
+
+"Heard you that strain--that joyous strain?
+ "'Twas such as England loved to hear,
+"Ere thou and all thy frippery train,
+ "Corrupted both her foot and ear--
+
+"Ere Waltz, that rake from foreign lands,
+ "Presumed, in sight of all beholders,
+"To lay his rude, licentious hands
+ "On virtuous English backs and shoulders--
+
+"Ere times and morals both grew bad,
+ "And, yet unfleeced by funding block-heads,
+"Happy John Bull not only _had_,
+ "But danced to, 'Money in both pockets.'
+
+"Alas, the change!--Oh, Londonderry,
+ "Where is the land could 'scape disasters,
+"With _such_ a Foreign Secretary,
+ "Aided by Foreign Dancing Masters?
+
+"Woe to ye, men of ships and shops!
+ "Rulers of day-books and of waves!
+"Quadrilled, on one side, into fops,
+ "And drilled, on t'other, into slaves!
+
+"Ye, too, ye lovely victims, seen,
+ "Like pigeons, trussed for exhibition,
+"With elbows, _à la crapaudine_,
+ "And feet, in--God knows what position;
+
+"Hemmed in by watchful chaperons,
+ "Inspectors of your airs and graces,
+"Who intercept all whispered tones,
+ "And read your telegraphic faces;
+
+"Unable with the youth adored,
+ "In that grim _cordon_ of Mammas,
+"To interchange one tender word,
+ "Tho' whispered but in _queue-de-chats_.
+
+"Ah did you know how blest we ranged,
+ "Ere vile Quadrille usurpt the fiddle--
+"What looks in _setting_ were exchanged,
+ "What tender words in _down the middle_;
+
+"How many a couple, like the wind,
+ "Which nothing in its course controls,
+Left time and chaperons far behind,
+ "And gave a loose to legs and souls;
+
+How matrimony throve--ere stopt
+ "By this cold, silent, foot-coquetting--
+"How charmingly one's partner propt
+"The important question in _poussetteing_.
+
+"While now, alas--no sly advances--
+ "No marriage hints--all goes on badly--
+"'Twixt Parson Malthus and French Dances,
+ "We, girls, are at a discount sadly.
+
+"Sir William Scott (now Baron Stowell)
+ "Declares not half so much is made
+"By Licences--and he must know well--
+ "Since vile Quadrilling spoiled the trade."
+
+She ceased--tears fell from every Miss--
+ She now had touched the true pathetic:--
+One such authentic fact as this,
+ Is worth whole volumes theoretic.
+
+Instant the cry was "Country Dance!"
+ And the maid saw with brightening face,
+The Steward of the night advance,
+ And lead her to her birthright place.
+
+The fiddles, which awhile had ceased,
+ Now tuned again their summons sweet,
+And, for one happy night, at least,
+ Old England's triumph was complete.
+
+
+[1] An old English country dance.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+GAZEL.
+
+
+Haste, Maami, the spring is nigh;
+ Already, in the unopened flowers
+That sleep around us, Fancy's eye
+ Can see the blush of future bowers;
+And joy it brings to thee and me,
+My own beloved Maami!
+
+The streamlet frozen on its way,
+ To feed the marble Founts of Kings,
+Now, loosened by the vernal ray,
+ Upon its path exulting springs--
+As doth this bounding heart to thee,
+My ever blissful Maami!
+
+Such bright hours were not made to stay;
+ Enough if they awhile remain,
+Like Irem's bowers, that fade away.
+ From time to time, and come again.
+And life shall all one Irem be
+For us, my gentle Maami.
+
+O haste, for this impatient heart,
+ Is like the rose in Yemen's vale,
+That rends its inmost leaves apart
+ With passion for the nightingale;
+So languishes this soul for thee,
+My bright and blushing Maami!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LINES ON THE DEATH OF JOSEPH ATKINSON, ESQ., OF DUBLIN.
+
+
+If ever life was prosperously cast,
+ If ever life was like the lengthened flow
+Of some sweet music, sweetness to the last,
+ 'Twas his who, mourned by many, sleeps below.
+
+The sunny temper, bright where all is strife.
+ The simple heart above all worldly wiles;
+Light wit that plays along the calm of life,
+ And stirs its languid surface into smiles;
+
+Pure charity that comes not in a shower,
+ Sudden and loud, oppressing what it feeds,
+But, like the dew, with gradual silent power,
+ Felt in the bloom it leaves along the meads;
+
+The happy grateful spirit, that improves
+ And brightens every gift by fortune given;
+That, wander where it will with those it loves,
+ Makes every place a home, and home a heaven:
+
+All these were his.--Oh, thou who read'st this stone,
+ When for thyself, thy children, to the sky
+Thou humbly prayest, ask this boon alone,
+ That ye like him may live, like him may die!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+GENIUS AND CRITICISM.
+
+
+ _scripsit quidem fata, sed sequitur_.
+ SENECA.
+
+
+Of old, the Sultan Genius reigned,
+ As Nature meant, supreme alone;
+With mind unchekt, and hands unchained,
+ His views, his conquests were his own.
+
+But power like his, that digs its grave
+ With its own sceptre, could not last;
+So Genius' self became the slave
+ Of laws that Genius' self had past.
+
+As Jove, who forged the chain of Fate,
+ Was, ever after, doomed to wear it:
+His nods, his struggles all too late--
+ "_Qui semel jussit, semper paret_."
+
+To check young Genius' proud career,
+ The slaves who now his throne invaded,
+Made Criticism his prime Vizir,
+ And from that hour his glories faded.
+
+Tied down in Legislation's school,
+ Afraid of even his own ambition,
+His very victories were by rule,
+ And he was great but by permission.
+
+His most heroic deeds--the same,
+ That dazzled, when spontaneous actions--
+Now, done by law, seemed cold and tame,
+ And shorn of all their first attractions.
+
+If he but stirred to take the air,
+ Instant, the Vizir's Council sat--
+"Good Lord, your Highness can't go there--
+"Bless me, your Highness can't do that."
+
+If, loving pomp, he chose to buy
+ Rich jewels for his diadem,
+"The taste was bad, the price was high--
+ "A flower were simpler than a gem."
+
+To please them if he took to flowers--
+ "What trifling, what unmeaning things!
+"Fit for a woman's toilet hours,
+ "But not at all the style for Kings."
+
+If, fond of his domestic sphere,
+ He played no more the rambling comet--
+"A dull, good sort of man, 'twas clear,
+ "But, as for great or brave, far from it."
+
+Did he then look o'er distant oceans,
+ For realms more worthy to enthrone him?--
+"Saint Aristotle, what wild notions!
+ "Serve a '_ne exeat regno_' on him."
+
+At length, their last and worst to do,
+They round him placed a guard of watchmen,
+Reviewers, knaves in brown, or blue
+Turned up with yellow--chiefly Scotchmen;
+
+To dog his footsteps all about
+ Like those in Longwood's prison grounds,
+Who at Napoleon's heels rode out,
+ For fear the Conqueror should break bounds.
+
+Oh for some Champion of his power,
+ Some _Ultra_ spirit, to set free,
+As erst in Shakespeare's sovereign hour,
+ The thunders of his Royalty!--
+
+To vindicate his ancient line,
+ The first, the true, the only one,
+Of Right eternal and divine,
+ That rules beneath the blessed sun.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO LADY JERSEY.
+
+ON BEING ASKED TO WRITE SOMETHING IN HER ALBUM.
+
+Written at Middleton.
+
+
+Oh albums, albums, how I dread
+ Your everlasting scrap and scrawl!
+How often wish that from the dead
+Old Omar would pop forth his head,
+ And make a bonfire of you all!
+
+So might I 'scape the spinster band,
+ The blushless blues, who, day and night,
+Like duns in doorways, take their stand,
+To waylay bards, with book in hand,
+ Crying for ever, "Write, sir, write!"
+
+So might I shun the shame and pain,
+ That o'er me at this instant come,
+When Beauty, seeking Wit in vain,
+Knocks at the portal of my brain,
+ And gets, for answer, "Not at home!"
+
+_November, 1828_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE SAME.
+
+ON LOOKING THROUGH HER ALBUM.
+
+
+No wonder bards, both high and low,
+ From Byron down to ***** and me,
+Should seek the fame which all bestow
+ On him whose task is praising thee.
+
+Let but the theme be Jersey's eyes,
+ At once all errors are forgiven;
+As even old Sternhold still we prize,
+ Because, tho' dull, he sings of heaven.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AT NIGHT.[1]
+
+
+At night, when all is still around.
+How sweet to hear the distant sound
+ Of footstep, coming soft and light!
+What pleasure in the anxious beat,
+With which the bosom flies to meet
+ That foot that comes so soft at night!
+
+And then, at night, how sweet to say
+"'Tis late, my love!" and chide delay,
+ Tho' still the western clouds are bright;
+Oh! happy, too, the silent press,
+The eloquence of mute caress.
+ With those we love exchanged at night!
+
+
+[1] These lines allude to a curious lamp, which has for its device a
+Cupid, with the words "at night" written over him.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO LADY HOLLAND.
+
+ON NAPOLEON'S LEGACY OP A SNUFF-BOX.
+
+
+Gift of the Hero, on his dying day,
+ To her, whose pity watched, for ever nigh;
+Oh! could he see the proud, the happy ray,
+ This relic lights up on her generous eye,
+Sighing, he'd feel how easy 'tis to pay
+ A friendship all his kingdoms could not buy.
+
+_Paris, July_, 1821
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EPILOGUE.
+
+WRITTEN FOR LADY DACRE'S TRAGEDY OF INA.
+
+
+Last night, as lonely o'er my fire I sat,
+Thinking of cues, starts, exits, and--all that,
+And wondering much what little knavish sprite
+Had put it first in women's heads to write:--
+Sudden I saw--as in some witching dream--
+A bright-blue glory round my book-case beam,
+From whose quick-opening folds of azure light
+Out flew a tiny form, as small and bright
+As Puck the Fairy, when he pops his head,
+Some sunny morning from a violet bed.
+"Bless me!" I starting cried "what imp are you?"--
+"A small he-devil, Ma'am--my name BAS BLEU--
+"A bookish sprite, much given to routs and reading;
+"'Tis I who teach your spinsters of good breeding,
+"The reigning taste in chemistry and caps,
+"The last new bounds of tuckers and of maps,
+"And when the waltz has twirled her giddy brain
+"With metaphysics twirl it back again!"
+I viewed him, as he spoke--his hose were blue,
+His wings--the covers of the last Review--
+Cerulean, bordered with a jaundice hue,
+And tinselled gayly o'er, for evening wear,
+Till the next quarter brings a new-fledged pair.
+"Inspired by me--(pursued this waggish Fairy)--
+"That best of wives and Sapphos, Lady Mary,
+"Votary alike of Crispin and the Muse,
+"Makes her own splay-foot epigrams and shoes.
+"For me the eyes of young Camilla shine,
+"And mingle Love's blue brilliances with mine;
+"For me she sits apart, from coxcombs shrinking,
+"Looks wise--the pretty soul!--and _thinks_ she's thinking.
+"By my advice Miss Indigo attends
+"Lectures on Memory, and assures her friends,
+"''Pon honor!--(_mimics_)--nothing can surpass the plan
+"'Of that professor--(_trying to recollect_)--psha! that memory-man--
+"'That--what's his name?--him I attended lately--
+"''Pon honor, he improved _my_ memory greatly.'"
+Here curtsying low, I asked the blue-legged sprite,
+What share he had in this our play to-night.
+'Nay, there--(he cried)--there I am guiltless quite--
+"What! choose a heroine from that Gothic time
+"When no one waltzed and none but monks could rhyme;
+"When lovely woman, all unschooled and wild,
+"Blushed without art, and without culture smiled--
+"Simple as flowers, while yet unclassed they shone,
+"Ere Science called their brilliant world her own,
+"Ranged the wild, rosy things in learned orders,
+"And filled with Greek the garden's blushing borders!--
+"No, no--your gentle Inas will not do--
+"To-morrow evening, when the lights burn blue,
+"I'll come--(_pointing downwards_)--you understand--till then adieu!"
+
+ And _has_ the sprite been here! No--jests apart--
+Howe'er man rules in science and in art,
+The sphere of woman's glories is the heart.
+And, if our Muse have sketched with pencil true
+The wife--the mother--firm, yet gentle too--
+Whose soul, wrapt up in ties itself hath spun,
+Trembles, if touched in the remotest one;
+Who loves--yet dares even Love himself disown,
+When Honor's broken shaft supports his throne:
+If such our Ina, she may scorn the evils,
+Dire as they are, of Critics and--Blue Devils.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DAY-DREAM.[1]
+
+
+They both were husht, the voice, the chords,--
+ I heard but once that witching lay;
+And few the notes, and few the words.
+ My spell-bound memory brought away;
+
+Traces, remembered here and there,
+ Like echoes of some broken strain;--
+Links of a sweetness lost in air,
+ That nothing now could join again.
+
+Even these, too, ere the morning, fled;
+ And, tho' the charm still lingered on,
+That o'er each sense her song had shed,
+ The song itself was faded, gone;--
+
+Gone, like the thoughts that once were ours,
+ On summer days, ere youth had set;
+Thoughts bright, we know, as summer flowers,
+ Tho' _what_ they were we now forget.
+
+In vain with hints from other strains
+ I wooed this truant air to come--
+As birds are taught on eastern plains
+ To lure their wilder kindred home.
+
+In vain:--the song that Sappho gave,
+ In dying, to the mournful sea,
+Not muter slept beneath the wave
+ Than this within my memory.
+
+At length, one morning, as I lay
+ In that half-waking mood when dreams
+Unwillingly at last gave way
+ To the full truth of daylight's beams,
+
+A face--the very face, methought,
+ From which had breathed, as from a shrine
+Of song and soul, the notes I sought--
+ Came with its music close to mine;
+
+And sung the long-lost measure o'er,--
+ Each note and word, with every tone
+And look, that lent it life before,--
+ All perfect, all again my own!
+
+Like parted souls, when, mid the Blest
+ They meet again, each widowed sound
+Thro' memory's realm had winged in quest
+ Of its sweet mate, till all were found.
+
+Nor even in waking did the clew,
+ Thus strangely caught, escape again;
+For never lark its matins knew
+ So well as now I knew this strain.
+
+And oft when memory's wondrous spell
+ Is talked of in our tranquil bower,
+I sing this lady's song, and tell
+ The vision of that morning hour.
+
+
+[1] In these stanzas I have done little more than relate a fact in verse;
+and the lady, whose singing gave rise to this curious instance of the
+power of memory in sleep, is Mrs. Robert Arkwright.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Where is the heart that would not give
+ Years of drowsy days and nights,
+One little hour, like this, to live--
+ Full, to the brim, of life's delights?
+ Look, look around,
+ This fairy ground,
+ With love-lights glittering o'er;
+ While cups that shine
+ With freight divine
+ Go coasting round its shore.
+
+Hope is the dupe of future hours,
+ Memory lives in those gone by;
+Neither can see the moment's flowers
+ Springing up fresh beneath the eye,
+ Wouldst thou, or thou,
+ Forego what's _now_,
+ For all that Hope may say?
+ No--Joy's reply,
+ From every eye,
+ Is, "Live we while we may,"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE POCO-CURANTE SOCIETY.
+
+
+ _haud curat Hippoclides_.
+ ERASM. _Adag_.
+
+
+To those we love we've drank tonight;
+ But now attend and stare not,
+While I the ampler list recite
+ Of those for whom WE CARE NOT.
+
+For royal men, howe'er they frown,
+ If on their fronts they bear not
+That noblest gem that decks a crown,
+ The People's Love--WE CARE NOT.
+
+For slavish men who bend beneath
+ A despot yoke, yet dare not
+Pronounce the will whose very breath
+ Would rend its links--WE CARE NOT.
+
+For priestly men who covet sway
+ And wealth, tho' they declare not;
+Who point, like finger-posts, the way
+ They never go--WE CARE NOT.
+
+For martial men who on their sword,
+ Howe'er it conquers, wear not
+The pledges of a soldier's word,
+ Redeemed and pure--WE CARE NOT.
+
+For legal men who plead for wrong.
+ And, tho' to lies they swear not,
+Are hardly better than the throng
+ Of those who do--WE CARE NOT.
+
+For courtly men who feed upon
+ The land, like grubs, and spare not
+The smallest leaf where they can sun
+ Their crawling limbs--WE CARE NOT.
+
+For wealthy men who keep their mines
+ In darkness hid, and share not
+The paltry ore with him who pines
+ In honest want--WE CARE NOT.
+
+For prudent men who hold the power
+ Of Love aloof, and bare not
+Their hearts in any guardless hour
+ To Beauty's shaft--WE CARE NOT.
+
+For all, in short, on land or sea,
+ In camp or court, who _are_ not,
+Who never _were_, or e'er _will_ be
+ Good men and true--WE CARE NOT.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ANNE BOLEYN.
+
+TRANSLATION FROM THE METRICAL
+
+"_Histoire d'Anne Boleyn."_
+
+
+ _"S'elle estoit belle et de taille élégante,
+ Estoit des yeulx encor plus attirante,
+ Lesquelz sçavoit bien conduyre à propos
+ En les lenant quelquefoys en repos;
+ Aucune foys envoyant en message
+ Porter du cueur le secret tesmoignage_."
+
+
+Much as her form seduced the sight,
+ Her eyes could even more surely woo;
+And when and how to shoot their light
+ Into men's hearts full well she knew.
+For sometimes in repose she hid
+Their rays beneath a downcast lid;
+And then again, with wakening air,
+ Would send their sunny glances out,
+Like heralds of delight, to bear
+ Her heart's sweet messages about.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DREAM OF THE TWO SISTERS.
+
+FROM DANTE.
+
+
+ _Nell ora, credo, che dell'oriente
+ Prima raggio nel monte Citerea,
+ Che di fuoco d'amor par sempre dente,
+ Giovane e bella in sogno mi parea
+ Donna vedere andar per una landa
+ Cogliendo flori; e cantando dicea ;--
+ Sappia qualunque'l mio nome dimanda,
+ Ch'io mi son Lia, e vo movendo 'ntorno
+ Le belle mani a farmi una ghirlanda--
+ Per piacermi allo specchio qui m'adorno;
+ Ma mia suora Rachel mai non si smaga
+ Dal suo ammiraglio, e siede tutto il giorno_.
+
+ _Ell' è de'suoi begli occhi veder vaga,
+ Com' io dell'adornarmi con le mani;
+ Lei lo vodere e me l'ovrare appaga_.
+
+ DANTE, _Purg. Canto xxvii_.
+
+
+'Twas eve's soft hour, and bright, above.
+ The star of beauty beamed,
+While lulled by light so full of love,
+ In slumber thus I dreamed--
+Methought, at that sweet hour,
+ A nymph came o'er the lea,
+Who, gathering many a flower,
+ Thus said and sung to me:--
+"Should any ask what Leila loves,
+ "Say thou, To wreathe her hair
+"With flowerets culled from glens and groves,
+ "Is Leila's only care.
+
+"While thus in quest of flowers rare,
+ "O'er hill and dale I roam,
+"My sister, Rachel, far more fair,
+ "Sits lone and mute at home.
+"Before her glass untiring,
+ "With thoughts that never stray,
+"Her own bright eyes admiring,
+ "She sits the live-long day;
+"While I!--oh, seldom even a look
+ "Of self salutes my eye;
+"My only glass, the limpid brook,
+ "That shines and passes by."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SOVEREIGN WOMAN.
+
+A BALLAD.
+
+
+The dance was o'er, yet still in dreams
+ That fairy scene went on;
+Like clouds still flusht with daylight gleams
+ Tho' day itself is gone.
+And gracefully to music's sound,
+The same bright nymphs were gliding round;
+While thou, the Queen of all, wert there--
+The Fairest still, where all were fair.
+The dream then changed--in halls of state,
+ I saw thee high enthroned;
+While, ranged around, the wise, the great,
+ In thee their mistress owned;
+And still the same, thy gentle sway
+O'er willing subjects won its way--
+Till all confest the Right Divine
+To rule o'er man was only thine!
+
+But, lo, the scene now changed again--
+ And borne on plumed steed,
+I saw thee o'er the battle-plain
+ Our land's defenders lead:
+And stronger in thy beauty's charms,
+Than man, with countless hosts in arms,
+Thy voice, like music, cheered the Free,
+Thy very smile was victory!
+
+Nor reign such queens on thrones alone--
+ In cot and court the same,
+Wherever woman's smile is known,
+ Victoria's still her name.
+For tho' she almost blush to reign,
+Tho' Love's own flowerets wreath the chain,
+Disguise our bondage as we will,
+'Tis woman, woman, rules us still.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+COME, PLAY ME THAT SIMPLE AIR AGAIN.
+
+A BALLAD.
+
+
+Come, play me that simple air again,
+ I used so to love, in life's young day,
+And bring, if thou canst, the dreams that then
+ Were wakened by that sweet lay
+ The tender gloom its strain
+ Shed o'er the heart and brow
+ Grief's shadow without its pain--
+ Say where, where is it now?
+But play me the well-known air once more,
+ For thoughts of youth still haunt its strain
+Like dreams of some far, fairy shore
+ We never shall see again.
+
+Sweet air, how every note brings back
+ Some sunny hope, some daydream bright,
+That, shining o'er life's early track,
+ Filled even its tears with light.
+ The new-found life that came
+ With love's first echoed vow;--
+ The fear, the bliss, the shame--
+ Ah--where, where are they now?
+But, still the same loved notes prolong,
+ For sweet 'twere thus, to that old lay,
+In dreams of youth and love and song,
+ To breathe life's hour away.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+POEMS FROM THE EPICUREAN
+
+(1827.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE VALLEY OF THE NILE.
+
+
+Far as the sight can reach, beneath as clear
+And blue a heaven as ever blest this sphere,
+Gardens and pillared streets and porphyry domes
+And high-built temples, fit to be the homes
+Of mighty gods, and pyramids whose hour
+Outlasts all time, above the waters tower!
+
+Then, too, the scenes of pomp and joy that make
+One theatre of this vast peopled lake,
+Where all that Love, Religion, Commerce gives
+Of life and motion, ever moves and lives,
+Here, up in the steps of temples, from the wave
+Ascending, in procession slow and grave,
+Priests in white garments go, with sacred wands
+And silver cymbals gleaming in their hands:
+While there, rich barks--fresh from those sunny tracts
+Far off, beyond the sounding cataracts--
+Glide with their precious lading to the sea,
+Plumes of bright birds, rhinoceros' ivory,
+Gems from the isle of Meroë, and those grains
+Of gold, washed down by Abyssinian rains.
+
+Here, where the waters wind into a bay
+Shadowy and cool, some pilgrims on their way
+To Saïs or Bubastus, among beds
+Of lotos flowers that close above their heads,
+Push their light barks, and hid as in a bower
+Sing, talk, or sleep away the sultry hour,
+While haply, not far off, beneath a bank
+Of blossoming acacias, many a prank
+Is played in the cool current by a train
+Of laughing nymphs, lovely as she whose chain
+Around two conquerors of the world was cast;
+But, for a third too feeble, broke at last.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE TWO CUPBEARERS.
+
+
+FIRST CUPBEARER.
+
+Drink of this cup--Osiris sips
+ The same in his halls below;
+And the same he gives, to cool the lips
+ Of the dead, who downward go.
+
+Drink of this cup--the water within
+ Is fresh from Lethe's stream;
+'Twill make the past, with all its sin,
+ And all its pain and sorrows, seem
+ Like a long forgotten dream;
+The pleasure, whose charms
+ Are steeped in woe;
+The knowledge, that harms
+ The soul to know;
+
+The hope, that bright
+ As the lake of the waste,
+Allures the sight
+ And mocks the taste;
+
+The love, that binds
+ Its innocent wreath,
+Where the serpent winds
+ In venom beneath!--
+
+All that of evil or false, by thee
+ Hath ever been known or seen,
+Shalt melt away in this cup, and be
+ Forgot as it never had been!
+
+SECOND CUPBEARER.
+
+Drink of this cup--when Isis led
+ Her boy of old to the beaming sky,
+She mingled a draught divine and said.--
+ "Drink of this cup, thou'lt never die!"
+
+Thus do I say and sing to thee.
+ Heir of that boundless heaven on high,
+Though frail and fallen and lost thou be,
+ "Drink of this cup, thou'lt never die!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And Memory, too, with her dreams shall come,
+ Dreams of a former, happier day,
+When heaven was still the spirit's home,
+ And her wings had not yet fallen away.
+
+Glimpses of glory ne'er forgot,
+ That tell, like gleams on a sunset sea,
+What once hath been, what now is not.
+ But oh! what again shall brightly be!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE NUBIAN GIRL.
+
+
+ O Abyssinian tree,
+ We pray, we pray to thee;
+By the glow of thy golden fruit
+ And the violet hue of the flower,
+ And the greeting mute
+ Of thy boughs' salute
+ To the stranger who seeks thy bow.
+
+ O Abyssinian tree!
+ How the traveller blesses thee
+When the light no moon allows,
+ And the sunset hour is near,
+ And thou bend'st thy boughs
+ To kiss his brows.
+ Saying, "Come, rest thee here."
+ O Abyssinian tree!
+ Thus bow thy head to me!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SUMMER FÊTE.
+
+
+
+
+TO THE HONORABLE MRS. NORTON.
+
+
+For the groundwork of the following Poem I am indebted to a memorable
+Fête, given some years since, at Boyle Farm, the seat of the late Lord
+Henry Fitzgerald. In commemoration of that evening--of which the lady to
+whom these pages are inscribed was, I well recollect, one of the most
+distinguished ornaments--I was induced at the time to write some verses,
+which were afterwards, however, thrown aside unfinished, on my discovering
+that the same task had been undertaken by a noble poet,[1] whose playful
+and happy _jeu d'esprit_ on the subject has since been published. It was
+but lately, that, on finding the fragments of my own sketch among my
+papers, I thought of founding on them such a description of an imaginary
+Fête as might furnish me with situations for the introduction of music.
+
+Such is the origin and object of the following Poem, and to MRS. NORTON it
+is, with every feeling of admiration and regard, inscribed by her father's
+warmly attached friend,
+
+ THOMAS MOORE.
+
+_Sloperton Cottage_,
+
+_November 1881_
+
+
+[1] Lord Francis Egerton.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SUMMER FÊTE
+
+
+"Where are ye now, ye summer days,
+"That once inspired the poet's lays?
+"Blest time! ere England's nymphs and swains,
+ "For lack of sunbeams, took to coals--
+"Summers of light, undimmed by rains,
+"Whose only mocking trace remains
+ "In watering-pots and parasols."
+
+Thus spoke a young Patrician maid,
+ As, on the morning of that Fête
+ Which bards unborn shall celebrate,
+She backward drew her curtain's shade,
+And, closing one half-dazzled eye,
+Peeped with the other at the sky--
+The important sky, whose light or gloom
+Was to decide, this day, the doom
+Of some few hundred beauties, wits,
+Blues, Dandies, Swains, and Exquisites.
+
+Faint were her hopes; for June had now
+ Set in with all his usual rigor!
+Young Zephyr yet scarce knowing how
+To nurse a bud, or fan a bough,
+ But Eurus in perpetual vigor;
+And, such the biting summer air,
+That she, the nymph now nestling there--
+Snug as her own bright gems recline
+At night within their cotton shrine--
+Had more than once been caught of late
+Kneeling before her blazing grate,
+Like a young worshipper of fire,
+ With hands uplifted to the flame,
+Whose glow as if to woo them nigher.
+ Thro' the white fingers flushing came.
+
+But oh! the light, the unhoped-for light,
+ That now illumed this morning's heaven!
+Up sprung Iänthe at the sight,
+ Tho'--hark!--the clocks but strike eleven,
+And rarely did the nymph surprise
+Mankind so early with her eyes.
+Who now will say that England's sun
+ (Like England's self, these spendthrift days)
+His stock of wealth hath near outrun,
+ And must retrench his golden rays--
+Pay for the pride of sunbeams past,
+And to mere moonshine come at last?
+
+"Calumnious thought!" Iänthe cries,
+ While coming mirth lit up each glance,
+And, prescient of the ball, her eyes
+ Already had begun to dance:
+For brighter sun than that which now
+ Sparkled o'er London's spires and towers,
+Had never bent from heaven his brow
+ To kiss Firenze's City of Flowers.
+
+What must it be--if thus so fair.
+Mid the smoked groves of Grosvenor Square--
+What must it be where Thames is seen
+Gliding between his banks of green,
+While rival villas, on each side,
+Peep from their bowers to woo his tide,
+And, like a Turk between two rows
+Of Harem beauties, on he goes--
+A lover, loved for even the grace
+With which he slides from their embrace.
+
+In one of those enchanted domes,
+ One, the most flowery, cool, and bright
+Of all by which that river roams,
+ The Fête is to be held to-night--
+That Fête already linked to fame,
+ Whose cards, in many a fair one's sight
+(When looked for long, at last they came,)
+ Seemed circled with a fairy light;--
+That Fête to which the cull, the flower
+Of England's beauty, rank and power,
+From the young spinster, just come _out_,
+ To the old Premier, too long _in_--
+From legs of far descended gout,
+ To the last new-mustachioed chin--
+All were convoked by Fashion's spells
+To the small circle where she dwells,
+Collecting nightly, to allure us,
+ Live atoms, which, together hurled,
+She, like another Epicurus,
+ Sets dancing thus, and calls "the World."
+
+Behold how busy in those bowers
+(Like May-flies in and out of flowers.)
+The countless menials, swarming run,
+To furnish forth ere set of sun
+The banquet-table richly laid
+Beneath yon awning's lengthened shade,
+Where fruits shall tempt and wines entice,
+ And Luxury's self, at Gunter's call,
+Breathe from her summer-throne of ice
+ A spirit of coolness over all.
+
+And now the important hour drew nigh,
+When, 'neath the flush of evening's sky,
+The west-end "world" for mirth let loose,
+And moved, as he of Syracuse[1]
+Ne'er dreamt of moving worlds, by force
+ Of four horse power, had all combined
+Thro' Grosvenor Gate to speed their course,
+ Leaving that portion of mankind,
+ Whom they call "Nobody," behind;
+No star for London's feasts to-day,
+No moon of beauty, new this May,
+To lend the night her crescent ray;--
+Nothing, in short, for ear or eye,
+But veteran belles and wits gone by,
+The relics of a past beau-monde,
+A world like Cuvier's, long dethroned!
+Even Parliament this evening nods
+Beneath the harangues of minor Gods,
+ On half its usual opiate's share;
+The great dispensers of repose,
+The first-rate furnishers of prose
+ Being all called to--prose elsewhere.
+
+Soon as thro' Grosvenor's lordly square--
+ That last impregnable redoubt,
+Where, guarded with Patrician care,
+ Primeval Error still holds out--
+Where never gleam of gas must dare
+ 'Gainst ancient Darkness to revolt,
+Nor smooth Macadam hope to spare
+ The dowagers one single jolt;--
+Where, far too stately and sublime
+To profit by the lights of time,
+Let Intellect march how it will,
+They stick to oil and watchman still:--
+Soon as thro' that illustrious square
+ The first epistolary bell.
+Sounding by fits upon the air,
+ Of parting pennies rung the knell;
+Warned by that tell-tale of the hours,
+ And by the day-light's westering beam,
+The young Iänthe, who, with flowers
+ Half crowned, had sat in idle dream
+Before her glass, scarce knowing where
+Her fingers roved thro' that bright hair,
+ While, all capriciously, she now
+ Dislodged some curl from her white brow,
+And now again replaced it there:--
+As tho' her task was meant to be
+One endless change of ministry--
+A routing-up of Loves and Graces,
+But to plant others in their places.
+
+Meanwhile--what strain is that which floats
+Thro' the small boudoir near--like notes
+Of some young bird, its task repeating
+For the next linnet music-meeting?
+A voice it was, whose gentle sounds
+Still kept a modest octave's bounds,
+Nor yet had ventured to exalt
+Its rash ambition to _B alt_,
+That point towards which when ladies rise,
+The wise man takes his hat and--flies.
+Tones of a harp, too, gently played,
+ Came with this youthful voice communing;
+Tones true, for once, without the aid
+ Of that inflictive process, tuning--
+A process which must oft have given
+ Poor Milton's ears a deadly wound;
+So pleased, among the joys of Heaven,
+ He specifies "harps _ever_ tuned."
+She who now sung this gentle strain
+ Was our young nymph's still younger sister--
+Scarce ready yet for Fashion's train
+ In their light legions to enlist her,
+But counted on, as sure to bring
+Her force into the field next spring.
+
+The song she thus, like Jubal's shell,
+Gave forth "so sweetly and so well,"
+Was one in Morning Post much famed,
+From a _divine_ collection, named,
+ "Songs of the Toilet"--every Lay
+Taking for subject of its Muse,
+ Some branch of feminine array,
+Some item, with full scope, to choose,
+From diamonds down to dancing shoes;
+From the last hat that Herbault's hands
+ Bequeathed to an admiring world,
+Down to the latest flounce that stands
+Like Jacob's Ladder--or expands
+ Far forth, tempestuously unfurled.
+
+Speaking of one of these new Lays,
+The Morning Post thus sweetly says:--
+"Not all that breathes from Bishop's lyre,
+ "That Barnett dreams, or Cooke conceives,
+"Can match for sweetness, strength, or fire,
+ "This fine Cantata upon Sleeves.
+"The very notes themselves reveal
+ "The cut of each new sleeve so well;
+"A _flat_ betrays the _Imbécilles_,[2]
+ "Light fugues the flying lappets tell;
+"While rich cathedral chords awake
+'Our homage for the _Manches d'Évêque_."
+
+'Twas the first opening song the Lay
+ Of all least deep in toilet-lore,
+That the young nymph, to while away
+ The tiring-hour, thus warbled o'er:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Array thee, love, array thee, love,
+ In all thy best array thee;
+The sun's below--the moon's above--
+ And Night and Bliss obey thee.
+Put on thee all that's bright and rare,
+ The zone, the wreath, the gem,
+Not so much gracing charms so fair,
+ As borrowing grace from them.
+Array thee, love, array thee, love,
+ In all that's bright array thee;
+The sun's below--the moon's above--
+ And Night and Bliss obey thee.
+
+Put on the plumes thy lover gave.
+ The plumes, that, proudly dancing,
+Proclaim to all, where'er they wave,
+ Victorious eyes advancing.
+Bring forth the robe whose hue of heaven
+ From thee derives such light,
+That Iris would give all her seven
+ To boast but _one_ so bright.
+Array thee, love, array thee, love, etc.
+
+Now hie thee, love, now hie thee, love,
+ Thro' Pleasure's circles hie thee.
+And hearts, where'er thy footsteps move,
+ Will beat when they come nigh thee.
+Thy every word shall be a spell,
+ Thy every look a ray,
+And tracks of wondering eyes shall tell
+ The glory of thy way!
+Now hie thee, love, now hie thee, love,
+ Thro' Pleasure's circles hie thee,
+And hearts, where'er thy footsteps move,
+ Shall beat when they come nigh thee.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now in his Palace of the West,
+ Sinking to slumber, the bright Day,
+Like a tired monarch fanned to rest,
+ Mid the cool airs of Evening lay;
+While round his couch's golden rim
+ The gaudy clouds, like courtiers, crept--
+Struggling each other's light to dim,
+ And catch his last smile e'er he slept.
+How gay, as o'er the gliding Thames
+ The golden eve its lustre poured,
+Shone out the high-born knights and dames
+ Now grouped around that festal board;
+A living mass of plumes and flowers.
+As tho' they'd robbed both birds and bowers--
+A peopled rainbow, swarming thro'
+With habitants of every hue;
+While, as the sparkling juice of France
+High in the crystal brimmers flowed,
+ Each sunset ray that mixt by chance
+With the wine's sparkles, showed
+ How sunbeams may be taught to dance.
+If not in written form exprest,
+'Twas known at least to every guest,
+That, tho' not bidden to parade
+Their scenic powers in masquerade,
+(A pastime little found to thrive
+ In the bleak fog of England's skies,
+Where wit's the thing we best contrive,
+ As masqueraders, to _disguise_,)
+It yet was hoped-and well that hope
+ Was answered by the young and gay--
+ That in the toilet's task to-day
+Fancy should take her wildest scope;--
+That the rapt milliner should be
+Let loose thro fields of poesy,
+The tailor, in inventive trance,
+ Up to the heights of Epic clamber,
+And all the regions of Romance
+ Be ransackt by the _femme de chambre_.
+
+Accordingly, with gay Sultanas,
+Rebeccas, Sapphos, Roxalanas--
+Circassian slaves whom Love would pay
+ Half his maternal realms to ransom;--
+Young nuns, whose chief religion lay
+ In looking most profanely handsome;--
+Muses in muslin-pastoral maids
+With hats from the _Arcade-ian_ shades,
+And fortune-tellers, rich, 'twas plain,
+As fortune-_hunters_ formed their train.
+
+With these and more such female groups,
+Were mixt no less fantastic troops
+Of male exhibitors--all willing
+To look even more than usual killing;--
+Beau tyrants, smock-faced braggadocios,
+And brigands, charmingly ferocious:--
+M.P.'s turned Turks, good Moslems then,
+ Who, last night, voted for the Greeks;
+And Friars, stanch No-Popery men,
+ In close confab with Whig Caciques.
+
+But where is she--the nymph whom late
+ We left before her glass delaying
+Like Eve, when by the lake she sate,
+ In the clear wave her charms surveying,
+And saw in that first glassy mirror
+The first fair face that lured to error.
+"Where is she," ask'st thou?--watch all looks
+ As centring to one point they bear,
+Like sun-flowers by the sides of brooks,
+ Turned to the sun--and she is there.
+Even in disguise, oh never doubt
+By her own light you'd track her out:
+As when the moon, close shawled in fog,
+Steals as she thinks, thro' heaven _incog_.,
+Tho' hid herself, some sidelong ray
+At every step, detects her way.
+
+But not in dark disguise to-night
+Hath our young heroine veiled her light;--
+For see, she walks the earth, Love's own.
+ His wedded bride, by _holiest_ vow
+Pledged in Olympus, and made known
+ To mortals by the type which now
+ Hangs glittering on her snowy brow,
+That butterfly, mysterious trinket,
+Which means the Soul (tho' few would think it),
+And sparkling thus on brow so white,
+Tells us we've Psyche here tonight!
+But hark! some song hath caught her ears--
+ And, lo, how pleased, as tho' she'd ne'er
+Heard the Grand Opera of the Spheres,
+ Her goddess-ship approves the air;
+And to a mere terrestrial strain,
+Inspired by naught but pink champagne,
+ Her butterfly as gayly nods
+As tho' she sate with all her train
+ At some great Concert of the Gods,
+With Phoebus, leader--Jove, director,
+And half the audience drunk with nectar.
+
+From the male group the carol came--
+ A few gay youths whom round the board
+The last-tried flask's superior fame
+ Had lured to taste the tide it poured;
+And one who from his youth and lyre
+Seemed grandson to the Teian-sire,
+Thus gayly sung, while, to his song,
+Replied in chorus the gay throng:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Some mortals there may be, so wise, or so fine,
+ As in evenings like this no enjoyment to see;
+But, as I'm not particular--wit, love, and wine,
+ Are for one night's amusement sufficient for me.
+Nay--humble and strange as my tastes may appear--
+ If driven to the worst, I could manage, thank Heaven,
+To put up with eyes such as beam round me here,
+ And such wine as we're sipping, six days out of seven.
+So pledge me a bumper--your sages profound
+ May be blest, if they will, on their own patent plan:
+But as we are _not_ sages, why--send the cup round--
+ We must only be happy the best way we can.
+
+A reward by some king was once offered, we're told,
+ To whoe'er could invent a new bliss for mankind;
+But talk of _new_ pleasures!--give me but the old,
+ And I'll leave your inventors all new ones they find.
+Or should I, in quest of fresh realms of bliss,
+ Set sail in the pinnace of Fancy some day,
+Let the rich rosy sea I embark on be this,
+ And such eyes as we've here be the stars of my way!
+In the mean time, a bumper--your Angels, on high,
+ May have pleasures unknown to life's limited span;
+But, as we are _not_ Angels, why--let the flask fly--
+ We must be happy _all_ ways that we can.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now nearly fled was sunset's light,
+ Leaving but so much of its beam
+As gave to objects, late so blight,
+ The coloring of a shadowy dream;
+And there was still where Day had set
+ A flush that spoke him loath to die--
+A last link of his glory yet,
+ Binding together earth and sky.
+Say, why is it that twilight best
+Becomes even brows the loveliest?
+That dimness with its softening Touch
+ Can bring out grace unfelt before,
+And charms we ne'er can see too much,
+ When seen but half enchant the more?
+Alas, it is that every joy
+In fulness finds its worst alloy,
+And half a bliss, but hoped or guessed,
+Is sweeter than the whole possest;--
+That Beauty, when least shone upon,
+ A creature most ideal grows;
+And there's no light from moon or sun
+ Like that Imagination throws;--
+It is, alas, that Fancy shrinks
+ Even from a bright reality,
+And turning inly, feels and thinks
+ For heavenlier things than e'er will be.
+
+Such was the effect of twilight's hour
+ On the fair groups that, round and round,
+From glade to grot, from bank to bower,
+ Now wandered thro' this fairy ground;
+And thus did Fancy--and champagne--
+ Work on the sight their dazzling spells,
+Till nymphs that looked at noonday plain,
+ Now brightened in the gloom to belles;
+And the brief interval of time,
+ 'Twixt after dinner and before,
+To dowagers brought back their prime,
+ And shed a halo round two-score.
+
+Meanwhile, new pastimes for the eye,
+ The ear, the fancy, quick succeed;
+And now along the waters fly
+ Light gondoles, of Venetian breed,
+With knights and dames who, calm reclined,
+ Lisp out love-sonnets as they glide--
+Astonishing old Thames to find
+ Such doings on his moral tide.
+
+So bright was still that tranquil river,
+With the last shaft from Daylight's quiver,
+That many a group in turn were seen
+Embarking on its wave serene;
+And 'mong the rest, in chorus gay,
+ A band of mariners, from the isles
+ Of sunny Greece, all song and smiles,
+As smooth they floated, to the play
+Of their oar's cadence, sung this lay:--
+
+
+TRIO.
+
+
+Our home is on the sea, boy,
+ Our home is on the sea;
+ When Nature gave
+ The ocean-wave,
+ She markt it for the Free.
+Whatever storms befall, boy,
+ Whatever storms befall,
+ The island bark
+ Is Freedom's ark,
+ And floats her safe thro' all.
+
+Behold yon sea of isles, boy,
+ Behold yon sea of isles,
+ Where every shore
+ Is sparkling o'er
+ With Beauty's richest smiles.
+For us hath Freedom claimed, boy,
+ For us hath Freedom claimed
+ Those ocean-nests
+ Where Valor rests
+ His eagle wing untamed.
+
+And shall the Moslem dare, boy,
+ And shall the Moslem dare,
+ While Grecian hand
+ Can wield a brand,
+ To plant his Crescent there?
+No--by our fathers, no, boy,
+ No, by the Cross, we show--
+ From Maina's rills
+ To Thracia's hills
+ All Greece re-echoes "No!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Like pleasant thoughts that o'er the mind
+ A minute come and go again,
+Even so by snatches in the wind,
+ Was caught and lost that choral strain,
+Now full, now faint upon the ear,
+As the bark floated far or near.
+At length when, lost, the closing note
+ Had down the waters died along,
+Forth from another fairy boat,
+ Freighted with music, came this song--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Smoothly flowing thro' verdant vales,
+ Gentle river, thy current runs,
+Sheltered safe from winter gales,
+ Shaded cool from summer suns.
+Thus our Youth's sweet moments glide.
+ Fenced with flowery shelter round;
+No rude tempest wakes the tide,
+ All its path is fairy ground.
+
+But, fair river, the day will come,
+ When, wooed by whispering groves in vain,
+Thou'lt leave those banks, thy shaded home,
+ To mingle with the stormy main.
+And thou, sweet Youth, too soon wilt pass
+ Into the world's unsheltered sea,
+Where, once thy wave hath mixt, alas,
+ All hope of peace is lost for thee.
+
+Next turn we to the gay saloon,
+Resplendent as a summer noon,
+ Where, 'neath a pendent wreath of lights,
+A Zodiac of flowers and tapers--
+(Such as in Russian ball-rooms sheds
+Its glory o'er young dancers' heads)--
+ Quadrille performs her mazy rites,
+And reigns supreme o'er slides and capers;--
+
+Working to death each opera strain,
+ As, with a foot that ne'er reposes,
+She jigs thro' sacred and profane,
+ From "Maid and Magpie" up to "Moses;"--[3]
+Wearing out tunes as fast as shoes,
+ Till fagged Rossini scarce respires;
+Till Meyerbeer for mercy sues,
+ And Weber at her feet expires.
+
+And now the set hath ceased--the bows
+Of fiddlers taste a brief repose,
+While light along the painted floor,
+ Arm within arm, the couples stray,
+Talking their stock of nothings o'er,
+ Till--nothing's left at last to say.
+When lo!--most opportunely sent--
+ Two Exquisites, a he and she,
+Just brought from Dandyland, and meant
+ For Fashion's grand Menagerie,
+Entered the room--and scarce were there
+When all flocked round them, glad to stare
+At _any_ monsters, _any_ where.
+Some thought them perfect, to their tastes;
+While others hinted that the waists
+(That in particular of the _he_ thing)
+Left far too ample room for breathing:
+Whereas, to meet these critics' wishes,
+ The isthmus there should be so small,
+That Exquisites, at last, like fishes,
+ Must manage not to breathe at all.
+The female (these same critics said),
+ Tho' orthodox from toe to chin,
+Yet lacked that spacious width of head
+ To hat of toadstool much akin--
+That build of bonnet, whose extent
+Should, like a doctrine of dissent,
+ Puzzle church-doors to let it in.
+
+However--sad as 'twas, no doubt,
+That nymph so smart should go about,
+With head unconscious of the place
+It _ought_ to fill in Infinite Space--
+Yet all allowed that, of her kind,
+A prettier show 'twas hard to find;
+While of that doubtful genus, "dressy men,"
+The male was thought a first-rate specimen.
+Such _Savans_, too, as wisht to trace
+The manners, habits, of this race--
+To know what rank (if rank at all)
+'Mong reasoning things to them should fall--
+What sort of notions heaven imparts
+To high-built heads and tight-laced hearts
+And how far Soul, which, Plato says,
+Abhors restraint, can act in stays--
+Might now, if gifted with discerning,
+Find opportunities of learning:
+As these two creatures--from their pout
+And frown, 'twas plain--had just fallen out;
+And all their little thoughts, of course.
+Were stirring in full fret and force;--
+Like mites, through microscope espied,
+A world of nothings magnified.
+
+But mild the vent such beings seek,
+The tempest of their souls to speak:
+As Opera swains to fiddles sigh,
+To fiddles fight, to fiddles die,
+Even so this tender couple set
+Their well-bred woes to a Duet.
+
+
+WALTZ DUET.
+
+
+HE.
+Long as I waltzed with only thee,
+ Each blissful Wednesday that went by,
+Nor stylish Stultz, nor neat Nugee
+ Adorned a youth so blest as I.
+ Oh! ah! ah! oh!
+ Those happy days are gone--heigho!
+
+SHE.
+Long as with thee I skimmed the ground,
+ Nor yet was scorned for Lady Jane,
+No blither nymph tetotumed round
+ To Collinet's immortal strain.
+ Oh! ah! etc.
+ Those happy days are gone--heigho!
+
+HE.
+With Lady Jane now whirled about,
+ I know no bounds of time or breath;
+And, should the charmer's head hold out,
+ My heart and heels are hers till death.
+ Oh! ah! etc.
+ Still round and round thro' life we'll go.
+
+SHE.
+To Lord Fitznoodle's eldest son,
+ A youth renowned for waistcoats smart,
+I now have given (excuse the pun)
+ A vested interest in my heart.
+ Oh! ah! etc.
+ Still round and round with him I'll go.
+
+HE.
+What if by fond remembrance led
+ Again to wear our mutual chain.
+For me thou cut'st Fitznoodle
+ dead,
+ And I _levant_ from Lady Jane.
+ Oh! ah! etc.
+ Still round and round again we'll go.
+
+SHE.
+Tho' he the Noodle honors give,
+And thine, dear youth, are not so high,
+With thee in endless waltz I'd live,
+ With thee, to Weber's Stop--
+ Waltz, die!
+ Oh! ah! etc.
+ Thus round and round thro' life we'll go.
+
+[_Exeunt waltzing_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While thus, like motes that dance away
+Existence in a summer ray,
+These gay things, born but to quadrille,
+The circle of their doom fulfil--
+(That dancing doom whose law decrees
+ That they should live on the alert toe
+A life of ups-and-downs, like keys
+ Of Broadwood's in a long concerto:--)
+While thus the fiddle's spell, _within_,
+ Calls up its realm of restless sprites.
+_Without_, as if some Mandarin
+ Were holding there his Feast of Lights,
+Lamps of all hues, from walks and bowers,
+Broke on the eye, like kindling flowers,
+Till, budding into light, each tree
+Bore its full fruit of brilliancy.
+
+Here shone a garden-lamps all o'er,
+ As tho' the Spirits of the Air
+Had taken it in their heads to pour
+ A shower of summer meteors there;--
+While here a lighted shrubbery led
+ To a small lake that sleeping lay,
+Cradled in foliage but, o'er-head,
+ Open to heaven's sweet breath and ray;
+While round its rim there burning stood
+ Lamps, with young flowers beside them bedded,
+That shrunk from such warm neighborhood,
+And, looking bashful in the flood,
+ Blushed to behold themselves so wedded.
+
+Hither, to this embowered retreat,
+Fit but for nights so still and sweet;
+ Nights, such as Eden's calm recall
+ In its first lonely hour, when all
+ So silent is, below, on high,
+ That is a star falls down the sky,
+ You almost think you hear it fall--
+ Hither, to this recess, a few,
+ To shun the dancers' wildering noise,
+ And give an hour, ere night-time flew,
+ To music's more ethereal joys,
+ Came with their voices-ready all
+ As Echo waiting for a call--
+ In hymn or ballad, dirge or glee,
+ To weave their mingling ministrelsy,
+And first a dark-eyed nymph, arrayed--
+Like her whom Art hath deathless made,
+Bright Mona Lisa[4]--with that braid
+Of hair across the brow, and one
+Small gem that in the centre shone--
+With face, too, in its form resembling
+Da Vinci's Beauties-the dark eyes,
+Now lucid as thro' crystal trembling,
+ Now soft as if suffused with sighs--
+Her lute that hung beside her took,
+And, bending o'er it with shy look,
+More beautiful, in shadow thus,
+Than when with life most luminous,
+Past her light finger o'er the chords,
+And sung to them these mournful words:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Bring hither, bring thy lute, while day is dying--
+ Here will I lay me and list to thy song;
+Should tones of other days mix with its sighing,
+ Tones of a light heart, now banisht so long,
+Chase them away-they bring but pain,
+And let thy theme be woe again.
+
+Sing on thou mournful lute--day is fast going,
+ Soon will its light from thy chords die away;
+One little gleam in the west is still glowing,
+ When that hath vanisht, farewell to thy lay.
+Mark, how it fades!-see, it is fled!
+Now, sweet lute, be thou, too, dead.
+
+The group that late in garb of Greeks
+ Sung their light chorus o'er the tide--
+Forms, such as up the wooded creeks
+ Of Helle's shore at noon-day glide,
+Or nightly on her glistening sea,
+Woo the bright waves with melody--
+Now linked their triple league again
+Of voices sweet, and sung a strain,
+Such as, had Sappho's tuneful ear
+ But caught it, on the fatal steep,
+She would have paused, entranced, to hear,
+ And for that day deferred her leap.
+
+
+SONG AND TRIO.
+
+
+On one of those sweet nights that oft
+ Their lustre o'er the AEgean fling,
+Beneath my casement, low and soft,
+ I heard a Lesbian lover sing;
+And, listening both with ear and thought,
+These sounds upon the night breeze caught--
+ "Oh, happy as the gods is he,
+ "Who gazes at this hour on thee!"
+
+The song was one by Sappho sung,
+ In the first love-dreams of her lyre,
+When words of passion from her tongue
+ Fell like a shower of living fire.
+And still, at close of every strain,
+I heard these burning words again--
+ "Oh, happy as the gods is he,
+ "Who listens at this hour to thee!"
+
+Once more to Mona Lisa turned
+ Each asking eye--nor turned in vain
+Tho' the quick, transient blush that burned
+ Bright o'er her cheek and died again,
+Showed with what inly shame and fear
+Was uttered what all loved to hear.
+Yet not to sorrow's languid lay
+ Did she her lute-song now devote;
+But thus, with voice that like a ray
+ Of southern sunshine seemed to float--
+ So rich with climate was each note--
+Called up in every heart a dream
+Of Italy with this soft theme:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Oh, where art thou dreaming,
+ On land, or on sea?
+In my lattice is gleaming
+ The watch-light for thee;
+
+And this fond heart is glowing
+ To welcome thee home,
+And the night is fast going,
+ But thou art not come:
+ No, thou com'st not!
+
+'Tis the time when night-flowers
+ Should wake from their rest;
+'Tis the hour of all hours,
+ When the lute singeth best,
+But the flowers are half sleeping
+ Till _thy_ glance they see;
+And the husht lute is keeping
+ Its music for thee.
+ Yet, thou com'st not!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Scarce had the last word left her lip,
+When a light, boyish form, with trip
+Fantastic, up the green walk came,
+Prankt in gay vest to which the flame
+Of every lamp he past, or blue
+Or green or crimson, lent its hue;
+As tho' a live chameleon's skin
+He had despoiled, to robe him in.
+A zone he wore of clattering shells,
+ And from his lofty cap, where shone
+A peacock's plume, there dangled bells
+ That rung as he came dancing on.
+Close after him, a page--in dress
+And shape, his miniature express--
+An ample basket, filled with store
+Of toys and trinkets, laughing bore;
+Till, having reached this verdant seat,
+He laid it at his master's feet,
+Who, half in speech and half in song,
+Chanted this invoice to the throng:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Who'll buy?--'tis Folly's shop, who'll buy?--
+ We've toys to suit all ranks and ages;
+Besides our usual fools' supply,
+ We've lots of playthings, too, for sages.
+For reasoners here's a juggler's cup
+ That fullest seems when nothing's in it;
+And nine-pins set, like systems, up,
+ To be knocked down the following minute.
+ Who'll buy?--'tis Folly's shop, who'll buy?
+
+Gay caps we here of foolscap make.
+ For bards to wear in dog-day weather;
+Or bards the bells alone may take,
+ And leave to wits the cap and feather,
+Tetotums we've for patriots got,
+ Who court the mob with antics humble;
+Like theirs the patriot's dizzy lot,
+ A glorious spin, and then--a tumble,
+ Who'll buy, etc.
+
+Here, wealthy misers to inter,
+ We've shrouds of neat post-obit paper;
+While, for their heirs, we've _quick_silver,
+ That, fast as they can wish, will caper.
+For aldermen we've dials true,
+ That tell no hour but that of dinner;
+For courtly parsons sermons new,
+ That suit alike both saint and sinner.
+ Who'll buy, etc.
+
+No time we've now to name our terms,
+ But, whatsoe'er the whims that seize you,
+ This oldest of all mortal firms,
+ Folly and Co., will try to please you.
+Or, should you wish a darker hue
+Of goods than _we_ can recommend you,
+Why then (as we with lawyers do)
+ To Knavery's shop next door we'll send you.
+ Who'll buy, etc.
+
+While thus the blissful moments rolled,
+ Moments of rare and fleeting light,
+That show themselves, like grains of gold
+ In the mine's refuse, few and bright;
+Behold where, opening far away,
+ The long Conservatory's range,
+Stript of the flowers it wore all day,
+ But gaining lovelier in exchange,
+Presents, on Dresden's costliest ware,
+A supper such as Gods might share.
+
+Ah much-loved Supper!--blithe repast
+Of other times, now dwindling fast,
+Since Dinner far into the night
+Advanced the march of appetite;
+Deployed his never-ending forces
+Of various vintage and three courses,
+And, like those Goths who played the dickens
+With Rome and all her sacred chickens,
+Put Supper and her fowls so white,
+Legs, wings, and drumsticks, all to flight.
+Now waked once more by wine--whose tide
+Is the true Hippocrene, where glide
+The Muse's swans with happiest wing,
+Dipping their bills before they sing--
+The minstrels of the table greet
+The listening ear with descant sweet:--
+
+
+SONG AND TRIO.
+
+THE LEVÉE AND COUCHÉE.
+
+
+ Call the Loves around,
+ Let the whispering sound
+ Of their wings be heard alone.
+ Till soft to rest
+ My Lady blest
+ At this bright hour hath gone,
+ Let Fancy's beams
+ Play o'er her dreams,
+ Till, touched with light all through.
+ Her spirit be
+ Like a summer sea,
+ Shining and slumbering too.
+ And, while thus husht she lies,
+ Let the whispered chorus rise--
+"Good evening, good evening, to our
+ Lady's bright eyes."
+
+ But the day-beam breaks,
+ See, our Lady wakes!
+ Call the Loves around once more,
+ Like stars that wait
+ At Morning's gate,
+ Her first steps to adore.
+ Let the veil of night
+ From her dawning sight
+ All gently pass away,
+ Like mists that flee
+ From a summer sea,
+ Leaving it full of day.
+ And, while her last dream flies,
+ Let the whispered chorus rise--
+"Good morning, good morning, to our
+ Lady's bright eyes."
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+If to see thee be to love thee,
+ If to love thee be to prize
+Naught of earth or heaven above thee,
+ Nor to live but for those eyes:
+If such love to mortal given,
+Be wrong to earth, be wrong to heaven,
+'Tis not for thee the fault to blame,
+For from those eyes the madness came.
+Forgive but thou the crime of loving
+ In this heart more pride 'twill raise
+To be thus wrong with thee approving,
+ Than right with all a world to praise!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But say, while light these songs resound,
+What means that buzz of whispering round,
+From lip to lip--as if the Power
+Of Mystery, in this gay hour,
+Had thrown some secret (as we fling
+Nuts among children) to that ring
+Of rosy, restless lips, to be
+Thus scrambled for so wantonly?
+And, mark ye, still as each reveals
+The mystic news, her hearer steals
+A look towards yon enchanted chair,
+ Where, like the Lady of the Masque,
+A nymph, as exquisitely fair
+ As Love himself for bride could ask,
+Sits blushing deep, as if aware
+Of the winged secret circling there.
+Who is this nymph? and what, oh Muse,
+ What, in the name of all odd things
+That woman's restless brain pursues,
+What mean these mystic whisperings?
+
+Thus runs the tale:--yon blushing maid,
+Who sits in beauty's light arrayed,
+While o'er her leans a tall young Dervise,
+(Who from her eyes, as all observe, is
+Learning by heart the Marriage Service,)
+Is the bright heroine of our song,--
+The Love-wed Psyche, whom so long
+We've missed among this mortal train,
+We thought her winged to heaven again.
+
+But no--earth still demands her smile;
+Her friends, the Gods, must wait awhile.
+And if, for maid of heavenly birth,
+ A young Duke's proffered heart and hand
+Be things worth waiting for on earth,
+ Both are, this hour, at her command.
+To-night, in yonder half-lit shade,
+For love concerns expressly meant,
+The fond proposal first was made,
+ And love and silence blusht consent
+Parents and friends (all here, as Jews,
+Enchanters, house-maids, Turks, Hindoos,)
+Have heard, approved, and blest the tie;
+And now, hadst thou a poet's eye,
+Thou might'st behold, in the air, above
+That brilliant brow, triumphant Love,
+Holding, as if to drop it down
+Gently upon her curls, a crown
+Of Ducal shape--but, oh, such gems!
+Pilfered from Peri diadems,
+And set in gold like that which shines
+To deck the Fairy of the Mines:
+In short, a crown all glorious--such as
+Love orders when he makes a Duchess.
+
+But see, 'tis morn in heaven; the Sun
+Up in the bright orient hath begun
+To canter his immortal beam;
+ And, tho' not yet arrived in sight,
+His leaders' nostrils send a steam
+ Of radiance forth, so rosy bright
+ As makes their onward path all light.
+What's to be done? if Sol will be
+So deuced early, so must we:
+And when the day thus shines outright,
+Even dearest friends must bid good night.
+So, farewell, scene of mirth and masking,
+ Now almost a by-gone tale;
+Beauties, late in lamp-light basking,
+ Now, by daylight, dim and pale;
+Harpers, yawning o'er your harps,
+Scarcely knowing flats from sharps;
+Mothers who, while bored you keep
+Time by nodding, nod to sleep;
+Heads of hair, that stood last night
+_Crépé_, crispy, and upright,
+But have now, alas, one sees, a
+Leaning like the tower of Pisa;
+Fare ye will--thus sinks away
+ All that's mighty, all that's bright:
+Tyre and Sidon had their day,
+And even a Ball--has but its night!
+
+
+[1] Archimedes.
+
+[2] The name given to those large sleeves that hang loosely.
+
+[3] In England the partition of this opera of Rossini was transferred to
+the story of Peter the Hermit; by which means the indecorum of giving such
+names as "Moyse," "Pharaon," etc., to the dancers selected from it (as was
+done in Paris), has been avoided.
+
+[4] The celebrated portrait by Leonardo da Vinci, which he is said to have
+occupied four years in painting,--_Vasari_, vol. vii.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EVENINGS IN GREECE
+
+
+In thus connecting together a series of Songs by a thread of poetical
+narrative, my chief object has been to combine Recitation with Music, so
+as to enable a greater number of persons to join in the performance, by
+enlisting as readers those who may not feel willing or competent to take a
+part as singers.
+
+The Island of Zea where the scene is laid was called by the ancients
+Ceos, and was the birthplace of Simonides, Bacchylides, and other eminent
+persons. An account of its present state may be found in the Travels of
+Dr. Clarke, who says, that "it appeared to him to be the best cultivated
+of any of the Grecian Isles."--Vol. vi. p. 174.
+
+T.M.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EVENINGS IN GREECE.
+
+
+
+
+FIRST EVENING.
+
+
+"The sky is bright--the breeze is fair,
+ "And the mainsail flowing, full and free--
+"Our farewell word is woman's prayer,
+ "And the hope before us--Liberty!
+ "Farewell, farewell.
+ "To Greece we give our shining blades,
+ "And our hearts to you, young Zean Maids!
+
+"The moon is in the heavens above,
+ "And the wind is on the foaming sea--
+"Thus shines the star of woman's love
+ "On the glorious strife of Liberty!
+ "Farewell, farewell.
+ "To Greece we give our shining blades,
+ "And our hearts to you, young Zean Maids!"
+
+ Thus sung they from the bark, that now
+Turned to the sea its gallant prow,
+Bearing within its hearts as brave,
+As e'er sought Freedom o'er the wave;
+And leaving on that islet's shore,
+ Where still the farewell beacons burn,
+Friends that shall many a day look o'er
+ The long, dim sea for their return.
+
+Virgin of Heaven! speed their way--
+ Oh, speed their way,--the chosen flower,
+Of Zea's youth, the hope and stay
+ Of parents in their wintry hour,
+The love of maidens and the pride
+Of the young, happy, blushing bride,
+Whose nuptial wreath has not yet died--
+All, all are in that precious bark,
+ Which now, alas! no more is seen--
+Tho' every eye still turns to mark
+ The moonlight spot where it had been.
+
+Vainly you look, ye maidens, sires,
+ And mothers, your beloved are gone!--
+Now may you quench those signal fires,
+ Whose light they long looked back upon
+From their dark deck--watching the flame
+ As fast it faded from their view,
+With thoughts, that, but for manly shame,
+ Had made them droop and weep like you.
+Home to your chambers! home, and pray
+For the bright coming of that day,
+When, blest by heaven, the Cross shall sweep
+The Crescent from the Aegean deep,
+And your brave warriors, hastening back,
+Will bring such glories in their track,
+As shall, for many an age to come,
+Shed light around their name and home.
+
+ There is a Fount on Zea's isle,
+Round which, in soft luxuriance, smile
+All the sweet flowers, of every kind,
+ On which the sun of Greece looks down,
+ Pleased as a lover on the crown
+His mistress for her brow hath twined,
+When he beholds each floweret there,
+Himself had wisht her most to wear;
+Here bloomed the laurel-rose,[1] whose wreath
+Hangs radiant round the Cypriot shines,
+And here those bramble-flowers, that breathe
+ Their odor into Zante's wines:--
+The splendid woodbine that, as eve,
+ To grace their floral diadems,
+The lovely maids of Patmos weave:--[2]
+And that fair plant whose tangled stems
+Shine like a Nereid's hair,[3] when spread,
+Dishevelled, o'er her azure bed:--
+All these bright children of the clime,
+(Each at its own most genial time,
+The summer, or the year's sweet prime,)
+ Like beautiful earth-stars, adorn
+ The Valley where that Fount is born;
+While round, to grace its cradle green
+Groups of Velani oaks are seen
+Towering on every verdant height--
+Tall, shadowy, in the evening light,
+Like Genii set to watch the birth
+Of some enchanted child of earth--
+Fair oaks that over Zea's vales,
+ Stand with their leafy pride unfurled;
+While Commerce from her thousand sails
+ Scatters their fruit throughout the world![4]
+
+ 'Twas here--as soon as prayer and sleep
+(Those truest friends to all who weep)
+Had lightened every heart; and made
+Even sorrow wear a softer shade--
+'Twas here, in this secluded spot,
+ Amid whose breathings calm and sweet
+Grief might be soothed if not forgot,
+ The Zean nymphs resolved to meet
+Each evening now, by the same light
+That saw their farewell tears that night:
+And try if sound of lute and song,
+ If wandering mid the moonlight flowers
+In various talk, could charm along
+ With lighter step, the lingering hours,
+Till tidings of that Bark should come,
+Or Victory waft their warriors home!
+
+ When first they met--the wonted smile
+Of greeting having gleamed awhile--
+'Twould touch even Moslem heart to see
+The sadness that came suddenly
+O'er their young brows, when they looked round
+Upon that bright, enchanted ground;
+And thought how many a time with those
+ Who now were gone to the rude wars
+They there had met at evening's close,
+ And danced till morn outshone the stars!
+
+But seldom long doth hang the eclipse
+ Of sorrow o'er such youthful breasts--
+The breath from her own blushing lips,
+ That on the maiden's mirror rests,
+Not swifter, lighter from the glass,
+Than sadness from her brow doth pass.
+
+Soon did they now, as round the Well
+ They sat, beneath the rising moon--
+And some with voice of awe would tell
+Of midnight fays and nymphs who dwell
+ In holy founts--while some would time
+Their idle lutes that now had lain
+For days without a single strain;--
+And others, from the rest apart,
+With laugh that told the lightened heart,
+Sat whispering in each other's ear
+Secrets that all in turn would hear;--
+Soon did they find this thoughtless play
+So swiftly steal their griefs away,
+ That many a nymph tho' pleased the while,
+ Reproached her own forgetful smile,
+And sighed to think she _could_ be gay.
+
+Among these maidens there was one
+ Who to Leucadia[5] late had been--
+Had stood beneath the evening sun
+ On its white towering cliffs and seen
+The very spot where Sappho sung
+Her swan-like music, ere she sprung
+(Still holding, in that fearful leap,
+By her loved lyre,) into the deep,
+And dying quenched the fatal fire,
+At once, of both her heart and lyre.
+
+ Mutely they listened all--and well
+Did the young travelled maiden tell
+Of the dread height to which that steep
+Beetles above the eddying deep--[6]
+Of the lone sea-birds, wheeling round
+The dizzy edge with mournful sound--
+And of those scented lilies found
+Still blooming on that fearful place--
+As if called up by Love to grace
+The immortal spot o'er which the last
+Bright footsteps of his martyr past!
+
+ While fresh to every listener's thought
+These legends of Leucadia brought
+All that of Sappho's hapless flame
+Is kept alive, still watcht by Fame--
+The maiden, tuning her soft lute,
+While all the rest stood round her, mute,
+Thus sketched the languishment of soul,
+That o'er the tender Lesbian stole;
+And in a voice whose thrilling tone
+Fancy might deem the Lesbian's own,
+One of those fervid fragments gave,
+ Which still,--like sparkles of Greek Fire,
+Undying, even beneath the wave,--
+ Burn on thro' Time and ne'er expire.
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+As o'er her loom the Lesbian Maid
+ In love-sick languor hung her head,
+Unknowing where her fingers strayed,
+ She weeping turned away, and said,
+"Oh, my sweet Mother--'tis in vain--
+ "I cannot weave, as once I wove--
+"So wildered is my heart and brain
+ "With thinking of that youth I love!"
+
+Again the web she tried to trace,
+ But tears fell o'er each tangled thread;
+While looking in her mother's face,
+ Who watchful o'er her leaned, she said,
+"Oh, my sweet Mother--'tis in vain--
+ "I cannot weave, as once I wove--
+"So wildered is my heart and brain
+ "With thinking of that youth I love!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A silence followed this sweet air,
+ As each in tender musing stood,
+Thinking, with lips that moved in prayer,
+ Of Sappho and that fearful flood:
+While some who ne'er till now had known
+ How much their hearts resembled hers,
+Felt as they made her griefs their own,
+ That _they_ too were Love's worshippers.
+
+ At length a murmur, all but mute,
+So faint it was, came from the lute
+Of a young melancholy maid,
+Whose fingers, all uncertain played
+From chord to chord, as if in chase
+ Of some lost melody, some strain
+Of other times, whose faded trace
+ She sought among those chords again.
+Slowly the half-forgotten theme
+ (Tho' born in feelings ne'er forgot)
+Came to her memory--as a beam
+ Falls broken o'er some shaded spot;--
+And while her lute's sad symphony
+Filled up each sighing pause between;
+And Love himself might weep to see
+ What ruin comes where he hath been--
+As withered still the grass is found
+Where fays have danced their merry round--
+Thus simply to the listening throng
+She breathed her melancholy song:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Weeping for thee, my love, thro' the long day,
+Lonely and wearily life wears away.
+Weeping for thee, my love, thro' the long night--
+No rest in darkness, no joy in light!
+Naught left but Memory whose dreary tread
+Sounds thro' this ruined heart, where all lies dead--
+Wakening the echoes of joy long fled!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Of many a stanza, this alone
+Had 'scaped oblivion--like the one
+Stray fragment of a wreck which thrown
+With the lost vessel's name ashore
+Tells who they were that live no more.
+ When thus the heart is in a vein
+Of tender thought, the simplest strain
+Can touch it with peculiar power--
+ As when the air is warm, the scent
+Of the most wild and rustic flower
+ Can fill the whole rich element--
+And in such moods the homeliest tone
+That's linked with feelings, once our own--
+With friends or joy gone by--will be
+Worth choirs of loftiest harmony!
+
+But some there were among the group
+ Of damsels there too light of heart
+To let their spirits longer droop,
+ Even under music's melting art;
+And one upspringing with a bound
+From a low bank of flowers, looked round
+With eyes that tho' so full of light
+ Had still a trembling tear within;
+And, while her fingers in swift flight
+ Flew o'er a fairy mandolin,
+Thus sung the song her lover late
+ Had sung to her--the eve before
+ That joyous night, when as of yore
+All Zea met to celebrate
+ The feast of May on the sea-shore.
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+When the Balaika[7]
+ Is heard o'er the sea,
+I'll dance the Romaika
+ By moonlight with thee.
+If waves then advancing
+ Should steal on our play,
+Thy white feet in dancing
+ Shall chase them away.[8]
+When the Balaika
+ Is heard o'er the sea,
+Thou'lt dance the Romaika
+ My own love, with me.
+
+Then at the closing
+ Of each merry lay,
+How sweet 'tis, reposing
+ Beneath the night ray!
+Or if declining
+ The moon leave the skies,
+We'll talk by the shining
+ Of each other's eyes.
+
+Oh then how featly
+ The dance we'll renew,
+Treading so fleetly
+ Its light mazes thro':[9]
+Till stars, looking o'er us
+ From heaven's high bowers,
+Would change their bright chorus
+ For one dance of ours!
+When the Balaika
+ Is heard o'er the sea,
+Thou'lt dance the Romaika,
+ My own love, with me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+How changingly for ever veers
+The heart of youth 'twixt smiles and tears!
+Even as in April the light vane
+Now points to sunshine, now to rain.
+Instant this lively lay dispelled
+ The shadow from each blooming brow,
+And Dancing, joyous Dancing, held
+ Full empire o'er each fancy now.
+
+
+But say--_what_ shall the measure be?
+ "Shall we the old Romaika tread,"
+(Some eager asked) "as anciently
+ "'Twas by the maids of Delos led,
+"When slow at first, then circling fast,
+"As the gay spirits rose--at last,
+"With hand in hand like links enlocked,
+ "Thro' the light air they seemed to flit
+"In labyrinthine maze, that mocked
+ "The dazzled eye that followed it?"
+Some called aloud "the Fountain Dance!"--
+ While one young, dark-eyed Amazon,
+Whose step was air-like and whose glance
+ Flashed, like a sabre in the sun,
+Sportively said, "Shame on these soft
+ "And languid strains we hear so oft.
+"Daughters of Freedom! have not we
+ "Learned from our lovers and our sires
+"The Dance of Greece, while Greece was free--
+ "That Dance, where neither flutes nor lyres,
+"But sword and shield clash on the ear
+"A music tyrants quake to hear?
+"Heroines of Zea, arm with me
+"And dance the dance of Victory!"
+
+Thus saying, she, with playful grace,
+Loosed the wide hat, that o'er her face
+(From Anatolia came the maid)
+ Hung shadowing each sunny charm;
+And with a fair young armorer's aid,
+ Fixing it on her rounded arm,
+A mimic shield with pride displayed;
+Then, springing towards a grove that spread
+ Its canopy of foliage near,
+Plucked off a lance-like twig, and said,
+ "To arms, to arms!" while o'er her head
+ She waved the light branch, as a spear.
+
+Promptly the laughing maidens all
+Obeyed their Chief's heroic call;--
+Round the shield-arm of each was tied
+ Hat, turban, shawl, as chance might be;
+ The grove, their verdant armory,
+Falchion and lance[10] alike supplied;
+ And as their glossy locks, let free,
+ Fell down their shoulders carelessly,
+You might have dreamed you saw a throng
+ Of youthful Thyads, by the beam
+Of a May moon, bounding along
+ Peneus' silver-eddied stream!
+
+And now they stept, with measured tread,
+ Martially o'er the shining field;
+Now to the mimic combat led
+(A heroine at each squadron's head),
+ Struck lance to lance and sword to shield:
+While still, thro' every varying feat,
+Their voices heard in contrast sweet
+With some of deep but softened sound
+From lips of aged sires around,
+Who smiling watched their children's play--
+Thus sung the ancient Pyrrhic lay:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+"Raise the buckler--poise the lance--
+"Now here--now there--retreat--advance!"
+
+Such were the sounds to which the warrior boy
+ Danced in those happy days when Greece was free;
+When Sparta's youth, even in the hour of joy,
+ Thus trained their steps to war and victory.
+"Raise the buckler--poise the lance--
+"Now here--now there--retreat--advance!"
+Such was the Spartan warriors' dance.
+ "Grasp the falchion--gird the shield--
+"Attack--defend--do all but yield."
+
+Thus did thy sons, oh Greece, one glorious night,
+ Dance by a moon like this, till o'er the sea
+That morning dawned by whose immortal light
+ They nobly died for thee and liberty![11]
+"Raise the buckler--poise the lance--
+"Now here--now there--retreat--advance!"
+Such was the Spartan heroes' dance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Scarce had they closed this martial lay
+When, flinging their light spears away,
+The combatants, in broken ranks.
+ All breathless from the war-field fly;
+And down upon the velvet banks
+ And flowery slopes exhausted lie,
+Like rosy huntresses of Thrace,
+Resting at sunset from the chase.
+
+"Fond girls!" an aged Zean said--
+One who himself had fought and bled,
+And now with feelings half delight,
+Half sadness, watched their mimic fight--
+"Fond maids! who thus with War can jest--
+"Like Love in Mar's helmet drest,
+"When, in his childish innocence,
+ "Pleased with the shade that helmet flings,
+"He thinks not of the blood that thence
+ "Is dropping o'er his snowy wings.
+"Ay--true it is, young patriot maids,
+ "If Honor's arm still won the fray,
+"If luck but shone on righteous blades,
+ "War were a game for gods to play!
+"But, no, alas!--hear one, who well
+ "Hath tracked the fortunes of the brave--
+"Hear _me_, in mournful ditty, tell
+ "What glory waits the patriot's grave."
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+As by the shore, at break of day,
+A vanquished chief expiring lay.
+Upon the sands, with broken sword,
+ He traced his farewell to the Free;
+And, there, the last unfinished word
+ He dying wrote was "Liberty!"
+
+At night a Sea-bird shrieked the knell
+Of him who thus for Freedom fell;
+The words he wrote, ere evening came,
+ Were covered by the sounding sea;--
+So pass away the cause and name
+ Of him who dies for Liberty!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That tribute of subdued applause
+ A charmed but timid audience pays,
+That murmur which a minstrel draws
+ From hearts that feel but fear to praise,
+Followed this song, and left a pause
+Of silence after it, that hung
+Like a fixt spell on every tongue.
+
+ At length a low and tremulous sound
+Was heard from midst a group that round
+A bashful maiden stood to hide
+Her blushes while the lute she tried--
+Like roses gathering round to veil
+The song of some young nightingale,
+Whose trembling notes steal out between
+The clustered leaves, herself unseen.
+And while that voice in tones that more
+ Thro' feeling than thro' weakness erred,
+Came with a stronger sweetness o'er
+ The attentive ear, this strain was heard:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+I saw from yonder silent cave,[12]
+ Two Fountains running side by side;
+The one was Memory's limpid wave,
+ The other cold Oblivion's tide.
+"Oh Love!" said I, in thoughtless mood,
+ As deep I drank of Lethe's stream,
+"Be all my sorrows in this flood
+ "Forgotten like a vanisht dream!"
+
+But who could bear that gloomy blank
+ Where joy was lost as well as pain?
+Quickly of Memory's fount I drank.
+ And brought the past all back again;
+And said, "Oh Love! whate'er my lot,
+ "Still let this soul to thee be true--
+"Rather than have one bliss forgot,
+ "Be all my pains remembered too!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The group that stood around to shade
+The blushes of that bashful maid,
+Had by degrees as came the lay
+More strongly forth retired away,
+Like a fair shell whose valves divide
+To show the fairer pearl inside:
+For such she was--a creature, bright
+ And delicate as those day-flowers,
+Which while they last make up in light
+ And sweetness what they want in hours.
+
+ So rich upon the ear had grown
+Her voice's melody--its tone
+Gathering new courage as it found
+An echo in each bosom round--
+That, ere the nymph with downcast eye
+Still on the chords, her lute laid by,
+"Another song," all lips exclaimed,
+And each some matchless favorite named;
+while blushing as her fingers ran
+O'er the sweet chords she thus began:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Oh, Memory, how coldly
+ Thou paintest joy gone by:
+Like rainbows, thy pictures
+ But mournfully shine and die.
+Or if some tints thou keepest
+ That former days recall,
+As o'er each line thou weepest,
+ Thy tears efface them all.
+
+But, Memory, too truly
+ Thou paintest grief that's past;
+Joy's colors are fleeting,
+ But those of Sorrow last.
+And, while thou bringst before us
+ Dark pictures of past ill,
+Life's evening closing o'er us
+ But makes them darker still.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So went the moonlight hours along,
+In this sweet glade; and so with song
+And witching sounds--not such as they,
+ The cymbalists of Ossa, played,
+To chase the moon's eclipse away,[13]
+ But soft and holy--did each maid
+Lighten her heart's eclipse awhile,
+And win back Sorrow to a smile.
+
+Not far from this secluded place,
+ On the sea-shore a ruin stood;--
+A relic of the extinguisht race,
+ Who once o'er that foamy flood,
+ When fair Ioulis[14] by the light
+ Of golden sunset on the sight
+ Of mariners who sailed that sea,
+ Rose like a city of chrysolite
+ Called from the wave by witchery.
+ This ruin--now by barbarous hands
+ Debased into a motley shed,
+ Where the once splendid column stands
+ Inverted on its leafy head--
+ Formed, as they tell in times of old
+ The dwelling of that bard whose lay
+ Could melt to tears the stern and cold,
+ And sadden mid their mirth the gay--
+ Simonides,[15] whose fame thro' years
+ And ages past still bright appears--
+ Like Hesperus, a star of tears!
+
+ 'Twas hither now--to catch a view
+ Of the white waters as they played
+ Silently in the light--a few
+ Of the more restless damsels strayed;
+ And some would linger mid the scent
+ Of hanging foliage that perfumed
+ The ruined walls; while others went
+ Culling whatever floweret bloomed
+
+In the lone leafy space between,
+Where gilded chambers once had been;
+Or, turning sadly to the sea,
+ Sent o'er the wave a sigh unblest
+To some brave champion of the Free--
+Thinking, alas, how cold might be
+ At that still hour his place of rest!
+
+Meanwhile there came a sound of song
+ From the dark ruins--a faint strain,
+As if some echo that among
+Those minstrel halls had slumbered long
+ Were murmuring into life again.
+
+But, no--the nymphs knew well the tone--
+ A maiden of their train, who loved
+Like the night-bird to sing alone.
+ Had deep into those ruins roved,
+And there, all other thoughts forgot,
+ Was warbling o'er, in lone delight,
+A lay that, on that very spot,
+ Her lover sung one moonlight night:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Ah! where are they, who heard, in former hours,
+The voice of Song in these neglected bowers?
+ They are gone--all gone!
+
+The youth who told his pain in such sweet tone
+That all who heard him wisht his pain their own--
+ He is gone--he is gone!
+
+And she who while he sung sat listening by
+And thought to strains like these 'twere sweet to die--
+ She is gone--she too is gone!
+
+'Tis thus in future hours some bard will say
+Of her who hears and him who sings this lay--
+ They are gone--they both are gone!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The moon was now, from heaven's steep,
+ Bending to dip her silvery urn
+Into the bright and silent deep--
+ And the young nymphs, on their return
+From those romantic ruins, found
+Their other playmates ranged around
+The sacred Spring, prepared to tune
+Their parting hymn,[16] ere sunk the moon,
+To that fair Fountain by whose stream
+Their hearts had formed so many a dream.
+
+ Who has not read the tales that tell
+Of old Eleusis' sacred Well,
+Or heard what legend-songs recount
+Of Syra and its holy Fount,[17]
+Gushing at once from the hard rock
+ Into the laps of living flowers--
+Where village maidens loved to flock,
+ On summer-nights and like the Hours
+Linked in harmonious dance and song,
+Charmed the unconscious night along;
+While holy pilgrims on their way
+ To Delos' isle stood looking on,
+Enchanted with a scene so gay,
+ Nor sought their boats till morning shone.
+
+Such was the scene this lovely glade
+And its fair inmates now displayed.
+As round the Fount in linked ring
+ They went in cadence slow and light
+And thus to that enchanted Spring
+ Warbled their Farewell for the night:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Here, while the moonlight dim
+Falls on that mossy brim,
+Sing we our Fountain Hymn,
+ Maidens of Zea!
+Nothing but Music's strain,
+When Lovers part in pain,
+Soothes till they meet again,
+ Oh, Maids of Zea!
+
+Bright Fount so clear and cold
+Round which the nymphs of old
+Stood with their locks of gold,
+ Fountain of Zea!
+Not even Castaly,
+Famed tho' its streamlet be,
+Murmurs or shines like thee,
+ Oh, Fount of Zea!
+
+Thou, while our hymn we sing,
+Thy silver voice shalt bring,
+Answering, answering,
+ Sweet Fount of Zea!
+For of all rills that run
+Sparkling by moon or sun
+Thou art the fairest one,
+ Bright Fount of Zea!
+
+Now, by those stars that glance
+Over heaven's still expanse
+Weave we our mirthful dance,
+ Daughters of Zea!
+Such as in former days
+Danced they by Dian's rays
+Where the Eurotas strays,
+ Oh, Maids of Zea!
+
+But when to merry feet
+Hearts with no echo beat,
+Say, can the dance be sweet?
+ Maidens of Zea!
+No, naught but Music's strain,
+When lovers part in pain,
+Soothes till they meet again,
+ Oh, Maids of Zea!
+
+
+
+
+SECOND EVENING.
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+When evening shades are falling
+ O'er Ocean's sunny sleep,
+To pilgrims' hearts recalling
+ Their home beyond the deep;
+When rest o'er all descending
+ The shores with gladness smile,
+And lutes their echoes blending
+ Are heard from isle to isle,
+Then, Mary, Star of the Sea,
+We pray, we pray, to thee!
+
+The noon-day tempest over,
+ Now Ocean toils no more,
+And wings of halcyons hover
+ Where all was strife before.
+Oh thus may life in closing
+ Its short tempestuous day
+Beneath heaven's smile reposing
+ Shine all its storms away:
+Thus, Mary, Star of the Sea,
+We pray, we pray, to thee!
+
+On Helle's sea the light grew dim
+As the last sounds of that sweet hymn
+ Floated along its azure tide--
+Floated in light as if the lay
+Had mixt with sunset's fading ray
+ And light and song together died.
+So soft thro' evening's air had breathed
+That choir of youthful voices wreathed
+In many-linked harmony,
+That boats then hurrying o'er the sea
+Paused when they reached this fairy shore,
+And lingered till the strain was o'er.
+
+Of those young maids who've met to fleet
+In song and dance this evening's hours,
+Far happier now the bosoms beat
+ Than when they last adorned these bowers;
+For tidings of glad sound had come,
+ At break of day from the far isles--
+Tidings like breath of life to some--
+That Zea's sons would soon wing home,
+ Crowded with the light of Victory's smiles
+To meet that brightest of all meeds
+That wait on high, heroic deeds.
+When gentle eyes that scarce for tears
+ Could trace the warrior's parting track,
+Shall like a misty morn that clears
+When the long-absent sun appears
+ Shine out all bliss to hail him back.
+
+How fickle still the youthful breast!--
+ More fond of change than a young moon,
+No joy so new was e'er possest
+ But Youth would leave for newer soon.
+These Zean nymphs tho' bright the spot
+ Where first they held their evening play
+As ever fell to fairy's lot
+ To wanton o'er by midnight's ray,
+Had now exchanged that sheltered scene
+ For a wide glade beside the sea--
+A lawn whose soft expanse of green
+ Turned to the west sun smilingly
+As tho' in conscious beauty bright
+It joyed to give him light for light.
+
+And ne'er did evening more serene
+Look down from heaven on lovelier scene.
+Calm lay the flood around while fleet
+ O'er the blue shining element
+Light barks as if with fairy feet
+ That stirred not the husht waters went;
+Some, that ere rosy eve fell o'er
+ The blushing wave, with mainsail free,
+Had put forth from the Attic shore,
+ Or the near Isle of Ebony;--
+Some, Hydriot barks that deep in caves
+ Beneath Colonna's pillared cliffs,
+Had all day lurked and o'er the waves
+ Now shot their long and dart-like skiffs.
+Woe to the craft however fleet
+These sea-hawks in their course shall meet,
+Laden with juice of Lesbian vines,
+Or rich from Naxos' emery mines;
+For not more sure, when owlets flee
+O'er the dark crags of Pendelee,
+Doth the night-falcon mark his prey,
+Or pounce on it more fleet than they.
+
+And what a moon now lights the glade
+ Where these young island nymphs are met!
+Full-orbed yet pure as if no shade
+ Had touched its virgin lustre yet;
+And freshly bright as if just made
+By Love's own hands of new-born light
+Stolen from his mother's star tonight.
+
+ On a bold rock that o'er the flood
+Jutted from that soft glade there stood
+A Chapel, fronting towards the sea,--
+Built in some by-gone century,--
+Where nightly as the seaman's mark
+When waves rose high or clouds were dark,
+A lamp bequeathed by some kind Saint
+Shed o'er the wave its glimmer faint.
+Waking in way-worn men a sigh
+And prayer to heaven as they went by.
+'Twas there, around that rock-built shrine
+ A group of maidens and their sires
+Had stood to watch the day's decline,
+ And as the light fell o'er their lyres
+Sung to the Queen-Star of the Sea
+That soft and holy melody.
+
+But lighter thoughts and lighter song
+Now woo the coming hours along.
+For mark, where smooth the herbage lies,
+ Yon gay pavilion curtained deep
+With silken folds thro' which bright eyes
+ From time to time are seen to peep;
+While twinkling lights that to and fro
+Beneath those veils like meteors go,
+ Tell of some spells at work and keep
+Young fancies chained in mute suspense,
+Watching what next may shine from thence,
+Nor long the pause ere hands unseen
+ That mystic curtain backward drew,
+And all that late but shone between
+ In half-caught gleams now burst to view.
+
+A picture 'twas of the early days
+Of glorious Greece ere yet those rays
+Of rich, immortal Mind were hers
+That made mankind her worshippers;
+While yet unsung her landscapes shone
+With glory lent by heaven alone;
+Nor temples crowned her nameless hills,
+Nor Muse immortalized her rills;
+Nor aught but the mute poesy
+Of sun and stars and shining sea
+Illumed that land of bards to be.
+While prescient of the gifted race
+ That yet would realm so blest adorn,
+Nature took pains to deck the place
+ Where glorious Art was to be born.
+
+Such was the scene that mimic stage
+ Of Athens and her hills portrayed
+Athens in her first, youthful age,
+ Ere yet the simple violet braid,[18]
+Which then adorned her had shone down
+The glory of earth's loftiest crown.
+While yet undreamed, her seeds of Art
+ Lay sleeping in the marble mine--
+Sleeping till Genius bade them start
+ To all but life in shapes divine;
+Till deified the quarry shone
+And all Olympus stood in stone!
+
+There in the foreground of that scene,
+On a soft bank of living green
+Sate a young nymph with her lap full
+ Of the newly gathered flowers, o'er which
+She graceful leaned intent to cull
+ All that was there of hue most rich,
+To form a wreath such as the eye
+Of her young lover who stood by,
+With pallet mingled fresh might choose
+To fix by Painting's rainbow hues.
+
+The wreath was formed; the maiden raised
+ Her speaking eyes to his, while he--
+Oh _not_ upon the flowers now gazed,
+ But on that bright look's witchery.
+While, quick as if but then the thought
+Like light had reached his soul, he caught
+His pencil up and warm and true
+As life itself that love-look drew:
+And, as his raptured task went on,
+And forth each kindling feature shone,
+Sweet voices thro' the moonlight air
+ From lips as moonlight fresh and pure
+Thus hailed the bright dream passing there,
+ And sung the Birth of Portraiture.[19]
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+As once a Grecian maiden wove
+ Her garland mid the summer bowers,
+There stood a youth with eyes of love
+ To watch her while she wreathed the flowers.
+The youth was skilled in Painting's art,
+ But ne'er had studied woman's brow,
+Nor knew what magic hues the heart
+ Can shed o'er Nature's charms till now.
+
+
+CHORUS.
+
+
+Blest be Love to whom we owe
+All that's fair and bright below.
+
+His hand had pictured many a rose
+ And sketched the rays that light the brook;
+But what were these or what were those
+ To woman's blush, to woman's look?
+"Oh, if such magic power there be,
+ "This, this," he cried, "is all my prayer,
+"To paint that living light I see
+ "And fix the soul that sparkles there."
+
+His prayer as soon as breathed was heard;
+ His pallet touched by Love grew warm,
+And Painting saw her hues transferred
+ From lifeless flowers to woman's form.
+Still as from tint to tint he stole,
+ The fair design shone out the more,
+And there was now a life, a soul,
+ Where only colors glowed before.
+
+Then first carnations learned to speak
+ And lilies into life were brought;
+While mantling on the maiden's cheek
+ Young roses kindled into thought.
+Then hyacinths their darkest dyes
+ Upon the locks of Beauty threw;
+And violets transformed to eyes
+ Inshrined a soul within their blue.
+
+
+CHORUS.
+
+
+Blest be Love to whom we owe,
+All that's fair and bright below.
+Song was cold and Painting dim
+Till Song and Painting learned from him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Soon as the scene had closed, a cheer
+ Of gentle voices old and young
+Rose from the groups that stood to hear
+ This tale of yore so aptly sung;
+And while some nymphs in haste to tell
+The workers of that fairy spell
+How crowned with praise their task had been
+Stole in behind the curtained scene,
+The rest in happy converse strayed--
+ Talking that ancient love-tale o'er--
+Some to the groves that skirt the glade,
+ Some to the chapel by the shore,
+To look what lights were on the sea.
+And think of the absent silently.
+
+But soon that summons known so well
+ Thro' bower and hall in Eastern lands,
+Whose sound more sure than gong or bell
+ Lovers and slaves alike commands,--
+ The clapping of young female hands,
+Calls back the groups from rock and field
+To see some new-formed scene revealed;--
+And fleet and eager down the slopes
+Of the green glades like antelopes
+When in their thirst they hear the sound
+Of distant rills, the light nymphs bound.
+
+Far different now the scene--a waste
+ Of Libyan sands, by moonlight's ray;
+An ancient well, whereon were traced
+ The warning words, for such as stray
+ Unarmed there, "Drink and away!"[20]
+While near it from the night-ray screened,
+ And like his bells in husht repose,
+A camel slept--young as if weaned
+ When last the star Canopus rose.[21]
+
+Such was the back-ground's silent scene;--
+ While nearer lay fast slumbering too
+In a rude tent with brow serene
+ A youth whose cheeks of wayworn hue
+And pilgrim-bonnet told the tale
+That he had been to Mecca's Vale:
+Haply in pleasant dreams, even now
+ Thinking the long wished hour is come
+ When o'er the well-known porch at home
+His hand shall hang the aloe bough--
+Trophy of his accomplished vow.[22]
+
+But brief his dream--for now the call
+ Of the camp-chiefs from rear to van,
+ "Bind on your burdens,"[23] wakes up all
+ The widely slumbering caravan;
+And thus meanwhile to greet the ear
+ Of the young pilgrim as he wakes,
+The song of one who lingering near
+ Had watched his slumber, cheerly breaks.
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Up and march! the timbrel's sound
+Wakes the slumbering camp around;
+Fleet thy hour of rest hath gone,
+Armed sleeper, up, and on!
+Long and weary is our way
+O'er the burning sands to-day;
+But to pilgrim's homeward feet
+Even the desert's path is sweet.
+
+When we lie at dead of night,
+Looking up to heaven's light,
+Hearing but the watchman’s tone
+Faintly chanting "God is one,"[24]
+Oh what thoughts then o'er us come
+Of our distant village home,
+Where that chant when evening sets
+Sounds from all the minarets.
+
+Cheer thee!--soon shall signal lights,
+Kindling o'er the Red Sea heights,
+Kindling quick from man to man,
+Hail our coming caravan:[25]
+Think what bliss that hour will be!
+Looks of home again to see,
+And our names again to hear
+Murmured out by voices dear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So past the desert dream away,
+Fleeting as his who heard this lay,
+Nor long the pause between, nor moved
+ The spell-bound audience from that spot;
+While still as usual Fancy roved
+ On to the joy that yet was not;--
+Fancy who hath no present home,
+But builds her bower in scenes to come,
+Walking for ever in a light
+That flows from regions out of sight.
+
+But see by gradual dawn descried
+ A mountain realm-rugged as e'er
+ Upraised to heaven its summits bare,
+Or told to earth with frown of pride
+ That Freedom's falcon nest was there,
+Too high for hand of lord or king
+To hood her brow, or chain her wing.
+
+'Tis Maina's land--her ancient hills,
+The abode of nymphs--her countless rills
+And torrents in their downward dash
+ Shining like silver thro' the shade
+Of the sea-pine and flowering ash--
+ All with a truth so fresh portrayed
+As wants but touch of life to be
+A world of warm reality.
+
+And now light bounding forth a band
+ Of mountaineers, all smiles, advance--
+Nymphs with their lovers hand in hand
+Linked in the Ariadne dance;
+And while, apart from that gay throng,
+A minstrel youth in varied song
+Tells of the loves, the joys, the ills
+Of these wild children of the hills,
+The rest by turns or fierce or gay
+As war or sport inspires the lay
+Follow each change that wakes the strings
+And act what thus the lyrist sings:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+No life is like the mountaineer's,
+His home is near the sky,
+Where throned above this world he hears
+ Its strife at distance die,
+Or should the sound of hostile drum
+Proclaim below, "We come--we come,"
+Each crag that towers in air
+Gives answer, "Come who dare!"
+While like bees from dell and dingle,
+Swift the swarming warriors mingle,
+And their cry "Hurra!" will be,
+"Hurra, to victory!"
+
+Then when battle's hour is over
+See the happy mountain lover
+With the nymph who'll soon be bride
+Seated blushing by his side,--
+Every shadow of his lot
+In her sunny smile forgot.
+Oh, no life is like the mountaineer's.
+ His home is near the sky,
+Where throned above this world he hears
+ Its strife at distance die.
+Nor only thus thro' summer suns
+His blithe existence cheerly runs--
+ Even winter bleak and dim
+ Brings joyous hours to him;
+When his rifle behind him flinging
+He watches the roe-buck springing,
+And away, o'er the hills away
+Re-echoes his glad "hurra."
+
+Then how blest when night is closing,
+By the kindled hearth reposing,
+To his rebeck's drowsy song,
+He beguiles the hour along;
+Or provoked by merry glances
+To a brisker movement dances,
+Till, weary at last, in slumber's chain,
+He dreams o'er chase and dance again,
+ Dreams, dreams them o'er again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As slow that minstrel at the close
+Sunk while he sung to feigned repose,
+Aptly did they whose mimic art
+ Followed the changes of his lay
+Portray the lull, the nod, the start,
+ Thro' which as faintly died away
+His lute and voice, the minstrel past,
+Till voice and lute lay husht at last.
+
+But now far other song came o'er
+ Their startled ears--song that at first
+As solemnly the night-wind bore
+ Across the wave its mournful burst,
+Seemed to the fancy like a dirge
+ Of some lone Spirit of the Sea,
+Singing o'er Helle's ancient surge
+ The requiem of her Brave and Free.
+
+Sudden amid their pastime pause
+ The wondering nymphs; and as the sound
+Of that strange music nearer draws,
+ With mute inquiring eye look round,
+Asking each other what can be
+The source of this sad minstrelsy?
+Nor longer can they doubt, the song
+ Comes from some island-bark which now
+Courses the bright waves swift along
+And soon perhaps beneath the brow
+Of the Saint's Bock will shoot its prow.
+
+Instantly all with hearts that sighed
+ 'Twixt fear's and fancy's influence,
+ Flew to the rock and saw from thence
+A red-sailed pinnace towards them glide,
+Whose shadow as it swept the spray
+Scattered the moonlight's smiles away.
+Soon as the mariners saw that throng
+ From the cliff gazing, young and old,
+Sudden they slacked their sail and song,
+ And while their pinnace idly rolled
+ On the light surge, these tidings told:--
+
+'Twas from an isle of mournful name,
+From Missolonghi, last they came--
+Sad Missolonghi sorrowing yet
+O'er him, the noblest Star of Fame
+ That e'er in life's young glory set!--
+And now were on their mournful way,
+ Wafting the news thro' Helle's isles;--
+News that would cloud even Freedom's ray
+ And sadden Victory mid her smiles.
+
+Their tale thus told and heard with pain,
+Out spread the galliot's wings again;
+And as she sped her swift career
+Again that Hymn rose on the ear--
+"Thou art not dead--thou art not dead!"
+ As oft 'twas sung in ages flown
+Of him, the Athenian, who to shed
+ A tyrant's blood poured out his own.
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Thou art not dead--thou art not dead!
+ No, dearest Harmodius, no.
+Thy soul to realms above us fled
+Tho' like a star it dwells o'er head
+Still lights this world below.
+Thou art _not_ dead--thou art not dead!
+ No, dearest Harmodius, no.
+
+Thro' isles of light where heroes tread
+ And flowers ethereal blow,
+Thy god-like Spirit now is led,
+Thy lip with life ambrosial fed
+Forgets all taste of woe.
+Thou art not dead--thou art not dead!
+ No, dearest Harmodius, no.
+
+The myrtle round that falchion spread
+ Which struck the immortal blow,
+Throughout all time with leaves unshed--
+The patriot's hope, the tyrant's dread--
+ Round Freedom's shrine shall grow.
+Thou art not dead--thou art not dead!
+ No, dearest Harmodius, no.
+
+Where hearts like thine have broke or bled,
+ Tho' quenched the vital glow,
+Their memory lights a flame instead,
+Which even from out the narrow bed
+ Of death its beams shall throw.
+Thou art not dead--thou art not dead!
+ No, dearest Harmodius, no.
+
+Thy name, by myriads sung and said,
+ From age to age shall go,
+Long as the oak and ivy wed,
+As bees shall haunt Hymettus' head,
+ Or Helle's waters flow.
+Thou art not dead--thou art not dead!
+ No, dearest Harmodius, no.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+'Mong those who lingered listening there,--
+ Listening with ear and eye as long
+As breath of night could towards them bear
+ A murmur of that mournful song,--
+A few there were in whom the lay
+ Had called up feelings far too sad
+To pass with the brief strain away,
+ Or turn at once to theme more glad;
+And who in mood untuned to meet
+ The light laugh of the happie train,
+Wandered to seek some moonlight seat
+Where they might rest, in converse sweet,
+ Till vanisht smiles should come again.
+
+And seldom e'er hath noon of night
+To sadness lent more soothing light.
+On one side in the dark blue sky
+Lonely and radiant was the eye
+Of Jove himself, while on the other
+ 'Mong tiny stars that round her gleamed,
+The young moon like the Roman mother
+ Among her living "jewels" beamed.
+
+Touched by the lovely scenes around,
+ A pensive maid--one who, tho' young,
+Had known what 'twas to see unwound
+ The ties by which her heart had clung--
+Wakened her soft tamboura's sound,
+ And to its faint accords thus sung:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+ Calm as beneath its mother's eyes
+ In sleep the smiling infant lies,
+ So watched by all the stars of night
+ Yon landscape sleeps in light.
+And while the night-breeze dies away,
+ Like relics of some faded strain,
+Loved voices, lost for many a day,
+ Seem whispering round again.
+Oh youth! oh love! ye dreams that shed
+Such glory once--where are ye fled?
+
+Pure ray of light that down the sky
+ Art pointing like an angel's wand,
+As if to guide to realms that lie
+ In that bright sea beyond:
+Who knows but in some brighter deep
+ Than even that tranquil, moonlit main,
+Some land may lie where those who weep
+ Shall wake to smile again!
+With cheeks that had regained their power
+ And play of smiles,--and each bright eye
+Like violets after morning's shower
+ The brighter for the tears gone by,
+Back to the scene such smiles should grace
+These wandering nymphs their path retrace,
+And reach the spot with rapture new
+Just as the veils asunder flew
+And a fresh vision burst to view.
+
+There by her own bright Attic flood,
+The blue-eyed Queen of Wisdom stood;--
+Not as she haunts the sage's dreams,
+ With brow unveiled, divine, severe;
+But softened as on bards she beams
+ When fresh from Poesy's high sphere
+A music not her own she brings,
+And thro' the veil which Fancy flings
+O'er her stern features gently sings.
+
+But who is he--that urchin nigh,
+ With quiver on the rose-trees hung,
+Who seems just dropt from yonder sky,
+And stands to watch that maid with eye
+ So full of thought for one so young?--
+That child--but, silence! lend thine ear,
+And thus in song the tale thou'lt hear:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+As Love one summer eve was straying,
+ Who should he see at that soft hour
+But young Minerva gravely playing
+Her flute within an olive bower.
+I need not say, 'tis Love's opinion
+ That grave or merry, good or ill,
+The sex all bow to his dominion,
+ As woman will be woman still.
+
+Tho' seldom yet the boy hath given
+ To learned dames his smiles or sighs,
+So handsome Pallas looked that even
+ Love quite forgot the maid was wise.
+Besides, a youth of his discerning
+ Knew well that by a shady rill
+At sunset hour whate'er her learning
+ A woman will be woman still.
+
+Her flute he praised in terms extatic,--
+ Wishing it dumb, nor cared how soon.--
+For Wisdom's notes, howe'er chromatic,
+ To Love seem always out of tune.
+But long as he found face to flatter,
+ The nymph found breath to shake and thrill;
+As, weak or wise--it doesn't matter--
+Woman at heart is woman still.
+
+Love changed his plan, with warmth exclaiming,
+ "How rosy was her lips' soft dye!"
+And much that flute the flatterer blaming,
+ For twisting lips so sweet awry.
+The nymph looked down, beheld her features
+ Reflected in the passing rill,
+And started, shocked--for, ah, ye creatures!
+ Even when divine you're women still.
+
+Quick from the lips it made so odious.
+ That graceless flute the Goddess took
+And while yet filled with breath melodious,
+ Flung it into the glassy brook;
+Where as its vocal life was fleeting
+ Adown the current, faint and shrill,
+'Twas heard in plaintive tone repeating,
+ "Woman, alas, vain woman still!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An interval of dark repose--
+Such as the summer lightning knows,
+Twixt flash and flash, as still more bright
+ The quick revealment comes and goes,
+Opening each time the veils of night,
+To show within a world of light--
+Such pause, so brief, now past between
+This last gay vision and the scene
+ Which now its depth of light disclosed.
+A bower it seemed, an Indian bower,
+ Within whose shade a nymph reposed,
+Sleeping away noon's sunny hour--
+Lovely as she, the Sprite, who weaves
+Her mansion of sweet Durva leaves,
+And there, as Indian legends say,
+Dreams the long summer hours away.
+And mark how charmed this sleeper seems
+With some hid fancy--she, too, dreams!
+Oh for a wizard's art to tell
+ The wonders that now bless her sight!
+'Tis done--a truer, holier spell
+Than e'er from wizard's lip yet fell.
+ Thus brings her vision all to light:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+"Who comes so gracefully
+ "Gliding along
+"While the blue rivulet
+ "Sleeps to her song;
+"Song richly vying
+"With the faint sighing
+"Which swans in dying
+ "Sweetly prolong?"
+
+So sung the shepherd-boy
+ By the stream's side,
+Watching that fairy-boat
+ Down the flood glide,
+Like a bird winging,
+Thro' the waves bringing
+That Syren, singing
+ To the husht tide.
+
+"Stay," said the shepherd-boy,
+"Fairy-boat, stay,
+"Linger, sweet minstrelsy,
+ "Linger a day."
+But vain his pleading,
+Past him, unheeding,
+Song and boat, speeding,
+ Glided away.
+
+So to our youthful eyes
+ Joy and hope shone;
+So while we gazed on them
+ Fast they flew on;--
+Like flowers declining
+Even in the twining,
+One moment shining.
+ And the next gone!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Soon as the imagined dream went by,
+Uprose the nymph, with anxious eye
+Turned to the clouds as tho' some boon
+She waited from that sun-bright dome,
+And marvelled that it came not soon
+As her young thoughts would have it come.
+
+But joy is in her glance!--the wing
+ Of a white bird is seen above;
+And oh, if round his neck he bring
+ The long-wished tidings from her love,
+Not half so precious in her eyes
+ Even that high-omened bird[26] would be.
+Who dooms the brow o'er which he flies
+ To wear a crown of royalty.
+
+She had herself last evening sent
+ A winged messenger whose flight
+Thro' the clear, roseate element,
+ She watched till lessening out of sight
+Far to the golden West it went,
+Wafting to him, her distant love,
+ A missive in that language wrought
+Which flowers can speak when aptly wove,
+ Each hue a word, each leaf a thought.
+
+And now--oh speed of pinion, known
+To Love's light messengers alone I--
+Ere yet another evening takes
+Its farewell of the golden lakes,
+She sees another envoy fly,
+With the wished answer, thro' the sky.
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Welcome sweet bird, thro' the sunny air winging,
+ Swift hast thou come o'er the far-shining sea,
+Like Seba's dove on thy snowy neck bringing
+ Love's written vows from my lover to me.
+Oh, in thy absence what hours did I number!--
+ Saying oft, "Idle bird, how could he rest?"
+But thou art come at last, take now thy slumber,
+ And lull thee in dreams of all thou lov'st best.
+
+Yet dost thou droop--even now while I utter
+ Love's happy welcome, thy pulse dies away;
+Cheer thee, my bird--were it life's ebbing flutter.
+ This fondling bosom should woo it to stay,
+But no--thou'rt dying--thy last task is over--
+ Farewell, sweet martyr to Love and to me!
+The smiles thou hast wakened by news from my lover,
+ Will now all be turned into weeping for thee.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While thus this scene of song (their last
+For the sweet summer season) past,
+A few presiding nymphs whose care
+ Watched over all invisibly,
+As do those guardian sprites of air
+ Whose watch we feel but cannot see,
+Had from the circle--scarcely missed,
+ Ere they were sparkling there again--
+Glided like fairies to assist
+ Their handmaids on the moonlight plain,
+Where, hid by intercepting shade
+ From the stray glance of curious eyes,
+A feast of fruits and wines was laid--
+ Soon to shine out, a glad surprise!
+
+And now the moon, her ark of light
+ Steering thro' Heaven, as tho' she bore
+In safety thro' that deep of night
+Spirits of earth, the good, the bright,
+ To some remote immortal shore,
+Had half-way sped her glorious way,
+ When round reclined on hillocks green
+In groups beneath that tranquil ray,
+ The Zeans at their feast were seen.
+Gay was the picture--every maid
+Whom late the lighted scene displayed,
+Still in her fancy garb arrayed;--
+The Arabian pilgrim, smiling here
+ Beside the nymph of India's sky;
+While there the Mainiote mountaineer
+Whispered in young Minerva's ear,
+ And urchin Love stood laughing by.
+
+Meantime the elders round the board,
+ By mirth and wit themselves made young,
+High cups of juice Zacynthian poured,
+ And while the flask went round thus sung:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+Up with the sparkling brimmer,
+ Up to the crystal rim;
+Let not a moonbeam glimmer
+ 'Twixt the flood and brim.
+When hath the world set eyes on
+ Aught to match this light,
+Which o'er our cup's horizon
+ Dawns in bumpers bright?
+
+Truth in a deep well lieth--
+ So the wise aver;
+But Truth the fact denieth--
+ Water suits not her.
+No, her abode's in brimmers,
+ Like this mighty cup--
+Waiting till we, good swimmers,
+ Dive to bring her up.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Thus circled round the song of glee,
+ And all was tuneful mirth the while,
+ Save on the cheeks of some whose smile
+As fixt they gaze upon the sea,
+Turns into paleness suddenly!
+What see they there? a bright blue light
+ That like a meteor gliding o'er
+The distant wave grows on the sight,
+As tho' 'twere winged to Zea's shore.
+To some, 'mong those who came to gaze,
+ It seemed the night-light far away
+Of some lone fisher by the blaze
+ Of pine torch luring on his prey;
+While others, as 'twixt awe and mirth
+ They breathed the blest Panaya's[27] name,
+Vowed that such light was not of earth
+ But of that drear, ill-omen'd flame
+Which mariners see on sail or mast
+When Death is coming in the blast.
+While marvelling thus they stood, a maid
+ Who sate apart with downcast eye,
+Not yet had like the rest surveyed
+ That coming light which now was nigh,
+Soon as it met her sight, with cry
+ Of pain-like joy, "'Tis he! 'tis he!"
+Loud she exclaimed, and hurrying by
+ The assembled throng, rushed towards the sea.
+At burst so wild, alarmed, amazed,
+All stood like statues mute and gazed
+Into each other's eyes to seek
+What meant such mood in maid so meek?
+
+Till now, the tale was known to few,
+But now from lip to lip it flew:--
+A youth, the flower of all the band,
+ Who late had left this sunny shore,
+When last he kist that maiden's hand,
+ Lingering to kiss it o'er and o'er.
+By his sad brow too plainly told
+ The ill-omened thought which crost him then,
+That once those hands should lose their hold,
+ They ne'er would meet on earth again!
+In vain his mistress sad as he,
+But with a heart from Self as free
+As generous woman's only is,
+Veiled her own fears to banish his:--
+With frank rebuke but still more vain,
+ Did a rough warrior who stood by
+Call to his mind this martial strain,
+ His favorite once, ere Beauty's eye
+ Had taught his soldier-heart to sigh:--
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+March! nor heed those arms that hold thee,
+ Tho' so fondly close they come;
+Closer still will they enfold thee
+ When thou bring'st fresh laurels home.
+Dost thou dote on woman's brow?
+ Dost thou live but in her breath?
+March!--one hour of victory now
+ Wins thee woman's smile till death.
+
+Oh what bliss when war is over
+ Beauty's long-missed smile to meet.
+And when wreaths our temples cover
+ Lay them shining at her feet.
+Who would not that hour to reach
+ Breathe out life's expiring sigh,--
+Proud as waves that on the beach
+ Lay their war-crests down and die.
+
+There! I see thy soul is burning--
+ She herself who clasps thee so
+Paints, even now, thy glad returning,
+ And while clasping bids thee go.
+One deep sigh to passion given,
+ One last glowing tear and then--
+March!--nor rest thy sword till Heaven
+ Brings thee to those arms again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Even then ere loath their hands could part
+ A promise the youth gave which bore
+Some balm unto the maiden's heart,
+ That, soon as the fierce fight was o'er,
+To home he'd speed, if safe and free--
+ Nay, even if dying, still would come,
+So the blest word of "Victory!"
+ Might be the last he'd breathe at home.
+"By day," he cried, "thou'lt know my bark;
+"But should I come thro' midnight dark,
+"A blue light on the prow shall tell
+"That Greece hath won and all is well!"
+
+Fondly the maiden every night,
+Had stolen to seek that promised light;
+Nor long her eyes had now been turned
+From watching when the signal burned.
+Signal of joy--for her, for all--
+ Fleetly the boat now nears the land,
+While voices from the shore-edge call
+ For tidings of the long-wished band.
+
+Oh the blest hour when those who've been
+ Thro' peril's paths by land or sea
+Locked in our arms again are seen
+ Smiling in glad security;
+When heart to heart we fondly strain,
+ Questioning quickly o'er and o'er--
+Then hold them off to gaze affain
+ And ask, tho' answered oft before,
+ If they _indeed_ are ours once more?
+
+Such is the scene so full of joy
+Which welcomes now this warrior-boy,
+As fathers, sisters, friends all run
+Bounding to meet him--all but one
+Who, slowest on his neck to fall,
+Is yet the happiest of them all.
+
+And now behold him circled round
+ With beaming faces at that board,
+While cups with laurel foliage crowned,
+ Are to the coming warriors poured--
+Coming, as he, their herald, told,
+With blades from victory scarce yet cold,
+With hearts untouched by Moslem steel
+And wounds that home's sweet breath will heal.
+
+"Ere morn," said he,--and while he spoke
+ Turned to the east, where clear and pale
+The star of dawn already broke--
+ "We'll greet on yonder wave their sail!"
+Then wherefore part? all, all agree
+ To wait them here beneath this bower;
+And thus, while even amidst their glee,
+Each eye is turned to watch the sea,
+ With song they cheer the anxious hour.
+
+
+SONG.
+
+
+"'Tis the Vine! 'tis the Vine!" said the cup-loving boy
+As he saw it spring bright from the earth,
+And called the young Genii of Wit, Love, and Joy,
+ To witness and hallow its birth.
+The fruit was full grown, like a ruby it flamed
+ Till the sunbeam that kist it looked pale;
+"'Tis the Vine! 'tis the Vine!" every Spirit exclaimed
+ "Hail, hail to the Wine-tree, all hail!"
+
+First, fleet as a bird to the summons Wit flew,
+ While a light on the vine-leaves there broke
+In flashes so quick and so brilliant all knew
+ T'was the light from his lips as he spoke.
+"Bright tree! let thy nectar but cheer me," he cried,
+ "And the fount of Wit never can fail:"
+"'Tis the Vine! 'tis the Vine!" hills and valleys reply,
+ "Hail, hail to the Wine-tree, all hail!"
+
+Next Love as he leaned o'er the plant to admire
+ Each tendril and cluster it wore,
+From his rosy mouth sent such a breath of desire,
+ As made the tree tremble all o'er.
+Oh! never did flower of the earth, sea, or sky,
+ Such a soul-giving odor inhale:
+"'Tis the Vine! 'tis the Vine!" all re-echo the cry,
+ "Hail, hail to the Wine-tree, all hail!"
+
+Last, Joy, without whom even Love and Wit die,
+ Came to crown the bright hour with his ray;
+And scarce had that mirth-waking tree met his eye,
+ When a laugh spoke what Joy could not say;--
+A laugh of the heart which was echoed around
+ Till like music it swelled on the gale:
+"T is the Vine! 'tis the Vine!" laughing myriads resound,
+"Hail, hail to the Wine-tree, all hail!"
+
+
+[1] "_Nerium Oleander_. In Cyprus it retains its ancient name,
+Rhododaphne, and the Cypriots adorn their churches with the flowers on
+feast-days."--_Journal of Dr. Sibthorpe, Walpole's, Turkey_.
+
+[2] _Lonicera caprifolium_, used by the girls of Patmos for garlands.
+
+[3] _Cuscuta europoea_. "From the twisting and twining of the stems, it is
+compared by the Greeks to the dishevelled hair of the Nereids."--
+_Walpole's Turkey_.
+
+[4] "The produce of the island in these acorns alone amounts annually to
+fifteen thousand quintals."--_Clarke's Travels_.
+
+[5] Now Santa Maura--the island, from whose cliffs Sappho leaped into the
+sea.
+
+[6] "The precipice, which is fearfully dizzy, is about one hundred and
+fourteen feet from the water, which is of a profound depth, as appears
+from the dark blue color and the eddy that plays round the pointed and
+projecting rocks."--_Goodisson's Ionian Isles_.
+
+[7] This word is defrauded here, I suspect, of a syllable; Dr. Clarke, if
+I recollect right, makes it "Balalaika."
+
+[8] "I saw above thirty parties engaged in dancing the Romaika upon the
+sand; in some of these groups, the girl who led them chased the retreating
+wave."--Douglas on the Modern Greeks.
+
+[9] "In dancing the Romaika [says Mr. Douglas] they begin in slow and
+solemn step till they have gained the time, but by degrees the air becomes
+more sprightly; the conductress of the dance sometimes setting to her
+partners, sometimes darting before the rest, and leading them through the
+most rapid revolutions: sometimes crossing under the hands, which are held
+up to let her pass, and giving as much liveliness and intricacy as she can
+to the figures, into which she conducts her companions, while their
+business is to follow her in all her movements, without breaking the
+chain, or losing the measure,"
+
+[10] The sword was the weapon chiefly used in this dance.
+
+[11] It is said that Leonidas and his companions employed themselves, on
+the eve of the battle, in music and the gymnastic exercises of their
+country.
+
+[12] "This morning we paid our visit to the Cave of Trophonius, and the
+Fountains of Memory and Oblivion, just upon the water of Hercyna, which
+flows through stupendous rocks."--_Williams's Travels in Greece_.
+
+[13] This superstitious custom of the Thessalians exists also, as Pietro
+dello Valle tells us, among the Persians.
+
+[14] An ancient city of Zea, the walls of which were of marble. Its
+remains (says Clarke) "extend from the shore, quite into a valley watered
+by the streams of a fountain, whence Ioulis received its name."
+
+[15] Zea was the birthplace of this poet, whose verses are by Catullus
+called "tears."
+
+[16] These "Songs of the Well," as they were called among the ancients,
+still exist in Greece. _De Guys_ tells us that he has seen "the young
+women in Prince's Island, assembled in the evening at a public well,
+suddenly strike up a dance, while others sung in concert to them."
+
+[17] "The inhabitants of Syra, both ancient and modern, may be considered
+as the worshippers of water. The old fountain, at which the nymphs of the
+island assembled in the earliest ages, exists in its original state; the
+same rendezvous as it was formerly, whether of love and gallantry, or of
+gossiping and tale-telling. It is near to the town, and the most limpid
+water gushes continually from the solid rock. It is regarded by the
+inhabitants with a degree of religious veneration; and they p reserve a
+tradition, that the pilgrims of old time, in their way to Delos, resorted
+hither for purification."_--Clarke_.
+
+[18] "Violet-crowned Athens."--_Pindar_.
+
+[19] The whole of this scene was suggested by Pliny's account of the
+artist Pausias and his mistress Glycera, _Lib_. 35 c. 40.
+
+[20] The traveller Shaw mentions a beautiful rill In Barbary, which is
+received into a large basin called _Shrub wee krub_, "Drink and away"--
+there being great danger of meeting with thieves and assassins in such
+places.
+
+[21] The Arabian shepherd has a peculiar ceremony in weaning the young
+camel; when the proper time arrives, he turns the camel towards the rising
+star, Canopus, and says, "Do you see Canopus? from this moment you taste
+not another drop of milk."--_Richardson_.
+
+[22] "Whoever returns from a pilgrimage to Mecca hangs this plant (the
+mitre-shaped Aloe) over his street door, as a token of his having
+performed this holy journey."--_Hasselquist_.
+
+[23] This form of notice to the caravans to prepare for marching was
+applied by Hafiz to the necessity of relinquishing the pleasures of this
+world, and preparing for death:--"For me what room is there for pleasure
+in the bower of Beauty, when every moment the bell makes proclamation,
+'Bind on your burden'?"
+
+[24] The watchmen, in the camp of the caravans, go their rounds, crying
+one after another, "God is one," etc.
+
+[25] "It was customary," says Irwin, "to light up fires on the mountains,
+within view of Cosseir, to give notice of the approach of the caravans
+that came from the Nile."
+
+[26] the Hume.
+
+[27] The name which the Greeks give to the Virgin Mary.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ALCIPHRON: A FRAGMENT.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER I.
+
+FROM ALCIPHRON AT ALEXANDRIA TO CLEON AT ATHENS.
+
+
+Well may you wonder at my flight
+ From those fair Gardens in whose bowers
+Lingers whate'er of wise and bright,
+Of Beauty's smile or Wisdom's light,
+ Is left to grace this world of ours.
+Well may my comrades as they roam
+ On such sweet eyes as this inquire
+Why I have left that happy home
+ Where all is found that all desire,
+ And Time hath wings that never tire:
+Where bliss in all the countless shapes
+ That Fancy's self to bliss hath given
+Comes clustering round like roadside grapes
+ That woo the traveller's lip at even;
+Where Wisdom flings not joy away--
+As Pallas in the stream they say
+Once flung her flute--but smiling owns
+That woman's lip can send forth tones
+Worth all the music of those spheres
+So many dream of but none hears;
+Where Virtue's self puts on so well
+ Her sister Pleasure's smile that, loath
+From either nymph apart to dwell,
+ We finish by embracing both.
+Yes, such the place of bliss, I own
+From all whose charms I just have flown;
+And even while thus to thee I write,
+ And by the Nile's dark flood recline,
+Fondly, in thought I wing my flight
+Back to those groves and gardens bright,
+And often think by this sweet light
+ How lovelily they all must shine;
+Can see that graceful temple throw
+ Down the green slope its lengthened shade,
+While on the marble steps below
+ There sits some fair Athenian maid,
+Over some favorite volume bending;
+ And by her side a youthful sage
+Holds back the ringlets that descending
+ Would else o'ershadow all the page.
+But hence such thoughts!--nor let me grieve
+O'er scenes of joy that I but leave,
+As the bird quits awhile its nest
+To come again with livelier zest.
+
+And now to tell thee--what I fear
+Thou'lt gravely smile at--_why_ I'm here
+Tho' thro' my life's short, sunny dream,
+ I've floated without pain or care
+Like a light leaf down pleasure's stream,
+ Caught in each sparkling eddy there;
+Tho' never Mirth awaked a strain
+That my heart echoed not again;
+Yet have I felt, when even most gay,
+ Sad thoughts--I knew not whence or why--
+ Suddenly o'er my spirit fly,
+Like clouds that ere we've time to say
+ "How bright the sky is!" shade the sky.
+Sometimes so vague, so undefined
+Were these strange darkenings of my mind--
+"While naught but joy around me beamed
+ So causelessly they've come and flown,
+That not of life or earth they seemed,
+ But shadows from some world unknown.
+More oft, however, 'twas the thought
+ How soon that scene with all its play
+ Of life and gladness must decay--
+Those lips I prest, the hands I caught--
+Myself--the crowd that mirth had brought
+Around me--swept like weeds away!
+
+This thought it was that came to shed
+ O'er rapture's hour its worst alloys;
+And close as shade with sunshine wed
+ Its sadness with my happiest joys.
+Oh, but for this disheartening voice
+ Stealing amid our mirth to say
+That all in which we most rejoice
+ Ere night may be the earthworm's prey--
+_But_ for this bitter--only this--
+Full as the world is brimmed with bliss,
+And capable as feels my soul
+Of draining to its dregs the whole,
+I should turn earth to heaven and be,
+If bliss made Gods, a Deity?
+
+Thou know'st that night--the very last
+That 'mong my Garden friends I past--
+When the School held its feast of mirth
+To celebrate our founder's birth.
+And all that He in dreams but saw
+ When he set Pleasure on the throne
+Of this bright world and wrote her law
+ In human hearts was felt and known--
+_Not_ in unreal dreams but true,
+Substantial joy as pulse e'er knew--
+By hearts and bosoms, that each felt
+_Itself_ the realm where Pleasure dwelt.
+
+That night when all our mirth was o'er,
+ The minstrels silent, and the feet
+Of the young maidens heard no more--
+ So stilly was the time, so sweet,
+And such a calm came o'er that scene,
+Where life and revel late had been--
+Lone as the quiet of some bay
+From which the sea hath ebbed away--
+That still I lingered, lost in thought,
+ Gazing upon the stars of night,
+Sad and intent as if I sought
+ Some mournful secret in their light;
+And asked them mid that silence why
+Man, glorious man, alone must die
+While they, less wonderful than he,
+Shine on thro' all eternity.
+
+That night--thou haply may'st forget
+ Its loveliness--but 'twas a night
+To make earth's meanest slave regret
+ Leaving a world so soft and bright.
+On one side in the dark blue sky
+Lonely and radiant was the eye
+Of Jove himself, while on the other,
+ 'Mong stars that came out one by one,
+The young moon--like the Roman mother
+ Among her living jewels--shone.
+"Oh that from yonder orbs," I thought,
+ "Pure and eternal as they are,
+"There could to earth some power be brought,
+"Some charm with their own essence fraught
+ "To make man deathless as a star,
+"And open to his vast desires
+ "A course, as boundless and sublime
+"As that which waits those comet-fires,
+ "That burn and roam throughout all time!"
+
+While thoughts like these absorbed my mind,
+ That weariness which earthly bliss
+However sweet still leaves behind,
+ As if to show how earthly 'tis,
+Came lulling o'er me and I laid
+ My limbs at that fair statue's base--
+That miracle, which Art hath made
+ Of all the choice of Nature's grace--
+To which so oft I've knelt and sworn.
+ That could a living maid like her
+Unto this wondering world be born,
+ I would myself turn worshipper.
+
+Sleep came then o'er me--and I seemed
+ To be transported far away
+To a bleak desert plain where gleamed
+ One single, melancholy ray.
+Throughout that darkness dimly shed
+ From a small taper in the hand
+Of one who pale as are the dead
+ Before me took his spectral stand,
+And said while awfully a smile
+ Came o'er the wanness of his cheek--
+"Go and beside the sacred Nile
+ "You'll find the Eternal Life you seek."
+
+Soon as he spoke these words the hue
+Of death o'er all his features grew
+Like the pale morning when o'er night
+She gains the victory full of light;
+While the small torch he held became
+A glory in his hand whose flame
+Brightened the desert suddenly,
+ Even to the far horizon's line--
+Along whose level I could see
+ Gardens and groves that seemed to shine
+As if then o'er them freshly played
+A vernal rainbow's rich cascade;
+And music floated every where,
+Circling, as 'twere itself the air,
+And spirits on whose wings the hue
+Of heaven still lingered round me flew,
+Till from all sides such splendors broke,
+That with the excess of light I woke!
+
+Such was my dream;--and I confess
+ Tho' none of all our creedless school
+E'er conned, believed, or reverenced less
+ The fables of the priest-led fool
+Who tells us of a soul, a mind,
+Separate and pure within us shrined,
+Which is to live--ah, hope too bright!--
+For ever in yon fields of light;
+Who fondly thinks the guardian eyes
+ Of Gods are on him--as if blest
+And blooming in their own blue skies
+The eternal Gods were not too wise
+ To let weak man disturb their rest!--
+Tho' thinking of such creeds as thou
+ And all our Garden sages think,
+Yet is there something, I allow,
+ In dreams like this--a sort of link
+With worlds unseen which from the hour
+ I first could lisp my thoughts till now
+Hath mastered me with spell-like power.
+
+And who can tell, as we're combined
+Of various atoms--some refined,
+Like those that scintillate and play
+In the fixt stars--some gross as they
+That frown in clouds or sleep in clay--
+Who can be sure but 'tis the best
+ And brightest atoms of our frame,
+ Those most akin to stellar flame,
+That shine out thus, when we're at rest;--
+Even as the stars themselves whose light
+Comes out but in the silent night.
+Or is it that there lurks indeed
+Some truth in Man's prevailing creed
+And that our Guardians from on high
+ Come in that pause from toil and sin
+To put the senses' curtain by
+ And on the wakeful soul look in!
+
+Vain thought!--but yet, howe'er it be,
+Dreams more than once have proved to me
+Oracles, truer far than Oak
+Or Dove or Tripod ever spoke.
+And 'twas the words--thou'lt hear and smile--
+ The words that phantom seemed to speak--
+"Go and beside the sacred Nile
+ "You'll find the Eternal Life you seek"--
+That haunting me by night, by day,
+ At length as with the unseen hand
+Of Fate itself urged me away
+ From Athens to this Holy Land;
+Where 'mong the secrets still untaught,
+ The mysteries that as yet nor sun
+Nor eye hath reached--oh, blessed thought!--
+ May sleep this everlasting one.
+
+Farewell--when to our Garden friends
+Thou talk'st of the wild dream that sends
+The gayest of their school thus far,
+Wandering beneath Canopus' star,
+Tell them that wander where he will
+ Or howsoe'er they now condemn
+His vague and vain pursuit he still
+ Is worthy of the School and them;--
+Still all their own--nor e'er forgets
+ Even while his heart and soul pursue
+The Eternal Light which never sets,
+ The many meteor joys that _do_,
+But seeks them, hails them with delight
+Where'er they meet his longing sight.
+And if his life _must_ wane away
+Like other lives at least the day,
+The hour it lasts shall like a fire
+With incense fed in sweets expire.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER II.
+
+FROM THE SAME TO THE SAME.
+
+_Memphis_.
+
+
+'Tis true, alas--the mysteries and the lore
+I came to study on this, wondrous shore.
+Are all forgotten in the new delights.
+The strange, wild joys that fill my days and nights.
+Instead of dark, dull oracles that speak
+From subterranean temples, those _I_ seek
+Come from the breathing shrines where Beauty lives,
+And Love, her priest, the soft responses gives.
+Instead of honoring Isis in those rites
+At Coptos held, I hail her when she lights
+Her first young crescent on the holy stream--
+When wandering youths and maidens watch her beam
+And number o'er the nights she hath to run,
+Ere she again embrace her bridegroom sun.
+While o'er some mystic leaf that dimly lends
+A clew into past times the student bends,
+And by its glimmering guidance learns to tread
+Back thro' the shadowy knowledge of the dead--
+The only skill, alas, _I_ yet can claim
+Lies in deciphering some new loved-one's name--
+Some gentle missive hinting time and place,
+In language soft as Memphian reed can trace.
+
+And where--oh where's the heart that could withstand
+The unnumbered witcheries of this sun-born land,
+Where first young Pleasure's banner was unfurled
+And Love hath temples ancient as the world!
+Where mystery like the veil by Beauty worn
+Hides but to win and shades but to adorn;
+Where that luxurious melancholy born
+Of passion and of genius sheds a gloom
+Making joy holy;--where the bower and tomb
+Stand side by side and Pleasure learns from Death
+The instant value of each moment's breath.
+Couldst thou but see how like a poet's dream
+This lovely land now looks!--the glorious stream
+That late between its banks was seen to glide
+'Mong shrines and marble cities on each side
+Glittering like jewels strung along a chain
+Hath now sent forth its waters, and o'er plain
+And valley like a giant from his bed
+Rising with outstretched limbs hath grandly spread.
+While far as sight can reach beneath as clear
+And blue a heaven as ever blest our sphere,
+Gardens and pillared streets and porphyry domes
+And high-built temples fit to be the homes
+Of mighty Gods, and pyramids whose hour
+Outlasts all time above the waters tower!
+
+Then, too, the scenes of pomp and joy that make
+One theatre of this vast, peopled lake,
+Where all that Love, Religion, Commerce gives
+Of life and motion ever moves and lives.
+Here, up the steps of temples from the wave
+Ascending in procession slow and grave.
+Priests in white garments go, with sacred wands
+And silver cymbals gleaming in their hands;
+While there, rich barks--fresh from those sunny tracts
+Far off beyond the sounding cataracts--
+Glide with their precious lading to the sea,
+Plumes of bright birds, rhinoceros ivory,
+Gems from the Isle of Meroe, and those grains
+Of gold washed down by Abyssinian rains.
+Here where the waters wind into a bay
+Shadowy and cool some pilgrims on their way
+To Saïs or Bubastus among beds
+Of lotus flowers that close above their heads
+Push their light barks, and there as in a bower,
+Sing, talk, or sleep away the sultry hour;
+Oft dipping in the Nile, when faint with heat,
+That leaf from which its waters drink most sweet.--
+While haply not far off beneath a bank
+Of blossoming acacias many a prank
+Is played in the cool current by a train
+Of laughing nymphs, lovely as she,[1] whose chain
+Around two conquerors of the world was cast,
+But, for a third too feeble, broke at last.
+
+For oh! believe not them who dare to brand
+As poor in charms the women of this land.
+Tho' darkened by that sun whose spirit flows
+Thro' every vein and tinges as it goes,
+'Tis but the embrowning of the fruit that tells
+How rich within the soul of ripeness dwells--
+The hue their own dark sanctuaries wear,
+Announcing heaven in half-caught glimpses there.
+And never yet did tell-tale looks set free
+The secret of young hearts more tenderly.
+Such eyes!--long, shadowy, with that languid fall
+Of the fringed lids which may be seen in all
+Who live beneath the sun's too ardent rays--
+Lending such looks as on their marriage days
+Young maids cast down before a bridegroom's gaze!
+Then for their grace--mark but the nymph-like shapes
+Of the young village girls, when carrying grapes
+From green Anthylla or light urns of flowers--
+Not our own Sculpture in her happiest hours
+E'er imaged forth even at the touch of him[2]
+Whose touch was life, more luxury of limb!
+Then, canst thou wonder if mid scenes like these
+I should forget all graver mysteries,
+All lore but Love's, all secrets but that best
+In heaven or earth, the art of being blest!
+Yet are there times--tho' brief I own their stay,
+Like summer-clouds that shine themselves away--
+Moments of gloom, when even these pleasures pall
+Upon my saddening heart and I recall
+That garden dream--that promise of a power,
+Oh, were there such!--to lengthen out life's hour,
+On, on, as thro' a vista far away
+Opening before us into endless day!
+And chiefly o'er my spirit did this thought
+Come on that evening--bright as ever brought
+Light's golden farewell to the world--when first
+The eternal pyramids of Memphis burst
+Awfully on my sight-standing sublime
+Twixt earth and heaven, the watch-towers of Time,
+From whose lone summit when his reign hath past
+From earth for ever he will look his last!
+
+There hung a calm and solemn sunshine round
+Those mighty monuments, a hushing sound
+In the still air that circled them which stole
+Like music of past times into my soul.
+I thought what myriads of the wise and brave
+And beautiful had sunk into the grave,
+Since earth first saw these wonders--and I said
+"Are things eternal only for the Dead?
+"Hath Man no loftier hope than this which dooms
+"His only lasting trophies to be tombs?
+"But _'tis_ not so--earth, heaven, all nature shows
+"He _may_ become immortal--_may_ unclose
+"The wings within him wrapt, and proudly rise
+"Redeemed from earth, a creature of the skies!
+
+"And who can say, among the written spells
+"From Hermes' hand that in these shrines and cells
+"Have from the Flood lay hid there may not be
+"Some secret clew to immortality,
+"Some amulet whose spell can keep life's fire
+"Awake within us never to expire!
+"'Tis known that on the Emerald Table, hid
+"For ages in yon loftiest pyramid,
+"The Thrice-Great[3] did himself engrave of old
+"The chymic mystery that gives endless gold.
+"And why may not this mightier secret dwell
+"Within the same dark chambers? who can tell
+"But that those kings who by the written skill
+"Of the Emerald Table called forth gold at will
+"And quarries upon quarries heapt and hurled,
+"To build them domes that might outstand the world--
+"Who knows, but that the heavenlier art which shares
+"The life of Gods with man was also theirs--
+"That they themselves, triumphant o'er the power
+"Of fate and death, are living at this hour;
+"And these, the giant homes they still possess.
+"Not tombs but everlasting palaces
+"Within whose depths hid from the world above
+"Even now they wander with the few they love,
+"Thro' subterranean gardens, by a light
+"Unknown on earth which hath nor dawn nor night!
+"Else, why those deathless structures? why the grand
+"And hidden halls that undermine this land?
+"Why else hath none of earth e'er dared to go
+"Thro' the dark windings of that realm below,
+"Nor aught from heaven itself except the God
+"Of Silence thro' those endless labyrinths trod?"
+Thus did I dream--wild, wandering dreams, I own,
+But such as haunt me ever, if alone,
+Or in that pause 'twixt joy and joy I be,
+Like a ship husht between two waves at sea.
+Then do these spirit whisperings like the sound
+Of the Dark Future come appalling round;
+Nor can I break the trance that holds me then,
+Till high o'er Pleasure's surge I mount again!
+
+Even now for new adventure, new delight,
+My heart is on the wing;--this very night,
+The Temple on that island halfway o'er
+From Memphis' gardens to the eastern shore
+Sends up its annual rite[4] to her whose beams
+Bring the sweet time of night-flowers and dreams;
+The nymph who dips her urn in silent lakes
+And turns to silvery dew each drop it takes;--
+Oh! not our Dian of the North who chains
+In vestal ice the current of young veins,
+But she who haunts the gay Bubastian[5] grove
+And owns she sees from her bright heaven above,
+Nothing on earth to match that heaven but Love.
+Think then what bliss will be abroad to-night!--
+Besides those sparkling nymphs who meet the sight
+Day after day, familiar as the sun,
+Coy buds of beauty yet unbreathed upon
+And all the hidden loveliness that lies,--
+Shut up as are the beams of sleeping eyes
+Within these twilight shrines--tonight shall be
+Let loose like birds for this festivity!
+And mark, 'tis nigh; already the sun bids
+His evening farewell to the Pyramids.
+As he hath done age after age till they
+Alone on earth seem ancient as his ray;
+While their great shadows stretching from the light
+Look like the first colossal steps of Night
+Stretching across the valley to invade
+The distant hills of porphyry with their shade.
+Around, as signals of the setting beam,
+Gay, gilded flags on every housetop gleam:
+While, hark!--from all the temples a rich swell
+Of music to the Moon--farewell--farewell.
+
+
+[1] Cleopatra.
+
+[2] Apellas.
+
+[3] The Hermes Trismegistus.
+
+[4] The great Festival of the Moon.
+
+[5] Bubastis, or Isis, was the Diana of the Egyptian mythology.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER III.
+
+FROM THE SAME TO THE SAME.
+
+_Memphis_.
+
+
+There is some star--or may it be
+ That moon we saw so near last night--
+Which comes athwart my destiny
+ For ever with misleading light.
+If for a moment pure and wise
+ And calm I feel there quick doth fall
+A spark from some disturbing eyes,
+That thro' my heart, soul, being flies,
+ And makes a wildfire of it all.
+I've seen--oh, Cleon, that this earth
+Should e'er have given such beauty birth!--
+That man--but, hold--hear all that past
+Since yester-night from first to last.
+
+The rising of the Moon, calm, slow,
+ And beautiful, as if she came
+Fresh from the Elysian bowers below,
+ Was with a loud and sweet acclaim
+Welcomed from every breezy height,
+Where crowds stood waiting for her light.
+And well might they who viewed the scene
+ Then lit up all around them, say
+That never yet had Nature been
+ Caught sleeping in a lovelier ray
+Or rivalled her own noontide face
+With purer show of moonlight grace.
+
+Memphis--still grand, tho' not the same
+ Unrivalled Memphis that could seize
+From ancient Thebes the crown of Fame,
+ And wear it bright thro' centuries--
+Now, in the moonshine, that came down
+Like a last smile upon that crown.
+Memphis, still grand among her lakes,
+ Her pyramids and shrines of fire,
+Rose like a vision that half breaks
+On one who dreaming still awakes
+ To music from some midnight choir:
+While to the west--where gradual sinks
+ In the red sands from Libya rolled.
+Some mighty column or fair sphynx,
+ That stood in kingly courts of old--
+It seemed as, mid the pomps that shone
+Thus gayly round him Time looked on,
+Waiting till all now bright and blest,
+Should sink beneath him like the rest.
+
+No sooner had the setting sun
+Proclaimed the festal rite begun,
+And mid their idol's fullest beams
+ The Egyptian world was all afloat,
+Than I who live upon these streams
+Like a young Nile-bird turned my boat
+To the fair island on whose shores
+Thro' leafy palms and sycamores
+Already shone the moving lights
+Of pilgrims hastening to the rites.
+While, far around like ruby sparks
+Upon the water, lighted barks,
+Of every form and kind--from those
+ That down Syene's cataract shoots,
+To the grand, gilded barge that rows
+ To tambour's beat and breath of flutes,
+And wears at night in words of flame
+On the rich prow its master's name;--
+All were alive and made this sea
+ Of cities busy as a hill
+Of summer ants caught suddenly
+ In the overflowing of a rill.
+
+Landed upon the isle, I soon
+ Thro' marble alleys and small groves
+ Of that mysterious palm she loves,
+Reached the fair Temple of the Moon;
+And there--as slowly thro' the last
+Dim-lighted vestibule I past--
+Between the porphyry pillars twined
+ With palm and ivy, I could see
+A band of youthful maidens wind
+ In measured walk half dancingly,
+Round a small shrine on which was placed
+ That bird[1] whose plumes of black and white
+Wear in their hue by Nature traced
+ A type of the moon's shadowed light.
+
+In drapery like woven snow
+These nymphs were clad; and each below
+The rounded bosom loosely wore
+ A dark blue zone or bandelet,
+With little silver stars all o'er
+ As are the skies at midnight set.
+While in their tresses, braided thro',
+ Sparkled that flower of Egypt's lakes,
+The silvery lotus in whose hue
+ As much delight the young Moon takes
+As doth the Day-God to behold
+The lofty bean-flower's buds of gold.
+And, as they gracefully went round
+ The worshipt bird, some to the beat
+Of castanets, some to the sound
+ Of the shrill sistrum timed their feet;
+While others at each step they took
+A tinkling chain of silver shook.
+
+They seemed all fair--but there was one
+On whom the light had not yet shone,
+Or shone but partly--so downcast
+She held her brow, as slow she past.
+And yet to me there seemed to dwell
+ A charm about that unseen face--
+A something in the shade that fell
+ Over that brow's imagined grace
+Which won me more than all the best
+Outshining beauties of the rest.
+And _her_ alone my eyes could see
+Enchained by this sweet mystery;
+And her alone I watched as round
+She glided o'er that marble ground,
+Stirring not more the unconscious air
+Than if a Spirit were moving there.
+Till suddenly, wide open flew
+The Temple's folding gates and threw
+A splendor from within, a flood
+Of glory where these maidens stood.
+While with that light--as if the same
+Rich source gave birth to both--there came
+A swell of harmony as grand
+As e'er was born of voice and band,
+Filling the gorgeous aisles around
+With luxury of light and sound.
+
+Then was it, by the flash that blazed
+ Full o'er her features--oh 'twas then,
+As startingly her eyes she raised,
+ But quick let fall their lids again,
+I saw--not Psyche's self when first
+ Upon the threshold of the skies
+She paused, while heaven's glory burst
+ Newly upon her downcast eyes,
+Could look more beautiful or blush
+ With holier shame than did this maid,
+Whom now I saw in all that gush
+ Of splendor from the aisles, displayed.
+Never--tho' well thou know'st how much
+ I've felt the sway of Beauty's star--
+Never did her bright influence touch
+ My soul into its depths so far;
+And had that vision lingered there
+ One minute more I should have flown,
+Forgetful _who_ I was and where.
+ And at her feet in worship thrown
+ Proffered my soul thro' life her own.
+
+But scarcely had that burst of light
+And music broke on ear and sight,
+Than up the aisle the bird took wing
+ As if on heavenly mission sent,
+While after him with graceful spring
+ Like some unearthly creatures, meant
+ To live in that mixt element
+ Of light and song the young maids went;
+And she who in my heart had thrown
+A spark to burn for life was flown.
+
+In vain I tried to follow;--bands
+ Of reverend chanters filled the aisle:
+Where'er I sought to pass, their wands
+ Motioned me back, while many a file
+Of sacred nymphs--but ah, not they
+Whom my eyes looked for thronged the way.
+Perplext, impatient, mid this crowd
+Of faces, lights--the o'erwhelming cloud
+Of incense round me, and my blood
+Full of its new-born fire--I stood,
+Nor moved, nor breathed, but when I caught
+ A glimpse of some blue, spangled zone,
+Or wreath of lotus, which I thought
+ Like those she wore at distance shone.
+
+But no, 'twas vain--hour after hour,
+ Till my heart's throbbing turned to pain,
+And my strained eyesight lost its power,
+ I sought her thus, but all in vain.
+At length, hot--wildered--in despair,
+I rushed into the cool night-air,
+And hurrying (tho' with many a look
+Back to the busy Temple) took
+My way along the moonlight shore,
+And sprung into my boat once more.
+There is a Lake that to the north
+Of Memphis stretches grandly forth,
+Upon whose silent shore the Dead
+ Have a proud city of their own,[2]
+With shrines and pyramids o'erspread--
+Where many an ancient kingly head
+ Slumbers, immortalized in stone;
+And where thro' marble grots beneath
+ The lifeless, ranged like sacred things,
+Nor wanting aught of life but breath,
+ Lie in their painted coverings,
+And on each new successive race
+ That visit their dim haunts below
+Look with the same unwithering face
+ They wore three thousand years ago.
+
+There. Silence, thoughtful God, who loves
+The neighborhood of death in groves
+Of asphodel lies hid and weaves
+His hushing spell among the leaves--
+Nor ever noise disturbs the air
+ Save the low, humming, mournful sound
+Of priests within their shrines at prayer
+ For the fresh Dead entombed around.
+
+'Twas toward this place of death--in mood
+ Made up of thoughts, half bright, half dark--
+I now across the shining flood
+ Unconscious turned my light-winged bark.
+The form of that young maid in all
+ Its beauty was before me still;
+And oft I thought, if thus to call
+ Her image to my mind at will,
+If but the memory of that one
+Bright look of hers for ever gone,
+Was to my heart worth all the rest
+Of woman-kind, beheld, possest--
+What would it be if wholly mine,
+Within these arms as in a shrine,
+Hallowed by Love, I saw her shine--
+An idol, worshipt by the light
+Of her own beauties, day and night--
+If 'twas a blessing but to see
+And lose again, what would _this_ be?
+
+In thoughts like these--but often crost
+By darker threads--my mind was lost,
+Till near that City of the Dead,
+Waked from my trance, I saw o'erhead--
+As if by some enchanter bid
+ Suddenly from the wave to rise--
+Pyramid over pyramid
+ Tower in succession to the skies;
+While one, aspiring, as if soon,
+ 'Twould touch the heavens, rose over all;
+And, on its summit, the white moon
+ Rested as on a pedestal!
+
+The silence of the lonely tombs
+ And temples round where naught was heard
+But the high palm-tree's tufted plumes,
+ Shaken at times by breeze or bird,
+Formed a deep contrast to the scene
+Of revel where I late had been;
+To those gay sounds that still came o'er,
+Faintly from many a distant shore,
+And the unnumbered lights that shone
+Far o'er the flood from Memphis on
+To the Moon's Isle and Babylon.
+
+My oars were lifted and my boat
+ Lay rocked upon the rippling stream;
+While my vague thoughts alike afloat,
+ Drifted thro' many an idle dream.
+With all of which, wild and unfixt
+As was their aim, that vision mixt,
+That bright nymph of the Temple--now,
+With the same innocence of brow
+She wore within the lighted fane--
+Now kindling thro' each pulse and vein
+With passion of such deep-felt fire
+As Gods might glory to inspire;--
+And now--oh Darkness of the tomb,
+ That must eclipse even light like hers!
+Cold, dead, and blackening mid the gloom
+ Of those eternal sepulchres.
+
+Scarce had I turned my eyes away
+ From that dark death-place, at the thought,
+When by the sound of dashing spray
+ From a light oar my ear was caught,
+While past me, thro' the moonlight, sailed.
+ A little gilded bark that bore
+Two female figures closely veiled
+ And mantled towards that funeral shore.
+They landed--and the boat again
+Put off across the watery plain.
+
+Shall I confess--to _thee_ I may--
+ That never yet hath come the chance
+Of a new music, a new ray
+ From woman's voice, from woman's glance,
+Which--let it find me how it might,
+ In joy or grief--I did not bless,
+And wander after as a light
+ Leading to undreamt, happiness.
+And chiefly now when hopes so vain
+Were stirring in my heart and brain,
+When Fancy had allured my soul
+ Into a chase as vague and far
+As would be his who fixt his goal
+ In the horizon or some star--
+_Any_ bewilderment that brought
+More near to earth my high-flown thought--
+The faintest glimpse of joy, less pure,
+Less high and heavenly, but more sure,
+Came welcome--and was then to me
+What the first flowery isle must be
+To vagrant birds blown out to sea.
+
+Quick to the shore I urged my bark,
+ And by the bursts of moonlight shed
+Between the lofty tombs could mark
+ Those figures as with hasty tread
+They glided on--till in the shade
+ Of a small pyramid, which thro'
+Some boughs of palm its peak displayed,
+ They vanisht instant from my view.
+
+I hurried to the spot--no trace
+Of life was in that lonely place;
+And had the creed I hold by taught
+Of other worlds I might have thought
+Some mocking spirits had from thence
+Come in this guise to cheat my sense.
+
+At length, exploring darkly round
+The Pyramid's smooth sides, I found
+An iron portal--opening high
+ 'Twixt peak and base--and, with a prayer
+To the bliss-loving Moon whose eye
+ Alone beheld me sprung in there.
+Downward the narrow stairway led
+Thro' many a duct obscure and dread,
+ A labyrinth for mystery made,
+With wanderings onward, backward, round,
+And gathering still, where'er it wound.
+ But deeper density of shade.
+
+Scarce had I asked myself, "Can aught
+ "That man delights in sojourn here?"--
+When, suddenly, far off, I caught
+ A glimpse of light, remote, but clear--
+Whose welcome glimmer seemed to pour
+ From some alcove or cell that ended
+The long, steep, marble corridor,
+ Thro' which I now, all hope, descended.
+Never did Spartan to his bride
+With warier foot at midnight glide.
+It seemed as echo's self were dead
+In this dark place, so mute my tread.
+Reaching at length that light, I saw--
+ Oh! listen to the scene now raised
+Before my eyes--then guess the awe,
+ The still, rapt awe with which I gazed.
+
+'Twas a small chapel, lined around
+With the fair, spangling marble found
+In many a ruined shrine that stands
+Half seen above the Libyan sands.
+The walls were richly sculptured o'er,
+And charactered with that dark lore
+Of times before the Flood, whose key
+Was lost in the "Universal Sea."--
+While on the roof was pictured bright
+ The Theban beetle as he shines,
+ When the Nile's mighty flow declines
+And forth the creature springs to light,
+With life regenerate in his wings:--
+Emblem of vain imaginings!
+Of a new world, when this is gone,
+In which the spirit still lives on!
+
+Direct beneath this type, reclined
+ On a black granite altar, lay
+A female form, in crystal shrined,
+ And looking fresh as if the ray
+ Of soul had fled but yesterday,
+While in relief of silvery hue
+ Graved on the altar's front were seen
+A branch of lotus, broken in two,
+ As that fair creature's life had been,
+And a small bird that from its spray
+Was winging like her soul away.
+
+But brief the glimpse I now could spare
+ To the wild, mystic wonders round;
+For there was yet one wonder there
+ That held me as by witchery bound.
+The lamp that thro' the chamber shed
+Its vivid beam was at the head
+Of her who on that altar slept;
+ And near it stood when first I came--
+Bending her brow, as if she kept
+ Sad watch upon its silent flame--
+A female form as yet so placed
+ Between the lamp's strong glow and me,
+That I but saw, in outline traced,
+ The shadow of her symmetry.
+Yet did my heart--I scarce knew why--
+Even at that shadowed shape beat high.
+Nor was it long ere full in sight
+The figure turned; and by the light
+That touched her features as she bent
+Over the crystal monument,
+I saw 'twas she--the same--the same--
+ That lately stood before me, brightening
+The holy spot where she but came
+ And went again like summer lightning!
+
+Upon the crystal o'er the breast
+Of her who took that silent rest,
+There was a cross of silver lying--
+ Another type of that blest home,
+Which hope and pride and fear of dying
+ Build for us in a world to come:--
+This silver cross the maiden raised
+To her pure lips:--then, having gazed
+Some minutes on that tranquil face,
+Sleeping in all death's mournful grace,
+Upward she turned her brow serene,
+ As if intent on heaven those eyes
+Saw them nor roof nor cloud between
+ Their own pure orbits and the skies,
+And, tho' her lips no motion made,
+ And that fixt look was all her speech,
+I saw that the rapt spirit prayed
+ Deeper within than words could reach.
+
+Strange power of Innocence, to turn
+ To its own hue whate'er comes near,
+And make even vagrant Passion burn
+ With purer warmth within its sphere!
+She who but one short hour before
+Had come like sudden wild-fire o'er
+My heart and brain--whom gladly even
+ From that bright Temple in the face
+Of those proud ministers of heaven,
+ I would have borne in wild embrace,
+And risked all punishment, divine
+And human, but to make her mine;--
+She, she was now before me, thrown
+ By fate itself into my arms--
+There standing, beautiful, alone,
+ With naught to guard her but her charms.
+Yet did I, then--did even a breath
+ From my parched lips, too parched to move,
+Disturb a scene where thus, beneath
+ Earth's silent covering, Youth and Death
+ Held converse thro' undying love?
+No--smile and taunt me as thou wilt--
+ Tho' but to gaze thus was delight,
+Yet seemed it like a wrong, a guilt,
+ To win by stealth so pure a sight:
+And rather than a look profane
+ Should then have met those thoughtful eyes,
+Or voice or whisper broke the chain
+That linked her spirit with the skies,
+I would have gladly in that place
+From which I watched her heavenward face,
+Let my heart break, without one beat
+That could disturb a prayer so sweet.
+Gently, as if on every tread.
+ My life, my more than life depended,
+Back thro' the corridor that led
+ To this blest scene I now ascended,
+And with slow seeking and some pain
+And many a winding tried in vain
+Emerged to upper earth again.
+
+The sun had freshly risen, and down
+ The marble hills of Araby,
+Scattered as from a conqueror's crown
+ His beams into that living sea.
+There seemed a glory in his light,
+ Newly put on--as if for pride.
+Of the high homage paid this night
+ To his own Isis, his young bride.,
+Now fading feminine away
+In her proud Lord's superior ray.
+
+My mind's first impulse was to fly
+ At once from this entangling net--
+New scenes to range, new loves to try,
+Or in mirth, wine and luxury
+Of every sense that might forget.
+But vain the effort--spell-bound still,
+I lingered, without power or will
+ To turn my eyes from that dark door,
+Which now enclosed her 'mong the dead;
+ Oft fancying, thro' the boughs that o'er
+The sunny pile their flickering shed.
+'Twas her light form again I saw
+ Starting to earth--still pure and bright,
+But wakening, as I hoped, less awe,
+ Thus seen by morning's natural light,
+ Than in that strange, dim cell at night.
+
+But no, alas--she ne'er returned:
+ Nor yet--tho' still I watch--nor yet,
+Tho' the red sun for hours hath burned,
+ And now in his mid course hath met
+The peak of that eternal pile
+ He pauses still at noon to bless,
+Standing beneath his downward smile,
+ Like a great Spirit shadowless!--
+Nor yet she comes--while here, alone,
+ Sauntering thro' this death-peopled place,
+Where no heart beats except my own,
+Or 'neath a palm-tree's shelter thrown,
+ By turns I watch and rest and trace
+These lines that are to waft to thee
+My last night's wondrous history.
+
+Dost thou remember, in that Isle
+ Of our own Sea where thou and I
+Lingered so long, so happy a while,
+ Till all the summer flowers went by--
+How gay it was when sunset brought
+ To the cool Well our favorite maids--
+Some we had won, and some we sought--
+ To dance within the fragrant shades,
+And till the stars went down attune
+Their Fountain Hymns[3] to the young moon?
+
+That time, too--oh, 'tis like a dream--
+ When from Scamander's holy tide
+I sprung as Genius of the Stream,
+ And bore away that blooming bride,
+Who thither came, to yield her charms
+ (As Phrygian maids are wont ere wed)
+Into the cold Scamander's arms,
+ But met and welcomed mine, instead--
+Wondering as on my neck she fell,
+How river-gods could love so well!
+Who would have thought that he who roved
+ Like the first bees of summer then,
+Rifling each sweet nor ever loved
+ But the free hearts that loved again,
+Readily as the reed replies
+To the least breath that round it sighs--
+Is the same dreamer who last night
+Stood awed and breathless at the sight
+Of one Egyptian girl; and now
+Wanders among these tombs with brow
+Pale, watchful, sad, as tho' he just,
+Himself, had risen from out their dust!
+
+Yet so it is--and the same thirst
+ For something high and pure, above
+This withering world, which from the first
+ Made me drink deep of woman's love--
+As the one joy, to heaven most near
+Of all our hearts can meet with here--
+Still burns me up, still keeps awake
+A fever naught but death can slake.
+
+Farewell; whatever may befall--
+Or bright, or dark--thou'lt know it all.
+
+
+[1] The Ibis.
+
+[2] Necropolis, or the City of the Dead, to the south of Memphis.
+
+[3] These Songs of the Well, as they were called by the ancients, are
+still common in the Greek isles.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER IV.
+
+FROM ORCUS, HIGH PRIEST OF MEMPHIS, TO
+DECIUS, THE PRAETORIAN PREFECT.
+
+
+Rejoice, my friend, rejoice;--the youthful Chief
+Of that light Sect which mocks at all belief,
+And gay and godless makes the present hour
+Its only heaven, is now within our power.
+Smooth, impious school!--not all the weapons aimed,
+At priestly creeds, since first a creed was framed,
+E'er struck so deep as that sly dart they wield,
+The Bacchant's pointed spear in laughing flowers concealed.
+And oh, 'twere victory to this heart, as sweet
+As any _thou _canst boast--even when the feet
+Of thy proud war-steed wade thro' Christian blood,
+To wrap this scoffer in Faith's blinding hood,
+And bring him tamed and prostrate to implore
+The vilest gods even Egypt's saints adore.
+What!--do these sages think, to _them_ alone
+The key of this world's happiness is known?
+That none but they who make such proud parade
+Of Pleasure's smiling favors win the maid,
+Or that Religion keeps no secret place,
+No niche in her dark fanes for Love to grace?
+
+Fools!--did they know how keen the zest that's given
+To earthly joy when seasoned well with heaven;
+How Piety's grave mask improves the hue
+Of Pleasure's laughing features, half seen thro',
+And how the Priest set aptly within reach
+Of two rich worlds, traffics for bliss with each,
+Would they not, Decius--thou, whom the ancient tie
+'Twixt Sword and Altar makes our best ally--
+Would they not change their creed, their craft, for ours?
+Leave the gross daylight joys that in their bowers
+Languish with too much sun, like o'er-blown flowers,
+For the veiled loves, the blisses undisplayed
+That slyly lurk within the Temple's shade?
+And, 'stead of haunting the trim Garden's school--
+Where cold Philosophy usurps a rule,
+Like the pale moon's, o'er passion's heaving tide,
+Till Pleasure's self is chilled by Wisdom's pride--
+Be taught by _us_, quit shadows for the true,
+Substantial joys we sager Priests pursue,
+Who far too wise to theorize on bliss
+Or pleasure's substance for its shade to miss.
+Preach _other_ worlds but live for only _this_:-
+Thanks to the well-paid Mystery round us flung,
+Which, like its type the golden cloud that hung
+O'er Jupiter's love-couch its shade benign,
+Round human frailty wraps a veil divine.
+
+Still less should they presume, weak wits, that they
+Alone despise the craft of us who pray;--
+Still less their creedless vanity deceive
+With the fond thought that we who pray believe.
+Believe!--Apis forbid--forbid it, all
+Ye monster Gods before whose shrines we fall--
+Deities framed in jest as if to try
+How far gross Man can vulgarize the sky;
+How far the same low fancy that combines
+Into a drove of brutes yon zodiac's signs,
+And turns that Heaven itself into a place
+Of sainted sin and deified disgrace,
+Can bring Olympus even to shame more deep,
+Stock it with things that earth itself holds cheap.
+Fish, flesh, and fowl, the kitchen's sacred brood,
+Which Egypt keeps for worship, not for food--
+All, worthy idols of a Faith that sees
+In dogs, cats, owls, and apes, divinities!
+
+Believe!--oh, Decius, thou, who feel'st no care
+For things divine beyond the soldier's share,
+Who takes on trust the faith for which he bleeds,
+A good, fierce God to swear by, all he needs--
+Little canst thou, whose creed around thee hangs
+Loose as thy summer war-cloak guess the pangs
+Of loathing and self-scorn with which a heart
+Stubborn as mine is acts the zealot's part--
+The deep and dire disgust with which I wade
+Thro' the foul juggling of this holy trade--
+This mud profound of mystery where the feet
+At every step sink deeper in deceit.
+Oh! many a time, when, mid the Temple's blaze,
+O'er prostrate fools the sacred cist I raise,
+Did I not keep still proudly in my mind
+The power this priestcraft gives me o'er mankind--
+A lever, of more might, in skilful hand,
+To move this world, than Archimede e'er planned--
+I should in vengeance of the shame I feel
+At my own mockery crush the slaves that kneel
+Besotted round; and--like that kindred breed
+Of reverend, well-drest crocodiles they feed,
+At famed Arsinoë[1]--make my keepers bless,
+With their last throb, my sharp-fanged Holiness.
+
+Say, _is_ it to be borne, that scoffers, vain
+Of their own freedom from the altar's chain,
+Should mock thus all that thou thy blood hast sold.
+And I my truth, pride, freedom, to uphold?
+It must not be:--think'st thou that Christian sect,
+Whose followers quick as broken waves, erect
+Their crests anew and swell into a tide,
+That threats to sweep away our shrines of pride--
+Think'st thou with all their wondrous spells even they
+Would triumph thus, had not the constant play
+Of Wit's resistless archery cleared their way?--
+That mocking spirit, worst of all the foes,
+Our solemn fraud, our mystic mummery knows,
+Whose wounding flash thus ever 'mong the signs
+Of a fast-falling creed, prelusive shines,
+Threatening such change as do the awful freaks
+Of summer lightning ere the tempest breaks.
+
+But, to my point--a youth of this vain school,
+But one, whom Doubt itself hath failed to cool
+Down to that freezing point where Priests despair
+Of any spark from the altar catching there--
+Hath, some nights since--it was, me thinks, the night
+That followed the full Moon's great annual rite--
+Thro' the dark, winding ducts that downward stray
+To these earth--hidden temples, tracked his way,
+Just at that hour when, round the Shrine, and me,
+The choir of blooming nymphs thou long'st to see,
+Sing their last night-hymn in the Sanctuary.
+The clangor of the marvellous Gate that stands
+At the Well's lowest depth--which none but hands
+Of new, untaught adventurers, from above,
+Who know not the safe path, e'er dare to move--
+Gave signal that a foot profane was nigh:--
+'Twas the Greek youth, who, by that morning's sky,
+Had been observed, curiously wandering round
+The mighty fanes of our sepulchral ground.
+
+Instant, the Initiate's Trials were prepared,--
+The Fire, Air, Water; all that Orpheus dared,
+That Plato, that the bright-haired Samian[2] past,
+With trembling hope, to come to--_what_, at last?
+Go, ask the dupes of Priestcraft; question him
+Who mid terrific sounds and spectres dim
+Walks at Eleusis; ask of those who brave
+The dazzling miracles of Mithra's Cave
+With its seven starry gates; ask all who keep
+Those terrible night-mysteries where they weep
+And howl sad dirges to the answering breeze.
+O'er their dead Gods, their mortal Deities--
+Amphibious, hybrid things that died as men,
+Drowned, hanged, empaled, to rise as gods again;--
+Ask _them_, what mighty secret lurks below
+This seven-fold mystery--can they tell thee? No;
+Gravely they keep that only secret, well
+And fairly kept--that they have none to tell;
+And duped themselves console their humbled pride
+By duping thenceforth all mankind beside.
+
+And such the advance in fraud since Orpheus' time--
+That earliest master of our craft sublime--
+So many minor Mysteries, imps of fraud,
+From the great Orphic Egg have winged abroad,
+That, still to uphold our Temple's ancient boast,
+And seem most holy, we must cheat the most;
+Work the best miracles, wrap nonsense round
+In pomp and darkness till it seems profound;
+Play on the hopes, the terrors of mankind,
+With changeful skill; and make the human mind
+Like our own Sanctuary, where no ray
+But by the Priest's permission wins its way--
+Where thro' the gloom as wave our wizard rods.
+Monsters at will are conjured into Gods;
+While Reason like a grave-faced mummy stands
+With her arms swathed in hieroglyphic bands.
+But chiefly in that skill with which we use
+Man's wildest passions for Religion's views,
+Yoking them to her car like fiery steeds,
+Lies the main art in which our craft succeeds.
+And oh be blest, ye men of yore, whose toil
+Hath, for our use, scooped out from Egypt's soil
+This hidden Paradise, this mine of fanes,
+Gardens and palaces where Pleasure reigns
+In a rich, sunless empire of her own,
+With all earth's luxuries lighting up her throne:--
+A realm for mystery made, which undermines
+The Nile itself and, 'neath the Twelve Great Shrines
+That keep Initiation's holy rite,
+Spreads its long labyrinths of unearthly light.
+A light that knows no change--its brooks that run
+Too deep for day, its gardens without sun,
+Where soul and sense, by turns, are charmed, surprised.
+And all that bard or prophet e'er devised
+For man's Elysium, priests have realized.
+
+Here, at this moment--all his trials past.
+And heart and nerve unshrinking to the last--
+Our new Initiate roves--as yet left free
+To wander thro' this realm of mystery;
+Feeding on such illusions as prepare
+The soul, like mist o'er waterfalls, to wear
+All shapes and lines at Fancy's varying will,
+Thro' every shifting aspect, vapor still;--
+Vague glimpses of the Future, vistas shown.
+By scenic skill, into that world unknown.
+Which saints and sinners claim alike their own;
+And all those other witching, wildering arts,
+Illusions, terrors, that make human hearts,
+Ay, even the wisest and the hardiest quail
+To _any_ goblin throned behind a veil.
+Yes--such the spells shall haunt his eye, his ear,
+Mix wild his night-dreams, form his atmosphere;
+Till, if our Sage be not tamed down, at length,
+His wit, his wisdom, shorn of all their strength,
+Like Phrygian priests, in honor of the shrine--
+If he become not absolutely mine,
+Body and soul and like the tame decoy
+Which wary hunters of wild doves employ
+Draw converts also, lure his brother wits
+To the dark cage where his own spirit flits.
+And give us if not saints good hypocrites--
+If I effect not this then be it said
+The ancient spirit of our craft hath fled,
+Gone with that serpent-god the Cross hath chased
+To hiss its soul out in the Theban waste.
+
+
+[1] For the trinkets with which the sacred Crocodiles were ornamented see
+the "Epicurean" chap x.
+
+[2] Pythagoras.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LALLA ROOKH
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+SAMUEL ROGERS, ESQ.
+
+THIS EASTERN ROMANCE
+
+IS INSCRIBED
+
+BY
+
+HIS VERY GRATEFUL AND AFFECTIONATE FRIEND,
+
+THOMAS MOORE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LALLA ROOKH
+
+
+In the eleventh year of the reign of Aurungzebe, Abdalla, King of the
+Lesser Bucharia, a lineal descendant from the Great Zingis, having
+abdicated the throne in favor of his son, set out on a pilgrimage to the
+Shrine of the Prophet; and, passing into India through the delightful
+valley of Cashmere, rested for a short time at Delhi on his way. He was
+entertained by Aurungzebe in a style of magnificent hospitality, worthy
+alike of the visitor and the host, and was afterwards escorted with the
+same splendor to Surat, where he embarked for Arabia.[1] During the stay
+of the Royal Pilgrim at Delhi, a marriage was agreed upon between the
+Prince, his son, and the youngest daughter of the Emperor, LALLA ROOKH;
+[2]--a Princess described by the poets of her time as more beautiful than
+Leila,[3] Shirine,[4] Dewildé,[5] or any of those heroines whose names
+and loves embellish the songs of Persia and Hindostan. It was intended
+that the nuptials should be celebrated at Cashmere; where the young King,
+as soon as the cares of the empire would permit, was to meet, for the
+first time, his lovely bride, and, after a few months' repose in that
+enchanting valley, conduct her over the snowy hills into Bucharia.
+
+The day of LALLA ROOKH'S departure from Delhi was as splendid as sunshine
+and pageantry could make it. The bazaars and baths were all covered with
+the richest tapestry; hundreds of gilded barges upon the Jumna floated
+with their banners shining in the water; while through the streets groups
+of beautiful children went strewing the most delicious flowers around, as
+in that Persian festival called the Scattering of the Roses;[6] till
+every part of the city was as fragrant as if a caravan of musk from Khoten
+had passed through it. The Princess, having taken leave of her kind
+father, who at parting hung a cornelian of Yemen round her neck, on which
+was inscribed a verse from the Koran, and having sent a considerable
+present to the Fakirs, who kept up the Perpetual Lamp in her sister's
+tomb, meekly ascended the palankeen prepared for her; and while Aurungzebe
+stood to take a last look from his balcony, the procession moved slowly on
+the road to Lahore.
+
+Seldom had the Eastern world seen a cavalcade so superb. From the gardens
+in the suburbs to the Imperial palace, it was one unbroken line of
+splendor. The gallant appearance of the Rajahs and Mogul lords,
+distinguished by those insignia of the Emperor's favor,[7] the feathers
+of the egret of Cashmere in their turbans, and the small silver-rimm'd
+kettle-drums at the bows of their saddles;--the costly armor of their
+cavaliers, who vied, on this occasion, with the guards of the great Keder
+Khan,[8] in the brightness of their silver battle-axes and the massiness
+of their maces of gold;--the glittering of the gilt pine-apple[9] on the
+tops of the palankeens;--the embroidered trappings of the elephants,
+bearing on their backs small turrets, in the shape of little antique
+temples, within which the Ladies of LALLA ROOKH lay as it were enshrined;
+--the rose-colored veils of the Princess's own sumptuous litter,[10] at
+the front of which a fair young female slave sat fanning her through the
+curtains, with feathers of the Argus pheasant's wing;[11]--and the lovely
+troop of Tartarian and Cashmerian maids of honor, whom the young King had
+sent to accompany his bride, and who rode on each side of the litter, upon
+small Arabian horses;--all was brilliant, tasteful, and magnificent, and
+pleased even the critical and fastidious FADLADEEN, Great Nazir or
+Chamberlain of the Haram, who was borne in his palankeen immediately after
+the Princess, and considered himself not the least important personage of
+the pageant.
+
+FADLADEEN was a judge of everything,--from the pencilling of a
+Circassian's eyelids to the deepest questions of science and literature;
+from the mixture of a conserve of rose-leaves to the composition of an
+epic poem: and such influence had his opinion upon the various tastes of
+the day, that all the cooks and poets of Delhi stood in awe of him. His
+political conduct and opinions were founded upon that line of Sadi,--
+"Should the Prince at noon-day say, It is night, declare that you behold
+the moon and stars."--And his zeal for religion, of which Aurungzebe was a
+munificent protector,[12] was about as disinterested as that of the
+goldsmith who fell in love with the diamond eyes of the idol of
+Jaghernaut.[13]
+
+During the first days of their journey, LALLA ROOKH, who had passed all
+her life within the shadow of the Royal Gardens of Delhi,[14] found
+enough in the beauty of the scenery through which they passed to interest
+her mind, and delight her imagination; and when at evening or in the heat
+of the day they turned off from the high road to those retired and
+romantic places which had been selected for her encampments,--sometimes,
+on the banks of a small rivulet, as clear as the waters of the Lake of
+Pearl;[15] sometimes under the sacred shade of a Banyan tree, from which
+the view opened upon a glade covered with antelopes; and often in those
+hidden, embowered spots, described by one from the Isles of the West,
+[16]as "places of melancholy, delight, and safety, where all the company
+around was wild peacocks and turtle-doves;"--she felt a charm in these
+scenes, so lovely and so new to her, which, for a time, made her
+indifferent to every other amusement. But LALLA ROOKH was young, and the
+young love variety; nor could the conversation of her Ladies and the Great
+Chamberlain, FADLADEEN,(the only persons, of course, admitted to her
+pavilion.) sufficiently enliven those many vacant hours, which were
+devoted neither to the pillow nor the palankeen. There was a little
+Persian slave who sung sweetly to the Vina, and who, now and then, lulled
+the Princess to sleep with the ancient ditties of her country, about the
+loves of Wavnak and Ezra,[17] the fair-haired Zal and his mistress
+Rodahver,[18] not forgetting the combat of Rustam with the terrible White
+Demon.[19] At other times she was amused by those graceful dancing-girls
+of Delhi, who had been permitted by the Bramins of the Great Pagoda to
+attend her, much to the horror of the good Mussulman FADLADEEN, who could
+see nothing graceful or agreeable in idolaters, and to whom the very
+tinkling of their golden anklets[20] was an abomination.
+
+But these and many other diversions were repeated till they lost all their
+charm, and the nights and noon-days were beginning to move heavily, when,
+at length, it was recollected that, among the attendants sent by the
+bridegroom, was a young poet of Cashmere, much celebrated throughout the
+Valley for his manner of reciting the Stories of the East, on whom his
+Royal Master had conferred the privilege of being admitted to the pavilion
+of the Princess, that he might help to beguile the tediousness of the
+journey by some of his most agreeable recitals. At the mention of a poet,
+FADLADEEN elevated his critical eyebrows, and, having refreshed his
+faculties with a dose of that delicious opium which is distilled from the
+black poppy of the Thebais, gave orders for the minstrel to be forthwith
+introduced into the presence.
+
+The Princess, who had once in her life seen a poet from behind the screens
+of gauze in her father's hall, and had conceived from that specimen no
+very favorable ideas of the Caste, expected but little in this new
+exhibition to interest her;--she felt inclined, however, to alter her
+opinion on the very first appearance of FERAMORZ. He was a youth about
+LALLA ROOKH'S own age, and graceful as that idol of women,
+Crishna,[21]--such as he appears to their young imaginations, heroic,
+beautiful, breathing music from his very eyes, and exalting the religion
+of his worshippers into love. His dress was simple, yet not without some
+marks of costliness; and the Ladies of the Princess were not long in
+discovering that the cloth, which encircled his high Tartarian cap, was of
+the most delicate kind that the shawl-goats of Tibet supply.[22] Here and
+there, too, over his vest, which was confined by a flowered girdle of
+Kashan, hung strings of fine pearl, disposed with an air of studied
+negligence;--nor did the exquisite embroidery of his sandals escape the
+observation of these fair critics; who, however they might give way to
+FADLADEEN upon the unimportant topics of religion and government, had the
+spirit of martyrs in everything relating to such momentous matters as
+jewels and embroidery.
+
+For the purpose of relieving the pauses of recitation by music, the young
+Cashmerian held in his hand a kitar;--such as, in old times, the Arab
+maids of the West used to listen to by moonlight in the gardens of the
+Alhambra--and, having premised, with much humility, that the story he was
+about to relate was founded on the adventures of that Veiled Prophet of
+Khorassan,[23] who, in the year of the Hegira 163, created such alarm
+throughout the Eastern Empire, made an obeisance to the Princess, and thus
+began:--
+
+
+THE VEILED PROPHET OF KHORASSAN.[24]
+
+
+In that delightful Province of the Sun,
+The first of Persian lands he shines upon.
+Where all the loveliest children of his beam,
+Flowerets and fruits, blush over every stream,[25]
+And, fairest of all streams, the MURGA roves
+Among MEROU'S[26] bright palaces and groves;--
+There on that throne, to which the blind belief
+Of millions raised him, sat the Prophet-Chief,
+The Great MOKANNA. O'er his features hung
+The Veil, the Silver Veil, which he had flung
+In mercy there, to hide from mortal sight
+His dazzling brow, till man could bear its light.
+For, far less luminous, his votaries said,
+Were even the gleams, miraculously shed
+O'er MOUSSA'S[27] cheek, when down the Mount he trod
+All glowing from the presence of his God!
+
+ On either side, with ready hearts and hands,
+His chosen guard of bold Believers stands;
+Young fire-eyed disputants, who deem their swords,
+On points of faith, more eloquent than words;
+
+And such their zeal, there's not a youth with brand
+Uplifted there, but at the Chief's command,
+Would make his own devoted heart its sheath,
+And bless the lips that doomed so dear a death!
+In hatred to the Caliph's hue of night,[28]
+Their vesture, helms and all, is snowy white;
+Their weapons various--some equipt for speed,
+With javelins of the light Kathaian reed;[29]
+Or bows of buffalo horn and shining quivers
+Filled with the stems[30]
+that bloom on IRAN'S rivers;[31]
+While some, for war's more terrible attacks,
+Wield the huge mace and ponderous battle-axe;
+And as they wave aloft in morning's beam
+The milk-white plumage of their helms, they seem
+Like a chenar-tree grove[32] when winter throws
+O'er all its tufted heads his feathery snows.
+
+ Between the porphyry pillars that uphold
+The rich moresque-work of the roof of gold,
+Aloft the Haram's curtained galleries rise,
+Where thro' the silken net-work, glancing eyes,
+From time to time, like sudden gleams that glow
+Thro' autumn clouds, shine o'er the pomp below.--
+What impious tongue, ye blushing saints, would dare
+To hint that aught but Heaven hath placed you there?
+Or that the loves of this light world could bind,
+In their gross chain, your Prophet's soaring mind?
+No--wrongful thought!--commissioned from above
+To people Eden's bowers with shapes of love,
+(Creatures so bright, that the same lips and eyes
+They wear on earth will serve in Paradise,)
+There to recline among Heaven's native maids,
+And crown the Elect with bliss that never fades--
+Well hath the Prophet-Chief his bidding done;
+And every beauteous race beneath the sun,
+From those who kneel at BRAHMA'S burning fount,[33]
+To the fresh nymphs bounding o'er YEMEN'S mounts;
+From PERSIA'S eyes of full and fawnlike ray,
+To the small, half-shut glances of KATHAY;[34]
+And GEORGIA'S bloom, and AZAB'S darker smiles,
+And the gold ringlets of the Western Isles;
+All, all are there;--each Land its flower hath given,
+To form that fair young Nursery for Heaven!
+
+ But why this pageant now? this armed array?
+What triumph crowds the rich Divan to-day
+With turbaned heads of every hue and race,
+Bowing before that veiled and awful face,
+Like tulip-beds,[35] of different shape and dyes,
+Bending beneath the invisible West-wind's sighs!
+What new-made mystery now for Faith to sign
+And blood to seal, as genuine and divine,
+What dazzling mimicry of God's own power
+Hath the bold Prophet planned to grace this hour?
+
+ Not such the pageant now, tho' not less proud;
+Yon warrior youth advancing from the crowd
+With silver bow, with belt of broidered crape
+And fur-bound bonnet of Bucharian shape.[36]
+So fiercely beautiful in form and eye,
+Like war's wild planet in a summer sky;
+That youth to-day,--a proselyte, worth hordes
+Of cooler spirits and less practised swords,--
+Is come to join, all bravery and belief,
+The creed and standard of the heaven-sent Chief.
+
+ Tho' few his years, the West already knows
+Young AZIM'S fame;--beyond the Olympian snows
+Ere manhood darkened o'er his downy cheek,
+O'erwhelmed in fight and captive to the Greek,[37]
+He lingered there, till peace dissolved his chains;--
+Oh! who could even in bondage tread the plains
+Of glorious GREECE nor feel his spirit rise
+Kindling within him? who with heart and eyes
+Could walk where Liberty had been nor see
+The shining foot-prints of her Deity,
+Nor feel those god-like breathings in the air
+Which mutely told her spirit had been there?
+Not he, that youthful warrior,--no, too well
+For his soul's quiet worked the awakening spell;
+And now, returning to his own dear land,
+Full of those dreams of good that, vainly grand,
+Haunt the young heart,--proud views of human-kind,
+Of men to Gods exalted and refined,--
+False views like that horizon's fair deceit
+Where earth and heaven but _seem_, alas, to meet!--
+Soon as he heard an Arm Divine was raised
+To right the nations, and beheld, emblazed
+On the white flag MOKANNA'S host unfurled,
+Those words of sunshine, "Freedom to the World,"
+At once his faith, his sword, his soul obeyed
+The inspiring summons; every chosen blade
+That fought beneath that banner's sacred text
+Seemed doubly edged for this world and the next;
+And ne'er did Faith with her smooth bandage bind
+Eyes more devoutly willing to be blind,
+In virtue's cause;--never was soul inspired
+With livelier trust in what it most desired,
+Than his, the enthusiast there, who kneeling, pale
+With pious awe before that Silver Veil,
+Believes the form to which he bends his knee
+Some pure, redeeming angel sent to free
+This fettered world from every bond and stain,
+And bring its primal glories back again!
+
+Low as young AZIM knelt, that motley crowd
+Of all earth's nations sunk the knee and bowed,
+With shouts of "ALLA!" echoing long and loud;
+Which high in air, above the Prophet's head,
+Hundreds of banners to the sunbeam spread
+Waved, like the wings of the white birds that fan
+The flying throne of star-taught SOLIMAN.[38]
+Then thus he spoke:-"Stranger, tho' new the frame
+"Thy soul inhabits now. I've trackt its flame
+"For many an age,[39] in every chance and change
+"Of that existence, thro' whose varied range,--
+"As thro' a torch-race where from hand to hand
+"The flying youths transmit their shining brand,
+"From frame to frame the unextinguisht soul
+"Rapidly passes till it reach the goal!
+
+"Nor think 'tis only the gross Spirits warmed
+"With duskier fire and for earth's medium formed
+"That run this course;--Beings the most divine
+"Thus deign thro' dark mortality to shine.
+"Such was the Essence that in ADAM dwelt,
+"To which all Heaven except the Proud One knelt:[40]
+"Such the refined Intelligence that glowed
+"In MOUSSA'S[41] frame,--and thence descending flowed
+"Thro' many a Prophet's breast;--in ISSA[42] shone
+"And in MOHAMMED burned; till hastening on.
+"(As a bright river that from fall to fall
+"In many a maze descending bright thro' all,
+"Finds some fair region where, each labyrinth past,
+"In one full lake of light it rests at last)
+"That Holy Spirit settling calm and free
+"From lapse or shadow centres all in me!
+
+Again throughout the assembly at these words
+Thousands of voices rung: the warrior's swords
+Were pointed up at heaven; a sudden wind
+In the open banners played, and from behind
+Those Persian hangings that but ill could screen
+The Harem's loveliness, white hands were seen
+Waving embroidered scarves whose motion gave
+A perfume forth--like those the Houris wave
+When beckoning to their bowers the immortal Brave.
+
+"But these," pursued the Chief "are truths sublime,
+"That claim a holier mood and calmer time
+"Than earth allows us now;--this sword must first
+"The darkling prison-house of mankind burst.
+"Ere Peace can visit them or Truth let in
+"Her wakening daylight on a world of sin.
+"But then,--celestial warriors, then when all
+"Earth's shrines and thrones before our banner fall,
+"When the glad Slave shall at these feet lay down
+"His broken chain, the tyrant Lord his crown,
+"The Priest his book, the Conqueror his wreath,
+"And from the lips of Truth one mighty breath
+"Shall like a whirlwind scatter in its breeze
+"That whole dark pile of human mockeries:--
+"Then shall the reign of mind commence on earth,
+"And starting fresh as from a second birth,
+"Man in the sunshine of the world's new spring
+"Shall walk transparent like some holy thing!
+"Then too your Prophet from his angel brow
+"Shall cast the Veil that hides its splendors now,
+"And gladdened Earth shall thro' her wide expanse
+"Bask in the glories of this countenance!
+
+"For thee, young warrior, welcome!--thou hast yet
+"Some tasks to learn, some frailties to forget,
+"Ere the white war-plume o'er thy brow can wave;--
+"But, once my own, mine all till in the grave!"
+
+The pomp is at an end--the crowds are gone--
+Each ear and heart still haunted by the tone
+Of that deep voice, which thrilled like ALLA'S own!
+The Young all dazzled by the plumes and lances,
+The glittering throne and Haram's half-caught glances,
+The Old deep pondering on the promised reign
+Of peace and truth, and all the female train
+Ready to risk their eyes could they but gaze
+A moment on that brow's miraculous blaze!
+
+But there was one among the chosen maids
+Who blushed behind the gallery's silken shades,
+One, to whose soul the pageant of to-day
+Has been like death:--you saw her pale dismay,
+Ye wondering sisterhood, and heard the burst
+Of exclamation from her lips when first
+She saw that youth, too well, too dearly known,
+Silently kneeling at the Prophet's throne.
+
+Ah ZELICA! there was a time when bliss
+Shone o'er thy heart from every look of his,
+When but to see him, hear him, breathe the air
+In which he dwelt was thy soul's fondest prayer;
+When round him hung such a perpetual spell,
+Whate'er he did, none ever did so well.
+Too happy days! when, if he touched a flower
+Or gem of thine, 'twas sacred from that hour;
+When thou didst study him till every tone
+And gesture and dear look became thy own.--
+Thy voice like his, the changes of his face
+In thine reflected with still lovelier grace,
+Like echo, sending back sweet music, fraught
+With twice the aerial sweetness it had brought!
+Yet now he comes,--brighter than even he
+E'er beamed before,--but, ah! not bright for thee;
+No--dread, unlookt for, like a visitant
+From the other world he comes as if to haunt
+Thy guilty soul with dreams of lost delight,
+Long lost to all but memory's aching sight:--
+Sad dreams! as when the Spirit of our Youth
+Returns in sleep, sparkling with all the truth
+And innocence once ours and leads us back,
+In mournful mockery o'er the shining track
+Of our young life and points out every ray
+Of hope and peace we've lost upon the way!
+
+ Once happy pair!--In proud BOKHARA'S groves,
+Who had not heard of their first youthful loves?
+Born by that ancient flood,[43]which from its spring
+In the dark Mountains swiftly wandering,
+Enriched by every pilgrim brook that shines
+With relics from BUCHARIA'S ruby mines.
+And, lending to the CASPIAN half its strength,
+In the cold Lake of Eagles sinks at length;--
+There, on the banks of that bright river born,
+The flowers that hung above its wave at morn
+Blest not the waters as they murmured by
+With holier scent and lustre than the sigh
+And virgin-glance of first affection cast
+Upon their youth's smooth current as it past!
+But war disturbed this vision,--far away
+From her fond eyes summoned to join the array
+Of PERSIA'S warriors on the hills of THRACE,
+The youth exchanged his sylvan dwelling-place
+For the rude tent and war-field's deathful clash;
+His ZELICA'S sweet glances for the flash
+Of Grecian wild-fire, and Love's gentle chains
+For bleeding bondage on BYZANTIUM'S plains.
+
+ Month after month in widowhood of soul
+Drooping the maiden saw two summers roll
+Their suns away--but, ah, how cold and dim
+Even summer suns when not beheld with him!
+From time to time ill-omened rumors came
+Like spirit-tongues muttering the sick man's name
+Just ere he dies:--at length those sounds of dread
+Fell withering on her soul, "AZIM is dead!"
+Oh Grief beyond all other griefs when fate
+First leaves the young heart lone and desolate
+In the wide world without that only tie
+For which it loved to live or feared to die;--
+Lorn as the hung-up lute, that near hath spoken
+Since the sad day its master-chord was broken!
+
+Fond maid, the sorrow of her soul was such,
+Even reason sunk,--blighted beneath its touch;
+And tho' ere long her sanguine spirit rose
+Above the first dead pressure of its woes,
+Tho' health and bloom returned, the delicate chain
+Of thought once tangled never cleared again.
+Warm, lively, soft as in youth's happiest day,
+The mind was still all there, but turned astray,--
+A wandering bark upon whose pathway shone
+All stars of heaven except the guiding one!
+Again she smiled, nay, much and brightly smiled,
+But 'twas a lustre, strange, unreal, wild;
+And when she sung to her lute's touching strain,
+'Twas like the notes, half ecstasy, half pain,
+The bulbul[44] utters ere her soul depart,
+When, vanquisht by some minstrel's powerful art,
+She dies upon the lute whose sweetness broke her heart!
+
+Such was the mood in which that mission found,
+Young ZELICA,--that mission which around
+The Eastern world in every region blest
+With woman's smile sought out its loveliest
+To grace that galaxy of lips and eyes
+Which the Veiled Prophet destined for the skies:--
+And such quick welcome as a spark receives
+Dropt on a bed of Autumn's withered leaves,
+Did every tale of these enthusiasts find
+In the wild maiden's sorrow-blighted mind.
+All fire at once the maddening zeal she caught:--
+Elect of Paradise! blest, rapturous thought!
+Predestined bride, in heaven's eternal dome,
+Of some brave youth--ha! durst they say "of _some_?"
+No--of the one, one only object traced
+In her heart's core too deep to be effaced;
+The one whose memory, fresh as life, is twined
+With every broken link of her lost mind;
+Whose image lives tho' Reason's self be wreckt
+Safe mid the ruins of her intellect!
+
+ Alas, poor ZELICA! it needed all
+The fantasy which held thy mind in thrall
+To see in that gay Haram's glowing maids
+A sainted colony for Eden's shades;
+Or dream that he,--of whose unholy flame
+Thou wert too soon the victim,--shining came
+From Paradise to people its pure sphere
+With souls like thine which he hath ruined here!
+No--had not reason's light totally set,
+And left thee dark thou hadst an amulet
+In the loved image graven on thy heart
+Which would have saved thee from the tempter's art,
+And kept alive in all its bloom of breath
+That purity whose fading is love's death!--
+But lost, inflamed,--a restless zeal took place
+Of the mild virgin's still and feminine grace;
+First of the Prophets favorites, proudly first
+In zeal and charms, too well the Impostor nurst
+Her soul's delirium in whose active flame,
+Thus lighting up a young, luxuriant frame,
+He saw more potent sorceries to bind
+To his dark yoke the spirits of mankind,
+More subtle chains than hell itself e'er twined.
+No art was spared, no witchery;--all the skill
+His demons taught him was employed to fill
+Her mind with gloom and ecstasy by turns--
+That gloom, thro' which Frenzy but fiercer burns,
+That ecstasy which from the depth of sadness
+Glares like the maniac's moon whose light is madness!
+
+ 'Twas from a brilliant banquet where the sound
+Of poesy and music breathed around,
+Together picturing to her mind and ear
+The glories of that heaven, her destined sphere,
+Where all was pure, where every stain that lay
+Upon the spirit's light should pass away,
+And realizing more than youthful love
+E'er wisht or dreamed, she should for ever rove
+Thro' fields of fragrance by her AZIM'S side,
+His own blest, purified, eternal bride!--
+T was from a scene, a witching trance like this,
+He hurried her away, yet breathing bliss,
+To the dim charnel-house;--thro' all its steams
+Of damp and death led only by those gleams
+Which foul Corruption lights, as with design
+To show the gay and proud _she_ too can shine--
+And passing on thro' upright ranks of Dead
+Which to the maiden, doubly crazed by dread,
+Seemed, thro' the bluish death-light round them cast,
+To move their lips in mutterings as she past--
+There in that awful place, when each had quaft
+And pledged in silence such a fearful draught,
+Such--oh! the look and taste of that red bowl
+Will haunt her till she dies--he bound her soul
+By a dark oath, in hell's own language framed,
+Never, while earth his mystic presence claimed,
+While the blue arch of day hung o'er them both,
+Never, by that all-imprecating oath,
+In joy or sorrow from his side to sever.--
+She swore and the wide charnel echoed "Never, never!"
+
+ From that dread hour, entirely, wildly given
+To him and--she believed, lost maid!--to heaven;
+Her brain, her heart, her passions all inflamed,
+How proud she stood, when in full Haram named
+The Priestess of the Faith!--how flasht her eyes
+With light, alas, that was not of the skies,
+When round in trances only less than hers
+She saw the Haram kneel, her prostrate worshippers.
+Well might MOKANNA think that form alone
+Had spells enough to make the world his own:--
+Light, lovely limbs to which the spirit's play
+Gave motion, airy as the dancing spray,
+When from its stem the small bird wings away;
+Lips in whose rosy labyrinth when she smiled
+The soul was lost, and blushes, swift and wild
+As are the momentary meteors sent
+Across the uncalm but beauteous firmament.
+And then her look--oh! where's the heart so wise
+Could unbewildered meet those matchless eyes?
+Quick, restless, strange, but exquisite withal,
+Like those of angels just before their fall;
+Now shadowed with the shames of earth--now crost
+By glimpses of the Heaven her heart had lost;
+In every glance there broke without control,
+The flashes of a bright but troubled soul,
+Where sensibility still wildly played
+Like lightning round the ruins it had made!
+
+ And such was now young ZELICA--so changed
+From her who some years since delighted ranged
+The almond groves that shade BOKHARA'S tide
+All life and bliss with AZIM by her side!
+So altered was she now, this festal day,
+When, mid the proud Divan's dazzling array,
+The vision of that Youth whom she had loved,
+Had wept as dead, before her breathed and moved;--
+When--bright, she thought, as if from Eden's track
+But half-way trodden, he had wandered back
+Again to earth, glistening with Eden's light--
+Her beauteous AZIM shone before her sight.
+
+ O Reason! who shall say what spells renew,
+When least we look for it, thy broken clew!
+Thro' what small vistas o'er the darkened brain
+Thy intellectual day-beam bursts again;
+And how like forts to which beleaguerers win
+Unhoped-for entrance thro' some friend within,
+One clear idea, wakened in the breast
+By memory's magic, lets in all the rest.
+Would it were thus, unhappy girl, with thee!
+But tho' light came, it came but partially;
+Enough to show the maze, in which thy sense
+Wandered about,--but not to guide it thence;
+Enough to glimmer o'er the yawning wave,
+But not to point the harbor which might save.
+Hours of delight and peace, long left behind,
+With that dear form came rushing o'er her mind;
+But, oh! to think how deep her soul had gone
+In shame and falsehood since those moments shone;
+And then her oath--_there_ madness lay again,
+And shuddering, back she sunk into her chain
+Of mental darkness, as if blest to flee
+From light whose every glimpse was agony!
+Yet _one_ relief this glance of former years
+Brought mingled with its pain,--tears, floods of tears,
+Long frozen at her heart, but now like rills
+Let loose in spring-time from the snowy hills,
+And gushing warm after a sleep of frost,
+Thro' valleys where their flow had long been lost.
+
+ Sad and subdued, for the first time her frame
+Trembled with horror when the summons came
+(A summons proud and rare, which all but she,
+And she, till now, had heard with ecstasy,)
+To meet MOKANNA at his place of prayer,
+A garden oratory cool and fair
+By the stream's side, where still at close of day
+The Prophet of the Veil retired to pray,
+Sometimes alone--but oftener far with one,
+One chosen nymph to share his orison.
+
+ Of late none found such favor in his sight
+As the young Priestess; and tho', since that night
+When the death-cavorns echoed every tone
+Of the dire oath that made her all his own,
+The Impostor sure of his infatuate prize
+Had more than once thrown off his soul's disguise,
+And uttered such unheavenly, monstrous things,
+As even across the desperate wanderings
+Of a weak intellect, whose lamp was out,
+Threw startling shadows of dismay and doubt;--
+Yet zeal, ambition, her tremendous vow,
+The thought, still haunting her, of that bright brow,
+Whose blaze, as yet from mortal eye concealed,
+Would soon, proud triumph! be to her revealed,
+To her alone;--and then the hope, most dear,
+Most wild of all, that her transgression here
+Was but a passage thro' earth's grosser fire,
+From which the spirit would at last aspire,
+Even purer than before,--as perfumes rise
+Thro' flame and smoke, most welcome to the skies--
+And that when AZIM's fond, divine embrace
+Should circle her in heaven, no darkening trace
+Would on that bosom he once loved remain.
+But all be bright, be pure, be _his_ again!--
+These were the wildering dreams, whose curst deceit
+Had chained her soul beneath the tempter's feet,
+And made her think even damning falsehood sweet.
+But now that Shape, which had appalled her view,
+That Semblance--oh how terrible, if true!
+Which came across her frenzy's full career
+With shock of consciousness, cold, deep, severe.
+As when in northern seas at midnight dark
+An isle of ice encounters some swift bark,
+And startling all its wretches from their sleep
+By one cold impulse hurls them to the deep;--
+So came that shock not frenzy's self could bear,
+And waking up each long-lulled image there,
+But checkt her headlong soul to sink it in despair!
+
+ Wan and dejected, thro' the evening dusk,
+She now went slowly to that small kiosk,
+Where, pondering alone his impious schemes,
+MOKANNA waited her--too wrapt in dreams
+Of the fair-ripening future's rich success,
+To heed the sorrow, pale and spiritless,
+That sat upon his victim's downcast brow,
+Or mark how slow her step, how altered now
+From the quick, ardent Priestess, whose light bound
+Came like a spirit's o'er the unechoing ground,--
+From that wild ZELICA whose every glance
+Was thrilling fire, whose every thought a trance!
+
+ Upon his couch the Veiled MOKANNA lay,
+While lamps around--not such as lend their ray,
+Glimmering and cold, to those who nightly pray
+In holy KOOM,[45] or MECCA'S dim arcades,--
+But brilliant, soft, such lights as lovely maids.
+Look loveliest in, shed their luxurious glow
+Upon his mystic Veil's white glittering flow.
+Beside him, 'stead of beads and books of prayer,
+Which the world fondly thought he mused on there,
+Stood Vases, filled with KISIIMEE'S[46] golden wine,
+And the red weepings of the SHIRAZ vine;
+Of which his curtained lips full many a draught
+Took zealously, as if each drop they quaft
+Like ZEMZEM'S Spring of Holiness[47] had power
+To freshen the soul's virtues into flower!
+And still he drank and pondered--nor could see
+The approaching maid, so deep his revery;
+At length with fiendish laugh like that which broke
+From EBLIS at the Fall of Man he spoke:--
+"Yes, ye vile race, for hell's amusement given,
+"Too mean for earth, yet claiming kin with heaven;
+"God's images, forsooth!--such gods as he
+"Whom INDIA serves, the monkey deity;[48]
+"Ye creatures of a breath, proud things of clay,
+"To whom if LUCIFER, as gran-dams say,
+"Refused tho' at the forfeit of heaven's light
+"To bend in worship, LUCIFER was right!
+"Soon shall I plant this foot upon the neck
+"Of your foul race and without fear or check,
+"Luxuriating in hate, avenge my shame,
+"My deep-felt, long-nurst loathing of man's name!--
+"Soon at the head of myriads, blind and fierce
+"As hooded falcons, thro' the universe
+"I'll sweep my darkening, desolating way,
+"Weak man my instrument, curst man my prey!
+
+ "Ye wise, ye learned, who grope your dull way on
+"By the dim twinkling gleams of ages gone,
+"Like superstitious thieves who think the light
+"From dead men's marrow guides them best at night[49]--
+"Ye shall have honors--wealth--yes, Sages, yes--
+"I know, grave fools, your wisdom's nothingness;
+"Undazzled it can track yon starry sphere,
+"But a gilt stick, a bauble blinds it here.
+"How I shall laugh, when trumpeted along
+"In lying speech and still more lying song,
+"By these learned slaves, the meanest of the throng;
+"Their wits brought up, their wisdom shrunk so small,
+"A sceptre's puny point can wield it all!
+
+ "Ye too, believers of incredible creeds,
+"Whose faith enshrines the monsters which it breeds;
+"Who, bolder even than NEMROD, think to rise
+"By nonsense heapt on nonsense to the skies;
+"Ye shall have miracles, ay, sound ones too,
+"Seen, heard, attested, everything--but true.
+"Your preaching zealots too inspired to seek
+"One grace of meaning for the things they speak:
+"Your martyrs ready to shed out their blood,
+"For truths too heavenly to be understood;
+"And your State Priests, sole venders of the lore,
+"That works salvation;--as, on AVA'S shore,
+"Where none _but_ priests are privileged to trade
+"In that best marble of which Gods are made[50];
+"They shall have mysteries--ay precious stuff
+"For knaves to thrive by--mysteries enough;
+"Dark, tangled doctrines, dark as fraud can weave,
+"Which simple votaries shall on trust receive,
+"While craftier feign belief till they believe.
+"A Heaven too ye must have, ye lords of dust,--
+"A splendid Paradise,--pure souls, ye must:
+"That Prophet ill sustains his holy call,
+"Who finds not heavens to suit the tastes of all;
+"Houris for boys, omniscience for sages,
+"And wings and glories for all ranks and ages.
+"Vain things!--as lust or vanity inspires,
+"The heaven of each is but what each desires,
+"And, soul or sense, whate'er the object be,
+"Man would be man to all eternity!
+"So let him--EBLIS! grant this crowning curse,
+"But keep him what he is, no Hell were worse."
+
+ "Oh my lost soul!" exclaimed the shuddering maid,
+Whose ears had drunk like poison all he said:
+MOKANNA started--not abasht, afraid,--
+He knew no more of fear than one who dwells
+Beneath the tropics knows of icicles!
+But in those dismal words that reached his ear,
+"Oh my lost soul!" there was a sound so drear,
+So like that voice among the sinful dead
+In which the legend o'er Hell's Gate is read,
+That, new as 'twas from her whom naught could dim
+Or sink till now, it startled even him.
+
+ "Ha, my fair Priestess!"--thus, with ready wile,
+The impostor turned to greet her--"thou whose smile
+"Hath inspiration in its rosy beam
+"Beyond the Enthusiast's hope or Prophet's dream,
+"Light of the Faith! who twin'st religion's zeal
+"So close with love's, men know not which they feel,
+"Nor which to sigh for, in their trance of heart,
+"The heaven thou preachest or the heaven thou art!
+"What should I be without thee? without thee
+"How dull were power, how joyless victory!
+"Tho' borne by angels, if that smile of thine
+"Blest not my banner 'twere but half divine.
+"But--why so mournful, child? those eyes that shone
+"All life last night--what!--is their glory gone?
+"Come, come--this morn's fatigue hath made them pale,
+"They want rekindling--suns themselves would fail
+"Did not their comets bring, as I to thee,
+"From light's own fount supplies of brilliancy.
+"Thou seest this cup--no juice of earth is here,
+"But the pure waters of that upper sphere,
+"Whose rills o'er ruby beds and topaz flow,
+"Catching the gem's bright color as they go.
+"Nightly my Genii come and fill these urns--
+"Nay, drink--in every drop life's essence burns;
+"'Twill make that soul all fire, those eyes all light--
+"Come, come, I want thy loveliest smiles to-night:
+"There is a youth--why start?--thou saw'st him then;
+"Lookt he not nobly? such the godlike men,
+"Thou'lt have to woo thee in the bowers above;--
+"Tho' _he_, I fear, hath thoughts too stern for love,
+"Too ruled by that cold enemy of bliss
+"The world calls virtue--we must conquer this;
+"Nay, shrink not, pretty sage! 'tis not for thee
+"To scan the mazes of Heaven's mystery:
+"The steel must pass thro' fire, ere it can yield
+"Fit instruments for mighty hands to wield.
+"This very night I mean to try the art
+"Of powerful beauty on that warrior's heart.
+"All that my Haram boasts of bloom and wit,
+"Of skill and charms, most rare and exquisite,
+"Shall tempt the boy;--young MIRZALA'S blue eyes
+"Whose sleepy lid like snow on violets lies;
+"AROUYA'S cheeks warm as a spring-day sun
+"And lips that like the seal of SOLOMON
+"Have magic in their pressure; ZEBA'S lute,
+"And LILLA'S dancing feet that gleam and shoot
+"Rapid and white as sea-birds o'er the deep--
+"All shall combine their witching powers to steep
+"My convert's spirit in that softening trance,
+"From which to heaven is but the next advance;--
+"That glowing, yielding fusion of the breast.
+"On which Religion stamps her image best.
+"But hear me, Priestess!--tho' each nymph of these
+"Hath some peculiar, practised power to please,
+"Some glance or step which at the mirror tried
+"First charms herself, then all the world beside:
+"There still wants _one_ to make the victory sure,
+"One who in every look joins every lure,
+"Thro' whom all beauty's beams concentred pass,
+"Dazzling and warm as thro' love's burning glass;
+"Whose gentle lips persuade without a word,
+"Whose words, even when unmeaning, are adored.
+"Like inarticulate breathings from a shrine,
+"Which our faith takes for granted are divine!
+"Such is the nymph we want, all warmth and light,
+"To crown the rich temptations of to-night;
+"Such the refined enchantress that must be
+"This hero's vanquisher,--and thou art she!"
+
+ With her hands claspt, her lips apart and pale,
+The maid had stood gazing upon the Veil
+From which these words like south winds thro' a fence
+Of Kerzrah flowers, came filled with pestilence;[51]
+So boldly uttered too! as if all dread
+Of frowns from her, of virtuous frowns, were fled,
+And the wretch felt assured that once plunged in,
+Her woman's soul would know no pause in sin!
+
+ At first, tho' mute she listened, like a dream
+Seemed all he said: nor could her mind whose beam
+As yet was weak penetrate half his scheme.
+But when at length he uttered, "Thou art she!"
+All flasht at once and shrieking piteously,
+"Oh not for worlds! "she cried--"Great God! to whom
+"I once knelt innocent, is this my doom?
+"Are all my dreams, my hopes of heavenly bliss,
+"My purity, my pride, then come to this,--
+"To live, the wanton of a fiend! to be
+"The pander of his guilt--oh infamy!
+"And sunk myself as low as hell can steep
+"In its hot flood, drag others down as deep!
+
+"Others--ha! yes--that youth who came to-day--
+"_Not_ him I loved--not him--oh! do but say,
+"But swear to me this moment 'tis not he,
+"And I will serve, dark fiend, will worship even thee!"
+
+"Beware, young raving thing!--in time beware,
+"Nor utter what I can not, must not bear,
+"Even from _thy_ lips. Go--try thy lute, thy voice,
+"The boy must feel their magic;--I rejoice
+"To see those fires, no matter whence they rise,
+"Once more illuming my fait Priestess' eyes;
+"And should the youth whom soon those eyes shall warm,
+"Indeed resemble thy dead lover's form,
+"So much the happier wilt thou find thy doom,
+"As one warm lover full of life and bloom
+"Excels ten thousand cold ones in the tomb.
+"Nay, nay, no frowning, sweet!--those eyes were made
+"For love, not anger--I must be obeyed."
+
+ "Obeyed!--'tis well--yes, I deserve it all--
+"On me, on me Heaven's vengeance can not fall
+"Too heavily--but AZIM, brave and true
+"And beautiful--must _he_ be ruined too?
+"Must _he_ too, glorious as he is, be driven
+"A renegade like me from Love and Heaven?
+"Like me?--weak wretch, I wrong him--not like me;
+"No--he's all truth and strength and purity!
+"Fill up your maddening hell-cup to the brim,
+"Its witchery, fiends, will have no charm for him.
+"Let loose your glowing wantons from their bowers,
+"He loves, he loves, and can defy their powers!
+"Wretch as I am, in his heart still I reign
+"Pure as when first we met, without a stain!
+"Tho' ruined--lost--my memory like a charm
+"Left by the dead still keeps his soul from harm.
+"Oh! never let him know how deep the brow
+"He kist at parting is dishonored now;--
+"Ne'er tell him how debased, how sunk is she.
+"Whom once he loved--once!--_still_ loves dotingly.
+"Thou laugh'st, tormentor,--what!--thou it brand my name?
+"Do, do--in vain--he'll not believe my shame--
+"He thinks me true, that naught beneath God's sky
+"Could tempt or change me, and--so once thought I.
+"But this is past--tho' worse than death my lot,
+"Than hell--'tis nothing while _he_ knows it not.
+"Far off to some benighted land I'll fly,
+"Where sunbeam ne'er shall enter till I die;
+"Where none will ask the lost one whence she came,
+"But I may fade and fall without a name.
+"And thou--curst man or fiend, whate'er thou art,
+"Who found'st this burning plague-spot in my heart,
+"And spread'st it--oh, so quick!--thro' soul and frame,
+"With more than demon's art, till I became
+"A loathsome thing, all pestilence, all flame!--
+"If, when I'm gone"--"Hold, fearless maniac, hold,
+"Nor tempt my rage--by Heaven, not half so bold
+"The puny bird that dares with teasing hum
+"Within the crocodile's stretched jaws to come![52]
+"And so thou'lt fly, forsooth?--what!--give up all
+"Thy chaste dominion in the Haram Hall,
+"Where now to Love and now to ALLA given,
+"Half mistress and half saint, thou hang'st as even
+"As doth MEDINA'S tomb, 'twixt hell and heaven!
+"Thou'lt fly?--as easily may reptiles run,
+"The gaunt snake once hath fixt his eyes upon;
+"As easily, when caught, the prey may be
+"Pluckt from his loving folds, as thou from me.
+"No, no, 'tis fixt--let good or ill betide,
+"Thou'rt mine till death, till death MOKANNA'S bride!
+"Hast thou forgot thy oath?"--
+ At this dread word,
+The Maid whose spirit his rude taunts had stirred
+Thro' all its depths and roused an anger there,
+That burst and lightened even thro' her despair--
+Shrunk back as if a blight were in the breath
+That spoke that word and staggered pale as death.
+
+ "Yes, my sworn bride, let others seek in bowers
+"Their bridal place--the charnel vault was ours!
+"Instead of scents and balms, for thee and me
+"Rose the rich steams of sweet mortality,
+"Gay, flickering death-lights shone while we were wed.
+"And for our guests a row of goodly Dead,
+"(Immortal spirits in their time, no doubt,)
+"From reeking shrouds upon the rite looked out!
+"That oath thou heard'st more lips than thine repeat--
+"That cup--thou shudderest, Lady,--was it sweet?
+"That cup we pledged, the charnel's choicest wine,
+"Hath bound thee--ay--body and soul all mine;
+"Bound thee by chains that, whether blest or curst
+"No matter now, not hell itself shall burst!
+"Hence, woman, to the Haram, and look gay,
+"Look wild, look--anything but sad; yet stay--
+"One moment more--from what this night hath past,
+"I see thou know'st me, know'st me _well_ at last.
+"Ha! ha! and so, fond thing, thou thought'st all true,
+"And that I love mankind?--I do, I do--
+"As victims, love them; as the sea-dog dotes
+"Upon the small, sweet fry that round him floats;
+"Or, as the Nile-bird loves the slime that gives
+"That rank and venomous food on which she lives!--
+
+ "And, now thou seest my _soul's_ angelic hue,
+"'Tis time these _features_ were uncurtained too;--
+"This brow, whose light--oh rare celestial light!
+"Hath been reserved to bless thy favored sight;
+"These dazzling eyes before whose shrouded might
+"Thou'st seen immortal Man kneel down and quake--
+"Would that they _were_ heaven's lightnings for his sake!
+"But turn and look--then wonder, if thou wilt,
+"That I should hate, should take revenge, by guilt,
+"Upon the hand whose mischief or whose mirth
+"Sent me thus mained and monstrous upon earth;
+"And on that race who, tho' more vile they be
+"Than moving apes, are demigods to me!
+"Here--judge if hell, with all its power to damn,
+"Can add one curse to the foul thing I am!"--
+He raised his veil--the Maid turned slowly round,
+Looked at him--shrieked--and sunk upon the ground!
+
+
+On their arrival next night at the place of encampment they were surprised
+and delighted to find the groves all around illuminated; some artists of
+Yamtcheou[53] having been sent on previously for the purpose. On each
+side of the green alley, which led to the Royal Pavilion, artificial
+sceneries of bamboo-work were erected, representing arches, minarets,
+towers, from which hung thousands of silken lanterns painted by the most
+delicate pencils of Canton.--Nothing could be more beautiful than the
+leaves of the mango-trees and acacias shining in the light of the
+bamboo-scenery which shed a lustre round as soft as that of the nights of
+Peristan.
+
+LALLA ROOKH, however, who was too much occupied by the sad story of ZELICA
+and her lover to give a thought to anything else, except perhaps him who
+related it, hurried on through this scene of splendor to her
+pavilion,--greatly to the mortification of the poor artists of
+Yamtcheou,--and was followed with equal rapidity by the Great Chamberlain,
+cursing, as he went, that ancient Mandarin, whose parental anxiety in
+lighting up the shores of the lake, where his beloved daughter had
+wandered and been lost, was the origin of these fantastic Chinese
+illuminations.[54]
+
+Without a moment's delay, young FERAMORZ was introduced, and FADLADEEN,
+who could never make up his mind as to the merits of a poet till he knew
+the religious sect to which he belonged, was about to ask him whether he
+was a Shia or a Sooni when LALLA KOOKH impatiently clapped her hands for
+silence, and the youth being seated upon the musnud near her proceeded:--
+
+
+Prepare thy soul, young AZIM!--thou hast braved
+The bands of GREECE, still mighty tho' enslaved;
+Hast faced her phalanx armed with all its fame,--
+Her Macedonian pikes and globes of fame,
+All this hast fronted with firm heart and brow,
+But a more perilous trial waits thee now,--
+Woman's bright eyes, a dazzling host of eyes
+From every land where woman smiles or sighs;
+Of every hue, as Love may chance to raise
+His black or azure banner in their blaze;
+And each sweet mode of warfare, from the flash
+That lightens boldly thro' the shadowy lash,
+To the sly, stealing splendors almost hid
+Like swords half-sheathed beneath the downcast lid;--
+Such, AZIM, is the lovely, luminous host
+Now led against thee; and let conquerors boast
+Their fields of fame, he who in virtue arms
+A young, warm spirit against beauty's charms,
+Who feels her brightness, yet defies her thrall,
+Is the best, bravest conqueror of them all.
+
+ Now, thro' the Haram chambers, moving lights
+And busy shapes proclaim the toilet's rites;--
+From room to room the ready handmaids hie,
+Some skilled to wreath the turban tastefully,
+Or hang the veil in negligence of shade
+O'er the warm blushes of the youthful maid,
+Who, if between the folds but one eye shone,
+Like SEBA'S Queen could vanquish with that one:[55]--
+
+While some bring leaves of Henna to imbue
+The fingers' ends with a bright roseate hue,[56]
+So bright that in the mirror's depth they seem
+Like tips of coral branches in the stream:
+And others mix the Kohol's jetty dye,
+To give that long, dark languish to the eye,[57]
+Which makes the maids whom kings are proud to call
+From fair Circassia's vales, so beautiful.
+All is in motion; rings and plumes and pearls
+Are shining everywhere:--some younger girls
+Are gone by moonlight to the garden-beds,
+To gather fresh, cool chaplets for their heads;--
+Gay creatures! sweet, tho' mournful, 'tis to see
+How each prefers a garland from that tree
+Which brings to mind her childhood's innocent day
+And the dear fields and friendships far away.
+The maid of INDIA, blest again to hold
+In her full lap the Champac's leaves of gold,[58]
+Thinks of the time when, by the GANGES' flood,
+Her little playmates scattered many a bud
+Upon her long black hair with glossy gleam
+Just dripping from the consecrated stream;
+While the young Arab haunted by the smell
+Of her own mountain flowers as by a spell,--
+The sweet Alcaya[59] and that courteous tree
+Which bows to all who seek its canopy,[60]
+Sees called up round her by these magic scents
+The well, the camels, and her father's tents;
+Sighs for the home she left with little pain,
+And wishes even its sorrow back again!
+
+ Meanwhile thro' vast illuminated halls,
+Silent and bright, where nothing but the falls
+Of fragrant waters gushing with cool sound
+From many a jasper fount is heard around,
+Young AZIM roams bewildered,--nor can guess
+What means this maze of light and loneliness.
+Here the way leads o'er tesselated floors
+Or mats of CAIRO thro' long corridors,
+Where ranged in cassolets and silver urns
+Sweet wood of aloe or of sandal burns,
+And spicy rods such as illume at night
+The bowers of TIBET[61] send forth odorous light,
+Like Peris' wands, when pointing out the road
+For some pure Spirit to its blest abode:--
+And here at once the glittering saloon
+Bursts on his sight, boundless and bright as noon;
+Where in the midst reflecting back the rays
+In broken rainbows a fresh fountain plays
+High as the enamelled cupola which towers
+All rich with Arabesques of gold and flowers:
+And the mosaic floor beneath shines thro'
+The sprinkling of that fountain's silvery dew,
+Like the wet, glistening shells of every dye
+That on the margin of the Red Sea lie.
+
+ Here too he traces the kind visitings
+Of woman's love in those fair, living things
+Of land and wave, whose fate--in bondage thrown
+For their weak loveliness--is like her own!
+On one side gleaming with a sudden grace
+Thro' water brilliant as the crystal vase
+In which it undulates, small fishes shine
+Like golden ingots from a fairy mine;--
+While, on the other, latticed lightly in
+With odoriferous woods of COMORIN,
+Each brilliant bird that wings the air is seen;--
+Gay, sparkling loories such as gleam between
+The crimson blossoms of the coral-tree[62]
+In the warm isles of India's sunny sea:
+Mecca's blue sacred pigeon,[63] and the thrush
+Of Hindostan[64] whose holy warblings gush
+At evening from the tall pagoda's top;--
+Those golden birds that in the spice time drop
+About the gardens, drunk with that sweet food[65]
+Whose scent hath lured them o'er the summer flood;[66]
+And those that under Araby's soft sun
+Build their high nests of budding cinnamon;[67]
+In short, all rare and beauteous things that fly
+Thro' the pure element here calmly lie
+Sleeping in light, like the green birds[68] that dwell
+In Eden's radiant fields of asphodel!
+
+ So on, thro' scenes past all imagining,
+More like the luxuries of that impious King,[69]
+Whom Death's dark Angel with his lightning torch
+Struck down and blasted even in Pleasure's porch,
+Than the pure dwelling of a Prophet sent
+Armed with Heaven's sword for man's enfranchisement--
+Young AZIM wandered, looking sternly round,
+His simple garb and war-boots clanking sound
+But ill according with the pomp and grace
+And silent lull of that voluptuous place.
+
+ "Is this, then," thought the youth, "is this the way
+"To free man's spirit from the deadening sway
+"Of worldly sloth,--to teach him while he lives
+"To know no bliss but that which virtue gives,
+"And when he dies to leave his lofty name
+"A light, a landmark on the cliffs of fame?
+"It was not so, Land of the generous thought
+"And daring deed, thy god-like sages taught;
+"It was not thus in bowers of wanton ease
+"Thy Freedom nurst her sacred energies;
+"Oh! not beneath the enfeebling, withering glow
+"Of such dull luxury did those myrtles grow
+"With which she wreathed her sword when she would dare
+"Immortal deeds; but in the bracing air
+"Of toil,--of temperance,--of that high, rare,
+"Ethereal virtue, which alone can breathe
+"Life, health, and lustre into Freedom's wreath.
+"Who that surveys this span of earth we press.--
+"This speck of life in time's great wilderness,
+"This narrow isthmus 'twixt two boundless seas,
+"The past, the future, two eternities!--
+"Would sully the bright spot, or leave it bare,
+"When he might build him a proud temple there,
+"A name that long shall hallow all its space,
+"And be each purer soul's high resting-place.
+"But no--it cannot be, that one whom God
+"Has sent to break the wizard Falsehood's rod,--
+"A Prophet of the Truth, whose mission draws
+"Its rights from Heaven, should thus profane its cause
+"With the world's vulgar pomps;--no, no,--I see--
+"He thinks me weak--this glare of luxury
+"Is but to tempt, to try the eaglet gaze
+"Of my young soul--shine on, 'twill stand the blaze!"
+
+ So thought the youth;--but even while he defied
+This witching scene he felt its witchery glide
+Thro' every sense. The perfume breathing round,
+Like a pervading spirit;--the still sound
+Of falling waters, lulling as the song
+Of Indian bees at sunset when they throng
+Around the fragrant NILICA, and deep
+In its blue blossoms hum themselves to sleep;[70]
+And music, too--dear music! that can touch
+Beyond all else the soul that loves it much--
+Now heard far off, so far as but to seem
+Like the faint, exquisite music of a dream;
+All was too much for him, too full of bliss,
+The heart could nothing feel, that felt not this;
+Softened he sunk upon a couch and gave
+His soul up to sweet thoughts like wave on wave
+Succeeding in smooth seas when storms are laid;
+He thought of ZELICA, his own dear maid,
+And of the time when full of blissful sighs
+They sat and lookt into each other's eyes,
+Silent and happy--as if God had given
+Naught else worth looking at on this side heaven.
+
+ "Oh, my loved mistress, thou whose spirit still
+"Is with me, round me, wander where I will--
+"It is for thee, for thee alone I seek
+"The paths of glory; to light up thy cheek
+"With warm approval--in that gentle look
+"To read my praise as in an angel's book,
+"And think all toils rewarded when from thee
+"I gain a smile worth immortality!
+"How shall I bear the moment, when restored
+"To that young heart where I alone am Lord.
+"Tho' of such bliss unworthy,--since the best
+"Alone deserve to be the happiest:--
+"When from those lips unbreathed upon for years
+"I shall again kiss off the soul-felt tears,
+"And find those tears warm as when last they started,
+"Those sacred kisses pure as when we parted.
+"O my own life!--why should a single day,
+"A moment keep me from those arms away?"
+
+While thus he thinks, still nearer on the breeze
+Come those delicious, dream-like harmonies,
+Each note of which but adds new, downy links
+To the soft chain in which his spirit sinks.
+He turns him toward the sound, and far away
+Thro' a long vista sparkling with the play
+Of countless lamps,--like the rich track which Day
+Leaves on the waters, when he sinks from us,
+So long the path, its light so tremulous;--
+He sees a group of female forms advance,
+Some chained together in the mazy dance
+By fetters forged in the green sunny bowers,
+As they were captives to the King of Flowers;[71]
+And some disporting round, unlinkt and free,
+Who seemed to mock their sisters' slavery;
+And round and round them still in wheeling flight
+Went like gay moths about a lamp at night;
+While others waked, as gracefully along
+Their feet kept time, the very soul of song
+From psaltery, pipe, and lutes of heavenly thrill,
+Or their own youthful voices heavenlier still.
+And now they come, now pass before his eye,
+Forms such as Nature moulds when she would vie
+With Fancy's pencil and give birth to things
+Lovely beyond its fairest picturings.
+Awhile they dance before him, then divide,
+Breaking like rosy clouds at eventide
+Around the rich pavilion of the sun,--
+Till silently dispersing, one by one,
+Thro' many a path that from the chamber leads
+To gardens, terraces and moonlight meads,
+Their distant laughter comes upon the wind,
+And but one trembling nymph remains behind,--
+Beckoning them back in vain--for they are gone
+And she is left in all that light alone;
+No veil to curtain o'er her beauteous brow,
+In its young bashfulness more beauteous now;
+But a light golden chain-work round her hair,[72]
+Such as the maids of YEZD and SHIRAS wear,[73]
+From which on either side gracefully hung
+A golden amulet in the Arab tongue,
+Engraven o'er with some immortal line
+From Holy Writ or bard scarce less divine;
+While her left hand, as shrinkingly she stood,
+Held a small lute of gold and sandal-wood,
+Which once or twice she touched with hurried strain,
+Then took her trembling fingers off again.
+But when at length a timid glance she stole
+At AZIM, the sweet gravity of soul
+She saw thro' all his features calmed her fear,
+And like a half-tamed antelope more near,
+Tho' shrinking still, she came;--then sat her down
+Upon a musnud's[74] edge, and, bolder grown.
+In the pathetic mode of ISFAHAN[75]
+Touched a preluding strain and thus began:--
+
+There's a bower of roses by BENDEMEER's[76] stream,
+ And the nightingale sings round it all the day long;
+In the time of my childhood 'twas like a sweet dream,
+ To sit in the roses and hear the bird's song.
+
+That bower and its music, I never forget,
+ But oft when alone in the bloom of the year
+I think--is the nightingale singing there yet?
+ Are the roses still bright by the calm BENDEMEER?
+
+No, the roses soon withered that hung o'er the wave,
+ But some blossoms were gathered while freshly they shone.
+And a dew was distilled from their flowers that gave
+ All the fragrance of summer when summer was gone.
+
+Thus memory draws from delight ere it dies
+ An essence that breathes of it many a year;
+Thus bright to my soul, as 'twas then to my eyes,
+ Is that bower on the banks of the calm BENDEMEER!
+
+ "Poor maiden!" thought the youth, "if thou wert sent
+"With thy soft lute and beauty's blandishment
+"To wake unholy wishes in this heart,
+"Or tempt its truth, thou little know'st the art.
+"For tho' thy lips should sweetly counsel wrong,
+"Those vestal eyes would disavow its song.
+"But thou hast breathed such purity, thy lay
+"Returns so fondly to youth's virtuous day,
+"And leads thy soul--if e'er it wandered thence--
+"So gently back to its first innocence,
+"That I would sooner stop the unchained dove,
+"When swift returning to its home of love,
+"And round its snowy wing new fetters twine.
+"Than turn from virtue one pure wish of thine!"
+
+ Scarce had this feeling past, when sparkling thro'
+The gently open'd curtains of light blue
+That veiled the breezy casement, countless eyes
+Peeping like stars thro' the blue evening skies,
+Looked laughing in as if to mock the pair
+That sat so still and melancholy there:--
+And now the curtains fly apart and in
+From the cool air mid showers of jessamine
+Which those without fling after them in play,
+Two lightsome maidens spring,--lightsome as they
+Who live in the air on odors,--and around
+The bright saloon, scarce conscious of the ground,
+Chase one another in a varying dance
+Of mirth and languor, coyness and advance,
+Too eloquently like love's warm pursuit:--
+While she who sung so gently to the lute
+Her dream of home steals timidly away,
+Shrinking as violets do in summer's ray,--
+But takes with her from AZIM'S heart that sigh
+We sometimes give to forms that pass us by
+In the world's crowd, too lovely to remain,
+Creatures of light we never see again!
+
+ Around the white necks of the nymphs who danced
+Hung carcanets of orient gems that glanced
+More brilliant than the sea-glass glittering o'er
+The hills of crystal on the Caspian shore;[77]
+While from their long, dark tresses, in a fall
+Of curls descending, bells as musical
+As those that on the golden-shafted trees
+Of EDEN shake in the eternal breeze,[78]
+Rung round their steps, at every bound more sweet.
+As 'twere the ecstatic language of their feet.
+At length the chase was o'er, and they stood wreathed
+Within each other's arms; while soft there breathed
+Thro' the cool casement, mingled with the sighs
+Of moonlight flowers, music that seemed to rise
+From some still lake, so liquidly it rose;
+And as it swelled again at each faint close
+The ear could track thro' all that maze of chords
+And young sweet voices these impassioned words:--
+
+A SPIRIT there is whose fragrant sigh
+ Is burning now thro' earth and air;
+Where cheeks are blushing the Spirit is nigh,
+ Where lips are meeting the Spirit is there!
+
+His breath is the soul of flowers like these,
+ And his floating eyes--oh! they resemble[79]
+Blue water-lilies,[80] when the breeze
+ Is making the stream around them tremble.
+
+Hail to thee, hail to thee, kindling power!
+ Spirit of Love, Spirit of Bliss!
+Thy holiest time is the moonlight hour,
+ And there never was moonlight so sweet as this.
+
+By the fair and brave
+ Who blushing unite,
+Like the sun and wave,
+ When they meet at night;
+
+By the tear that shows
+ When passion is nigh,
+As the rain-drop flows
+ From the heat of the sky;
+
+By the first love-beat
+ Of the youthful heart,
+By the bliss to meet,
+ And the pain to part;
+
+By all that thou hast
+ To mortals given,
+Which--oh, could it last,
+ This earth were heaven!
+
+We call thee thither, entrancing Power!
+ Spirit of Love! Spirit of Bliss!
+Thy holiest time is the moonlight hour,
+ And there never was moonlight so sweet as this.
+
+Impatient of a scene whose luxuries stole,
+Spite of himself, too deep into his soul,
+And where, midst all that the young heart loves most,
+Flowers, music, smiles, to yield was to be lost,
+The youth had started up and turned away
+From the light nymphs and their luxurious lay
+To muse upon the pictures that hung round,--[81]
+Bright images, that spoke without a sound,
+And views like vistas into fairy ground.
+But here again new spells came o'er his sense:--
+All that the pencil's mute omnipotence
+Could call up into life, of soft and fair,
+Of fond and passionate, was glowing there;
+Nor yet too warm, but touched with that fine art
+Which paints of pleasure but the purer part;
+Which knows even Beauty when half-veiled is best,--
+Like her own radiant planet of the west,
+Whose orb when half retired looks loveliest.[82]
+_There_ hung the history of the Genii-King,
+Traced thro' each gay, voluptuous wandering
+With her from SABA'S bowers, in whose bright eyes
+He read that to be blest is to be wise;--
+_Here_ fond ZULEIKA woos with open arms[83]
+The Hebrew boy who flies from her young charms,
+Yet flying turns to gaze and half undone
+Wishes that Heaven and she could _both_ be won;
+And here MOHAMMED born for love and guile
+Forgets the Koran in his MARY'S smile;--
+Then beckons some kind angel from above
+With a new text to consecrate their love.[84]
+
+With rapid step, yet pleased and lingering eye,
+Did the youth pass these pictured stories by,
+And hastened to a casement where the light
+Of the calm moon came in and freshly bright
+The fields without were seen sleeping as still
+As if no life remained in breeze or rill.
+Here paused he while the music now less near
+Breathed with a holier language on his ear,
+As tho' the distance and that heavenly ray
+Thro' which the sounds came floating took away
+All that had been too earthly in the lay.
+
+Oh! could he listen to such sounds unmoved,
+And by that light--nor dream of her he loved?
+Dream on, unconscious boy! while yet thou may'st;
+'Tis the last bliss thy soul shall ever taste.
+Clasp yet awhile her image to thy heart,
+Ere all the light that made it dear depart.
+Think of her smiles as when thou saw'st them last,
+Clear, beautiful, by naught of earth o'ercast;
+Recall her tears to thee at parting given,
+Pure as they weep, _if_ angels weep in Heaven.
+Think in her own still bower she waits thee now
+With the same glow of heart and bloom of brow,
+Yet shrined in solitude--thine all, thine only,
+Like the one star above thee, bright and lonely.
+Oh! that a dream so sweet, so long enjoyed,
+Should be so sadly, cruelly destroyed!
+
+The song is husht, the laughing nymphs are flown,
+And he is left musing of bliss alone;--
+Alone?--no, not alone--that heavy sigh,
+That sob of grief which broke from some one nigh--
+Whose could it be?--alas! is misery found
+Here, even here, on this enchanted ground?
+He turns and sees a female form close veiled,
+Leaning, as if both heart and strength had failed,
+Against a pillar near;--not glittering o'er
+With gems and wreaths such as the others wore,
+But in that deep-blue, melancholy dress.[85]
+BOKHARA'S maidens wear in mindfulness
+Of friends or kindred, dead or far away;--
+And such as ZELICA had on that day
+He left her--when with heart too full to speak
+He took away her last warm tears upon his cheek.
+
+A strange emotion stirs within him,--more
+Than mere compassion ever waked before;
+Unconsciously he opes his arms while she
+Springs forward as with life's last energy,
+But, swooning in that one convulsive bound,
+Sinks ere she reach his arms upon the ground;--
+Her veil falls off--her faint hands clasp his knees--
+'Tis she herself!--it is ZELICA he sees!
+But, ah, so pale, so changed--none but a lover
+Could in that wreck of beauty's shrine discover
+The once adorned divinity--even he
+Stood for some moments mute, and doubtingly
+Put back the ringlets from her brow, and gazed
+Upon those lids where once such lustre blazed,
+Ere he could think she was _indeed_ his own,
+Own darling maid whom he so long had known
+In joy and sorrow, beautiful in both;
+Who, even when grief was heaviest--when loath
+He left her for the wars--in that worst hour
+Sat in her sorrow like the sweet night-flower,[86]
+When darkness brings its weeping glories out,
+And spreads its sighs like frankincense about.
+
+ "Look up, my ZELICA--one moment show
+"Those gentle eyes to me that I may know
+"Thy life, thy loveliness is not all gone,
+"But _there_ at least shines as it ever shone.
+"Come, look upon thy AZIM--one dear glance,
+"Like those of old, were heaven! whatever chance
+"Hath brought thee here, oh, 'twas a blessed one!
+"There--my loved lips--they move--that kiss hath run
+"Like the first shoot of life thro' every vein,
+"And now I clasp her, mine, all mine again.
+"Oh the delight--now, in this very hour,
+"When had the whole rich world been in my power,
+"I should have singled out thee only thee,
+"From the whole world's collected treasury--
+"To have thee here--to hang thus fondly o'er
+"My own, best, purest ZELICA once more!"
+
+ It was indeed the touch of those fond lips
+Upon her eyes that chased their short eclipse.
+And gradual as the snow at Heaven's breath
+Melts off and shows the azure flowers beneath,
+Her lids unclosed and the bright eyes were seen
+Gazing on his--not, as they late had been,
+Quick, restless, wild, but mournfully serene;
+As if to lie even for that tranced minute
+So near his heart had consolation in it;
+And thus to wake in his beloved caress
+Took from her soul one half its wretchedness.
+But, when she heard him call her good and pure,
+Oh! 'twas too much--too dreadful to endure!
+Shuddering she broke away from his embrace.
+And hiding with both hands her guilty face
+Said in a tone whose anguish would have riven
+A heart of very marble, "Pure!--oh Heaven!"--
+
+ That tone--those looks so changed--the withering blight,
+That sin and sorrow leave where'er they light:
+The dead despondency of those sunk eyes,
+Where once, had he thus met her by surprise,
+He would have seen himself, too happy boy,
+Reflected in a thousand lights of joy:
+And then the place,--that bright, unholy place,
+Where vice lay hid beneath each winning grace
+And charm of luxury as the viper weaves
+Its wily covering of sweet balsam leaves,[87]--
+All struck upon his heart, sudden and cold
+As death itself;--it needs not to be told--
+No, no--he sees it all plain as the brand
+Of burning shame can mark--whate'er the hand,
+That could from Heaven and him such brightness sever,
+'Tis done--to Heaven and him she's lost for ever!
+It was a dreadful moment; not the tears,
+The lingering, lasting misery of years
+Could match that minute's anguish--all the worst
+Of sorrow's elements in that dark burst
+Broke o'er his soul and with one crash of fate
+Laid the whole hopes of his life desolate.
+
+ "Oh! curse me not," she cried, as wild he tost
+His desperate hand towards Heav'n--"tho' I am lost,
+"Think not that guilt, that falsehood made me fall,
+"No, no--'twas grief, 'twas madness did it all!
+"Nay, doubt me not--tho' all thy love hath ceased--
+"I know it hath--yet, yet believe, at least,
+"That every spark of reason's light must be
+"Quenched in this brain ere I could stray from thee.
+"They told me thou wert dead--why, AZIM, why
+"Did we not, both of us, that instant die
+"When we were parted? oh! couldst thou but know
+"With what a deep devotedness of woe
+"I wept thy absence--o'er and o'er again
+"Thinking of thee, still thee, till thought grew pain,
+"And memory like a drop that night and day
+"Falls cold and ceaseless wore my heart away.
+"Didst thou but know how pale I sat at home,
+"My eyes still turned the way thou wert to come,
+"And, all the long, long night of hope and fear,
+"Thy voice and step still sounding in my ear--
+"Oh God! thou wouldst not wonder that at last,
+"When every hope was all at once o'ercast,
+"When I heard frightful voices round me say
+"_Azim is dead_!--this wretched brain gave way,
+"And I became a wreck, at random driven,
+"Without one glimpse of reason or of Heaven--
+"All wild--and even this quenchless love within
+"Turned to foul fires to light me into sin!--
+"Thou pitiest me--I knew thou wouldst--that sky
+"Hath naught beneath it half so lorn as I.
+"The fiend, who lured me hither--hist! come near.
+"Or thou too, _thou_ art lost, if he should hear--
+"Told me such things--oh! with such devilish art.
+"As would have ruined even a holier heart--
+"Of thee, and of that ever-radiant sphere,
+"Where blest at length, if I but served him here,
+"I should for ever live in thy dear sight.
+"And drink from those pure eyes eternal light.
+"Think, think how lost, how maddened I must be,
+"To hope that guilt could lead to God or thee!
+"Thou weep'st for me--do weep--oh, that I durst
+"Kiss off that tear! but, no--these lips are curst,
+"They must not touch thee;--one divine caress,
+"One blessed moment of forgetfulness
+"I've had within those arms and _that_ shall lie
+"Shrined in my soul's deep memory till I die;
+"The last of joy's last relics here below,
+"The one sweet drop, in all this waste of woe,
+"My heart has treasured from affection's spring,
+"To soothe and cool its deadly withering!
+"But thou--yes, thou must go--for ever go;
+"This place is not for thee--for thee! oh no,
+"Did I but tell thee half, thy tortured brain
+"Would burn like mine, and mine go wild again!
+"Enough that Guilt reigns here--that hearts once good
+"Now tainted, chilled and broken are his food.--
+"Enough that we are parted--that there rolls
+"A flood of headlong fate between our souls,
+"Whose darkness severs me as wide from thee
+"As hell from heaven to all eternity!"
+
+ "ZELICA, ZELICA!" the youth exclaimed.
+In all the tortures of a mind inflamed
+Almost to madness--"by that sacred Heaven,
+"Where yet, if prayers can move, thou'lt be forgiven,
+"As thou art here--here, in this writhing heart,
+"All sinful, wild, and ruined as thou art!
+"By the remembrance of our once pure love,
+"Which like a church-yard light still burns above
+"The grave of our lost souls--which guilt in thee
+"Cannot extinguish nor despair in me!
+"I do conjure, implore thee to fly hence--
+"If thou hast yet one spark of innocence,
+"Fly with me from this place"--
+ "With thee! oh bliss!
+"'Tis worth whole years of torment to hear this.
+"What! take the lost one with thee?--let her rove
+"By thy dear side, as in those days of love,
+"When we were both so happy, both so pure--
+"Too heavenly dream! if there's on earth a cure
+"For the sunk heart, 'tis this--day after day
+"To be the blest companion of thy way;
+"To hear thy angel eloquence--to see
+"Those virtuous eyes for ever turned on me;
+"And in their light re-chastened silently,
+"Like the stained web that whitens in the sun,
+"Grow pure by being purely shone upon!
+"And thou wilt pray for me--I know thou wilt--
+"At the dim vesper hour when thoughts of guilt
+"Come heaviest o'er the heart thou'lt lift thine eyes
+"Full of sweet tears unto the darkening skies
+"And plead for me with Heaven till I can dare
+"To fix my own weak, sinful glances there;
+"Till the good angels when they see me cling
+"For ever near thee, pale and sorrowing,
+"Shall for thy sake pronounce my soul forgiven,
+"And bid thee take thy weeping slave to Heaven!
+"Oh yes, I'll fly with thee"--
+ Scarce had she said
+These breathless words when a voice deep and dread
+As that of MONKER waking up the dead
+From their first sleep--so startling 'twas to both--
+Rang thro' the casement near, "Thy oath! thy oath!"
+Oh Heaven, the ghastliness of that Maid's look!--
+"'Tis he," faintly she cried, while terror shook
+Her inmost core, nor durst she lift her eyes,
+Tho' thro' the casement, now naught but the skies
+And moonlight fields were seen, calm as before--
+"'Tis he, and I am his--all, all is o'er--
+"Go--fly this instant, or thou'rt ruin'd too--
+"My oath, my oath, oh God! 'tis all too true,
+"True as the worm in this cold heart it is--
+"I am MOKANNA'S bride--his, AZIM, his--
+"The Dead stood round us while I spoke that vow,
+"Their blue lips echoed it--I hear them now!
+"Their eyes glared on me, while I pledged that bowl,
+"'Twas burning blood--I feel it in my soul!
+"And the Veiled Bridegroom--hist! I've seen to-night
+"What angels know not of--so foul a sight.
+"So horrible--oh! never may'st thou see
+"What _there_ lies hid from all but hell and me!
+"But I must hence--off, off--I am not thine,
+"Nor Heaven's, nor Love's, nor aught that is divine--
+"Hold me not--ha! think'st thou the fiends that sever
+"Hearts cannot sunder hands?--thus, then--for ever!"
+
+With all that strength which madness lends the weak
+She flung away his arm; and with a shriek
+Whose sound tho' be should linger out more years
+Than wretch e'er told can never leave his ears--
+Flew up thro' that long avenue of light,
+Fleetly as some dark, ominous bird of night,
+Across the sun; and soon was out of sight!
+
+
+LALLA ROOKH could think of nothing all day but the misery of those two
+young lovers. Her gayety was gone, and she looked pensively even upon
+FADLAPEEN. She felt, too, without knowing why, a sort of uneasy pleasure
+in imagining that AZIM must have been just such a youth as FERAMORZ; just
+as worthy to enjoy all the blessings, without any of the pangs, of that
+illusive passion, which too often like the sunny apples of Istkahar[88]
+is all sweetness on one side and all bitterness on the other.
+
+As they passed along a sequestered river after sunset they saw a young
+Hindoo girl upon the bank, whose employment seemed to them so strange that
+they stopped their palankeens to observe her. She had lighted a small lamp
+filled with oil of cocoa, and placing it in an earthen dish adorned with a
+wreath of flowers, had committed it with a trembling hand to the stream;
+and was now anxiously watching its progress down the current, heedless of
+the gay cavalcade which had drawn up beside her. LALLA ROOKH was all
+curiosity;--when one of her attendants, who had lived upon the banks of
+the Ganges, (where this ceremony is so frequent that often in the dusk of
+the evening the river is seen glittering all over with lights, like the
+Oton-tala or Sea of Stars,)[89] informed the princess that it was the
+usual way in which the friends of those who had gone on dangerous voyages
+offered up vows for their safe return. If the lamp sunk immediately the
+omen was disastrous; but if it went shining down the stream and continued
+to burn till entirely out of sight, the return of the beloved object was
+considered as certain.
+
+LALLA ROOKH as they moved on more than once looked back to observe how the
+young Hindoo's lamp proceeded; and while she saw with pleasure that it was
+still unextinguished she could not help fearing that all the hopes of this
+life were no better than that feeble light upon the river. The remainder
+of the journey was passed in silence. She now for the first time felt that
+shade of melancholy which comes over the youthful maiden's heart as sweet
+and transient as her own breath upon a mirror; nor was it till she heard
+the lute of FERAMOKZ, touched lightly at the door of her pavilion that she
+waked from the revery in which she had been wandering. Instantly her eyes
+were lighted up with pleasure; and after a few unheard remarks from
+FADLADEEN upon the indecorum of a poet seating himself in presence of a
+Princess everything was arranged as on the preceding evening and all
+listened with eagerness while the story was thus continued:--
+
+
+Whose are the gilded tents that crowd the way,
+Where all was waste and silent yesterday?
+This City of War which, in a few short hours,
+Hath sprung up here, as if the magic powers[90]
+Of Him who, in the twinkling of a star,
+Built the high pillared halls of CHILMINAR,[91]
+Had conjur'd up, far as the eye can see,
+This world of tents and domes and sunbright armory:--
+Princely pavilions screened by many a fold
+Of crimson cloth and topt with balls of gold:--
+Steeds with their housings of rich silver spun,
+Their chains and poitrels glittering in the sun;
+And camels tufted o'er with Yemen's shells[92]
+Shaking in every breeze their light-toned bells!
+
+But yester-eve, so motionless around,
+So mute was this wide plain that not a sound
+But the far torrent or the locust bird[93]
+Hunting among thickets could be heard;--
+Yet hark! what discords now of every kind,
+Shouts, laughs, and screams are revelling in the wind;
+The neigh of cavalry;--the tinkling throngs
+Of laden camels and their drivers' songs;--
+Ringing of arms, and flapping in the breeze
+Of streamers from ten thousand canopies;--[94]
+War-music bursting out from time to time
+With gong and tymbalon's tremendous chime;--
+Or in the pause when harsher sounds are mute,
+The mellow breathings of some horn or flute,
+That far off, broken by the eagle note
+Of the Abyssinian trumpet, swell and float.[95]
+
+Who leads this mighty army?--ask ye "who?"
+And mark ye not those banners of dark hue,
+The Night and Shadow, over yonder tent?--[96]
+It is the CALIPH'S glorious armament.
+Roused in his Palace by the dread alarms,
+That hourly came, of the false Prophet's arms,
+And of his host of infidels who hurled
+Defiance fierce at Islam and the world,[97]
+Tho' worn with Grecian warfare, and behind
+The veils of his bright Palace calm reclined,
+Yet brooked he not such blasphemy should stain,
+Thus unrevenged, the evening of his reign;
+But having sworn upon the Holy Grave[98]
+To conquer or to perish, once more gave
+His shadowy banners proudly to the breeze,
+And with an army nurst in victories,
+Here stands to crush the rebels that o'errun
+His blest and beauteous Province of the Sun.
+
+Ne'er did the march of MAHADI display
+Such pomp before;--not even when on his way
+To MECCA'S Temple, when both land and sea
+Were spoiled to feed the Pilgrim's luxury;[99]
+When round him mid the burning sands he saw
+Fruits of the North in icy freshness thaw,
+And cooled his thirsty lip beneath the glow
+Of MECCA'S sun with urns of Persian snow:--
+Nor e'er did armament more grand than that
+Pour from the kingdoms of the Caliphat.
+First, in the van, the People of the Rock[100]
+On their light mountain steeds of royal stock:[101]
+Then chieftains of DAMASCUS proud to see
+The flashing of their swords' rich marquetry;--[102]
+Men from the regions near the VOLGA'S mouth
+Mixt with the rude, black archers of the South;
+And Indian lancers in white-turbaned ranks
+From the far SINDE or ATTOCK'S sacred banks,
+With dusky legions from the Land of Myrrh,[103]
+And many a mace-armed Moor and Midsea islander.
+
+Nor less in number tho' more new and rude
+In warfare's school was the vast multitude
+That, fired by zeal or by oppression wronged,
+Round the white standard of the impostor thronged.
+Beside his thousands of Believers--blind,
+Burning and headlong as the Samiel wind--
+Many who felt and more who feared to feel
+The bloody Islamite's converting steel,
+Flockt to his banner;--Chiefs of the UZBEK race,
+Waving their heron crests with martial grace;[104]
+TURKOMANS, countless as their flocks, led forth
+From the aromatic pastures of the North;
+Wild warriors of the turquoise hills,--and those[105]
+Who dwell beyond the everlasting snows
+Of HINDOO KOSH, in stormy freedom bred,
+Their fort the rock, their camp the torrent's bed.
+But none of all who owned the Chief's command
+Rushed to that battle-field with bolder hand
+Or sterner hate than IRAN'S outlawed men,
+Her Worshippers of Fire--all panting then[106]
+For vengeance on the accursed Saracen;
+Vengeance at last for their dear country spurned,
+Her throne usurpt, and her bright shrines o'erturned.
+
+From YEZD'S eternal Mansion of the Fire[107]
+Where aged saints in dreams of Heaven expire:
+From BADKU and those fountains of blue flame
+That burn into the CASPIAN, fierce they came,[108]
+Careless for what or whom the blow was sped,
+So vengeance triumpht and their tyrants bled.
+
+Such was the wild and miscellaneous host
+That high in air their motley banners tost
+Around the Prophet-Chief--all eyes still bent
+Upon that glittering Veil, where'er it went,
+That beacon thro' the battle's stormy flood,
+That rainbow of the field whose showers were blood!
+
+Twice hath the sun upon their conflict set
+And risen again and found them grappling yet;
+While streams of carnage in his noontide blaze,
+Smoke up to Heaven--hot as that crimson haze
+By which the prostrate Caravan is awed[109]
+In the red Desert when the wind's abroad.
+"Oh, Swords of God!" the panting CALIPH calls,--
+"Thrones for the living--Heaven for him who falls!"--
+"On, brave avengers, on," MOKANNA cries,
+"And EBLIS blast the recreant slave that flies!"
+Now comes the brunt, the crisis of the day--
+They clash--they strive--the CALIPH'S troops give way!
+MOKANNA'S self plucks the black Banner down,
+And now the Orient World's Imperial crown
+Is just within his grasp--when, hark, that shout!
+Some hand hath checkt the flying Moslem's rout;
+And now they turn, they rally--at their head
+A warrior, (like those angel youths who led,
+In glorious panoply of Heaven's own mail,
+The Champions of the Faith thro BEDER'S vale,)[110]
+Bold as if gifted with ten thousand lives,
+Turns on the fierce pursuers' blades, and drives
+At once the multitudinous torrent back--
+While hope and courage kindle in his track;
+And at each step his bloody falchion makes
+Terrible vistas thro' which victory breaks!
+In vain MOKANNA, midst the general flight,
+Stands like the red moon on some stormy night
+Among the fugitive clouds that hurrying by
+Leave only her unshaken in the sky--
+In vain he yells his desperate curses out,
+Deals death promiscuously to all about,
+To foes that charge and coward friends that fly,
+And seems of _all_ the Great Archenemy.
+The panic spreads--"A miracle!" throughout
+The Moslem ranks, "a miracle!" they shout,
+All gazing on that youth whose coming seems
+A light, a glory, such as breaks in dreams;
+And every sword, true as o'er billows dim
+The needle tracks the lode-star, following him!
+
+Right towards MOKANNA now he cleaves his path,
+Impatient cleaves as tho' the bolt of wrath
+He bears from Heaven withheld its awful burst
+From weaker heads and souls but half way curst,
+To break o'er Him, the mightiest and the worst!
+But vain his speed--tho', in that hour of blood,
+Had all God's seraphs round MOKANNA stood
+With swords o'fire ready like fate to fall,
+MOKANNA'S soul would have defied them all;
+Yet now, the rush of fugitives, too strong
+For human force, hurries even _him_ along;
+In vain he struggles mid the wedged array
+Of flying thousands--he is borne away;
+And the sole joy his baffled spirit knows,
+In this forced flight, is--murdering as he goes!
+As a grim tiger whom the torrent's might
+Surprises in some parched ravine at night,
+Turns even in drowning on the wretched flocks
+Swept with him in that snow-flood from the rocks,
+And, to the last, devouring on his way,
+Bloodies the stream lie hath not power to stay.
+
+"Alla illa Alla!"--the glad shout renew--
+"Alla Akbar"--the Caliph's in MEROU.[111]
+Hang out your gilded tapestry in the streets,
+And light your shrines and chant your ziraleets.[112]
+The swords of God have triumpht--on his throne
+Your Caliph sits and the veiled Chief hath flown.
+Who does not envy that young warrior now
+To whom the Lord of Islam bends his brow,
+In all the graceful gratitude of power,
+For his throne's safety in that perilous hour?
+Who doth not wonder, when, amidst the acclaim
+Of thousands heralding to heaven his name--
+Mid all those holier harmonies of fame
+Which sound along the path of virtuous souls,
+Like music round a planet as it rolls,--
+He turns away--coldly, as if some gloom
+Hung o'er his heart no triumphs can illume;--
+Some sightless grief upon whose blasted gaze
+Tho' glory's light may play, in vain it plays.
+Yes, wretched AZIM! thine is such a grief,
+Beyond all hope, all terror, all relief!
+A dark, cold calm, which nothing now can break.
+Or warm or brighten,--Like that Syrian Lake[113]
+Upon whose surface morn and summer shed
+Their smiles in vain, for all beneath is dead!--
+Hearts there have been o'er which this weight of woe
+Came by long use of suffering, tame and slow;
+But thine, lost youth! was sudden--over thee
+It broke at once, when all seemed ecstasy;
+When Hope lookt up and saw the gloomy Past
+Melt into splendor and Bliss dawn at last--
+'Twas then, even then, o'er joys so freshly blown
+This mortal blight of misery came down;
+Even then, the full, warm gushings of thy heart
+Were checkt--like fount-drops, frozen as they start--
+And there like them cold, sunless relics hang,
+Each fixt and chilled into a lasting pang.
+
+One sole desire, one passion now remains
+To keep life's fever still within his veins,
+Vengeance!--dire vengeance on the wretch who cast
+O'er him and all he loved that ruinous blast.
+For this, when rumors reached him in his flight
+Far, far away, after that fatal night,--
+Rumors of armies thronging to the attack
+Of the Veiled Chief,--for this he winged him back,
+Fleet as the Vulture speeds to flags unfurled,
+And when all hope seemed desperate, wildly hurled
+Himself into the scale and saved a world.
+For this he still lives on, careless of all
+The wreaths that Glory on his path lets fall;
+For this alone exists--like lightning-fire,
+To speed one bolt of vengeance and expire!
+
+But safe as yet that Spirit of Evil lives;
+With a small band of desperate fugitives,
+The last sole stubborn fragment left unriven
+Of the proud host that late stood fronting Heaven,
+He gained MEROU--breathed a short curse of blood
+O'er his lost throne--then past the JIHON'S flood,[114]
+And gathering all whose madness of belief
+Still saw a Saviour in their down-fallen Chief,
+Raised the white banner within NEKSHEB'S gates,[115]
+And there, untamed, the approaching conqueror waits.
+
+Of all his Haram, all that busy hive,
+With music and with sweets sparkling alive,
+He took but one, the partner of his flight,
+One--not for love--not for her beauty's light--
+No, ZELICA stood withering midst the gay.
+Wan as the blossom that fell yesterday
+From the Alma tree and dies, while overhead
+To-day's young flower is springing in its stead.[116]
+Oh, not for love--the deepest Damned must be
+Touched with Heaven's glory ere such fiends as he
+Can feel one glimpse of Love's divinity.
+But no, she is his victim; _there_ lie all
+Her charms for him-charms that can never pall,
+As long as hell within his heart can stir,
+Or one faint trace of Heaven is left in her.
+To work an angel's ruin,--to behold
+As white a page as Virtue e'er unrolled
+Blacken beneath his touch into a scroll
+Of damning sins, sealed with a burning soul--
+This is his triumph; this the joy accurst,
+That ranks him among demons all but first:
+This gives the victim that before him lies
+Blighted and lost, a glory in his eyes,
+A light like that with which hellfire illumes
+The ghastly, writhing wretch whom it consumes!
+
+But other tasks now wait him--tasks that need
+All the deep daringness of thought and deed
+With which the Divs have gifted him--for mark,[117]
+Over yon plains which night had else made dark,
+Those lanterns countless as the winged lights
+That spangle INDIA'S field on showery nights,--[118]
+Far as their formidable gleams they shed,
+The mighty tents of the beleaguerer spread,
+Glimmering along the horizon's dusky line
+And thence in nearer circles till they shine
+Among the founts and groves o'er which the town
+In all its armed magnificence looks down.
+Yet, fearless, from his lofty battlements
+MOKANNA views that multitude of tents;
+Nay, smiles to think that, tho' entoiled, beset,
+Not less than myriads dare to front him yet;--
+That friendless, throneless, he thus stands at bay,
+Even thus a match for myriads such as they.
+"Oh, for a sweep of that dark Angel's wing,
+"Who brushed the thousands of the Assyrian King[119]
+"To darkness in a moment that I might
+"People Hell's chambers with yon host to-night!
+"But come what may, let who will grasp the throne,
+"Caliph or Prophet, Man alike shall groan;
+"Let who will torture him, Priest--Caliph--King--
+"Alike this loathsome world of his shall ring
+"With victims' shrieks and howlings of the slave,--
+"Sounds that shall glad me even within my grave!"
+Thus, to himself--but to the scanty train
+Still left around him, a far different strain:--
+"Glorious Defenders of the sacred Crown
+"I bear from Heaven whose light nor blood shall drown
+"Nor shadow of earth eclipse;--before whose gems
+"The paly pomp of this world's diadems,
+"The crown of GERASHID. the pillared throne
+"Of PARVIZ[120] and the heron crest that shone[121]
+"Magnificent o'er ALI'S beauteous eyes.[122]
+"Fade like the stars when morn is in the skies:
+"Warriors, rejoice--the port to which we've past
+"O'er Destiny's dark wave beams out at last!
+"Victory's our own--'tis written in that Book
+"Upon whose leaves none but the angels look,
+"That ISLAM'S sceptre shall beneath the power
+"Of her great foe fall broken in that hour
+"When the moon's mighty orb before all eyes
+"From NEKSHEB'S Holy Well portentously shall rise!
+"Now turn and see!"--They turned, and, as he spoke,
+A sudden splendor all around them broke,
+And they beheld an orb, ample and bright,
+Rise from the Holy Well and cast its light[123]
+Round the rich city and the plain for miles,--
+Flinging such radiance o'er the gilded tiles
+Of many a dome and fair-roofed imaret
+As autumn suns shed round them when they set.
+Instant from all who saw the illusive sign
+A murmur broke--"Miraculous! divine!"
+The Gheber bowed, thinking his idol star
+Had waked, and burst impatient thro' the bar
+Of midnight to inflame him to the war;
+While he of MOUSSA'S creed saw in that ray
+The glorious Light which in his freedom's day
+Had rested on the Ark, and now again[124]
+Shone out to bless the breaking of his chain.
+
+"To victory!" is at once the cry of all--
+Nor stands MOKANNA loitering at that call;
+But instant the huge gates are flung aside,
+And forth like a diminutive mountain-tide
+Into the boundless sea they speed their course
+Right on into the MOSLEM'S mighty force.
+The watchmen of the camp,--who in their rounds
+Had paused and even forgot the punctual sounds
+Of the small drum with which they count the night,[125]
+To gaze upon that supernatural light,--
+Now sink beneath an unexpected arm,
+And in a death-groan give their last alarm.
+"On for the lamps that light yon lofty screen[126]
+"Nor blunt your blades with massacre so mean;
+"_There_ rests the CALIPH--speed--one lucky lance
+"May now achieve mankind's deliverance."
+Desperate the die--such as they only cast
+Who venture for a world and stake their last.
+But Fate's no longer with him--blade for blade
+Springs up to meet them thro' the glimmering shade,
+And as the clash is heard new legions soon
+Pour to the spot, like bees of KAUZEROON[127]
+To the shrill timbrel's summons,--till at length
+The mighty camp swarms out in all its strength.
+And back to NEKSHEB'S gates covering the plain
+With random slaughter drives the adventurous train;
+Among the last of whom the Silver Veil
+Is seen glittering at times, like the white sail
+Of some tost vessel on a stormy night
+Catching the tempest's momentary light!
+
+And hath not this brought the proud spirit low!
+Nor dashed his brow nor checkt his daring? No.
+Tho' half the wretches whom at night he led
+To thrones and victory lie disgraced and dead,
+Yet morning hears him with unshrinking crest.
+Still vaunt of thrones and victory to the rest;--
+And they believe him!--oh, the lover may
+Distrust that look which steals his soul away;--
+The babe may cease to think that it can play
+With Heaven's rainbow;--alchymists may doubt
+The shining gold their crucible gives out;
+But Faith, fanatic Faith, once wedded fast
+To some dear falsehood hugs it to the last.
+
+And well the Impostor knew all lures and arts,
+That LUCIFER e'er taught to tangle hearts;
+Nor, mid these last bold workings of his plot
+Against men's souls, is ZELICA forgot.
+Ill-fated ZELICA! had reason been
+Awake, thro' half the horrors thou hast seen,
+Thou never couldst have borne it--Death had come
+At once and taken thy wrung spirit home.
+But 'twas not so--a torpor, a suspense
+Of thought, almost of life, came o'er the intense
+And passionate struggles of that fearful night,
+When her last hope of peace and heaven took flight:
+And tho' at times a gleam of frenzy broke,--
+As thro' some dull volcano's veil of smoke
+Ominous flashings now and then will start,
+Which show the fire's still busy at its heart;
+Yet was she mostly wrapt in solemn gloom,--
+Not such as AZIM'S, brooding o'er its doom
+And calm without as is the brow of death
+While busy worms are gnawing underneath--
+But in a blank and pulseless torpor free
+From thought or pain, a sealed-up apathy
+Which left her oft with scarce one living thrill
+The cold, pale victim of her torturer's will.
+
+Again, as in MEROU, he had her deckt
+Gorgeously out, the Priestess of the sect;
+And led her glittering forth before the eyes
+Of his rude train as to a sacrifice,--
+Pallid as she, the young, devoted Bride
+Of the fierce NILE, when, deckt in all the pride
+Of nuptial pomp, she sinks into his tide.[128]
+And while the wretched maid hung down her head,
+And stood as one just risen from the dead
+Amid that gazing crowd, the fiend would tell
+His credulous slaves it was some charm or spell
+Possest her now,--and from that darkened trance
+Should dawn ere long their Faith's deliverance.
+Or if at times goaded by guilty shame,
+Her soul was roused and words of wildness came,
+Instant the bold blasphemer would translate
+Her ravings into oracles of fate,
+Would hail Heaven's signals in her flashing eyes
+And call her shrieks the language of the skies!
+
+But vain at length his arts--despair is seen
+Gathering around; and famine comes to glean
+All that the sword had left unreaped;--in vain
+At morn and eve across the northern plain
+He looks impatient for the promised spears
+Of the wild Hordes and TARTAR mountaineers;
+They come not--while his fierce beleaguerers pour
+Engines of havoc in, unknown before,[129]
+And horrible as new;--javelins, that fly[130]
+Enwreathed with smoky flames thro' the dark sky,
+And red-hot globes that opening as they mount
+Discharge as from a kindled Naphtha fount[131]
+Showers of consuming fire o'er all below;
+Looking as thro' the illumined night they go
+Like those wild birds that by the Magians oft[132]
+At festivals of fire were sent aloft
+Into the air with blazing fagots tied
+To their huge wings, scattering combustion wide.
+All night the groans of wretches who expire
+In agony beneath these darts of fire
+Ring thro' the city--while descending o'er
+Its shrines and domes and streets of sycamore,--
+Its lone bazars, with their bright cloths of gold,
+Since the last peaceful pageant left unrolled,--
+Its beauteous marble baths whose idle jets.
+Now gush with blood,--and its tall minarets
+That late have stood up in the evening glare
+Of the red sun, unhallowed by a prayer;--
+O'er each in turn the dreadful flame-bolts fall,
+And death and conflagration throughout all
+The desolate city hold high festival!
+
+MOKANNA sees the world is his no more;--
+One sting at parting and his grasp is o'er,
+"What! drooping now?"--thus, with unblushing cheek,
+He hails the few who yet can hear him speak,
+Of all those famished slaves around him lying,
+And by the light of blazing temples dying;
+"What!--drooping now!--now, when at length we press
+"Home o'er the very threshold of success;
+"When ALLA from our ranks hath thinned away
+"Those grosser branches that kept out his ray
+"Of favor from us and we stand at length
+"Heirs of his light and children of his strength,
+"The chosen few who shall survive the fall
+"Of Kings and Thrones, triumphant over all!
+"Have you then lost, weak murmurers as you are,
+"All faith in him who was your Light, your Star?
+"Have you forgot the eye of glory hid
+"Beneath this Veil, the flashing of whose lid
+"Could like a sun-stroke of the desert wither
+"Millions of such as yonder Chief brings hither?
+"Long have its lightnings slept--too long--but now
+"All earth shall feel the unveiling of this brow!
+"To-night--yes, sainted men! this very night,
+"I bid you all to a fair festal rite,
+"Where--having deep refreshed each weary limb
+"With viands such as feast Heaven's cherubim
+"And kindled up your souls now sunk and dim
+"With that pure wine the Dark-eyed Maids above
+"Keep, sealed with precious musk, for those they love,--[133]
+"I will myself uncurtain in your sight
+"The wonders of this brow's ineffable light;
+"Then lead you forth and with a wink disperse
+"Yon myriads howling thro' the universe!"
+
+Eager they listen--while each accent darts
+New life into their chilled and hope-sick hearts;
+Such treacherous life as the cool draught supplies
+To him upon the stake who drinks and dies!
+Wildly they point their lances to the light
+Of the fast sinking sun, and shout "To-night!"--
+"To-night," their Chief re-echoes in a voice
+Of fiend-like mockery that bids hell rejoice.
+Deluded victims!--never hath this earth
+Seen mourning half so mournful as their mirth.
+_Here_, to the few whose iron frames had stood
+This racking waste of famine and of blood,
+Faint, dying wretches clung, from whom the shout
+Of triumph like a maniac's laugh broke out:--
+_There_, others, lighted by the smouldering fire,
+Danced like wan ghosts about a funeral pyre
+Among the dead and dying strewed around;--
+While some pale wretch lookt on and from his wound
+Plucking the fiery dart by which he bled,
+In ghastly transport waved it o'er his head!
+
+'Twas more than midnight now--a fearful pause
+Had followed the long shouts, the wild applause,
+That lately from those Royal Gardens burst,
+Where the veiled demon held his feast accurst,
+When ZELICA, alas, poor ruined heart,
+In every horror doomed to bear its part!--
+Was bidden to the banquet by a slave,
+Who, while his quivering lip the summons gave,
+Grew black, as tho' the shadows of the grave
+Compast him round and ere he could repeat
+His message thro', fell lifeless at her feet!
+Shuddering she went--a soul-felt pang of fear
+A presage that her own dark doom was near,
+Roused every feeling and brought Reason back
+Once more to writhe her last upon the rack.
+All round seemed tranquil even the foe had ceased
+As if aware of that demoniac feast
+His fiery bolts; and tho' the heavens looked red,
+'Twas but some distant conflagration's spread.
+But hark--she stops--she listens--dreadful tone!
+'Tis her Tormentor's laugh--and now, a groan,
+A long death-groan comes with it--can this be
+The place of mirth, the bower of revelry?
+
+She enters--Holy ALLA, what a sight
+Was there before her! By the glimmering light
+Of the pale dawn, mixt with the flare of brands
+That round lay burning dropt from lifeless hands,
+She saw the board in splendid mockery spread,
+Rich censers breathing--garlands overhead--
+The urns, the cups, from which they late had quaft
+All gold and gems, but--what had been the draught?
+Oh! who need ask that saw those livid guests,
+With their swollen heads sunk blackening on their breasts,
+Or looking pale to Heaven with glassy glare,
+As if they sought but saw no mercy there;
+As if they felt, tho' poison racked them thro',
+Remorse the deadlier torment of the two!
+While some, the bravest, hardiest in the train
+Of their false Chief, who on the battle-plain
+Would have met death with transport by his side,
+Here mute and helpless gasped;--but as they died
+Lookt horrible vengeance with their eyes' last strain,
+And clenched the slackening hand at him in vain.
+
+Dreadful it was to see the ghastly stare,
+The stony look of horror and despair,
+Which some of these expiring victims cast
+Upon their souls' tormentor to the last;
+Upon that mocking Fiend whose Veil now raised,
+Showed them as in death's agony they gazed,
+Not the long promised light, the brow whose beaming
+Was to come forth, all conquering, all redeeming,
+But features horribler than Hell e'er traced
+On its own brood;--no Demon of the Waste,[134]
+No church-yard Ghoul caught lingering in the light
+Of the blest sun, e'er blasted human sight
+With lineaments so foul, so fierce as those
+The Impostor now in grinning mockery shows:--
+"There, ye wise Saints, behold your Light, your Star--
+"Ye _would_ be dupes and victims and ye _are_.
+"Is it enough? or must I, while a thrill
+"Lives in your sapient bosoms, cheat you still?
+"Swear that the burning death ye feel within
+"Is but the trance with which Heaven's joys begin:
+"That this foul visage, foul as e'er disgraced
+"Even monstrous men, is--after God's own taste;
+"And that--but see!--ere I have half-way said
+"My greetings thro', the uncourteous souls are fled.
+"Farewell, sweet spirits! not in vain ye die,
+"If EBLIS loves you half so well as I.--
+"Ha, my young bride!--'tis well--take thou thy seat;
+"Nay come--no shuddering--didst thou never meet
+"The Dead before?--they graced our wedding, sweet;
+"And these, my guests to-night, have brimmed so true
+"Their parting cups, that _thou_ shalt pledge one too.
+"But--how is this?--all empty? all drunk up?
+"Hot lips have been before thee in the cup,
+"Young bride,--yet stay--one precious drop remains,
+"Enough to warm a gentle Priestess' veins;--
+"Here, drink--and should thy lover's conquering arms
+"Speed hither ere thy lip lose all its charms,
+"Give him but half this venom in thy kiss,
+"And I'll forgive my haughty rival's bliss!
+
+"For, _me_--I too must die--but not like these
+"Vile rankling things to fester in the breeze;
+"To have this brow in ruffian triumph shown,
+"With all death's grimness added to its own,
+"And rot to dust beneath the taunting eyes
+"Of slaves, exclaiming, 'There his Godship lies!'
+"No--cursed race--since first my soul drew breath,
+"They've been my dupes and _shall_ be even in death.
+"Thou seest yon cistern in the shade--'tis filled
+"With burning drugs for this last hour distilled;
+"There will I plunge me, in that liquid flame--
+"Fit bath to lave a dying Prophet's frame!--
+"There perish, all--ere pulse of thine shall fail--
+"Nor leave one limb to tell mankind the tale.
+"So shall my votaries, wheresoe'er they rave,
+"Proclaim that Heaven took back the Saint it gave;--
+"That I've but vanished from this earth awhile,
+"To come again with bright, unshrouded smile!
+"So shall they build me altars in their zeal,
+"Where knaves shall minister and fools shall kneel;
+"Where Faith may mutter o'er her mystic spell,
+"Written in blood--and Bigotry may swell
+"The sail he spreads for Heaven with blasts from hell!
+"So shall my banner thro' long ages be
+"The rallying sign of fraud and anarchy;--
+"Kings yet unborn shall rue MOKANNA'S name,
+"And tho' I die my spirit still the same
+"Shall walk abroad in all the stormy strife,
+"And guilt and blood that were its bliss in life.
+"But hark! their battering engine shakes the wall--
+"Why, _let_ it shake--thus I can brave them all.
+"No trace of me shall greet them when they come,
+"And I can trust thy faith, for--thou'lt be dumb.
+"Now mark how readily a wretch like me
+"In one bold plunge commences Deity!"
+
+He sprung and sunk as the last words were said--
+Quick closed the burning waters o'er his head,
+And ZELICA was left--within the ring
+Of those wide walls the only living thing;
+The only wretched one still curst with breath
+In all that frightful wilderness of death!
+More like some bloodless ghost--such as they tell,
+In the Lone Cities of the Silent dwell,[135]
+And there unseen of all but ALLA sit
+Each by its own pale carcass watching it.
+But morn is up and a fresh warfare stirs
+Throughout the camp of the beleaguerers.
+Their globes of fire (the dread artillery lent
+By GREECE to conquering MAHADI) are spent;
+And now the scorpion's shaft, the quarry sent
+From high balistas and the shielded throng
+Of soldiers swinging the huge ram along,
+All speak the impatient Islamite's intent
+To try, at length, if tower and battlement
+And bastioned wall be not less hard to win,
+Less tough to break down than the hearts within.
+First he, in impatience and in toil is
+The burning AZIM--oh! could he but see
+The impostor once alive within his grasp,
+Not the gaunt lion's hug nor boa's clasp
+Could match thy gripe of vengeance or keep pace
+With the fell heartiness of Hate's embrace!
+
+Loud rings the ponderous ram against the walls;
+Now shake the ramparts, now a buttress falls,
+But, still no breach--"Once more one mighty swing
+"Of all your beams, together thundering!"
+There--the wall shakes--the shouting troops exult,
+"Quick, quick discharge your weightiest catapult
+"Right on that spot and NEKSHEB is our own!"
+'Tis done--the battlements come crashing down,
+And the huge wall by that stroke riven in two
+Yawning like some old crater rent anew,
+Shows the dim, desolate city smoking thro'.
+But strange! no sign of life--naught living seen
+Above, below--what can this stillness mean?
+A minute's pause suspends all hearts and eyes--
+"In thro' the breach," impetuous AZIM cries;
+But the cool CALIPH fearful of some wile
+In this blank stillness checks the troops awhile.--
+Just then a figure with slow step advanced
+Forth from the ruined walls and as there glanced
+A sunbeam over it all eyes could see
+The well-known Silver Veil!--"'Tis He, 'tis He,
+"MOKANNA and alone!" they shout around;
+Young AZIM from his steed springs to the ground--
+"Mine, Holy Caliph! mine," he cries, "the task
+"To crush yon daring wretch--'tis all I ask."
+Eager he darts to meet the demon foe
+Who still across wide heaps of ruin slow
+And falteringly comes, till they are near;
+Then with a bound rushes on AZIM'S spear,
+And casting off the Veil in falling shows--
+Oh!--'tis his ZELICA'S life-blood that flows!
+
+"I meant not, AZIM," soothingly she said,
+As on his trembling arm she leaned her head,
+And looking in his face saw anguish there
+Beyond all wounds the quivering flesh can bear--
+"I meant not _thou_ shouldst have the pain of this:--
+"Tho' death with thee thus tasted is a bliss
+"Thou wouldst not rob me of, didst thou but know
+"How oft I've prayed to God I might die so!
+"But the Fiend's venom was too scant and slow;--
+"To linger on were maddening--and I thought
+"If once that Veil--nay, look not on it--caught
+"The eyes of your fierce soldiery, I should be
+"Struck by a thousand death-darts instantly.
+"But this is sweeter--oh! believe me, yes--
+"I would not change this sad, but dear caress.
+"This death within thy arms I would not give
+"For the most smiling life the happiest live!
+"All that stood dark and drear before the eye
+"Of my strayed soul is passing swiftly by;
+"A light comes o'er me from those looks of love,
+"Like the first dawn of mercy from above;
+"And if thy lips but tell me I'm forgiven,
+"Angels will echo the blest words in Heaven!
+"But live, my AZIM;--oh! to call thee mine
+"Thus once again! _my_ AZIM--dream divine!
+"Live, if thou ever lovedst me, if to meet
+"Thy ZELICA hereafter would be sweet,
+"Oh, live to pray for her--to bend the knee
+"Morning and night before that Deity
+"To whom pure lips and hearts without a stain,
+"As thine are, AZIM, never breathed in vain,--
+"And pray that He may pardon her,--may take
+"Compassion on her soul for thy dear sake,
+"And naught remembering but her love to thee,
+"Make her all thine, all His, eternally!
+"Go to those happy fields where first we twined
+"Our youthful hearts together--every wind
+"That meets thee there fresh from the well-known flowers
+"Will bring the sweetness of those innocent hours
+"Back to thy soul and thou mayst feel again
+"For thy poor ZELICA as thou didst then.
+"So shall thy orisons like dew that flies
+"To Heaven upon the morning's sunshine rise
+"With all love's earliest ardor to the skies!
+"And should they--but, alas, my senses fail--
+"Oh for one minute!--should thy prayers prevail--
+"If pardoned souls may from that World of Bliss
+"Reveal their joy to those they love in this--
+"I'll come to thee--in some sweet dream--and tell--
+"Oh Heaven--I die--dear love! farewell, farewell."
+
+Time fleeted--years on years had past away,
+And few of those who on that mournful day
+Had stood with pity in their eyes to see
+The maiden's death and the youth's agony,
+Were living still--when, by a rustic grave,
+Beside the swift Amoo's transparent wave,
+An aged man who had grown aged there
+By that lone grave, morning and night in prayer,
+For the last time knelt down--and tho' the shade
+Of death hung darkening over him there played
+A gleam of rapture on his eye and cheek,
+That brightened even Death--like the last streak
+Of intense glory on the horizon's brim,
+When night o'er all the rest hangs chill and dim.
+His soul had seen a Vision while he slept;
+She for whose spirit he had prayed and wept
+So many years had come to him all drest
+In angel smiles and told him she was blest!
+For this the old man breathed his thanks and died.--
+And there upon the banks of that loved tide,
+He and his ZELICA sleep side by side.
+
+
+The story of the Veiled Prophet of Khorassan being ended, they were now
+doomed to hear FADLADEEN'S criticisms upon it. A series of disappointments
+and accidents had occurred to this learned Chamberlain during the journey.
+In the first place, those couriers stationed, as in the reign of Shah
+Jehan, between Delhi and the Western coast of India, to secure a constant
+supply of mangoes for the Royal Table, had by some cruel irregularity
+failed in their duty; and to eat any mangoes but those of Mazagong was of
+course impossible.[136] In the next place, the elephant laden with his
+fine antique porcelain,[137] had, in an unusual fit of liveliness,
+shattered the whole set to pieces:--an irreparable loss, as many of the
+vessels were so exquisitely old, as to have been used under the Emperors
+Yan and Chun, who reigned many ages before the dynasty of Tang. His Koran
+too, supposed to be the identical copy between the leaves of which
+Mahomet's favorite pigeon used to nestle, had been mislaid by his
+Koran-bearer three whole days; not without much spiritual alarm to
+FADLADEEN who though professing to hold with other loyal and orthodox
+Mussulmans that salvation could only be found in the Koran was strongly
+suspected of believing in his heart that it could only be found in his own
+particular copy of it. When to all these grievances is added the obstinacy
+of the cooks in putting the pepper of Canara into his dishes instead of
+the cinnamon of Serendib, we may easily suppose that he came to the task
+of criticism with at least a sufficient degree of irritability for the
+purpose.
+
+"In order," said he, importantly swinging about his chaplet of pearls, "to
+convey with clearness my opinion of the story this young man has related,
+it is necessary to take a review of all the stories that have ever"---"My
+good FADLADEEN!" exclaimed the Princess, interrupting him, "we really do
+not deserve that you should give yourself so much trouble. Your opinion of
+the poem we have just heard, will I have no doubt be abundantly edifying
+without any further waste of your valuable erudition."--"If that be all,"
+replied the critic,--evidently mortified at not being allowed to show how
+much he knew about everything but the subject immediately before him--"if
+that be all that is required the matter is easily despatched." He then
+proceeded to analyze the poem, in that strain (so well known to the
+unfortunate bards of Delhi), whose censures were an infliction from which
+few recovered and whose very praises were like the honey extracted from
+the bitter flowers of the aloe. The chief personages of the story were, if
+he rightly understood them, an ill-favored gentleman with a veil over his
+face;--a young lady whose reason went and came according as it suited the
+poet's convenience to be sensible or otherwise;--and a youth in one of
+those hideous Bokharian bonnets, who took the aforesaid gentleman in a
+veil for a Divinity. "From such materials," said he, "what can be
+expected?--after rivalling each other in long speeches and absurdities
+through some thousands of lines as indigestible as the filberts of Berdaa,
+our friend in the veil jumps into a tub of aquafortis; the young lady dies
+in a set speech whose only recommendation is that it is her last; and the
+lover lives on to a good old age for the laudable purpose of seeing her
+ghost which he at last happily accomplishes, and expires. This you will
+allow is a fair summary of the story; and if Nasser, the Arabian merchant,
+told no better, our Holy Prophet (to whom be all honor and glory!) had no
+need to be jealous of his abilities for story-telling."
+
+With respect to the style, it was worthy of the matter;--it had not even
+those politic contrivances of structure which make up for the commonness
+of the thoughts by the peculiarity of the manner nor that stately poetical
+phraseology by which sentiments mean in themselves, like the blacksmith's
+[138] apron converted into a banner, are so easily gilt and embroidered
+into consequence. Then as to the versification it was, to say no worse of
+it, execrable: it had neither the copious flow of Ferdosi, the sweetness
+of Hafez, nor the sententious march of Sadi; but appeared to him in the
+uneasy heaviness of its movements to have been modelled upon the gait of a
+very tired dromedary. The licenses too in which it indulged were
+unpardonable;--for instance this line, and the poem abounded with such;--
+
+ Like the faint, exquisite music of a dream.
+
+"What critic that can count," said FADLADEEN, "and has his full complement
+of fingers to count withal, would tolerate for an instant such syllabic
+superfluities?"--He here looked round, and discovered that most of his
+audience were asleep; while the glimmering lamps seemed inclined to follow
+their example. It became necessary therefore, however painful to himself,
+to put an end to his valuable animadversions for the present and he
+accordingly concluded with an air of dignified candor, thus:--
+
+"Notwithstanding the observations which I have thought it my duty to make,
+it is by no means my wish to discourage the young man:--so far from it
+indeed that if he will but totally alter his style of writing and thinking
+I have very little doubt that I shall be vastly pleased with him."
+
+Some days elapsed after this harangue of the Great Chamberlain before
+LALLA ROOKH could venture to ask for another story. The youth was still a
+welcome guest in the pavilion--to _one_ heart perhaps too dangerously
+welcome;--but all mention of poetry was as if by common consent avoided.
+Though none of the party had much respect for FADLADEEN, yet his censures
+thus magisterially delivered evidently made an impression on them all. The
+Poet himself to whom criticism was quite a new operation, (being wholly
+unknown in that Paradise of the Indies, Cashmere,) felt the shock as it is
+generally felt at first, till use has made it more tolerable to the
+patient;--the Ladies began to suspect that they ought not to be pleased
+and seemed to conclude that there must have been much good sense in what
+FADLADEEN said from its having set them all so soundly to sleep;--while
+the self-complacent Chamberlain was left to triumph in the idea of having
+for the hundred and fiftieth time in his life extinguished a Poet. LALLA
+ROOKH alone--and Love knew why--persisted in being delighted with all she
+had heard and in resolving to hear more as speedily as possible. Her
+manner however of first returning to the subject was unlucky. It was while
+they rested during the heat of noon near a fountain on which some hand had
+rudely traced those well-known words from the Garden of Sadi.--"Many like
+me have viewed this fountain, but they are gone and their eyes are closed
+for ever!"--that she took occasion from the melancholy beauty of this
+passage to dwell upon the charms of poetry in general. "It is true," she
+said, "few poets can imitate that sublime bird which flies always in the
+air and never touches the earth:[139]--it is only once in many ages a
+Genius appears whose words, like those on the Written Mountain last for
+ever:[140]--but still there are some as delightful perhaps, though not so
+wonderful, who if not stars over our head are at least flowers along our
+path and whose sweetness of the moment we ought gratefully to inhale
+without calling upon them for a brightness and a durability beyond their
+nature. In short," continued she, blushing as if conscious of being caught
+in an oration, "it is quite cruel that a poet cannot wander through his
+regions of enchantment without having a critic for ever, like the old Man
+of the Sea, upon his back!"[141]--FADLADEEN, it was plain took this last
+luckless allusion to himself and would treasure it up in his mind as a
+whetstone for his next criticism. A sudden silence ensued; and the
+Princess, glancing a look at FERAMORZ, saw plainly she must wait for a
+more courageous moment.
+
+But the glories of Nature and her wild, fragrant airs playing freshly over
+the current of youthful spirits will soon heal even deeper wounds than the
+dull Fadladeens of this world can inflict. In an evening or two after,
+they came to the small Valley of Gardens which had been planted by order
+of the Emperor for his favorite sister Rochinara during their progress to
+Cashmere some years before; and never was there a more sparkling
+assemblage of sweets since the Gulzar-e-Irem or Rose-bower of Irem. Every
+precious flower was there to be found that poetry or love or religion has
+ever consecrated; from the dark hyacinth to which Hafez compares his
+mistress's hair to be _Cámalatá_ by whose rosy blossoms the heaven of
+Indra is scented.[142] As they sat in the cool fragrance of this
+delicious spot and LALLA ROOKH remarked that she could fancy it the abode
+of that flower-loving Nymph whom they worship in the temples of Kathay,
+[143] or of one of those Peris, those beautiful creatures of the air who
+live upon perfumes and to whom a place like this might make some amends
+for the Paradise they have lost,--the young Poet in whose eyes she
+appeared while she spoke to be one of the bright spiritual creatures she
+was describing said hesitatingly that he remembered a Story of a Peri,
+which if the Princess had no objection he would venture to relate. "It
+is," said he, with an appealing look to FADLADEEN, "in a lighter and
+humbler strain than the other:" then, striking a few careless but
+melancholy chords on his kitar, he thus began:--
+
+
+PARADISE AND THE PERI.
+
+
+One morn a Peri at the gate
+Of Eden stood disconsolate;
+And as she listened to the Springs
+ Of Life within like music flowing
+And caught the light upon her wings
+ Thro' the half-open portal glowing,
+She wept to think her recreant race
+Should e'er have lost that glorious place!
+
+"How happy," exclaimed this child of air,
+"Are the holy Spirits who wander there
+ "Mid flowers that never shall fade or fall;
+"Tho' mine are the gardens of earth and sea
+"And the stars themselves have flowers for me,
+ "One blossom of Heaven out-blooms them all!
+
+"Tho' sunny the Lake of cool CASHMERE
+"With its plane-tree Isle reflected clear,[144]
+ "And sweetly the founts of that Valley fall;
+"Tho' bright are the waters of SING-SU-HAY
+And the golden floods that thitherward stray,[145]
+Yet--oh, 'tis only the Blest can say
+ How the waters of Heaven outshine them all!
+
+"Go, wing thy flight from star to star,
+From world to luminous world as far
+ As the universe spreads its flaming wall:
+Take all the pleasures of all the spheres
+And multiply each thro' endless years
+ One minute of Heaven is worth them all!"
+
+The glorious Angel who was keeping
+The gates of Light beheld her weeping,
+And as he nearer drew and listened
+To her sad song, a tear-drop glistened
+Within his eyelids, like the spray
+ From Eden's fountain when it lies
+On the blue flower which--Bramins say--
+ Blooms nowhere but in Paradise.[146]
+
+"Nymph of a fair but erring line!"
+Gently he said--"One hope is thine.
+'Tis written in the Book of Fate,
+ _The Peri yet may be forgiven
+Who brings to this Eternal gate
+ The Gift that is most dear to Heaven_!
+Go seek it and redeem thy sin--
+'Tis sweet to let the Pardoned in."
+
+Rapidly as comets run
+To the embraces of the Sun;--
+Fleeter than the starry brands
+Flung at night from angel hands[147]
+At those dark and daring sprites
+Who would climb the empyreal heights,
+Down the blue vault the PERI flies,
+ And lighted earthward by a glance
+That just then broke from morning's eyes,
+ Hung hovering o'er our world's expanse.
+
+But whither shall the Spirit go
+To find this gift for Heaven;--"I know
+The wealth," she cries, "of every urn
+In which unnumbered rubies burn
+Beneath the pillars of CHILMINAR:[148]
+I know where the Isles of Perfume are[149]
+Many a fathom down in the sea,
+To the south of sun-bright ARABY;[150]
+I know too where the Genii hid
+The jewelled cup of their King JAMSHID,[151]
+"With Life's elixir sparkling high--
+"But gifts like these are not for the sky.
+"Where was there ever a gem that shone
+"Like the steps of ALLA'S wonderful Throne?
+"And the Drops of Life--oh! what would they be
+"In the boundless Deep of Eternity?"
+
+While thus she mused her pinions fanned
+The air of that sweet Indian land
+Whose air is balm, whose ocean spreads
+O'er coral rocks and amber beds,[152]
+Whose mountains pregnant by the beam
+Of the warm sun with diamonds teem,
+Whose rivulets are like rich brides,
+Lovely, with gold beneath their tides,
+Whose sandal groves and bowers of spice
+Might be a Peri's Paradise!
+But crimson now her rivers ran
+ With human blood--the smell of death
+Came reeking from those spicy bowers,
+And man the sacrifice of man
+ Mingled his taint with every breath
+Upwafted from the innocent flowers.
+Land of the Sun! what foot invades
+Thy Pagods and thy pillared shades--
+Thy cavern shrines and Idol stones,
+Thy Monarch and their thousand Thrones?[153]
+
+'Tis He of GAZNA[154], fierce in wrath
+ He comes and INDIA'S diadems
+Lie scattered in his ruinous path.-
+ His bloodhounds he adorns with gems,
+Torn from the violated necks
+ Of many a young and loved Sultana;[155]
+ Maidens within their pure Zenana,
+ Priests in the very fane he slaughters,
+And chokes up with the glittering wrecks
+ Of golden shrines the sacred waters!
+Downward the PERI turns her gaze,
+And thro' the war-field's bloody haze
+Beholds a youthful warrior stand
+Alone beside his native river,--
+The red blade broken in his hand
+And the last arrow in his quiver.
+"Live," said the Conqueror, "live to share
+"The trophies and the crowns I bear!"
+Silent that youthful warrior stood--
+Silent he pointed to the flood
+All crimson with his country's blood,
+Then sent his last remaining dart,
+For answer, to the Invader's heart.
+
+False flew the shaft tho' pointed well;
+The Tyrant lived, the Hero fell!--
+Yet marked the PERI where he lay,
+ And when the rush of war was past
+Swiftly descending on a ray
+ Of morning light she caught the last--
+Last glorious drop his heart had shed
+Before its free-born spirit fled!
+
+"Be this," she cried, as she winged her flight,
+"My welcome gift at the Gates of Light.
+"Tho' foul are the drops that oft distil
+ "On the field of warfare, blood like this
+ "For Liberty shed so holy is,
+"It would not stain the purest rill
+ "That sparkles among the Bowers of Bliss!
+"Oh, if there be on this earthly sphere
+"A boon, an offering Heaven holds dear,
+"'Tis the last libation Liberty draws
+"From the heart that bleeds and breaks in her cause!"
+"Sweet," said the Angel, as she gave
+The gift into his radiant hand,
+"Sweet is our welcome of the Brave
+ "Who die thus for their native Land.--
+"But see--alas! the crystal bar
+"Of Eden moves not--holier far
+"Than even this drop the boon must be
+"That opes the Gates of Heaven for thee!"
+
+Her first fond hope of Eden blighted,
+ Now among AFRIC'S lunar Mountains[156]
+Far to the South the PERI lighted
+ And sleeked her plumage at the fountains
+Of that Egyptian tide whose birth
+Is hidden from the sons of earth
+Deep in those solitary woods
+Where oft the Genii of the Floods
+Dance round the cradle of their Nile
+And hail the new-born Giant's smile.[157]
+Thence over EGYPT'S palmy groves
+ Her grots, and sepulchres of Kings,[158]
+The exiled Spirit sighing roves
+And now hangs listening to the doves
+In warm ROSETTA'S vale;[159] now loves
+ To watch the moonlight on the wings
+Of the white pelicans that break
+The azure calm of MOERIS' Lake.[160]
+'Twas a fair scene: a Land more bright
+ Never did mortal eye behold!
+Who could have thought that saw this night
+ Those valleys and their fruits of gold
+Basking in Heaven's serenest light,
+Those groups of lovely date-trees bending
+ Languidly their leaf-crowned heads,
+Like youthful maids, when sleep descending
+ Warns them to their silken beds,[161]
+Those virgin lilies all the night
+ Bathing their beauties in the lake
+That they may rise more fresh and bright,
+ When their beloved Sun's awake,
+Those ruined shrines and towers that seem
+The relics of a splendid dream,
+ Amid whose fairy loneliness
+Naught but the lapwing's cry is heard,--
+Naught seen but (when the shadows flitting,
+Fast from the moon unsheath its gleam,)
+Some purple-winged Sultana sitting[162]
+ Upon a column motionless
+And glittering like an Idol bird!--
+Who could have thought that there, even there,
+Amid those scenes so still and fair,
+The Demon of the Plague hath cast
+From his hot wing a deadlier blast,
+More mortal far than ever came
+From the red Desert's sands of flame!
+So quick that every living thing
+Of human shape touched by his wing,
+Like plants, where the Simoom hath past
+At once falls black and withering!
+The sun went down on many a brow
+ Which, full of bloom and freshness then,
+Is rankling in the pest-house now
+ And ne'er will feel that sun again,
+And, oh! to see the unburied heaps
+On which the lonely moonlight sleeps--
+The very vultures turn away,
+And sicken at so foul a prey!
+Only the fierce hyaena stalks[163]
+Throughout the city's desolate walks[164]
+At midnight and his carnage plies:--
+ Woe to the half-dead wretch who meets
+The glaring of those large blue eyes
+ Amid the darkness of the streets!
+
+"Poor race of men!" said the pitying Spirit,
+ "Dearly ye pay for your primal Fall--
+"Some flowerets of Eden ye still inherit,
+ "But the trail of the Serpent is over them all!"
+She wept--the air grew pure and clear
+ Around her as the bright drops ran,
+For there's a magic in each tear
+ Such kindly Spirits weep for man!
+
+Just then beneath some orange trees
+Whose fruit and blossoms in the breeze
+Were wantoning together, free,
+Like age at play with infancy--
+Beneath that fresh and springing bower
+ Close by the Lake she heard the moan
+Of one who at this silent hour,
+ Had thither stolen to die alone.
+One who in life where'er he moved,
+ Drew after him the hearts of many;
+Yet now, as tho' he ne'er were loved,
+ Dies here unseen, unwept by any!
+None to watch near him--none to slake
+ The fire that in his bosom lies,
+With even a sprinkle from that lake
+ Which shines so cool before his eyes.
+No voice well known thro' many a day
+ To speak the last, the parting word
+Which when all other sounds decay
+ Is still like distant music heard;--
+That tender farewell on the shore
+Of this rude world when all is o'er,
+Which cheers the spirit ere its bark
+Puts off into the unknown Dark.
+
+Deserted youth! one thought alone
+ Shed joy around his soul in death
+That she whom he for years had known,
+And loved and might have called his own
+ Was safe from this foul midnight's breath,--
+Safe in her father's princely halls
+Where the cool airs from fountain falls,
+Freshly perfumed by many a brand
+Of the sweet wood from India's land,
+Were pure as she whose brow they fanned.
+
+But see--who yonder comes by stealth,
+ This melancholy bower to seek,
+Like a young envoy sent by Health
+ With rosy gifts upon her cheek?
+'Tis she--far off, thro' moonlight dim
+ He knew his own betrothed bride,
+She who would rather die with him
+ Than live to gain the world beside!--
+Her arms are round her lover now,
+ His livid cheek to hers she presses
+And dips to bind his burning brow
+ In the cool lake her loosened tresses.
+Ah! once, how little did he think
+An hour would come when he should shrink
+With horror from that dear embrace,
+ Those gentle arms that were to him
+Holy as is the cradling place
+ Of Eden's infant cherubim!
+And now he yields--now turns away,
+Shuddering as if the venom lay
+All in those proffered lips alone--
+Those lips that then so fearless grown
+Never until that instant came
+Near his unasked or without shame.
+"Oh! let me only breathe the air.
+"The blessed air, that's breathed by thee,
+"And whether on its wings it bear
+ "Healing or death 'tis sweet to me!
+"There--drink my tears while yet they fall--
+ "Would that my bosom's blood were balm,
+"And, well thou knowst, I'd shed it all
+ "To give thy brow one minute's calm.
+"Nay, turn not from me that dear face--
+ "Am I not thine--thy own loved bride--
+"The one, the chosen one, whose place
+ "In life or death is by thy side?
+"Thinkst thou that she whose only light,
+ "In this dim world from thee hath shone
+"Could bear the long, the cheerless night
+ "That must be hers when thou art gone?
+"That I can live and let thee go,
+"Who art my life itself?--No, no--
+"When the stem dies the leaf that grew
+"Out of its heart must perish too!
+"Then turn to me, my own love, turn,
+"Before, like thee, I fade and burn;
+"Cling to these yet cool lips and share
+"The last pure life that lingers there!"
+She fails--she sinks--as dies the lamp
+In charnel airs or cavern-damp,
+So quickly do his baleful sighs
+Quench all the sweet light of her eyes,
+One struggle--and his pain is past--
+ Her lover is no longer living!
+One kiss the maiden gives, one last,
+ Long kiss, which she expires in giving!
+
+"Sleep," said the PERI, as softly she stole
+The farewell sigh of that vanishing soul,
+As true as e'er warmed a woman's breast--
+"Sleep on, in visions of odor rest
+"In balmier airs than ever yet stirred
+"The enchanted pile of that lonely bird
+"Who sings at the last his own death-lay[165]
+"And in music and perfume dies away!"
+Thus saying, from her lips she spread
+ Unearthly breathings thro' the place
+And shook her sparkling wreath and shed
+ Such lustre o'er each paly face
+That like two lovely saints they seemed,
+ Upon the eve of doomsday taken
+From their dim graves in ordor sleeping;
+ While that benevolent PERI beamed
+Like their good angel calmly keeping
+ Watch o'er them till their souls would waken.
+
+But morn is blushing in the sky;
+ Again the PERI soars above,
+Bearing to Heaven that precious sigh
+ Of pure, self-sacrificing love.
+High throbbed her heart with hope elate
+ The Elysian palm she soon shall win.
+For the bright Spirit at the gate
+ Smiled as she gave that offering in;
+And she already hears the trees
+ Of Eden with their crystal bells
+Ringing in that ambrosial breeze
+ That from the throne of ALLA swells;
+And she can see the starry bowls
+ That lie around that lucid lake
+Upon whose banks admitted Souls
+ Their first sweet draught of glory take![166]
+
+But, ah! even PERIS' hopes are vain--
+Again the Fates forbade, again
+The immortal barrier closed--"Not yet,"
+The Angel said as with regret
+He shut from her that glimpse of glory--
+"True was the maiden, and her story
+"Written in light o'er ALLA'S head
+"By seraph eyes shall long be read.
+"But, PERI, see--the crystal bar
+"Of Eden moves not--holier far
+"Than even this sigh the boon must be
+"That opes the Gates of Heaven for thee."
+
+ Now upon SYRIA'S land of roses[167]
+Softly the light of Eve reposes,
+And like a glory the broad sun
+Hangs over sainted LEBANON,
+Whose head in wintry grandeur towers
+ And whitens with eternal sleet,
+While summer in a vale of flowers
+ Is sleeping rosy at his feet.
+
+To one who looked from upper air
+O'er all the enchanted regions there,
+How beauteous must have been the glow,
+The life, the sparkling from below!
+Fair gardens, shining streams, with ranks
+Of golden melons on their banks,
+More golden where the sunlight falls;--
+Gay lizards, glittering on the walls[168]
+Of ruined shrines, busy and bright
+As they were all alive with light;
+And yet more splendid numerous flocks
+Of pigeons settling on the rocks
+With their rich restless wings that gleam
+Variously in the crimson beam
+Of the warm West,--as if inlaid
+With brilliants from the mine or made
+Of tearless rainbows such as span
+The unclouded skies of PERISTAN.
+And then the mingling sounds that come,
+Of shepherd's ancient reed,[169] with hum
+Of the wild bees of PALESTINE,[170]
+ Banqueting thro' the flowery vales;
+And, JORDAN, those sweet banks of thine
+ And woods so full of nightingales.[171]
+But naught can charm the luckless PERI;
+Her soul is sad--her wings are weary--
+Joyless she sees the Sun look down
+On that great Temple once his own,[172]
+Whose lonely columns stand sublime,
+Flinging their shadows from on high
+Like dials which the Wizard Time
+Had raised to count his ages by!
+
+Yet haply there may lie concealed
+ Beneath those Chambers of the Sun
+Some amulet of gems, annealed
+In upper fires, some tablet sealed
+ With the great name of SOLOMON,
+ Which spelled by her illumined eyes,
+May teach her where beneath the moon,
+In earth or ocean, lies the boon,
+The charm, that can restore so soon
+ An erring Spirit to the skies.
+
+Cheered by this hope she bends her thither;--
+ Still laughs the radiant eye of Heaven,
+ Nor have the golden bowers of Even
+In the rich West begun to wither;--
+When o'er the vale of BALBEC winging
+ Slowly she sees a child at play,
+Among the rosy wild flowers singing,
+ As rosy and as wild as they;
+Chasing with eager hands and eyes
+The beautiful blue damsel-flies,[173]
+That fluttered round the jasmine stems
+Like winged flowers or flying gems:--
+And near the boy, who tired with play
+Now nestling mid the roses lay.
+She saw a wearied man dismount
+ From his hot steed and on the brink
+Of a small imaret's rustic fount
+ Impatient fling him down to drink.
+Then swift his haggard brow he turned
+ To the fair child who fearless sat,
+Tho' never yet hath day-beam burned
+ Upon a brow more fierce than that,--
+Sullenly fierce--a mixture dire
+Like thunder-clouds of gloom and fire;
+In which the PERI'S eye could read
+Dark tales of many a ruthless deed;
+The ruined maid--the shrine profaned--
+Oaths broken--and the threshold stained
+With blood of guests!--_there_ written, all,
+Black as the damning drops that fall
+From the denouncing Angel's pen,
+Ere Mercy weeps them out again.
+Yet tranquil now that man of crime
+(As if the balmy evening time
+Softened his spirit) looked and lay,
+Watching the rosy infant's play:--
+Tho' still whene'er his eye by chance
+Fell on the boy's, its lucid glance
+ Met that unclouded, joyous gaze,
+As torches that have burnt all night
+Tho' some impure and godless rite,
+ Encounter morning's glorious rays.
+
+But, hark! the vesper call to prayer,
+ As slow the orb of daylight sets,
+Is rising sweetly on the air.
+ From SYRIA'S thousand minarets!
+The boy has started from the bed
+Of flowers where he had laid his head.
+And down upon the fragrant sod
+ Kneels[174] with his forehead to the south
+Lisping the eternal name of God
+ From Purity's own cherub mouth,
+And looking while his hands and eyes
+Are lifted to the glowing skies
+Like a stray babe of Paradise
+Just lighted on that flowery plain
+And seeking for its home again.
+Oh! 'twas a sight--that Heaven--that child--
+A scene, which might have well beguiled
+Even haughty EBLIS of a sigh
+For glories lost and peace gone by!
+And how felt _he_, the wretched Man
+Reclining there--while memory ran
+O'er many a year of guilt and strife,
+Flew o'er the dark flood of his life,
+Nor found one sunny resting-place.
+Nor brought him back one branch of grace.
+"There _was_ a time," he said, in mild,
+Heart-humbled tones--"thou blessed child!
+"When young and haply pure as thou
+"I looked and prayed like thee--but now"--
+He hung his head--each nobler aim
+ And hope and feeling which had slept
+From boyhood's hour that instant came
+ Fresh o'er him and he wept--he wept!
+
+Blest tears of soul-felt penitence!
+ In whose benign, redeeming flow
+Is felt the first, the only sense
+ Of guiltless joy that guilt can know.
+"There's a drop," said the PERI, "that down from the moon
+"Falls thro' the withering airs of June
+"Upon EGYPT'S land,[175] of so healing a power,
+"So balmy a virtue, that even in the hour
+"That drop descends contagion dies
+"And health reanimates earth and skies!--
+"Oh, is it not thus, thou man of sin,
+ "The precious tears of repentance fall?
+"Tho' foul thy fiery plagues within
+ "One heavenly drop hath dispelled them all!"
+And now--behold him kneeling there
+By the child's side, in humble prayer,
+While the same sunbeam shines upon
+The guilty and the guiltless one.
+And hymns of joy proclaim thro' Heaven
+The triumph of a Soul Forgiven!
+
+'Twas when the golden orb had set,
+While on their knees they lingered yet,
+There fell a light more lovely far
+Than ever came from sun or star,
+Upon the tear that, warm and meek,
+Dewed that repentant sinner's cheek.
+To mortal eye this light might seem
+A northern flash or meteor beam--
+But well the enraptured PERI knew
+'Twas a bright smile the Angel threw
+From Heaven's gate to hail that tear
+Her harbinger of glory near!
+
+"Joy, joy for ever! my task is done--
+"The Gates are past and Heaven is won!
+"Oh! am I not happy? I am, I am--
+ "To thee, sweet Eden! how dark and sad
+"Are the diamond turrets of SHADUKIAM,[176]
+ "And the fragrant bowers of AMBERABAD!
+
+"Farewell ye odors of Earth that die
+"Passing away like a lover's sigh;--
+"My feast is now of the Tooba Tree[177]
+"Whose scent is the breath of Eternity!
+
+"Farewell, ye vanishing flowers that shone
+ "In my fairy wreath so bright an' brief;--
+"Oh! what are the brightest that e'er have blown
+"To the lote-tree springing by ALLA'S throne[178]
+ "Whose flowers have a soul in every leaf.
+"Joy, joy for ever.--my task is done--
+"The Gates are past and Heaven is won!"
+
+
+"And this," said the Great Chamberlain, "is poetry! this flimsy
+manufacture of the brain, which in comparison with the lofty and durable
+monuments of genius is as the gold filigree-work of Zamara beside the
+eternal architecture of Egypt!" After this gorgeous sentence, which, with
+a few more of the same kind, FADLADEEN kept by him for rare and important
+occasions, he proceeded to the anatomy of the short poem just recited. The
+lax and easy kind of metre in which it was written ought to be denounced,
+he said, as one of the leading causes of the alarming growth of poetry in
+our times. If some check were not given to this lawless facility we should
+soon be overrun by a race of bards as numerous and as shallow as the
+hundred and twenty thousand Streams of Basra.[179] They who succeeded in
+this style deserved chastisement for their very success;--as warriors have
+been punished even after gaining a victory because they had taken the
+liberty of gaining it in an irregular or unestablished manner. What then
+was to be said to those who failed? to those who presumed as in the
+present lamentable instance to imitate the licence and ease of the bolder
+sons of song without any of that grace or vigor which gave a dignity even
+to negligence;--who like them flung the jereed[180] carelessly, but not,
+like them, to the mark;--"and who," said he, raising his voice to excite a
+proper degree of wakefulness in his hearers, "contrive to appear heavy and
+constrained in the midst of all the latitude they allow themselves, like
+one of those young pagans that dance before the Princess, who is ingenious
+enough to move as if her limbs were fettered, in a pair of the lightest
+and loosest drawers of Masulipatam!"
+
+It was but little suitable, he continued, to the grave march of criticism
+to follow this fantastical Peri of whom they had just heard, through all
+her flights and adventures between earth and heaven, but he could not help
+adverting to the puerile conceitedness of the Three Gifts which she is
+supposed to carry to the skies,--a drop of blood, forsooth, a sigh, and a
+tear! How the first of these articles was delivered into the Angel's
+"radiant hand" he professed himself at a loss to discover; and as to the
+safe carriage of the sigh and the tear, such Peris and such poets were
+beings by far too incomprehensible for him even to guess how they managed
+such matters. "But, in short," said he, "it is a waste of time and
+patience to dwell longer upon a thing so incurably frivolous,--puny even
+among its own puny race, and such as only the Banyan Hospital[181] for
+Sick Insects should undertake."
+
+In vain did LALLA ROOKH try to soften this inexorable critic; in vain did
+she resort to her most eloquent commonplaces, reminding him that poets
+were a timid and sensitive race whose sweetness was not to be drawn forth
+like that of the fragrant grass near the Ganges by crushing and trampling
+upon them,[182] that severity often extinguished every chance of the
+perfection which it demanded, and that after all perfection was like the
+Mountain of the Talisman,--no one had ever yet reached its summit.[183]
+Neither these gentle axioms nor the still gentler looks with which they
+were inculcated could lower for one instant the elevation of FADLADEEN'S
+eyebrows or charm him into anything like encouragement or even toleration
+of her poet. Toleration, indeed, was not among the weaknesses of
+FADLADEEN:--he carried the same spirit into matters of poetry and of
+religion, and though little versed in the beauties or sublimities of
+either was a perfect master of the art of persecution in both. His zeal
+was the same too in either pursuit, whether the game before him was pagans
+or poetasters, worshippers of cows, or writers of epics.
+
+They had now arrived at the splendid city of Lahore whose mausoleums and
+shrines, magnificent and numberless where Death appeared to share equal
+honors with Heaven would have powerfully affected the heart and
+imagination of LALLA ROOKH, if feelings more of this earth had not taken
+entire possession of her already. She was here met by messengers
+despatched from Cashmere who informed her that the King had arrived in the
+Valley and was himself superintending the sumptuous preparations that were
+then making in the Saloons of the Shalimar for her reception. The chill
+she felt on receiving this intelligence,--which to a bride whose heart was
+free and light would have brought only images of affection and
+pleasure,--convinced her that her peace was gone for ever and that she was
+in love, irretrievably in love, with young FERAMORZ. The veil had fallen
+off in which this passion at first disguises itself, and to know that she
+loved was now as painful as to love without knowing it had been delicious.
+FERAMORZ, too,--what misery would be his, if the sweet hours of
+intercourse so imprudently allowed them should have stolen into his heart
+the same fatal fascination as into hers;--if, notwithstanding her rank and
+the modest homage he always paid to it, even _he_ should have yielded to
+the influence of those long and happy interviews where music, poetry, the
+delightful scenes of nature,--all had tended to bring their hearts close
+together and to waken by every means that too ready passion which often
+like the young of the desert-bird is warmed into life by the eyes alone!
+[184] She saw but one way to preserve herself from being culpable as well
+as unhappy, and this however painful she was resolved to adopt. FERAMORZ
+must no more be admitted to her presence. To have strayed so far into the
+dangerous labyrinth was wrong, but to linger in it while the clew was yet
+in her hand would be criminal. Though the heart she had to offer to the
+King of Bucharia might be cold and broken, it should at least be pure, and
+she must only endeavor to forget the short dream of happiness she had
+enjoyed,--like that Arabian shepherd who in wandering into the wilderness
+caught a glimpse of the Gardens of Irim and then lost them again for ever!
+
+The arrival of the young Bride at Lahore was celebrated in the most
+enthusiastic manner. The Rajas and Omras in her train, who had kept at a
+certain distance during the journey and never encamped nearer to the
+Princess than was strictly necessary for her safeguard here rode in
+splendid cavalcade through the city and distributed the most costly
+presents to the crowd. Engines were erected in all the squares which cast
+forth showers of confectionery among the people, while the artisans in
+chariots[185] adorned with tinsel and flying streamers exhibited the
+badges of their respective trades through the streets. Such brilliant
+displays of life and pageantry among the palaces and domes and gilded
+minarets of Lahore made the city altogether like a place of
+enchantment;--particularly on the day when LALLA ROOKH set out again upon
+her journey, when she was accompanied to the gate by all the fairest and
+richest of the nobility and rode along between ranks of beautiful boys and
+girls who kept waving over their heads plates of gold and silver
+flowers,[186] and then threw them around to be gathered by the populace.
+
+For many days after their departure from Lahore a considerable degree of
+gloom hung over the whole party. LALLA ROOKH, who had intended to make
+illness her excuse for not admitting the young minstrel, as usual, to the
+pavilion, soon found that to feign indisposition was unnecessary;--
+FADLADEEN felt the loss of the good road they had hitherto travelled and
+was very near cursing Jehan-Guire (of blessed memory!) for not having
+continued his delectable alley of trees[187] a least as far as the
+mountains of Cashmere;--while the Ladies who had nothing now to do all day
+but to be fanned by peacocks' feathers and listen to FADLADEEN seemed
+heartily weary of the life they led and in spite of all the Great
+Chamberlain's criticisms were so tasteless as to wish for the poet again.
+One evening as they were proceeding to their place of rest for the night
+the Princess who for the freer enjoyment of the air had mounted her
+favorite Arabian palfrey, in passing by a small grove heard the notes of a
+lute from within its leaves and a voice which she but too well knew
+singing the following words:--
+
+ Tell me not of joys above,
+ If that world can give no bliss,
+ Truer, happier than the Love
+ Which enslaves our souls in this.
+
+ Tell me not of Houris' eyes;--
+ Far from me their dangerous glow.
+ If those looks that light the skies
+ Wound like some that burn below.
+
+ Who that feels what Love is here,
+ All its falsehood--all its pain--
+ Would, for even Elysium's sphere,
+ Risk the fatal dream again?
+
+ Who that midst a desert's heat
+ Sees the waters fade away
+ Would not rather die than meet
+ Streams again as false as they?
+
+The tone of melancholy defiance in which these words were uttered went to
+LALLA ROOKH'S heart;--and as she reluctantly rode on she could not help
+feeling it to be a sad but still sweet certainty that FERAMORZ was to the
+full as enamored and miserable as herself.
+
+The place where they encamped that evening was the first delightful spot
+they had come to since they left Lahore. On one side of them was a grove
+full of small Hindoo temples and planted with the most graceful trees of
+the East, where the tamarind, the cassia, and the silken plantains of
+Ceylon were mingled in rich contrast with the high fan-like foliage of the
+Palmyra,--that favorite tree of the luxurious bird that lights up the
+chambers of its nest with fire-flies.[188]. In the middle of the lawn
+where the pavilion stood there was a tank surrounded by small mango-trees
+on the clear cold waters of which floated multitudes of the beautiful red
+lotus,[189] while at a distance stood the ruins of a strange and awful-
+looking tower which seemed old enough to have been the temple of some
+religion no longer known and which spoke the voice of desolation in the
+midst of all that bloom and loveliness. This singular ruin excited the
+wonder and conjectures of all. LALLA ROOKH guessed in vain, and the all-
+pretending FADLADEEN who had never till this journey been beyond the
+precincts of Delhi was proceeding most learnedly to show that he knew
+nothing whatever about the matter, when one of the Ladies suggested that
+perhaps FERAMORZ could satisfy their curiosity. They were now approaching
+his native mountains and this tower might perhaps be a relic of some of
+those dark superstitions which had prevailed in that country before the
+light of Islam dawned upon it. The Chamberlain who usually preferred his
+own ignorance to the best knowledge that any one else could give him was
+by no means pleased with this officious reference, and the Princess too
+was about to interpose a faint word of objection, but before either of
+them could speak a slave was despatched for FERAMORZ, who in a very few
+minutes made his appearance before them--looking so pale and unhappy in
+LALLA ROOKH'S eyes that she repented already of her cruelty in having so
+long excluded him.
+
+That venerable tower he told them was the remains of an ancient Fire-
+Temple, built by those Ghebers or Persians of the old religion, who many
+hundred years since had fled hither from the Arab conquerors, preferring
+liberty and their altars in a foreign land to the alternative of apostasy
+or persecution in their own. It was impossible, he added, not to feel
+interested in the many glorious but unsuccessful struggles which had been
+made by these original natives of Persia to cast off the yoke of their
+bigoted conquerors. Like their own Fire in the Burning Field at Bakou when
+suppressed in one place they had but broken out with fresh flame in
+another; and as a native of Cashmere, of that fair and Holy Valley which
+had in the same manner become the prey of strangers[190] and seen her
+ancient shrines and native princes swept away before the march of her
+intolerant invaders he felt a sympathy, he owned, with the sufferings of
+the persecuted Ghebers which every monument like this before them but
+tended more powerfully to awaken.
+
+It was the first time that FERAMORZ had ever ventured upon so much
+_prose_ before FADLADEEN and it may easily be conceived what effect such
+prose as this must have produced upon that most orthodox and most pagan-
+hating personage. He sat for some minutes aghast, ejaculating only at
+intervals, "Bigoted conquerors!--sympathy with Fire-worshippers!"[191]--
+while FERAMORZ happy to take advantage of this almost speechless horror of
+the Chamberlain proceeded to say that he knew a melancholy story connected
+with the events of one of those struggles of the brave Fire-worshippers
+against their Arab masters, which if the evening was not too far advanced
+he should have much pleasure in being allowed to relate to the Princess.
+It was impossible for LALLA ROOKH to refuse;--he had never before looked
+half so animated, and when he spoke of the Holy Valley his eyes had
+sparkled she thought like the talismanic characters on the scimitar of
+Solomon. Her consent was therefore most readily granted; and while
+FADLADEEN sat in unspeakable dismay, expecting treason and abomination in
+every line, the poet thus began his story of the Fire-worshippers:
+
+
+THE FIRE-WORSHIPPERS.
+
+
+'Tis moonlight over OMAN'S SEA;[192]
+ Her banks of pearl and palmy isles
+Bask in the night-beam beauteously
+ And her blue waters sleep in smiles.
+'Tis moonlight in HARMOZIA'S[193] walls,
+And through her EMIR'S porphyry halls
+Where some hours since was heard the swell
+Of trumpets and the clash of zel[194]
+Bidding the bright-eyed sun farewell;--
+The peaceful sun whom better suits
+ The music of the bulbul's nest
+Or the light touch of lovers' lutes
+ To sing him to his golden rest.
+All husht--there's not a breeze in motion;
+The shore is silent as the ocean.
+If zephyrs come, so light they come.
+ Nor leaf is stirred nor wave is driven;--
+The wind-tower on the EMIR'S dome[195]
+ Can hardly win a breath from heaven.
+
+Even he, that tyrant Arab, sleeps
+Calm, while a nation round him weeps,
+While curses load the air he breathes
+And falchions from unnumbered sheaths
+Are starting to avenge the shame
+His race hath brought on IRAN'S[196]name.
+Hard, heartless Chief, unmoved alike
+Mid eyes that weep and swords that strike;
+One of that saintly, murderous brood,
+ To carnage and the Koran given,
+Who think thro' unbelievers' blood
+ Lies their directest path to heaven,--
+One who will pause and kneel unshod
+ In the warm blood his hand hath poured,
+To mutter o'er some text of God
+ Engraven on his reeking sword;[197]
+Nay, who can coolly note the line,
+The letter of those words divine,
+To which his blade with searching art
+Had sunk into its victim's heart!
+
+Just ALLA! what must be thy look
+ When such a wretch before thee stands
+Unblushing, with thy Sacred Book,--
+ Turning the leaves with bloodstained hands,
+And wresting from its page sublime
+His creed of lust and hate and crime;--
+Even as those bees of TREBIZOND,
+ Which from the sunniest flowers that glad
+With their pure smile the gardens round,
+ Draw venom forth that drives men mad.[198]
+Never did fierce Arabia send
+ A satrap forth more direly great;
+Never was IRAN doomed to bend
+ Beneath a yoke of deadlier weight.
+Her throne had fallen--her pride was crusht--
+Her sons were willing slaves, nor blusht,
+In their own land,--no more their own,--
+To crouch beneath a stranger's throne.
+Her towers where MITHRA once had burned.
+To Moslem shrines--oh shame!--were turned,
+Where slaves converted by the sword,
+Their mean, apostate worship poured,
+And curst the faith their sires adored.
+Yet has she hearts, mid all this ill,
+O'er all this wreck high buoyant still
+With hope and vengeance;--hearts that yet--
+ Like gems, in darkness, issuing rays
+They've treasured from the sun that's set,--
+ Beam all the light of long-lost days!
+And swords she hath, nor weak nor slow
+ To second all such hearts can dare:
+As he shall know, well, dearly know.
+ Who sleeps in moonlight luxury there,
+Tranquil as if his spirit lay
+Becalmed in Heaven's approving ray.
+Sleep on--for purer eyes than thine
+Those waves are husht, those planets shine;
+Sleep on and be thy rest unmoved
+ By the white moonbeam's dazzling power;--
+None but the loving and the loved
+ Should be awake at this sweet hour.
+
+And see--where high above those rocks
+ That o'er the deep their shadows fling.
+Yon turret stands;--where ebon locks,
+ As glossy as the heron's wing
+ Upon the turban of a king,[199]
+Hang from the lattice, long and wild,--
+'Tis she, that EMIR'S blooming child,
+All truth and tenderness and grace,
+Tho' born of such ungentle race;--
+An image of Youth's radiant Fountain
+Springing in a desolate mountain![200]
+
+Oh what a pure and sacred thing
+ Is Beauty curtained from the sight
+Of the gross world, illumining
+ One only mansion with her light!
+Unseen by man's disturbing eye,--
+ The flower that blooms beneath the sea,
+Too deep for sunbeams, doth not lie
+ Hid in more chaste obscurity.
+So, HINDA. have thy face and mind,
+Like holy mysteries, lain enshrined.
+And oh! what transport for a lover
+ To lift the veil that shades them o'er!--
+Like those who all at once discover
+ In the lone deep some fairy shore
+ Where mortal never trod before,
+And sleep and wake in scented airs
+No lip had ever breathed but theirs.
+
+Beautiful are the maids that glide
+ On summer-eves thro' YEMEN'S[201] dales,
+And bright the glancing looks they hide
+ Behind their litters' roseate veils;--
+And brides as delicate and fair
+As the white jasmine flowers they wear,
+Hath YEMEN in her blissful clime,
+ Who lulled in cool kiosk or bower,[202]
+Before their mirrors count the time[203]
+ And grow still lovelier every hour.
+But never yet hath bride or maid
+ In ARABY'S gay Haram smiled.
+Whose boasted brightness would not fade
+ Before AL HASSAN'S blooming child.
+
+ Light as the angel shapes that bless
+An infant's dream, yet not the less
+Rich in all woman's loveliness;--
+With eyes so pure that from their ray
+Dark Vice would turn abasht away,
+Blinded like serpents when they gaze
+Upon the emerald's virgin blaze;[204]--
+Yet filled with all youth's sweet desires,
+Mingling the meek and vestal fires
+Of other worlds with all the bliss,
+The fond, weak tenderness of this:
+A soul too more than half divine,
+ Where, thro' some shades of earthly feeling,
+Religion's softened glories shine,
+ Like light thro' summer foliage stealing,
+Shedding a glow of such mild hue,
+So warm and yet so shadowy too,
+As makes the very darkness there
+More beautiful than light elsewhere.
+
+Such is the maid who at this hour
+ Hath risen from her restless sleep
+And sits alone in that high bower,
+ Watching the still and shining deep.
+Ah! 'twas not thus,--with tearful eyes
+ And beating heart,--she used to gaze
+On the magnificent earth and skies,
+ In her own land, in happier days.
+Why looks she now so anxious down
+Among those rocks whose rugged frown
+ Blackens the mirror of the deep?
+Whom waits she all this lonely night?
+ Too rough the rocks, too bold the steep,
+For man to scale that turret's height!--
+
+So deemed at least her thoughtful sire,
+ When high, to catch the cool night-air
+After the day-beam's withering fire,[205]
+ He built her bower of freshness there,
+And had it deckt with costliest skill
+ And fondly thought it safe as fair:--
+Think, reverend dreamer! think so still,
+ Nor wake to learn what Love can dare;--
+Love, all defying Love, who sees
+No charm in trophies won with ease;--
+Whose rarest, dearest fruits of bliss
+Are plucked on Danger's precipice!
+Bolder than they who dare not dive
+ For pearls but when the sea's at rest,
+Love, in the tempest most alive,
+ Hath ever held that pearl the best
+He finds beneath the stormiest water.
+Yes, ARABY'S unrivalled daughter,
+Tho' high that tower, that rock-way rude,
+ There's one who but to kiss thy cheek
+Would climb the untrodden solitude
+Of ARARAT'S tremendous peak,[206]
+And think its steeps, tho' dark and dread,
+Heaven's pathways, if to thee they led!
+Even now thou seest the flashing spray,
+That lights his oar's impatient way;--
+Even now thou hearest the sudden shock
+Of his swift bark against the rock,
+And stretchest down thy arms of snow
+As if to lift him from below!
+Like her to whom at dead of night
+The bridegroom with his locks of light[207]
+Came in the flush of love and pride
+And scaled the terrace of his bride;--
+When as she saw him rashly spring,
+And midway up in danger cling,
+She flung him down her long black hair,
+Exclaiming breathless, "There, love, there!"
+And scarce did manlier nerve uphold
+ The hero ZAL in that fond hour,
+Than wings the youth who, fleet and bold,
+ Now climbs the rocks to HINDA'S bower.
+See-light as up their granite steeps
+The rock-goats of ARABIA clamber,[208]
+Fearless from crag to crag he leaps,
+ And now is in the maiden's chamber.
+She loves--but knows not whom she loves,
+ Nor what his race, nor whence he came;--
+Like one who meets in Indian groves
+ Some beauteous bird without a name;
+Brought by the last ambrosial breeze
+From isles in the undiscovered seas,
+To show his plumage for a day
+To wondering eyes and wing away!
+Will he thus fly--her nameless lover?
+ ALLA forbid! 'twas by a moon
+As fair as this, while singing over
+Some ditty to her soft Kanoon,
+Alone, at this same witching hour,
+ She first beheld his radiant eyes
+Gleam thro' the lattice of the bower,
+ Where nightly now they mix their sighs;
+And thought some spirit of the air
+(For what could waft a mortal there?)
+Was pausing on his moonlight way
+To listen to her lonely lay!
+This fancy ne'er hath left her mind:
+ And--tho', when terror's swoon had past,
+She saw a youth of mortal kind
+ Before her in obeisance cast,--
+Yet often since, when he hath spoken
+Strange, awful words,--and gleams have broken
+From his dark eyes, too bright to bear,
+ Oh! she hath feared her soul was given
+To some unhallowed child of air,
+ Some erring spirit cast from heaven,
+Like those angelic youths of old
+Who burned for maids of mortal mould,
+Bewildered left the glorious skies
+And lost their heaven for woman's eyes.
+Fond girl! nor fiend nor angel he
+Who woos thy young simplicity;
+But one of earth's impassioned sons,
+ As warm in love, as fierce in ire
+As the best heart whose current runs
+ Full of the Day-God's living fire.
+
+But quenched to-night that ardor seems,
+ And pale his cheek and sunk his brow;--
+Never before but in her dreams
+ Had she beheld him pale as now:
+And those were dreams of troubled sleep
+From which 'twas joy to wake and weep;
+Visions that will not be forgot,
+ But sadden every waking scene
+Like warning ghosts that leave the spot
+ All withered where they once have been.
+
+ "How sweetly," said the trembling maid,
+Of her own gentle voice afraid,
+So long had they in silence stood
+Looking upon that tranquil flood--
+"How sweetly does the moonbeam smile
+"To-night upon yon leafy isle!
+"Oft, in my fancy's wanderings,
+"I've wisht that little isle had wings,
+"And we within its fairy bowers
+ "Were wafted off to seas unknown,
+"Where not a pulse should beat but ours,
+ "And we might live, love, die, alone!
+"Far from the cruel and the cold,--
+ "Where the bright eyes of angels only
+"Should come around us to behold
+ "A paradise so pure and lonely.
+"Would this be world enough for thee?"--
+Playful she turned that he might see
+ The passing smile her cheek put on;
+But when she markt how mournfully
+ His eye met hers, that smile was gone;
+And bursting into heart-felt tears,
+"Yes, yes," she cried, "my hourly fears,
+"My dreams have boded all too right--
+"We part--for ever part--tonight!
+"I knew, I knew it _could_ not last--
+"'Twas bright, 'twas heavenly, but 'tis past!
+"Oh! ever thus from childhood's hour
+"I've seen my fondest hopes decay;
+"I never loved a tree or flower,
+ "But 'twas the first to fade away.
+"I never nurst a dear gazelle
+ "To glad me with its soft black eye
+"But when it came to know me well
+ "And love me it was sure to die I
+"Now too--the joy most like divine
+ "Of all I ever dreamt or knew,
+"To see thee, hear thee, call thee mine,--
+ "Oh misery! must I lose _that_ too?
+"Yet go--on peril's brink we meet;--
+ "Those frightful rocks--that treacherous sea--
+"No, never come again--tho' sweet,
+ "Tho' heaven, it may be death to thee.
+"Farewell--and blessings on thy way,
+ "Where'er thou goest, beloved stranger!
+"Better to sit and watch that ray
+"And think thee safe, tho' far away,
+ "Than have thee near me and in danger!"
+
+"Danger!--oh, tempt me not to boast"--
+The youth exclaimed--"thou little know'st
+"What he can brave, who, born and nurst
+"In Danger's paths, has dared her worst;
+"Upon whose ear the signal-word
+ "Of strife and death is hourly breaking;
+"Who sleeps with head upon the sword
+ "His fevered hand must grasp in waking.
+"Danger!"--
+ "Say on--thou fearest not then,
+"And we may meet--oft meet again?"
+
+"Oh! look not so--beneath the skies
+"I now fear nothing but those eyes.
+"If aught on earth could charm or force
+"My spirit from its destined course,--
+"If aught could make this soul forget
+"The bond to which its seal is set,
+"'Twould be those eyes;--they, only they,
+"Could melt that sacred seal away!
+"But no--'tis fixt--_my_ awful doom
+"Is fixt--on this side of the tomb
+"We meet no more;--why, why did Heaven
+"Mingle two souls that earth has riven,
+"Has rent asunder wide as ours?
+"Oh, Arab maid, as soon the Powers
+"Of Light and Darkness may combine.
+"As I be linkt with thee or thine!
+"Thy Father"--
+ "Holy ALLA save
+ "His gray head from that lightning glance!
+"Thou knowest him not--he loves the brave;
+ "Nor lives there under heaven's expanse
+"One who would prize, would worship thee
+"And thy bold spirit more than he.
+"Oft when in childhood I have played
+ "With the bright falchion by his side,
+"I've heard him swear his lisping maid
+ "In time should be a warrior's bride.
+"And still whene'er at Haram hours
+"I take him cool sherbets and flowers,
+"He tells me when in playful mood
+ "A hero shall my bridegroom be,
+"Since maids are best in battle wooed,
+ "And won with shouts of victory!
+"Nay, turn not from me--thou alone
+"Art formed to make both hearts thy own.
+"Go--join his sacred ranks--thou knowest
+ "The unholy strife these Persians wage:--
+"Good Heaven, that frown!--even now thou glowest
+ "With more than mortal warrior's rage.
+"Haste to the camp by morning's light,
+"And when that sword is raised in fight,
+"Oh still remember, Love and I
+"Beneath its shadow trembling lie!
+"One victory o'er those Slaves of Fire,
+"Those impious Ghebers whom my sire
+"Abhors"--
+ "Hold, hold--thy words are death"--
+ The stranger cried as wild he flung
+His mantle back and showed beneath
+ The Gheber belt that round him clung.[209]--
+"Here, maiden, look--weep--blush to see
+"All that thy sire abhors in me!
+"Yes--_I_ am of that impious race,
+ "Those Slaves of Fire who, morn and even,
+"Hail their Creator's dwelling-place
+ "Among the living lights of heaven:[210]
+"Yes--_I_ am of that outcast few,
+"To IRAN and to vengeance true,
+"Who curse the hour your Arabs came
+"To desolate our shrines of flame,
+"And swear before God's burning eye
+"To break our country's chains or die!
+"Thy bigot sire,--nay, tremble not,--
+ "He who gave birth to those dear eyes
+"With me is sacred as the spot
+ "From which our fires of worship rise!
+"But know--'twas he I sought that night,
+ "When from my watch-boat on the sea
+"I caught this turret's glimmering light,
+ "And up the rude rocks desperately
+"Rusht to my prey--thou knowest the rest--
+"I climbed the gory vulture's nest,
+"And found a trembling dove within;--
+"Thine, thine the victory--thine the sin--
+"If Love hath made one thought his own,
+"That Vengeance claims first--last--alone!
+"Oh? had we never, never met,
+"Or could this heart even now forget
+"How linkt, how blest we might have been,
+"Had fate not frowned so dark between!
+"Hadst thou been born a Persian maid,
+ "In neighboring valleys had we dwelt,
+"Thro' the same fields in childhood played,
+ "At the same kindling altar knelt,--
+"Then, then, while all those nameless ties
+"In which the charm of Country lies
+"Had round our hearts been hourly spun,
+"Till IRAN'S cause and thine were one;
+"While in thy lute's awakening sigh
+"I heard the voice of days gone by,
+"And saw in every smile of thine
+"Returning hours of glory shine;--
+"While the wronged Spirit of our Land
+ "Lived, lookt, and spoke her wrongs thro' thee,--
+"God! who could then this sword withstand?
+ "Its very flash were victory!
+"But now--estranged, divorced for ever,
+"Far as the grasp of Fate can sever;
+"Our only ties what love has wove,--
+"In faith, friends, country, sundered wide;
+"And then, then only, true to love,
+ "When false to all that's dear beside!
+"Thy father IKAN'S deadliest foe--
+"Thyself, perhaps, even now--but no--
+"Hate never looked so lovely yet!
+ No--sacred to thy soul will be
+"The land of him who could forget
+ "All but that bleeding land for thee.
+"When other eyes shall see, unmoved,
+ "Her widows mourn, her warriors fall,
+"Thou'lt think how well one Gheber loved.
+ "And for _his_ sake thou'lt weep for all!
+"But look"--
+ With sudden start he turned
+ And pointed to the distant wave
+Where lights like charnel meteors burned
+ Bluely as o'er some seaman's grave;
+And fiery darts at intervals[211]
+ Flew up all sparkling from the main
+As if each star that nightly falls
+Were shooting back to heaven again.
+"My signal lights!--I must away--
+"Both, both are ruined, if I stay.
+"Farewell--sweet life! thou clingest in vain--
+"Now, Vengeance, I am thine again!"
+Fiercely he broke away, nor stopt,
+Nor lookt--but from the lattice dropt
+Down mid the pointed crags beneath
+As if he fled from love to death.
+While pale and mute young HINDA stood,
+Nor moved till in the silent flood
+A momentary plunge below
+Startled her from her trance of woe;--
+Shrieking she to the lattice flew,
+ "I come--I come--if in that tide
+"Thou sleepest to-night, I'll sleep there too
+ "In death's cold wedlock by thy side.
+"Oh! I would ask no happier bed
+ "Than the chill wave my love lies under:--
+"Sweeter to rest together dead,
+ "Far sweeter than to live asunder!"
+But no--their hour is not yet come--
+ Again she sees his pinnace fly,
+Wafting him fleetly to his home,
+ Where'er that ill-starred home may lie;
+And calm and smooth it seemed to win
+ Its moonlight way before the wind
+As if it bore all peace within
+ Nor left one breaking heart behind!
+
+
+The Princess whose heart was sad enough already could have wished that
+FERAMORZ had chosen a less melancholy story; as it is only to the happy
+that tears are a luxury. Her Ladies however were by no means sorry that
+love was once more the Poet's theme; for, whenever he spoke of love, they
+said, his voice was as sweet as if he had chewed the leaves of that
+enchanted tree, which grows over the tomb of the musician, Tan-Sein.[212]
+
+Their road all the morning had lain through a very dreary country;--
+through valleys, covered with a low bushy jungle, where in more than one
+place the awful signal of the bamboo staff[213] with the white flag at
+its top reminded the traveller that in that very spot the tiger had made
+some human creature his victim. It was therefore with much pleasure that
+they arrived at sunset in a safe and lovely glen and encamped under one of
+those holy trees whose smooth columns and spreading roofs seem to destine
+them for natural temples of religion. Beneath this spacious shade some
+pious hands had erected a row of pillars ornamented with the most
+beautiful porcelain[214] which now supplied the use of mirrors to the
+young maidens as they adjusted their hair in descending from the
+palankeens. Here while as usual the Princess sat listening anxiously with
+FADLADEEN in one of his loftiest moods of criticism by her side the young
+Poet leaning against a branch of the tree thus continued his story:--
+
+
+The morn hath risen clear and calm
+ And o'er the Green Sea[215] palely shines,
+Revealing BAHREIN'S groves of palm
+ And lighting KISHMA'S amber vines.
+Fresh smell the shores of ARABY,
+ While breezes from the Indian sea
+Blow round SELAMA'S[216] sainted cape
+ And curl the shining flood beneath,--
+Whose waves are rich with many a grape
+ And cocoa-nut and flowery wreath
+Which pious seamen as they past
+Had toward that holy headland cast--
+Oblations to the Genii there
+For gentle skies and breezes fair!
+The nightingale now bends her flight[217]
+From the high trees where all the night
+ She sung so sweet with none to listen;
+And hides her from the morning star
+ Where thickets of pomegranate glisten
+In the clear dawn,--bespangled o'er
+ With dew whose night-drops would not stain
+The best and brightest scimitar[218]
+That ever youthful Sultan wore
+ On the first morning of his reign.
+
+And see--the Sun himself!--on wings
+Of glory up the East he springs.
+Angel of Light! who from the time
+Those heavens began their march sublime,
+Hath first of all the starry choir
+Trod in his Maker's steps of fire!
+ Where are the days, thou wondrous sphere,
+When IRAN, like a sun-flower, turned
+To meet that eye where'er it burned?--
+ When from the banks of BENDEMEER
+To the nut-groves of SAMARCAND
+Thy temples flamed o'er all the land?
+Where are they? ask the shades of them
+ Who, on CADESSIA'S[219] bloody plains,
+Saw fierce invaders pluck the gem
+From IRAN'S broken diadem,
+ And bind her ancient faith in chains:--
+Ask the poor exile cast alone
+On foreign shores, unloved, unknown,
+Beyond the Caspian's Iron Gates,
+ Or on the snowy Mossian mountains,
+Far from his beauteous land of dates,
+ Her jasmine bowers and sunny fountains:
+Yet happier so than if he trod
+His own beloved but blighted sod
+Beneath a despot stranger's nod!--
+Oh, he would rather houseless roam
+ Where Freedom and his God may lead,
+Than be the sleekest slave at home
+ That crouches to the conqueror's creed!
+
+Is IRAN'S pride then gone for ever,
+ Quenched with the flame in MITHRA'S caves?
+No--she has sons that never--never--
+ Will stoop to be the Moslem's slaves
+ While heaven has light or earth has graves;--
+Spirits of fire that brood not long
+But flash resentment back for wrong;
+And hearts where, slow but deep, the seeds
+Of vengeance ripen into deeds,
+Till in some treacherous hour of calm
+They burst like ZEILAN'S giant palm[220]
+Whose buds fly open with a sound
+That shakes the pigmy forests round!
+Yes, EMIR! he, who scaled that tower,
+ And had he reached thy slumbering breast
+Had taught thee in a Gheber's power
+ How safe even tyrant heads may rest--
+Is one of many, brave as he,
+Who loathe thy haughty race and thee;
+Who tho' they knew the strife is vain,
+Who tho' they know the riven chain
+Snaps but to enter in the heart
+Of him who rends its links apart,
+Yet dare the issue,--blest to be
+Even for one bleeding moment free
+And die in pangs of liberty!
+Thou knowest them well--'tis some moons since
+ Thy turbaned troops and blood-red flags,
+Thou satrap of a bigot Prince,
+ Have swarmed among these Green Sea crags;
+Yet here, even here, a sacred band
+Ay, in the portal of that land
+Thou, Arab, darest to call thy own,
+Their spears across thy path have thrown;
+Here--ere the winds half winged thee o'er--
+Rebellion braved thee from the shore.
+
+Rebellion! foul, dishonoring word,
+ Whose wrongful blight so oft has stained
+The holiest cause that tongue or sword
+ Of mortal ever lost or gained.
+How many a spirit born to bless
+ Hath sunk beneath that withering name,
+Whom but a day's, an hour's success
+ Had wafted to eternal fame!
+As exhalations when they burst
+From the warm earth if chilled at first,
+If checkt in soaring from the plain
+Darken to fogs and sink again;--
+But if they once triumphant spread
+Their wings above the mountain-head,
+Become enthroned in upper air,
+And turn to sun-bright glories there!
+
+And who is he that wields the might
+ Of Freedom on the Green Sea brink,
+Before whose sabre's dazzling light[221]
+ The eyes of YEMEN'S warriors wink?
+Who comes embowered in the spears
+Of KERMAN'S hardy mountaineers?
+Those mountaineers that truest, last,
+ Cling to their country's ancient rites,
+As if that God whose eyelids cast
+ Their closing gleam on IRAN'S heights,
+Among her snowy mountains threw
+The last light of his worship too!
+'Tis HAFED--name of fear, whose sound
+ Chills like the muttering of a charm!--
+Shout but that awful name around,
+ And palsy shakes the manliest arm.
+
+'Tis HAFED, most accurst and dire
+(So rankt by Moslem hate and ire)
+Of all the rebel Sons of Fire;
+Of whose malign, tremendous power
+The Arabs at their mid-watch hour
+Such tales of fearful wonder tell
+That each affrighted sentinel
+Pulls down his cowl upon his eyes,
+Lest HAFED in the midst should rise!
+A man, they say, of monstrous birth,
+A mingled race of flame and earth,
+Sprung from those old, enchanted kings[222]
+ Who in their fairy helms of yore
+A feather from the mystic wings
+ Of the Simoorgh resistless wore;
+And gifted by the Fiends of Fire,
+Who groaned to see their shrines expire
+With charms that all in vain withstood
+Would drown the Koran's light in blood!
+
+Such were the tales that won belief,
+ And such the coloring Fancy gave
+To a young, warm, and dauntless Chief,--
+ One who, no more than mortal brave,
+Fought for the land his soul adored,
+ For happy homes and altars free,--
+His only talisman, the sword,
+ His only spell-word, Liberty!
+One of that ancient hero line,
+Along whose glorious current shine
+Names that have sanctified their blood:
+As LEBANON'S small mountain-flood
+Is rendered holy by the ranks
+Of sainted cedars on its banks.[223]
+'Twas not for him to crouch the knee
+Tamely to Moslem tyranny;
+'Twas not for him whose soul was cast
+In the bright mould of ages past,
+Whose melancholy spirit fed
+With all the glories of the dead
+Tho' framed for IRAN'S happiest years.
+Was born among her chains and tears!--
+'Twas not for him to swell the crowd
+Of slavish heads, that shrinking bowed
+Before the Moslem as he past
+Like shrubs beneath the poison-blast--
+No--far he fled--indignant fled
+ The pageant of his country's shame;
+While every tear her children shed
+ Fell on his soul like drops of flame;
+And as a lover hails the dawn
+ Of a first smile, so welcomed he
+The sparkle of the first sword drawn
+ For vengeance and for liberty!
+But vain was valor--vain the flower
+Of KERMAN, in that deathful hour,
+Against AL HASSAN'S whelming power.--
+In vain they met him helm to helm
+Upon the threshold of that realm
+He came in bigot pomp to sway,
+And with their corpses blockt his way--
+In vain--for every lance they raised
+Thousands around the conqueror blazed;
+For every arm that lined their shore
+Myriads of slaves were wafted o'er,--
+A bloody, bold, and countless crowd,
+Before whose swarm as fast they bowed
+As dates beneath the locust cloud.
+
+There stood--but one short league away
+From old HARMOZIA'S sultry bay--
+A rocky mountain o'er the Sea--
+Of OMAN beetling awfully;[224]
+A last and solitary link
+ Of those stupendous chains that reach
+From the broad Caspian's reedy brink
+ Down winding to the Green Sea beach.
+Around its base the bare rocks stood
+Like naked giants, in the flood
+ As if to guard the Gulf across;
+While on its peak that braved the sky
+A ruined Temple towered so high
+ That oft the sleeping albatross[225]
+Struck the wild ruins with her wing,
+And from her cloud-rockt slumbering
+Started--to find man's dwelling there
+In her own silent fields of air!
+Beneath, terrific caverns gave
+Dark welcome to each stormy wave
+That dasht like midnight revellers in;--
+And such the strange, mysterious din
+At times throughout those caverns rolled,--
+And such the fearful wonders told
+Of restless sprites imprisoned there,
+That bold were Moslem who would dare
+At twilight hour to steer his skiff
+Beneath the Gheber's lonely cliff.[226]
+On the land side those towers sublime,
+That seemed above the grasp of Time,
+Were severed from the haunts of men
+By a wide, deep, and wizard glen,
+So fathomless, so full of gloom,
+ No eye could pierce the void between:
+It seemed a place where Ghouls might come
+With their foul banquets from the tomb
+ And in its caverns feed unseen.
+Like distant thunder, from below
+ The sound of many torrents came,
+Too deep for eye or ear to know
+If 'twere the sea's imprisoned flow,
+ Or floods of ever-restless flame.
+For each ravine, each rocky spire
+Of that vast mountain stood on fire;[227]
+And tho' for ever past the days
+When God was worshipt in the blaze--
+That from its lofty altar shone,--
+Tho' fled the priests, the votaries gone,
+Still did the mighty flame burn on,[228]
+Thro' chance and change, thro' good and ill,
+Like its own God's eternal will,
+Deep, constant, bright, unquenchable!
+
+Thither the vanquisht HAFED led
+ His little army's last remains;--
+"Welcome, terrific glen!" he said,
+"Thy gloom, that Eblis' self might dread,
+ "Is Heaven to him who flies from chains!"
+O'er a dark, narrow bridge-way known
+To him and to his Chiefs alone
+They crost the chasm and gained the towers;--
+"This home," he cried, "at least is ours;
+"Here we may bleed, unmockt by hymns
+ "Of Moslem triumph o'er our head;
+"Here we may fall nor leave our limbs
+ "To quiver to the Moslem's tread.
+"Stretched on this rock while vultures' beaks
+"Are whetted on our yet warm cheeks,
+"Here--happy that no tyrant's eye
+"Gloats on our torments--we may die!"--
+
+'Twas night when to those towers they came,
+And gloomily the fitful flame
+That from the ruined altar broke
+Glared on his features as he spoke:--
+"'Tis o'er--what men could do, we've done--
+"If IRAN _will_ look tamely on
+"And see her priests, her warriors driven
+ "Before a sensual bigot's nod,
+"A wretch who shrines his lusts in heaven
+ "And makes a pander of his God;
+"If her proud sons, her high-born souls,
+ "Men in whose veins--oh last disgrace!
+"The blood of ZAL and RUSTAM[229] rolls.--
+ "If they _will_ court this upstart race
+"And turn from MITHRA'S ancient ray
+"To kneel at shrines of yesterday;
+"If they _will_ crouch to IRAN'S foes,
+ "Why, let them--till the land's despair
+"Cries out to Heaven, and bondage grows
+ "Too vile for even the vile to bear!
+"Till shame at last, long hidden, burns
+"Their inmost core, and conscience turns
+"Each coward tear the slave lets fall
+"Back on his heart in drops of gall.
+"But here at least are arms unchained
+"And souls that thraldom never stained;--
+ "This spot at least no foot of slave
+"Or satrap ever yet profaned,
+ "And tho' but few--tho' fast the wave
+"Of life is ebbing from our veins,
+"Enough for vengeance still remains.
+"As panthers after set of sun
+"Rush from the roots of LEBANON
+"Across the dark sea-robber's way,[230]
+"We'll bound upon our startled prey.
+"And when some hearts that proudest swell
+"Have felt our falchion's last farewell,
+"When Hope's expiring throb is o'er
+"And even Despair can prompt no more,
+"This spot shall be the sacred grave
+"Of the last few who vainly brave
+"Die for the land they cannot save!"
+
+His Chiefs stood round--each shining blade
+Upon the broken altar laid--
+And tho' so wild and desolate
+Those courts where once the Mighty sate:
+Nor longer on those mouldering towers
+Was seen the feast of fruits and flowers
+With which of old the Magi fed
+The wandering Spirits of their Dead;[231]
+Tho' neither priest nor rites were there,
+ Nor charmed leaf of pure pomegranate,[232]
+Nor hymn, nor censer's fragrant air,
+ Nor symbol of their worshipt planet;[233]
+Yet the same God that heard their sires
+Heard _them_ while on that altar's fires
+They swore the latest, holiest deed
+Of the few hearts, still left to bleed,
+Should be in IRAN'S injured name
+To die upon that Mount of Flame--
+The last of all her patriot line,
+Before her last untrampled Shrine!
+
+Brave, suffering souls! they little knew
+How many a tear their injuries drew
+From one meek maid, one gentle foe,
+Whom love first touched with others' woe--
+Whose life, as free from thought as sin,
+Slept like a lake till Love threw in
+His talisman and woke the tide
+And spread its trembling circles wide.
+Once, EMIR! thy unheeding child
+Mid all this havoc bloomed and smiled,--
+Tranquil as on some battle plain
+ The Persian lily shines and towers[234]
+Before the combat's reddening stain
+ Hath fallen upon her golden flowers.
+Light-hearted maid, unawed, unmoved,
+While Heaven but spared the sire she loved,
+Once at thy evening tales of blood
+Unlistening and aloof she stood--
+And oft when thou hast paced along
+ Thy Haram halls with furious heat,
+Hast thou not curst her cheerful song,
+ That came across thee, calm and sweet,
+Like lutes of angels touched so near
+Hell's confines that the damned can hear!
+
+Far other feelings Love hath brought--
+ Her soul all flame, her brow all sadness,
+She now has but the one dear thought,
+ And thinks that o'er, almost to madness!
+Oft doth her sinking heart recall
+His words--"for _my_ sake weep for all;"
+And bitterly as day on day
+ Of rebel carnage fast succeeds,
+She weeps a lover snatched away
+ In every Gheber wretch that bleeds.
+There's not a sabre meets her eye
+ But with his life-blood seems to swim;
+There's not an arrow wings the sky
+ But fancy turns its point to him.
+No more she brings with footsteps light
+AL HASSAN's falchion for the fight;
+And--had he lookt with clearer sight,
+Had not the mists that ever rise
+From a foul spirit dimmed his eyes--
+He would have markt her shuddering frame,
+When from the field of blood he came,
+The faltering speech--the look estranged--
+Voice, step and life and beauty changed--
+He would have markt all this, and known
+Such change is wrought by Love alone!
+Ah! not the Love that should have blest
+So young, so innocent a breast;
+Not the pure, open, prosperous Love,
+That, pledged on earth and sealed above,
+Grows in the world's approving eyes,
+ In friendship's smile and home's caress,
+Collecting all the heart's sweet ties
+ Into one knot of happiness!
+No, HINDA, no,--thy fatal flame
+Is nurst in silence, sorrow, shame;--
+ A passion without hope or pleasure,
+In thy soul's darkness buried deep,
+ It lies like some ill-gotten treasure,--
+Some idol without shrine or name,
+O'er which its pale-eyed votaries keep
+Unholy watch while others sleep.
+
+Seven nights have darkened OMAN'S sea,
+ Since last beneath the moonlight ray
+She saw his light oar rapidly
+ Hurry her Gheber's bark away,--
+And still she goes at midnight hour
+To weep alone in that high bower
+And watch and look along the deep
+For him whose smiles first made her weep;--
+But watching, weeping, all was vain,
+She never saw his bark again.
+The owlet's solitary cry,
+The night-hawk flitting darkly by,
+ And oft the hateful carrion bird,
+Heavily flapping his clogged wing,
+Which reeked with that day's banqueting--
+ Was all she saw, was all she heard.
+
+'Tis the eighth morn--AL HASSAN'S brow
+ Is brightened with unusual joy--
+What mighty mischief glads him now,
+ Who never smiles but to destroy?
+The sparkle upon HERKEND'S Sea,
+When tost at midnight furiously,[235]
+Tells not of wreck and ruin nigh,
+More surely than that smiling eye!
+"Up, daughter, up--the KERNA'S[236] breath
+"Has blown a blast would waken death,
+"And yet thou sleepest--up, child, and see
+"This blessed day for heaven and me,
+"A day more rich in Pagan blood
+"Than ever flasht o'er OMAN'S flood.
+"Before another dawn shall shine,
+"His head--heart--limbs--will all be mine;
+"This very night his blood shall steep
+"These hands all over ere I sleep!"--
+
+"_His_ blood!" she faintly screamed--her mind
+Still singling _one_ from all mankind--
+"Yes--spite of his ravines and towers,
+"HAFED, my child, this night is ours.
+"Thanks to all-conquering treachery,
+ "Without whose aid the links accurst,
+"That bind these impious slaves, would be
+ "Too strong for ALLA'S self to burst!
+"That rebel fiend whose blade has spread
+"My path with piles of Moslem dead,
+"Whose baffling spells had almost driven
+"Back from their course the Swords of Heaven,
+"This night with all his band shall know
+"How deep an Arab's steel can go,
+"When God and Vengeance speed the blow.
+"And--Prophet! by that holy wreath
+"Thou worest on OHOD'S field of death,[237]
+"I swear, for every sob that parts
+"In anguish from these heathen hearts,
+"A gem from PERSIA'S plundered mines
+"Shall glitter on thy shrine of Shrines.
+"But, ha!--she sinks--that look so wild--
+"Those livid lips--my child, my child,
+"This life of blood befits not thee,
+"And thou must back to ARABY.
+ "Ne'er had I riskt thy timid sex
+"In scenes that man himself might dread,
+"Had I not hoped our every tread
+ "Would be on prostrate Persian necks--
+"Curst race, they offer swords instead!
+"But cheer thee, maid,--the wind that now
+"Is blowing o'er thy feverish brow
+"To-day shall waft thee from the shore;
+"And ere a drop of this night's gore
+"Have time to chill in yonder towers,
+"Thou'lt see thy own sweet Arab bowers!"
+
+His bloody boast was all too true;
+There lurkt one wretch among the few
+Whom HAFED'S eagle eye could count
+Around him on that Fiery Mount,--
+One miscreant who for gold betrayed
+The pathway thro' the valley's shade
+To those high towers where Freedom stood
+In her last hold of flame and blood.
+Left on the field last dreadful night,
+When sallying from their sacred height
+The Ghebers fought hope's farewell fight,
+He lay--but died not with the brave;
+That sun which should have gilt his grave
+Saw him a traitor and a slave;--
+And while the few who thence returned
+To their high rocky fortress mourned
+For him among the matchless dead
+They left behind on glory's bed,
+He lived, and in the face of morn
+Laught them and Faith and
+ Heaven to scorn.
+
+Oh for a tongue to curse the slave
+ Whose treason like a deadly blight
+Comes o'er the councils of the brave
+And blasts them in their hour of might!
+May Life's unblessed cup for him
+Be drugged with treacheries to the brim.--
+With hopes that but allure to fly,
+ With joys that vanish while he sips,
+Like Dead-Sea fruits that tempt the eye,
+ But turn to ashes on the lips![238]
+His country's curse, his children's shame,
+Outcast of virtue, peace and fame,
+May he at last with lips of flame
+On the parched desert thirsting die,--
+While lakes that shone in mockery nigh,[239]
+Are fading off, untouched, untasted,
+Like the once glorious hopes he blasted!
+And when from earth his spirit flies,
+ Just Prophet, let the damned-one dwell
+Full in the sight of Paradise
+ Beholding heaven and feeling hell!
+
+
+LALLA ROOKH had the night before been visited by a dream which in spite of
+the impending fate of poor HAFED made her heart more than usually cheerful
+during the morning and gave her cheeks all the freshened animation of a
+flower that the Bidmusk had just passed over.[240] She fancied that she
+was sailing on that Eastern Ocean where the sea-gypsies who live for ever
+on the water[241] enjoy a perpetual summer in wandering from isle to isle
+when she saw a small gilded bark approaching her. It was like one of those
+boats which the Maldivian islanders send adrift, at the mercy of winds and
+waves, loaded with perfumes, flowers, and odoriferous wood, as an offering
+to the Spirit whom they call King of the Sea. At first, this little bark
+appeared to be empty but on coming nearer--
+
+She had proceeded thus far in relating the dream to her Ladies, when
+FERAMORZ appeared at the door of the pavilion. In his presence of course
+everything else was forgotten and the continuance of the story was
+instantly requested by all. Fresh wood of aloes was set to burn in the
+cassolets;--the violet sherbets[242] were hastily handed round, and after
+a short prelude on his lute in the pathetic measure of Nava,[243] which is
+always used to express the lamentations of absent lovers, the Poet thus
+continued:--
+
+
+The day is lowering--stilly black
+Sleeps the grim wave, while heaven's rack,
+Disperst and wild, 'twixt earth and sky
+Hangs like a shattered canopy.
+There's not a cloud in that blue plain
+ But tells of storm to come or past;--
+Here flying loosely as the mane
+ Of a young war-horse in the blast;--
+There rolled in masses dark and swelling,
+As proud to be the thunder's dwelling!
+While some already burst and riven
+Seen melting down the verge of heaven;
+As tho' the infant storm had rent
+The mighty womb that gave him birth,
+And having swept the firmament
+ Was now in fierce career for earth.
+
+On earth 'twas yet all calm around,
+A pulseless silence, dread, profound,
+More awful than the tempest's sound.
+The diver steered for ORMUS' bowers,
+And moored his skiff till calmer hours;
+The sea-birds with portentous screech
+Flew fast to land;--upon the beach
+The pilot oft had paused, with glance
+Turned upward to that wild expanse;--
+And all was boding, drear and dark
+As her own soul when HINDA'S bark
+Went slowly from the Persian shore.--
+No music timed her parting oar,[244]
+Nor friends upon the lessening strand
+Lingering to wave the unseen hand
+Or speak the farewell, heard no more;--
+But lone, unheeded, from the bay
+The vessel takes its mournful way,
+Like some ill-destined bark that steers
+In silence thro' the Gate of Tears.[245]
+And where was stern AL HASSAN then?
+Could not that saintly scourge of men
+From bloodshed and devotion spare
+One minute for a farewell there?
+No--close within in changeful fits
+Of cursing and of prayer he sits
+In savage loneliness to brood
+Upon the coming night of blood,--
+ With that keen, second-scent of death,
+By which the vulture snuffs his food
+ In the still warm and living breath![246]
+While o'er the wave his weeping daughter
+Is wafted from these scenes of slaughter,--
+As a young bird of BABYLON,[247]
+Let loose to tell of victory won,
+Flies home, with wing, ah! not unstained
+By the red hands that held her chained.
+
+And does the long-left home she seeks
+Light up no gladness on her cheeks?
+The flowers she nurst--the well-known groves,
+Where oft in dreams her spirit roves--
+Once more to see her dear gazelles
+Come bounding with their silver bells;
+Her birds' new plumage to behold
+ And the gay, gleaming fishes count,
+She left all filleted with gold
+ Shooting around their jasper fount;[248]
+Her little garden mosque to see,
+ And once again, at evening hour,
+To tell her ruby rosary
+ In her own sweet acacia bower.--
+Can these delights that wait her now
+Call up no sunshine on her brow?
+No,--silent, from her train apart,--
+As if even now she felt at heart
+The chill of her approaching doom,--
+She sits, all lovely in her gloom
+As a pale Angel of the Grave;
+And o'er the wide, tempestuous wave
+Looks with a shudder to those towers
+Where in a few short awful hours
+Blood, blood, in streaming tides shall run,
+Foul incense for to-morrow's sun!
+"Where art thou, glorious stranger! thou,
+"So loved, so lost, where art thou now?
+"Foe--Gheber--infidel--whate'er
+"The unhallowed name thou'rt doomed to bear,
+"Still glorious--still to this fond heart
+"Dear as its blood, whate'er thou art!
+"Yes--ALLA, dreadful ALLA! yes--
+"If there be wrong, be crime in this,
+"Let the black waves that round us roll,
+"Whelm me this instant ere my soul
+"Forgetting faith--home--father--all
+"Before its earthly idol fall,
+"Nor worship even Thyself above him--
+"For, oh, so wildly do I love him,
+"Thy Paradise itself were dim
+"And joyless, if not shared with him!"
+Her hands were claspt--her eyes upturned,
+ Dropping their tears like moonlight rain;
+And, tho' her lip, fond raver! burned
+ With words of passion, bold, profane.
+Yet was there light around her brow,
+ A holiness in those dark eyes,
+Which showed,--tho' wandering earthward now,--
+ Her spirit's home was in the skies.
+Yes--for a spirit pure as hers
+Is always pure, even while it errs;
+As sunshine broken in the rill
+Tho' turned astray is sunshine still!
+
+So wholly had her mind forgot
+All thoughts but one she heeded not
+The rising storm--the wave that cast
+A moment's midnight as it past--
+Nor heard the frequent shout, the tread
+Of gathering tumult o'er her head--
+Clasht swords and tongues that seemed to vie
+With the rude riot of the sky.--
+But, hark!--that war-whoop on the deck--
+ That crash as if each engine there,
+Mast, sails and all, were gone to wreck,
+ Mid yells and stampings of despair!
+Merciful Heaven! what _can_ it be?
+'Tis not the storm, tho' fearfully
+The ship has shuddered as she rode
+O'er mountain-waves--"Forgive me, God!
+"Forgive me"--shrieked the maid and knelt,
+Trembling all over--for she felt
+As if her judgment hour was near;
+While crouching round half dead with fear,
+Her handmaids clung, nor breathed nor stirred--
+When, hark!--a second crash--a third--
+And now as if a bolt of thunder
+Had riven the laboring planks asunder,
+The deck falls in--what horrors then!
+Blood, waves and tackle, swords and men
+Come mixt together thro' the chasm,--
+Some wretches in their dying spasm
+Still fighting on--and some that call
+"For GOD and IRAN!" as they fall!
+Whose was the hand that turned away
+The perils of the infuriate fray,
+And snatcht her breathless from beneath
+This wilderment of wreck and death?
+She knew not--for a faintness came
+Chill o'er her and her sinking frame
+Amid the ruins of that hour
+Lay like a pale and scorched flower
+Beneath the red volcano's shower.
+But, oh! the sights and sounds of dread
+That shockt her ere her senses fled!
+The yawning deck--the crowd that strove
+Upon the tottering planks above--
+The sail whose fragments, shivering o'er
+The stragglers' heads all dasht with gore
+Fluttered like bloody flags--the clash
+Of sabres and the lightning's flash
+Upon their blades, high tost about
+Like meteor brands[249]--as if throughout
+ The elements one fury ran,
+One general rage that left a doubt
+ Which was the fiercer, Heaven or Man!
+Once too--but no--it could not be--
+ 'Twas fancy all--yet once she thought,
+While yet her fading eyes could see
+ High on the ruined deck she caught
+A glimpse of that unearthly form,
+ That glory of her soul,--even then,
+Amid the whirl of wreck and storm,
+ Shining above his fellow-men,
+As on some black and troublous night
+The Star of EGYPT,[250] whose proud light
+Never hath beamed on those who rest
+In the White Islands of the West,
+Burns thro' the storm with looks of flame
+That put Heaven's cloudier eyes to shame.
+But no--'twas but the minute's dream--
+A fantasy--and ere the scream
+Had half-way past her pallid lips,
+A death-like swoon, a chill eclipse
+Of soul and sense its darkness spread
+Around her and she sunk as dead.
+How calm, how beautiful comes on
+The stilly hour when storms are gone,
+When warring winds have died away,
+And clouds beneath the glancing ray
+Melt off and leave the land and sea
+Sleeping in bright tranquillity,--
+Fresh as if Day again were born,
+Again upon the lap of Morn!--
+When the light blossoms rudely torn
+And scattered at the whirlwind's will,
+Hang floating in the pure air still,
+Filling it all with precious balm,
+In gratitude for this sweet calm;--
+And every drop the thundershowers
+Have left upon the grass and flowers
+Sparkles, as 'twere that lightning-gem[251]
+Whose liquid flame is born of them!
+When, 'stead of one unchanging breeze,
+ There blow a thousand gentle airs
+ And each a different perfume bears,--
+As if the loveliest plants and trees
+Had vassal breezes of their own
+To watch and wait on them alone,
+And waft no other breath than theirs:
+When the blue waters rise and fall,
+In sleepy sunshine mantling all;
+And even that swell the tempest leaves
+Is like the full and silent heaves
+Of lovers' hearts when newly blest,
+Too newly to be quite at rest.
+
+Such was the golden hour that broke
+Upon the world when HINDA woke
+From her long trance and heard around
+No motion but the water's sound
+Rippling against the vessel's side,
+As slow it mounted o'er the tide.--
+But where is she?--her eyes are dark,
+Are wilder still--is this the bark,
+The same, that from HARMOZIA'S bay
+Bore her at morn--whose bloody way
+The sea-dog trackt?--no--strange and new
+Is all that meets her wondering view.
+Upon a galliot's deck she lies,
+ Beneath no rich pavilion's shade,--
+No plumes to fan her sleeping eyes,
+ Nor jasmine on her pillow laid.
+But the rude litter roughly spread
+With war-cloaks is her homely bed,
+And shawl and sash on javelins hung
+For awning o'er her head are flung.
+Shuddering she lookt around--there lay
+ A group of warriors in the sun,
+Resting their limbs, as for that day
+ Their ministry of death were done.
+Some gazing on the drowsy sea
+Lost in unconscious revery;
+And some who seemed but ill to brook
+That sluggish calm with many a look
+To the slack sail impatient cast,
+As loose it bagged around the mast.
+
+Blest ALLA! who shall save her now?
+ There's not in all that warrior band
+One Arab sword, one turbaned brow
+ From her own Faithful Moslem land.
+Their garb--the leathern belt that wraps
+ Each yellow vest[252]--that rebel hue--
+The Tartar fleece upon their caps[253]--
+ Yes--yes--her fears are all too true,
+And Heaven hath in this dreadful hour
+Abandoned her to HAFED'S power;--
+HAFED, the Gheber!--at the thought
+ Her very heart's blood chills within;
+He whom her soul was hourly taught
+ To loathe as some foul fiend of sin,
+Some minister whom Hell had sent
+To spread its blast where'er he went
+And fling as o'er our earth he trod
+His shadow betwixt man and God!
+And she is now his captive,--thrown
+In his fierce hands, alive, alone;
+His the infuriate band she sees,
+All infidels--all enemies!
+What was the daring hope that then
+Crost her like lightning, as again
+With boldness that despair had lent
+ She darted tho' that armed crowd
+A look so searching, so intent,
+ That even the sternest warrior bowed
+Abasht, when he her glances caught,
+As if he guessed whose form they sought.
+But no--she sees him not--'tis gone,
+The vision that before her shone
+Thro' all the maze of blood and storm,
+Is fled--'twas but a phantom form--
+One of those passing, rainbow dreams,
+Half light, half shade, which Fancy's beams
+Paint on the fleeting mists that roll
+In trance or slumber round the soul.
+
+But now the bark with livelier bound
+ Scales the blue wave--the crew's in motion.
+The oars are out and with light sound
+ Break the bright mirror of the ocean,
+Scattering its brilliant fragments round.
+And now she sees--with horror sees,
+ Their course is toward that mountain-hold,--
+Those towers that make her life-blood freeze,
+Where MECCA'S godless enemies
+ Lie like beleaguered scorpions rolled
+ In their last deadly, venomous fold!
+Amid the illumined land and flood
+Sunless that mighty mountain stood;
+Save where above its awful head,
+There shone a flaming cloud, blood-red,
+As 'twere the flag of destiny
+Hung out to mark where death would be!
+
+Had her bewildered mind the power
+Of thought in this terrific hour,
+She well might marvel where or how
+Man's foot could scale that mountain's brow,
+Since ne'er had Arab heard or known
+Of path but thro' the glen alone.--
+But every thought was lost in fear,
+When, as their bounding bark drew near
+The craggy base, she felt the waves
+Hurry them toward those dismal caves
+That from the Deep in windings pass
+Beneath that Mount's volcanic mass;--
+And loud a voice on deck commands
+To lower the mast and light the brands!--
+Instantly o'er the dashing tide
+Within a cavern's mouth they glide,
+Gloomy as that eternal Porch
+ Thro' which departed spirits go:--
+Not even the flare of brand and torch
+ Its flickering light could further throw
+ Than the thick flood that boiled below.
+Silent they floated--as if each
+Sat breathless, and too awed for speech
+In that dark chasm where even sound
+Seemed dark,--so sullenly around
+The goblin echoes of the cave
+Muttered it o'er the long black wave
+As 'twere some secret of the grave!
+
+But soft--they pause--the current turns
+ Beneath them from its onward track;--
+Some mighty, unseen barrier spurns
+ The vexed tide all foaming back,
+And scarce the oar's redoubled force
+Can stem the eddy's whirling course;
+When, hark!--some desperate foot has sprung
+Among the rocks--the chain is flung--
+The oars are up--the grapple clings,
+And the tost bark in moorings swings.
+Just then, a day-beam thro' the shade
+Broke tremulous--but ere the maid
+Can see from whence the brightness steals,
+Upon her brow she shuddering feels
+A viewless hand that promptly ties
+A bandage round her burning eyes;
+While the rude litter where she lies,
+Uplifted by the warrior throng,
+O'er the steep rocks is borne along.
+
+Blest power of sunshine!--genial Day,
+What balm, what life is in thy ray!
+To feel thee is such real bliss,
+That had the world no joy but this
+To sit in sunshine calm and sweet.--
+It were a world too exquisite
+For man to leave it for the gloom,
+The deep, cold shadow of the tomb.
+Even HINDA, tho' she saw not where
+ Or whither wound the perilous road,
+Yet knew by that awakening air,
+ Which suddenly around her glowed,
+That they had risen from the darkness there,
+And breathed the sunny world again!
+
+But soon this balmy freshness fled--
+For now the steepy labyrinth led
+Thro' damp and gloom--mid crash of boughs,
+And fall of loosened crags that rouse
+The leopard from his hungry sleep,
+ Who starting thinks each crag a prey,
+And long is heard from steep to steep
+ Chasing them down their thundering way!
+The jackal's cry--the distant moan
+Of the hyena, fierce and lone--
+And that eternal saddening sound
+ Of torrents in the glen beneath,
+As 'twere the ever-dark Profound
+ That rolls beneath the Bridge of Death!
+All, all is fearful--even to see,
+ To gaze on those terrific things
+She now but blindly hears, would be
+ Relief to her imaginings;
+Since never yet was shape so dread,
+ But Fancy thus in darkness thrown
+And by such sounds of horror fed
+ Could frame more dreadful of her own.
+
+But does she dream? has Fear again
+Perplext the workings of her brain,
+Or did a voice, all music, then
+Come from the gloom, low whispering near--
+"Tremble not, love, thy Gheber's here?"
+She _does_ not dream--all sense, all ear,
+She drinks the words, "Thy Gheber's here."
+'Twas his own voice--she could not err--
+ Throughout the breathing world's extent
+There was but _one_ such voice for her,
+ So kind, so soft, so eloquent!
+Oh, sooner shall the rose of May
+ Mistake her own sweet nightingale,
+And to some meaner minstrel's lay
+ Open her bosom's glowing veil,[254]
+Than Love shall ever doubt a tone,
+A breath of the beloved one!
+
+Though blest mid all her ills to think
+ She has that one beloved near,
+Whose smile tho' met on ruin's brink
+ Hath power to make even ruin dear,--
+Yet soon this gleam of rapture crost
+By fears for him is chilled and lost.
+How shall the ruthless HAFED brook
+That one of Gheber blood should look,
+With aught but curses in his eye,
+On her--a maid of ARABY--
+A Moslem maid--the child of him,
+ Whose bloody banners' dire success
+Hath left their altars cold and dim,
+ And their fair land a wilderness!
+And worse than all that night of blood
+ Which comes so fast--Oh! who shall stay
+The sword, that once hath tasted food
+ Of Persian hearts or turn its way?
+What arm shall then the victim cover,
+Or from her father shield her lover?
+
+"Save him, my God!" she inly cries--
+"Save him this night--and if thine eyes
+ "Have ever welcomed with delight
+"The sinner's tears, the sacrifice
+ "Of sinners' hearts--guard him this night,
+"And here before thy throne I swear
+"From my heart's inmost core to tear
+ "Love, hope, remembrance, tho' they be
+"Linkt with each quivering life-string there,
+ "And give it bleeding all to Thee!
+"Let him but live,--the burning tear,
+"The sighs, so sinful, yet so dear,
+"Which have been all too much his own,
+"Shall from this hour be Heaven's alone.
+"Youth past in penitence and age
+"In long and painful pilgrimage
+"Shall leave no traces of the flame
+"That wastes me now--nor shall his name
+"E'er bless my lips but when I pray
+"For his dear spirit, that away
+"Casting from its angelic ray
+"The eclipse of earth, he too may shine
+"Redeemed, all glorious and all Thine!
+"Think--think what victory to win
+"One radiant soul like his from sin,
+"One wandering star of virtue back
+"To its own native, heavenward track!
+"Let him but live, and both are Thine,
+ "Together Thine--for blest or crost,
+"Living or dead, his doom is mine,
+ "And if _he_ perish, both are lost!"
+
+
+The next evening LALLA ROOKH was entreated by her Ladies to continue the
+relation of her wonderful dream; but the fearful interest that hung round
+the fate of HINDA and her lover had completely removed every trace of it
+from her mind;--much to the disappointment of a fair seer or two in her
+train, who prided themselves on their skill in interpreting visions, and
+who had already remarked, as an unlucky omen, that the Princess, on the
+very morning after the dream, had worn a silk dyed with the blossoms of
+the sorrowful tree, Nilica.[255]
+
+FADLADEEN, whose indignation had more than once broken out during the
+recital of some parts of this heterodox poem, seemed at length to have
+made up his mind to the infliction; and took his seat this evening with
+all the patience of a martyr while the Poet resumed his profane and
+seditious story as follows:--
+
+
+To tearless eyes and hearts at ease
+The leafy shores and sun-bright seas
+That lay beneath that mountain's height
+Had been a fair enchanting sight.
+'Twas one of those ambrosial eyes
+A day of storm so often leaves
+At its calm setting--when the West
+Opens her golden bowers of rest,
+And a moist radiance from the skies
+Shoots trembling down, as from the eyes
+Of some meek penitent whose last
+Bright hours atone for dark ones past,
+And whose sweet tears o'er wrong forgiven
+Shine as they fall with light from heaven!
+
+'Twas stillness all--the winds that late
+Had rushed through KERMAN'S almond groves,
+And shaken from her bowers of date
+That cooling feast the traveller loves.[256]
+Now lulled to languor scarcely curl
+ The Green Sea wave whose waters gleam
+Limpid as if her mines of pearl
+ Were melted all to form the stream:
+And her fair islets small and bright
+ With their green shores reflected there
+Look like those PERI isles of light
+ That hang by spell-work in the air
+
+But vainly did those glories burst
+On HINDA'S dazzled eyes, when first
+The bandage from her brow was taken,
+And, pale and awed as those who waken
+In their dark tombs--when, scowling near,
+The Searchers of the Grave[257] appear.--
+She shuddering turned to read her fate
+ In the fierce eyes that flasht around;
+And saw those towers all desolate,
+ That o'er her head terrific frowned,
+As if defying even the smile
+Of that soft heaven to gild their pile.
+In vain with mingled hope and fear,
+She looks for him whose voice so dear
+Had come, like music, to her ear,--
+Strange, mocking dream! again 'tis fled.
+And oh, the shoots, the pangs of dread
+That thro' her inmost bosom run,
+ When voices from without proclaim
+"HAFED, the Chief"--and, one by one,
+ The warriors shout that fearful name!
+He comes--the rock resounds his tread--
+How shall she dare to lift her head
+Or meet those eyes whose scorching glare
+Not YEMEN'S boldest sons can bear?
+In whose red beam, the Moslem tells,
+Such rank and deadly lustre dwells
+As in those hellish fires that light
+The mandrake's charnel leaves at night.[258]
+How shall she bear that voice's tone,
+At whose loud battle-cry alone
+Whole squadrons oft in panic ran,
+Scattered like some vast caravan,
+When stretched at evening round the well
+They hear the thirsting tiger's yell.
+
+Breathless she stands with eyes cast down
+Shrinking beneath the fiery frown
+Which, fancy tells her, from that brow
+Is flashing o'er her fiercely now:
+And shuddering as she hears the tread
+ Of his retiring warrior band.--
+Never was pause full of dread;
+ Till HAFED with a trembling hand
+Took hers and leaning o'er her said,
+"HINDA;"--that word was all he spoke.
+And 'twas enough--the shriek that broke
+ From her full bosom told the rest.--
+Panting with terror, joy, surprise,
+The maid but lifts her wandering eyes,
+ To hide them on her Gheber's breast!
+'Tis he, 'tis he--the man of blood,
+The fellest of the Fire-fiend's brood,
+HAFED, the demon of the fight,
+Whose voice unnerves, whose glances blight,--
+Is her own loved Gheber, mild
+And glorious as when first he smiled
+In her lone tower and left such beams
+Of his pure eye to light her dreams,
+That she believed her bower had given
+Rest to some wanderer from heaven!
+
+Moments there are, and this was one,
+Snatched like a minute's gleam of sun
+Amid the black Simoom's eclipse--
+ Or like those verdant spots that bloom
+Around the crater's burning lips.
+ Sweetening the very edge of doom!
+The past, the future--all that Fate
+ Can bring of dark or desperate
+Around such hours but makes them cast
+Intenser radiance while they last!
+Even he, this youth--tho' dimmed and gone
+Each Star of Hope that cheered him on--
+His glories lost--his cause betrayed--
+IRAN, his dear-loved country, made
+A land of carcasses and slaves,
+One dreary waste of chains and graves!
+Himself but lingering, dead at heart,
+ To see the last, long struggling breath
+Of Liberty's great soul depart,
+ Then lay him down and share her death--
+Even he so sunk in wretchedness
+ With doom still darker gathering o'er him,
+Yet, in this moment's pure caress,
+ In the mild eyes that shone before him,
+Beaming that blest assurance worth
+All other transports known on earth.
+That he was loved-well, warmly loved--
+Oh! in this precious hour he proved
+How deep, how thorough-felt the glow
+Of rapture kindling out of woe;--
+How exquisite one single drop
+Of bliss thus sparkling to the top
+Of misery's cup--how keenly quaft,
+Tho' death must follow on the draught!
+
+She too while gazing on those eyes
+ That sink into her soul so deep,
+Forgets all fears, all miseries,
+ Or feels them like the wretch in sleep,
+Whom fancy cheats into a smile.
+ Who dreams of joy and sobs the while!
+The mighty Ruins where they stood
+ Upon the mount's high, rocky verge
+Lay open towards the ocean flood,
+ Where lightly o'er the illumined surge
+Many a fair bark that, all the day,
+Had lurkt in sheltering creek or bay
+Now bounded on and gave their sails,
+Yet dripping to the evening gales;
+Like eagles when the storm is done,
+Spreading their wet wings in the sun.
+The beauteous clouds, tho' daylight's Star
+Had sunk behind the hills of LAR,
+Were still with lingering glories bright.--
+As if to grace the gorgeous West
+ The Spirit of departing Light
+That eve had left his sunny vest
+ Behind him ere he winged his flight.
+Never was scene so formed for love!
+Beneath them waves of crystal move
+In silent swell--Heaven glows above
+And their pure hearts, to transport given,
+Swell like the wave and glow like heaven.
+
+But ah! too soon that dream is past--
+ Again, again her fear returns;--
+Night, dreadful night, is gathering fast,
+ More faintly the horizon burns,
+And every rosy tint that lay
+On the smooth sea hath died away
+Hastily to the darkening skies
+A glance she casts--then wildly cries
+"_At night_, he said--and look, 'tis near--
+ "Fly, fly--if yet thou lovest me, fly--
+"Soon will his murderous band be here.
+ "And I shall see thee bleed and die.--
+"Hush! heardest thou not the tramp of men
+"Sounding from yonder fearful glen?--
+"Perhaps, even now they climb the wood--
+ "Fly, fly--tho' still the West is bright,
+"He'll come--oh! yes--he wants thy blood--
+ "I know him--he'll not wait for night!"
+
+In terrors even to agony
+ She clings around the wondering Chief;--
+ "Alas, poor wildered maid! to me
+ "Thou owest this raving trance of grief.
+"Lost as I am, naught ever grew
+"Beneath my shade but perisht too--
+"My doom is like the Dead Sea air,
+"And nothing lives that enters there!
+"Why were our barks together driven
+"Beneath this morning's furious heaven?
+"Why when I saw the prize that chance
+ "Had thrown into my desperate arms,--
+"When casting but a single glance
+"Upon thy pale and prostrate charms,
+"I vowed (tho' watching viewless o'er
+ "Thy safety thro' that hour's alarms)
+"To meet the unmanning sight no more--
+"Why have I broke that heart-wrung vow?
+"Why weakly, madly met thee now?
+"Start not--that noise is but the shock
+ "Of torrents thro' yon valley hurled--
+"Dread nothing here--upon this rock
+ "We stand above the jarring world,
+"Alike beyond its hope--its dread--
+"In gloomy safety like the Dead!
+"Or could even earth and hell unite
+"In league to storm this Sacred Height,
+"Fear nothing thou--myself, tonight,
+"And each o'erlooking star that dwells
+"Near God will be thy sentinels;--
+"And ere to-morrow's dawn shall glow,
+"Back to thy sire"--
+ "To-morrow!--no"--
+The maiden screamed--"Thou'lt never see
+"To-morrow's sun--death, death will be
+"The night-cry thro' each reeking tower,
+"Unless we fly, ay, fly this hour!
+"Thou art betrayed--some wretch who knew
+"That dreadful glen's mysterious clew-
+"Nay, doubt not--by yon stars, 'tis true--
+"Hath sold thee to my vengeful sire;
+"This morning, with that smile so dire
+"He wears in joy he told me all
+"And stampt in triumph thro' our hall,
+"As tho' thy heart already beat
+"Its last life-throb beneath his feet!
+"Good Heaven, how little dreamed I then
+ "His victim was my own loved youth!--
+"Fly--send--let some one watch the glen--
+ "By all my hopes of heaven 'tis truth!"
+
+Oh! colder than the wind that freezes
+ Founts that but now in sunshine played,
+Is that congealing pang which seizes
+ The trusting bosom, when betrayed.
+He felt it--deeply felt--and stood,
+As if the tale had frozen his blood,
+ So mazed and motionless was he;--
+Like one whom sudden spells enchant,
+Or some mute, marble habitant
+ Of the still Halls of ISHMONIE![259]
+But soon the painful chill was o'er,
+And his great soul herself once more
+Lookt from his brow in all the rays
+Of her best, happiest, grandest days.
+Never in moment most elate
+ Did that high spirit loftier rise:--
+While bright, serene, determinate,
+ His looks are lifted to the skies,
+As if the signal lights of Fate
+ Were shining in those awful eyes!
+'Tis come--his hour of martyrdom
+In IRAN'S sacred cause is come;
+And tho' his life hath past away
+Like lightning on a stormy day,
+Yet shall his death-hour leave a track
+ Of glory permanent and bright
+To which the brave of after-times,
+The suffering brave, shall long look back
+ With proud regret,--and by its light
+ Watch thro' the hours of slavery's night
+For vengeance on the oppressor's crimes.
+This rock, his monument aloft,
+ Shall speak the tale to many an age;
+And hither bards and heroes oft
+ Shall come in secret pilgrimage,
+And bring their warrior sons and tell
+The wondering boys where HAFED fell;
+And swear them on those lone remains
+Of their lost country's ancient fanes,
+Never--while breath of life shall live
+Within them--never to forgive
+The accursed race whose ruthless chain
+Hath left on IRAN'S neck a stain
+Blood, blood alone can cleanse again!
+
+Such are the swelling thoughts that now
+Enthrone themselves on HAFED'S brow;
+And ne'er did Saint of ISSA [260] gaze
+ On the red wreath for martyrs twined.
+More proudly than the youth surveys
+ That pile which thro' the gloom behind,
+Half lighted by the altar's fire,
+Glimmers--his destined funeral pyre!
+Heaped by his own, his comrades hands,
+ Of every wood of odorous breath.
+There, by the Fire-God's shrine it stands,
+ Ready to fold in radiant death
+The few still left of those who swore
+To perish there when hope was o'er--
+The few to whom that couch of flame,
+Which rescues them from bonds and shame,
+Is sweet and welcome as the bed
+For their own infant Prophet spread,
+When pitying Heaven to roses turned
+The death-flames that beneath him burned![261]
+
+ With watchfulness the maid attends
+His rapid glance where'er it bends--
+Why shoot his eyes such awful beams?
+What plans he now? what thinks or dreams?
+Alas! why stands he musing here,
+When every moment teems with fear?
+"HAFED, my own beloved Lord,"
+She kneeling cries--"first, last adored!
+"If in that soul thou'st ever felt
+ "Half what thy lips impassioned swore,
+"Here on my knees that never knelt
+ "To any but their God before,
+"I pray thee, as thou lovest me, fly--
+"Now, now--ere yet their blades are nigh.
+"Oh haste--the bark that bore me hither
+ "Can waft us o'er yon darkening sea
+"East--west--alas, I care not whither,
+ "So thou art safe, and I with thee!
+"Go where we will, this hand in thine,
+ "Those eyes before me smiling thus,
+"Thro' good and ill, thro' storm and shine,
+ "The world's a world of love for us!
+"On some calm, blessed shore we'll dwell,
+"Where 'tis no crime to love too well;
+"Where thus to worship tenderly
+"An erring child of light like thee
+"Will not be sin--or if it be
+"Where we may weep our faults away,
+"Together kneeling, night and day,
+"Thou, for _my_ sake, at ALLA'S shrine,
+"And I--at _any_ God's, for thine!"
+
+Wildly these passionate words she spoke--
+ Then hung her head and wept for shame;
+Sobbing as if a heart-string broke
+ With every deep-heaved sob that came,
+While he, young, warm--oh! wonder not
+ If, for a moment, pride and fame;
+ His oath--his cause--that shrine of flame,
+And IRAN'S self are all forgot
+For her, whom at his feet he sees
+Kneeling in speechless agonies.
+No, blame him not if Hope awhile
+Dawned in his soul and threw her smile
+O'er hours to come--o'er days and nights,
+Winged with those precious, pure delights
+Which she who bends all beauteous there
+Was born to kindle and to share.
+A tear or two which as he bowed
+ To raise the suppliant, trembling stole,
+First warned him of this dangerous cloud
+ Of softness passing o'er his soul.
+Starting he brusht the drops away
+Unworthy o'er that cheek to stray;--
+Like one who on the morn of fight
+Shakes from his sword the dews of night,
+That had but dimmed not stained its light.
+
+Yet tho' subdued the unnerving thrill,
+Its warmth, its weakness lingered still
+ So touching in each look and tone,
+That the fond, fearing, hoping maid
+Half counted on the flight she prayed,
+ Half thought the hero's soul was grown
+ As soft, as yielding as her own,
+And smiled and blest him while he said,--
+"Yes--if there be some happier sphere
+"Where fadeless truth like ours is dear.--
+"If there be any land of rest
+ "For those who love and ne'er forget,
+"Oh! comfort thee--for safe and blest
+ "We'll meet in that calm region yet!"
+
+ Scarce had she time to ask her heart
+If good or ill these words impart,
+When the roused youth impatient flew
+To the tower-wall, where high in view
+A ponderous sea-horn[262] hung, and blew
+A signal deep and dread as those
+The storm-fiend at his rising blows.--
+Full well his Chieftains, sworn and true
+Thro' life and death, that signal knew;
+For 'twas the appointed warning-blast,
+The alarm to tell when hope was past
+And the tremendous death-die cast!
+And there upon the mouldering tower
+Hath hung this sea-horn many an hour,
+Ready to sound o'er land and sea
+That dirge-note of the brave and free.
+
+They came--his Chieftains at the call
+Came slowly round and with them all--
+Alas, how few!--the worn remains
+Of those who late o'er KERMAN'S plains
+When gayly prancing to the clash
+ Of Moorish zel and tymbalon
+Catching new hope from every flash
+ Of their long lances in the sun,
+And as their coursers charged the wind
+And the white ox-tails streamed behind,[263]
+Looking as if the steeds they rode
+Were winged and every Chief a God!
+How fallen, how altered now! how wan
+Each scarred and faded visage shone,
+As round the burning shrine they came;--
+ How deadly was the glare it cast,
+As mute they paused before the flame
+ To light their torches as they past!
+'Twas silence all--the youth hath planned
+The duties of his soldier-band;
+And each determined brow declares
+His faithful Chieftains well know theirs.
+But minutes speed--night gems the skies--
+And oh, how soon, ye blessed eyes
+That look from heaven ye may behold
+Sights that will turn your star-fires cold!
+Breathless with awe, impatience, hope,
+The maiden sees the veteran group
+Her litter silently prepare,
+ And lay it at her trembling feet;--
+And now the youth with gentle care,
+ Hath placed her in the sheltered seat
+And prest her hand--that lingering press
+ Of hands that for the last time sever;
+Of hearts whose pulse of happiness
+ When that hold breaks is dead for ever.
+And yet to _her_ this sad caress
+ Gives hope--so fondly hope can err!
+'Twas joy, she thought, joy's mute excess--
+ Their happy flight's dear harbinger;
+'Twas warmth--assurance--tenderness--
+ 'Twas any thing but leaving her.
+
+"Haste, haste!" she cried, "the clouds grow dark,
+"But still, ere night, we'll reach the bark;
+"And by to-morrow's dawn--oh bliss!
+ "With thee upon the sun-bright deep,
+"Far off, I'll but remember this,
+ "As some dark vanisht dream of sleep;
+"And thou"--but ah!--he answers not--
+ Good Heaven!--and does she go alone?
+She now has reached that dismal spot,
+ Where some hours since his voice's tone
+Had come to soothe her fears and ills,
+Sweet as the angel ISRAFIL'S,[264]
+When every leaf on Eden's tree
+Is trembling to his minstrelsy--
+Yet now--oh, now, he is not nigh.--
+ "HAFED! my HAFED!--if it be
+"Thy will, thy doom this night to die
+ "Let me but stay to die with thee
+"And I will bless thy loved name,
+"Till the last life-breath leave this frame.
+"Oh! let our lips, our cheeks be laid
+"But near each other while they fade;
+"Let us but mix our parting breaths,
+"And I can die ten thousand deaths!
+"You too, who hurry me away
+"So cruelly, one moment stay--
+ "Oh! stay--one moment is not much--
+"He yet may come--for _him_ I pray--
+"HAFED! dear HAFED!"--all the way
+ In wild lamentings that would touch
+A heart of stone she shrieked his name
+To the dark woods--no HAFED came:--
+No--hapless pair--you've lookt your last:--
+ Your hearts should both have broken then:--
+The dream is o'er--your doom is cast--
+ You'll never meet on earth again!
+
+Alas for him who hears her cries!
+ Still half-way down the steep he stands,
+Watching with fixt and feverish eyes
+ The glimmer of those burning brands
+That down the rocks with mournful ray,
+Light all he loves on earth away!
+Hopeless as they who far at sea
+ By the cold moon have just consigned
+The corse of one loved tenderly
+ To the bleak flood they leave behind,
+And on the deck still lingering stay,
+And long look back with sad delay
+To watch the moonlight on the wave
+That ripples o'er that cheerless grave.
+
+ But see--he starts--what heard he then?
+That dreadful shout!--across the glen
+From the land-side it comes and loud
+Rings thro' the chasm, as if the crowd
+Of fearful things that haunt that dell
+Its Ghouls and Divs and shapes of hell,
+And all in one dread howl broke out,
+So loud, so terrible that shout!
+"They come--the Moslems come!"--he cries,
+His proud soul mounting to his eyes,--
+"Now, Spirits of the Brave, who roam
+"Enfranchised thro' yon starry dome,
+"Rejoice--for souls of kindred fire
+"Are on the wing to join your choir!"
+He said--and, light as bridegrooms bound
+ To their young loves, reclined the steep
+And gained the Shrine--his Chiefs stood round--
+ Their swords, as with instinctive leap,
+Together at that cry accurst
+Had from their sheaths like sunbeams burst.
+And hark!--again--again it rings;
+Near and more near its echoings
+Peal thro' the chasm--oh! who that then
+Had seen those listening warrior-men,
+With their swords graspt, their eyes of flame
+Turned on their Chief--could doubt the shame,
+The indignant shame with which they thrill
+To hear those shouts and yet stand still?
+
+He read their thoughts--they were his own--
+ "What! while our arms can wield these blades,
+"Shall we die tamely? die alone?
+ "Without one victim to our shades,
+"One Moslem heart, where buried deep
+ "The sabre from its toil may sleep?
+"No--God of IRAN'S burning skies!
+"Thou scornest the inglorious sacrifice.
+"No--tho' of all earth's hope bereft,
+"Life, swords, and vengeance still are left.
+"We'll make yon valley's reeking caves
+ "Live in the awe-struck minds of men
+"Till tyrants shudder, when their slaves
+ "Tell of the Gheber's bloody glen,
+"Follow, brave hearts!--this pile remains
+"Our refuge still from life and chains;
+"But his the best, the holiest bed,
+"Who sinks entombed in Moslem dead!"
+
+ Down the precipitous rocks they sprung,
+While vigor more than human strung
+Each arm and heart.--The exulting foe
+Still thro' the dark defiles below,
+Trackt by his torches' lurid fire,
+ Wound slow, as thro' GOLCONDA'S vale
+The mighty serpent in his ire
+ Glides on with glittering, deadly trail.
+No torch the Ghebers need--so well
+They know each mystery of the dell,
+So oft have in their wanderings
+Crost the wild race that round them dwell,
+ The very tigers from their delves
+Look out and let them pass as things
+ Untamed and fearless like themselves!
+
+ There was a deep ravine that lay
+Yet darkling in the Moslem's way;
+Fit spot to make invaders rue
+The many fallen before the few.
+The torrents from that morning's sky
+Had filled the narrow chasm breast-high,
+And on each side aloft and wild
+Huge cliffs and toppling crags were piled,--
+The guards with which young Freedom lines
+The pathways to her mountain-shrines,
+Here at this pass the scanty band;
+Of IRAN'S last avengers stand;
+Here wait in silence like the dead
+And listen for the Moslem's tread
+So anxiously the carrion-bird
+Above them flaps his wing unheard!
+
+ They come--that plunge into the water
+Gives signal for the work of slaughter.
+Now, Ghebers, now--if e'er your blades
+ Had point or prowess prove them now--
+Woe to the file that foremost wades!
+ They come--a falchion greets each brow,
+And as they tumble trunk on trunk
+Beneath the gory waters sunk,
+Still o'er their drowning bodies press
+New victims quick and numberless;
+Till scarce an arm in HAFED'S band,
+ So fierce their toil, hath power to stir,
+But listless from each crimson hand
+ The sword hangs clogged with massacre.
+Never was horde of tyrants met
+With bloodier welcome--never yet
+To patriot vengeance hath the sword
+More terrible libations poured!
+
+ All up the dreary, long ravine,
+By the red, murky glimmer seen
+Of half-quenched brands, that o'er the flood
+Lie scattered round and burn in blood,
+What ruin glares! what carnage swims!
+Heads, blazing turbans, quivering limbs,
+Lost swords that dropt from many a hand,
+In that thick pool of slaughter stand;--
+Wretches who wading, half on fire
+ From the tost brands that round them fly,
+'Twixt flood and flame in shrieks expire;--
+ And some who grasp by those that die
+Sink woundless with them, smothered o'er
+In their dead brethren's gushing gore!
+
+ But vainly hundreds, thousands bleed,
+Still hundreds, thousands more succeed;
+Countless as toward some flame at night
+The North's dark insects wing their flight
+And quench or perish in its light,
+To this terrific spot they pour--
+Till, bridged with Moslem bodies o'er,
+It bears aloft their slippery tread,
+And o'er the dying and the dead,
+Tremendous causeway! on they pass.
+Then, hapless Ghebers, then, alas,
+What hope was left for you? for you,
+Whose yet warm pile of sacrifice
+Is smoking in their vengeful eyes;--
+Whose swords how keen, how fierce they knew.
+And burned with shame to find how few.
+
+ Crusht down by that vast multitude
+Some found their graves where first they stood;
+While some with hardier struggle died,
+And still fought on by HAFED'S side,
+Who fronting to the foe trod back
+Towards the high towers his gory track;
+And as a lion swept away
+ By sudden swell of JORDAN'S pride
+From the wild covert where he lay,[265]
+ Long battles with the o'erwhelming tide,
+So fought he back with fierce delay
+And kept both foes and fate at bay.
+
+But whither now? their track is lost,
+ Their prey escaped--guide, torches gone--
+By torrent-beds and labyrinths crost,
+ The scattered crowd rush blindly on--
+"Curse on those tardy lights that wind,"
+They panting cry, "so far behind;
+"Oh, for a bloodhound's precious scent,
+"To track the way the Ghebers went!"
+Vain wish--confusedly along
+They rush more desperate as more wrong:
+Till wildered by the far-off lights,
+Yet glittering up those gloomy heights,
+Their footing mazed and lost they miss,
+And down the darkling precipice
+Are dasht into the deep abyss;
+Or midway hang impaled on rocks,
+A banquet yet alive for flocks
+Of ravening vultures,--while the dell
+Re-echoes with each horrible yell.
+Those sounds--the last, to vengeance dear.
+That e'er shall ring in HAFED'S ear,--
+Now reached him as aloft alone
+Upon the steep way breathless thrown,
+He lay beside his reeking blade,
+ Resigned, as if life's task were o'er,
+Its last blood-offering amply paid,
+ And IRAN'S self could claim no more.
+One only thought, one lingering beam
+Now broke across his dizzy dream
+Of pain and weariness--'twas she,
+ His heart's pure planet shining yet
+Above the waste of memory
+ When all life's other lights were set.
+And never to his mind before
+Her image such enchantment wore.
+It seemed as if each thought that stained,
+ Each fear that chilled their loves was past,
+And not one cloud of earth remained
+ Between him and her radiance cast;--
+As if to charms, before so bright,
+ New grace from other worlds was given.
+And his soul saw her by the light
+ Now breaking o'er itself from heaven!
+
+A voice spoke near him--'twas the tone
+Of a loved friend, the only one
+Of all his warriors left with life
+From that short night's tremendous strife.--
+"And must we then, my chief, die here?
+"Foes round us and the Shrine so near!"
+These words have roused the last remains
+ Of life within him:--"What! not yet
+"Beyond the reach of Moslem chains!"
+
+ The thought could make even Death forget
+His icy bondage:--with a bound
+He springs all bleeding from the ground
+And grasps his comrade's arm now grown
+Even feebler, heavier than his own.
+And up the painful pathway leads,
+Death gaining on each step he treads.
+Speed them, thou God, who heardest their vow!
+They mount--they bleed--oh save them now--
+The crags are red they've clambered o'er,
+The rock-weed's dripping with their gore;--
+Thy blade too, HAFED, false at length,
+How breaks beneath thy tottering strength!
+Haste, haste--the voices of the Foe
+Come near and nearer from below--
+One effort more--thank Heaven! 'tis past,
+They've gained the topmost steep at last.
+And now they touch the temple's walls.
+ Now HAFED sees the Fire divine--
+When, lo!--his weak, worn comrade falls
+ Dead on the threshold of the shrine.
+"Alas, brave soul, too quickly fled!
+ "And must I leave thee withering here,
+"The sport of every ruffian's tread,
+ "The mark for every coward's spear?
+"No, by yon altar's sacred beams!"
+He cries and with a strength that seems
+Not of this world uplifts the frame
+Of the fallen Chief and toward the flame
+Bears him along; with death-damp hand
+ The corpse upon the pyre he lays,
+Then lights the consecrated brand
+ And fires the pile whose sudden blaze
+Like lightning bursts o'er OMAN'S Sea.--
+"Now, Freedom's God! I come to Thee,"
+The youth exclaims and with a smile
+Of triumph vaulting on the pile,
+In that last effort ere the fires
+Have harmed one glorious limb expires!
+
+What shriek was that on OMAN'S tide?
+ It came from yonder drifting bark,
+That just hath caught upon her side
+ The death-light--and again is dark.
+It is the boat--ah! why delayed?--
+That bears the wretched Moslem maid;
+Confided to the watchful care
+ Of a small veteran band with whom
+Their generous Chieftain would not share
+ The secret of his final doom,
+But hoped when HINDA safe and free
+ Was rendered to her father's eyes,
+Their pardon full and prompt would be
+ The ransom of so dear a prize.--
+Unconscious thus of HAFED'S fate,
+And proud to guard their beauteous freight,
+Scarce had they cleared the surfy waves
+That foam around those frightful caves
+When the curst war-whoops known so well
+Came echoing from the distant dell--
+Sudden each oar, upheld and still,
+ Hung dripping o'er the vessel's side,
+And driving at the current's will,
+ They rockt along the whispering tide;
+While every eye in mute dismay
+ Was toward that fatal mountain turned.
+Where the dim altar's quivering ray
+ As yet all lone and tranquil burned.
+
+Oh! 'tis not, HINDA, in the power
+ Of Fancy's most terrific touch
+To paint thy pangs in that dread hour--
+ Thy silent agony--'twas such
+As those who feel could paint too well,
+But none e'er felt and lived to tell!
+'Twas not alone the dreary state
+Of a lorn spirit crusht by fate,
+When tho' no more remains to dread
+ The panic chill will not depart;--
+When tho' the inmate Hope be dead,
+ Her ghost still haunts the mouldering heart;
+No--pleasures, hopes, affections gone,
+The wretch may bear and yet live on
+Like things within the cold rock found
+Alive when all's congealed around.
+But there's a blank repose in this,
+A calm stagnation, that were bliss
+To the keen, burning, harrowing pain,
+Now felt thro' all thy breast and brain;--
+That spasm of terror, mute, intense,
+That breathless, agonized suspense
+From whose hot throb whose deadly aching,
+The heart hath no relief but breaking!
+
+Calm is the wave--heaven's brilliant lights
+ Reflected dance beneath the prow;--
+Time was when on such lovely nights
+ She who is there so desolate now
+Could sit all cheerful tho' alone
+ And ask no happier joy than seeing
+That starlight o'er the waters thrown--
+No joy but that to make her blest,
+ And the fresh, buoyant sense of Being
+Which bounds in youth's yet careless breast,--
+Itself a star not borrowing light
+But in its own glad essence bright.
+How different now!--but, hark! again
+The yell of havoc rings--brave men!
+In vain with beating hearts ye stand
+On the bark's edge--in vain each hand
+Half draws the falchion from its sheath;
+ All's o'er--in rust your blades may lie:--
+He at whose word they've scattered death
+ Even now this night himself must die!
+Well may ye look to yon dim tower,
+ And ask and wondering guess what means
+The battle-cry at this dead hour--
+ Ah! she could tell you--she who leans
+Unheeded there, pale, sunk, aghast,
+With brow against the dew-cold mast;--
+ Too well she knows--her more than life,
+Her soul's first idol and its last
+ Lies bleeding in that murderous strife.
+But see--what moves upon the height?
+Some signal!--'tis a torch's light
+ What bodes its solitary glare?
+In gasping silence toward the Shrine
+All eyes are turned--thine, HINDA, thine
+ Fix their last fading life-beams there.
+'Twas but a moment--fierce and high
+The death-pile blazed into the sky
+And far-away o'er rock and flood
+ Its melancholy radiance sent:
+While HAFED like a vision stood
+Revealed before the burning pyre.
+Tall, shadowy, like a Spirit of fire
+ Shrined in its own grand element!
+"'Tis he!"--the shuddering maid exclaims,--
+ But while she speaks he's seen no more;
+High burst in air the funeral flames,
+ And IRAN'S hopes and hers are o'er!
+
+One wild, heart-broken shriek she gave;
+ Then sprung as if to reach that blaze
+ Where still she fixt her dying gaze,
+And gazing sunk into the wave.--
+ Deep, deep,--where never care or pain
+ Shall reach her innocent heart again!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Farewell--farewell to thee. ARABY'S daughter!
+ (Thus warbled a PERI beneath the dark sea,)
+No pearl ever lay under OMAN'S green water
+ More pure in its shell than thy Spirit in thee.
+
+Oh! fair as the sea-flower close to thee growing,
+ How light was thy heart till Love's witchery came,
+Like the wind of the south[266] o'er a summer lute blowing,
+ And husht all its music and withered its frame!
+
+But long upon ARABY'S green sunny highlands
+ Shall maids and their lovers remember the doom
+Of her who lies sleeping among the Pearl Islands
+ With naught but the sea-star[267] to light up her tomb.
+
+And still when the merry date-season is burning
+ And calls to the palm-groves the young and the old,
+The happiest there from their pastime returning
+ At sunset will weep when thy story is told.
+
+The young village-maid when with flowers she dresses
+ Her dark flowing hair for some festival day
+Will think of thy fate till neglecting her tresses
+ She mournfully turns from the mirror away.
+
+Nor shall IRAN, beloved of her Hero! forget thee--
+ Tho' tyrants watch over her tears as they start,
+Close, close by the side of that Hero she'll set thee,
+ Embalmed in the innermost shrine of her heart.
+
+Farewell--be it ours to embellish thy pillow
+ With everything beauteous that grows in the deep;
+Each flower of the rock and each gem of the billow
+ Shall sweeten thy bed and illumine thy sleep.
+
+Around thee shall glisten the loveliest amber
+ That ever the sorrowing sea-bird has wept;[268]
+With many a shell in whose hollow-wreathed chamber
+ We Peris of Ocean by moonlight have slept.
+
+We'll dive where the gardens of coral lie darkling
+ And plant all the rosiest stems at thy head;
+We'll seek where the sands of the Caspian[269] are sparkling
+ And gather their gold to strew over thy bed.
+
+Farewell--farewell!--Until Pity's sweet fountain
+ Is lost in the hearts of the fair and the brave,
+They'll weep for the Chieftain who died on that mountain,
+ They'll weep for the Maiden who sleeps in this wave.
+
+
+The singular placidity with which FADLADEEN had listened during the latter
+part of this obnoxious story surprised the Princess and FERAMORZ
+exceedingly; and even inclined towards him the hearts of these
+unsuspicious young persons who little knew the source of a complacency so
+marvellous. The truth was he had been organizing for the last few days a
+most notable plan of persecution against the poet in consequence of some
+passages that had fallen from him on the second evening of recital,--which
+appeared to this worthy Chamberlain to contain language and principles for
+which nothing short of the summary criticism of the Chabuk[270] would be
+advisable. It was his intention therefore immediately on their arrival at
+Cashmere to give information to the King of Bucharia of the very dangerous
+sentiments of his minstrel; and if unfortunately that monarch did not act
+with suitable vigor on the occasion, (that is, if he did not give the
+Chabuk to FERAMORZ and a place to FADLADEEN.) there would be an end, he
+feared, of all legitimate government in Bucharia. He could not help
+however auguring better both for himself and the cause of potentates in
+general; and it was the pleasure arising from these mingled anticipations
+that diffused such unusual satisfaction through his features and made his
+eyes shine out like poppies of the desert over the wide and lifeless
+wilderness of that countenance.
+
+Having decided upon the Poet's chastisement in this manner he thought it
+but humanity to spare him the minor tortures of criticism. Accordingly
+when they assembled the following evening in the pavilion and LALLA ROOKH
+was expecting to see all the beauties of her bard melt away one by one in
+the acidity of criticism, like pearls in the cup of the Egyptian queen.--
+he agreeably disappointed her by merely saying with an ironical smile that
+the merits of such a poem deserved to be tried at a much higher tribunal;
+and then suddenly passed off into a panegyric upon all Mussulman
+sovereigns, more particularly his august and Imperial master, Aurungzebe,
+--the wisest and best of the descendants of Timur,--who among other great
+things he had done for mankind had given to him, FADLADEEN, the very
+profitable posts of Betel-carrier and Taster of Sherbets to the Emperor,
+Chief Holder of the Girdle of Beautiful Forms,[271] and Grand Nazir or
+Chamberlain of the Haram.
+
+They were now not far from that Forbidden River[272] beyond which no pure
+Hindoo can pass, and were reposing for a time in the rich valley of Hussun
+Abdaul, which had always been a favorite resting-place of the Emperors in
+their annual migrations to Cashmere. Here often had the Light of the
+Faith, Jehan-Guire, been known to wander with his beloved and beautiful
+Nourmahal, and here would LALLA ROOKH have been happy to remain for ever,
+giving up the throne of Bucharia and the world for FERAMORZ and love in
+this sweet, lonely valley. But the time was now fast approaching when she
+must see him no longer,--or, what was still worse, behold him with eyes
+whose every look belonged to another, and there was a melancholy
+preciousness in these last moments, which made her heart cling to them as
+it would to life. During the latter part of the journey, indeed, she had
+sunk into a deep sadness from which nothing but the presence of the young
+minstrel could awake her. Like those lamps in tombs which only light up
+when the air is admitted, it was only at his approach that her eyes became
+smiling and animated. But here in this dear valley every moment appeared
+an age of pleasure; she saw him all day and was therefore all day happy,--
+resembling, she often thought, that people of Zinge[273] who attribute
+the unfading cheerfulness they enjoy to one genial star that rises nightly
+over their heads.[274]
+
+The whole party indeed seemed in their liveliest mood during the few days
+they passed in this delightful solitude. The young attendants of the
+Princess who were here allowed a much freer range than they could safely
+be indulged with in a less sequestered place ran wild among the gardens
+and bounded through the meadows lightly as young roes over the aromatic
+plains of Tibet. While FADLADEEN, in addition to the spiritual comfort
+derived by him from a pilgrimage to the tomb of the Saint from whom the
+valley is named, had also opportunities of indulging in a small way his
+taste for victims by putting to death some hundreds of those unfortunate
+little lizards,[275] which all pious Mussulmans make it a point to kill;--
+taking for granted that the manner in which the creature hangs its head
+is meant as a mimicry of the attitude in which the Faithful say their
+prayers.
+
+About two miles from Hussun Abdaul were those Royal Gardens which had
+grown beautiful under the care of so many lovely eyes, and were beautiful
+still though those eyes could see them no longer. This place, with its
+flowers and its holy silence interrupted only by the dipping of the wings
+of birds in its marble basins filled with the pure water of those hills,
+was to LALLA ROOKH all that her heart could fancy of fragrance, coolness,
+and almost heavenly tranquillity. As the Prophet said of Damascus, "it was
+too delicious;"[276]--and here in listening to the sweet voice of
+FERAMORZ or reading in his eyes what yet he never dared to tell her, the
+most exquisite moments of her whole life were passed. One evening when
+they had been talking of the Sultana Nourmahal, the Light of the Haram,
+[277] who had so often wandered among these flowers, and fed with her own
+hands in those marble basins the small shining fishes of which she was so
+fond,--the youth in order to delay the moment of separation proposed to
+recite a short story or rather rhapsody of which this adored Sultana was
+the heroine. It related, he said, to the reconcilement of a sort of
+lovers' quarrel which took place between her and the Emperor during a
+Feast of Roses at Cashmere; and would remind the Princess of that
+difference between Haroun-al-Raschid and his fair mistress Marida, which
+was so happily made up by the soft strains of the musician Moussali. As
+the story was chiefly to be told in song and FERAMORZ had unluckily
+forgotten his own lute in the valley, he borrowed the vina of LALLA
+ROOKH'S little Persian slave, and thus began:--
+
+
+THE LIGHT OF THE HARAM.
+
+
+Who has not heard of the Vale of CASHMERE,
+ With its roses the brightest that earth ever gave,[278]
+Its temples and grottos and fountains as clear
+ As the love-lighted eyes that hang over their wave?
+
+Oh! to see it at sunset,--when warm o'er the Lake
+ Its splendor at parting a summer eve throws,
+Like a bride full of blushes when lingering to take
+ A last look of her mirror at night ere she goes!--
+When the shrines thro' the foliage are gleaming half shown,
+And each hallows the hour by some rites of its own.
+Here the music of prayer from a minaret swells,
+ Here the Magian his urn full of perfume is swinging,
+And here at the altar a zone of sweet bells
+ Round the waist of some fair Indian dancer is ringing.[279]
+Or to see it by moonlight when mellowly shines
+The light o'er its palaces, gardens, and shrines,
+When the water-falls gleam like a quick fall of stars
+And the nightingale's hymn from the Isle of Chenars
+Is broken by laughs and light echoes of feet
+From the cool, shining walks where the young people meet.--
+Or at morn when the magic of daylight awakes
+A new wonder each minute as slowly it breaks,
+Hills, cupolas, fountains, called forth every one
+Out of darkness as if but just born of the Sun.
+When the Spirit of Fragrance is up with the day
+From his Haram of night-flowers stealing away;
+And the wind full of wantonness wooes like a lover
+The young aspen-trees,[280]
+till they tremble all over.
+When the East is as warm as the light of first hopes,
+ And day with his banner of radiance unfurled
+Shines in thro' the mountainous portal[281] that opes,
+ Sublime, from that Valley of bliss to the world!
+
+But never yet by night or day,
+In dew of spring or summer's ray,
+Did the sweet Valley shine so gay
+As now it shines--all love and light,
+Visions by day and feasts by night!
+A happier smile illumes each brow;
+ With quicker spread each heart uncloses,
+And all is ecstasy--for now
+ The Valley holds its Feast of Roses;[282]
+The joyous Time when pleasures pour
+Profusely round and in their shower
+Hearts open like the Season's Rose,--
+ The Floweret of a hundred leaves[283]
+Expanding while the dew-fall flows
+ And every leaf its balm receives.
+
+'Twas when the hour of evening came
+ Upon the Lake, serene and cool,
+When day had hid his sultry flame
+ Behind the palms of BARAMOULE,
+When maids began to lift their heads.
+Refresht from their embroidered beds
+Where they had slept the sun away,
+And waked to moonlight and to play.
+All were abroad:--the busiest hive
+On BELA'S[284] hills is less alive
+When saffron-beds are full in flower,
+Than lookt the Valley in that hour.
+A thousand restless torches played
+Thro' every grove and island shade;
+A thousand sparkling lamps were set
+On every dome and minaret;
+And fields and pathways far and near
+Were lighted by a blaze so clear
+That you could see in wandering round
+The smallest rose-leaf on the ground,
+Yet did the maids and matrons leave
+Their veils at home, that brilliant eve;
+And there were glancing eyes about
+And cheeks that would not dare shine out
+In open day but thought they might
+Look lovely then, because 'twas night.
+And all were free and wandering
+ And all exclaimed to all they met,
+That never did the summer bring
+ So gay a Feast of Roses yet;--
+The moon had never shed a light
+ So clear as that which blest them there;
+The roses ne'er shone half so bright,
+ Nor they themselves lookt half so fair.
+
+And what a wilderness of flowers!
+It seemed as tho' from all the bowers
+And fairest fields of all the year,
+The mingled spoil were scattered here.
+The lake too like a garden breathes
+ With the rich buds that o'er it lie,--
+As if a shower of fairy wreaths
+ Had fallen upon it from the sky!
+And then the sounds of joy,--the beat
+Of tabors and of dancing feet;--
+The minaret-crier's chant of glee
+Sung from his lighted gallery,[285]
+And answered by a ziraleet
+From neighboring Haram, wild and sweet;--
+The merry laughter echoing
+From gardens where the silken swing[286]
+Wafts some delighted girl above
+The top leaves of the orange-grove;
+Or from those infant groups at play
+Among the tents[287] that line the way,
+Flinging, unawed by slave or mother,
+Handfuls of roses at each other.--
+Then the sounds from the Lake,--the low whispering in boats,
+ As they shoot thro' the moonlight,--the dipping of oars
+And the wild, airy warbling that everywhere floats
+ Thro' the groves, round the islands, as if all the shores
+Like those of KATHAY uttered music and gave
+An answer in song to the kiss on each wave.[288]
+But the gentlest of all are those sounds full of feeling
+That soft from the lute of some lover are stealing,--
+Some lover who knows all the heart-touching power
+Of a lute and a sigh in this magical hour.
+Oh! best of delights as it everywhere is
+To be near the loved _One_,--what a rapture is his
+Who in moonlight and music thus sweetly may glide
+O'er the Lake of CASHMERE with that _One_ by his side!
+
+If woman can make the worst wilderness dear,
+Think, think what a Heaven she must make of CASHMERE!
+
+So felt the magnificent Son of ACBAR,
+When from power and pomp and the trophies of war
+He flew to that Valley forgetting them all
+With the Light of the HARAM, his young NOURMAHAL.
+When free and uncrowned as the Conqueror roved
+By the banks of that Lake with his only beloved
+He saw in the wreaths she would playfully snatch
+From the hedges a glory his crown could not match,
+And preferred in his heart the least ringlet that curled
+Down her exquisite neck to the throne of the world.
+
+ There's a beauty for ever unchangingly bright,
+Like the long, sunny lapse of a summer-day's light,
+Shining on, shining on, by no shadow made tender
+Till Love falls asleep in its sameness of splendor.
+This _was_ not the beauty--oh, nothing like this
+That to young NOURMAHAL gave such magic of bliss!
+But that loveliness ever in motion which plays
+Like the light upon autumn's soft shadowy days,
+Now here and now there, giving warmth as it flies
+From the lip to the cheek, from the cheek to the eyes;
+Now melting in mist and now breaking in gleams,
+Like the glimpses a saint hath of Heaven in his dreams.
+When pensive it seemed as if that very grace,
+That charm of all others, was born with her face!
+And when angry,--for even in the tranquillest climes
+Light breezes will ruffle the blossoms sometimes--
+The short, passing anger but seemed to awaken
+New beauty like flowers that are sweetest when shaken.
+If tenderness touched her, the dark of her eye
+At once took a darker, a heavenlier dye,
+From the depth of whose shadow like holy revealings
+From innermost shrines came the light of her feelings.
+Then her mirth--oh! 'twas sportive as ever took wing
+From the heart with a burst like the wild-bird in spring;
+Illumed by a wit that would fascinate sages,
+Yet playful as Peris just loosed from their cages.[289]
+While her laugh full of life, without any control
+But the sweet one of gracefulness, rung from her soul;
+And where it most sparkled no glance could discover,
+In lip, cheek, or eyes, for she brightened all over,--
+Like any fair lake that the breeze is upon
+When it breaks into dimples and, laughs in the sun.
+Such, such were the peerless enchantments that gave
+NOURMAHAL the proud Lord of the East for her slave:
+And tho' bright was his Haram,--a living parterre
+Of the flowers[290] of this planet--tho' treasures were there,
+For which SOLIMAN'S self might have given all the store
+That the navy from OPHIR e'er winged to his shore,
+Yet dim before _her_ were the smiles of them all
+And the Light of his Haram was young NOURMAHAL!
+
+But where is she now, this night of joy,
+When bliss is every heart's employ?--
+When all around her is so bright,
+So like the visions of a trance,
+That one might think, who came by chance
+Into the vale this happy night,
+He saw that City of Delight[291]
+In Fairy-land, whose streets and towers
+Are made of gems and light and flowers!
+Where is the loved Sultana? where,
+When mirth brings out the young and fair,
+Does she, the fairest, hide her brow
+In melancholy stillness now?
+
+Alas!--how light a cause may move
+Dissension between hearts that love!
+Hearts that the world in vain had tried
+And sorrow but more closely tied;
+That stood the storm when waves were rough
+Yet in a sunny hour fall off,
+Like ships that have gone down at sea
+When heaven was all tranquillity!
+A something light as air--a look,
+ A word unkind or wrongly taken--
+Oh! love that tempests never shook,
+ A breath, a touch like this hath shaken.
+
+And ruder words will soon rush in
+To spread the breach that words begin;
+And eyes forget the gentle ray
+They wore in courtship's smiling day;
+And voices lose the tone that shed
+A tenderness round all they said;
+Till fast declining one by one
+The sweetnesses of love are gone,
+And hearts so lately mingled seem
+Like broken clouds,--or like the stream
+That smiling left the mountain's brow
+ As tho' its waters ne'er could sever,
+Yet ere it reach the plain below,
+ Breaks into floods that part for ever.
+
+Oh, you that have the charge of Love,
+ Keep him in rosy bondage bound,
+As in the Fields of Bliss above
+ He sits with flowerets fettered round;--
+Loose not a tie that round him clings.
+Nor ever let him use his wings;
+For even an hour, a minute's flight
+Will rob the plumes of half their light.
+Like that celestial bird whose nest
+ Is found beneath far Eastern skies,
+Whose wings tho' radiant when at rest
+ Lose all their glory when he flies![292]
+
+Some difference of this dangerous kind,--
+By which, tho' light, the links that bind
+The fondest hearts may soon be riven;
+Some shadow in Love's summer heaven,
+Which, tho' a fleecy speck at first
+May yet in awful thunder burst;--
+Such cloud it is that now hangs over
+The heart of the Imperial Lover,
+And far hath banisht from his sight
+His NOURMAHAL, his Haram's Light!
+Hence is it on this happy night
+When Pleasure thro' the fields and groves
+Has let loose all her world of loves
+And every heart has found its own
+He wanders joyless and alone
+And weary as that bird of Thrace
+Whose pinion knows no resting place.[293]
+
+In vain the loveliest cheeks and eyes
+This Eden of the Earth supplies
+ Come crowding round--the cheeks are pale,
+The eyes are dim:--tho' rich the spot
+With every flower this earth has got
+ What is it to the nightingale
+If there his darling rose is not?[294]
+In vain the Valley's smiling throng
+Worship him as he moves along;
+He heeds them not--one smile of hers
+Is worth a world of worshippers.
+They but the Star's adorers are,
+She is the Heaven that lights the Star!
+
+Hence is it too that NOURMAHAL,
+Amid the luxuries of this hour,
+Far from the joyous festival
+Sits in her own sequestered bower,
+With no one near to soothe or aid,
+But that inspired and wondrous maid,
+NAMOUNA, the Enchantress;--one
+O'er whom his race the golden sun
+For unremembered years has run,
+Yet never saw her blooming brow
+Younger or fairer than 'tis now.
+Nay, rather,--as the west wind's sigh
+Freshens the flower it passes by,--
+Time's wing but seemed in stealing o'er
+To leave her lovelier than before.
+Yet on her smiles a sadness hung,
+And when as oft she spoke or sung
+Of other worlds there came a light
+From her dark eyes so strangely bright
+That all believed nor man nor earth
+Were conscious of NAMOUNA'S birth!
+All spells and talismans she knew,
+From the great Mantra,[295] which around
+The Air's sublimer Spirits drew,
+To the gold gems[296] of AFRIC, bound
+Upon the wandering Arab's arm
+To keep him from the Siltim's[297] harm.
+And she had pledged her powerful art,--
+Pledged it with all the zeal and heart
+Of one who knew tho' high her sphere,
+What 'twas to lose a love so dear,--
+To find some spell that should recall
+Her Selim's[298] smile to NOURMAHAL!
+
+ 'Twas midnight--thro' the lattice wreathed
+With woodbine many a perfume breathed
+From plants that wake when others sleep.
+From timid jasmine buds that keep
+Their odor to themselves all day
+But when the sunlight dies away
+Let the delicious secret out
+To every breeze that roams about;--
+When thus NAMOUNA:--"'Tis the hour
+"That scatters spells on herb and flower,
+"And garlands might be gathered now,
+"That twined around the sleeper's brow
+"Would make him dream of such delights,
+"Such miracles and dazzling sights
+"As Genii of the Sun behold
+"At evening from their tents of gold
+"Upon the horizon--where they play
+"Till twilight comes and ray by ray
+"Their sunny mansions melt away.
+"Now too a chaplet might be wreathed
+"Of buds o'er which the moon has breathed,
+"Which worn by her whose love has strayed
+ "Might bring some Peri from the skies,
+"Some sprite, whose very soul is made
+ "Of flowerets' breaths and lovers' sighs,
+"And who might tell"--
+ "For me, for me,"
+Cried NOURMAHAL impatiently,--
+"Oh! twine that wreath for me to-night."
+Then rapidly with foot as light
+As the young musk-roe's out she flew
+To cull each shining leaf that grew
+Beneath the moonlight's hallowing beams
+For this enchanted Wreath of Dreams.
+Anemones and Seas of Gold,[299]
+ And new-blown lilies of the river,
+And those sweet flowerets that unfold
+ Their buds on CAMADEVA'S quiver;[300]--
+The tuberose, with her silvery light,
+ That in the Gardens of Malay
+Is called the Mistress of the Night,[301]
+So like a bride, scented and bright,
+ She comes out when the sun's away:--
+Amaranths such as crown the maids
+That wander thro' ZAMARA'S shades;[302]--
+And the white moon-flower as it shows,
+On SERENDIB'S high crags to those
+Who near the isle at evening sail,
+Scenting her clove-trees in the gale;
+In short all flowerets and all plants,
+ From the divine Amrita tree[303]
+That blesses heaven's habitants
+ With fruits of immortality,
+Down to the basil tuft[304] that waves
+Its fragrant blossom over graves,
+ And to the humble rosemary
+Whose sweets so thanklessly are shed
+To scent the desert[305]and the dead:--
+All in that garden bloom and all
+Are gathered by young NOURMAHAL,
+Who heaps her baskets with the flowers
+ And leaves till they can hold no more;
+Then to NAMOUNA flies and showers
+ Upon her lap the shining store.
+With what delight the Enchantress views
+So many buds bathed with the dews
+And beams of that blest hour!--her glance
+ Spoke something past all mortal pleasures,
+As in a kind of holy trance
+ She hung above those fragrant treasures,
+Bending to drink their balmy airs,
+As if she mixt her soul with theirs.
+And 'twas indeed the perfume shed
+From flowers and scented flame that fed
+Her charmed life--for none had e'er
+Beheld her taste of mortal fare,
+Nor ever in aught earthly dip,
+But the morn's dew, her roseate lip.
+Filled with the cool, inspiring smell,
+The Enchantress now begins her spell,
+Thus singing as she winds and weaves
+In mystic form the glittering leaves:--
+
+I know where the winged visions dwell
+ That around the night-bed play;
+I know each herb and floweret's bell,
+ Where they hide their wings by day.
+ Then hasten we, maid,
+ To twine our braid,
+To-morrow the dreams and flowers will fade.
+
+The image of love that nightly flies
+ To visit the bashful maid,
+Steals from the jasmine flower that sighs
+ Its soul like her in the shade.
+The dream of a future, happier hour
+ That alights on misery's brow,
+Springs out of the silvery almond-flower
+ That blooms on a leafless bough.[306]
+ Then hasten we, maid,
+ To twine our braid,
+To-morrow the dreams and flowers will fade.
+
+The visions that oft to worldly eyes
+ The glitter of mines unfold
+Inhabit the mountain-herb[307] that dyes
+ The tooth of the fawn like gold.
+The phantom shapes--oh touch not them--
+ That appal the murderer's sight,
+Lurk in the fleshly mandrake's stem,
+ That shrieks when pluckt at night!
+ Then hasten we, maid,
+ To twine our braid,
+To-morrow the dreams and flowers will fade.
+
+The dream of the injured, patient mind
+ That smiles at the wrongs of men
+Is found in the bruised and wounded rind
+ Of the cinnamon, sweetest then.
+ Then hasten we, maid,
+ To twine our braid,
+To-morrow the dreams and flowers will fade.
+
+No sooner was the flowery crown
+Placed on her head than sleep came down,
+Gently as nights of summer fall,
+Upon the lids of NOURMAHAL;--
+And suddenly a tuneful breeze
+As full of small, rich harmonies
+As ever wind that o'er the tents
+Of AZAB[308] blew was full of scents,
+Steals on her ear and floats and swells
+ Like the first air of morning creeping
+Into those wreathy, Red-Sea shells
+ Where Love himself of old lay sleeping;[309]
+And now a Spirit formed, 'twould seem,
+ Of music and of light,--so fair,
+So brilliantly his features beam,
+ And such a sound is in the air
+Of sweetness when he waves his wings,--
+Hovers around her and thus sings:
+
+From CHINDARA'S[310] warbling fount I come,
+ Called by that moonlight garland's spell;
+From CHINDARA'S fount, my fairy home,
+ Wherein music, morn and night, I dwell.
+Where lutes in the air are heard about
+ And voices are singing the whole day long,
+And every sigh the heart breathes out
+ Is turned, as it leaves the lips, to song!
+ Hither I come
+ From my fairy home,
+ And if there's a magic in Music's strain
+ I swear by the breath
+ Of that moonlight wreath
+ Thy Lover shall sigh at thy feet again.
+
+For mine is the lay that lightly floats
+And mine are the murmuring, dying notes
+That fall as soft as snow on the sea
+And melt in the heart as instantly:--
+And the passionate strain that, deeply going,
+ Refines the bosom it trembles thro'
+As the musk-wind over the water blowing
+ Ruffles the wave but sweetens it too.
+
+Mine is the charm whose mystic sway
+The Spirits of past Delight obey;--
+Let but the tuneful talisman sound,
+And they come like Genii hovering round.
+And mine is the gentle song that bears
+ From soul to soul the wishes of love,
+As a bird that wafts thro' genial airs
+ The cinnamon-seed from grove to grove.[311]
+
+'Tis I that mingle in one sweet measure
+The past, the present and future of pleasure;
+When Memory links the tone that is gone
+ With the blissful tone that's still in the ear;
+And Hope from a heavenly note flies on
+ To a note more heavenly still that is near.
+
+The warrior's heart when touched by me,
+Can as downy soft and as yielding be
+As his own white plume that high amid death
+Thro' the field has shone--yet moves with a breath!
+And oh, how the eyes of Beauty glisten.
+ When Music has reached her inward soul,
+Like the silent stars that wink and listen
+ While Heaven's eternal melodies roll.
+ So hither I come
+ From my fairy home,
+ And if there's a magic in Music's strain,
+ I swear by the breath
+ Of that moonlight wreath
+ Thy Lover shall sigh at thy feet again.
+
+'Tis dawn--at least that earlier dawn
+Whose glimpses are again withdrawn,[312]
+As if the morn had waked, and then
+Shut close her lids of light again.
+And NOURMAHAL is up and trying
+ The wonders of her lute whose strings--
+Oh, bliss!--now murmur like the sighing
+ From that ambrosial Spirit's wings.
+And then her voice--'tis more than human--
+ Never till now had it been given
+To lips of any mortal woman
+ To utter notes so fresh from heaven;
+Sweet as the breath of angel sighs
+ When angel sighs are most divine.--
+"Oh! let it last till night," she cries,
+ "And he is more than ever mine."
+
+And hourly she renews the lay,
+ So fearful lest its heavenly sweetness
+Should ere the evening fade away,--
+ For things so heavenly have such fleetness!
+But far from fading it but grows
+Richer, diviner as it flows;
+Till rapt she dwells on every string
+ And pours again each sound along,
+Like echo, lost and languishing,
+ In love with her own wondrous song.
+
+That evening, (trusting that his soul
+ Might be from haunting love released
+By mirth, by music and the bowl,)
+ The Imperial SELIM held a feast
+In his magnificent Shalimar:[313]--
+In whose Saloons, when the first star
+Of evening o'er the waters trembled,
+The Valley's loveliest all assembled;
+All the bright creatures that like dreams
+Glide thro' its foliage and drink beams
+Of beauty from its founts and streams;[314]
+And all those wandering minstrel-maids,
+Who leave--how _can_ they leave?--the shades
+Of that dear Valley and are found
+ Singing in gardens of the South[315]
+Those songs that ne'er so sweetly sound
+ As from a young Cashmerian's mouth.
+
+There too the Haram's inmates smile;--
+ Maids from the West, with sun-bright hair,
+And from the Garden of the NILE,
+ Delicate as the roses there;[316]--
+Daughters of Love from CYPRUS rocks,
+With Paphian diamonds in their locks;[317]--
+Light PERI forms such as there are
+On the gold Meads of CANDAHAR;[318]
+And they before whose sleepy eyes
+ In their own bright Kathaian bowers
+Sparkle such rainbow butterflies
+ That they might fancy the rich flowers
+That round them in the sun lay sighing
+Had been by magic all set flying.[319]
+
+Every thing young, every thing fair
+From East and West is blushing there,
+Except--except--oh, NOURMAHAL!
+Thou loveliest, dearest of them all,
+The one whose smile shone out alone,
+Amidst a world the only one;
+Whose light among so many lights
+Was like that star on starry nights,
+The seaman singles from the sky,
+To steer his bark for ever by!
+Thou wert not there--so SELIM thought,
+ And every thing seemed drear without thee;
+But, ah! thou wert, thou wert,--and brought
+ Thy charm of song all fresh about thee,
+Mingling unnoticed with a band
+Of lutanists from many a land,
+And veiled by such a mask as shades
+The features of young Arab maids,[320]--
+A mask that leaves but one eye free,
+To do its best in witchery,--
+She roved with beating heart around
+ And waited trembling for the minute
+When she might try if still the sound
+ Of her loved lute had magic in it.
+
+The board was spread with fruits and wine,
+With grapes of gold, like those that shine
+On CASBIN hills;[321]--pomegranates full
+ Of melting sweetness, and the pears,
+And sunniest apples[322] that CAUBUL
+ In all its thousand gardens[323] bears;--
+Plantains, the golden and the green,
+MALAYA'S nectared mangusteen;[324]
+Prunes of BOCKHARA, and sweet nuts
+ From the far groves of SAMARCAND,
+And BASRA dates, and apricots,
+ Seed of the Sun,[325] from IRAN'S land;--
+With rich conserve of Visna cherries,[326]
+Of orange flowers, and of those berries
+That, wild and fresh, the young gazelles
+Feed on in ERAC's rocky dells.[327]
+All these in richest vases smile,
+ In baskets of pure santal-wood,
+And urns of porcelain from that isle[328]
+ Sunk underneath the Indian flood,
+Whence oft the lucky diver brings
+Vases to grace the halls of kings.
+Wines too of every clime and hue
+Around their liquid lustre threw;
+Amber Rosolli,[329]--the bright dew
+From vineyards of the Green-Sea gushing;[330]
+And SHIRAZ wine that richly ran
+ As if that jewel large and rare,
+The ruby for which KUBLAI-KHAN
+Offered a city's wealth,[331] was blushing
+ Melted within the goblets there!
+
+And amply SELIM quaffs of each,
+And seems resolved the flood shall reach
+His inward heart,--shedding around
+ A genial deluge, as they run,
+That soon shall leave no spot undrowned
+ For Love to rest his wings upon.
+He little knew how well the boy
+ Can float upon a goblet's streams,
+Lighting them with his smile of joy;--
+ As bards have seen him in their dreams,
+Down the blue GANGES laughing glide
+ Upon a rosy lotus wreath,[332]
+Catching new lustre from the tide
+ That with his image shone beneath.
+
+But what are cups without the aid
+ Of song to speed them as they flow?
+And see--a lovely Georgian maid
+ With all the bloom, the freshened glow
+Of her own country maidens' looks,
+When warm they rise from Teflis' brooks;[333]
+And with an eye whose restless ray
+ Full, floating, dark--oh, he, who knows
+His heart is weak, of Heaven should pray
+ To guard him from such eyes as those!--
+ With a voluptuous wildness flings
+ Her snowy hand across the strings
+ Of a syrinda[334] and thus sings:--
+
+Come hither, come hither--by night and by day,
+ We linger in pleasures that never are gone;
+Like the waves of the summer as one dies away
+ Another as sweet and as shining comes on.
+And the love that is o'er, in expiring gives birth
+ To a new one as warm, as unequalled in bliss;
+And, oh! if there be an Elysium on earth,
+ It is this, it is this.[335]
+
+Here maidens are sighing, and fragrant their sigh
+ As the flower of the Amra just oped by a bee;[336]
+And precious their tears as that rain from the sky,[337]
+ Which turns into pearls as it falls in the sea.
+Oh! think what the kiss and the smile must be worth
+ When the sigh and the tear are so perfect in bliss,
+And own if there be an Elysium on earth,
+ It is this, it is this.
+
+Here sparkles the nectar that hallowed by love
+ Could draw down those angels of old from their sphere,
+Who for wine of this earth[338] left the fountains above,
+ And forgot heaven's stars for the eyes we have here.
+And, blest with the odor our goblet gives forth,
+ What Spirit the sweets of his Eden would miss?
+For, oh! if there be an Elysium on earth,
+ It is this, it is this.
+
+The Georgian's song was scarcely mute,
+ When the same measure, sound for sound,
+Was caught up by another lute
+ And so divinely breathed around
+That all stood husht and wondering,
+ And turned and lookt into the air,
+As if they thought to see the wing
+ Of ISRAFIL[339] the Angel there;--
+So powerfully on every soul
+That new, enchanted measure stole.
+While now a voice sweet as the note
+Of the charmed lute was heard to float
+Along its chords and so entwine
+ Its sounds with theirs that none knew whether
+The voice or lute was most divine,
+ So wondrously they went together:--
+
+There's a bliss beyond all that the minstrel has told,
+ When two that are linkt in one heavenly tie,
+With heart never changing and brow never cold,
+ Love on thro' all ills and love on till they die!
+One hour of a passion so sacred is worth
+ Whole ages of heartless and wandering bliss;
+And, oh! if there be an Elysium on earth,
+ It is this, it is this.
+
+'Twas not the air, 'twas not the words,
+But that deep magic in the chords
+And in the lips that gave such power
+As music knew not till that hour.
+At once a hundred voices said,
+"It is the maskt Arabian maid!"
+While SELIM who had felt the strain
+Deepest of any and had lain
+Some minutes rapt as in a trance
+ After the fairy sounds were o'er.
+Too inly touched for utterance,
+ Now motioned with his hand for more:--
+
+Fly to the desert, fly with me,
+Our Arab's tents are rude for thee;
+But oh! the choice what heart can doubt,
+Of tents with love or thrones without?
+Our rocks are rough, but smiling there
+The acacia waves her yellow hair,
+Lonely and sweet nor loved the less
+For flowering in a wilderness.
+
+Our sands are bare, but down their slope
+The silvery-footed antelope
+As gracefully and gayly springs
+As o'er the marble courts of kings.
+
+Then come--thy Arab maid will be
+The loved and lone acacia-tree.
+The antelope whose feet shall bless
+With their light sound thy loneliness.
+
+Oh! there are looks and tones that dart
+An instant sunshine thro' the heart,--
+As if the soul that minute caught
+Some treasure it thro' life had sought;
+
+As if the very lips and eyes,
+Predestined to have all our sighs
+And never be forgot again,
+Sparkled and spoke before us then!
+
+So came thy every glance and tone,
+When first on me they breathed and shone,
+New as if brought from other spheres
+Yet welcome as if loved for years.
+
+Then fly with me,--if thou hast known
+No other flame nor falsely thrown
+A gem away, that thou hadst sworn
+Should ever in thy heart be worn.
+
+Come if the love thou hast for me
+Is pure and fresh as mine for thee,--
+Fresh as the fountain under ground,
+When first 'tis by the lapwing found.[340]
+
+But if for me thou dost forsake
+Some other maid and rudely break
+Her worshipt image from its base,
+To give to me the ruined place;--
+
+Then fare thee well--I'd rather make
+My bower upon some icy lake
+When thawing suns begin to shine
+Than trust to love so false as thine.
+
+There was a pathos in this lay,
+ That, even without enchantment's art,
+Would instantly have found its way
+ Deep in to SELIM'S burning heart;
+But breathing as it did a tone
+To earthly lutes and lips unknown;
+With every chord fresh from the touch
+Of Music's Spirit,--'twas too much!
+Starting he dasht away the cup,--
+Which all the time of this sweet air
+His hand had held, untasted, up,
+As if 'twere fixt by magic there--
+And naming her, so long unnamed,
+So long unseen, wildly exclaimed,
+"Oh NOURMAHAL! oh NOURMAHAL!
+ "Hadst thou but sung this witching strain,
+"I could forget--forgive thee all
+"And never leave those eyes again."
+
+The mask is off--the charm is wrought--
+And SELIM to his heart has caught,
+In blushes, more than ever bright,
+His NOURMAHAL, his Haram's Light!
+And well do vanisht frowns enhance
+The charm of every brightened glance;
+And dearer seems each dawning smile
+For having lost its light awhile:
+And happier now for all her sighs
+As on his arm her head reposes
+She whispers him, with laughing eyes,
+ "Remember, love, the Feast of Roses!"
+
+
+FADLADEEN, at the conclusion of this light rhapsody, took occasion to sum
+up his opinion of the young Cashmerian's poetry,--of which, he trusted,
+they had that evening heard the last. Having recapitulated the epithets,
+"frivolous"--"inharmonious"--"nonsensical," he proceeded to say that,
+viewed in the most favorable light it resembled one of those Maldivian
+boats, to which the Princess had alluded in the relation of her dream,--
+a slight, gilded thing, sent adrift without rudder or ballast, and with
+nothing but vapid sweets and faded flowers on board. The profusion,
+indeed, of flowers and birds, which this poet had ready on all occasions,
+--not to mention dews, gems, etc.--was a most oppressive kind of opulence
+to his hearers; and had the unlucky effect of giving to his style all the
+glitter of the flower garden without its method, and all the flutter of
+the aviary without its song. In addition to this, he chose his subjects
+badly, and was always most inspired by the worst parts of them. The
+charms of paganism, the merits of rebellion,--these were the themes
+honored with his particular enthusiasm; and, in the poem just recited, one
+of his most palatable passages was in praise of that beverage of the
+Unfaithful, wine;--"being, perhaps," said he, relaxing into a smile, as
+conscious of his own character in the Haram on this point, "one of those
+bards, whose fancy owes all its illumination to the grape, like that
+painted porcelain,[341] so curious and so rare, whose images are only
+visible when liquor is poured into it." Upon the whole, it was his
+opinion, from the specimens which they had heard, and which, he begged to
+say, were the most tiresome part of the journey, that--whatever other
+merits this well-dressed young gentleman might possess--poetry was by no
+means his proper avocation; "and indeed," concluded the critic, "from his
+fondness for flowers and for birds, I would venture to suggest that a
+florist or a bird-catcher is a much more suitable calling for him than a
+poet."
+
+They had now begun to ascend those barren mountains, which separate
+Cashmere from the rest of India; and, as the heats were intolerable, and
+the time of their encampments limited to the few hours necessary for
+refreshment and repose, there was an end to all their delightful evenings,
+and LALLA ROOKH saw no more of FERAMORZ. She now felt that her short dream
+of happiness was over, and that she had nothing but the recollection of
+its few blissful hours, like the one draught of sweet water that serves
+the camel across the wilderness, to be her heart's refreshment during the
+dreary waste of life that was before her. The blight that had fallen upon
+her spirits soon found its way to her cheek, and her ladies saw with
+regret--though not without some suspicion of the cause--that the beauty of
+their mistress, of which they were almost as proud as of their own, was
+fast vanishing away at the very moment of all when she had most need of
+it. What must the King of Bucharia feel, when, instead of the lively and
+beautiful LALLA ROOKH, whom the poets of Delhi had described as more
+perfect than the divinest images in the house of AZOR,[342] he should
+receive a pale and inanimate victim, upon whose cheek neither health nor
+pleasure bloomed, and from whose eyes Love had fled,--to hide himself in
+her heart?
+
+If any thing could have charmed away the melancholy of her spirits, it
+would have been the fresh airs and enchanting scenery of that Valley,
+which the Persians so justly called the Unequalled.[343] But neither the
+coolness of its atmosphere, so luxurious after toiling up those bare and
+burning mountains,--neither the splendor of the minarets and pagodas, that
+shone put from the depth of its woods, nor the grottoes, hermitages, and
+miraculous fountains,[344] which make every spot of that region holy
+ground,--neither the countless waterfalls, that rush into the Valley from
+all those high and romantic mountains that encircle it, nor the fair city
+on the Lake, whose houses, roofed with flowers,[345] appeared at a
+distance like one vast and variegated parterre;--not all these wonders and
+glories of the most lovely country under the sun could steal her heart for
+a minute from those sad thoughts which but darkened and grew bitterer
+every step she advanced.
+
+The gay pomps and processions that met her upon her entrance into the
+Valley, and the magnificence with which the roads all along were
+decorated, did honor to the taste and gallantry of the young King. It was
+night when they approached the city, and, for the last two miles, they had
+passed under arches, thrown from hedge to hedge, festooned with only those
+rarest roses from which the Attar Gul, more precious than gold, is
+distilled, and illuminated in rich and fanciful forms with lanterns of the
+triple-colored tortoise-shell of Pegu.[346] Sometimes, from a dark wood
+by the side of the road, a display of fireworks would break out, so sudden
+and so brilliant, that a Brahmin might fancy he beheld that grove, in
+whose purple shade the God of Battles was born, bursting into a flame at
+the moment of his birth;--while, at other times, a quick and playful
+irradiation continued to brighten all the fields and gardens by which they
+passed, forming a line of dancing lights along the horizon; like the
+meteors of the north as they are seen by those hunters who pursue the
+white and blue foxes on the confines of the Icy Sea.
+
+These arches and fireworks delighted the Ladies of the Princess
+exceedingly; and, with their usual good logic, they deduced from his taste
+for illuminations, that the King of Bucharia would make the most exemplary
+husband imaginable. Nor, indeed, could LALLA ROOKH herself help feeling
+the kindness and splendor with which the young bridegroom welcomed
+her;--but she also felt how painful is the gratitude which kindness from
+those we cannot love excites; and that their best blandishments come over
+the heart with all that chilling and deadly sweetness which we can fancy
+in the cold, odoriferous wind[347] that is to blow over this earth in the
+last days.
+
+The marriage was fixed for the morning after her arrival, when she was,
+for the first time, to be presented to the monarch in that Imperial Palace
+beyond the lake, called the Shalimar. Though never before had a night of
+more wakeful and anxious thought been passed in the Happy Valley, yet,
+when she rose in the morning, and her Ladies came around her, to assist in
+the adjustment of the bridal ornaments, they thought they had never seen
+her look half so beautiful. What she had lost of the bloom and radiancy
+of her charms was more than made up by that intellectual expression, that
+soul beaming forth from the eyes, which is worth all the rest of
+loveliness. When they had tinged her fingers with the Henna leaf, and
+placed upon her brow a small coronet of jewels, of the shape worn by the
+ancient Queens of Bucharia, they flung over her head the rose-colored
+bridal veil, and she proceeded to the barge that was to convey her across
+the lake;--first kissing, with a mournful look, the little amulet of
+cornelian, which her father at parting had hung about her neck.
+
+The morning was as fresh and fair as the maid on whose nuptials it rose,
+and the shining lake, all covered with boats, the minstrels playing upon
+the shores of the islands, and the crowded summer-houses on the green
+hills around, with shawls and banners waving from their roofs, presented
+such a picture of animated rejoicing, as only she, who was the object of
+it all, did not feel with transport. To LALLA ROOKH alone it was a
+melancholy pageant; nor could she have even borne to look upon the scene,
+were it not for a hope that among the crowds around, she might once more
+perhaps catch a glimpse of FERAMORZ. So much was her imagination haunted
+by this thought that there was scarcely an islet or boat she passed on the
+way at which her heart did not flutter with the momentary fancy that he
+was there. Happy, in her eyes, the humblest slave upon whom the light of
+his dear looks fell!--In the barge immediately after the Princess sat
+FADLADEEN, with his silken curtains thrown widely apart, that all might
+have the benefit of his august presence, and with his head full of the
+speech he was to deliver to the King, "concerning FERAMORZ and literature
+and the Chabuk as connected therewith."
+
+They now had entered the canal which leads from the Lake to the splendid
+domes and saloons of the Shalimar and went gliding on through the gardens
+that ascended from each bank, full of flowering shrubs that made the air
+all perfume; while from the middle of the canal rose jets of water, smooth
+and unbroken, to such a dazzling height that they stood like tall pillars
+of diamond in the sunshine. After sailing under the arches of various
+saloons they at length arrived at the last and most magnificent, where the
+monarch awaited the coming of his bride; and such was the agitation of her
+heart and frame that it was with difficulty she could walk up the marble
+steps which were covered with cloth of gold for her ascent from the barge.
+At the end of the hall stood two thrones, as precious as the Cerulean
+Throne of Koolburga,[348] on one of which sat ALIRIS, the youthful King
+of Bucharia, and on the other was in a few minutes to be placed the most
+beautiful Princess in the world. Immediately upon the entrance of LALLA
+ROOKH into the saloon the monarch descended from his throne to meet her;
+but scarcely had he time to take her hand in his when she screamed with
+surprise and fainted at his feet. It was FERAMORZ, himself, who stood
+before her! FERAMORZ, was, himself, the Sovereign of Bucharia, who in this
+disguise had accompanied his young bride from Delhi, and having won her
+love as an humble minstrel now amply deserved to enjoy it as a King.
+
+The consternation of FADLADEEN at this discovery was, for the moment,
+almost pitiable. But change of opinion is a resource too convenient in
+courts for this experienced courtier not to have learned to avail himself
+of it. His criticisms were all, of course, recanted instantly: he was
+seized with an admiration of the King's verses, as unbounded as, he begged
+him to believe, it was disinterested; and the following week saw him in
+possession of an additional place, swearing by all the Saints of Islam
+that never had there existed so great a poet as the Monarch ALIRIS, and
+moreover ready to prescribe his favorite regimen of the Chabuk for every
+man, woman and child that dared to think otherwise.
+
+Of the happiness of the King and Queen of Bucharia, after such a
+beginning, there can be but little doubt; and among the lesser symptoms it
+is recorded of LALLA ROOKH that to the day of her death in memory of their
+delightful journey she never called the King by any other name than
+FERAMORZ.
+
+
+[1] These particulars of the visit of the King of Bucharia to Aurungzebe
+are found in _Dow's "History of Hindostan_," vol. iii. p. 392.
+
+[2] Tulip cheek.
+
+[3] The mistress of Mejnoun, upon whose story so many Romances in all the
+languages of the East are founded.
+
+[4] For the loves of this celebrated beauty with Khosrou and with Ferhad,
+see _D'Herbelot, Gibbon, Oriental Collections_, etc.
+
+[5] "The history of the loves of Dewildé and Chizer, the son of the
+Emperor Alla, is written in an elegant poem, by the noble Chusero."—-
+_Ferishta_.
+
+[6] Gul Reazee.
+
+[7] "One mark of honor or knighthood bestowed by the Emperor is the
+permission to wear a small kettle-drum at the bows of their saddles, which
+at first was invented for the training of hawks, and to call them to the
+lure, and is worn in the field by all sportsmen to that end."--_Fryer's_
+Travels. "Those on whom the King has conferred the privilege must wear an
+ornament of jewels on the right side of the turban, surmounted by a high
+plume of the feathers of a kind of egret. This bird is found only in
+Cashmere, and the feathers are carefully collected for the King, who
+bestows them on his nobles."--_Elphinstone's_ Account of Cabul.
+
+[8] "Khedar Khan, the Khakan, or King of Turquestan beyond the Gibon (at
+the end of the eleventh century), whenever he appeared abroad was preceded
+by seven hundred horsemen with silver battle-axes, and was followed by an
+equal number bearing maces of gold. He was a great patron of poetry, and
+it was he who used to preside at public exercises of genius, with four
+basins of gold and silver by him to distribute among the poets who
+excelled."--_Richardson's_ Dissertation prefixed to his Dictionary.
+
+[9] "The kubdeh, a large golden knob, generally in the shape of a pine-
+apple, on the top of the canopy over the litter or palanquin."--_Scott's_
+Notes on the Bahardanush.
+
+[10] In the Poem of Zohair, in the Moallakat, there is the following
+lively description of "a company of maidens seated on camels." "They are
+mounted in carriages covered with costly awnings, and with rose-colored
+veils, the linings of which have the hue of crimson Andem-wood. "When they
+ascend from the bosom of the vale, they sit forward on the saddlecloth,
+with every mark of a voluptuous gayety. "Now, When they have reached the
+brink of yon blue-gushing rivulet, they fix the poles of their tents like
+the Arab with a settled mansion."
+
+[11] See _Bernier's_ description of the attendants on Rauchanara Begum, in
+her progress to Cashmere.
+
+[12] This hypocritical Emperor would have made a worthy associate of
+certain Holy Leagues.--"He held the cloak of religion [says Dow] between
+his actions and the vulgar; and impiously thanked the Divinity for a
+success which he owed to his own wickedness. When he was murdering and
+persecuting his brothers and their families, he was building a magnificent
+mosque at Delhi, as an offering to God for his assistance to him in the
+civil wars. He acted as high priest at the consecration of this temple;
+and made a practice of attending divine service there, in the humble dress
+of a Fakeer. But when he lifted one hand to the Divinity, he, with the
+other, signed warrants for the assassination of his relations."--"_History
+of Hindostan_,". vol. iii. p.335. See also the curious letter of
+Aurungzebe, given in the _Oriental Collections_, vol. i. p.320.
+
+[13] "The idol at Jaghernat has two fine diamonds for eyes. No goldsmith
+is suffered to enter the Pagoda, one having stole one of these eyes, being
+locked up all night with the Idol."--_Tavernier_.
+
+[14] See a description of these royal Gardens in "An Account of the
+present State of Delhi, by Lieut. W. Franklin."--_Asiat. Research_, vol.
+iv. p. 417.
+
+[15] "In the neighborhood is Notte Gill, or the Lake of Pearl, which
+receives this name from its pellucid water."--_Pennant's_ "Hindostan."
+"Nasir Jung encamped in the vicinity of the Lake of Tonoor, amused himself
+with sailing on that clear and beautiful water, and gave it the fanciful
+name of Motee Talah, 'the Lake of Pearls,' which it still retains."--
+_Wilks's_ "South of India."
+
+[16] Sir Thomas Roe, Ambassador from James I. to Jehanguire.
+
+[17] "The romance Wemakweazra, written in Persian verse, which contains
+the loves of Wamak and Ezra, two celebrated lovers who lived before the
+time of Mahomet."--_Note on the Oriental Tales_.
+
+[18] Their amour is recounted in the Shah-Namêh of Ferdousi; and there is
+much beauty in the passage which describes the slaves of Rodahver sitting
+on the bank of the river and throwing flowers into the stream, in order to
+draw the attention of the young Hero who is encamped on the opposite
+side.--See _Champion's_ translation.
+
+[19] Rustam is the Hercules of the Persians. For the particulars of his
+victory over the Sepeed Deeve, or White Demon, see _Oriental Collections_,
+vol. ii. p. 45.--Near the city of Shiraz is an immense quadrangular
+monument, in commemoration of this combat, called the Kelaat-i-Deev
+Sepeed, or castle of the White Giant, which Father Angelo, in his
+"_Gazophilacium Persicum_," p.127, declares to have been the most
+memorable monument of antiquity which he had seen in Persia.--See
+_Ouseley's_ "Persian Miscellanies."
+
+[20] "The women of the Idol, or dancing girls of the Pagoda, have little
+golden bells, fastened to their feet, the soft harmonious tinkling of
+which vibrates in unison with the exquisite melody of their voices."--
+_Maurice's_ "Indian Antiquities."
+
+"The Arabian courtesans, like the Indian women, have little golden bells
+fastened round their legs, neck, and elbows, to the sound of which they
+dance before the King. The Arabian princesses wear golden rings on their
+fingers, to which little bells are suspended, as well as in the flowing
+tresses of their hair, that their superior rank may be known and they
+themselves receive in passing the homage due to them."--See _Calmet's_
+Dictionary, art. "Bells."
+
+[21] The Indian Apollo.— "He and the three Ramas are described as youths
+of perfect beauty, and the princesses of Hindustan were all passionately
+in love with Chrishna, who continues to this hour the darling God of the
+Indan women."--_Sir W. Jones_, on the Gods of Greece, Italy, and India.
+
+[22] See _Turner's_ Embassy for a description of this animal, "the most
+beautiful among the whole tribe of goats." The material for the shawls
+(which is carried to Cashmere) is found next the skin.
+
+[23] For the real history of this Impostor, whose original name was Hakem
+ben Haschem, and who was called Mocanna from the veil of silver gauze (or,
+as others say, golden) which he always wore, see _D'Herbelot_.
+
+[24] Khorassan signifies, in the old Persian language, Province or Region
+of the Sun.--_Sir W. Jones_.
+
+[25] "The fruits of Meru are finer than those of any other place: and one
+cannot see in any other city such palaces with groves, and streams, and
+gardens."--_Ebn Haukal's_ Geography.
+
+[26] One of the royal cities of Khorassan.
+
+[27] Moses.
+
+[28] Black was the color adopted by the Caliphs of the House of Abbas, in
+their garments, turbans, and standards.
+
+[29] "Our dark javelins, exquisitely wrought of Khathaian reeds, slender
+and delicate."--_Poem of Amru_.
+
+[30] Pichula, used anciently for arrows by the Persians.
+
+[31] The Persians call this plant Gaz. The celebrated shaft of Isfendiar,
+one of their ancient heroes, was made of it.--"Nothing can be more
+beautiful than the appearance of this plant in flower during the rains on
+the banks of rivers, where it is usually interwoven with a lovely twining
+asclepias."--_Sir W. Jones_..
+
+[32] The oriental plane. "The chenar is a delightful tree; its bole is of
+a fine white and smooth bark; and its foliage, which grows in a tuft at
+the summit, is of a bright green."--_Morier's Travels_..
+
+[33] The burning fountains of Brahma near Chittogong, esteemed as
+holy.--_Turner_.
+
+[34] China.
+
+[35] "The name of tulip is said to be of Turkish extraction, and given to
+the flower on account of its resembling a turban."--_Beckmann_'s History
+of Inventions.
+
+[36] "The inhabitants of Bucharia wear a round cloth bonnet, shaped much
+after the Polish fashion, having a large fur border. They tie their
+kaftans about the middle with a girdle of a kind of silk crape, several
+times round the body."--_Account of Independent Tartary, in Pinkerton's
+Collection_.
+
+[37] In the war of the Caliph Mahadi against the Empress Irene, for an
+account of which _vide Gibbon_, vol. x.
+
+[38] When Soliman travelled, the eastern writers say, "He had a carpet of
+green silk on which his throne was placed, being of a prodigious length
+and breadth, and sufficient for all his forces to stand upon, the men
+placing themselves on his right hand, and the spirits on his left; and
+that when all were in order, the wind, at his command, took up the carpet,
+and transported it, with all that were upon it, wherever he pleased; the
+army of birds at the same time flying over their heads, and forming a kind
+of canopy to shade them from the sun."--Sale's Koran, vol. ii. p. 214,
+note.
+
+[39] The transmigration of souls was one of his doctrines.--_Vide
+D'Herbelot_..
+
+[40] "And when we said unto the angels. Worship Adam, they all worshipped
+him except Eblis (Lucifer), who refused." _The. Koran_, chap. ii.
+
+[41] Moses.
+
+[42] Jesus.
+
+[43] The Amu, which rises in the Belur Tag, or Dark Mountains, and running
+nearly from east to west, splits into two branches; one of which falls
+into the Caspian Sea, and the other into Aral Nahr, or the Lake of Eagles.
+
+[44] The nightingale.
+
+[45] The cities of Com (or Koom) and Cashan are full of mosques,
+mausoleums and sepulchres of the descendants of Ali, the Saints of Persia
+--_Chardin_..
+
+[46] An island in the Persian Gulf, celebrated for its white wine.
+
+[47] The miraculous well at Mecca: so called, says Sale, from the
+murmuring of its waters.
+
+[48] The god Hannaman.--"Apes are in many parts of India highly venerated,
+out of respect to the God Hannaman, a deity partaking of the form of that
+race."--_Pennant's_ Hindoostan. See a curious account in _Stephen's
+Persia_, of a solemn embassy from some part of the Indies to Goa when the
+Portuguese were there, offering vast treasures for the recovery of a
+monkey's tooth, which they held in great veneration, and which had been
+taken away upon the conquest of the kingdom of Jafanapatan.
+
+[49] A kind of lantern formerly used by robbers, called the Hand of Glory,
+the candle for which was made of the fat of a dead malefactor. This,
+however, was rather a western than an eastern superstition.
+
+[50] The material of which images of Gaudma (the Birman Deity) are made,
+is held sacred. "Birmans may not purchase the marble in mass, but are
+suffered, and indeed encouraged, to buy figures of the Deity ready made."
+--_Sytnes's_ "Ava," vol. ii. p. 876.
+
+[51] "It is commonly said in Persia, that if a man breathe in the hot
+south wind, which in June or July passes over that flower (the Kerzereh),
+it will kill him."--_Thevenot_.
+
+[52] The humming bird is said to run this risk for the purpose of picking
+the crocodile's teeth. The same circumstance is related of the lapwing, as
+a fact to which he was witness, by _Paul Lucas, "Voyage fait en_ 1714."
+
+The ancient story concerning the Trochilus, or humming-bird, entering with
+impunity into the mouth of the crocodile, is firmly believed at
+Java.--_Barrow's "Cochin-China_."
+
+[53] "The feast of Lanterns celebrated at Yamtcheou with more magnificence
+than anywhere else! and the report goes that the illuminations there are
+so splendid, that an Emperor once, not daring openly to leave his Court to
+go thither, committed himself with the Queen and several Princesses of his
+family into the hands of a magician, who promised to transport them
+thither in a trice. He made them in the night to ascend magnificent
+thrones that were borne up by swans, which in a moment arrived at
+Yamtcheou. The Emperor saw at his leisure all the solemnity, being carried
+upon a cloud that hovered over the city and descended by degrees; and came
+back again with the same speed and equipage, nobody at court perceiving
+his absence."--_The Present State of China_," p. 156.
+
+[54] "The vulgar ascribe it to an accident that happened in the family of
+a famous mandarin, whose daughter, walking one evening upon the shore of a
+lake, fell in and was drowned: this afflicted father, with his family, ran
+thither, and the better to find her, he caused a great company of lanterns
+to be lighted. All the inhabitants of the place thronged after him with
+torches. The year ensuing they made fires upon the shores the same day;
+they continued the ceremony every year, every one lighted his lantern, and
+by degrees it commenced into a custom."--_The Present State of China_."
+
+[55] "Thou hast ravished my heart with one of thine eyes."--_Sol. Song_.
+
+[56] "They tinged the ends of her fingers scarlet with Henna, so that they
+resembled branches of coral."--_Story of Prince Futtun in Bahardanush_.
+
+[57] "The women blacken the inside of their eyelids with a powder named
+the black Kohol."--_Russell_.
+
+"None of these ladies," says _Shaw_, "take themselves to be completely
+dressed, till they have tinged their hair and edges of their eyelids with
+the powder of lead ore. Now, as this operation is performed by dipping
+first into the powder a small wooden bodkin of the thickness of a quill,
+and then drawing it afterwards through the eyelids over the ball of the
+eye, we shall have a lively image of what the Prophet (Jer. iv. 30) may be
+supposed to mean by _rending the eyes with painting_. This practice is no
+doubt of great antiquity; for besides the instance already taken notice
+of, we find that where Jezebel is said (2 Kings ix. 30.) _to have painted
+her face_, the original words are, _she adjusted her eyes with the powder
+of lead-ore_."--_Shaw's_ Travels.
+
+[58] "The appearance of the blossoms of the gold-colored Campac on the
+black hair of the Indian women has supplied the Sanscrit Poets with many
+elegant allusions."--See _Asiatic Researches_, vol. iv.
+
+[59] A tree famous for its perfume, and common on the hills of
+Yemen.--_Niebuhr_.
+
+[60] Of the genus mimosa "which droops its branches whenever any person
+approaches it, seeming as if it saluted those who retire under its
+shade."--_Niebuhr_.
+
+[61] Cloves are a principal ingredient in the composition of the perfumed
+rods, which men of rank keep constantly burning in their presence.--
+_Turner's_ "Tibet."
+
+[62] "Thousands of variegated loories visit the coral-trees."--_Barrow_.
+
+[63] "In Mecca there are quantities of blue pigeons, which none will
+affright or abuse, much less kill."--_Pitt's_ Account of the Mahometans.
+
+[64] "The Pagoda Thrush is esteemed among the first choristers of India.
+It sits perched on the sacred pagodas, and from thence delivers its
+melodious song."--_Pennant's_ "Hindostan."
+
+[65] _Tavernier_ adds, that while the Birds of Paradise lie in this
+intoxicated state, the emmets come and eat off their legs; and that hence
+it is they are said to have no feet.
+
+[66] Birds of Paradise, which, at the nutmeg season, come in flights from
+the southern isles to India; and "the strength of the nutmeg," says
+_Tavernier_, "so intoxicates them that they fall dead drunk to the earth."
+
+[67] "That bird which liveth in Arabia, and buildeth its nest with
+cinnamon."--_Brown's_ Vulgar Errors.
+
+[68] "The spirits of the martyrs will be lodged in the crops of green
+birds."--_Gibbon_, vol. ix. p. 421.
+
+[69] Shedad, who made the delicious gardens of Irim, in imitation of
+Paradise, and was destroyed by lightning the first time he attempted to
+enter them.
+
+[70] "My Pandits assure me that the plant before us (the Nilica) is their
+Sephalica, thus named because the bees are supposed to sleep on its
+blossoms."--_Sir W. Jones_.
+
+[71] They deterred it till the King of Flowers should ascend his throne of
+enamelled foliage."--_The Bahardanush_".
+
+[72] "One of the head-dresses of the Persian women is composed of a light
+golden chain-work, set with small pearls, with a thin gold plate pendant,
+about the bigness of a crown-piece, on which is impressed an Arabian
+prayer, and which hangs upon the cheek below the ear."--_Hanway's_
+Travels.
+
+[73] "Certainly the women of Yezd are the handsomest women in Persia. The
+proverb is, that to live happy a man must have a wife of Yezd, eat the
+bread of Yezdecas, and drink the wine of Shiraz."--_Tavernier_.
+
+[74] Musnuds are cushioned seats, usually reserved for persons of
+distinction.
+
+[75] The Persians, like the ancient Greeks call their musical modes or
+Perdas by the names of different countries or cities, as the mode of
+Isfahan, the mode of Irak, etc.
+
+[76] A river which flows near the ruins of Chilminar.
+
+[77] "To the north of us (on the coast of the Caspian, near Badku,) was a
+mountain, which sparkled like diamonds, arising from the sea-glass and
+crystals with which it abounds."--_Journey of the Russian Ambassador to
+Persia_, 1746.
+
+[78] "To which will be added, the sound of the bells, hanging on the
+trees, which will be put in motion by the wind proceeding from the throne
+of God, as often as the blessed wish for music."--_Sale_.
+
+[79] "Whose wanton eyes resemble blue water-lilies, agitated by the
+breeze."--_Jayadeva_.
+
+[80] The blue lotos, which grows in Cashmere and in Persia.
+
+[81] It has been generally supposed that the Mahometans prohibit all
+pictures of animals; but _Toderini_ shows that, though the practice is
+forbidden by the Koran, they are not more averse to painted figures and
+images than other people. From Mr. Murphy's work, too, we find that the
+Arabs of Spain had no objection to the introduction of figures into
+Painting.
+
+[82] This is not quite astronomically true. "Dr. Hadley [says Keil] has
+shown that Venus is brightest when she is about forty degrees removed from
+the sun; and that then but _only a fourth part_ of her lucid disk is to be
+seen from the earth."
+
+[83] The wife of Potiphar, thus named by the Orientals. The passion which
+this frail beauty of antiquity conceived for her young Hebrew slave has
+given rise to a much esteemed poem in the Persian language, entitled
+_Yusef vau Zelikha_, by _Noureddin Jami;_ the manuscript copy of which, in
+the Bodleian Library at Oxford, is supposed to be the finest in the whole
+world."--_Note upon Nott's Translation of Hafez_."
+
+[84] The particulars of Mahomet's amour with Mary, the Coptic girl, in
+justification of which he added a new chapter to the Koran, may be found
+in _Gagnier's Notes upon Abulfeda_, p. 151.
+
+[85] "Deep blue is their mourning color." _Hanway_.
+
+[86] The sorrowful nyctanthes, which begins to spread its rich odor after
+sunset.
+
+[87] "Concerning the vipers, which Pliny says were frequent among the
+balsam-trees, I made very particular inquiry; several were brought me
+alive both to Yambo and Jidda."--_Bruce_.
+
+[88] In the territory of Istkahar there is a kind of apple, half of which
+is sweet and half sour.--_Ebn Haukal_.
+
+[89] "The place where the Whangho, a river of Tibet, rises, and where
+there are more than a hundred springs, which sparkle like stars; whence it
+is called Hotun-nor, that is, the Sea of Stars."--_Description of Tibet in
+Pinkerton_.
+
+[90] "The Lescar or Imperial Camp is divided, like a regular town, into
+squares, alleys, and streets, and from a rising ground furnishes one of
+the most agreeable prospects in the world. Starting up in a few hours in
+an uninhabited plain, it raises the idea of a city built by enchantment.
+Even those who leave their houses in cities to follow the prince in his
+progress are frequently so charmed with the Lescar, when situated in a
+beautiful and convenient place, that they cannot prevail with themselves
+to remove. To prevent this inconvenience to the court, the Emperor, after
+sufficient time is allowed to the tradesmen to follow, orders them to be
+burnt out of their tents."--_Dow's Hindostan_.
+
+[91] The edifices of Chilminar and Balbec are supposed to have been built
+by the Genii, acting under the orders of Jan ben Jan, who governed the
+world long before the time of Adam.
+
+[92] "A superb camel, ornamented with strings and tufts of small
+shells."--_Ali Bey_.
+
+[93] A native of Khorassan, and allured southward by means of the water of
+a fountain between Shiraz and Ispahan, called the Fountain of Birds, of
+which it is so fond that it will follow wherever that water is carried.
+
+[94] "Some of the camels have bells about their necks, and some about
+their legs, like those which our carriers put about their fore-horses'
+necks, which together with the servants (who belong to the camels, and
+travel on foot), singing all night, make a pleasant noise, and the journey
+passes away delightfully."--_Pitt's_ Account of the Mahometans.
+
+"The camel-driver follows the camels singing, and sometimes playing upon
+his pipe; the louder he sings and pipes, the faster the camels go. Nay,
+they will stand still when he gives over his music."--_Tavernier_.
+
+[95] "This trumpet is often called, in Abyssinia, _nesser cano_, which
+signifies the Note of the Eagle."--_Note of Bruce's Editor_.
+
+[96] The two black standards borne before the Caliphs of the House of
+Abbas were called, allegorically, The Night and The Shadow.--See _Gibbon_.
+
+[97] The Mohometan religion.
+
+[98] "The Persians swear by the Tomb of Shad Besade, who is buried at
+Casbin; and when one desires another to asseverate a matter he will ask
+him, if he dare swear by the Holy Grave."--_Struy_.
+
+[99] Mahadi, in a single pilgrimage to Mecca, expended six millions of
+dinars of gold.
+
+[100] The inhabitants of Hejaz or Arabia Petraea, called by an Eastern
+writer "The People of the Rock."--_Ebn Haukal_.
+
+[101] "Those horses, called by the Arabians Kochlani, of whom a written
+genealogy has been kept for 2000 years. They are said to derive their
+origin from King Solomon's steeds."--_Niebuhr_.
+
+[102] "Many of the figures on the blades of their swords are wrought in
+gold or silver, or in marquetry with small gems."--_Asiat. Misc_. v. i.
+
+[103] Azab or Saba.
+
+[104] "The chiefs of the Uzbek Tartars wear a plume of white heron's
+feathers in their turbans."--_Account of Independent Tartary_.
+
+[105] In the mountains of Nishapour and Tous in (Khorassan) they find
+turquoises.--_Ebn Huukal_.
+
+[106] The Ghebers or Guebres, those original natives of Persia, who
+adhered to their ancient faith, the religion of Zoroaster, and who, after
+the conquest of their country by the Arabs, were either persecuted at
+home, or forced to become wanderers abroad.
+
+[107] "Yezd, the chief residence of those ancient natives who worship the
+Sun and the Fire, which latter they have carefully kept lighted, without
+being once extinguished for a moment, about 3000 years, on a mountain near
+Yezd, called Ater Quedah, signifying the House or Mansion of the Fire. He
+is reckoned very unfortunate who dies off that mountain."--_Stephen's
+Persia_.
+
+[108] When the weather is hazy, the springs of Naphtha (on an island near
+Baku) boil up the higher, and the Naphtha often takes fire on the surface
+of the earth, and runs in a flame into the sea to a distance almost
+incredible."--_Hanway on the Everlasting Fire at Baku_.
+
+[109] _Savary_ says of the south wind, which blows in Egypt from February
+to May, "Sometimes it appears only in the shape of an impetuous whirlwind,
+which passes rapidly, and is fatal to the traveller, surprised in the
+middle of the deserts. Torrents of burning sand roll before it, the
+firmament is enveloped in a thick veil, and the sun appears of the color
+of blood. Sometimes whole caravans are buried in it."
+
+[110] In the great victory gained by Mahomed at Beder, he was assisted,
+say the Mussulmans, by three thousand angels led by Gabriel mounted on his
+horse Hiazum.--See _The Koran and its Commentators_.
+
+[111] The Techir, or cry of the Arabs. "Alla Acbar!" says Ockley, means,
+"God is most mighty."
+
+[112] The ziraleet is a kind of chorus, which the women of the East sing
+upon joyful occasions.
+
+[113] The Dead Sea, which contains neither animal nor vegetable life.
+
+[114] The ancient Oxus.
+
+[115] A city of Transoxiana.
+
+[116] "You never can cast your eyes on this tree, but you meet there
+either blossoms or fruit; and as the blossom drops underneath on the
+ground (which is frequently covered with these purple-colored flowers),
+others come forth in their stead," etc.--_Nieuhoff_.
+
+[117] The Demons of the Persian mythology.
+
+[118] Carreri mentions the fire-flies in India during the rainy
+season.--See his Travels.
+
+[119] Sennacherib, called by the Orientals King of Moussal.--_D'Herbelot_.
+
+[120] Chosroes. For the description of his Throne or Palace, see _Gibbon
+and D'Herbelot_.
+
+There were said to be under this Throne or Palace of Khosrou Parviz a
+hundred vaults filled with "treasures so immense that some Mahometan
+writers tell us, their Prophet to encourage his disciples carried them to
+a rock which at his command opened and gave them a prospect through it of
+the treasures of Khosrou."--_Universal History_.
+
+[121] "The crown of Gerashid is cloudy and tarnished before the heron tuft
+of thy turban."--From one of the elegies or songs in praise of Ali,
+written in characters of gold round the gallery of Abbas's tomb.--See
+_Chardin_.
+
+[122] The beauty of Ali's eyes was so remarkable, that whenever the
+Persians would describe anything as very lovely, they say it is Ayn Hali,
+or the Eyes of Ali.--_Chardin_.
+
+[123] "Nakshab, the name of a city in Transoxiana, where they say there is
+a well, in which the appearance of the moon is to be seen night and day."
+
+[124] The Shechinah, called Sakfnat in the Koran.--See _Sale's Note_,
+chap. ii.
+
+[125] The parts of the night are made known as well by instruments of
+music, as by the rounds of the watchmen with cries and small drums.--See
+_Burder's Oriental Customs_, vol. i. p. 119.
+
+[126] The Serrapurda, high screens of red cloth, stiffened with cane, used
+to enclose a considerable space round the royal tents.--_Notes on the
+Bakardanush.
+
+The tents of Princes were generally illuminated. Norden tells us that the
+tent of the Bey of Girge was distinguished from the other tents by forty
+lanterns being suspended before it.--See _Harmer's Observations on Job_.
+
+[127] "From the groves of orange trees at Kauzeroon the bees cull a
+celebrated honey.--_Morier's Travels_.
+
+[128] "A custom still subsisting at this day, seems to me to prove that
+the Egyptians formerly sacrificed a young virgin to the God of the Nile;
+for they now make a statue of earth in shape of a girl, to which they give
+the name of the Betrothed Bride, and throw it into the river."--_Savary_.
+
+[129] That they knew the secret of the Greek fire among the Mussulmans
+early in the eleventh century, appears from _Dow's_ account of Mamood I.
+"When he at Moultan, finding that the country of the Jits was defended by
+great rivers, he ordered fifteen hundred boats to be built, each of which
+he armed with six iron spikes, projecting from their prows and sides, to
+prevent their being boarded by the enemy, who were very expert in that
+kind of war. When he had launched this fleet, he ordered twenty archers
+into each boat, and five others with fire-balls, to burn the craft of the
+Jits, and naphtha to set the whole river on fire."
+
+[130] The Greek fire, which was occasionally lent by the emperors to their
+allies. "It was," says Gibbon, "either launched in red-hot balls of stone
+and iron, or darted in arrows and javelins, twisted round with flax and
+tow, which had deeply imbibed the imflammable oil."
+
+[131] See _Hanway's_ Account of the Springs of Naphtha at Baku (which is
+called by _Lieutenant Pottinger_ Joala Mookee, or, the Flaming Mouth),
+taking fire and running into the sea. _Dr. Cooke_, in his Journal,
+mentions some wells in Circassia, strongly impregnated with this
+inflammable oil, from which issues boiling water. "Though the weather," he
+adds, "was now very cold, the warmth of these wells of hot water produced
+near them the verdure and flowers of spring.'
+
+[132] "At the great festival of fire, called the Sheb Seze, they used to
+set fire to large bunches of dry combustibles, fastened round wild beasts
+and birds, which being then let loose, the air and earth appeared one
+great illumination; and as these terrified creatures naturally fled to the
+woods for shelter, it is easy to conceive the conflagrations they
+produced."--_Richardson's Dissertation_.
+
+[133] "The righteous shall be given to drink of pure wine, sealed: the
+seal whereof shall be musk."--_Koran_, chap lxxxiii.
+
+[134] The Afghans believe each of the numerous solitudes and deserts of
+their country to be inhabited by a lonely demon, whom they call The
+Ghoolee Beeabau, or Spirit of the Waste. They often illustrate the
+wildness of any sequestered tribe, by saying they are wild as the Demon of
+the Waste."--_Elphinstone's Caubul_.
+
+[135] "They have all a great reverence for burial-grounds, which they
+sometimes call by the poetical name of Cities of the Silent, and which
+they people with the ghosts of the departed, who sit each at the head of
+his own grave, invisible to mortal eyes."--_Elphinstone_.
+
+[136] The celebrity of Mazagong is owing to its mangoes, which are
+certainly the best I ever tasted. The parent-tree, from which all those of
+this species have been grafted, is honored during the fruit-season by a
+guard of sepoys; and, in the reign of Shah Jehan, couriers ware stationed
+between Delhi and the Mahratta coast, to secure an abundant and fresh
+supply of mangoes for the royal table."--_Mrs. Graham's_ Journal of
+Residence in India.
+
+[137] This old porcelain is found in digging, and "if it is esteemed, it
+is not because it has acquired any new degree of beauty in the earth, but
+because it has retained its ancient beauty; and this alone is of great
+importance in China, where they give large sums for the smallest vessels
+which were used under the Emperors Yan and Chun, who reigned many ages
+before the dynasty of Tang, at which time porcelain began to be used by
+the Emperors" (about the year 442).--_Dunn's_ Collection of curious
+Observations, etc.
+
+[138] The blacksmith Gao, who successfully resisted the tyrant Zohak, and
+whose apron became the royal standard of Persia.
+
+[139] "The Huma, a bird peculiar to the East. It is supposed to fly
+constantly in the air, and never touch the ground; it is looked upon as a
+bird of happy omen; and that every head it overshades will in time wear a
+crown."--_Richardson_.
+
+In the terms of alliance made by Fuzel Oola Khan with Hyder in 1760, one
+of the stipulations was, "that he should have the distinction of two
+honorary attendants standing behind him, holding fans composed of the
+feathers of the humma, according to the practice of his family."--
+_Wilks's_ South of India. He adds in a note;--"The Humma is a fabulous
+bird. The head over which its shadow once passes will assuredly be circled
+with a crown. The splendid little bird suspended over the throne of Tippoo
+Sultaun, found at Seringapatam in 1799, was intended to represent this
+poetical fancy."
+
+[140] "To the pilgrims to Mount Sinai we must attribute the inscriptions,
+figures, etc., on those rocks, which have from thence acquired the name of
+the Written Mountain."--_Volney_.
+
+M. Gebelin and others have been at much pains to attach some mysterious
+and important meaning to these inscriptions; but Niebuhr, as well as
+Volney, thinks that they must have been executed at idle hours by the
+travellers to Mount Sinai, "who were satisfied with cutting the unpolished
+rock with any pointed instrument; adding to their names and the date of
+their journeys some rude figures, which bespeak the hand of a people but
+little skilled in the arts."--_Niebuhr_.
+
+[141] The Story of Sinbad.
+
+[142] "The Cámalatá (called by Linnaeus, Ipomaea) is the most beautiful of
+its order, both in the color and form of its leaves and flowers; its
+elegant blossoms are 'celestial rosy red, Love's proper hue,' and have
+justly procured is the name of Cámalatá, or Love's creeper."--_Sir W.
+Jones_.
+
+[143] "According to Father Premare, in his tract on Chinese Mythology, the
+mother of Fo-hi was the daughter of heaven, surnamed Flower-loving; and as
+the nymph was walking alone on the bank of a river, she found herself
+encircled by a rainbow, after which she became pregnant, and, at the end
+of twelve years, was delivered of a son radiant as herself."--_Asiat.
+Res_.
+
+[144] "Numerous small islands emerge from the Lake of Cashmere. One is
+called Char Chenaur, from the plane trees upon it.--_Foster_.
+
+[145] "The Altan Kol or Golden River of Tibet, which runs into the Lakes
+of Sing-su-hay, has abundance of gold in its sands, which employs the
+inhabitants all the summer in gathering it."--_Description of Tibet in
+Pinkerton_.
+
+[146] "The Brahmins of this province insist that the blue campac flowers
+only in Paradise."--_Sir W. Jones_. It appears, however, from a curious
+letter of the Sultan of Menangeabow, given by Marsden, that one place on
+earth may lay claim to the possession of it. "This is the Sultan, who
+keeps the flower champaka that is blue, and to be found in no other
+country but his, being yellow elsewhere."--_Marsden's_ Sumatra.
+
+[147] "The Mahometans suppose that falling stars are the firebrands
+wherewith the good angels drive away the bad, when they approach too near
+the empyrean or verge or the heavens."--_Fryer_.
+
+[148] The Forty Pillars; so the Persians call the ruins of Persepolis. It
+is imagined by them that this palace and the edifices at Balbec were built
+by Genii, for the purpose of hiding in their subterraneous caverns immense
+treasures, which still remain there.--_D'Herbelot, Volney_.
+
+[149] _Diodorus_ mentions the Isle of Panchai, to the south of Arabia
+Felix, where there was a temple of Jupiter. This island, or rather cluster
+of isles, has disappeared, "sunk [says _Grandpré_] in the abyss made by
+the fire beneath their foundations."--_Voyage to the Indian Ocean_.
+
+[150] The Isles of Panchaia.
+
+[151] "The cup of Jamshid, discovered, they say, when digging for the
+foundations of Persepolis."-_Richardson_.
+
+[152] "It is not like the Sea of India, whose bottom is rich with pearls
+and ambergris, whose mountains of the coast are stored with gold and
+precious stones, whose gulfs breed creatures that yield ivory, and among
+the plants of whose shores are ebony, red wood, and the wood of Hairzan,
+aloes, camphor, cloves, sandal-wood, and all other spices and aromatics;
+where parrots and peacocks are birds of the forest, and musk and civit are
+collected upon the lands."--_Travels of Two Mohammedans_.
+
+[153] "With this immense treasure Mamood returned to Ghizni and in the
+year 400 prepared a magnificent festival, where he displayed to the people
+his wealth in golden thrones and in other ornaments, in a great plain
+without the city of Ghizni." _Ferishta_.
+
+[154] "Mahmood of Gazna, or Chizni, who conquered India in the beginning
+of the 11th century."--See his History in _Dow_ and Sir _J. Malcolm_.
+
+[155] "It is reported that the hunting equipage of the Sultan Mahmood was
+so magnificent, that he kept 400 greyhounds and bloodhounds each of which
+wore a collar set with jewels and a covering edged with gold and
+pearls."--_Universal History_, vol. iii.
+
+[156] "The Mountains of the Moon, or the _Montes Lunae_ of antiquity, at
+the foot of which the Nile is supposed to arise."--_Bruce_.
+
+[157] "The Nile, which the Abyssinians know by the names of Abey and Alawy
+or the Giant."--_Asiat. Research_. vol. i. p. 387.
+
+[158] See Perry's View of the Levant for an account of the sepulchres in
+Upper Thebes, and the numberless grots, covered all over with
+hieroglyphics in the mountains of Upper Egypt.
+
+[159] "The orchards of Rosetta are filled with turtle-doves.--_Sonnini_.
+
+[160] Savary mentions the pelicans upon Lake Moeris.
+
+[161] "The superb date-tree, whose head languidly reclines, like that of a
+handsome woman overcome with sleep."--_Dafard el Hadad_.
+
+[162] "That beautiful bird, with plumage of the finest shining blue, with
+purple beak and legs, the natural and living ornament of the temples and
+palaces of the Greeks and Romans, which, from the stateliness of its part,
+as well as the brilliancy of its colors, has obtained the title of
+Sultana,"--_Sonnini_.
+
+[163] Jackson, speaking of the plague that occurred in West Barbary, when
+he was there, says, "The birds of the air fled away from the abodes of
+men. The hyaenas, on the contrary, visited the cemeteries," etc.
+
+[164] "Gondar was full of hyaenas from the time it turned dark, till the
+dawn of day, seeking the different pieces of slaughtered carcasses, which
+this cruel and unclean people expose in the streets without burial, and
+who firmly believe that these animals are Falashta from the neighboring
+mountains, transformed by magic, and come down to eat human flesh in the
+dark in safety."--_Bruce_.
+
+[165] "In the East, they suppose the Phoenix to have fifty orifices in his
+bill, which are continued to his tail; and that, after living one thousand
+years, he builds himself a funeral pile, sings a melodious air of
+different harmonies through his fifty organ pipes, flaps his wings with a
+velocity which sets fire to the wood and consumes himself."--_Richardson_.
+
+[166] "On the shores of a quadrangular lake stand a thousand goblets, made
+of stars, out of which souls predestined to enjoy felicity drink the
+crystal wave."--From _Chateaubriand's_ Description of the Mahometan
+Paradise, in his _"Beauties of Christianity_."
+
+[167] Richardson thinks that Syria had its name from Suri, a beautiful and
+delicate species of rose, for which that country has always been
+famous;--hence, Suristan, the Land of Roses.
+
+[168] "The number of lizards I saw one day in the great court of the
+Temple of the Sun at Balbec amounted to many thousands; the ground, the
+walls, and stones of the ruined buildings, were covered with
+them."--_Bruce_.
+
+[169] "The Syrinx or Pan's pipes is still a pastoral instrument in
+Syria."--_Russel_.
+
+[170] "Wild bees, frequent in Palestine, in hollow trunks or branches of
+trees, and the clefts of rocks. Thus it is said (Psalm lxxxi.), _'honey
+out of the stony rock.'_"--_Burder's_ Oriental Customs.
+
+[171] "The River Jordan is on both sides beset with little, thick, and
+pleasant woods, among which thousands of nightingales warble all
+together."_--Thevenot_.
+
+[172] The Temple of the Sun at Balbec.
+
+[173] "You behold there a considerable number of a remarkable species of
+beautiful insects, the elegance of whose appearance and their attire
+procured for them the name of Damsels.--_Sonnini_.
+
+[174] "Such Turks as at the common hours of prayer are on the road, or so
+employed as not to find convenience to attend the mosques, are still
+obliged to execute that duty; nor are they ever known to fail, whatever
+business they are then about, but pray immediately when the hour alarms
+them, whatever they are about, in that very place they chance to stand on;
+insomuch that when a janissary, whom you have to guard you up and down the
+city, hears the notice which is given him from the steeples, he will turn
+about, stand still, and beckon with his hand, to tell his charge he must
+have patience for awhile; when, taking out his handkerchief, he spreads it
+on the ground, sits cross-legged thereupon, and says his prayers, though
+in the open market, which, having ended he leaps briskly up, salutes the
+person whom he undertook to convey, and renews his journey with the mild
+expression of _Ghell yelinnum ghell_, or Come, dear, follow me."--_Aaron
+Hill's_ Travels.
+
+[175] The Nucta, Or Miraculous Drop, which falls in Egypt precisely on St.
+John's day in June and is supposed to have the effect of stopping the
+plague.
+
+[176] The Country of Delight--the name of a province in the kingdom of
+Jinnistan, or Fairy Land, the capital of which is called the City of
+Jewels. Amberabad is another of the cities of Jinnistan.
+
+[177] The tree Tooba, that stands in Paradise, in the palace of Mahomet.
+See _Sale's Prelim. Disc_.--Tooba, says _D'Herbelot_, signifies beatitude,
+or eternal happiness.
+
+[178] Mahomet is described, in the 53d chapter of the Koran, as having
+seen the Angel Gabriel "by the lote-tree, beyond which there is no
+passing: near it is the Garden of Eternal Abode." This tree, say the
+commentators, stands in the seventh Heaven, on the right hand of the
+Throne of God.
+
+[179] "It is said that the rivers or streams of Basra were reckoned in the
+time of Peisl ben Abi Bordeh, and amounted to the number of one hundred
+and twenty thousand streams."--_Ebn Haukal_.
+
+[180] The name of the javelin with which the Easterns exercise. See
+_Castellan, "Moeurs des Ottomans," tom_. iii. p. 161.
+
+[181] "This account excited a desire of visiting the Banyan Hospital, as I
+had heard much of their benevolence to all kinds of animals that were
+either sick, lame, or infirm, through age or accident. On my arrival,
+there were presented to my view many horses, cows, and oxen, in one
+apartment; in another, dogs, sheep, goats, and monkeys, with clean straw
+for them to repose on. Above stairs were depositories for seeds of many
+sorts, and flat, broad dishes for water, for the use of birds and
+insects."--_Parson_'s Travels. It is said that all animals know the
+Banyans, that the most timid approach them, and that birds will fly nearer
+to them than to other people.--See _Grandpré_.
+
+[182] "A very fragrant grass from the banks of the Ganges, near Heridwar,
+which in some places covers whole acres, and diffuses, when crushed, a
+strong odor."--_Sir W. Jones_ on the Spikenard of the Ancients.
+
+[183] "Near this is a curious hill, called Koh Talism, the Mountain of the
+Talisman, because, according to the traditions of the country, no person
+ever succeeded in gaining its summit."--_Kinneir_.
+
+[184] "The Arabians believe that the ostriches hatch their young by only
+looking at them."
+
+[185] Oriental Tales.
+
+[186] Ferishta. "Or rather," says _Scott_, upon the passage of Ferishta,
+from which this is taken, "small coins, stamped with the figure of a
+flower. They are still used in India to distribute in charity and on
+occasion thrown by the purse-bearers of the great among the populace."
+
+[187] The fine road made by the Emperor Jehan-Guire from Agra to Lahore,
+planted with trees on each side. This road is 250 leagues in length. It
+has "little pyramids or turrets," says _Bernier_, "erected every half
+league, to mark the ways, and frequent wells to afford drink to
+passengers, and to water the young trees."
+
+[188] The Baya, or Indian Grosbeak.--_Sir W. Jones_.
+
+[189] "Here is a large pagoda by a tank, on the water of which float
+multitudes of the beautiful red lotus: the flower is larger than that of
+the white water-lily, and is the most lovely of the nymphaeas I have
+seen."--_Mrs. Graham's_ Journal of a Residence in India.
+
+[190] "Cashmere (says its historian) had its own princes 4000 years before
+its conquest by Akbar in 1585. Akbar would have found some difficulty to
+reduce this paradise of the Indies, situated as it is within such a
+fortress of mountains, but its monarch, Yusef-Khan, was basely betrayed by
+his Omrahs."--_Pennant_.
+
+[191] Voltaire tells us that in his tragedy, "_Les Guèbres_," he was
+generally supposed to have alluded to the Jansenists. I should not be
+surprised if this story of the Fire worshippers were found capable of a
+similar doubleness of application.
+
+[192] The Persian Gulf, sometimes so called, which separates the shores of
+Persia and Arabia.
+
+[193] The present Gombaroon, a town on the Persian side of the Gulf.
+
+[194] A Moorish instrument of music.
+
+[195] "At Gombaroon and other places in Persia, they have towers for the
+purpose of catching the wind and cooling the houses.--_Le Bruyn_.
+
+[196] "Iran is the true general name for the empire of Persia.--_Asiat.
+Res. Disc. 5_.
+
+[197] "On the blades of their scimitars some verse from the Koran is
+usually inscribed.--_Russel_.
+
+[198] There is a kind of Rhododendros about Trebizond, whose flowers the
+bee feeds upon, and the honey thence drives people mad;"--_Tournefort_.
+
+[199] Their kings wear plumes of black herons' feathers, upon the right
+side, as a badge of sovereignty "--_Hanway_.
+
+[200] "The Fountain of Youth, by a Mahometan tradition, is situated in
+some dark region of the East."--_Richardson_.
+
+[201] Arabia Felix.
+
+[202] "In the midst of the garden is the chiosk, that is, a large room,
+commonly beautified with a fine fountain in the midst of it. It is raised
+nine or ten steps, and enclosed with gilded lattices, round which vines,
+jessamines, and honeysuckles, make a sort of green wall; large trees are
+planted round this place, which is the scene of their greatest
+pleasures."--_Lady M. W. Montagu_.
+
+[203] The women of the East are never without their looking-glasses. "In
+Barbary," says _Shaw_, "they are so fond of their looking-glasses, which
+they hang upon their breasts, that they will not lay them aside, even when
+after the drudgery of the day they are obliged to go two or three miles
+with a pitcher or a goat's skin to fetch water."--_Travels_.
+
+[204] "They say that if a snake or serpent fix his eyes on the lustre of
+those stones (emeralds), he immediately becomes blind."--_Ahmed ben
+Abdalaziz_, Treatise on Jewels.
+
+[205] "At Gombaroon and the Isle of Ormus, it is sometimes so hot, that
+the people are obliged to lie all day in the water."--_Marco Polo_.
+
+[206] This mountain is generally supposed to be inaccessible. _Struy_
+says, "I can well assure the reader that their opinion is not true, who
+suppose this mount to be inaccessible." He adds, that "the lower part of
+the mountain is cloudy, misty, and dark, the middlemost part very cold,
+and like clouds of snow, but the upper regions perfectly calm."--It was on
+this mountain that the Ark was supposed to have rested after the Deluge,
+and part of it, they say, exists there still, which Struy thus gravely
+accounts for:--"Whereas none can remember that the air on the top of the
+hill did ever change or was subject either to wind or rain, which is
+presumed to be the reason that the Ark has endured so long without being
+rotten."--See _Carreri's_ Travels, where the Doctor laughs at this whole
+account of Mount Ararat.
+
+[207] In one of the books of the Shâh Nâmeh, when Zal (a celebrated hero
+of Persia, remarkable for his white hair,) comes to the terrace of his
+mistress Rodahver at night, she lets down her long tresses to assist him
+in his ascent;--he, however, manages it in a less romantic way by fixing
+his crook in a projecting beam.--See _Champion's_ Ferdosi.
+
+[208] "On the lofty hills of Arabia Petraea, are rock-goats."--_Niebuhr_.
+
+[209] "They (the Ghebers) lay so much stress on their cushee or girdle, as
+not to dare to be an instant without it."--_Grose's_ Voyage.
+
+[210] "They suppose the Throne of the Almighty is seated in the sun, and
+hence their worship of that luminary."--_Hanway_.
+
+[211] The Mameluks that were in the other boat, when it was dark used to
+shoot up a sort of fiery arrows into the air which in some measure
+resembled lightning or falling stars."--_Baumgarten_.
+
+[212] "Within the enclosure which surrounds his monument (at Gualior) is a
+small tomb to the memory of Tan-Sein, a musician of incomparable skill,
+who flourished at the court of Akbar. The tomb is overshadowed by a tree,
+concerning which a superstitious notion prevails, that the chewing of its
+leaves will give an extraordinary melody to the voice."--_Narrative of a
+Journey from Agra to Ouzein, by W. Hunter, Esq_.
+
+[213] "It is usual to place a small white triangular flag, fixed to a
+bamboo staff of ten or twelve feet long, at the place where a tiger has
+destroyed a man. It is common for the passengers also to throw each a
+stone or brick near the spot, so that in the course of a little time a
+pile equal to a good wagon-load is collected. The sight of these flags and
+piles of stones imparts a certain melancholy, not perhaps altogether void
+of apprehension."--_Oriental Field Sports_, vol. ii.
+
+[214] "The Ficus Indica is called the Pagod Tree of Councils; the first,
+from the idols placed under its shade; the second, because meetings were
+held under its cool branches. In some places it is believed to be the
+haunt of spectres, as the ancient spreading oaks of Wales have been of
+fairies; in others are erected beneath the shade pillars of stone, or
+posts, elegantly carved, and ornamented with the most beautiful porcelain
+to supply the use of mirrors."--_Pennant_.
+
+[215] The Persian Gulf.--"To dive for pearls in the Green Sea, or Persian
+Gulf."--_Sir W. Jones_.
+
+[216] Or Selemeh, the genuine name of the headland at the entrance of the
+Gulf, commonly called Cape Musseldom. "The Indians when they pass the
+promontory throw cocoa-nuts, fruits, or flowers into the sea to secure a
+propitious voyage."--_Morier_.
+
+[217] "The nightingale sings from the pomegranate-groves in the daytime
+and from the loftiest trees at night."--_Russel's_ "Aleppo."
+
+[218] In speaking of the climate of Shiraz, Francklin says, "The dew is of
+such a pure nature, that if the brightest scimitar should be exposed to it
+all night, it would not receive the least rust."
+
+[219] The place where the Persians were finally defeated by the Arabs, and
+their ancient monarchy destroyed.
+
+[220] The Talpot or Talipot tree. "This beautiful palm-tree, which grows
+in the heart of the forests, may be classed among the loftiest trees, and
+becomes still higher when on the point of bursting forth from its leafy
+summit. The sheath which then envelopes the flower is very large, and,
+when it bursts, makes an explosion like the report of a cannon."--
+_Thunberg_.
+
+[221] "When the bright scimitars make the eyes of our heroes wink."--_The
+Moallakat, Poem of Amru_.
+
+[222] Tahmuras, and other ancient Kings of Persia; whose adventures in
+Fairy-land among the Peris and Divs may be found in Richardson's curious
+Dissertation. The griffin Simoorgh, they say, took some feathers from her
+breast for Tahmuras, with which he adorned his helmet, and transmitted
+them afterwards to his descendants.
+
+[223] This rivulet, says Dandini, is called the Holy River from the
+"cedar-saints" among which it rises.
+
+[224] This mountain is my own creation, as the "stupendous chain," of
+which I suppose it a link, does not extend quite so far as the shores of
+the Persian Gulf.
+
+[225] These birds sleep in the air. They are most common about the Cape of
+Good Hope.
+
+[226] "There is an extraordinary hill in this neighborhood, called Kohé
+Gubr, or the Guebre's mountain. It rises in the form of a lofty cupola,
+and on the summit of it, they say, are the remains of an Atush Kudu or
+Fire Temple. It is superstitiously held to be the residence or Deeves or
+Sprites, and many marvellous stories are recounted of the injury and
+witchcraft suffered by those who essayed in former days to ascend or
+explore it."--_Pottinger's_ "Beloochistan."
+
+[227] The Ghebers generally built their temples over subterraneous fires.
+
+[228] "At the city of Yezd, in Persia, which is distinguished by the
+appellation of the Darub Abadut, or Seat of Religion, the Guebres are
+permitted to have an Atush Kudu or Fire Temple (which, they assert, has
+had the sacred fire in it since the days of Zoroaster) in their own
+compartment of the city; but for this indulgence they are indebted to the
+avarice, not the tolerance of the Persian government, which taxes them at
+twenty-five rupees each man."--_Pottinger's_ "Beloochistan."
+
+[229] Ancient heroes of Persia. "Among the Guebres there are some who
+boast their descent from Rustam."--_Stephen's Persia_.
+
+[230] See Russel's account of the panther's attacking travellers in the
+night on the sea-shore about the roots of Lebanon.
+
+[231] "Among other ceremonies the Magi used to place upon the tops of high
+towers various kinds of rich viands, upon which it was supposed the Peris
+and the spirits of their departed heroes regaled themselves."--
+_Richardson_.
+
+[232] In the ceremonies of the Ghebers round their Fire, as described by
+Lord, "the Daroo," he says, "giveth them water to drink, and a pomegranate
+leaf to chew in the mouth, to cleanse them from inward uncleanness."
+
+[233] "Early in the morning, they (the Parsees or Ghebers at Oulam) go in
+crowds to pay their devotions to the Sun, to whom upon all the altars
+there are spheres consecrated, made by magic, resembling the circles of
+the sun, and when the sun rises, these orbs seem to be inflamed, and to
+turn round with a great noise. They have every one a censer in their
+hands, and offer incense to the sun.'--_Rabbi Benjamin_.
+
+[234] A vivid verdure succeeds the autumnal rains, and the ploughed fields
+are covered with the Persian lily, of a resplendent yellow color."--
+_Russel's_ "Aleppo."
+
+[235] It is observed, with respect to the Sea of Herkend, that when it is
+tossed by tempestuous winds it sparkles like fire."--_Travels of Two
+Mohammedans_.
+
+[236] A kind of trumpet;--it "was that used by Tamerlane, the sound of
+which is described as uncommonly dreadful, and so loud as to be heard at a
+distance of several miles."--_Richardson_.
+
+[237] "Mohammed had two helmets, an interior and exterior one; the latter
+of which, called Al Mawashah, the fillet, wreath, or wreathed garland, he
+wore at the battle of Ohod."--_Universal History_.
+
+[238] "They say that there are apple-trees upon the sides of this sea,
+which bear very lovely fruit, but within are all full of ashes."--
+_Thevenot_.
+
+[239] "The Suhrab or Water of the Desert is said to be caused by the
+rarefaction of the atmosphere from extreme heat; and, which augments the
+delusion, it is most frequent in hollows, where water might be expected to
+lodge. I have seen bushes and trees reflected in it, with as much accuracy
+is though it had been the face of a clear and still lake."--_Pottinger_.
+
+[240] "A wind which prevails in February, called Bidmusk, from a small and
+odoriferous flower of that name."--"The wind which blows these flowers
+commonly lasts till the end of the month."--_Le Bruyn_.
+
+[241] "The Biajús are of two races: the one is settled on Borneo, and are
+a rude but warlike and industrious nation, who reckon themselves the
+original possessors of the island of Borneo. The other is a species of
+sea-gypsies or itinerant fishermen, who live in small covered boats, and
+enjoy a perpetual summer on the eastern ocean, shifting to leeward from
+island to island, with the variations of the monsoon.
+
+[242] "The sweet-scented violet is one of the plants most esteemed,
+particularly for its great use in Sorbet, which they make of violet
+sugar."--_Hassequist_.
+
+[243] "Last of all she took a guitar, and sang a pathetic air in the
+measure called Nava, which is always used to express the lamentations of
+absent lovers."--_Persian Tales_.
+
+[244] "The Easterns used to set out on their longer voyages with
+music."--_Harmer_.
+
+[245] "The Gate of Tears, the straits or passage into the Red Sea,
+commonly called Babelmandel. It received this name from the old Arabians,
+on account of the danger of the navigation and the number of shipwrecks by
+which it was distinguished; which induced them to consider as dead, and to
+wear mourning for all who had the boldness to hazard the passage through
+it into the Ethiopic ocean."--_Richardson_.
+
+[246] "I have been told that whensoever an animal falls down dead, one or
+more vultures, unseen before, instantly appears."--_Pennant_.
+
+[247] "They fasten some writing to the wings of a Bagdat, or Babylonian
+pigeon."--_Travels of certain Englishmen_.
+
+[248] "The Empress of Jehan-Guire used to divert herself with feeding tame
+fish in her canals, some of which were many years afterwards known by
+fillets of gold, which she caused to be put round them."--_Harris_.
+
+[249] The meteors that Pliny calls "_faces_."
+
+[250] "The brilliant Canopus, unseen in European climates."--_Brown_.
+
+[251] A precious stone of the Indies, called by the ancients, Ceraunium,
+because it was supposed to be found in places where thunder had fallen.
+Tertullian says it has a glittering appearance, as if there had fire in
+it; and the author of the Dissertation of Harris's Voyages, supposes it to
+be the opal.
+
+[252] "The Guebres are known by a dark yellow color, which the men affect
+in their clothes."--_Thevenot_.
+
+[253] "The Kolah, or cap, worn by the Persians, is made of the skin of the
+sheep of Tartary."--_Waring_.
+
+[254] A frequent image among the oriental poets. "The nightingales warbled
+their enchanting notes, and rent the thin veils of the rose-bud, and the
+rose."--_Jami_.
+
+[255] "Blossoms of the sorrowful Nyctanthes give a durable color to
+silk."--_Remarks on the Husbandry of Bengal_, p. 200. Nilica is one of the
+Indian names of this flower.--_Sir W. Jones_. The Persians call it
+Gul.--Carreri.
+
+[256] "In parts of Kerman, whatever dates are shaken from the trees by the
+wind they do not touch, but leave them for those who have not any, or for
+travellers.--Ebn Haukal.
+
+[257] The two terrible angels, Monkir and Nakir, who are called "the
+Searchers of the Grave" in the "Creed of the orthodox Mahometans" given by
+Ockley, vol. ii.
+
+[258] "The Arabians call the mandrake 'the devil's candle,' on account of
+its shining appearance in the night."--_Richardson_.
+
+[259] For an account of Ishmonie, the petrified city in Upper Egypt, where
+it is said there are many statues of men, women, etc., to be seen to this
+day, see _Perry's "Views of the Levant_."
+
+[260] Jesus.
+
+[261] The Ghebers say that when Abraham, their great Prophet, was thrown
+into the fire by order of Nimrod, the flame turned instantly into "a bed
+of roses, where the child sweetly reposed."--_Tavernier_.
+
+[262] "The shell called Siiankos, common to India, Africa, and the
+Mediterranean, and still used in many parts as a trumpet for blowing
+alarms or giving signals: it sends forth a deep and hollow sound."--
+_Pennant_.
+
+[263] "The finest ornament for the horses is made of six large flying
+tassels of long white hair, taken out of the tails of wild oxen, that are
+to be found in some places of the Indies."--_Thevenot_.
+
+[264] "The angel Israfll, who has the most melodious voice of all God's
+creatures."--_Sale_.
+
+[265] "In this thicket upon the banks of the Jordan several sorts of wild
+beasts are wont to harbor themselves, whose being washed out of the covert
+by the overflowings of the river, gave occasion to that allusion of
+Jeremiah, _he shall come up like a lion from the smelling of
+Jordan_."--_Maundrell's "Aleppo."_
+
+[266] "This wind (the Samoor) so softens the strings of lutes, that they
+can never be tuned while it lasts."--_Stephen's Persia_.
+
+[267] "One of the greatest curiosities found in the Persian Gulf is a fish
+which the English call Star-fish. It is circular, and at night very
+luminous, resembling the full moon surrounded by rays."--_Mirza Abu
+Taleb_.
+
+[268] Some naturalists have imagined that amber is a concretion of the
+tears of birds.--See _Trevoux, Chambers_.
+
+[269] "The bay Kieselarke, which is otherwise called the Golden Bay, the
+sand whereof shines as fire."--_Struy_.
+
+[270] "The application of whips or rods."--_Dubois_.
+
+[271] Kempfer mentions such an officer among the attendants of the King of
+Persia, and calls him "_formae corporis estimator_." His business was, at
+stated periods, to measure the ladies of the Haram by a sort of
+regulation-girdle whose limits it was not thought graceful to exceed. If
+any of them outgrew this standard of shape, they were reduced by
+abstinence till they came within proper bounds.
+
+[272] "Akbar on his way ordered a fort to be built upon the Nilab, which
+he called Attock, which means in the Indian language Forbidden; for, by
+the superstition of the Hindoos, it was held unlawful to cross that
+river."--_Dow's_ Hindostan.
+
+[273] "The inhabitants of this country (Zinge) are never afflicted with
+sadness or melancholy; on this subject the Sheikh _Abu-al-Kheir-Azhari_
+has the following distich:--
+
+"'Who is the man without care or sorrow, (tell) that I may rub my hand to
+him.
+
+"'(Behold) the Zingians, without care and sorrow, frolicsome with
+tipsiness and mirth.'"
+
+[274] The star Soheil, or Canopus.
+
+[275] "The lizard Stellio. The Arabs call it Hardun. The Turks kill it,
+for they imagine that by declining the head it mimics them when they say
+their prayers."--_Hasselquist_.
+
+[276] "As you enter at that Bazar, without the gate of Damascus, you see
+the Green Mosque, so called because it hath a steeple faced with green
+glazed bricks, which render it very resplendent: It is covered at top with
+a pavilion of the same stuff. The Turks say this mosque was made in that
+place, because Mahomet being come so far, would not enter the town, saying
+it was too delicious."--_Thevenot_.
+
+[277] Nourmahal signifies Light of the Haram. She was afterwards called
+Nourjehan, or the Light of the World.
+
+[278] "The rose of Kashmire for its brilliancy and delicacy of odor has
+long been proverbial in the East."--Foster.
+
+[279] "Tied round her waist the zone of bells, that sounded with ravishing
+melody."--_Song of Jayadeva_.
+
+[280] "The little isles in the Lake of Cachemire are set with arbors and
+large-leaved aspen-trees, slender and tall."--_Bernier_.
+
+[281] "The Tuckt Suliman, the name bestowed by the Mahommetans on this
+hill, forms one side of a grand portal to the Lake."--_Forster_.
+
+[282] "The Feast of Roses continues the whole time of their remaining in
+bloom."--See _Pietro de la Valle_.
+
+[283] "Gul sad berk, the Rose of a hundred leaves. I believe a particular
+species."--_Ouseley_.
+
+[284] A place mentioned in the Toozek Jehangeery, or Memoirs of Jehan-
+Guire, where there is an account of the beds of saffron-flowers about
+Cashmere.
+
+[285] "It is the custom among the women to employ the Maazeen to chant
+from the gallery of the nearest minaret, which on that occasion is
+illuminated, and the women assembled at the house respond at intervals
+with a ziraleet or joyous chorus."--_Russel_.
+
+[286] "The swing is a favorite pastime in the East, as promoting a
+circulation of air, extremely refreshing in those sultry climates."--
+_Richardson_.
+
+[287] At the keeping of the Feast of Roses we beheld an infinite number of
+tents pitched, with such a crowd of men, women, boys, and girls, with
+music, dances, etc."--_Herbert_.
+
+[288] "An old commentator of the Chou-King says, the ancients having
+remarked that a current of water made some of the stones near its banks
+send forth a sound, they detached some of them, and being charmed with the
+delightful sound they emitted, constructed King or musical instruments of
+them,"--_Grosier_.
+
+[289] In the wars of the Divs with the Peris, whenever the former took the
+latter prisoners, "they shut them up in iron cages, and hung them on the
+highest trees. Here they were visited by their companions, who brought
+them the choicest odors."--_Richardson_.
+
+[290] In the Malay language the same word signifies women and flowers.
+
+[291] The capital of Shadukiam.
+
+[292] "Among the birds of Tonquin is a species of goldfinch, which sings
+so melodiously that it is called the Celestial Bird. Its wings, when it is
+perched, appear variegated with beautiful colors, but when it flies they
+lose all their splendor."--_Grosier_.
+
+[293] "As these birds on the Bosphorus are never known to rest, they are
+called by the French '_les âmes damnées_.'"--_Dalloway_.
+
+[294] "You may place a hundred handfuls of fragrant herbs and flowers
+before the nightingale, yet he wishes not in his constant heart for more
+than the sweet breath of his beloved rose."--_Jami_.
+
+[295] "He is said to have found the great _Mantra_, spell or talisman,
+through which he ruled over the elements and spirits of all
+denominations."--_Wilford_.
+
+[296] "The gold jewels of Jinnie, which are called by the Arabs El Herrez,
+from the supposed charm they contain."--_Jackson_.
+
+[297] "A demon, supposed to haunt woods, etc., in a human shape."--
+_Richardson_.
+
+[298] The name of Jehan-Guire before his accession to the throne.
+
+[299] "Hemasagara, or the Sea of Gold, with flowers of the brightest gold
+color."--_Sir W. Jones_.
+
+[300] "This tree (the Nagacesara) is one of the most delightful on earth,
+and the delicious odor of its blossoms justly gives them a place in the
+quiver of Camadeva, or the God of Love."--_Id_.
+
+[301] "The Malayans style the tuberose (_polianthes tuberosa_) Sandal
+Malam, or the Mistress of the Night."--_Pennant_.
+
+[302] The people of the Batta country in Sumatra (of which Zamara is one
+of the ancient names), "when not engaged in war, lead an idle, inactive
+life, passing the day in playing on a kind of flute, crowned with garlands
+of flowers, among which the globe-amaranthus, a native of the country,
+mostly prevails,"--_Marsden_.
+
+[303] "The largest and richest sort (of the Jambu or rose-apple) is called
+Amrita, or immortal, and the mythologists of Tibet apply the same word to
+a celestial tree, bearing ambrosial fruit."--_Sir W. Jones_.
+
+[304] Sweet Basil, called Rayhan in Persia, and generally found in
+churchyards.
+
+[305] "In the Great Desert are found many stalks of lavender and
+rosemary."--_Asiat. Res_.
+
+[306] "The almond-tree, with white flowers, blossoms on the bare
+branches."--_Hasselquist_.
+
+[307] An herb on Mount Libanus, which is said to communicate a yellow
+golden hue to the teeth of the goat and other animals that graze upon it.
+
+[308] The myrrh country.
+
+[309] "This idea (of deities living in shells) was not unknown to the
+Greeks, who represent the young Nerites, one of the Cupids, as living in
+shells on the shores of the Red Sea."--_Wilford_.
+
+[310] "A fabulous fountain, where instruments are said to be constantly
+playing."--_Richardson_.
+
+[311] "The Pompadour pigeon is the species, which, by carrying the fruit
+of the cinnamon to different places, is a great disseminator of this
+valuable tree."--See _Brown's_ Illustr. Tab. 19.
+
+[312] "The Persians have two mornings, the Soobhi Kazim and the Soobhi
+Sadig, the false and the real daybreak. They account for this phenomenon
+in a most whimsical manner. They say that as the sun rises from behind the
+Kohi Qaf (Mount Caucasus), it passes a hole perforated through that
+mountain, and that darting its rays through it, it is the cause of the
+Soobhi Kazim, or this temporary appearance of daybreak. As it ascends, the
+earth is again veiled in darkness, until the sun rises above the mountain,
+and brings with it the Soobhi Sadig, or real morning."--_Scott Waring_.
+
+[313] "In the centre of the plain, as it approaches the Lake, one of the
+Delhi Emperors, I believe Shan Jehan, constructed a spacious garden called
+the Shalimar, which is abundantly stored with fruit-trees and flowering
+shrubs. Some of the rivulets which intersect the plain are led into a
+canal at the back of the garden, and flowing through its centre, or
+occasionally thrown into a variety of water-works, compose the chief
+beauty of the Shalimar."--_Forster_.
+
+[314] "The waters of Cachemir are the more renowned from its being
+supposed that the Cachemirians are indebted for their beauty to
+them."--_Ali Yezdi_.
+
+[315] "From him I received the following little Gazzel, or Love Song, the
+notes of which he committed to paper from the voice of one of those
+singing girls of Cashmere, who wander from that delightful valley over the
+various parts of India."--_Persian Miscellanies_.
+
+[316] "The roses of the Jinan Nile, or Garden of the Nile (attached to the
+Emperor of Morocco's palace) are unequalled, and mattresses are made of
+their leaves for the men of rank to recline upon."--_Jackson_.
+
+[317] "On the side of a mountain near Paphos there is a cavern which
+produces the most beautiful rock-crystal. On account of its brilliancy it
+has been called the Paphian diamond."--_Mariti_.
+
+[318] "These is a part of Candahar, called Peria, or Fairy Land."--
+_Thevenot_. In some of those countries to the north of India vegetable
+gold is supposed to be produced.
+
+[319] "These are the butterflies which are called in the Chinese language
+Flying Leaves. Some of them have such shining colors, and are so
+variegated, that they may be called flying flowers; and indeed they are
+always produced in the finest flower-gardens."--_Dunn_.
+
+[320] "The Arabian women wear black masks with little clasps prettily
+ordered."--_Carreri_. Niebuhr mentions their showing but one eye in
+conversation.
+
+[321] "The golden grapes of Casbin."--_Description of Persia_.
+
+[322] "The fruits exported from Caubul are apples, pears, pomegranates,"
+etc.--_Elphinstone_.
+
+[323] "We sat down under a tree, listened to the birds, and talked with
+the son of our Mehmaundar about our country and Caubul, of which he gave
+an enchanting account; that city and its 100,000 gardens," etc.--_Ib_.
+
+[324] "The mangusteen, the most delicate fruit in the world; the pride of
+the Malay islands."--_Marsden_.
+
+[325] "A delicious kind of apricot, called by the Persians tokmekshems,
+signifying sun's seed."--_Description of Persia_.
+
+[326] "Sweetmeats, in a crystal cup, consisting of rose-leaves in
+conserve, with Iemon of Visna cherry, orange flowers," etc.--_Russel_.
+
+[327] "Antelopes cropping the fresh berries of Erac."--The _Moallakat_,
+Poem of Tarafa.
+
+[328] "Mauri-ga-Sima, an island near Formosa, supposed to have been sunk
+in the sea for the crimes of its inhabitants. The vessels which the
+fishermen and divers bring up from it are sold at an immense price in
+China and Japan."--See _Kempfer_.
+
+[329] Persian Tales.
+
+[330] The white wine of Kishma.
+
+[331] "The King of Zeilan is said to have the very finest ruby that was
+ever seen. Kublai-Khan sent and offered the value of a city for It, but
+the king answered he would not give it for the treasure of the
+world."--_Marco Polo_.
+
+[332] The Indians feign that Cupid was first seen floating down the Ganges
+on the Nymphaea Nelumbo.--See _Pennant_.
+
+[333] Teflis is celebrated for its natural warm baths.--See _Ebn Haukal_.
+
+[334] "The Indian Syrinda, or guitar."--_Symez_.
+
+[335] "Around the exterior of the Dewan Khafs (a building of Shah Allum's)
+in the cornice are the following lines in letters of gold upon a ground of
+white marble--'_If there be a paradise upon earth, it is this, it is
+this.'"--Franklin_.
+
+[336] "Delightful are the flowers of the Amra trees on the mountain tops
+while the murmuring bees pursue their voluptuous toil."--_Song of
+Jayadera_.
+
+[337] "The Nison or drops of spring rain, which they believe to produce
+pearls if they fall into shells."--_Richardson_.
+
+[338] For an account of the share which wine had in the fall of the
+angels, see _Mariti_.
+
+[339] The Angel of Music.
+
+[340] The Hudhud, or Lapwing, is supposed to have the power of discovering
+water under ground.
+
+[341] "The Chinese had formerly the art of painting on the sides of
+porcelain vessels fish and other animals, which were only perceptible when
+the vessel was full of some liquor, They call this species Kia-tsin, that
+is, _azure is put in press_, on account of the manner in which the azure
+is laid on."--"They are every now and then trying to discover the art of
+this magical painting, but to no purpose."--_Dunn_.
+
+[342] An eminent carver of idols, said in the Koran to be father to
+Abraham. "I have such a lovely idol as is not to be met with in the house
+of Azor."--_Hafiz_.
+
+[343] Kachmire be Nazeer.--_Forster_.
+
+[344] Jehan-Guire mentions "a fountain in Cashmere called Tirnagh, which
+signifies a snake; probably because some large snake had formerly been
+seen there."--"During the lifetime of my father, I went twice to this
+fountain, which is about twenty coss from the city of Cashmere. The
+vestiges of places of worship and sanctity are to be traced without number
+amongst the ruins and the caves which are interspersed in its
+neighborhood."--_Toozek Jehangeery_.--v. _Asiat. Misc_. vol. ii.
+
+[345] "On a standing roof of wood is laid a covering of fine earth, which
+shelters the building from the great quantity of snow that falls in the
+winter season. This fence communicates an equal warmth in winter, as a
+refreshing coolness in the summer season, when the tops of the houses,
+which are planted with a variety of flowers, exhibit at a distance the
+spacious view of a beautifully checkered parterre."--_Forster_.
+
+[346] "Two hundred slaves there are, who have no other office than to hunt
+the woods and marshes for triple-colored tortoises for the King's Vivary.
+Of the shells of these also lanterns are made."--_Vincent le Blanc's_
+Travels.
+
+[347] This wind, which is to blow from Syria Damascena, is, according to
+the Mahometans, one of the signs of the Last Day's approach.
+
+Another of the signs is, "Great distress in the world, so that a man when
+he passes by another's grave shall say, Would to God I were in his
+place!"--_Sale's_ Preliminary Discourse.
+
+[348] "On Mahommed Shaw's return to Koolburga (the capital of Dekkan), he
+made a great festival, and mounted this throne with much pomp and
+magnificence, calling it Firozeh or Cerulean. I have heard some old
+persons, who saw the throne Firozeh in the reign of Sultan Mamood
+Bhamenee, describe it. They say that it was in length nine feet, and three
+in breadth; made of ebony covered with plates of pure gold, and set with
+precious stones of immense value. Every prince of the house of Bhamenee,
+who possessed this throne, made a point of adding to it some rich stones;
+so that when in the reign of Sultan Mamood it was taken to pieces to
+remove some of the jewels to be set in vases and cups, the jewellers
+valued it at one corore of oons (nearly four millions sterling). I learned
+also that it was called Firozeh from being partly enamelled of a sky-blue
+color which was in time totally concealed by the number of jewels."--
+_Ferishta_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LOVES OF THE ANGELS.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The Eastern story of the angels Harut and Marut and the Rabbinical
+fictions of the loves of Uzziel and Shámchazai are the only sources to
+which I need refer for the origin of the notion on which this Romance is
+founded. In addition to the fitness of the subject for poetry, it struck
+me also as capable of affording an allegorical medium through which might
+be shadowed out (as I have endeavored to do in the following stories) the
+fall of the Soul from its original purity[1]--the loss of light and
+happiness which it suffers, in the pursuit of this world's perishable
+pleasures--and the punishments both from conscience and Divine justice
+with which impurity, pride, and presumptuous inquiry into the awful
+secrets of Heaven are sure to be visited--The beautiful story of Cupid and
+Psyche owes its chief charm to this sort of "veiled meaning," and it has
+been my wish (however I may have failed in the attempt) to communicate to
+the following pages the same _moral_ interest.
+
+Among the doctrines or notions derived by Plato from the East, one of the
+most natural and sublime is that which inculcates the pre-existence of the
+soul and its gradual descent into this dark material world from that
+region of spirit and light which it is supposed to have once inhabited and
+to which after a long lapse of purification and trial it will return. This
+belief under various symbolical forms may be traced through almost all the
+Oriental theologies. The Chaldeans represent the Soul as originally
+endowed with wings which fall away when it sinks from its native element
+and must be re-produced before it can hope to return. Some disciples of
+Zoroaster once inquired of him, "How the wings of the Soul might be made
+to grow again?"
+
+"By sprinkling them," he replied, "with the Waters of Life."
+
+"But where are those Waters to be found?" they asked.
+
+"In the Garden of God," replied Zoroaster.
+
+The mythology of the Persians has allegorized the same doctrine, in the
+history of those genii of light who strayed from their dwellings in the
+stars and obscured their original nature by mixture with this material
+sphere; while the Egyptians connecting it with the descent and ascent of
+the sun in the zodiac considered Autumn as emblematic of the Soul's
+decline toward darkness and the re-appearance of Spring as its return to
+life and light.
+
+Besides the chief spirits of the Mahometan heaven, such as Gabriel the
+angel of Revelation, Israfil by whom the last trumpet is to be sounded,
+and Azrael the angel of death, there were also a number of subaltern
+intelligences of which tradition has preserved the names, appointed to
+preside over the different stages of ascents into which the celestial
+world was supposed to be divided.[2] Thus Kelail governs the fifth heaven;
+while Sadiel, the presiding spirit of the third, is also employed in
+steadying the motions of the earth which would be in a constant state of
+agitation if this angel did not keep his foot planted upon its orb.
+
+Among other miraculous interpositions in favor of Mahomet we find
+commemorated in the pages of the Koran the appearance of five thousand
+angels on his side at the battle of Bedr.
+
+The ancient Persians supposed that Ormuzd appointed thirty angels to
+preside successively over the days of the month and twelve greater ones to
+assume the government of the months themselves; among whom Bahman (to whom
+Ormuzd committed the custody of all animals, except man) was the greatest.
+Mihr, the angel of the 7th month, was also the spirit that watched over
+the affairs of friendship and love;--Chûr had the care of the disk of the
+sun;--Mah was agent for the concerns of the moon;--Isphandârmaz (whom
+Cazvin calls the Spirit of the Earth) was the tutelar genius of good and
+virtuous women, etc. For all this the reader may consult the 19th and 20th
+chapters of Hyde, "_de Religione Veterum Persarum_," where the names and
+attributes of these daily and monthly angels are with much minuteness and
+erudition explained. It appears from the Zend-avesta that the Persians had
+a certain office or prayer for every day of the month (addressed to the
+particular angel who presided over it), which they called the Sirouzé.
+
+The Celestial Hierarchy of the Syrians, as described by Kircher, appears
+to be the most regularly graduated of any of these systems. In the sphere
+of the Moon they placed the angels, in that of Mercury the archangels,
+Venus and the Sun contained the Principalities and the Powers;--and so on
+to the summit of the planetary system, where, in the sphere of Saturn, the
+Thrones had their station. Above this was the habitation of the Cherubim
+in the sphere of the fixed stars; and still higher, in the region of those
+stars which are so distant as to be imperceptible, the Seraphim, we are
+told, the most perfect of all celestial creatures, dwelt.
+
+The Sabeans also (as D'Herbelot tells us) had their classes of angels, to
+whom they prayed as mediators, or intercessors; and the Arabians
+worshipped _female_ angels, whom they called Benab Hasche, or, Daughters
+of God.
+
+
+[1] The account which Macrobius gives of the downward journey of the Soul,
+through that gate of the zodiac which opens into the lower spheres, is a
+curious specimen of the wild fancies that passed for philosophy in ancient
+times.
+
+[2] "We adorned the lower heaven with lights, and placed therein a guard
+of angels."--_Koran, chap. xli_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LOVES OF THE ANGELS
+
+
+'Twas when the world was in its prime,
+ When the fresh stars had just begun
+Their race of glory and young Time
+ Told his first birth-days by the sun;
+When in the light of Nature's dawn
+ Rejoicing, men and angels met
+On the high hill and sunny lawn,--
+Ere sorrow came or Sin had drawn
+ 'Twixt man and heaven her curtain yet!
+When earth lay nearer to the skies
+ Than in these days of crime and woe,
+And mortals saw without surprise
+In the mid-air angelic eyes
+ Gazing upon this world below.
+
+Alas! that Passion should profane
+ Even then the morning of the earth!
+That, sadder still, the fatal stain
+ Should fall on hearts of heavenly birth--
+And that from Woman's love should fall
+So dark a stain, most sad of all!
+
+One evening, in that primal hour,
+ On a hill's side where hung the ray
+Of sunset brightening rill and bower,
+ Three noble youths conversing lay;
+And, as they lookt from time to time
+ To the far sky where Daylight furled
+His radiant wing, their brows sublime
+ Bespoke them of that distant world--
+Spirits who once in brotherhood
+Of faith and bliss near ALLA stood,
+And o'er whose cheeks full oft had blown
+The wind that breathes from ALLA'S throne,[1]
+Creatures of light such as _still_ play,
+ Like motes in sunshine, round the Lord,
+And thro' their infinite array
+Transmit each moment, night and day,
+ The echo of His luminous word!
+
+Of Heaven they spoke and, still more oft,
+ Of the bright eyes that charmed them thence;
+Till yielding gradual to the soft
+ And balmy evening's influence--
+The silent breathing of the flowers--
+ The melting light that beamed above,
+As on their first, fond, erring hours,--
+ Each told the story of his love,
+The history of that hour unblest,
+When like a bird from its high nest
+Won down by fascinating eyes,
+For Woman's smile he lost the skies.
+
+The First who spoke was one, with look
+The least celestial of the three--
+A Spirit of light mould that took
+ The prints of earth most yieldingly;
+Who even in heaven was not of those
+ Nearest the Throne but held a place
+Far off among those shining rows
+ That circle out thro' endless space,
+And o'er whose wings the light from Him
+In Heaven's centre falls most dim.[2]
+
+Still fair and glorious, he but shone
+Among those youths the unheavenliest one--
+A creature to whom light remained
+From Eden still, but altered, stained,
+And o'er whose brow not Love alone
+ A blight had in his transit cast,
+But other, earthlier joys had gone,
+ And left their foot-prints as they past.
+Sighing, as back thro' ages flown,
+ Like a tomb-searcher, Memory ran,
+Lifting each shroud that Time had thrown
+ O'er buried hopes, he thus began:--
+
+
+FIRST ANGEL'S STORY.
+
+
+'Twas in a land that far away
+ Into the golden orient lies,
+Where Nature knows not night's delay,
+But springs to meet her bridegroom, Day,
+ Upon the threshold of the skies,
+One morn, on earthly mission sent,[3]
+ And mid-way choosing where to light,
+I saw from the blue element--
+ Oh beautiful, but fatal sight!--
+One of earth's fairest womankind,
+Half veiled from view, or rather shrined
+In the clear crystal of a brook;
+ Which while it hid no single gleam
+Of her young beauties made them look
+ More spirit-like, as they might seem
+ Thro' the dim shadowing of a dream.
+Pausing in wonder I lookt on,
+ While playfully around her breaking
+The waters that like diamonds shone
+ She moved in light of her own making.
+ At length as from that airy height
+ I gently lowered my breathless flight,
+The tremble of my wings all o'er
+ (For thro' each plume I felt the thrill)
+Startled her as she reached the shore
+ Of that small lake--her mirror still--
+Above whose brink she stood, like snow
+When rosy with a sunset glow,
+Never shall I forget those eyes!--
+The shame, the innocent surprise
+Of that bright face when in the air
+Uplooking she beheld me there.
+It seemed as if each thought and look
+ And motion were that minute chained
+Fast to the spot, such root she took,
+And--like a sunflower by a brook,
+ With face upturned--so still remained!
+
+In pity to the wondering maid,
+ Tho' loath from such a vision turning,
+Downward I bent, beneath the shade
+ Of my spread wings to hide the burning
+Of glances, which--I well could feel--
+ For me, for her, too warmly shone;
+But ere I could again unseal
+My restless eyes or even steal
+ One sidelong look the maid was gone--
+Hid from me in the forest leaves,
+ Sudden as when in all her charms
+Of full-blown light some cloud receives
+ The Moon into his dusky arms.
+
+'Tis not in words to tell the power,
+The despotism that from that hour
+Passion held o'er me. Day and night
+ I sought around each neighboring spot;
+And in the chase of this sweet light,
+ My task and heaven and all forgot;--
+All but the one, sole, haunting dream
+Of her I saw in that bright stream.
+
+Nor was it long ere by her side
+ I found myself whole happy days
+Listening to words whose music vied
+ With our own Eden's seraph lays,
+When seraph lays are warmed by love,
+But wanting _that_ far, far above!--
+And looking into eyes where, blue
+And beautiful, like skies seen thro'
+The sleeping wave, for me there shone
+A heaven, more worshipt than my own.
+Oh what, while I could hear and see
+Such words and looks, was heaven to me?
+
+Tho' gross the air on earth I drew,
+'Twas blessed, while she breathed it too;
+Tho' dark the flowers, tho' dim the sky,
+Love lent them light while she was nigh.
+Throughout creation I but knew
+Two separate worlds--the _one_, that small,
+ Beloved and consecrated spot
+Where LEA was--the other, all
+ The dull, wide waste where she was _not_!
+
+But vain my suit, my madness vain;
+Tho' gladly, from her eyes to gain
+ One earthly look, one stray desire,
+I would have torn the wings that hung
+ Furled at my back and o'er the Fire
+In GEHIM'S[4] pit their fragments flung;--
+'Twas hopeless all--pure and unmoved
+ She stood as lilies in the light
+ Of the hot noon but look more white;--
+And tho' she loved me, deeply loved,
+'Twas not as man, as mortal--no,
+Nothing of earth was in that glow--
+She loved me but as one, of race
+Angelic, from that radiant place
+She saw so oft in dreams--that Heaven
+ To which her prayers at morn were sent
+And on whose light she gazed at even,
+Wishing for wings that she might go
+Out of this shadowy world below
+ To that free, glorious element!
+
+Well I remember by her side
+Sitting at rosy even-tide,
+When,--turning to the star whose head
+Lookt out as from a bridal bed,
+At that mute, blushing hour,--she said,
+"Oh! that it were my doom to be
+ "The Spirit of yon beauteous star,
+"Dwelling up there in purity,
+ "Alone as all such bright things are;--
+"My sole employ to pray and shine,
+ "To light my censer at the sun,
+"And cast its fire towards the shrine
+ "Of Him in heaven, the Eternal One!"
+
+So innocent the maid, so free
+ From mortal taint in soul and frame,
+Whom 'twas my crime--my destiny--
+ To love, ay, burn for, with a flame
+ To which earth's wildest fires are tame.
+Had you but seen her look when first
+From my mad lips the avowal burst;
+Not angered--no!--the feeling came
+From depths beyond mere anger's flame--
+It was a _sorrow_ calm as deep,
+A mournfulness that could not weep,
+So filled her heart was to the brink,
+So fixt and frozen with grief to think
+That angel natures--that even I
+Whose love she clung to, as the tie
+Between her spirit and the sky--
+Should fall thus headlong from the height
+Of all that heaven hath pure and bright!
+
+That very night--my heart had grown
+ Impatient of its inward burning;
+The term, too, of my stay was flown,
+And the bright Watchers near the throne.
+Already, if a meteor shone
+Between them and this nether zone,
+ Thought 'twas their herald's wing returning.
+Oft did the potent spell-word, given
+ To Envoys hither from the skies,
+To be pronounced when back to heaven
+ It is their time or wish to rise,
+Come to my lips that fatal day;
+ And once too was so nearly spoken,
+That my spread plumage in the ray
+And breeze of heaven began to play;--
+ When my heart failed--the spell was broken--
+The word unfinisht died away,
+And my checkt plumes ready to soar,
+Fell slack and lifeless as before.
+How could I leave a world which she,
+Or lost or won, made all to me?
+No matter where my wanderings were,
+ So there she lookt, breathed, moved about--
+Woe, ruin, death, more sweet with her,
+ Than Paradise itself, without!
+
+But to return--that very day
+ A feast was held, where, full of mirth,
+Came--crowding thick as flowers that play
+In summer winds--the young and gay
+ And beautiful of this bright earth.
+And she was there and mid the young
+ And beautiful stood first, alone;
+Tho' on her gentle brow still hung
+ The shadow I that morn had thrown--
+The first that ever shame or woe
+Had cast upon its vernal snow.
+My heart was maddened;--in the flush
+ Of the wild revel I gave way
+To all that frantic mirth--that rush
+ Of desperate gayety which they,
+Who never felt how pain's excess
+Can break out thus, think happiness!
+Sad mimicry of mirth and life
+Whose flashes come but from the strife
+Of inward passions--like the light
+Struck out by clashing swords in fight.
+
+Then too that juice of earth, the bane
+And blessing of man's heart and brain--
+That draught of sorcery which brings
+Phantoms of fair, forbidden things--
+Whose drops like those of rainbows smile
+ Upon the mists that circle man,
+Brightening not only Earth the while,
+ But grasping Heaven too in their span!--
+Then first the fatal wine-cup rained
+ Its dews of darkness thro' my lips,
+Casting whate'er of light remained
+ To my lost soul into eclipse;
+And filling it with such wild dreams,
+ Such fantasies and wrong desires,
+As in the absence of heaven's beams
+ Haunt us for ever--like wildfires
+ That walk this earth when day retires.
+
+Now hear the rest;--our banquet done,
+ I sought her in the accustomed bower,
+Where late we oft, when day was gone
+And the world husht, had met alone,
+ At the same silent, moonlight hour.
+Her eyes as usual were upturned
+To her loved star whose lustre burned
+ Purer than ever on that night;
+ While she in looking grew more bright
+ As tho' she borrowed of its light.
+
+There was a virtue in that scene,
+ A spell of holiness around,
+Which had my burning brain not been
+ Thus maddened would have held me bound,
+ As tho' I trod celestial ground.
+Even as it was, with soul all flame
+ And lips that burned in their own sighs,
+I stood to gaze with awe and shame--
+The memory of Eden came
+ Full o'er me when I saw those eyes;
+And tho' too well each glance of mine
+ To the pale, shrinking maiden proved
+How far, alas! from aught divine,
+Aught worthy of so pure a shrine,
+ Was the wild love with which I loved,
+Yet must she, too, have seen--oh yes,
+ 'Tis soothing but to _think_ she saw
+The deep, true, soul-felt tenderness,
+ The homage of an Angel's awe
+To her, a mortal, whom pure love
+Then placed above him--far above--
+And all that struggle to repress
+A sinful spirit's mad excess,
+Which workt within me at that hour,
+ When with a voice where Passion shed
+All the deep sadness of her power,
+ Her melancholy power--I said,
+"Then be it so; if back to heaven
+ "I must unloved, unpitied fly.
+"Without one blest memorial given
+ "To soothe me in that lonely sky;
+"One look like those the young and fond
+ "Give when they're parting--which would be,
+"Even in remembrance far beyond
+ "All heaven hath left of bliss for me!
+
+"Oh, but to see that head recline
+ "A minute on this trembling arm,
+"And those mild eyes look up to mine,
+ "Without a dread, a thought of harm!
+"To meet but once the thrilling touch
+ "Of lips too purely fond to fear me--
+"Or if that boon be all too much,
+ "Even thus to bring their fragrance near me!
+"Nay, shrink not so--a look--a word--
+ "Give them but kindly and I fly;
+"Already, see, my plumes have stirred
+ "And tremble for their home on high.
+"Thus be our parting--cheek to cheek--
+ "One minute's lapse will be forgiven,
+"And thou, the next, shalt hear me speak
+ "The spell that plumes my wing for heaven!"
+
+While thus I spoke, the fearful maid,
+Of me and of herself afraid,
+Had shrinking stood like flowers beneath
+The scorching of the south-wind's breath:
+But when I named--alas, too well,
+ I now recall, tho' wildered then,--
+Instantly, when I named the spell
+ Her brow, her eyes uprose again;
+And with an eagerness that spoke
+The sudden light that o'er her broke,
+"The spell, the spell!--oh, speak it now.
+ "And I will bless thee!" she exclaimed--
+ Unknowing what I did, inflamed,
+And lost already, on her brow
+ I stampt one burning kiss, and named
+The mystic word till then ne'er told
+To living creature of earth's mould!
+Scarce was it said when quick a thought,
+Her lips from mine like echo caught
+The holy sound--her hands and eyes
+Were instant lifted to the skies,
+And thrice to heaven she spoke it out
+ With that triumphant look Faith wears,
+When not a cloud of fear or doubt,
+ A vapor from this vale of tears.
+ Between her and her God appears!
+That very moment her whole frame
+All bright and glorified became,
+And at her back I saw unclose
+Two wings magnificent as those
+ That sparkle around ALLA'S Throne,
+Whose plumes, as buoyantly she rose
+ Above me, in the moon-beam shone
+With a pure light; which--from its hue,
+Unknown upon this earth--I knew
+Was light from Eden, glistening thro'!
+Most holy vision! ne'er before
+ Did aught so radiant--since the day
+When EBLIS in his downfall, bore
+ The third of the bright stars away--
+Rise in earth's beauty to repair
+That loss of light and glory there!
+
+But did I tamely view her flight?
+ Did not I too proclaim out thrice
+The powerful words that were that night,--
+Oh even for heaven too much delight!--
+ Again to bring us, eyes to eyes
+ And soul to soul, in Paradise?
+I did--I spoke it o'er and o'er--
+ I prayed, I wept, but all in vain;
+For me the spell had power no more.
+ There seemed around me some dark chain
+Which still as I essayed to soar
+Baffled, alas, each wild endeavor;
+Dead lay my wings as they have lain
+Since that sad hour and will remain--
+ So wills the offended God--for ever!
+
+It was to yonder star I traced
+Her journey up the illumined waste--
+That isle in the blue firmament
+To which so oft her fancy went
+ In wishes and in dreams before,
+And which was now--such, Purity,
+Thy blest reward--ordained to be
+ Her home of light for evermore!
+Once--or did I but fancy so?--
+ Even in her flight to that fair sphere,
+Mid all her spirit's new-felt glow,
+A pitying look she turned below
+ On him who stood in darkness here;
+Him whom perhaps if vain regret
+Can dwell in heaven she pities yet;
+And oft when looking to this dim
+And distant world remembers him.
+
+But soon that passing dream was gone;
+Farther and farther off she shone,
+Till lessened to a point as small
+ As are those specks that yonder burn,--
+Those vivid drops of light that fall
+ The last from Day's exhausted urn.
+And when at length she merged, afar,
+Into her own immortal star,
+And when at length my straining sight
+ Had caught her wing's last fading ray,
+That minute from my soul the light
+Of heaven and love both past away;
+And I forgot my home, my birth,
+ Profaned my spirit, sunk my brow,
+And revelled in gross joys of earth
+Till I became--what I am now!
+
+The Spirit bowed his head in shame;
+ A shame that of itself would tell--
+Were there not even those breaks of flame,
+Celestial, thro' his clouded frame--
+ How grand the height from which he fell!
+That holy Shame which ne'er forgets
+ The unblenched renown it used to wear;
+Whose blush remains when Virtue sets
+ To show her sunshine _has_ been there.
+
+Once only while the tale he told
+Were his eyes lifted to behold
+That happy stainless, star where she
+Dwelt in her bower of purity!
+One minute did he look and then--
+ As tho' he felt some deadly pain
+ From its sweet light thro' heart and brain--
+Shrunk back and never lookt again.
+
+Who was the Second Spirit? he
+ With the proud front and piercing glance--
+ Who seemed when viewing heaven's expanse
+As tho' his far-sent eye could see
+On, on into the Immensity
+Behind the veils of that blue sky
+Where ALLA'S grandest secrets lie?--
+His wings, the while, tho' day was gone,
+ Flashing with many a various hue
+Of light they from themselves alone,
+ Instinct with Eden's brightness drew.
+'Twas RUBI--once among the prime
+ And flower of those bright creatures, named
+Spirits of Knowledge,[5] who o'er Time
+ And Space and Thought an empire claimed,
+Second alone to Him whose light
+Was even to theirs as day to night;
+'Twixt whom and them was distance far
+ And wide as would the journey be
+To reach from any island star
+ To vague shores of Infinity
+
+'Twas RUBI in whose mournful eye
+Slept the dim light of days gone by;
+Whose voice tho' sweet fell on the ear
+ Like echoes in some silent place
+When first awaked for many a year;
+ And when he smiled, if o'er his face
+ Smile ever shone, 'twas like the grace
+Of moonlight rainbows, fair, but wan,
+The sunny life, the glory gone.
+Even o'er his pride tho' still the same,
+A softening shade from sorrow came;
+And tho' at times his spirit knew
+ The kindlings of disdain and ire,
+Short was the fitful glare they threw--
+Like the last flashes, fierce but few,
+ Seen thro' some noble pile on fire!
+Such was the Angel who now broke
+ The silence that had come o'er all,
+When he the Spirit that last spoke
+ Closed the sad history of his fall;
+And while a sacred lustre flown
+ For many a day relumed his cheek--
+Beautiful as in days of old;
+And not those eloquent lips alone
+ But every feature seemed to speak--
+Thus his eventful story told:--
+
+
+SECOND ANGEL'S STORY.
+
+
+You both remember well the day
+ When unto Eden's new-made bowers
+ALLA convoked the bright array
+ Of his supreme angelic powers
+To witness the one wonder yet,
+ Beyond man, angel, star, or sun,
+He must achieve, ere he could set
+ His seal upon the world as done--
+To see the last perfection rise,
+ That crowning of creation's birth,
+When mid the worship and surprise
+Of circling angels Woman's eyes
+ First open upon heaven and earth;
+And from their lids a thrill was sent,
+That thro' each living spirit went
+Like first light thro' the firmament!
+
+Can you forget how gradual stole
+The fresh-awakened breath of soul
+Throughout her perfect form--which seemed
+To grow transparent as there beamed
+That dawn of Mind within and caught
+New loveliness from each new thought?
+Slow as o'er summer seas we trace
+ The progress of the noontide air,
+Dimpling its bright and silent face
+Each minute into some new grace,
+ And varying heaven's reflections there--
+Or like the light of evening stealing
+ O'er some fair temple which all day
+Hath slept in shadow, slow revealing
+ Its several beauties ray by ray,
+Till it shines out, a thing to bless,
+All full of light and loveliness.
+
+Can you forget her blush when round
+Thro' Eden's lone, enchanted ground
+She lookt, and saw the sea--the skies--
+ And heard the rush of many a wing,
+ On high behests then vanishing;
+And saw the last few angel eyes,
+Still lingering--mine among the rest,--
+Reluctant leaving scenes so blest?
+From that miraculous hour the fate
+ Of this new, glorious Being dwelt
+For ever with a spell-like weight
+Upon my spirit--early, late,
+ Whate'er I did or dreamed or felt,
+The thought of what might yet befall
+That matchless creature mixt with all.--
+Nor she alone but her whole race
+ Thro' ages yet to come--whate'er
+ Of feminine and fond and fair
+Should spring from that pure mind and face,
+ All waked my soul's intensest care;
+Their forms, souls, feelings, still to me
+Creation's strangest mystery!
+
+It was my doom--even from the first,
+When witnessing the primal burst
+Of Nature's wonders, I saw rise
+Those bright creations in the skies,--
+Those worlds instinct with life and light,
+Which Man, remote, but sees by night,--
+It was my doom still to be haunted
+ By some new wonder, some sublime
+ And matchless work, that for the time
+Held all my soul enchained, enchanted,
+And left me not a thought, a dream,
+A word but on that only theme!
+
+The wish to know--that endless thirst,
+ Which even by quenching is awaked,
+And which becomes or blest or curst
+ As is the fount whereat 'tis slaked--
+Still urged me onward with desire
+Insatiate, to explore, inquire--
+Whate'er the wondrous things might be
+That waked each new idolatry--
+ Their cause, aim, source, whenever sprung--
+Their inmost powers, as tho' for me
+ Existence on that knowledge hung.
+
+Oh what a vision were the stars
+ When first I saw them born on high,
+Rolling along like living cars
+ Of light for gods to journey by![6]
+They were like my heart's first passion--days
+And nights unwearied, in their rays
+Have I hung floating till each sense
+Seemed full of their bright influence.
+Innocent joy! alas, how much
+ Of misery had I shunned below,
+Could I have still lived blest with such;
+ Nor, proud and restless, burned to know
+ The knowledge that brings guilt and woe.
+
+Often--so much I loved to trace
+The secrets of this starry race--
+Have I at morn and evening run
+Along the lines of radiance spun
+Like webs between them and the sun,
+Untwisting all the tangled ties
+Of light into their different dyes--
+The fleetly winged I off in quest
+Of those, the farthest, loneliest,
+That watch like winking sentinels,[7]
+The void, beyond which Chaos dwells;
+And there with noiseless plume pursued
+Their track thro' that grand solitude,
+Asking intently all and each
+What soul within their radiance dwelt,
+And wishing their sweet light were speech,
+ That they might tell me all they felt.
+
+Nay, oft, so passionate my chase,
+Of these resplendent heirs of space,
+Oft did I follow--lest a ray
+ Should 'scape me in the farthest night--
+Some pilgrim Comet on his way
+To visit distant shrines of light,
+And well remember how I sung
+ Exultingly when on my sight
+New worlds of stars all fresh and young
+As if just born of darkness sprung!
+
+Such was my pure ambition then,
+ My sinless transport night and morn
+Ere yet this newer world of men,
+ And that most fair of stars was born
+Which I in fatal hour saw rise
+Among the flowers of Paradise!
+
+Thenceforth my nature all was changed,
+ My heart, soul, senses turned below;
+And he who but so lately ranged
+ Yon wonderful expanse where glow
+Worlds upon worlds,--yet found his mind
+Even in that luminous range confined,--
+Now blest the humblest, meanest sod
+Of the dark earth where Woman trod!
+In vain my former idols glistened
+ From their far thrones; in vain these ears
+To the once-thrilling music listened,
+ That hymned around my favorite spheres--
+To earth, to earth each thought was given,
+ That in this half-lost soul had birth;
+Like some high mount, whose head's in heaven
+ While its whole shadow rests on earth!
+
+Nor was it Love, even yet, that thralled
+ My spirit in his burning ties;
+And less, still less could it be called
+ That grosser flame, round which Love flies
+ Nearer and near till he dies--
+No, it was wonder, such as thrilled
+ At all God's works my dazzled sense;
+The same rapt wonder, only filled
+ With passion, more profound, intense,--
+A vehement, but wandering fire,
+Which, tho' nor love, nor yet desire,--
+Tho' thro' all womankind it took
+ Its range, its lawless lightnings run,
+Yet wanted but a touch, a look,
+ To fix it burning upon _One_.
+
+Then too the ever-restless zeal,
+ The insatiate curiosity,
+To know how shapes so fair must feel--
+To look but once beneath the seal
+ Of so much loveliness and see
+What souls belonged to such bright eyes--
+ Whether as sunbeams find their way
+Into the gem that hidden lies,
+ Those looks could inward turn their ray,
+ And make the soul as bright as they:
+All this impelled my anxious chase.
+ And still the more I saw and knew
+Of Woman's fond, weak, conquering race,
+ The intenser still my wonder grew.
+I had beheld their First, their EVE,
+ Born in that splendid Paradise,
+Which sprung there solely to receive
+ The first light of her waking eyes.
+I had seen purest angels lean
+ In worship o'er her from above;
+And man--oh yes, had envying seen
+ Proud man possest of all her love.
+
+I saw their happiness, so brief,
+ So exquisite,--her error, too,
+That easy trust, that prompt belief
+ In what the warm heart wishes true;
+That faith in words, when kindly said.
+By which the whole fond sex is led
+Mingled with--what I durst not blame,
+ For 'tis my own--that zeal to _know_,
+Sad, fatal zeal, so sure of woe;
+Which, tho' from heaven all pure it came,
+Yet stained, misused, brought sin and shame
+ On her, on me, on all below!
+
+I had seen this; had seen Man, armed
+ As his soul is with strength and sense,
+By her first words to ruin charmed;
+ His vaunted reason's cold defence,
+Like an ice-barrier in the ray
+Of melting summer, smiled away.
+Nay, stranger yet, spite of all this--
+ Tho' by her counsels taught to err,
+ Tho' driven from Paradise for her,
+(And _with_ her--_that_ at least was bliss,)
+Had I not heard him ere he crost
+ The threshold of that earthly heaven,
+Which by her bewildering smile he lost--
+ So quickly was the wrong forgiven--
+Had I not heard him, as he prest
+The frail, fond trembler to a breast
+Which she had doomed to sin and strife,
+Call her--even then--his Life! his Life![8]
+Yes, such a love-taught name, the first,
+ That ruined Man to Woman gave,
+Even in his outcast hour, when curst
+By her fond witchery, with that worst
+ And earliest boon of love, the grave!
+She who brought death into the world
+ There stood before him, with the light
+ Of their lost Paradise still bright
+Upon those sunny locks that curled
+Down her white shoulders to her feet--
+So beautiful in form, so sweet
+In heart and voice, as to redeem
+ The loss, the death of all things dear,
+Except herself--and make it seem
+ Life, endless Life, while she was near!
+Could I help wondering at a creature,
+ Thus circled round with spells so strong--
+One to whose every thought, word, feature.
+ In joy and woe, thro' right and wrong,
+Such sweet omnipotence heaven gave,
+To bless or ruin, curse or save?
+
+Nor did the marvel cease with her--
+ New Eves in all her daughters came,
+As strong to charm, as weak to err,
+ As sure of man thro' praise and blame,
+ Whate'er they brought him, pride or shame,
+He still the unreasoning worshipper,
+ And they, throughout all time, the same
+ Enchantresses of soul and frame,
+Into whose hands, from first to last,
+ This world with all its destinies,
+Devotedly by heaven seems cast,
+ To save or ruin as they please!
+Oh! 'tis not to be told how long,
+ How restlessly I sighed to find
+Some _one_ from out that witching throng,
+ Some abstract of the form and mind
+Of the whole matchless sex, from which,
+ In my own arms beheld, possest,
+I might learn all the powers to witch,
+ To warm, and (if my fate unblest
+ _Would_ have it) ruin, of the rest!
+Into whose inward soul and sense,
+ I might descend, as doth the bee
+Into the flower's deep heart, and thence
+ Rifle in all its purity
+The prime, the quintessence, the whole
+Of wondrous Woman's frame and soul!
+At length my burning wish, my prayer--
+(For such--oh! what will tongues not dare,
+When hearts go wrong?--this lip preferred)--
+At length my ominous prayer was heard--
+But whether heard in heaven or hell,
+Listen--and thou wilt know _too_ well.
+
+There was a maid, of all who move
+ Like visions o'er this orb most fit.
+To be a bright young angel's love--
+ Herself so bright, so exquisite!
+The pride too of her step, as light
+ Along the unconscious earth she went,
+Seemed that of one born with a right
+ To walk some heavenlier element,
+And tread in places where her feet
+A star at every step should meet.
+'Twas not alone that loveliness
+ By which the wildered sense is caught--
+Of lips whose very breath could bless;
+ Of playful blushes that seemed naught
+ But luminous escapes of thought;
+Of eyes that, when by anger stirred,
+Were fire itself, but at a word
+ Of tenderness, all soft became
+As tho' they could, like the sun's bird,
+ Dissolve away in their own flame--
+Of form, as pliant as the shoots
+ Of a young tree, in vernal flower;
+Yet round and glowing as the fruits,
+ That drop from it in summer's hour;--
+'Twas not alone this loveliness
+ That falls to loveliest women's share,
+ Tho' even here her form could spare
+From its own beauty's rich excess
+ Enough to make even _them_ more fair--
+But 'twas the Mind outshining clear
+Thro' her whole frame--the soul, still near,
+To light each charm, yet independent
+ Of what it lighted, as the sun
+That shines on flowers would be resplendent
+ Were there no flowers to shine upon--
+'Twas this, all this, in one combined--
+ The unnumbered looks and arts that form
+The glory of young womankind,
+ Taken, in their perfection, warm,
+ Ere time had chilled a single charm,
+And stampt with such a seal of Mind,
+ As gave to beauties that might be
+Too sensual else, too unrefined,
+ The impress of Divinity!
+
+'Twas this--a union, which the hand
+ Of Nature kept for her alone,
+Of every thing most playful, bland,
+Voluptuous, spiritual, grand,
+ In angel-natures and her own--
+Oh! this it was that drew me nigh
+One, who seemed kin to heaven as I,
+A bright twin-sister from on high--
+One in whose love, I felt, were given
+ The mixt delights of either sphere,
+All that the spirit seeks in heaven,
+ And all the senses burn for here.
+
+Had we--but hold!--hear every part
+ Of our sad tale--spite of the pain
+Remembrance gives, when the fixt dart
+ Is stirred thus in the wound again--
+Hear every step, so full of bliss,
+ And yet so ruinous, that led
+Down to the last, dark precipice,
+ Where perisht both--the fallen, the dead!
+
+From the first hour she caught my sight,
+I never left her--day and night
+Hovering unseen around her way,
+ And mid her loneliest musings near,
+I soon could track each thought that lay,
+ Gleaming within her heart, as clear
+ As pebbles within brooks appear;
+And there among the countless things
+ That keep young hearts for ever glowing--
+Vague wishes, fond imaginings,
+ Love-dreams, as yet no object knowing--
+Light, winged hopes that come when bid,
+ And rainbow joys that end in weeping;
+And passions among pure thoughts hid,
+ Like serpents under flowerets sleeping:--
+'Mong all these feelings--felt where'er
+Young hearts are beating--I saw there
+Proud thoughts, aspirings high--beyond
+Whate'er yet dwelt in soul so fond--
+Glimpses of glory, far away
+ Into the bright, vague future given;
+And fancies, free and grand, whose play,
+ Like that of eaglets, is near heaven!
+With this, too--what a soul and heart
+To fall beneath the tempter's art!--
+A zeal for knowledge, such as ne'er
+Enshrined itself in form so fair,
+Since that first, fatal hour, when Eve,
+ With every fruit of Eden blest
+Save one alone--rather than leave
+ That _one_ unreached, lost all the rest.
+
+It was in dreams that first I stole
+ With gentle mastery o'er her mind--
+In that rich twilight of the soul,
+ When reason's beam, half hid behind
+The clouds of sleep, obscurely gilds
+Each shadowy shape that Fancy builds--
+'Twas then by that soft light I brought
+ Vague, glimmering visions to her view,--
+Catches of radiance lost when caught,
+Bright labyrinths that led to naught,
+ And vistas with no pathway thro';--
+Dwellings of bliss that opening shone,
+ Then closed, dissolved, and left no trace--
+All that, in short, could tempt Hope on,
+ But give her wing no resting-place;
+Myself the while with brow as yet
+Pure as the young moon's coronet,
+Thro' every dream _still_ in her sight.
+ The enchanter of each mocking scene,
+Who gave the hope, then brought the blight,
+Who said, "Behold yon world of light,"
+ Then sudden dropt a veil between!
+
+At length when I perceived each thought,
+Waking or sleeping, fixt on naught
+ But these illusive scenes and me--
+The phantom who thus came and went,
+In half revealments, only meant
+ To madden curiosity--
+When by such various arts I found
+Her fancy to its utmost wound.
+One night--'twas in a holy spot
+Which she for prayer had chosen--a grot
+Of purest marble built below
+Her garden beds, thro' which a glow
+From lamps invisible then stole,
+ Brightly pervading all the place--
+Like that mysterious light the soul,
+ Itself unseen, sheds thro' the face.
+There at her altar while she knelt,
+And all that woman ever felt,
+ When God and man both claimed her sighs--
+Every warm thought, that ever dwelt,
+ Like summer clouds, 'twixt earth and skies,
+ Too pure to fall, too gross to rise,
+ Spoke in her gestures, tones, and eyes--
+Then, as the mystic light's soft ray
+Grew softer still, as tho' its ray
+Was breathed from her, I heard her say:--
+
+"O idol of my dreams! whate'er
+ "Thy nature be--human, divine,
+"Or but half heavenly--still too fair,
+ "Too heavenly to be ever mine!
+
+"Wonderful Spirit who dost make
+ "Slumber so lovely that it seems
+"No longer life to live awake,
+ "Since heaven itself descends in dreams,
+
+"Why do I ever lose thee? why
+ "When on thy realms and thee I gaze
+"Still drops that veil, which I could die,
+ "Oh! gladly, but one hour to raise?
+
+"Long ere such miracles as thou
+ "And thine came o'er my thoughts, a thirst
+"For light was in this soul which now
+ "Thy looks have into passion burst.
+
+"There's nothing bright above, below,
+ "In sky--earth--ocean, that this breast
+"Doth not intensely burn to know,
+ "And thee, thee, thee, o'er all the rest!
+
+"Then come, oh Spirit, from behind
+ "The curtains of thy radiant home,
+"If thou wouldst be as angel shrined,
+ "Or loved and claspt as mortal, come!
+
+"Bring all thy dazzling wonders here,
+ "That I may, waking, know and see;
+"Or waft me hence to thy own sphere,
+ "Thy heaven or--ay, even _that_ with thee!
+
+"Demon or God, who hold'st the book
+ "Of knowledge spread beneath thine eye,
+"Give me, with thee, but one bright look
+ "Into its leaves and let me die!
+
+"By those ethereal wings whose way
+ "Lies thro' an element so fraught
+"With living Mind that as they play
+ "Their every movement is a thought!
+
+"By that bright, wreathed hair, between
+ "Whose sunny clusters the sweet wind
+"Of Paradise so late hath been
+ "And left its fragrant soul behind!
+
+"By those impassioned eyes that melt
+ "Their light into the inmost heart,
+"Like sunset in the waters, felt
+ "As molten fire thro' every part--
+
+"I do implore thee, oh most bright
+ "And worshipt Spirit, shine but o'er
+"My waking, wondering eyes this night
+ "This one blest night--I ask no more!"
+
+Exhausted, breathless, as she said
+These burning words, her languid head
+Upon the altar's steps she cast,
+As if that brain-throb were its last---
+
+Till, startled by the breathing, nigh,
+Of lips that echoed back her sigh,
+Sudden her brow again she raised;
+ And there, just lighted on the shrine,
+Beheld me--not as I had blazed
+ Around her, full of light divine,
+In her late dreams, but softened down
+Into more mortal grace;--my crown
+Of flowers, too radiant for this world,
+ Left hanging on yon starry steep;
+My wings shut up, like banners furled,
+ When Peace hath put their pomp to sleep;
+ Or like autumnal clouds that keep
+Their lightnings sheathed rather than mar
+The dawning hour of some young star;
+And nothing left but what beseemed
+ The accessible, tho' glorious mate
+Of mortal woman--whose eyes beamed
+ Back upon hers, as passionate;
+Whose ready heart brought flame for flame,
+Whose sin, whose madness was the same;
+And whose soul lost in that one hour
+ For her and for her love--oh more
+Of heaven's light than even the power
+ Of heaven itself could now restore!
+And yet, that hour!--
+
+ The Spirit here
+ Stopt in his utterance as if words
+Gave way beneath the wild career
+ Of his then rushing thoughts--like chords,
+Midway in some enthusiast's song,
+Breaking beneath a touch too strong;
+While the clenched hand upon the brow
+Told how remembrance throbbed there now!
+But soon 'twas o'er--that casual blaze
+From the sunk fire of other days--
+That relic of a flame whose burning
+ Had been too fierce to be relumed,
+Soon passt away, and the youth turning
+ To his bright listeners thus resumed:--
+
+Days, months elapsed, and, tho' what most
+ On earth I sighed for was mine, all--
+Yet--was I happy? God, thou know'st,
+Howe'er they smile and feign and boast,
+ What happiness is theirs, who fall!
+'Twas bitterest anguish--made more keen
+Even by the love, the bliss, between
+Whose throbs it came, like gleams of hell
+ In agonizing cross-light given
+Athwart the glimpses, they who dwell
+ In purgatory[9] catch of heaven!
+The only feeling that to me
+ Seemed joy--or rather my sole rest
+From aching misery--was to see
+ My young, proud, blooming LILIS blest.
+She, the fair fountain of all ill
+ To my lost soul--whom yet its thirst
+Fervidly panted after still,
+ And found the charm fresh as at first--
+To see _her_ happy--to reflect
+ Whatever beams still round me played
+Of former pride, of glory wreckt,
+ On her, my Moon, whose light I made,
+ And whose soul worshipt even my shade--
+This was, I own, enjoyment--this
+My sole, last lingering glimpse of bliss.
+And proud she was, fair creature!--proud,
+ Beyond what even most queenly stirs
+In woman's heart, nor would have bowed
+ That beautiful young brow of hers
+To aught beneath the First above,
+So high she deemed her Cherub's love!
+
+Then too that passion hourly growing
+ Stronger and stronger--to which even
+Her love at times gave way--of knowing
+ Everything strange in earth and heaven;
+Not only all that, full revealed,
+ The eternal ALLA loves to show,
+But all that He hath wisely sealed
+ In darkness for man _not_ to know--
+Even this desire, alas! ill-starred
+ And fatal as it was, I sought
+To feed each minute, and unbarred
+ Such realms of wonder on her thought
+As ne'er till then had let their light
+Escape on any mortal's sight!
+
+In the deep earth--beneath the sea--
+ Thro' caves of fire--thro' wilds of air--
+Wherever sleeping Mystery
+ Had spread her curtain, we were there--
+Love still beside us as we went,
+At home in each new element
+ And sure of worship everywhere!
+
+Then first was Nature taught to lay
+ The wealth of all her kingdoms down
+At woman's worshipt feet and say
+ "Bright creature, this is all thine own!"
+Then first were diamonds from the night,
+Of earth's deep centre brought to light
+And made to grace the conquering way
+Of proud young beauty with their ray.
+
+Then too the pearl from out its shell
+ Unsightly, in the sunless sea,
+(As 'twere a spirit, forced to dwell
+ In form unlovely) was set free,
+And round the neck of woman threw
+A light it lent and borrowed too.
+For never did this maid--whate'er
+ The ambition of the hour--forget
+Her sex's pride in being fair;
+Nor that adornment, tasteful, rare,
+Which makes the mighty magnet, set
+In Woman's form, more mighty yet.
+Nor was there aught within the range
+ Of my swift wing in sea or air,
+Of beautiful or grand or strange,
+That, quickly as her wish could change,
+ I did not seek, with such fond care,
+That when I've seen her look above
+ At some bright star admiringly,
+I've said, "Nay, look not there, my love,[10]
+ "Alas, I _can not_ give it thee!"
+
+But not alone the wonders found
+ Thro' Nature's realm--the unveiled, material,
+Visible glories, that abound
+Thro' all her vast, enchanted ground--
+ But whatsoe'er unseen, ethereal,
+Dwells far away from human sense,
+Wrapt in its own intelligence--
+The mystery of that Fountainhead,
+ From which all vital spirit runs,
+All breath of Life, where'er 'tis spread
+ Thro' men or angels, flowers or suns--
+The workings of the Almighty Mind,
+When first o'er Chaos he designed
+The outlines of this world, and thro'
+ That depth of darkness--like the bow,
+Called out of rain-clouds hue by hue[11]
+ Saw the grand, gradual picture grow;--
+The covenant with human kind
+ By ALLA made--the chains of Fate
+He round himself and them hath twined,
+ Till his high task he consummate;--
+ Till good from evil, love from hate,
+Shall be workt out thro' sin and pain,
+And Fate shall loose her iron chain
+And all be free, be bright again!
+
+
+Such were the deep-drawn mysteries,
+ And some, even more obscure, profound,
+And wildering to the mind than these,
+ Which--far as woman's thought could sound,
+Or a fallen, outlawed spirit reach--
+She dared to learn and I to teach.
+Till--filled with such unearthly lore,
+ And mingling the pure light it brings
+With much that fancy had before
+ Shed in false, tinted glimmerings--
+The enthusiast girl spoke out, as one
+ Inspired, among her own dark race,
+Who from their ancient shrines would run,
+Leaving their holy rites undone,
+ To gaze upon her holier face.
+And tho' but wild the things she spoke,
+Yet mid that play of error's smoke
+ Into fair shapes by fancy curled,
+Some gleams of pure religion broke--
+Glimpses that have not yet awoke,
+ But startled the still dreaming world!
+Oh! many a truth, remote, sublime,
+ Which Heaven would from the minds of men
+Have kept concealed till its own time,
+ Stole out in these revealments then--
+Revealments dim that have forerun,
+By ages, the great, Sealing One![12]
+Like that imperfect dawn or light[13]
+ Escaping from the Zodiac's signs,
+Which makes the doubtful east half bright,
+ Before the real morning shines!
+
+Thus did some moons of bliss go by--
+ Of bliss to her who saw but love
+And knowledge throughout earth and sky;
+To whose enamored soul and eye
+I seemed--as is the sun on high--
+ The light of all below, above,
+The spirit of sea and land and air,
+Whose influence, felt everywhere,
+Spread from its centre, her own heart,
+Even to the world's extremest part;
+While thro' that world her rainless mind
+ Had now careered so fast and far,
+That earth itself seemed left behind
+And her proud fancy unconfined
+ Already saw Heaven's gates ajar!
+
+Happy enthusiast! still, oh! still
+Spite of my own heart's mortal chill,
+Spite of that double-fronted sorrow
+ Which looks at once before and back,
+Beholds the yesterday, the morrow,
+ And sees both comfortless, both black--
+Spite of all this, I could have still
+In her delight forgot all ill;
+Or if pain _would_ not be forgot,
+At least have borne and murmured not.
+When thoughts of an offended heaven,
+ Of sinfulness, which I--even I,
+While down its steep most headlong driven--
+Well knew could never be forgiven,
+ Came o'er me with an agony
+Beyond all reach of mortal woe--
+A torture kept for those who know.
+
+Know _every_ thing, and--worst of all--
+Know and love Virtue while they fall!
+Even then her presence had the power
+ To soothe, to warm--nay, even to bless--
+If ever bliss could graft its flower
+ On stem so full of bitterness--
+Even then her glorious smile to me
+ Brought warmth and radiance if not balm;
+Like moonlight o'er a troubled sea.
+ Brightening the storm it cannot calm.
+
+Oft too when that disheartening fear,
+ Which all who love, beneath yon sky,
+Feel when they gaze on what is dear--
+ The dreadful thought that it must die!
+That desolating thought which comes
+Into men's happiest hours and homes;
+Whose melancholy boding flings
+Death's shadow o'er the brightest things,
+Sicklies the infant's bloom and spreads
+The grave beneath young lovers' heads!
+This fear, so sad to all--to me
+ Most full of sadness from the thought
+That I most still live on,[14] when she
+Would, like the snow that on the sea
+ Fell yesterday, in vain be sought;
+That heaven to me this final seal
+ Of all earth's sorrow would deny,
+And I eternally must feel
+ The death-pang without power to die!
+
+Even this, her fond endearments--fond
+As ever cherisht the sweet bond
+'Twixt heart and heart--could charm away;
+Before her looks no clouds would stay,
+Or if they did their gloom was gone,
+Their darkness put a glory on!
+But 'tis not, 'tis not for the wrong,
+The guilty, to be happy long;
+And she too now had sunk within
+The shadow of her tempter's sin,
+Too deep for even Omnipotence
+To snatch the fated victim thence!
+Listen and if a tear there be
+Left in your hearts weep it for me.
+
+'Twas on the evening of a day,
+Which we in love had dreamt away;
+In that same garden, where--the pride
+Of seraph splendor laid aside,
+And those wings furled, whose open light
+For mortal gaze were else too bright--
+I first had stood before her sight,
+And found myself--oh, ecstasy,
+ Which even in pain I ne'er forget--
+Worshipt as only God should be,
+ And loved as never man was yet!
+In that same garden where we now,
+ Thoughtfully side by side reclining,
+Her eyes turned upward and her brow
+ With its own silent fancies shining.
+
+It was an evening bright and still
+ As ever blusht on wave or bower,
+Smiling from heaven as if naught ill
+ Could happen in so sweet an hour.
+Yet I remember both grew sad
+ In looking at that light--even she,
+Of heart so fresh and brow so glad,
+ Felt the still hour's solemnity,
+And thought she saw in that repose
+ The death-hour not alone of light,
+But of this whole fair world--the close
+ Of all things beautiful and bright--
+The last, grand sunset, in whose ray
+Nature herself died calm away!
+
+At length, as tho' some livelier thought
+Had suddenly her fancy caught,
+She turned upon me her dark eyes,
+ Dilated into that full shape
+They took in joy, reproach, surprise,
+ As 'twere to let more soul escape,
+And, playfully as on my head
+Her white hand rested, smiled and said:--
+
+"I had last night a dream of thee,
+ "Resembling those divine ones, given,
+"Like preludes to sweet minstrelsy,
+ "Before thou camest thyself from heaven.
+
+"The same rich wreath was on thy brow,
+ "Dazzling as if of starlight made;
+"And these wings, lying darkly now,
+ "Like meteors round thee flasht and played.
+
+"Thou stoodest, all bright, as in those dreams,
+ "As if just wafted from above,
+"Mingling earth's warmth with heaven's beams,
+ "And creature to adore and love.
+
+"Sudden I felt thee draw me near
+ "To thy pure heart, where, fondly placed,
+"I seemed within the atmosphere
+ "Of that exhaling light embraced;
+
+"And felt methought the ethereal flame
+ "Pass from thy purer soul to mine;
+"Till--oh, too blissful--I became,
+ "Like thee, all spirit, all divine!
+
+"Say, why did dream so blest come o'er me,
+ "If, now I wake, 'tis faded, gone?
+"When will my Cherub shine before me
+ "Thus radiant, as in heaven he shone?
+
+"When shall I, waking, be allowed
+ "To gaze upon those perfect charms,
+"And clasp thee once without a cloud,
+ "A chill of earth, within these arms?
+
+"Oh what a pride to say, this, this
+ "Is my own Angel--all divine,
+"And pure and dazzling as he is
+ "And fresh from heaven--he's mine, he's mine!
+
+"Thinkest thou, were LILIS in thy place,
+ "A creature of yon lofty skies,
+"She would have hid one single grace,
+ "One glory from her lover's eyes?
+
+ "No, no--then, if thou lovest like me,
+ "Shine out, young Spirit in the blaze
+"Of thy most proud divinity,
+ "Nor think thou'lt wound this mortal gaze.
+
+"Too long and oft I've looked upon
+ "Those ardent eyes, intense even thus--
+"Too near the stars themselves have gone,
+ "To fear aught grand or luminous.
+
+"Then doubt me not--oh! who can say
+ "But that this dream may yet come true
+"And my blest spirit drink thy ray,
+ "Till it becomes all heavenly too?
+
+"Let me this once but feel the flame
+ "Of those spread wings, the very pride
+"Will change my nature, and this frame
+ "By the mere touch be deified!"
+
+Thus spoke the maid, as one not used
+To be by earth or heaven refused--
+As one who knew her influence o'er
+ All creatures, whatsoe'er they were,
+And tho' to heaven she could not soar,
+ At least would bring down heaven to her.
+
+Little did she, alas! or I--
+ Even I, whose soul, but halfway yet
+Immerged in sin's obscurity
+Was as the earth whereon we lie,
+ O'er half whose disk the sun is set--
+Little did we foresee the fate,
+ The dreadful--how can it be told?
+Such pain, such anguish to relate
+ Is o'er again to feel, behold!
+But, charged as 'tis, my heart must speak
+Its sorrow out or it will break!
+Some dark misgivings _had_, I own,
+ Past for a moment thro' my breast--
+Fears of some danger, vague, unknown,
+ To one, or both--something unblest
+ To happen from this proud request.
+
+But soon these boding fancies fled;
+ Nor saw I aught that could forbid
+My full revealment save the dread
+ Of that first dazzle, when, unhid,
+ Such light should burst upon a lid
+Ne'er tried in heaven;--and even this glare
+She might, by love's own nursing care,
+Be, like young eagles, taught to bear.
+For well I knew, the lustre shed
+From cherub wings, when proudliest spread,
+Was in its nature lambent, pure,
+ And innocent as is the light
+The glow-worm hangs out to allure
+ Her mate to her green bower at night.
+Oft had I in the mid-air swept
+Thro' clouds in which the lightning slept,
+As in its lair, ready to spring,
+Yet waked it not--tho' from my wing
+A thousand sparks fell glittering!
+Oft too when round me from above
+ The feathered snow in all its whiteness,
+Fell like the moultings of heaven's Dove,[15]--
+ So harmless, tho' so full of brightness,
+Was my brow's wreath that it would shake
+From off its flowers each downy flake
+As delicate, unmelted, fair,
+And cool as they had lighted there.
+
+Nay even with LILIS--had I not
+ Around her sleep all radiant beamed,
+Hung o'er her slumbers nor forgot
+ To kiss her eyelids as she dreamed?
+And yet at morn from that repose,
+ Had she not waked, unscathed and bright,
+As doth the pure, unconscious rose
+ Tho' by the fire-fly kist all night?
+
+Thus having--as, alas! deceived
+By my sin's blindness, I believed--
+No cause for dread and those dark eyes
+ Now fixt upon me eagerly
+As tho' the unlocking of the skies
+ Then waited but a sign from me--
+How could I pause? how even let fall
+ A word; a whisper that could stir
+In her proud heart a doubt that all
+ I brought from heaven belonged to her?
+Slow from her side I rose, while she
+Arose too, mutely, tremblingly,
+But not with fear--all hope, and pride,
+ She waited for the awful boon,
+Like priestesses at eventide
+ Watching the rise of the full moon
+Whose light, when once its orb hath shone,
+'Twill madden them to look upon!
+
+Of all my glories, the bright crown
+Which when I last from heaven came down
+Was left behind me in yon star
+That shines from out those clouds afar--
+Where, relic sad, 'tis treasured yet,
+The downfallen angel's coronet!--
+Of all my glories, this alone
+Was wanting:--but the illumined brow,
+The sun-bright locks, the eyes that now
+Had love's spell added to their own,
+And poured a light till then unknown;--
+ The unfolded wings that in their play
+Shed sparkles bright as ALLA'S throne;
+ All I could bring of heaven's array,
+ Of that rich panoply of charms
+A Cherub moves in, on the day
+Of his best pomp, I now put on;
+And, proud that in her eyes I shone
+ Thus glorious, glided to her arms;
+Which still (tho', at a sight so splendid,
+ Her dazzled brow had instantly
+Sunk on her breast), were wide extended
+ To clasp the form she durst not see![16]
+Great Heaven! how _could_ thy vengeance light
+So bitterly on one so bright?
+How could the hand that gave such charms,
+Blast them again in love's own arms?
+Scarce had I touched her shrinking frame,
+ When--oh most horrible!--I felt
+That every spark of that pure flame--
+ Pure, while among the stars I dwelt--
+Was now by my transgression turned
+Into gross, earthly fire, which burned,
+Burned all it touched as fast as eye
+ Could follow the fierce, ravening flashes;
+Till there--oh God, I still ask why
+Such doom was hers?--I saw her lie
+ Blackening within my arms to ashes!
+That brow, a glory but to see--
+ Those lips whose touch was what the first
+Fresh cup of immortality
+ Is to a new-made angel's thirst!
+
+Those clasping arms, within whose round--
+My heart's horizon--the whole bound
+Of its hope, prospect, heaven was found!
+Which, even in this dread moment, fond
+ As when they first were round me cast,
+Loosed not in death the fatal bond,
+ But, burning, held me to the last!
+All, all, that, but that morn, had seemed
+As if Love's self there breathed and beamed,
+Now parched and black before me lay,
+Withering in agony away;
+And mine, oh misery! mine the flame
+From which this desolation came;--
+I, the curst spirit whose caress
+Had blasted all that loveliness!
+
+'Twas maddening!--but now hear even worse--
+Had death, death only, been the curse
+I brought upon her--had the doom
+But ended here, when her young bloom
+Lay in the dust--and did the spirit
+No part of that fell curse inherit,
+'Twere not so dreadful--but, come near--
+Too shocking 'tis for earth to hear--
+Just when her eyes in fading took
+Their last, keen, agonized farewell,
+And looked in mine with--oh, that look!
+ Great vengeful Power, whate'er the hell
+Thou mayst to human souls assign,
+The memory of that look is mine!--
+
+In her last struggle, on my brow
+ Her ashy lips a kiss imprest,
+So withering!--I feel it now--
+ 'Twas fire--but fire, even more unblest
+Than was my own, and like that flame,
+The angels shudder but to name,
+Hell's everlasting element!
+ Deep, deep it pierced into my brain,
+Maddening and torturing as it went;
+ And here, mark here, the brand, the stain
+It left upon my front--burnt in
+By that last kiss of love and sin--
+A brand which all the pomp and pride
+Of a fallen Spirit cannot hide!
+
+But is it thus, dread Providence--
+ _Can_ it indeed be thus, that she
+Who, (but for _one_ proud, fond offence,)
+ Had honored heaven itself, should be
+Now doomed--I cannot speak it--no,
+Merciful ALLA! _'tis_ not so--
+Never could lips divine have said
+The fiat of a fate so dread.
+And yet, that look--so deeply fraught
+ With more than anguish, with despair--
+That new, fierce fire, resembling naught
+ In heaven or earth--this scorch I bear!--
+Oh--for the first time that these knees
+ Have bent before thee since my fall,
+Great Power, if ever thy decrees
+ Thou couldst for prayer like mine recall,
+Pardon that spirit, and on me,
+ On me, who taught her pride to err,
+Shed out each drop of agony
+ Thy burning phial keeps for her!
+See too where low beside me kneel
+ Two other outcasts who, tho' gone
+And lost themselves, yet dare to feel
+ And pray for that poor mortal one.
+Alas, too well, too well they know
+The pain, the penitence, the woe
+That Passion brings upon the best,
+The wisest, and the loveliest.--
+Oh! who is to be saved, if such
+ Bright, erring souls are not forgiven;
+So loath they wander, and so much
+ Their very wanderings lean towards heaven!
+Again I cry. Just Power, transfer
+ That creature's sufferings all to me--
+ Mine, mine the guilt, the torment be,
+To save one minute's pain to her,
+ Let mine last all eternity!
+
+He paused and to the earth bent down
+ His throbbing head; while they who felt
+That agony as 'twere their own,
+ Those angel youths, beside him knelt,
+And in the night's still silence there,
+While mournfully each wandering air
+Played in those plumes that never more
+To their lost home in heaven must soar,
+Breathed inwardly the voiceless prayer,
+Unheard by all but Mercy's ear--
+And which if Mercy _did not_ hear,
+Oh, God would _not_ be what this bright
+ And glorious universe of His,
+This world of beauty, goodness, light
+ And endless love proclaims He _is_!
+
+Not long they knelt, when from a wood
+That crowned that airy solitude,
+They heard a low, uncertain sound,
+As from a lute, that just had found
+Some happy theme and murmured round
+The new-born fancy, with fond tone,
+Scarce thinking aught so sweet its own!
+Till soon a voice, that matched as well
+ That gentle instrument, as suits
+The sea-air to an ocean-shell,
+ (So kin its spirit to the lute's),
+Tremblingly followed the soft strain,
+Interpreting its joy, its pain,
+ And lending the light wings of words
+To many a thought that else had lain
+ Unfledged and mute among the chords.
+
+All started at the sound--but chief
+ The third young Angel in whose face,
+Tho' faded like the others, grief
+ Had left a gentler, holier trace;
+As if, even yet, thro' pain and ill,
+Hope had not fled him--as if still
+Her precious pearl in sorrow's cup
+ Unmelted at the bottom lay,
+To shine again, when, all drunk up,
+ The bitterness should pass away.
+Chiefly did he, tho' in his eyes
+There shone more pleasure than surprise,
+Turn to the wood from whence that sound
+ Of solitary sweetness broke;
+Then, listening, look delighted round
+ To his bright peers, while thus it spoke:--
+"Come, pray with me, my seraph love,
+ "My angel-lord, come pray with me:
+"In vain to-night my lips hath strove
+"To send one holy prayer above--
+"The knee may bend, the lip may move,
+ "But pray I cannot, without thee!
+"I've fed the altar in my bower
+ "With droppings from the incense tree;
+"I've sheltered it from wind and shower,
+"But dim it burns the livelong hour,
+"As if, like me, it had no power
+ "Of life or lustre without thee!
+
+"A boat at midnight sent alone
+ "To drift upon the moonless sea,
+"A lute, whose leading chord is gone,
+"A wounded bird that hath but one
+"Imperfect wing to soar upon,
+ "Are like what I am without thee!
+
+"Then ne'er, my spirit-love, divide,
+ "In life or death, thyself from me;
+"But when again in sunny pride
+"Thou walk'st thro' Eden, let me glide,
+"A prostrate shadow, by thy side--
+ "Oh happier thus than without thee!"
+
+The song had ceased when from the wood
+ Which sweeping down that airy height,
+Reached the lone spot whereon they stood--
+ There suddenly shone out a light
+From a clear lamp, which, as it blazed
+Across the brow of one, who raised
+Its flame aloft (as if to throw
+The light upon that group below),
+Displayed two eyes sparkling between
+The dusky leaves, such as are seen
+By fancy only, in those faces,
+ That haunt a poet's walk at even,
+Looking from out their leafy places
+ Upon his dreams of love and heaven.
+'Twas but a moment--the blush brought
+O'er all her features at the thought
+ Of being seen thus, late, alone,
+By any but the eyes she sought,
+ Had scarcely for an instant shore
+ Thro' the dark leaves when she was gone--
+Gone, like a meteor that o'erhead
+Suddenly shines, and, ere we've said,
+"Behold, how beautiful!"--'tis fled,
+Yet ere she went the words, "I come,
+ "I come, my NAMA," reached her ear,
+ In that kind voice, familiar, dear,
+Which tells of confidence, of home,--
+ Of habit, that hath drawn hearts near,
+Till they grow _one_,--of faith sincere,
+And all that Love most loves to hear;
+A music breathing of the past,
+ The present and the time to be,
+Where Hope and Memory to the last
+ Lengthen out life's true harmony!
+
+Nor long did he whom call so kind
+Summoned away remain behind:
+Nor did there need much time to tell
+ What they--alas! more fallen than he
+From happiness and heaven--knew well,
+ His gentler love's short history!
+
+Thus did it run--_not_ as he told
+ The tale himself, but as 'tis graved
+Upon the tablets that, of old,
+ By SETH[17] were from the deluge saved,
+All written over with sublime
+ And saddening legends of the unblest
+But glorious Spirits of that time,
+ And this young Angel's 'mong the rest.
+
+
+THIRD ANGEL'S STORY.
+
+
+Among the Spirits, of pure flame,
+ That in the eternal heavens abide--
+Circles of light that from the same
+ Unclouded centre sweeping wide,
+ Carry its beams on every side--
+Like spheres of air that waft around
+The undulations of rich sound--
+
+Till the far-circling radiance be
+Diffused into infinity!
+First and immediate near the Throne
+Of ALLA, as if most his own,
+The Seraphs stand[18] this burning sign
+Traced on their banner, "Love Divine!"
+Their rank, their honors, far above
+ Even those to high-browed Cherubs given,
+Tho' knowing all;--so much doth Love
+ Transcend all Knowledge, even in heaven!
+
+'Mong these was ZARAPH once--and none
+ E'er felt affection's holy fire,
+Or yearned towards the Eternal One,
+ With half such longing, deep desire.
+Love was to his impassioned soul
+ Not as with others a mere part
+Of its existence, but the whole--
+ The very life-breath of his heart!
+
+Oft, when from ALLA'S lifted brow
+ A lustre came, too bright to bear,
+And all the seraph ranks would bow,
+ To shade their dazzled sight nor dare
+ To look upon the effulgence there--
+This Spirit's eyes would court the blaze
+ (Such pride he in adoring took),
+
+And rather lose in that one gaze
+ The power of looking than _not_ look!
+Then too when angel voices sung
+The mercy of their God and strung
+Their harps to hail with welcome sweet
+ That moment, watched for by all eyes,
+When some repentant sinner's feet
+ First touched the threshold of the skies,
+Oh! then how clearly did the voice
+Of ZARAPH above all rejoice!
+Love was in every buoyant tone--
+ Such love as only could belong
+To the blest angels and alone
+ Could, even from angels, bring such song!
+Alas! that it should e'er have been
+ In heaven as 'tis too often here,
+Where nothing fond or bright is seen,
+ But it hath pain and peril near;--
+Where right and wrong so close resemble,
+ That what we take for virtue's thrill
+Is often the first downward tremble
+ Of the heart's balance unto ill;
+Where Love hath not a shrine so pure,
+ So holy, but the serpent, Sin,
+In moments, even the most secure,
+ Beneath his altar may glide in!
+
+So was it with that Angel--such
+ The charm, that sloped his fall along,
+From good to ill, from loving much,
+ Too easy lapse, to loving wrong.--
+Even so that amorous Spirit, bound
+By beauty's spell where'er 'twas found,
+From the bright things above the moon
+ Down to earth's beaming eyes descended,
+Till love for the Creator soon
+ In passion for the creature ended.
+
+'Twas first at twilight, on the shore
+ Of the smooth sea, he heard the lute
+And voice of her he loved steal o'er
+ The silver waters that lay mute,
+As loath, by even a breath, to stay
+The pilgrimage of that sweet lay;
+Whose echoes still went on and on,
+Till lost among the light that shone
+Far off beyond the ocean's brim--
+ There where the rich cascade of day
+Had o'er the horizon's golden rim,
+ Into Elysium rolled away!
+Of God she sung and of the mild
+ Attendant Mercy that beside
+His awful throne for ever smiled,
+ Ready with her white hand to guide
+His bolts of vengeance to their prey--
+That she might quench them on the way!
+Of Peace--of that Atoning Love,
+Upon whose star, shining above
+This twilight world of hope and fear,
+ The weeping eyes of Faith are fixt
+So fond that with her every tear
+ The light of that love-star is mixt!--
+All this she sung, and such a soul
+ Of piety was in that song
+That the charmed Angel as it stole
+ Tenderly to his ear, along
+Those lulling waters where he lay,
+Watching the daylight's dying ray,
+Thought 'twas a voice from out the wave,
+An echo, that some sea-nymph gave
+To Eden's distant harmony,
+Heard faint and sweet beneath the sea!
+
+Quickly, however, to its source,
+Tracking that music's melting course,
+He saw upon the golden sands
+Of the sea-shore a maiden stand,
+Before whose feet the expiring waves
+ Flung their last offering with a sigh--
+As, in the East, exhausted slaves
+ Lay down the far-brought gift and die--
+And while her lute hung by her hushed
+ As if unequal to the tide
+Of song that from her lips still gushed,
+ She raised, like one beatified,
+Those eyes whose light seemed rather given
+ To be adored than to adore--
+Such eyes as may have lookt _from_ heaven
+ But ne'er were raised to it before!
+
+Oh Love, Religion, Music--all
+ That's left of Eden upon earth--
+The only blessings, since the fall
+Of our weak souls, that still recall
+ A trace of their high, glorious birth--
+How kindred are the dreams you bring!
+ How Love tho' unto earth so prone,
+Delights to take Religion's wing,
+ When time or grief hath stained his own!
+How near to Love's beguiling brink
+ Too oft entranced Religion lies!
+While Music, Music is the link
+ They _both_ still hold by to the skies,
+The language of their native sphere
+Which they had else forgotten here.
+
+How then could ZARAPH fail to feel
+ That moment's witcheries?--one, so fair,
+Breathing out music, that might steal
+ Heaven from itself, and rapt in prayer
+ That seraphs might be proud to share!
+Oh, he _did_ feel it, all too well--
+ With warmth, that far too dearly cost--
+Nor knew he, when at last he fell,
+To which attraction, to which spell,
+Love, Music, or Devotion, most
+His soul in that sweet hour was lost.
+
+Sweet was the hour, tho' dearly won,
+ And pure, as aught of earth could be,
+For then first did the glorious sun
+ Before religion's altar see
+Two hearts in wedlock's golden tie
+Self-pledged, in love to live and die.
+Blest union! by that Angel wove,
+ And worthy from such hands to come;
+Safe, sole, asylum, in which Love,
+When fallen or exiled from above,
+ In this dark world can find a home.
+
+And, tho' the Spirit had transgrest,
+Had, from his station 'mong the blest
+Won down by woman's smile, allow'd
+ Terrestrial passion to breathe o'er
+The mirror of his heart, and cloud
+ God's image there so bright before--
+Yet never did that Power look down
+ On error with a brow so mild;
+Never did Justice wear a frown,
+ Thro' which so gently Mercy smiled.
+
+For humble was their love--with awe
+ And trembling like some treasure kept,
+That was not theirs by holy law--
+Whose beauty with remorse they saw
+ And o'er whose preciousness they wept.
+Humility, that low, sweet root,
+From which all heavenly virtues shoot,
+Was in the hearts of both--but most
+ In NAMA'S heart, by whom alone
+Those charms, for which a heaven was lost.
+ Seemed all unvalued and unknown;
+And when her Seraph's eyes she caught,
+ And hid hers glowing on his breast,
+Even bliss was humbled by the thought--
+ "What claim have I to be so blest"?
+Still less could maid, so meek, have nurst
+Desire of knowledge--that vain thirst,
+With which the sex hath all been curst
+From luckless EVE to her who near
+The Tabernacle stole to hear
+The secrets of the Angels: no--
+ To love as her own Seraph loved,
+With Faith, the same thro' bliss and woe--
+ Faith that were even its light removed,
+Could like the dial fixt remain
+And wait till it shone out again;--
+With Patience that tho' often bowed
+ By the rude storm can rise anew;
+And Hope that even from Evil's cloud
+ See sunny Good half breaking thro'!
+This deep, relying Love, worth more
+In heaven than all a Cherub's lore--
+This Faith more sure than aught beside
+Was the sole joy, ambition, pride
+Of her fond heart--the unreasoning scope
+ Of all its views, above, below--
+So true she felt it that to _hope_,
+ To _trust_, is happier than to _know_.
+And thus in humbleness they trod,
+Abasht but pure before their God;
+Nor e'er did earth behold a sight
+ So meekly beautiful as they,
+When with the altar's holy light
+ Full on their brows they knelt to pray,
+Hand within hand and side by side,
+Two links of love awhile untied
+From the great chain above, but fast
+Holding together to the last!--
+Two fallen Splendors from that tree[19]
+Which buds with such eternally,
+Shaken to earth yet keeping all
+Their light and freshness in the fall.
+
+Their only punishment, (as wrong,
+ However sweet, must bear its brand.)
+Their only doom was this--that, long
+ As the green earth and ocean stand,
+They both shall wander here--the same,
+Throughout all time, in heart and frame--
+Still looking to that goal sublime,
+ Whose light remote but sure they see;
+Pilgrims of Love whose way is Time,
+ Whose home is in Eternity!
+Subject the while to all the strife
+True Love encounters in this life--
+The wishes, hopes, he breathes in vain;
+ The chill that turns his warmest sighs
+ To earthly vapor ere they rise;
+The doubt he feeds on and the pain
+ That in his very sweetness lies:--
+Still worse, the illusions that betray
+ His footsteps to their shining brink;
+That tempt him on his desert way
+ Thro' the bleak world, to bend and drink,
+Where nothing meets his lips, alas!--
+But he again must sighing pass
+On to that far-off home of peace,
+In which alone his thirst will cease.
+
+All this they bear but not the less
+Have moments rich in happiness--
+Blest meetings, after many a day
+Of widowhood past far away,
+When the loved face again is seen
+Close, close, with not a tear between--
+Confidings frank, without control,
+Poured mutually from soul to soul;
+As free from any fear or doubt
+ As is that light from chill or strain
+The sun into the stars sheds out
+ To be by them shed back again!--
+That happy minglement of hearts,
+ Where, changed as chymic compounds are,
+Each with its own existence parts
+ To find a new one, happier far!
+Such are their joys--and crowning all
+ That blessed hope of the bright hour,
+When, happy and no more to fall,
+ Their spirits shall with freshened power
+Rise up rewarded for their trust
+ In Him from whom all goodness springs,
+And shaking off earth's soiling dust
+ From their emancipated wings,
+Wander for ever thro' those skies
+Of radiance where Love never dies!
+
+In what lone region of the earth,
+ These Pilgrims now may roam or dwell,
+God and the Angels who look forth
+ To watch their steps, alone can tell.
+But should we in our wanderings
+ Meet a young pair whose beauty wants
+But the adornment of bright wings
+ To look like heaven's inhabitants--
+Who shine where'er they tread and yet
+ Are humble in their earthly lot,
+As is the way-side violet,
+ That shines unseen, and were it not
+ For its sweet breath would be forgot
+Whose hearts in every thought are one,
+ Whose voices utter the same wills--
+Answering, as Echo doth some tone
+ Of fairy music 'mong the hills,
+So like itself we seek in vain
+Which is the echo, which the strain--
+Whose piety is love, whose love
+ Tho' close as 'twere their souls' embrace.
+Is not of earth but from above--
+ Like two fair mirrors face to face,
+Whose light from one to the other thrown,
+Is heaven's reflection, not their own--
+Should we e'er meet with aught so pure,
+So perfect here, we may be sure
+ 'Tis ZARAPH and his bride we see;
+And call young lovers round to view
+The pilgrim pair as they pursue
+ Their pathway towards eternity.
+
+
+[1] "To which will be joined the sound of the bells hanging on the trees,
+which will be put in motion by the wind proceeding from the Throne, so
+often as the Blessed wish for music."--See _Sale's Koran, Prelim.
+Dissert_.
+
+[2] The ancient Persians supposed that this Throne was placed in the Sun,
+and that through the stars were distributed the various classes of Angels
+that encircled it. The Basilidians supposed that there were three hundred
+and sixty-five orders of angels.
+
+[3] It appears that, in most languages, the term employed for an angel
+means also a messenger.
+
+[4] The name given by the Mahometans to the infernal regions, over which,
+they say, the angel Tabliek presides.
+
+[5] The Kerubilna, as the Mussulmans call them, are often joined
+indiscriminately with the Asrafil or Seraphim, under one common name of
+Azazil, by which all spirits who approach near the throne of Alla are
+designated.
+
+[6] A belief that the stars are either spirits or the vehicles of spirits,
+was common to all the religions and heresies of the East. Kircher has
+given the names and stations of the seven archangels, who were by the
+Cabala of the Jews distributed through the planets.
+
+[7] According to the cosmogony of the ancient Persians, there were four
+stars set as sentinels in the four quarters of the heavens, to watch over
+the other fixed stars, and superintend the planets in their course. The
+names of these four Sentinel stars are, according to the Boundesh,
+Taschter, for the east; Satevis, for the west; Venand, for the south; and
+Haftorang. for the north.
+
+[8] Chavah, or, as it is Arabic, Havah (the name by which Adam called the
+woman after their transgression), means "Life".
+
+[9] Called by the Mussulmans Al Araf--a sort of wall or partition which,
+according to the 7th chapter of the Koran, separates hell from paradise,
+and where they, who have not merits sufficient to gain them immediate
+admittance into heaven, are supposed to stand for a certain period,
+alternately tantalized and tormented by the sights that are on either side
+presented to them.
+
+[10] I am aware that this happy saying of Lord Albemarle's loses much of
+its grace and playfulness, by being put into the mouth of any but a human
+lover.
+
+[11] According to Whitehurst's theory, the mention of rainbows by an
+antediluvian angel is an anachronism; as he says, "There was no rain
+before the flood, and consequently no rainbow, which accounts for the
+novelty of this sight after the Deluge."
+
+[12] In acknowledging the authority of the great Prophets who had preceded
+him, Mahomet represented his own mission as the final "_Seal_," or
+consummation of them all.
+
+[13] The Zodiacal Light.
+
+[14] Pococke, however, gives it as the opinion of the Mahometan doctors,
+that all souls, not only of men and of animals, living either on land or
+in the sea, but of angels also, must necessarily taste of death.
+
+[15] The Dove, or pigeon which attended Mahomet as his Familiar, and was
+frequently seen to whisper into his ear, was, if I recollect right, one of
+that select number of animals [including also the ant of Solomon, the dog
+of the Seven Sleepers, etc.] which were thought by the Prophet worthy of
+admission into Paradise.
+
+[16] "Mohammed [says Sale], though a prophet, was not able to bear the
+sight of Gabriel, when he appeared in his proper form, much less would
+others be able to support it."
+
+[17] Seth is a favorite personage among the Orientals, and acts a
+conspicuous part in many of their most extravagant romances. The Syrians
+pretended to have a Testament of this Patriarch in their possession, in
+which was explained the whole theology of angels, their different orders,
+etc. The Curds, too (as Hyde mentions in his Appendix), have a book, which
+contains all the rites of their religion, and which they call Sohuph
+Sheit, or the Book of Seth.
+
+[18] The Seraphim, or Spirits of Divine Love.
+
+[19] An allusion to the Sephiroths or Splendors of the Jewish Cabala,
+represented as a tree, of which God is the crown or summit.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+RHYMES ON THE ROAD.
+
+EXTRACTED FROM THE JOURNAL OF
+A TRAVELLING MEMBER OF
+THE POCO-CURANTE SOCIETY,
+
+1819.
+
+
+The greater part of the following Rhymes were written or composed in an
+old _calêche_ for the purpose of beguiling the _ennui_ of solitary
+travelling; and as verses made by a gentleman in his sleep, have been
+lately called "a _psychological_ curiosity," it is to be hoped that
+verses, composed by a gentleman to keep himself awake, may be honored with
+some appellation equally Greek.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+RHYMES ON THE ROAD
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTORY RHYMES.
+
+
+_Different Attitudes in which Authors compose.--Bayes, Henry Stevens,
+Herodotus, etc.--Writing in Bed--in the Fields.--Plato and Sir Richard
+Blackmore.--Fiddling with Gloves and Twigs.--Madame de Staël.--Rhyming on
+the Road, in an old Calêche_.
+
+
+What various attitudes and ways
+ And tricks we authors have in writing!
+While some write sitting, some like BAYES
+ Usually stand while they're inditing,
+Poets there are who wear the floor out,
+ Measuring a line at every stride;
+While some like HENRY STEPHENS pour out
+ Rhymes by the dozen while they ride.
+HERODOTUS wrote most in bed;
+ And RICHERAND, a French physician,
+Declares the clock-work of the head
+ Goes best in that reclined position.
+If you consult MONTAIGNE and PLINY on
+The subject, 'tis their joint opinion
+That Thought its richest harvest yields
+Abroad among the woods and fields,
+That bards who deal in small retail
+ At home may at their counters stop;
+But that the grove, the hill, the vale,
+ Are Poesy's true wholesale shop.
+And verily I think they're right--
+ For many a time on summer eves,
+Just at that closing hour of light,
+ When, like an Eastern Prince, who leaves
+For distant war his Haram bowers,
+The Sun bids farewell to the flowers,
+Whose heads are sunk, whose tears are flowing
+Mid all the glory of his going!--
+Even _I_ have felt, beneath those beams,
+ When wandering thro' the fields alone,
+Thoughts, fancies, intellectual gleams,
+ Which, far too bright to be my own,
+Seemed lent me by the Sunny Power
+That was abroad at that still hour.
+
+If thus I've felt, how must _they_ feel,
+ The few whom genuine Genius warms,
+Upon whose soul he stamps his seal,
+ Graven with Beauty's countless forms;--
+The few upon this earth, who seem
+Born to give truth to PLATO'S dream,
+Since in their thoughts, as in a glass,
+ Shadows of heavenly things appear.
+Reflections of bright shapes that pass
+ Thro' other worlds, above our sphere!
+But this reminds me I digress;--
+ For PLATO, too, produced, 'tis said,
+(As one indeed might almost guess),
+ His glorious visions all in bed.[1]
+'Twas in his carriage the sublime
+Sir RICHARD BLACKMORE used to rhyme;
+ And (if the wits don’t do him wrong)
+Twixt death and epics past his time,[2]
+ Scribbling and killing all day long--
+Like Phoebus in his car, at ease,
+ Now warbling forth a lofty song,
+Now murdering the young Niobes.
+
+There was a hero 'mong the Danes,
+Who wrote, we're told, mid all the pains
+ And horrors of exenteration,
+Nine charming odes, which, if you'll look,
+ You'll find preserved with a translation
+By BARTHOLINOS in his book.
+In short 'twere endless to recite
+The various modes in which men write.
+Some wits are only in the mind.
+ When beaus and belles are round them prating;
+Some when they dress for dinner find
+ Their muse and valet both in waiting
+And manage at the self-same time
+To adjust a neckcloth and a rhyme.
+
+Some bards there are who cannot scribble
+Without a glove to tear or nibble
+Or a small twig to whisk about--
+ As if the hidden founts of Fancy,
+Like wells of old, were thus found out
+ By mystic trick of rhabdomancy.
+Such was the little feathery wand,[3]
+That, held for ever in the hand
+Of her who won and wore the crown[4]
+ Of female genius in this age,
+Seemed the conductor that drew down
+ Those words of lightning to her page.
+
+As for myself--to come, at last,
+ To the odd way in which _I_ write--
+Having employ'd these few months past
+ Chiefly in travelling, day and night,
+I've got into the easy mode
+Of rhyming thus along the road--
+Making a way-bill of my pages,
+Counting my stanzas by my stages--
+'Twixt lays and _re_-lays no time lost--
+In short, in two words, _writing post_.
+
+
+[1] The only authority I know for imputing this practice to Plato and
+Herodotus, is a Latin poem by M. de Valois on his Bed, in which he says:--
+
+_Lucifer Herodotum vidit Vesperque cubantem, desedit totos heic Plato
+saepe dies_.
+
+[2] Sir Richard Blackmore was a physician, as well as a bad poet.
+
+[3] Made of paper, twisted up like a fan or feather.
+
+[4] Madame de Staël.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT I.
+
+Geneva.
+
+
+_View of the Lake of Geneva from the Jura.[1]--Anxious to reach it
+before the Sun went down.--Obliged to proceed on Foot.--Alps.--Mont
+Blanc.--Effect of the Scene_.
+
+
+'Twas late--the sun had almost shone
+His last and best when I ran on
+Anxious to reach that splendid view
+Before the daybeams quite withdrew
+And feeling as all feel on first
+ Approaching scenes where, they are told,
+Such glories on their eyes will burst
+ As youthful bards in dreams behold.
+
+'Twas distant yet and as I ran
+ Full often was my wistful gaze
+Turned to the sun who now began
+ To call in all his out-posts rays,
+And form a denser march of light,
+Such as beseems a hero's flight.
+Oh, how I wisht for JOSHUA'S power,
+To stay the brightness of that hour?
+But no--the sun still less became,
+ Diminisht to a speck as splendid
+And small as were those tongues of flame,
+ That on the Apostles' heads descended!
+
+'Twas at this instant--while there glowed
+ This last, intensest gleam of light--
+Suddenly thro' the opening road
+ The valley burst upon my sight!
+That glorious valley with its Lake
+ And Alps on Alps in clusters swelling,
+Mighty and pure and fit to make
+ The ramparts of a Godhead's dwelling.
+
+I stood entranced--as Rabbins say
+ This whole assembled, gazing world
+Will stand, upon that awful day,
+ When the Ark's Light aloft unfurled
+Among the opening clouds shall shine,
+Divinity's own radiant sign!
+
+Mighty MONT BLANC, thou wert to me
+ That minute, with thy brow in heaven,
+As sure a sign of Deity
+ As e'er to mortal gaze was given.
+Nor ever, were I destined yet
+ To live my life twice o'er again,
+Can I the deep-felt awe forget,
+ The dream, the trance that rapt me then!
+
+'Twas all that consciousness of power
+And life, beyond this mortal hour;--
+Those mountings of the soul within
+At thoughts of Heaven--as birds begin
+By instinct in the cage to rise,
+When near their time for change of skies;--
+That proud assurance of our claim
+ To rank among the Sons of Light,
+Mingled with shame--oh bitter shame!--
+ At having riskt that splendid right,
+For aught that earth thro' all its range
+Of glories offers in exchange!
+'Twas all this, at that instant brought
+Like breaking sunshine o'er my thought--
+'Twas all this, kindled to a glow
+ Of sacred zeal which could it shine
+Thus purely ever man might grow,
+ Even upon earth a thing divine,
+And be once more the creature made
+To walk unstained the Elysian shade!
+
+No, never shall I lose the trace
+Of what I've felt in this bright place.
+And should my spirit's hope grow weak,
+ Should I, oh God! e'er doubt thy power,
+This mighty scene again I'll seek,
+ At the same calm and glowing hour,
+And here at the sublimest shrine
+ That Nature ever reared to Thee
+Rekindle all that hope divine
+ And _feel_ my immortality!
+
+
+[1] Between Vattay and Gex.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT II.
+
+Geneva.
+
+FATE OF GENEVA IN THE YEAR 1782.
+
+A FRAGMENT.
+
+
+Yes--if there yet live some of those,
+Who, when this small Republic rose,
+Quick as a startled hive of bees,
+Against her leaguering enemies--[1]
+When, as the Royal Satrap shook
+ His well-known fetters at her gates,
+Even wives and mothers armed and took
+ Their stations by their sons and mates;
+And on these walls there stood--yet, no,
+ Shame to the traitors--_would_ have stood
+As firm a band as e'er let flow
+ At Freedom's base their sacred blood;
+If those yet live, who on that night
+When all were watching, girt for fight,
+Stole like the creeping of a pest
+From rank to rank, from breast to breast,
+Filling the weak, the old with fears,
+Turning the heroine's zeal to tears,--
+Betraying Honor to that brink,
+Where, one step more, and he must sink--
+And quenching hopes which tho' the last,
+Like meteors on a drowning mast,
+Would yet have led to death more bright,
+Than life e'er lookt, in all its light!
+Till soon, too soon, distrust, alarms
+ Throughout the embattled thousands ran,
+And the high spirit, late in arms,
+The zeal that might have workt such charms,
+ Fell like a broken talisman--
+Their gates, that they had sworn should be
+ The gates of Death, that very dawn,
+Gave passage widely, bloodlessly,
+ To the proud foe--nor sword was drawn,
+Nor even one martyred body cast
+To stain their footsteps, as they past;
+But of the many sworn at night
+To do or die, some fled the sight,
+Some stood to look with sullen frown,
+ While some in impotent despair
+Broke their bright armor and lay down,
+ Weeping, upon the fragments there!--
+If those, I say, who brought that shame,
+That blast upon GENEVA'S name
+Be living still--tho' crime so dark
+ Shall hang up, fixt and unforgiven,
+In History's page, the eternal mark
+ For Scorn to pierce--so help me, Heaven,
+I wish the traitorous slaves no worse,
+ No deeper, deadlier disaster
+From all earth's ills no fouler curse
+ Than to have *********** their master!
+
+
+[1] In the year 1782, when the forces of Berne, Sardinia, and France laid
+siege to Geneva, and when, after a demonstration of heroism and
+self-devotion, which promised to rival the feats of their ancestors in
+1602 against Savoy, the Genevans, either panic-struck or betrayed, to the
+surprise of all Europe, opened their gates to the besiegers, and submitted
+without a struggle to the extinction of their liberties--See an account of
+this Revolution in Coxe's Switzerland.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT III.
+
+Geneva.
+
+_Fancy and Truth--Hippomenes and Atalanta. Mont Blanc.--Clouds_.
+
+
+Even here in this region of wonders I find
+That light-footed Fancy leaves Truth far behind;
+Or at least like Hippomenes turns her astray
+By the golden illusions he flings in her way.
+
+What a glory it seemed the first evening I gazed!
+MONT BLANC like a vision then suddenly raised
+On the wreck of the sunset--and all his array
+ Of high-towering Alps, touched still with a light
+Far holier, purer than that of the Day,
+ As if nearness to Heaven had made them so bright!
+Then the dying at last of these splendors away
+From peak after peak, till they left but a ray,
+One roseate ray, that, too precious to fly,
+ O'er the Mighty of Mountains still glowingly hung,
+Like the last sunny step of ASTRAEA, when high,
+ From the summit of earth to Elysium she sprung!
+And those infinite Alps stretching out from the sight
+Till they mingled with Heaven, now shorn of their light,
+Stood lofty and lifeless and pale in the sky,
+Like the ghosts of a Giant Creation gone by!
+
+That scene--I have viewed it this evening again,
+By the same brilliant light that hung over it then--
+The valley, the lake in their tenderest charms--
+ MONT BLANC in his awfullest pomp--and the whole
+A bright picture of Beauty, reclined in the arms
+ Of Sublimity, bridegroom elect of her soul!
+But where are the mountains that round me at first
+One dazzling horizon of miracles burst?
+Those Alps beyond Alps, without end swelling on
+Like the waves of eternity--where are _they_ gone?
+Clouds--clouds--they were nothing but clouds, after all![1]
+ That chain of MONT BLANC'S, which my fancy flew o'er,
+With a wonder that naught on this earth can recall,
+ Were but clouds of the evening and now are no more.
+
+What a picture of Life's young illusions! Oh, Night,
+Drop thy curtain at once and hide _all_ from my sight.
+
+
+[1] It is often very difficult to distinguish between clouds and
+Alps; and on the evening when I first saw this magnificent scene, the
+clouds were so disposed along the whole horizon, as to deceive me into an
+idea of the stupendous extent of these mountains, which my subsequent
+observation was very far, of course, from confirming.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT IV.
+
+Milan.
+
+
+_The Picture Gallery.--Albano's Rape of Proserpine.--Reflections.--
+Universal Salvation.--Abraham sending away Agar, by Guercino.--Genius_.
+
+
+Went to the _Brera_--saw a Dance of Loves
+ By smooth ALBANO! him whose pencil teems
+With Cupids numerous as in summer groves
+ The leaflets are or motes in summer beams.
+
+'Tis for the theft of Enna's flower from earth,
+These urchins celebrate their dance of mirth
+Round the green tree, like fays upon a heath--
+ Those that are nearest linkt in order bright,
+Cheek after cheek, like rose-buds in a wreath;
+And those more distant showing from beneath
+ The others' wings their little eyes of light.
+While see! among the clouds, their eldest brother
+ But just flown up tells with a smile of bliss
+This prank of Pluto to his charmed mother
+ Who turns to greet the tidings with a kiss!
+
+Well might the Loves rejoice--and well did they
+ Who wove these fables picture in their weaving
+That blessed truth, (which in a darker day
+ ORIGEN lost his saintship for believing,[1])--
+That Love, eternal Love, whose fadeless ray
+ Nor time nor death nor sin can overcast,
+Even to the depths of hell will find his way,
+ And soothe and heal and triumph there at last!
+GUERCINO'S Agar--where the bondmaid hears
+ From Abram's lips that he and she must part,
+And looks at him with eyes all full of tears
+ That seem the very last drops from her heart.
+Exquisite picture!--let me not be told
+Of minor faults, of coloring tame and cold--
+If thus to conjure up a face so fair,[2]
+So full of sorrow; with the story there
+Of all that woman suffers when the stay
+Her trusting heart hath leaned on falls away--
+If thus to touch the bosom's tenderest spring,
+By calling into life such eyes as bring
+Back to our sad remembrance some of those
+We've smiled and wept with in their joys and woes,
+Thus filling them with tears, like tears we've known,
+Till all the pictured grief becomes our own--
+If _this_ be deemed the victory of Art--
+ If thus by pen or pencil to lay bare
+The deep, fresh, living fountains of the heart
+ Before all eyes be Genius--it is _there_!
+
+
+[1] The extension of the Divine Love ultimately even to the
+regions of the damned.
+
+[2] It is probable that this fine head is a portrait, as we find
+it repeated in a picture by Guercino, which is in the possession of Signor
+Carnuccini, the brother of the celebrated painter at Rome.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT V.
+
+Padua.
+
+
+_Fancy and Reality.--Rain-drops and Lakes.--Plan of a Story.--Where to
+place the Scene of it.--In some unknown Region.--Psalmanazar's Imposture
+with respect to the Island of Formosa_.
+
+
+The more I've viewed this world the more I've found,
+ That, filled as 'tis with scenes and creatures rare.
+Fancy commands within her own bright round
+ A world of scenes and creatures far more fair.
+Nor is it that her power can call up there
+ A single charm, that's not from Nature won,
+No more than rainbows in their pride can wear
+ A single hue unborrowed from the sun--
+But 'tis the mental medium it shines thro'
+That lends to Beauty all its charm and hue;
+As the same light that o'er the level lake
+ One dull monotony of lustre flings,
+Will, entering in the rounded raindrop, make
+ Colors as gay as those on Peris' wings!
+
+ And such, I deem, the difference between real,
+Existing Beauty and that form ideal
+Which she assumes when seen by poets' eyes,
+Like sunshine in the drop--with all those dyes
+Which Fancy's variegating prism supples.
+
+I have a story of two lovers, filled
+ With all the pure romance, the blissful sadness,
+And the sad, doubtful bliss that ever thrilled
+ Two young and longing hearts in that sweet madness.
+But where to choose the region of my vision
+ In this wide, vulgar world--what real spot
+Can be found out sufficiently Elysian
+ For two such perfect lovers I know not.
+Oh for some fair FORMOSA, such as he,
+The young Jew fabled of, in the Indian Sea,
+By nothing but its name of Beauty known,
+And which Queen Fancy might make all her own,
+Her fairy kingdom--take its people, lands,
+And tenements into her own bright hands,
+And make at least one earthly corner fit
+For Love to live in, pure and exquisite!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT VI.
+
+Venice.
+
+
+_The Fall of Venice not to be lamented--Former Glory.--Expedition
+against Constantinople.--Giustinianis.--Republic.--Characteristics of the
+old Government.--Golden Book.--Brazen Mouths.--Spies.--Dungeons.--Present
+Desolation_.
+
+
+Mourn not for VENICE--let her rest
+In ruin, 'mong those States unblest,
+Beneath whose gilded hoofs of pride,
+Where'er they trampled, Freedom died.
+No--let us keep our tears for them,
+ Where'er they pine, whose fall hath been
+Not from a blood-stained diadem,
+ Like that which deckt this ocean-queen,
+But from high daring in the cause
+ Of human Rights--the only good
+And blessed strife, in which man draws
+ His mighty sword on land or flood.
+
+Mourn not for VENICE; tho' her fall
+ Be awful, as if Ocean's wave
+Swept o'er her, she deserves it all,
+ And Justice triumphs o'er her grave.
+Thus perish every King and State
+ That run the guilty race she ran,
+Strong but in ill and only great
+ By outrage against God and man!
+
+True, her high spirit is at rest,
+ And all those days of glory gone,
+When the world's waters, east and west,
+ Beneath her white-winged commerce shone;
+When with her countless barks she went
+ To meet the Orient Empire's might.[1]
+And her Giustinianis sent
+ Their hundred heroes to that fight.
+
+Vanisht are all her pomps, 'tis true,
+But mourn them not--for vanisht too
+ (Thanks to that Power, who soon or late,
+ Hurls to the dust the guilty Great,)
+Are all the outrage, falsehood, fraud,
+ The chains, the rapine, and the blood,
+That filled each spot, at home, abroad,
+ Where the Republic's standard stood.
+Desolate VENICE! when I track
+Thy haughty course thro' centuries back;
+Thy ruthless power, obeyed but curst--
+ The stern machinery of thy State,
+Which hatred would, like steam, have burst,
+ Had stronger fear not chilled even hate;--
+Thy perfidy, still worse than aught
+Thy own unblushing SARPI[2] taught;--
+Thy friendship which, o'er all beneath
+Its shadow, rained down dews of death;[3]--
+Thy Oligarchy's Book of Gold,
+ Closed against humble Virtue's name,
+But opened wide for slaves who sold
+ Their native land to thee and shame;[4]--
+Thy all-pervading host of spies
+ Watching o'er every glance and breath,
+Till men lookt in each others' eyes,
+ To read their chance of life or death;--
+Thy laws that made a mart of blood,
+ And legalized the assassin's knife;[5]--
+Thy sunless cells beneath the flood,
+ And racks and Leads that burnt out life;--
+
+When I review all this and see
+The doom that now hath fallen on thee;
+Thy nobles, towering once so proud,
+Themselves beneath the yoke now bowed,--
+A yoke by no one grace redeemed,
+Such as of old around thee beamed,
+But mean and base as e'er yet galled
+Earth's tyrants when themselves enthralled,--
+I feel the moral vengeance sweet.
+And smiling o'er the wreck repeat:--
+"Thus perish every King and State
+ "That tread the steps which VENICE trod,
+"Strong but in ill and only great,
+ "By outrage against man and God!"
+
+
+[1] Under the Doge Michaeli, in 1171.
+
+[2] The celebrated Fra Paolo. The collections of Maxims which this bold
+monk drew up at the request of the Venetian Government, for the guidance
+of the Secret Inquisition of State, are so atrocious as to seem rather an
+over-charged satire upon despotism, than a system of policy, seriously
+inculcated, and but too readily and constantly pursued.
+
+[3] Conduct of Venice towards her allies and dependencies, particularly to
+unfortunate Padua.
+
+[4] Among those admitted to the honor of being inscribed in the _Libro
+d'oro_ were some families of Brescia, Treviso, and other places, whose
+only claim to that distinction was the zeal with which they prostrated
+themselves and their country at the feet of the republic.
+
+[5] By the infamous statutes of the State Inquisition, not only was
+assassination recognized as a regular mode of punishment, but this secret
+power over life was delegated to their minions at a distance, with nearly
+as much facility as a licence is given under the game laws of England. The
+only restriction seems to have been the necessity of applying for a new
+certificate, after every individual exercise of the power.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT VII.
+
+Venice.
+
+
+_Lord Byron's Memoirs, written by himself.--Reflections, when about to
+read them_.
+
+
+Let me a moment--ere with fear and hope
+Of gloomy, glorious things, these leaves I ope--
+As one in fairy tale to whom the key
+ Of some enchanter's secret halls is given,
+Doubts while he enters slowly, tremblingly,
+ If he shall meet with shapes from hell or heaven--
+Let me a moment think what thousands live
+O'er the wide earth this instant who would give,
+Gladly, whole sleepless nights to bend the brow
+Over these precious leaves, as I do now.
+
+How all who know--and where is he unknown?
+To what far region have his songs not flown,
+Like PSAPHON'S birds[1] speaking their master's name,
+In every language syllabled by Fame?--
+How all who've felt the various spells combined
+Within the circle of that mastermind,--
+Like spells derived from many a star and met
+Together in some wondrous amulet,--
+Would burn to know when first the Light awoke
+In his young soul,--and if the gleams that broke
+From that Aurora of his genius, raised
+Most pain or bliss in those on whom they blazed;
+Would love to trace the unfolding of that power,
+Which had grown ampler, grander, every hour;
+And feel in watching o'er his first advance
+ As did the Egyptian traveller[2] when he stood
+By the young Nile and fathomed with his lance
+ The first small fountains of that mighty flood.
+
+They too who mid the scornful thoughts that dwell
+ In his rich fancy, tingeing all its streams,--
+As if the Star of Bitterness which fell
+ On earth of old,[3] had touched them with its beams,--
+Can track a spirit which tho' driven to hate,
+From Nature's hands came kind, affectionate;
+And which even now, struck as it is with blight,
+Comes out at times in love's own native light;--
+How gladly all who've watched these struggling rays
+Of a bright, ruined spirit thro' his lays,
+Would here inquire, as from his own frank lips,
+ What desolating grief, what wrongs had driven
+That noble nature into cold eclipse;
+ Like some fair orb that, once a sun in heaven.
+And born not only to surprise but cheer
+With warmth and lustre all within its sphere,
+Is now so quenched that of its grandeur lasts
+Naught but the wide, cold shadow which it casts.
+
+Eventful volume! whatsoe'er the change
+Of scene and clime--the adventures bold and strange--
+The griefs--the frailties but too frankly told--
+The loves, the feuds thy pages may unfold,
+If Truth with half so prompt a hand unlocks
+ His virtues as his failings, we shall find
+The record there of friendships held like rocks,
+ And enmities like sun-touched snow resigned;
+Of fealty, cherisht without change or chill,
+In those who served him, young, and serve him still;
+Of generous aid given, with that noiseless art
+Which wakes not pride, to many a wounded heart;
+Of acts--but, no--_not_ from himself must aught
+Of the bright features of his life be sought.
+
+While they who court the world, like Milton's cloud,
+"Turn forth their silver lining" on the crowd,
+This gifted Being wraps himself in night;
+ And keeping all that softens and adorns
+And gilds his social nature hid from sight,
+ Turns but its darkness on a world he scorns.
+
+
+[1] Psaphon, in order to attract the attention of the world, taught
+multitudes of birds to speak his name, and then let them fly away in
+various directions; whence the proverb, "Psaphonis aves."
+
+[2] Bruce.
+
+[3] "And the name of the star is called Wormwood, and the third part of
+the waters became wormwood."--_Rev_. viii.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT VIII.
+
+Venice.
+
+
+_Female Beauty at Venice.--No longer what it was in the time of Titian.--
+His mistress.--Various Forms in which he has painted her.--Venus.--Divine
+and profane Love.--La Fragilita d'Amore--Paul Veronese.--His Women.--
+Marriage of Cana.--Character of Italian Beauty.--Raphael's Fornarina.--
+Modesty_.
+
+
+Thy brave, thy learned have passed away:
+Thy beautiful!--ah, where are they?
+The forms, the faces that once shone,
+ Models of grace, in Titian's eye,
+Where are they now, while flowers live on
+ In ruined places, why, oh! why
+ Must Beauty thus with Glory die?
+That maid whose lips would still have moved,
+ Could art have breathed a spirit through them;
+Whose varying charms her artist loved
+ More fondly every time he drew them,
+(So oft beneath his touch they past,
+Each semblance fairer than the last);
+Wearing each shape that Fancy's range
+ Offers to Love--yet still the one
+Fair idol seen thro' every change,
+ Like facets of some orient stone,--
+ In each the same bright image shown.
+Sometimes a Venus, unarrayed
+ But in her beauty[1]--sometimes deckt
+In costly raiment, as a maid
+ That kings might for a throne select.[2]
+Now high and proud, like one who thought
+The world should at her feet be brought;
+Now with a look reproachful sad,[3]--
+Unwonted look from brow so glad,--
+And telling of a pain too deep
+For tongue to speak or eyes to weep.
+Sometimes thro' allegory's veil,
+ In double semblance seemed to shine,
+Telling a strange and mystic tale
+ Of Love Profane and Love Divine[4]--
+Akin in features, but in heart
+As far as earth and heaven apart.
+Or else (by quaint device to prove
+The frailty of all worldly love)
+Holding a globe of glass as thin
+ As air-blown bubbles in her hand,
+With a young Love confined therein,
+ Whose wings seem waiting to expand--
+And telling by her anxious eyes
+That if that frail orb break he flies.[5]
+
+Thou too with touch magnificent,
+PAUL of VERONA!--where are they?
+The oriental forms[6] that lent
+Thy canvas such a bright array?
+Noble and gorgeous dames whose dress
+Seems part of their own loveliness;
+Like the sun's drapery which at eve
+The floating clouds around him weave
+Of light they from himself receive!
+Where is there now the living face
+ Like those that in thy nuptial throng[7]
+By their superb, voluptuous grace,
+Make us forget the time, the place,
+ The holy guests they smile among,--
+Till in that feast of heaven-sent wine
+We see no miracles but thine.
+
+If e'er, except in Painting's dream,
+There bloomed such beauty here, 'tis gone,--
+Gone like the face that in the stream
+ Of Ocean for an instant shone,
+When Venus at that mirror gave
+A last look ere she left the wave.
+And tho', among the crowded ways,
+We oft are startled by the blaze
+ Of eyes that pass with fitful light.
+Like fire-flies on the wing at night[8]
+'Tis not that nobler beauty given
+To show how angels look in heaven.
+Even in its shape most pure and fair,
+'Tis Beauty with but half her zone,
+All that can warm the sense is there,
+ But the Soul's deeper charm has flown:--
+'Tis RAPHAEL's Fornarina,--warm,
+ Luxuriant, arch, but unrefined;
+A flower round which the noontide swarm
+ Of young Desires may buzz and wind,
+But where true Love no treasure meets
+Worth hoarding in his hive of sweets.
+
+Ah no,--for this and for the hue
+ Upon the rounded cheek, which tells
+How fresh within the heart this dew
+ Of love's unrifled sweetness dwells,
+We must go back to our own Isles,
+ Where Modesty, which here but gives
+A rare and transient grace to smiles,
+ In the heart's holy centre lives;
+And thence as from her throne diffuses
+ O'er thoughts and looks so bland a reign,
+That not a thought or feeling loses
+ Its freshness in that gentle chain.
+
+
+[1] In the Tribune at Florence.
+
+[2] In the Palazzo Pitti.
+
+[3] Alludes particularly to the portrait of her in the Sciarra collection
+at Rome, where the look of mournful reproach in those full, shadowy eyes,
+as if she had been unjustly accused of something wrong, is exquisite.
+
+[4] The fine picture in the Palazzo Borghese, called (it is not easy to
+say why) "Sacred and Profane Love," in which the two figures, sitting on
+the edge of the fountain, are evidently portraits of the same person.
+
+[5] This fanciful allegory is the subject of a picture by Titian in the
+possession of the Marquis Cambian at Turin, whose collection, though
+small, contains some beautiful specimens of all the great masters.
+
+[6] As Paul Veronese gave but little into the _beau idéal_, his women
+may be regarded as pretty close imitations of the living models which
+Venice afforded in his time.
+
+[7] The Marriage of Cana.
+
+[8] "Certain it is [as Arthur Young truly and feelingly says] one now and
+then meets with terrible eyes in Italy."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT IX.
+
+Venice.
+
+
+_The English to be met with everywhere.--Alps and Threadneedle
+Street.--The Simplon and the Stocks.--Rage for travelling.--Blue Stockings
+among the Wahabees.--Parasols and Pyramids.--Mrs. Hopkins and the Wall of
+China_.
+
+
+And is there then no earthly place,
+ Where we can rest in dream Elysian,
+Without some curst, round English face,
+ Popping up near to break the vision?
+Mid northern lakes, mid southern vines,
+ Unholy cits we're doomed to meet;
+Nor highest Alps nor Apennines
+ Are sacred from Threadneedle Street!
+
+If up the Simplon's path we wind,
+Fancying we leave this world behind,
+Such pleasant sounds salute one's ear
+As--"Baddish news from 'Change, my dear--
+"The funds--(phew I curse this ugly hill)--
+"Are lowering fast--(what, higher still?)--
+"And--(zooks, we're mounting up to heaven!)--
+"Will soon be down to sixty-seven."
+
+Go where we may--rest where we will.
+Eternal London haunts us still.
+The trash of Almack's or Fleet Ditch--
+And scarce a pin's head difference _which_--
+Mixes, tho' even to Greece we run,
+With every rill from Helicon!
+And if this rage for travelling lasts,
+If Cockneys of all sects and castes,
+Old maidens, aldermen, and squires,
+_Will_ leave their puddings and coal fires,
+To gape at things in foreign lands
+No soul among them understands;
+If Blues desert their coteries,
+To show off 'mong the Wahabees;
+If neither sex nor age controls,
+ Nor fear of Mamelukes forbids
+Young ladies with pink parasols
+ To glide among the Pyramids--
+
+Why, then, farewell all hope to find
+A spot that's free from London-kind!
+Who knows, if to the West we roam,
+But we may find some _Blue_ "at home"
+ Among the Blacks of Carolina--
+Or flying to the Eastward see
+Some Mrs. HOPKINS taking tea
+ And toast upon the Wall of China!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT X.
+
+Mantua.
+
+
+_Verses of Hippolyta to her Husband_.
+
+
+They tell me thou'rt the favored guest
+ Of every fair and brilliant throng;
+No wit like thine to wake the jest,
+ No voice like thine to breathe the song.
+And none could guess, so gay thou art,
+That thou and I are far apart.
+Alas, alas! how different flows,
+ With thee and me the time away!
+Not that I wish thee sad, heaven knows--
+ Still if thou canst, be light and gay;
+I only know that without thee
+The sun himself is dark for me.
+
+Do I put on the jewels rare
+Thou'st always loved to see me wear?
+Do I perfume the locks that thou
+So oft hast braided o'er my brow,
+Thus deckt thro' festive crowds to run,
+ And all the assembled world to see,--
+All but the one, the absent one,
+ Worth more than present worlds to me!
+No, nothing cheers this widowed heart--
+My only joy from thee apart,
+From thee thyself, is sitting hours
+ And days before thy pictured form--
+That dream of thee, which Raphael's powers
+ Have made with all but life-breath warm!
+And as I smile to it, and say
+The words I speak to thee in play,
+I fancy from their silent frame,
+Those eyes and lips give back the same:
+And still I gaze, and still they keep
+Smiling thus on me--till I weep!
+Our little boy too knows it well,
+ For there I lead him every day
+And teach his lisping lips to tell
+ The name of one that's far away.
+Forgive me, love, but thus alone
+My time is cheered while thou art gone.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT XI.
+
+Florence.
+
+
+No--'tis not the region where Love's to be found--
+ They have bosoms that sigh, they have glances that rove,
+They have language a Sappho's own lip might resound,
+ When she warbled her best--but they've nothing like Love.
+
+Nor is't that pure _sentiment_ only they want,
+ Which Heaven for the mild and the tranquil hath made--
+Calm, wedded affection, that home-rooted plant
+ Which sweetens seclusion and smiles in the shade;
+
+That feeling which, after long years have gone by,
+ Remains like a portrait we've sat for in youth,
+Where, even tho' the flush of the colors may fly,
+ The features still live in their first smiling truth;
+
+That union where all that in Woman is kind,
+ With all that in Man most ennoblingly towers,
+Grow wreathed into one--like the column, combined
+ Of the _strength_ of the shaft and the capital's _flowers_.
+
+Of this--bear ye witness, ye wives, everywhere,
+ By the ARNO, the PO, by all ITALY'S streams--
+Of this heart-wedded love, so delicious to share,
+ Not a husband hath even one glimpse in his dreams.
+
+But it _is_ not this only;--born full of the light
+ Of a sun from whose fount the luxuriant festoons
+Of these beautiful valleys drink lustre so bright
+ That beside him our suns of the north are but moons,--
+
+We might fancy at least, like their climate they burned;
+ And that Love tho' unused in this region of spring
+To be thus to a tame Household Deity turned,
+ Would yet be all soul when abroad on the wing.
+
+And there _may_ be, there _are_ those explosions of heart
+ Which burst when the senses have first caught the flame;
+Such fits of the blood as those climates impart,
+ Where Love is a sun-stroke that maddens the frame.
+
+But that Passion which springs in the depth of the soul;
+ Whose beginnings are virginly pure as the source
+Of some small mountain rivulet destined to roll
+ As a torrent ere long, losing peace in its course--
+
+A course to which Modesty's struggle but lends
+ A more headlong descent without chance of recall;
+But which Modesty even to the last edge attends,
+ And then throws a halo of tears round its fall!
+
+This exquisite Passion--ay, exquisite, even
+ Mid the ruin its madness too often hath made,
+As it keeps even then a bright trace of the heaven,
+ That heaven of Virtue from which it has strayed--
+
+This entireness of love which can only be found,
+Where Woman like something that's holy, watched over,
+And fenced from her childhood with purity round,
+Comes body and soul fresh as Spring to a lover!
+
+Where not an eye answers, where not a hand presses,
+Till spirit with spirit in sympathy move;
+And the Senses asleep in their sacred recesses
+Can only be reached thro' the temple of Love!--
+
+This perfection of Passion-how can it be found,
+Where the mystery Nature hath hung round the tie
+By which souls are together attracted and bound,
+Is laid open for ever to heart,
+ear and eye;--
+
+Where naught of that innocent doubt can exist,
+That ignorance even than knowledge more bright,
+Which circles the young like the morn's sunny mist,
+And curtains them round in their own native light;--
+
+Where Experience leaves nothing for Love to reveal,
+Or for Fancy in visions to gleam o'er the thought:
+But the truths which alone we would die to conceal
+From the maiden's young heart are the only ones taught.
+
+No, no, 'tis not here, howsoever we sigh,
+Whether purely to Hymen's one planet we pray,
+Or adore, like Sabaeans, each light of Love's sky,
+Here is not the region to fix or to stray.
+
+For faithless in wedlock, in gallantry gross,
+Without honor to guard, to reserve, to restrain,
+What have they a husband can mourn as a loss?
+What have they a lover can prize as a gain?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT XII.
+
+Florence.
+
+
+_Music in Italy.--Disappointed by it.--Recollections or other Times and
+Friends.--Dalton.--Sir John Stevenson.--His Daughter.--Musical Evenings
+together_.
+
+
+If it be true that Music reigns,
+ Supreme, in ITALY'S soft shades,
+'Tis like that Harmony so famous,
+Among the spheres, which He of SAMOS
+Declared had such transcendent merit
+That not a soul on earth could hear it;
+For, far as I have come--from Lakes,
+Whose sleep the Tramontana breaks,
+Thro' MILAN and that land which gave
+The Hero of the rainbow vest[1]--
+By MINCIO'S banks, and by that wave,
+Which made VERONA'S bard so blest--
+Places that (like the Attic shore,
+Which rung back music when the sea
+Struck on its marge) should be all o'er
+Thrilling alive with melody--
+I've heard no music--not a note
+Of such sweet native airs as float
+In my own land among the throng
+And speak our nation's soul for song.
+
+Nay, even in higher walks, where Art
+Performs, as 'twere, the gardener's part,
+And richer if not sweeter makes
+The flowers she from the wild-hedge takes--
+Even there, no voice hath charmed my ear,
+ No taste hath won my perfect praise,
+Like thine, dear friend[2]--long, truly dear--
+ Thine, and thy loved OLIVIA'S lays.
+She, always beautiful, and growing
+ Still more so every note she sings--
+Like an inspired young Sibyl,[3] glowing
+ With her own bright imaginings!
+And thou, most worthy to be tied
+ In music to her, as in love,
+Breathing that language by her side,
+ All other language far above,
+Eloquent Song--whose tones and words
+In every heart find answering chords!
+
+How happy once the hours we past,
+ Singing or listening all daylong,
+Till Time itself seemed changed at last
+ To music, and we lived in song!
+Turning the leaves of HAYDN o'er,
+ As quick beneath her master hand
+They opened all their brilliant store,
+ Like chambers, touched by fairy wand;
+Or o'er the page of MOZART bending,
+ Now by his airy warblings cheered,
+Now in his mournful _Requiem_ blending
+ Voices thro' which the heart was heard.
+And still, to lead our evening choir,
+Was He invoked, thy loved-one's Sire[4]--
+He who if aught of grace there be
+ In the wild notes I write or sing,
+First smoothed their links of harmony,
+ And lent them charms they did not bring;--
+He, of the gentlest, simplest heart,
+With whom, employed in his sweet art,
+(That art which gives this world of ours
+ A notion how they speak in heaven.)
+I've past more bright and charmed hours
+ Than all earth's wisdom could have given.
+Oh happy days, oh early friends,
+ How Life since then hath lost its flowers!
+But yet--tho' Time _some_ foliage rends,
+ The stem, the Friendship, still is ours;
+And long may it endure, as green
+And fresh as it hath always been!
+
+How I have wandered from my theme!
+ But where is he, that could return
+To such cold subjects from a dream,
+ Thro' which these best of feelings burn?--
+Not all the works of Science, Art,
+ Or Genius in this world are worth
+One genuine sigh that from the heart
+ Friendship or Love draws freshly forth.
+
+
+[1] Bermago--the birthplace, it is said, of Harlequin.
+
+[2] Edward Tuite Dalton, the first husband of Sir John Stevenson's
+daughter, the late Marchioness of Headfort.
+
+[3] Such as those of Domenichino in the Palazza Borghese, at the
+Capitol, etc.
+
+[4] Sir John Stevenson.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT XIII.
+
+Rome.
+
+
+_Reflections on reading Du Cerceau's Account of the Conspiracy of
+Rienzi, in 1347.--The Meeting of the Conspirators on the Night of the 19th
+of May.--Their Procession in the Morning to the Capitol.--Rienzi's
+Speech_.
+
+
+'Twas a proud moment--even to hear the words
+ Of Truth and Freedom mid these temples breathed,
+And see once more the Forum shine with swords
+ In the Republic's sacred name unsheathed--
+That glimpse, that vision of a brighter day
+ For his dear ROME, must to a Roman be,
+Short as it was, worth ages past away
+ In the dull lapse of hopeless slavery.
+
+'Twas on a night of May, beneath that moon
+Which had thro' many an age seen Time untune
+The strings of this Great Empire, till it fell
+From his rude hands, a broken, silent shell--
+The sound of the church clock near ADRIAN'S Tomb
+Summoned the warriors who had risen for ROME,
+To meet unarmed,--with none to watch them there,
+But God's own eye,--and pass the night in prayer.
+Holy beginning of a holy cause,
+When heroes girt for Freedom's combat pause
+Before high Heaven, and humble in their might
+Call down its blessing on that coming fight.
+
+At dawn, in arms went forth the patriot band;
+And as the breeze, fresh from the TIBER, fanned
+Their gilded gonfalons, all eyes could see
+ The palm-tree there, the sword, the keys of Heaven--
+Types of the justice, peace and liberty,
+ That were to bless them when their chains were riven.
+On to the Capitol the pageant moved,
+ While many a Shade of other times, that still
+Around that grave of grandeur sighing roved,
+ Hung o'er their footsteps up the Sacred Hill
+And heard its mournful echoes as the last
+High-minded heirs of the Republic past.
+'Twas then that thou, their Tribune,[1] (name which brought
+Dreams of lost glory to each patriot's thought,)
+Didst, with a spirit Rome in vain shall seek
+To wake up in her sons again, thus speak:--
+"ROMANS, look round you--on this sacred place
+ "There once stood shrines and gods and godlike men.
+"What see you now? what solitary trace
+ "Is left of all that made ROME'S glory then?
+"The shrines are sunk, the Sacred Mount bereft
+ "Even of its name--and nothing now remains
+"But the deep memory of that glory, left
+ "To whet our pangs and aggravate our chains!
+"But _shall_ this be?--our sun and sky the same,--
+ "Treading the very soil our fathers trod,--
+"What withering curse hath fallen on soul and frame,
+ "What visitation hath there come from God
+"To blast our strength and rot us into slaves,
+"_Here_ on our great forefathers' glorious graves?
+"It cannot be--rise up, ye Mighty Dead,--
+ "If we, the living, are too weak to crush
+"These tyrant priests that o'er your empire tread,
+ "Till all but Romans at Rome's tameness blush!
+
+"Happy, PALMYRA, in thy desert domes
+ "Where only date-trees sigh and serpents hiss;
+"And thou whose pillars are but silent homes
+ "For the stork's brood, superb PERSEPOLIS!
+"Thrice happy both, that your extinguisht race
+"Have left no embers--no half-living trace--
+"No slaves to crawl around the once proud spot,
+"Till past renown in present shame's forgot.
+"While ROME, the Queen of all, whose very wrecks,
+ "If lone and lifeless thro' a desert hurled,
+"Would wear more true magnificence than decks
+ "The assembled thrones of all the existing world--
+"ROME, ROME alone, is haunted, stained and curst,
+ "Thro' every spot her princely TIBER laves,
+"By living human things--the deadliest, worst,
+ "This earth engenders--tyrants and their slaves!
+"And we--oh shame!--we who have pondered o'er
+ "The patriot's lesson and the poet's lay;[2]
+"Have mounted up the streams of ancient lore,
+ "Tracking our country's glories all the way--
+"Even _we_ have tamely, basely kist the ground
+ "Before that Papal Power,--that Ghost of Her,
+"The World's Imperial Mistress--sitting crowned
+ "And ghastly on her mouldering sepulchre![3]
+"But this is past:--too long have lordly priests
+ "And priestly lords led us, with all our pride
+"Withering about us--like devoted beasts,
+ "Dragged to the shrine, with faded garlands tied.
+"'Tis o'er--the dawn of our deliverance breaks!
+"Up from his sleep of centuries awakes
+"The Genius of the Old Republic, free
+"As first he stood, in chainless majesty,
+"And sends his voice thro' ages yet to come,
+"Proclaiming ROME, ROME, ROME, Eternal ROME!"
+
+
+[1] Rienzi.
+
+[2] The fine Canzone of Petrarch, beginning _"Spirto gentil,"_ is
+supposed, by Voltaire and others, to have been addressed to Rienzi; but
+there is much more evidence of its having been written, as Ginguené
+asserts, to the young Stephen Colonna, on his being created a Senator of
+Rome.
+
+[3] This image is borrowed from Hobbes, whose words are, as near as I can
+recollect:--"For what is the Papacy, but the Ghost of the old Roman
+Empire, sitting crowned on the grave thereof?"
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT XIV.
+
+Rome.
+
+
+_Fragment of a Dream.--The great Painters supposed to be Magicians.--The
+Beginnings of the Art.--Gildings on the Glories and Draperies.--
+Improvements under Giotto, etc.--The first Dawn of the true Style in
+Masaccio.--Studied by all the great Artists who followed him.--Leonardo da
+Vinci, with whom commenced the Golden Age of Painting.--His Knowledge of
+Mathematics and of Music.--His female heads all like each other.--
+Triangular Faces.--Portraits of Mona Lisa, etc.--Picture of Vanity and
+Modesty.--His_ chef-d'oeuvre, _the Last Supper.--Faded and almost
+effaced_.
+
+
+Filled with the wonders I had seen
+ In Rome's stupendous shrines and halls,
+I felt the veil of sleep serene
+Come o'er the memory of each scene,
+ As twilight o'er the landscape falls.
+Nor was it slumber, sound and deep,
+ But such as suits a poet's rest--
+That sort of thin, transparent sleep,
+ Thro' which his day-dreams shine the best.
+Methought upon a plain I stood,
+ Where certain wondrous men, 'twas said,
+With strange, miraculous power endued,
+ Were coming each in turn to shed
+His art's illusions o'er the sight
+And call up miracles of light.
+The sky above this lonely place,
+ Was of that cold, uncertain hue,
+The canvas wears ere, warmed apace,
+ Its bright creation dawns to view.
+
+But soon a glimmer from the east
+ Proclaimed the first enchantments nigh;[1]
+And as the feeble light increased,
+ Strange figures moved across the sky,
+With golden glories deckt and streaks
+ Of gold among their garments' dyes;[2]
+And life's resemblance tinged their cheeks,
+ But naught of life was in their eyes;--
+Like the fresh-painted Dead one meets,
+Borne slow along Rome's mournful streets.
+
+But soon these figures past away;
+ And forms succeeded to their place
+With less of gold in their array,
+ But shining with more natural grace,
+And all could see the charming wands
+Had past into more gifted hands.
+Among these visions there was one,[3]
+Surpassing fair, on which the sun,
+That instant risen, a beam let fall,
+ Which thro' the dusky twilight trembled.
+And reached at length the spot where all
+ Those great magicians stood assembled.
+And as they turned their heads to view
+ The shining lustre, I could trace
+The bright varieties it threw
+ On each uplifted studying face:[4]
+While many a voice with loud acclaim
+Called forth, "Masaccio" as the name
+Of him, the Enchanter, who had raised
+This miracle on which all gazed.
+
+'Twas daylight now--the sun had risen
+ From out the dungeon of old Night.--
+Like the Apostle from his prison
+ Led by the Angel's hand of light;
+And--as the fetters, when that ray
+Of glory reached them, dropt away.[5]
+So fled the clouds at touch of day!
+Just then a bearded sage came forth,[6]
+ Who oft in thoughtful dream would stand,
+To trace upon the dusky earth
+ Strange learned figures with his wand;
+And oft he took the silver lute
+ His little page behind him bore,
+And waked such music as, when mute,
+ Left in the soul a thirst for more!
+
+Meanwhile his potent spells went on,
+ And forms and faces that from out
+A depth of shadow mildly shone
+ Were in the soft air seen about.
+Tho' thick as midnight stars they beamed,
+Yet all like living sisters seemed,
+So close in every point resembling
+ Each other's beauties--from the eyes
+Lucid as if thro' crystal trembling,
+ Yet soft as if suffused with sighs,
+To the long, fawn-like mouth, and chin,
+ Lovelily tapering, less and less,
+ Till by this very charm's excess,
+Like virtue on the verge of sin,
+ It touched the bounds of ugliness.
+Here lookt as when they lived the shades
+Of some of Arno's dark-eyed maids--
+Such maids as should alone live on
+In dreams thus when their charms are gone:
+Some Mona Lisa on whose eyes
+ A painter for whole years might gaze,[7]
+Nor find in all his pallet's dyes
+ One that could even approach their blaze!
+Here float two spirit shapes,[8] the one,
+With her white fingers to the sun
+Outspread as if to ask his ray
+Whether it e'er had chanced to play
+On lilies half so fair as they!
+This self-pleased nymph was Vanity--
+And by her side another smiled,
+ In form as beautiful as she,
+But with that air subdued and mild,
+ That still reserve of purity,
+Which is to beauty like the haze
+ Of evening to some sunny view,
+Softening such charms as it displays
+ And veiling others in that hue,
+ Which fancy only can see thro'!
+This phantom nymph, who could she be,
+But the bright Spirit, Modesty?
+
+Long did the learned enchanter stay
+ To weave his spells and still there past,
+As in the lantern's shifting play
+Group after group in close array,
+ Each fairer, grander, than the last.
+But the great triumph of his power
+ Was yet to come:--gradual and slow,
+(As all that is ordained to tower
+ Among the works of man must grow,)
+The sacred vision stole to view,
+ In that half light, half shadow shown,
+Which gives to even the gayest hue
+ A sobered, melancholy tone.
+It was a vision of that last,[9]
+Sorrowful night which Jesus past
+With his disciples when he said
+ Mournfully to them--"I shall be
+"Betrayed by one who here hath fed
+ "This night at the same board with me."
+And tho' the Saviour in the dream
+Spoke not these words, we saw them beam
+Legibly in his eyes (so well
+The great magician workt his spell),
+And read in every thoughtful line
+Imprinted on that brow divine.
+
+The meek, the tender nature, grieved,
+Not angered to be thus deceived--
+Celestial love requited ill
+For all its care, yet loving still--
+Deep, deep regret that there should fall
+ From man's deceit so foul a blight
+Upon that parting hour--and all
+ _His_ Spirit must have felt that night.
+Who, soon to die for human-kind,
+ Thought only, mid his mortal pain,
+How many a soul was left behind
+ For whom he died that death in vain!
+
+Such was the heavenly scene--alas!
+That scene so bright so soon should pass
+But pictured on the humid air,
+Its tints, ere long, grew languid there;[10]
+And storms came on, that, cold and rough,
+ Scattered its gentlest glories all--
+As when the baffling winds blow off
+ The hues that hang o'er Terni's fall,--
+Till one by one the vision's beams
+ Faded away and soon it fled.
+To join those other vanisht dreams
+ That now flit palely 'mong the dead,--
+The shadows of those shades that go.
+Around Oblivion's lake below!
+
+
+[1] The paintings of those artists who were introduced into Venice and
+Florence from Greece.
+
+[2] Margaritone of Orezzo, who was a pupil and imitator of the Greeks, is
+said to have invented this art of gilding the ornaments of pictures, a
+practice which, though it gave way to a purer taste at the beginning of
+the 16th century, was still occasionally used by many of the great
+masters: as by Raphael in the ornaments of the Fornarina, and by Rubens
+not unfrequently in glories and flames.
+
+[3] The works of Masaccio.--For the character of this powerful and
+original genius, see Sir Joshua Reynolds's twelfth discourse. His
+celebrated frescoes are in the church of St. Pietro del Carmine, at
+Florence.
+
+[4] All the great artists studies, and many of them borrowed from
+Masaccio. Several figures in the Cartoons of Raphael are taken, with but
+little alteration, from his frescoes.
+
+[5] "And a light shined in the prison ... and his chains fell off from his
+hands."--_Acts_.
+
+[6] Leonardo da Vinci.
+
+[7] He is said to have been four years employed upon the portrait of this
+fair Florentine, without being able, after all, to come up to his idea of
+her beauty.
+
+[8] Vanity and Modesty in the collection of Cardinal Fesch, at Rome. The
+composition of the four hands here is rather awkward, but the picture,
+altogether, is very delightful. There is a repetition of the subject in
+the possession of Lucien Bonaparte.
+
+[9] The Last Supper of Leonardo da Vinci, which is in the Refectory of the
+Convent delle Grazie at Milan.
+
+[10] Leonardo appears to have used a mixture of oil and varnish for this
+picture, which alone, without the various other causes of its ruin, would
+have prevented any long duration of its beauties. It is now almost
+entirely effaced.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT XV.
+
+Rome.
+
+
+_Mary Magdalen.--Her Story.--Numerous Pictures of her.--Correggio--Guido
+--Raphael, etc.--Canova's two exquisite Statues.--The Somariva Magdalen.
+--Chantrey's Admiration of Canova's Works_.
+
+
+No wonder, MARY, that thy story
+ Touches all hearts--for there we see thee.
+The soul's corruption and its glory,
+ Its death and life combine in thee.
+
+From the first moment when we find
+ Thy spirit haunted by a swarm
+Of dark desires,--like demons shrined
+ Unholily in that fair form,--
+Till when by touch of Heaven set free,
+ Thou camest, with those bright locks of gold
+(So oft the gaze of BETHANY),
+ And covering in their precious fold
+Thy Saviour's feet didst shed such tears
+As paid, each drop, the sins of years!--
+Thence on thro' all thy course of love
+ To Him, thy Heavenly Master,--Him
+Whose bitter death-cup from above
+ Had yet this cordial round the brim,
+That woman's faith and love stood fast
+And fearless by Him to the last:--
+Till, oh! blest boon for truth like thine!
+ Thou wert of all the chosen one,
+Before whose eyes that Face Divine
+ When risen from the dead first shone;
+That thou might'st see how, like a cloud,
+Had past away its mortal shroud,
+And make that bright revealment known
+To hearts less trusting than thy own.
+All is affecting, cheering, grand;
+ The kindliest record ever given,
+Even under God's own kindly hand,
+ Of what repentance wins from Heaven!
+
+No wonder, MARY, that thy face,
+ In all its touching light of tears,
+Should meet us in each holy place,
+ Where Man before his God appears,
+Hopeless--were he not taught to see
+All hope in Him who pardoned thee!
+No wonder that the painter's skill
+ Should oft have triumpht in the power
+Of keeping thee all lovely still
+ Even in thy sorrow's bitterest hour;
+That soft CORREGGIO should diffuse
+ His melting shadows round thy form;
+That GUIDO'S pale, unearthly hues
+ Should in portraying thee grow warm;
+That all--from the ideal, grand,
+Inimitable Roman hand,
+Down to the small, enameling touch
+ Of smooth CARLINO--should delight
+In picturing her, "who loved so much,"
+ And was, in spite of sin, so bright!
+
+ But MARY, 'mong these bold essays
+Of Genius and of Art to raise
+A semblance of those weeping eyes--
+ A vision worthy of the sphere
+Thy faith has earned thee in the skies,
+ And in the hearts of all men here,--
+None e'er hath matched, in grief or grace,
+CANOVA'S day-dream of thy face,
+In those bright sculptured forms, more bright
+With true expression's breathing light,
+Than ever yet beneath the stroke
+Of chisel into life awoke.
+The one,[1] portraying what thou wert
+ In thy first grief,--while yet the flower
+Of those young beauties was unhurt
+ By sorrow's slow, consuming power;
+And mingling earth's seductive grace
+ With heaven's subliming thoughts so well,
+We doubt, while gazing, in _which_ place
+ Such beauty was most formed to dwell!--
+The other, as thou look'dst, when years
+Of fasting, penitence and tears
+Had worn thy frame;--and ne'er did Art
+ With half such speaking power express
+The ruin which a breaking heart
+ Spreads by degrees o'er loveliness.
+Those wasting arms, that keep the trace,
+Even still, of all their youthful grace,
+That loosened hair of which thy brow
+Was once so proud,--neglected now!--
+Those features even in fading worth
+ The freshest bloom to others given,
+And those sunk eyes now lost to earth
+ But to the last still full of heaven!
+
+Wonderful artist! praise, like mine--
+ Tho' springing from a soul that feels
+Deep worship of those works divine
+ Where Genius all his light reveals--
+How weak 'tis to the words that came
+From him, thy peer in art and fame,[2]
+Whom I have known, by day, by night,
+Hang o'er thy marble with delight;
+And while his lingering hand would steal
+ O'er every grace the taper's rays[3]
+Give thee with all the generous zeal
+Such master spirits only feel,
+ That best of fame, a rival's prize!
+
+
+[1] This statue is one of the last works of Canova, and was not yet in
+marble when I left Rome. The other, which seems to prove, in contradiction
+to very high authority, that expression of the intensest kind is fully
+within the sphere of sculpture, was executed many years ago, and is in the
+possession of the Count Somariva at Paris.
+
+[2] Chantrey.
+
+[3] Canova always shows his fine statue, the Venere Vincitrice, by the
+light of a small candle.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT XVI.
+
+Les Charmettes.
+
+
+_A Visit to the house where Rousseau lived with Madame de Warrens.--
+Their Menage.--Its Grossness.--Claude Anet.--Reverence with which the spot
+is now visited.--Absurdity of this blind Devotion to Fame.--Feelings
+excited by the Beauty and Seclusion of the Scene. Disturbed by its
+Associations with Rousseau's History.--Impostures of Men of Genius.--Their
+Power of mimicking all the best Feelings, Love, Independence, etc_.
+
+
+Strange power of Genius, that can throw
+Round all that's vicious, weak, and low,
+Such magic lights, such rainbows dyes
+As dazzle even the steadiest eyes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+'Tis worse than weak--'tis wrong, 'tis shame,
+This mean prostration before Fame;
+This casting down beneath the car
+Of Idols, whatsoe'er they are,
+Life's purest, holiest decencies,
+To be careered o'er as they please.
+No--give triumphant Genius all
+For which his loftiest wish can call:
+If he be worshipt, let it be
+ For attributes, his noblest, first;
+Not with that base idolatry
+ Which sanctifies his last and worst.
+
+ I may be cold;--may want that glow
+Of high romance which bards should know;
+That holy homage which is felt
+In treading where the great have dwelt;
+This reverence, whatsoe'er it be,
+ I fear, I feel, I have it _not_:--
+For here at this still hour, to me
+ The charms of this delightful spot,
+Its calm seclusion from the throng,
+ From all the heart would fain forget,
+This narrow valley and the song
+ Of its small murmuring rivulet,
+The flitting to and fro of birds,
+Tranquil and tame as they were once
+In Eden ere the startling words
+ Of man disturbed their orisons,
+Those little, shadowy paths that wind
+Up the hillside, with fruit-trees lined
+And lighted only by the breaks
+The gay wind in the foliage makes,
+Or vistas here and there that ope
+ Thro' weeping willows, like the snatches
+Of far-off scenes of light, which Hope
+ Even tho' the shade of sadness catches!--
+All this, which--could I once but lose
+ The memory of those vulgar ties
+Whose grossness all the heavenliest hues
+ Of Genius can no more disguise
+Than the sun's beams can do away
+The filth of fens o'er which they play--
+This scene which would have filled my heart
+ With thoughts of all that happiest is;--
+Of Love where self hath only part,
+ As echoing back another's bliss;
+Of solitude secure and sweet.
+Beneath whose shade the Virtues meet.
+Which while it shelters never chills
+ Our sympathies with human woe,
+But keeps them like sequestered rills
+Purer and fresher in their flow;
+Of happy days that share their beams
+ 'Twixt quiet mirth and wise employ;
+Of tranquil nights that give in dreams
+ The moonlight of the morning's joy!--
+All this my heart could dwell on here,
+But for those gross mementoes near;
+Those sullying truths that cross the track
+Of each sweet thought and drive them back
+Full into all the mire and strife
+And vanities of that man's life,
+Who more than all that e'er have glowed
+ With fancy's flame (and it was _his_,
+In fullest warmth and radiance) showed
+ What an impostor Genius is;
+How with that strong, mimetic art
+ Which forms its life and soul, it takes
+All shapes of thought, all hues of heart,
+ Nor feels itself one throb it wakes;
+How like a gem its light may smile
+ O'er the dark path by mortals trod,
+Itself as mean a worm the while
+ As crawls at midnight o'er the sod;
+What gentle words and thoughts may fall
+ From its false lip, what zeal to bless,
+While home, friends, kindred, country, all,
+ Lie waste beneath its selfishness;
+How with the pencil hardly dry
+ From coloring up such scenes of love
+And beauty as make young hearts sigh
+ And dream and think thro' heaven they rove,
+They who can thus describe and move,
+ The very workers of these charms,
+Nor seek nor know a joy above
+ Some Maman's or Theresa's arms!
+
+How all in short that makes the boast
+Of their false tongues they want the most;
+And while with freedom on their lips,
+ Sounding their timbrels, to set free
+This bright world, laboring in the eclipse
+ Of priestcraft and of slavery,--
+They may themselves be slaves as low
+ As ever Lord or Patron made
+To blossom in his smile or grow
+ Like stunted brushwood in his shade.
+Out on the craft!--I'd rather be
+ One of those hinds that round me tread,
+With just enough of sense to see
+ The noonday sun that's o'er his head,
+Than thus with high-built genius curst,
+ That hath no heart for its foundation,
+Be all at once that's brightest, worst,
+ Sublimest, meanest in creation!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CORRUPTION,
+
+AND
+
+INTOLERANCE.
+
+TWO POEMS.
+
+ADDRESSED TO AN ENGLISHMAN BY AN IRISHMAN.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The practice which has been lately introduced into literature, of writing
+very long notes upon very indifferent verses, appears to me a rather happy
+invention, as it supplies us with a mode of turning dull poetry to
+account; and as horses too heavy for the saddle may yet serve well enough
+to draw lumber, so Poems of this kind make excellent beasts of burden and
+will bear notes though they may not bear reading. Besides, the comments in
+such cases are so little under the necessity of paying any servile
+deference to the text, that they may even adopt that Socratic, "_quod
+supra nos nihil ad nos."_
+
+In the first of the two following Poems, I have ventured to speak of the
+Revolution of 1688, in language which has sometimes been employed by Tory
+writers and which is therefore neither very new nor popular. But however
+an Englishman might be reproached with ingratitude for depreciating the
+merits and results of a measure which he is taught to regard as the source
+of his liberties--however ungrateful it might appear in Alderman Birch to
+question for a moment the purity of that glorious era to which he is
+indebted for the seasoning of so many orations--yet an Irishman who has
+none of these obligations to acknowledge, to whose country the Revolution
+brought nothing but injury and insult, and who recollects that the book of
+Molyneux was burned by order of William's Whig Parliament for daring to
+extend to unfortunate Ireland those principles on which the Revolution was
+professedly founded--an Irishman _may_ be allowed to criticise freely the
+measures of that period without exposing himself either to the imputation
+of ingratitude or to the suspicion of being influenced by any Popish
+remains of Jacobitism. No nation, it is true, was ever blessed with a more
+golden opportunity of establishing and securing its liberties for ever
+than the conjuncture of Eighty-eight presented to the people of Great
+Britain. But the disgraceful reigns of Charles and James had weakened and
+degraded the national character. The bold notions of popular right which
+had arisen out of the struggles between Charles the First and his
+Parliament were gradually supplanted by those slavish doctrines for which
+Lord Hawkesbury eulogizes the churchmen of that period, and as the
+Reformation had happened too soon for the purity of religion, so the
+Revolution came too late for the spirit of liberty. Its advantages
+accordingly were for the most part specious and transitory, while the
+evils which it entailed are still felt and still increasing. By rendering
+unnecessary the frequent exercise of Prerogative,--that unwieldy power
+which cannot move a step without alarm,--it diminished the only
+interference of the Crown, which is singly and independently exposed
+before the people, and whose abuses therefore are obvious to their senses
+and capabilities. Like the myrtle over a celebrated statue in Minerva's
+temple at Athens, it skilfully veiled from the public eye the only
+obtrusive feature of royalty. At the same time, however, that the
+Revolution abridged this unpopular attribute, it amply compensated by the
+substitution of a new power, as much more potent in its effect as it is
+more secret in its operations. In the disposal of an immense revenue and
+the extensive patronage annexed to it, the first foundations of this power
+of the Crown were laid; the innovation of a standing army at once
+increased and strengthened it, and the few slight barriers which the Act
+of Settlement opposed to its progress have all been gradually removed
+during the Whiggish reigns that succeeded; till at length this spirit of
+influence has become the vital principle of the state,--an agency, subtle
+and unseen, which pervades every part of the Constitution, lurks under all
+its forms and regulates all its movements, and, like the invisible sylph
+or grace which presides over the motions of beauty,
+
+ "_illam, quicquid agit, quoquo westigia flectit,
+ componit furlim subsequiturque."_
+
+The cause of Liberty and the Revolution are so habitually associated in
+the minds of Englishmen that probably in objecting to the latter I may be
+thought hostile or indifferent to the former. But assuredly nothing could
+be more unjust than such a suspicion. The very object indeed which my
+humble animadversions would attain is that in the crisis to which I think
+England is now hastening, and between which and foreign subjugation she
+may soon be compelled to choose, the errors and omissions of 1688 should
+be remedied; and, as it was then her fate to experience a Revolution
+without Reform, so she may now endeavor to accomplish a Reform without
+Revolution.
+
+In speaking of the parties which have so long agitated England, it will be
+observed that I lean as little to the Whigs as to their adversaries. Both
+factions have been equally cruel to Ireland and perhaps equally insincere
+in their efforts for the liberties of England. There is one name indeed
+connected with Whiggism, of which I can never think but with veneration
+and tenderness. As justly, however, might the light of the sun be claimed
+by any particular nation as the sanction of that name be monopolized by
+any party whatsoever. Mr. Fox belonged to mankind and they have lost in
+him their ablest friend.
+
+With respect to the few lines upon Intolerance, which I have subjoined,
+they are but the imperfect beginning of a long series of Essays with which
+I here menace my readers upon the same important subject. I shall look to
+no higher merit in the task than that of giving a new form to claims and
+remonstrances which have often been much more eloquently urged and which
+would long ere now have produced their effect, but that the minds of some
+of our statesmen, like the pupil of the human eye, contract themselves the
+more, the stronger light is shed upon them.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CORRUPTION,
+
+AN EPISTLE.
+
+
+Boast on, my friend--tho' stript of all beside,
+Thy struggling nation still retains her pride:
+That pride which once in genuine glory woke
+When Marlborough fought and brilliant St. John spoke;
+That pride which still, by time and shame unstung,
+Outlives even Whitelocke's sword and Hawkesbury's tongue!
+Boast on, my friend, while in this humbled isle[1]
+Where Honor mourns and Freedom fears to smile,
+Where the bright light of England's fame is known
+But by the shadow o'er our fortunes thrown;
+Where, doomed ourselves to naught but wrongs and slights,[2]
+We hear you boast of Britain's glorious rights,
+As wretched slaves that under hatches lie
+Hear those on deck extol the sun and sky!
+Boast on, while wandering thro' my native haunts,
+I coldly listen to thy patriot vaunts;
+And feel, tho' close our wedded countries twine,
+More sorrow for my own than pride from thine.
+
+ Yet pause a moment--and if truths severe
+Can find an inlet to that courtly ear,
+Which hears no news but Ward's gazetted lies,
+And loves no politics in rhyme but Pye's,--
+If aught can please thee but the good old saws
+Of "Church and State," and "William's matchless laws,"
+And "Acts and Rights of glorious Eighty-eight,"--
+Things which tho' now a century out of date
+Still serve to ballast with convenient words,
+A few crank arguments for speeching lords,--
+Turn while I tell how England's freedom found,
+Where most she lookt for life, her deadliest wound;
+How brave she struggled while her foe was seen,
+How faint since Influence lent that foe a screen;
+How strong o'er James and Popery she prevailed,
+How weakly fell when Whigs and gold assailed.
+
+ While kings were poor and all those schemes unknown
+Which drain the people to enrich the throne;
+Ere yet a yielding Commons had supplied
+Those chains of gold by which themselves are tied,
+Then proud Prerogative, untaught to creep
+With bribery's silent foot on Freedom's sleep,
+Frankly avowed his bold enslaving plan
+And claimed a right from God to trample man!
+But Luther's schism had too much roused mankind
+For Hampden's truths to linger long behind;
+Nor then, when king-like popes had fallen so low,
+Could pope-like kings escape the levelling blow.[3]
+That ponderous sceptre (in whose place we bow
+To the light talisman of influence now),
+Too gross, too visible to work the spell
+Which modern power performs, in fragments fell:
+In fragments lay, till, patched and painted o'er
+With fleurs-de-lis, it shone and scourged once more.
+
+ 'Twas then, my friend, thy kneeling nation quaft
+Long, long and deep, the churchman's opiate draught
+Of passive, prone obedience--then took flight
+All sense of man's true dignity and right;
+And Britons slept so sluggish in their chain
+That Freedom's watch-voice called almost in vain.
+Oh England! England! what a chance was thine,
+When the last tyrant of that ill-starred line
+Fled from his sullied crown and left thee free
+To found thy own eternal liberty!
+How nobly high in that propitious hour
+Might patriot hands have raised the triple tower[4]
+Of British freedom on a rock divine
+Which neither force could storm nor treachery mine!
+But no--the luminous, the lofty plan,
+Like mighty Babel, seemed too bold for man;
+The curse of jarring tongues again was given
+To thwart a work which raised men nearer heaven.
+While Tories marred what Whigs had scarce begun,
+While Whigs undid what Whigs themselves had done.
+The hour was lost and William with a smile
+Saw Freedom weeping o'er the unfinisht pile!
+
+ Hence all the ills you suffer,--hence remain
+Such galling fragments of that feudal chain[5]
+Whose links, around you by the Norman flung,
+Tho' loosed and broke so often, still have clung.
+Hence sly Prerogative like Jove of old
+Has turned his thunder into showers of gold,
+Whose silent courtship wins securer joys,
+Taints by degrees, and ruins without noise.
+While parliaments, no more those sacred things
+Which make and rule the destiny of kings.
+Like loaded dice by ministers are thrown,
+And each new set of sharpers cog their own.
+Hence the rich oil that from the Treasury steals
+Drips smooth o'er all the Constitution's wheels,
+Giving the old machine such pliant play[6]
+That Court and Commons jog one joltless way,
+While Wisdom trembles for the crazy car,
+So gilt, so rotten, carrying fools so far;
+And the duped people, hourly doomed to pay
+The sums that bribe their liberties away,[7]--
+Like a young eagle who has lent his plume
+To fledge the shaft by which he meets his doom,--
+See their own feathers pluckt, to wing the dart
+Which rank corruption destines for their heart!
+But soft! methinks I hear thee proudly say,
+"What! shall I listen to the impious lay
+"That dares with Tory license to profane
+"The bright bequests of William's glorious reign?
+"Shall the great wisdom of our patriot sires,
+"Whom Hawkesbury quotes and savory Birch admires,
+"Be slandered thus? shall honest Steele agree
+"With virtuous Rose to call us pure and free,
+"Yet fail to prove it? Shall our patent pair
+"Of wise state-poets waste their words in air,
+"And Pye unheeded breathe his prosperous strain,
+"And Canning _take the people's sense_ in vain?"
+
+ The people!--ah! that Freedom's form should stay
+Where Freedom's spirit long hath past away!
+That a false smile should play around the dead
+And flush the features when the soul hath fled![8]
+When Rome had lost her virtue with her rights,
+When her foul tyrant sat on Capreae's heights,[9]
+Amid his ruffian spies and doomed to death
+Each noble name they blasted with their breath,--
+Even then, (in mockery of that golden time,
+When the Republic rose revered, sublime,
+And her proud sons, diffused from zone to zone,
+Gave kings to every nation but their own,)
+Even then the senate and the tribunes stood,
+Insulting marks, to show how high the flood
+Of Freedom flowed, in glory's bygone day,
+And how it ebbed,--for ever ebbed away![10]
+
+ Look but around--tho' yet a tyrant's sword
+Nor haunts our sleep nor glitters o'er our board,
+Tho' blood be better drawn, by modern quacks,
+With Treasury leeches than with sword or axe;
+Yet say, could even a prostrate tribune's power
+Or a mock senate in Rome's servile hour
+Insult so much the claims, the rights of man,
+As doth that fettered mob, that free divan,
+Of noble tools and honorable knaves,
+Of pensioned patriots and privileged slaves;--
+That party-colored mass which naught can warm
+But rank corruption's heat--whose quickened swarm
+Spread their light wings in Bribery's golden sky,
+Buzz for a period, lay their eggs and die;--
+That greedy vampire which from Freedom's tomb
+Comes forth with all the mimicry of bloom
+Upon its lifeless cheek and sucks and drains
+A people's blood to feel its putrid veins!
+
+ Thou start'st, my friend, at picture drawn so dark--
+"Is there no light?"--thou ask'st--"no lingering spark
+"Of ancient fire to warm us? Lives there none,
+"To act a Marvell's part?"[11]--alas! not one.
+_To_ place and power all public spirit tends,
+_In_ place and power all public spirit ends;
+Like hardy plants that love the air and sky,
+When _out_, 'twill thrive--but taken _in_, 'twill die!
+
+ Not bolder truths of sacred Freedom hung
+From Sidney's pen or burned on Fox's tongue,
+Than upstart Whigs produce each market-night,
+While yet their conscience, as their purse, is light;
+While debts at home excite their care for those
+Which, dire to tell, their much-loved country owes,
+And loud and upright, till their prize be known,
+They thwart the King's supplies to raise their own.
+But bees on flowers alighting cease their hum--
+So, settling upon places, Whigs grow dumb.
+And, tho' most base is he who, 'neath the shade
+Of Freedom's ensign plies corruption's trade,
+And makes the sacred flag he dares to show
+His passport to the market of her foe,
+Yet, yet, I own, so venerably dear
+Are Freedom's grave old anthems to my ear,
+That I enjoy them, tho' by traitors sung,
+And reverence Scripture even from Satan's tongue.
+Nay, when the constitution has expired,
+I'll have such men, like Irish wakers, hired
+To chant old "_Habeas Corpus_" by its side,
+And ask in purchased ditties why it died?
+
+See yon smooth lord whom nature's plastic pains
+Would seem to've fashioned for those Eastern reigns
+When eunuchs flourisht, and such nerveless things
+As men rejected were the chosen of kings;--[12]
+Even _he_, forsooth, (oh fraud, of all the worst!)
+Dared to assume the patriot's name at first--
+Thus Pitt began, and thus begin his apes;
+Thus devils when _first_ raised take pleasing shapes.
+But oh, poor Ireland! if revenge be sweet
+For centuries of wrong, for dark deceit
+And withering insult--for the Union thrown
+Into thy bitter cup when that alone
+Of slavery's draught was wanting[13]--if for this
+Revenge be sweet, thou _hast_ that daemon's bliss;
+For sure 'tis more than hell's revenge to fee
+That England trusts the men who've ruined thee:--
+That in these awful days when every hour
+Creates some new or blasts some ancient power,
+When proud Napoleon like the enchanted shield
+Whose light compelled each wondering foe to yield,
+With baleful lustre blinds the brave and free
+And dazzles Europe into slavery,--
+That in this hour when patriot zeal should guide,
+When Mind should rule and--Fox should _not_ have died,
+All that devoted England can oppose
+To enemies made fiends and friends made foes,
+Is the rank refuse, the despised remains
+Of that unpitying power, whose whips and chains
+Drove Ireland first to turn with harlot glance
+Towards other shores and woo the embrace of France;--
+Those hacked and tainted tools, so foully fit
+For the grand artisan of mischief, Pitt,
+So useless ever but in vile employ,
+So weak to save, so vigorous to destroy--
+Such are the men that guard thy threatened shore,
+Oh England! sinking England! boast no more.
+
+
+[1] England began very early to feel the effects of cruelty towards her
+dependencies. "The severity of her government [says Macpherson]
+contributed more to deprive her of the continental dominions of the family
+of the Plantagenet than the arms of France."--See his _History_, vol.
+i.
+
+[2] "By the total reduction of the kingdom of Ireland in 1691[says
+Burke], the ruin of the native Irish, and in a great measure, too, of the
+first races of the English, was completely accomplished. The new English
+interested was settled with as solid a stability as anything in human
+affairs can look for. All the penal laws of that unparalleled code of
+oppression, which were made after the last event, were manifestly the
+effects of national hatred and scorn towards a conquered people, whom the
+victors delighted to trample upon, and were not at all afraid to provoke."
+Yet this is the era to which the wise Common Council of Dublin refer us
+for "invaluable blessings," etc.
+
+[3] The drivelling correspondence between James I and his "dog Steenie"
+(the Duke of Buckingham), which we find among the Hardwicke Papers,
+sufficiently shows, if we wanted any such illustration, into what doting,
+idiotic brains the plan at arbitrary power may enter.
+
+[4] Tacitus has expressed his opinion, in a passage very frequently
+quoted, that such a distribution of power as the theory of the British
+constitution exhibits is merely a subject of bright speculation, "a system
+more easily praised than practised, and which, even could it happen to
+exist, would certainly not prove permanent;" and, in truth, a review of
+England's annals would dispose us to agree with the great historian's
+remark. For we find that at no period whatever has this balance of the
+three estates existed; that the nobles predominated till the policy of
+Henry VII, and his successor reduced their weight by breaking up the
+feudal system of property; that the power of the Crown became then supreme
+and absolute, till the bold encroachments of the Commons subverted the
+fabric altogether; that the alternate ascendency of prerogative and
+privilege distracted the period which followed the Restoration; and that
+lastly, the Acts of 1688, by laying the foundation of an unbounded court-
+influence, have secured a preponderance to the Throne, which every
+succeeding year increases. So that the vaunted British constitution has
+never perhaps existed but in mere theory.
+
+[5] The last great wound given to the feudal system was the Act of the
+12th of Charles II, which abolished the tenure of knight's service _in
+capite_, and which Blackstone compares, for its salutary influence upon
+property, to the boasted provisions of Magna Charta itself. Yet even in
+this act we see the effects of that counteracting spirit which has
+contrived to weaken every effort of the English nation towards liberty.
+
+[6] "They drove so fast [says Wellwood of the ministers of Charles I.],
+that it was no wonder that the wheels and chariot broke."--(_Memoirs_
+p. 86.)
+
+[7] Among those auxiliaries which the Revolution of 1688 marshalled on the
+side of the Throne, the bugbear of Popery has not been the least
+convenient and serviceable. Those unskilful tyrants, Charles and James,
+instead of profiting by that useful subserviency which has always
+distinguished the ministers of our religious establishment, were so
+infatuated as to plan the ruin of this best bulwark of their power and
+moreover connected their designs upon the Church so undisguisedly with
+their attacks upon the Constitution that they identified in the minds of
+the people the interests of their religion and their liberties. During
+those times therefore "No Popery" was the watchword of freedom and served
+to keep the public spirit awake against the invasions of bigotry and
+prerogative.
+
+[8] "It is a scandal [said Sir Charles Sedley in William's reign] that a
+government so sick at heart as ours is should look so well in the face."
+
+[9] The senate still continued, during the reign of Tiberius, to manage
+all the business of the public: the money was then and long after coined
+by their authority, and every other public affair received their sanction.
+
+[10] There is something very touching in what Tacitus tells us of the
+hopes that revived in a few patriot bosoms, when the death of Augustus was
+near approaching, and the fond expectation with which they already began
+"_bona libertatis incassum disserere_."
+
+[11] Andrew Marvell, the honest opposer of the court during the reign of
+Charles the Second, and the last member of parliament who, according to
+the ancient mode, took wages from his constituents. The Commons have,
+since then, much changed their pay-masters.
+
+[12] According to Xenophon, the chief circumstance which recommended these
+creatures to the service of Eastern princes was the ignominious station
+they held in society, and the probability of their being, upon this
+account, more devoted to the will and caprice of a master, from whose
+notice alone they derived consideration, and in whose favor they might
+seek refuge from the general contempt of mankind.
+
+[13] Among the many measures, which, since the Revolution, have
+contributed to increase the influence of the Throne, and to feed up this
+"Aaron's serpent" of the constitution to its present healthy and
+respectable magnitude, there have been few more nutritive than the Scotch
+and Irish Unions.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+INTOLERANCE,
+
+A SATIRE.
+
+
+ "This clamor which pretends to be raised for the safety of religion
+ has almost worn put the very appearance of it, and rendered us not
+ only the most divided but the most immoral people upon the face of the
+ earth."
+
+ ADDISON, _Freeholder_, No. 37.
+
+
+Start not, my friend, nor think the Muse will stain
+Her classic fingers with the dust profane
+Of Bulls, Decrees and all those thundering scrolls
+Which took such freedom once with royal souls,[1]
+When heaven was yet the pope's exclusive trade,
+And kings were _damned_ as fast as now they're _made_,
+No, no--let Duigenan search the papal chair
+For fragrant treasures long forgotten there;
+And, as the witch of sunless Lapland thinks
+That little swarthy gnomes delight in stinks,
+Let sallow Perceval snuff up the gale
+Which wizard Duigenan's gathered sweets exhale.
+Enough for me whose heart has learned to scorn
+Bigots alike in Rome or England born,
+Who loathe the venom whence-soe'er it springs,
+From popes or lawyers,[2] pastrycooks or kings,--
+Enough for me to laugh and weep by turns,
+As mirth provokes or indignation burns,
+As Canning Vapors or as France succeeds,
+As Hawkesbury proses, or as Ireland bleeds!
+
+ And thou, my friend, if, in these headlong days,
+When bigot Zeal her drunken antics plays
+So near a precipice, that men the while
+Look breathless on and shudder while they smile--
+If in such fearful days thou'lt dare to look
+To hapless Ireland, to this rankling nook
+Which Heaven hath freed from poisonous things in vain,
+While Gifford's tongue and Musgrave's pen remain--
+If thou hast yet no golden blinkers got
+To shade thine eyes from this devoted spot,
+Whose wrongs tho' blazoned o'er the world they be,
+Placemen alone are privileged _not_ to see--
+Oh! turn awhile, and tho' the shamrock wreathes
+My homely harp, yet shall the song it breathes
+Of Ireland's slavery and of Ireland's woes
+Live when the memory of her tyrant foes
+Shall but exist, all future knaves to warn,
+Embalmed in hate and canonized by scorn.
+When Castlereagh in sleep still more profound
+Than his own opiate tongue now deals around,
+Shall wait the impeachment of that awful day
+Which even _his_ practised hand can't bribe away.
+
+ Yes, my dear friend, wert thou but near me now,
+To see how Spring lights up on Erin's brow
+Smiles that shine out unconquerably fair
+Even thro' the blood-marks left by Camden there,--[3]
+Couldst thou but see what verdure paints the sod
+Which none but tyrants and their slaves have trod,
+And didst thou know the spirit, kind and brave,
+That warms the soul of each insulted slave,
+Who tired with struggling sinks beneath his lot
+And seems by all but watchful France forgot--[4]
+Thy heart would burn--yes, even thy Pittite heart
+Would burn to think that such a blooming part
+Of the world's garden, rich in nature's charms
+And filled with social souls and vigorous arms,
+Should be the victim of that canting crew,
+So smooth, so godly,--yet so devilish too;
+Who, armed at once with prayer-books and with whips,
+Blood on their hands and Scripture on their lips,
+Tyrants by creed and tortures by text,
+Make _this_ life hell in honor of the _next_!
+Your Redesdales, Percevals,--great, glorious Heaven,
+If I'm presumptuous, be my tongue forgiven,
+When here I swear by my soul's hope of rest,
+I'd rather have been born ere man was blest
+With the pure dawn of Revelation's light,
+Yes,--rather plunge me back in Pagan night,
+And take my chance with Socrates for bliss,[5]
+Than be the Christian of a faith like this,
+Which builds on heavenly cant its earthly sway
+And in a convert mourns to lose a prey;
+Which, grasping human hearts with double hold,--
+Like Danäe's lover mixing god and gold,[6]--
+Corrupts both state and church and makes an oath
+The knave and atheist's passport into both;
+Which, while it dooms dissenting souls to know
+Nor bliss above nor liberty below,
+Adds the slave's suffering to the sinner's fear,
+And lest he 'scape hereafter racks him here!
+But no--far other faith, far milder beams
+Of heavenly justice warm the Christian's dreams;
+_His_ creed is writ on Mercy's page above,
+By the pure hands of all-atoning Love;
+_He_ weeps to see abused Religion twine
+Round Tyranny's coarse brow her wreath divine;
+And _he_, while round him sects and nations raise
+To the one God their varying notes of praise,
+Blesses each voice, whate'er its tone may be,
+That serves to swell the general harmony.[7]
+
+ Such was the spirit, gently, grandly bright,
+That filled, oh Fox! thy peaceful soul with light;
+While free and spacious as that ambient air
+Which folds our planet in its circling care,
+The mighty sphere of thy transparent mind
+Embraced the world, and breathed for all mankind.
+Last of the great, farewell!--yet _not_ the last--
+Tho' Britain's sunshine hour with thee be past,
+Ierne still one ray of glory gives
+And feels but half thy loss while Grattan lives.
+
+
+[1] The king-deposing doctrine, notwithstanding its many mischievous
+absurdities, was of no little service to the cause of political liberty,
+by inculcating the right of resistance to tyrants and asserting the will
+of the people to be the only true fountain of power.
+
+[2] When Innocent X. was entreated to decide the controversy between the
+Jesuits and the Jansenists, he answered, that "he had been bred a lawyer,
+and had therefore nothing to do with divinity." It were to be wished that
+some of our English pettifoggers knew their own fit element as well as
+Pope Innocent X.
+
+[3] Not the Camden who speaks thus of Ireland:--"To wind up all, whether
+we regard the fruitfulness of the soil, the advantage of the sea, with so
+many commodious havens, or the natives themselves, who are warlike,
+ingenious, handsome, and well-complexioned, soft-skinned and very nimble,
+by reason of the pliantness of their muscles, this Island is in many
+respects so happy, that Giraldus might very well say, 'Nature had regarded
+with more favorable eyes than ordinary this Kingdom of Zephyr.'"
+
+[4] The example of toleration, which Bonaparte has held forth, will, I
+fear, produce no other effect than that of determining the British
+government to persist, from the very spirit of opposition, in their own
+old system of intolerance and injustice: just as the Siamese blacken their
+teeth, "because," as they say, "the devil has white ones."
+
+[5] In a singular work, written by one Franciscus Collius, "upon the Souls
+of the Pagans," the author discusses, with much coolness and erudition,
+all the probable chances of salvation upon which a heathen philosopher
+might calculate. Consigning to perdition without much difficulty Plato,
+Socrates, etc., the only sage at whose fate he seems to hesitate is
+Pythagoras, in consideration of his golden thigh, and the many miracles
+which he performed. But having balanced a little his claims and finding
+reason to father all these miracles on the devil, he at length, in the
+twenty-fifth chapter, decides upon damning him also.
+
+[6] Mr. Fox, in his Speech on the Repeal of the Test Act (1790), thus
+condemns the intermixture of religion with the political constitution of a
+state:--"What purpose [he asks] can it serve, except the baleful purpose
+of communicating and receiving contamination? Under such an alliance
+corruption must alight upon the one, and slavery overwhelm the other."
+
+[7] Both Bayle and Locke would have treated the subject of Toleration in a
+manner much more worthy of themselves and of the cause if they had written
+in an age less distracted by religious prejudices.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SCEPTIC,
+
+A PHILOSOPHICAL SATIRE.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The Sceptical Philosophy of the Ancients has been no less misrepresented
+than the Epicurean. Pyrrho may perhaps have carried it to rather an
+irrational excess;--but we must not believe with Beattie all the
+absurdities imputed to this philosopher; and it appears to me that the
+doctrines of the school, as explained by Sextus Empiricus, are far more
+suited to the wants and infirmities of human reason as well as more
+conducive to the mild virtues of humility and patience, than any of those
+systems of philosophy which preceded the introduction of Christianity. The
+Sceptics may be said to have held a middle path between the Dogmatists and
+Academicians; the former of whom boasted that they had attained the truth
+while the latter denied that any attainable truth existed. The Sceptics
+however, without either asserting or denying its existence, professed to
+be modestly and anxiously in search of it; or, as St. Augustine expresses
+it, in his liberal tract against the Manichaeans, "_nemo nostrum dicat jam
+se invenisse veritatem; sic eam quoeramus quasi ab utrisque nesciatur_."
+From this habit of impartial investigation and the necessity which it
+imposed upon them of studying not only every system of philosophy but
+every art and science which professed to lay its basis in truth, they
+necessarily took a wider range of erudition and were far more travelled in
+the regions of philosophy than those whom conviction or bigotry had
+domesticated in any particular system. It required all the learning of
+dogmatism to overthrow the dogmatism of learning; and the Sceptics may be
+said to resemble in this respect that ancient incendiary who stole from
+the altar the fire with which he destroyed the temple. This advantage over
+all the other sects is allowed to them even by Lipsius, whose treatise on
+the miracles of the Virgo Hallensis will sufficiently save him from all
+suspicion of scepticism. "_labore, ingenio, memoria_," he says, "_supra
+omnes pene philosophos fuisse.--quid nonne omnia aliorum secta tenere
+debuerunt et inquirere, si poterunt refellere? res dicit nonne orationes
+varias, raras, subtiles inveniri ad tam receptas, claras, certas (ut
+videbatur) sententias evertendas?" etc.--"Manuduct. ad Philosoph. Stoic."
+Dissert_. 4.
+
+Between the scepticism of the ancients and the moderns the great
+difference is that the former doubted for the purpose of investigating, as
+may be exemplified by the third book of Aristotle's Metaphysics, while the
+latter investigate for the purpose of doubting, as may be seen through
+most of the philosophical works of Hume. Indeed the Pyrrhonism of latter
+days is not only more subtle than that of antiquity, but, it must be
+confessed, more dangerous in its tendency. The happiness of a Christian
+depends so essentially upon his belief, that it is but natural he should
+feel alarm at the progress of doubt, lest it should steal by degrees into
+that region from which he is most interested in excluding it, and poison
+at last the very spring of his consolation and hope. Still however the
+abuses of doubting ought not to deter a philosophical mind from indulging
+mildly and rationally in its use; and there is nothing surely more
+consistent with the meek spirit of Christianity than that humble
+scepticism which professes not to extend its distrust beyond the circle of
+human pursuits and the pretensions of human knowledge. A follower of this
+school may be among the readiest to admit the claims of a superintending
+Intelligence upon his faith and adoration: it is only to the wisdom of
+this weak world that he refuses or at least delays his assent;--it is only
+in passing through the shadow of earth that his mind undergoes the eclipse
+of scepticism. No follower of Pyrrho has ever spoken more strongly against
+the dogmatists than St. Paul himself, in the First Epistle to the
+Corinthians; and there are passages in Ecclesiastes and other parts of
+Scripture, which justify our utmost diffidence in all that human reason
+originates. Even the Sceptics of antiquity refrained carefully from the
+mysteries of theology, and in entering the temples of religion laid aside
+their philosophy at the porch. Sextus Empiricus declares the acquiescence
+of his sect in the general belief of a divine and foreknowing Power:--In
+short it appears to me that this rational and well-regulated scepticism is
+the only daughter of the Schools that can safely be selected as a handmaid
+for Piety. He who distrusts the light of reason will be the first to
+follow a more luminous guide; and if with an ardent love for truth he has
+sought her in vain through the ways of this life, he will but turn with
+the more hope to that better world where all is simple, true and
+everlasting: for there is no parallax at the zenith;--it is only near our
+troubled horizon that objects deceive us into vague and erroneous
+calculations.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SCEPTIC
+
+
+As the gay tint that decks the vernal rose[1]
+Not in the flower but in our vision glows;
+As the ripe flavor of Falernian tides
+Not in the wine but in our taste resides;
+So when with heartfelt tribute we declare
+That Marco's honest and that Susan's fair,
+'Tis in our minds and not in Susan's eyes
+Or Marco's life the worth or beauty lies:
+For she in flat-nosed China would appear
+As plain a thing as Lady Anne is here;
+And one light joke at rich Loretto's dome
+Would rank good Marco with the damned at Rome.
+
+ There's no deformity so vile, so base,
+That 'tis not somewhere thought a charm, a grace;
+No foul reproach that may not steal a beam
+From other suns to bleach it to esteem.
+Ask who is wise?--you'll find the self-same man
+A sage in France, a madman in Japan;
+And _here_ some head beneath a mitre swells,
+Which _there_ had tingled to a cap and bells:
+Nay, there may yet some monstrous region be,
+Unknown to Cook and from Napoleon free,
+Where Castlereagh would for a patriot pass
+And mouthing Musgrave scarce be deemed an ass!
+
+ "List not to reason (Epicurus cries),
+"But trust the senses, _there_ conviction lies:"[2]--
+Alas! _they_ judge not by a purer light,
+Nor keep their fountains more untinged and bright:
+Habit so mars them that the Russian swain
+Will sigh for train-oil while he sips Champagne;
+And health so rules them, that a fever's heat
+Would make even Sheridan think water sweet.
+
+ Just as the mind the erring sense[3] believes,
+The erring mind in turn the sense deceives;
+And cold disgust can find but wrinkles there,
+Where passion fancies all that's smooth and fair.
+P * * * *, who sees, upon his pillow laid,
+A face for which ten thousand pounds were paid,
+Can tell how quick before a jury flies
+The spell that mockt the warm seducer's eyes.
+
+ Self is the medium thro' which Judgment's ray
+Can seldom pass without being turned astray.
+The smith of Ephesus[4] thought Dian's shrine,
+By which his craft most throve, the most divine;
+And even the _true_ faith seems not half so true,
+When linkt with _one_ good living as with _two_.
+Had Wolcot first been pensioned by the throne,
+Kings would have suffered by his praise alone;
+And Paine perhaps, for something snug _per ann_.,
+Had laught like Wellesley at all Rights of Man.
+
+ But 'tis not only individual minds,--
+Whole nations too the same delusion blinds.
+Thus England, hot from Denmark's smoking meads,
+Turns up her eyes at Gallia's guilty deeds;
+Thus, self-pleased still, the same dishonoring chain
+She binds in Ireland she would break in Spain;
+While praised at distance, but at home forbid,
+Rebels in Cork are patriots at Madrid.
+
+ If Grotius be thy guide, shut, shut the book,--
+In force alone for Laws of Nations look.
+Let shipless Danes and whining Yankees dwell
+On naval rights, with Grotius and Vattel.
+While Cobbet's pirate code alone appears
+Sound moral sense to England and Algiers.
+
+ Woe to the Sceptic in these party days
+Who wafts to neither shrine his puffs of praise!
+For him no pension pours its annual fruits,
+No fertile sinecure spontaneous shoots;
+Not _his_ the meed that crowned Don Hookham's rhyme,
+Nor sees he e'er in dreams of future time
+Those shadowy forms of sleek reversions rise,
+So dear to Scotchmen's second-sighted eyes.
+Yet who that looks to History's damning leaf,
+Where Whig and Tory, thief opposed to thief,
+On either side in lofty shame are seen,[5]
+While Freedom's form lies crucified between--
+Who, Burdett, who such rival rogues can see,
+But flies from _both_ to Honesty and thee?
+
+ If weary of the world's bewildering maze,[6]
+Hopeless of finding thro' its weedy ways
+One flower of truth, the busy crowd we shun,
+And to the shades of tranquil learning run,
+How many a doubt pursues! how oft we sigh
+When histories charm to think that histories lie!
+That all are grave romances, at the best,
+And Musgrave's but more clumsy than the rest.
+By Tory Hume's seductive page beguiled,
+We fancy Charles was just and Strafford mild;[7]
+And Fox himself with party pencil draws
+Monmouth a hero, "for the good old cause!"
+
+Then rights are wrongs and victories are defeats,
+As French or English pride the tale repeats;
+And when they tell Corunna's story o'er,
+They'll disagree in all but honoring Moore:
+Nay, future pens to flatter future courts
+May cite perhaps the Park-guns' gay reports,
+To prove that England triumphs on the morn
+Which found her Junot's jest and Europe's scorn.
+
+ In science too--how many a system, raised
+Like Neva's icy domes, awhile hath blazed
+With lights of fancy and with forms of pride,
+Then, melting, mingled with the oblivious tide!
+_Now_ Earth usurps the centre of the sky,
+_Now_ Newton puts the paltry planet by;
+_Now_ whims revive beneath Descartes's[8] pen,
+Which _now_, assailed by Locke's, expire again.
+And when perhaps in pride of chemic powers,
+We think the keys of Nature's kingdom ours,
+Some Davy's magic touch the dream unsettles,
+And turns at once our alkalis to metals.
+Or should we roam in metaphysic maze
+Thro' fair-built theories of former days,
+Some Drummond from the north, more ably skilled,
+Like other Goths, to ruin than to build,
+Tramples triumphant thro' our fanes o'erthrown,
+Nor leaves one grace, one glory of its own.
+
+ Oh! Learning, whatsoe'er thy pomp and boast,
+_Un_lettered minds have taught and charmed men most.
+The rude, unread Columbus was our guide
+To worlds, which learned Lactantius had denied;
+And one wild Shakespeare following Nature's lights
+Is worth whole planets filled with Stagyrites.
+
+ See grave Theology, when once she strays
+From Revelation's path, what tricks she plays;
+What various heavens,--all fit for bards to sing,--
+Have churchmen dreamed, from Papias,[9] down to King![10]
+While hell itself, in India naught but smoke[11]
+In Spain's a furnace and in France--a joke.
+
+ Hail! modest Ignorance, thou goal and prize,
+Thou last, best knowledge of the simply wise!
+Hail! humble Doubt, when error's waves are past,
+How sweet to reach thy sheltered port at last,
+And there by changing skies nor lured nor awed.
+Smile at the battling winds that roar abroad.
+_There_ gentle Charity who knows how frail
+The bark of Virtue, even in summer's gale,
+Sits by the nightly fire whose beacon glows
+For all who wander, whether friends or foes.
+_There_ Faith retires and keeps her white sail furled,
+Till called to spread it for a better world;
+While Patience watching on the weedy shore,
+And mutely waiting till the storm be o'er,
+Oft turns to Hope who still directs her eye
+To some blue spot just breaking in the sky!
+
+ Such are the mild, the blest associates given
+To him who doubts,--and trusts in naught but Heaven!
+
+
+[1] "The particular bulk, number, figure, and motion of the parts of fire
+or snow are really in them, whether any one perceives them or not, and
+therefore they may be called real qualities because they really exist in
+those bodies; but light, heat, whiteness or coldness are no more really in
+them than sickness or pain is in manna. Take away the sensation of them;
+let not the eye see light or colors, nor the ears hear sounds; let the
+palate not taste nor the nose smell, and all colors, tastes, odors and
+sounds, as they are such particular ideas, vanish and
+cease."--_Locke_, book ii. chap 8.
+
+[2] This was the creed also of those modern Epicureans, whom Ninon de
+l'Enclos collected around her in the Rue des Tournelles, and whose object
+seems to have been to decry the faculty of reason, as tending only to
+embarrass our wholesome use of pleasures, without enabling us, in any
+degree, to avoid their abuse. Madame des Houlières, the fair pupil of Des
+Barreaux in the arts of poetry and gallantry, has devoted most of her
+verses to this laudable purpose, and is even such a determined foe to
+reason, that, in one of her pastorals, she congratulates her sheep on the
+want of it.
+
+[3] Socrates and Plato were the grand sources of ancient scepticism.
+According to Cicero ("_de Orator_," lib. iii.), they supplied Arcesilas
+with the doctrines of the Middle Academy; and how closely these resembled
+the tenets of the Sceptics, may be seen even in Sextus Empiricus (lib. i.
+cap. 33), who with all his distinctions can scarcely prove any difference.
+It appears strange that Epicurus should have been a dogmatist; and his
+natural temper would most probably have led him to the repose of
+scepticism had not the Stoics by their violent opposition to his doctrines
+compelled him to be as obstinate as themselves.
+
+[4] _Acts_, chap. xix. "For a certain man named Demetrius, a silversmith,
+which made silver shrines for Diana, brought no small gain unto the
+craftsmen."
+
+[5] "Those two thieves," says Ralph,” between whom the nation is
+crucified."--"_Use and Abuse of Parliaments_."
+
+[6] The agitation of the ship is one of the chief difficulties which
+impede the discovery of the longitude at sea; and the tumult and hurry of
+life are equally unfavorable to that calm level of mind which is necessary
+to an inquirer after truth.
+
+[7] He defends Stafford's conduct as "innocent and even laudable." In the
+same spirit, speaking of the arbitary sentences of the Star Chamber, he
+says,--"The severity of the Star Chamber, which was generally ascribed to
+Laud's passionate disposition, was perhaps in itself somewhat blamable."
+
+[8] Descartes, who is considered as the parent of modern scepticism, says,
+that there is nothing in the whole range of philosophy which does not
+admit of two opposite opinions, and which is not involved in doubt and
+uncertainty. Gassendi is likewise to be added to the list of modern
+Sceptics, and Wedderkopff, has denounced Erasmus also as a follower of
+Pyrrho, for his opinions upon the Trinity, and some other subjects. To
+these if we add the names of Bayle, Malebranche, Dryden, Locke, etc., I
+think there is no one who need be ashamed of insulting in such company.
+
+[9] Papias lived about the time of the apostles, and is supposed to have
+given birth to the heresy of the Chiliastae, whose heaven was by no means
+of a spiritual nature, but rather an anticipation of the Prophet of Hera's
+elysium.
+
+[10] King, in his "Morsels of Criticisms," vol. i., supposes the sun to be
+the receptacle of blessed spirits.
+
+[11] The Indians call hell "the House of Smoke."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TWOPENNY POST-BAG,
+
+BY
+
+THOMAS BROWN, THE YOUNGER.
+
+
+ _elapsae manibus secidere tabellae_.--OVID.
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION.
+
+TO
+
+STEPHEN WOOLRICHE, ESQ.
+
+
+MY DEAR WOOLRICHE,--
+
+It is now about seven years since I promised (and I grieve to think it is
+almost as long since we met) to dedicate to you the very first Book, of
+whatever size or kind I should publish. Who could have thought that so
+many years would elapse, without my giving the least signs of life upon
+the subject of this important promise? Who could have imagined that a
+volume of doggerel, after all, would be the first offering that Gratitude
+would lay upon the shrine of Friendship?
+
+If you continue, however, to be as much interested about me and my
+pursuits as formerly, you will be happy to hear that doggerel is not my
+_only_ occupation; but that I am preparing to throw my name to the Swans
+of the Temple of Immortality, leaving it of course to the said Swans to
+determine whether they ever will take the trouble of picking it from the
+stream.
+
+In the meantime, my dear Woolriche, like an orthodox Lutheran, you must
+judge of me rather by my _faith_ than my _works_; and however trifling the
+tribute which I here offer, never doubt the fidelity with which I am and
+always shall be
+
+Your sincere and attached friend,
+
+THE AUTHOR.
+
+_March 4, 1813_.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The Bag, from which the following Letters are selected, was dropped by a
+Twopenny Postman about two months since, and picked up by an emissary of
+the Society for the Suppression of Vice, who supposing it might materially
+assist the private researches of that Institution, immediately took it to
+his employers and was rewarded handsomely for his trouble. Such a treasury
+of secrets was worth a whole host of informers; and, accordingly, like the
+Cupids of the poet (if I may use so profane a simile) who "fell at odds
+about the sweet-bag of a bee,"[1] those venerable Suppressors almost
+fought with each other for the honor and delight of first ransacking the
+Post-Bag. Unluckily, however, it turned out upon examination that the
+discoveries of profligacy which it enabled them to make, lay chiefly in
+those upper regions of society which their well-bred regulations forbid
+them to molest or meddle with.--In consequence they gained but very few
+victims by their prize, and after lying for a week or two under Mr.
+Hatchard's counter the Bag with its violated contents was sold for a
+trifle to a friend of mine.
+
+It happened that I had been just then seized with an ambition (having
+never tried the strength of my wing but in a Newspaper) to publish
+something or other in the shape of a Book; and it occurred to me that, the
+present being such a letter-writing era, a few of these Twopenny-Post
+Epistles turned into easy verse would be as light and popular a task as I
+could possibly select for a commencement. I did not, however, think it
+prudent to give too many Letters at first and accordingly have been
+obliged (in order to eke out a sufficient number of pages) to reprint some
+of those trifles, which had already appeared in the public journals. As in
+the battles of ancient times, the shades of the departed were sometimes
+seen among the combatants, so I thought I might manage to remedy the
+thinness of my ranks, by conjuring up a few dead and forgotten ephemerons
+to fill them.
+
+Such are the motives and accidents that led to the present publication;
+and as this is the first time my Muse has ever ventured out of the go-cart
+of a Newspaper, though I feel all a parent's delight at seeing little Miss
+go alone, I am also not without a parent's anxiety lest an unlucky fall
+should be the consequence of the experiment; and I need not point out how
+many living instances might be found of Muses that have suffered very
+severely in their heads from taking rather too early and rashly to their
+feet. Besides, a Book is so very different a thing from a Newspaper!--in
+the former, your doggerel without either company or shelter must stand
+shivering in the middle of a bleak page by itself; whereas in the latter
+it is comfortably backed by advertisements and has sometimes even a Speech
+of Mr. Stephen's, or something equally warm, for a _chauffe-pieds_--so
+that, in general, the very reverse of "_laudatur et alget_" is its
+destiny.
+
+Ambition, however, must run some risks and I shall be very well satisfied
+if the reception of these few Letters should have the effect of sending me
+to the Post-Bag for more.
+
+
+[1] Herrick.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+INTERCEPTED LETTERS, ETC.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER I.
+
+FROM THE PRINCESS CHARLOTTE OF WALES
+TO THE LADY BARBARA ASHLER.[1]
+
+
+My dear Lady Bab, you'll be shockt I'm afraid,
+When you hear the sad rumpus your Ponies have made;
+Since the time of horse-consuls (now long out of date),
+No nags ever made such a stir in the state.
+Lord Eldon first heard--and as instantly prayed he
+To "God and his King"--that a Popish young Lady
+(For tho' you've bright eyes and twelve thousand a year,
+It is still but too true you're a Papist, my dear,)
+Had insidiously sent, by a tall Irish groom,
+Two priest-ridden ponies just landed from Rome,
+And so full, little rogues, of pontifical tricks
+That the dome of St. Paul was scarce safe from their kicks.
+
+Off at once to Papa in a flurry he flies--
+For Papa always does what these statesmen advise
+On condition that they'll be in turn so polite
+As in no case whate'er to advise him _too right_--
+"Pretty doings are here, Sir (he angrily cries,
+While by dint of dark eyebrows he strives to look wise)--
+"'Tis a scheme of the Romanists, so help me God!
+"To ride over your _most_ Royal Highness roughshod--
+"Excuse, Sir, my tears--they're from loyalty's source-
+"Bad enough 'twas for Troy to be sackt by a _Horse_,
+"But for us to be ruined by _Ponies_ still worse!"
+Quick a Council is called--the whole Cabinet sits--
+The Archbishops declare, frightened out of their wits,
+That if once Popish Ponies should eat at my manger,
+From that awful moment the Church is in danger!
+As, give them but stabling and shortly no stalls
+Will suit their proud stomachs but those at St. Paul's.
+
+The Doctor,[2] and he, the devout man of Leather,[3]
+Vansittart, now laying their Saint-heads together,
+Declare that these skittish young abominations
+Are clearly foretold in Chap. vi. Revelations--
+Nay, they verily think they could point out the one
+Which the Doctor's friend Death was to canter upon.
+
+ Lord Harrowby hoping that no one imputes
+To the Court any fancy to persecute brutes,
+Protests on the word of himself and his cronies
+That had these said creatures been Asses, not Ponies,
+The Court would have started no sort of objection,
+As Asses were, _there_, always sure of protection.
+
+ "If the Princess _will_ keep them (says Lord Castlereagh),
+"To make them quite harmless, the only true way
+"Is (as certain Chief Justices do with their wives)
+"To flog them within half an inch of their lives.
+"If they've any bad Irish blood lurking about,
+"This (he knew by experience) would soon draw it out."
+Should this be thought cruel his Lordship proposes
+"The new _Veto_ snaffle[4] to bind down their noses--
+"A pretty contrivance made out of old chains,
+"Which appears to indulge while it doubly restrains;
+"Which, however high-mettled, their gamesomeness checks
+"(Adds his Lordship humanely), or else breaks their necks!"
+
+ This proposal received pretty general applause
+From the Statesmen around-and the neck-breaking clause
+Had a vigor about it, which soon reconciled
+Even Eldon himself to a measure so mild.
+So the snaffles, my dear, were agreed to _nem. con_.,
+And my Lord Castlereagh, having so often shone
+In the _fettering line_, is to buckle them on.
+I shall drive to your door in these _Vetoes_ some day,
+But, at present, adieu!-I must hurry away
+To go see my Mamma, as I'm suffered to meet her
+For just half an hour by the Queen's best repeater.
+
+CHARLOTTE.
+
+
+[1] This young Lady, who is a Roman Catholic, had lately made a present of
+some beautiful Ponies to the Princess.
+
+[2] Mr. Addington, so nicknamed.
+
+[3] Alluding to a tax lately laid upon leather.
+
+[4] The question whether a Veto was to be allowed to the Crown in the
+appointment of Irish Catholic Bishops was, at this time, very generally
+and actively agitated.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER II.
+
+FROM COLONEL M'MAHON TO GOULD FRANCIS LECKIE, ESQ.
+
+
+DEAR SIR--
+ I've just had time to look
+Into your very learned Book,
+Wherein--as plain as man can speak.
+Whose English is half modern Greek--
+You prove that we can ne'er intrench
+Our happy isles against the French,
+Till Royalty in England's made
+A much more independent trade;--
+In short until the House of Guelph
+Lays Lords and Commons on the shelf,
+And boldly sets up for itself.
+
+ All that can well be understood
+In this said Book is vastly good;
+And as to what's incomprehensible,
+I dare be sworn 'tis full as sensible.
+
+ But to your work's immortal credit
+The Prince, good Sir, the Prince has read it
+(The only Book, himself remarks,
+Which he has read since Mrs. Clarke's).
+Last levee-morn he lookt it thro',
+During that awful hour or two
+Of grave tonsorial preparation,
+Which to a fond, admiring nation
+Sends forth, announced by trump and drum,
+The best-wigged Prince in Christendom.
+
+ He thinks with you, the imagination
+Of _partnership_ in legislation
+Could only enter in the noddles
+Of dull and ledger-keeping twaddles,
+Whose heads on _firms_ are running so,
+They even must have a King and Co.,
+And hence most eloquently show forth
+On _checks_ and _balances_ and so forth.
+
+ But now, he trusts, we're coming near a
+Far more royal, loyal era;
+When England's monarch need but say,
+"Whip me those scoundrels, Castlereagh!"
+Or, "Hang me up those Papists, Eldon,"
+And 'twill be done--ay, faith, and well done.
+
+ With view to which I've his command
+To beg, Sir, from your travelled hand,
+(Round which the foreign graces swarm)[1]
+A Plan of radical Reform;
+Compiled and chosen as best you can,
+In Turkey or at Ispahan,
+And quite upturning, branch and root,
+Lords, Commons, and Burdett to boot.
+
+ But, pray, whate'er you may impart, write
+Somewhat more brief than Major Cartwright:
+Else, tho' the Prince be long in rigging,
+'Twould take at least a fortnight's wigging,--
+Two wigs to every paragraph--
+Before he well could get thro' half.
+
+ You'll send it also speedily--
+As truth to say 'twixt you and me,
+His Highness, heated by your work,
+Already thinks himself Grand Turk!
+And you'd have laught, had you seen how
+He scared the Chancellor just now,
+When (on his Lordship's entering puft) he
+Slapt his back and called him "Mufti!"
+
+ The tailors too have got commands
+To put directly into hands
+All sorts of Dulimans and Pouches,
+With Sashes, Turbans and Paboutches,
+(While Yarmouth's sketching out a plan
+Of new _Moustaches à l'Ottomane_)
+And all things fitting and expedient
+To _turkify_ our gracious Regent!
+
+ You therefore have no time to waste--
+So, send your System.--
+ Yours in haste.
+
+POSTSCRIPT.
+
+Before I send this scrawl away,
+I seize a moment just to say
+There's some parts of the Turkish system
+So vulgar 'twere as well you missed 'em.
+For instance--in _Seraglio_ matters--
+Your Turk whom girlish fondness flatters,
+Would fill his Haram (tasteless fool!)
+With tittering, red-cheekt things from school.
+But _here_ (as in that fairy land,
+Where Love and Age went hand in hand;[2]
+Where lips, till sixty, shed no honey,
+And Grandams were worth any money,)
+_Our_ Sultan has much riper notions--
+So, let your list of _she_-promotions
+Include those only plump and sage,
+Who've reached the _regulation_-age;
+That is, (as near as one can fix
+From Peerage dates) full fifty-six.
+
+ This rule's for _favorites_--nothing more--
+For, as to _wives_, a Grand Signor,
+Tho' not decidedly _without_ them,
+Need never care one curse about them.
+
+
+[1] "The truth indeed seems to be, that having lived so long abroad as
+evidently to have lost, in a great degree, the use of his native language,
+Mr. Leckie has gradually come not only to speak, but to feel, like a
+foreigner."--_Edinburgh Review_.
+
+[2] The learned Colonel must allude here to a description of the
+Mysterious Isle, in the History of Abdalla, Son of Hanif, where such
+inversions of the order of nature are said to have taken place.--"A score
+of old women and the same number of old men played here and there in the
+court, some at chuck-farthing, others at tip-cat or at cockles."--And
+again, "There is nothing, believe me, more engaging than those lovely
+wrinkles."--See "_Tales of the East_," vol. iii. pp. 607, 608.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER III.
+
+FROM GEORGE PRINCE REGENT TO
+THE EARL OF YARMOUTH.[1]
+
+
+We missed you last night at the "hoary old sinner's,"
+Who gave us as usual the cream of good dinners;
+His soups scientific, his fishes quite _prime_--
+His _pâtés_ superb, and his cutlets sublime!
+In short, 'twas the snug sort of dinner to stir a
+Stomachic orgasm in my Lord Ellenborough,
+Who _set to_, to be sure, with miraculous force,
+And exclaimed between mouthfuls, "a _He-Cook_, of course!--
+"While you live--(what's there under that cover? pray, look)--
+"While you live--(I'll just taste it)--ne'er keep a She-Cook.
+"'Tis a sound Salic Law--(a small bit of that toast)--
+"Which ordains that a female shall ne'er rule the roast;
+"For Cookery's a secret--(this turtle's uncommon)--
+"Like Masonry, never found out by a woman!"
+
+ The dinner you know was in gay celebration
+Of _my_ brilliant triumph and Hunt's condemnation;
+A compliment too to his Lordship the Judge
+For his Speech to the Jury--and zounds! who would grudge
+Turtle soup tho' it came to five guineas a bowl,
+To reward such a loyal and complaisant soul?
+We were all in high gig--Roman Punch and Tokay
+Travelled round till our heads travelled just the same way;
+And we cared not for Juries or Libels--no--damme! nor
+Even for the threats of last Sunday's Examiner!
+
+ More good things were eaten than said--but Tom Tyrrhitt
+In quoting Joe Miller you know has some merit;
+And hearing the sturdy Judiciary Chief
+Say--sated with turtle--"I'll now try the beef"--
+Tommy whispered him (giving his Lordship a sly hit)
+"I fear 'twill be _hung_-beef, my Lord, if you _try_ it!"
+
+ And Camden was there, who that morning had gone
+To fit his new Marquis's coronet on;
+And the dish set before him--oh! dish well-devised!--
+Was what old Mother Glasse calls, "a calf's head surprised!"
+The _brains_ were near Sherry and _once_ had been fine,
+But of late they had lain so long soaking in wine,
+That tho' we from courtesy still chose to call
+These brains very fine they were no brains at all.
+
+ When the dinner was over, we drank, every one
+In a bumper, "the venial delights of Crim. Con.;"
+At which Headfort with warm reminiscences gloated,
+And Ellenb'rough chuckled to hear himself quoted.
+
+ Our next round of toasts was a fancy quite new,
+For we drank--and you'll own 'twas benevolent too--
+To those well-meaning husbands, cits, parsons or peers,
+Whom we've any time honored by courting their dears:
+This museum of wittols was comical rather;
+Old Headfort gave Massey, and _I_ gave your father.
+In short, not a soul till this morning would budge--
+We were all fun and frolic, and even the Judge
+Laid aside for the time his juridical fashion,
+And thro' the whole night wasn't _once_ in a passion!
+
+ I write this in bed while my whiskers are airing,
+And Mac[2] has a sly dose of jalap preparing
+For poor Tommy Tyrrhitt at breakfast to quaff--
+As I feel I want something to give me a laugh,
+And there's nothing so good as old Tommy kept close
+To his Cornwall accounts after taking a dose.
+
+
+[1] This letter, as the reader will perceive, was written the day after a
+dinner given by the Marquis of Headfort.
+
+[2] Colonel M'Mahon.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER IV.
+
+FROM THE RIGHT HON. PATRICK DUIGENAN
+TO THE RIGHT HON. SIR JOHN NICHOL.
+
+
+Last week, dear Nichol, making merry
+At dinner with our Secretary,
+When all were drunk or pretty near
+(The time for doing business here),
+Says he to me, "Sweet Bully Bottom!
+"These Papist dogs--hiccup--'od rot 'em!--
+"Deserve to be bespattered--hiccup--
+"With all the dirt even _you_ can pick up.
+"But, as the Prince (here's to him--fill--
+"Hip, hip, hurra!)--is trying still
+"To humbug them with kind professions,
+"And as _you_ deal in _strong_ expressions--
+"_Rogue"--"traitor_"--hiccup--and all that--
+"You must be muzzled, Doctor Pat!--
+"You must indeed--hiccup--that's flat."--
+
+Yes--"muzzled" was the word Sir John--
+These fools have clapt a muzzle on
+The boldest mouth that e'er run o'er
+With slaver of the times of yore![1]--
+Was it for this that back I went
+As far as Lateran and Trent,
+To prove that they who damned us then
+Ought now in turn be damned again?
+The silent victim still to sit
+Of Grattan's fire and Canning's wit,
+To hear even noisy Mathew gabble on,
+Nor mention once the Whore of Babylon!
+Oh! 'tis too much--who now will be
+The Nightman of No-Popery?
+What Courtier, Saint or even Bishop
+Such learned filth will ever fish up?
+If there among our ranks be one
+To take my place, 'tis _thou_, Sir John;
+Thou who like me art dubbed Right Hon.
+Like me too art a Lawyer Civil
+That wishes Papists at the devil.
+
+ To whom then but to thee, my friend,
+Should Patrick[2] his Port-folio send?
+Take it--'tis thine--his learned Port-folio,
+With all its theologic olio
+Of Bulls, half Irish and half Roman--
+Of Doctrines now believed by no man--
+Of Councils held for men's salvation,
+Yet always ending in damnation--
+(Which shows that since the world's creation
+Your Priests, whate'er their gentle shamming,
+Have always had a taste for damning,)
+And many more such pious scraps,
+To prove (what _we've_ long proved, perhaps,)
+That mad as Christians used to be
+About the Thirteenth Century,
+There still are Christians to be had
+In this, the Nineteenth, just as mad!
+
+ Farewell--I send with this, dear Nichol,
+A rod or two I've had in pickle
+Wherewith to trim old Grattan's jacket.--
+The rest shall go by Monday's packet.
+
+P. D.
+
+_Among the Enclosures in the foregoing Letter was the following
+"Unanswerable Argument against the Papists_."
+
+We're told the ancient Roman nation
+Made use of spittle in lustration;
+(_Vide "Lactantium ap. Gallaeum"_[3]--
+_i. e_. you need not _read_ but _see_ 'em;)
+Now Irish Papists--fact surprising--
+Make use of spittle in baptizing;
+Which proves them all, O'Finns, O'Fagans,
+Connors and Tooles all downright Pagans.
+This fact's enough; let no one tell us
+To free such sad, _salivous_ fellows.--
+No, no--the man, baptized with spittle,
+Hath no truth in him--not a tittle!
+
+
+[1] In sending this sheet to the Press, however, I learn that the "muzzle"
+has been taken off, and the Right Hon. Doctor again let loose!
+
+[2] A bad name for poetry; but Duigenan is still worse.
+
+[3] I have taken the trouble of examining the Doctor's reference here, and
+find him for once correct.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER V.
+
+FROM THE COUNTESS DOWAGER OF CORK TO LADY---.
+
+
+My dear Lady---! I've been just sending out
+About five hundred cards for a snug little Rout--
+(By the by, you've seen "Rokeby"?--this moment got mine--
+The "Mail-Coach Edition"--prodigiously fine!)
+But I can't conceive how in this very cold weather
+I'm ever to bring my five hundred together;
+As, unless the thermometer's near boiling heat,
+One can never get half of one's hundreds to meet.
+
+(Apropos--you'd have thought to see Townsend last night,
+Escort to their chairs, with his staff, so polite,
+The "three maiden Miseries," all in a fright;
+Poor Townsend, like Mercury, filling two posts,
+Supervisor of _thieves_ and chief-usher of _ghosts_!)
+
+ But, my dear Lady----, can't you hit on some notion,
+At least for one night to set London in motion?--
+As to having the Regent, _that_ show is gone by--
+Besides, I've remarkt that (between you and I)
+The Marchesa and he, inconvenient in more ways,
+Have taken much lately to whispering in doorways;
+Which--considering, you know, dear, the _size_ of the two--
+Makes a block that one's company _cannot_ get thro';
+And a house such as mine is, with door-ways so small,
+Has no room for such cumbersome love-work at all.--
+(Apropos, tho', of love-work--you've heard it, I hope,
+That Napoleon's old mother's to marry the Pope,--
+"What a comical pair!)--but, to stick to my Rout,
+'Twill be hard if some novelty can't be struck out.
+Is there no Algerine, no Kamchatkan arrived?
+No Plenipo Pacha, three-tailed and ten-wived?
+No Russian whose dissonant consonant name
+Almost rattles to fragments the trumpet of fame?
+
+ I remember the time three or four winters back,
+When--provided their wigs were but decently black--
+A few Patriot monsters from Spain were a sight
+That would people one's house for one, night after night.
+But--whether the Ministers _pawed_ them too much--
+(And you--know how they spoil whatsoever they touch)
+Or, whether Lord George (the young man about town)
+Has by dint of bad poetry written them down.
+One has certainly lost one's _peninsular_ rage;
+And the only stray Patriot seen for an age
+Has been at such places (think, how the fit cools!)
+As old Mrs. Vaughan's or Lord Liverpool's.
+
+ But, in short, my dear, names like Wintztschitstopschinzoudhoff
+Are the only things now make an evening go smooth off:
+So, get me a Russian--till death I'm your debtor--
+If he brings the whole Alphabet, so much the better.
+And--Lord! if he would but, _in character_, sup
+Off his fish-oil and candles, he'd quite set me up!
+
+ _Au revoir_, my sweet girl--I must leave you in haste--
+Little Gunter has brought me the Liqueurs to taste.
+
+POSTSCRIPT.
+
+By the by, have you found any friend that can conster
+That Latin account, t'other day, of a Monster?[1]
+If we can't get a Russian, and _that think_ in Latin
+Be not _too_ improper, I think I'll bring that in.
+
+
+[1] Alluding, I suppose, to the Latin Advertisement of a _lusus
+Naturae_ in the Newspapers lately.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER VI.
+
+FROM ABDALLAH,[1] IN LONDON, TO MOHASSAN, IN ISPAHAN.
+
+
+Whilst thou, Mohassan, (happy thou!)
+Dost daily bend thy loyal brow
+Before our King--our Asia's treasure!
+Nutmeg of Comfort: Rose of Pleasure!--
+And bearest as many kicks and bruises
+As the said Rose and Nutmeg chooses;
+Thy head still near the bowstring's borders.
+And but left on till further orders--
+Thro' London streets with turban fair,
+And caftan floating to the air,
+I saunter on, the admiration
+Of this short-coated population--
+This sewed-up race--this buttoned nation--
+Who while they boast their laws so free
+Leave not one limb at liberty,
+But live with all their lordly speeches
+The slaves of buttons and tight breeches.
+
+ Yet tho' they thus their knee-pans fetter
+(They're Christians and they know no better)
+ In _some_ things they're a thinking nation;
+And on Religious Toleration.
+I own I like their notions _quite_,
+They are so Persian and so right!
+You know our Sunnites,[2] hateful dogs!
+Whom every pious Shiite flogs
+Or longs to flog--'tis true, they pray
+To God, but in an ill-bred way;
+With neither arms nor legs nor faces
+Stuck in their right, canonic places.[3]
+'Tis true, they worship Ali's name--
+_Their_ heaven and _ours_ are just the same--
+(A Persian's Heaven is easily made,
+'Tis but black eyes and lemonade.)
+Yet tho' we've tried for centuries back--
+We can't persuade this stubborn pack,
+By bastinadoes, screws or nippers,
+To wear the establisht pea-green slippers.[4]
+Then, only think, the libertines!
+They wash their toes--they comb their chins,
+With many more such deadly sins;
+And what's the worst, (tho' last I rank it)
+Believe the Chapter of the Blanket!
+
+ Yet spite of tenets so flagitious,
+(Which _must_ at bottom be seditious;
+Since no man living would refuse
+Green slippers but from treasonous views;
+Nor wash his toes but with intent
+To overturn the government,)--
+Such is our mild and tolerant way,
+We only curse them twice a day
+(According to a Form that's set),
+And, far from torturing, only let
+All orthodox believers beat 'em,
+And twitch their beards where'er they meet 'em.
+
+ As to the rest, they're free to do
+Whate'er their fancy prompts them to,
+Provided they make nothing of it
+Towards rank or honor, power or profit;
+Which things we naturally expect,
+Belong to US, the Establisht sect,
+Who disbelieve (the Lord be thanked!)
+The aforesaid Chapter of the Blanket.
+The same mild views of Toleration
+Inspire, I find, this buttoned nation,
+Whose Papists (full as given to rogue,
+And only Sunnites with a brogue)
+Fare just as well, with all their fuss,
+As rascal Sunnites do with us.
+
+ The tender Gazel I enclose
+Is for my love, my Syrian Rose--
+Take it when night begins to fall,
+And throw it o'er her mother's wall.
+
+GAZEL.
+
+Rememberest thou the hour we past,--
+That hour the happiest and the last?
+Oh! not so sweet the Siha thorn
+To summer bees at break of morn,
+Not half so sweet, thro' dale and dell,
+To Camels' ears the tinkling bell,
+As is the soothing memory
+Of that one precious hour to me.
+
+How can we live, so far apart?
+Oh! why not rather, heart to heart,
+ United live and die--
+Like those sweet birds, that fly together,
+With feather always touching feather,
+ Linkt by a hook and eye![5]
+
+
+[1] I have made many inquiries about this Persian gentleman, but cannot
+satisfactorily ascertain who he is. From his notions of Religious Liberty,
+however, I conclude that he is an importation of Ministers; and he has
+arrived just in time to assist the Prince and Mr. Leckie in their new
+Oriental Plan of Reform.--See the second of these letters.--How Abdallah's
+epistle to Ispahan found its way into the Twopenny Post-Bag is more than I
+can pretend to account for.
+
+[2] Sunnites and Shiites are the two leading sects into which the
+Mahometan world is divided; and they have gone on cursing and persecuting
+each other, without any intermission, for about eleven hundred years. The
+_Sunni_ is the established sect in Turkey, and the _Shia_ in
+Persia; and the differences between them turn chiefly upon those important
+points, which our pious friend Abdallah, is the true spirit of Shiite
+Ascendency, reprobates in this Letter.
+
+[3] "In contradistinction to the Sounis, who in their prayers cross their
+hands on the lower part of the breasts, the Schiahs drop their arms in
+straight lines; and as the Sounis, at certain periods of the prayer, press
+their foreheads on the ground or carpet, the Schiahs," etc.--_Forster's
+Voyage_.
+
+[4] "The Shiites wear green slippers, which the Sunnites consider as a
+great abomination."--_Mariti_.
+
+[5] This will appear strange to an English reader, but it is literally
+translated from Abdallah's Persian, and the curious bird to which he
+alludes is the _Juftak_, of which I find the following account in
+Richardson:--"A sort of bird, that is said to have but one wing; on the
+opposite side to which the male has a hook and the female a ring, so that,
+when they fly, they are fastened together."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER VII.
+
+FROM MESSRS. LACKINGTON AND CO. TO THOMAS MOORE, ESQ.
+
+
+Per Post, Sir, we send your MS.--look it thro'--
+Very sorry--but can't undertake--'twouldn't do.
+Clever work, Sir!--would _get up_ prodigiously well--
+Its only defect is--it never would sell.
+And tho' _Statesmen_ may glory in being _unbought_,
+In an _Author_ 'tis not so desirable thought.
+
+ Hard times, Sir, most books are too dear to be read--
+Tho' the _gold_ of Good-sense and Wit's _small-change_ are fled,
+Yet the paper we Publishers pass, in their stead,
+Rises higher each day, and ('tis frightful to think it)
+Not even such names as Fitzgerald's can sink it!
+
+ However, Sir--if you're for trying again,
+And at somewhat that's vendible--we are your men.
+
+ Since the Chevalier Carr[1] took to marrying lately,
+The Trade is in want of a _Traveller_ greatly--
+No job, Sir, more easy--your _Country_ once planned,
+A month aboard ship and a fortnight on land
+Puts your Quarto of Travels, Sir, clean out of hand.
+
+ An East-India pamphlet's a thing that would tell--
+And a lick at the Papists is _sure_ to sell well.
+Or--supposing you've nothing _original_ in you--
+Write Parodies, Sir, and such fame it will win you,
+You'll get to the Blue-stocking Routs of Albinia![2]
+(Mind--_not_ to her _dinners_--a _second-hand_ Muse
+Mustn't think of aspiring to _mess_ with the _Blues_.)
+Or--in case nothing else in this world you can do--
+The deuce is in't, Sir, if you can not _review_!
+
+ Should you feel any touch of _poetical_ glow,
+We've a Scheme to suggest--Mr. Scott, you must know,
+(Who, we're sorry to say it, now works for _the Row_.[3])
+Having quitted the Borders to seek new renown,
+Is coming by long Quarto stages to Town;
+And beginning with "Rokeby" (the job's sure to pay)
+Means to _do_ all the Gentlemen's Seats on the way.
+Now, the Scheme is (tho' none of our hackneys can beat him)
+To start a fresh Poet thro' Highgate to _meet_ him;
+Who by means of quick proofs--no revises--long coaches--
+May do a few Villas before Scott approaches.
+Indeed if our Pegasus be not curst shabby,
+He'll reach, without foundering, at least Woburn Abbey.
+Such, Sir, is our plan--if you're up to the freak,
+'Tis a match! and we'll put you _in training_ next week.
+At present, no more--in reply to this Letter,
+A line will oblige very much
+ Yours, _et cetera_.
+
+_Temple of the Muses_.
+
+
+[1] Sir John Carr, the author of "Tours in Ireland, Holland. Sweden," etc.
+
+[2] This alludes, I believe, to a curious correspondence, which is said to
+have passed lately between Albina, Countess of Buckinghamshire, and a
+certain ingenious Parodist.
+
+[3] Paternoster Row.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER VIII.
+
+FROM COLONEL THOMAS TO ---- SKEFFINGTON, ESQ.
+
+
+Come to our Fête and bring with thee
+Thy newest, best embroidery.
+Come to our Fête and show again
+That pea-green coat, thou pink of men,
+Which charmed all eyes that last surveyed it;
+When Brummel's self inquired "who made it?"--
+When Cits came wondering from the East
+And thought thee Poet Pye _at least_!
+
+ Oh! come, (if haply 'tis thy week
+For looking pale,) with paly cheek;
+Tho' more we love thy roseate days,
+When the rich rouge-pot pours its blaze
+Full o'er thy face and amply spread,
+Tips even thy whisker-tops with red--
+Like the last tints of dying Day
+That o'er some darkling grove delay.
+
+ Bring thy best lace, thou gay Philander,
+(That lace, like Harry Alexander,
+Too precious to be washt,) thy _rings_,
+Thy seals--in short, thy prettiest things!
+Put all thy wardrobe's glories on,
+And yield in frogs and fringe to none
+But the great Regent's self alone;
+Who--by particular desire--
+_For that night only_, means to hire
+A dress from, Romeo Coates, Esquire.[1]
+Hail, first of Actors! best of Regents!
+Born for each other's fond allegiance!
+_Both_ gay Lotharios--both good dressers--
+Of serious Farce _both_ learned Professors--
+_Both_ circled round, for use or show,
+With cock's combs, wheresoe'er they go![2]
+
+ Thou knowest the time, thou man of lore!
+It takes to chalk a ball-room floor--
+Thou knowest the time, too, well-a-day!
+It takes to dance that chalk away.[3]
+The Ball-room opens--far and nigh
+Comets and suns beneath us lie;
+O'er snow-white moons and stars we walk,
+And the floor seems one sky of chalk!
+But soon shall fade that bright deceit,
+When many a maid, with busy feet
+That sparkle in the lustre's ray,
+O'er the white path shall bound and play
+Like Nymphs along the Milky Way:--
+With every step a star hath fled,
+And suns grow dim beneath their tread,
+So passeth life--(thus Scott would write,
+And spinsters read him with delight,)--
+Hours are not feet, yet hours trip on,
+Time is not chalk, yet time's soon gone!
+
+ But, hang this long digressive flight!--
+I meant to say, thou'lt see that night
+What falsehood rankles in their hearts,
+Who say the Prince neglects the arts--
+Neglects the arts?--no, Strahlweg,[4] no;
+_Thy_ Cupids answer "'tis not so;"
+And every floor that night shall tell
+How quick thou daubest and how well.
+Shine as thou mayst in French vermilion,
+Thou'rt _best_ beneath a French cotillion;
+And still comest off, whate'er thy faults,
+With _flying colors_ in a Waltz.
+Nor needest thou mourn the transient date
+To thy best works assigned by fate.
+While _some chef-d'oeuvres_ live to weary one,
+_Thine_ boast a short life and a merry one;
+Their hour of glory past and gone
+With "Molly put the kettle on!"[5]
+
+ But, bless my soul! I've scarce a leaf
+Of paper left--so must be brief.
+ This festive Fête, in fact, will be
+The former Fête's _facsimile_;[6]
+The same long Masquerade of Rooms,
+All trickt up in such odd costumes,
+(These, Porter,[7] are thy glorious works!)
+You'd swear Egyptians, Moors and Turks,
+Bearing Good-Taste some deadly malice,
+Had clubbed to raise a Pic-Nic Palace;
+And each to make the olio pleasant
+Had sent a State-Room as a present.
+The same _fauteuils_ and girondoles--
+The same gold Asses,[8]pretty souls!
+That in this rich and classic dome
+Appear so perfectly at home.
+The same bright river 'mong the dishes,
+But _not_--ah! not the same dear fishes--
+Late hours and claret killed the old ones--
+So 'stead of silver and of gold ones,
+(It being rather hard to raise
+Fish of that _specie_ now-a-days)
+Some sprats have been by Yarmouth's wish,
+Promoted into _Silver_ Fish,
+And Gudgeons (so Vansittart told
+The Regent) are as good as _Gold_!
+
+ So, prithee, come--our Fête will be
+But half a Fête if wanting thee.
+
+
+[1] An amateur actor of much risible renown.
+
+[2] The crest of Mr. Coates, the very amusing amateur tragedian here
+alluded to, was a cock; and most profusely were his liveries, harness,
+etc. covered wit this ornament.
+
+[3] To those who neither go to balls nor read _The Morning Post_, it may
+be necessary to mention, that the floors of Ballrooms, in general, are
+chalked for safety and for ornament with various fanciful devices.
+
+[4] A foreign artist much patronized by the Prince Regent.
+
+[5] The name of a popular country-dance.
+
+[6] "Carleton House will exhibit a complete _facsimile_ in respect to
+interior ornament, to what it did at the last Fête. The same splendid
+draperies," etc.--_Morning Post_.
+
+[7] Mr. Walsh Porter, to whose taste was left the furnishing of the rooms
+of Carletone House.
+
+[8] The salt-cellars on the Prince's _own_ table were in the form of an
+Ass with panniers.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+
+
+
+LETTER IV. PAGE 584.
+
+
+Among the papers, enclosed in Dr. Duigenan's Letter, was found an Heroic
+Epistle in Latin verse, from Pope Joan to her Lover, of which, as it is
+rather a curious document, I shall venture to give some account. This
+female Pontiff was a native of England, (or, according to others of
+Germany,) who at an early age disguised herself in male attire and
+followed her lover, a young ecclesiastic, to Athens where she studied with
+such effect that upon her arrival at Rome she was thought worthy of being
+raised to the Pontificate. This Epistle is addressed to her Lover (whom
+she had elevated to the dignity of Cardinal), soon after the fatal
+_accouchement_, by which her Fallibility was betrayed.
+
+She begins by reminding him tenderly of the time, when they were together
+at Athens--when, as she says,
+
+ --"by Ilissus' stream
+ "We whispering walkt along, and learned to speak
+ "The tenderest feelings in the purest Greek;
+ "Ah! then how little did we think or hope,
+ "Dearest of men, that I should e'er be Pope![1]
+ "That I, the humble Joan, whose housewife art
+ "Seemed just enough to keep thy house and heart,
+ "(And those, alas! at sixes and at sevens,)
+ "Should soon keep all the keys of all the heavens!"
+
+Still less (she continues to say) could they have foreseen, that such
+a catastrophe as had happened in Council would befall them--that she
+
+ "Should thus surprise the Conclave's grave decorum,
+ "And let a _little Pope_ pop out before 'em--
+ "Pope _Innocent_! alas, the only one
+ "That name could e'er be justly fixt upon."
+
+She then very pathetically laments the downfall of her greatness, and
+enumerates the various treasures to which she is doomed to bid farewell
+forever:--
+
+ "But oh, more dear, more precious ten times over--
+ "Farewell my Lord, my Cardinal, my Lover!
+ "I made _thee_ Cardinal--thou madest _me_--ah!
+ "Thou madest the Papa of the world Mamma!"
+
+I have not time at present to translate any more of this Epistle; but I
+presume the argument which the Right Hon. Doctor and his friends mean to
+deduce from it, is (in their usual convincing strain) that Romanists must
+be unworthy of Emancipation _now_, because they had a Petticoat Pope in
+the Ninth Century. Nothing can be more logically clear, and I find that
+Horace had exactly the same views upon the subject.
+
+ Romanus (_eheu posteri negabitis_!)
+ emancipatus FOEMINAE
+ _fert vallum_!
+
+
+[1] Spanheim attributes the unanimity with which Joan was elected to that
+innate and irresistible charm by which her sex, though latent, operated
+upon the instinct of the Cardinals.
+
+
+
+
+LETTER VII. PAGE 588.
+
+
+The Manuscript, found enclosed in the Bookseller's Letter, turns out to be
+a Melo-Drama, in two Acts, entitled "The Book,"[1] of which the Theatres,
+of course, had had the refusal, before it was presented to Messrs.
+Lackington and Co. This rejected Drama however possesses considerable
+merit and I shall take the liberty of laying a sketch of it before my
+Readers.
+
+The first Act opens in a very awful manner--_Time_, three o'clock in
+the morning--_Scene_, the Bourbon Chamber[2] in Carleton House--
+Enter the Prince Regent _solus_--After a few broken sentences, he
+thus exclaims:--
+
+ Away--Away--
+ Thou haunt'st my fancy so, thou devilish Book,
+ I meet thee--trace thee, whereso'er I look.
+ I see thy damned _ink_ in Eldon's brows--
+ I see thy _foolscap_ on my Hertford's Spouse--
+ Vansittart's head recalls thy _leathern_ case,
+ And all thy _blank-leaves_ stare from R--d--r's face!
+ While, turning here (_laying his hand on his heart_,)
+ I find, ah wretched elf,
+ Thy _List_ of dire _Errata_ in myself.
+ (_Walks the stage in considerable agitation_.)
+ Oh Roman Punch! oh potent Curaçoa!
+ Oh Mareschino! Mareschino oh!
+ Delicious drams! why have you not the art
+ To kill this gnawing _Book-worm_ in my heart?
+
+He is here interrupted in his Soliloquy by perceiving on the ground some
+scribbled fragments of paper, which he instantly collects, and "by the
+light of two magnificent candelabras" discovers the following unconnected
+words, "_Wife neglected"--"the Book"--"Wrong Measures"--"the Queen"--"Mr.
+Lambert"--"the Regent_."
+
+ Ha! treason in my house!--Curst words, that wither
+ My princely soul, (_shaking the papers violently_) what Demon
+ brought you hither?
+ "My Wife;"--"the Book" too!--stay--a nearer look--
+ (_holding the fragments closer to the Candelabras_)
+ Alas! too plain, B, double O, K, Book--
+ Death and destruction!
+
+He here rings all the bells, and a whole legion of valets enter. A scene
+of cursing and swearing (very much in the German style) ensues, in the
+course of which messengers are despatched, in different directions, for
+the Lord Chancellor, the Duke of Cumberland, etc. The intermediate time is
+filled up by another Soliloquy, at the conclusion of which the aforesaid
+Personages rush on alarmed; the Duke with his stays only half-laced, and
+the Chancellor with his wig thrown hastily over an old red night-cap, "to
+maintain the becoming splendor of his office."[3] The Regent produces the
+appalling fragments, upon which the Chancellor breaks out into
+exclamations of loyalty and tenderness, and relates the following
+portentous dream:
+
+ 'Tis scarcely two hours since
+ I had a fearful dream of thee, my Prince!--
+ Methought I heard thee midst a courtly crowd
+ Say from thy throne of gold, in mandate loud,
+ "Worship my whiskers!"--(_weeps_) not a knee was there
+ But bent and worshipt the Illustrious Pair,
+ Which curled in conscious majesty! (_pulls out his handkerchief_)--
+ while cries
+ Of "Whiskers; whiskers!" shook the echoing skies.--
+ Just in that glorious hour, me-thought, there came,
+ With looks of injured pride, a Princely Dame
+ And a young maiden, clinging by her side,
+ As if she feared some tyrant would divide
+ Two hearts that nature and affection tied!
+ The Matron came--within her _right_ hand glowed
+ A radiant torch; while from her _left_ a load
+ Of Papers hung--(_wipes his eyes_) collected in her veil--
+ The venal evidence, the slanderous tale,
+ The wounding hint, the current lies that pass
+ From _Post_ to _Courier_, formed the motley mass;
+ Which with disdain before the Throne she throws,
+ And lights the Pile beneath thy princely nose.
+
+ (_Weeps_.)
+
+ Heavens, how it blazed!--I'd ask no livelier fire,
+ (With animation) To roast a Papist by, my gracious Sire!--
+ But ah! the Evidence--_(weeps again)_ I mourned to see--
+ Cast as it burned, a deadly light on thee:
+ And Tales and Hints their random sparkles flung,
+ And hissed and crackled, like an old maid's tongue;
+ While _Post_ and _Courier_, faithful to their fame,
+ Made up in stink for what they lackt in flame.
+ When, lo, ye Gods! the fire ascending brisker,
+ Now singes _one_ now lights the _other_ whisker.
+ Ah! where was then the Sylphid that unfurls
+ Her fairy standard in defence of curls?
+ Throne, Whiskers, Wig soon vanisht into smoke,
+ The watchman cried "Past One," and--I awoke.
+
+Here his Lordship weeps more profusely than ever, and the Regents (who has
+been very much agitated during the recital of the Dream) by a movement as
+characteristic as that of Charles XII. when he was shot, claps his hands
+to his whiskers to feel if all be really safe. A Privy Council is held--
+all the Servants, etc. are examined, and it appears that a Tailor, who had
+come to measure the Regent for a Dress (which takes three whole pages of
+the best superfine _clinquant_ in describing) was the only person who
+had been in the Bourbon Chamber during the day. It is, accordingly,
+determined to seize the Tailor, and the Council breaks up with a unanimous
+resolution to be vigorous.
+
+The commencement of the Second Act turns chiefly upon the Trial and
+Imprisonment of two Brothers[4]--but as this forms the _under_ plot
+of the Drama, I shall content myself with extracting from it the following
+speech, which is addressed to the two Brothers, as they "_exeunt_
+severally" to Prison:--
+
+ Go to your prisons--tho' the air of Spring
+ No mountain coolness to your cheeks shall bring;
+ Tho' Summer flowers shall pass unseen away,
+ And all your portion of the glorious day
+ May be some solitary beam that falls
+ At morn or eve upon your dreary walls--
+ Some beam that enters, trembling as if awed,
+ To tell how gay the young world laughs abroad!
+ Yet go--for thoughts as blessed as the air
+ Of Spring or Summer flowers await you there;
+ Thoughts such as He who feasts his courtly crew
+ In rich conservatories _never_ knew;
+ Pure self-esteem--the smiles that light within--
+ The Zeal, whose circling charities begin
+ With the few loved-ones Heaven has placed it near,
+ And spread till all Mankind are in its sphere;
+ The Pride that suffers without vaunt or plea.
+ And the fresh Spirit that can warble free
+ Thro' prison-bars its hymn to Liberty!
+
+The Scene next changes to a Tailor's Workshop, and a fancifully-arranged
+group of these Artists is discovered upon the Shop-board--Their task
+evidently of a _royal_ nature, from the profusion of gold-lace, frogs,
+etc., that lie about--They all rise and come forward, while one of them
+sings the following Stanzas to the tune of "Derry Down."
+
+ My brave brother Tailors, come, straighten your knees,
+ For a moment, like gentlemen, stand up at ease,
+ While I sing of our Prince (and a fig for his railers),
+ The Shop-board's delight! the Maecenas of Tailors!
+ Derry down, down, down
+ derry down.
+
+ Some monarchs take roundabout ways into note,
+ While _His_ short cut to fame is--the cut of his coat;
+ Philip's Son thought the World was too small for his Soul,
+ But our Regent's finds room in a laced button-hole.
+ Derry down, etc.
+
+ Look thro' all Europe's Kings--those, at least, who go loose--
+ Not a King of them all's such a friend to the Goose.
+ So, God keep him increasing in size and renown,
+ Still the fattest and best fitted Prince about town!
+ Derry down, etc.
+
+During the "Derry down" of this last verse, a messenger from the Secretary
+of State's Office rushes on, and the singer (who, luckily for the effect
+of the scene, is the very Tailor suspected of the mysterious fragments) is
+interrupted in the midst of his laudatory exertions and hurried away, to
+the no small surprise and consternation of his comrades. The Plot now
+hastens rapidly in its development--the management of the Tailor's
+examination is highly skilful, and the alarm which he is made to betray is
+natural without being ludicrous. The explanation too which he finally
+gives is not more simple than satisfactory. It appears that the said
+fragments formed part of a self-exculpatory note, which he had intended to
+send to Colonel M'Mahon upon subjects purely professional, and the
+corresponding bits (which still lie luckily in his pocket) being produced
+and skilfully laid beside the others, the following _billet-doux_ is the
+satisfactory result of their juxtaposition,
+
+ Honored Colonel--my Wife, who's the Queen of all slatterns,
+ Neglected to put up the Book of new Patterns.
+ She sent the wrong Measures too--shamefully wrong--
+ They're the same used for poor Mr. Lambert, when young;
+ But, bless you! they wouldn’t go half round the Regent--
+ So, hope you'll excuse yours till death, most obedient.
+
+This fully explains the whole mystery--the Regent resumes his wonted
+smiles, and the Drama terminates as usual to the satisfaction of all
+parties.
+
+
+[1] There was, in like manner, a mysterious Book, in the 16th Century,
+which employed all the anxious curiosity of the Learned of that time.
+Every one spoke of it; many wrote against it; though it does not appear
+that anybody had ever seen it; and Grotius is of opinion that no such Book
+ever existed. It was entitled, "_Liber de tribus impostoribus_." (See
+Morhof. Cap. "_de Libris damnatis_.")
+
+[2] The same Chamber, doubtless, that was prepared for the reception of
+the Bourbons at the first Grand Fête, and which was ornamented (all "for
+the Deliverance of Europe") with _fleurs de-lys_.
+
+[3] "To enable the individual who holds the office of Chancellor to
+maintain it in becoming splendor." (_A loud laugh_.)--Lord
+CASTLEREAGH'S _Speech upon the Vice Chancellor's Bill_.
+
+[4] Mr. Leigh Hunt and his brother.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SATIRICAL AND HUMOROUS POEMS.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE INSURRECTION OF THE PAPERS.
+
+A DREAM.
+
+
+ "It would be impossible for his Royal Highness to disengage his person
+ from the accumulating pile of papers that encompassed it."
+ --Lord CASTLEREAGH'S _Speech upon Colonel M Mahon's Appointment,
+ April 14, 1812_.
+
+
+Last night I tost and turned in bed,
+But could not sleep--at length I said,
+"I'll think of Viscount Castlereagh,
+"And of his speeches--that's the way."
+And so it was, for instantly
+I slept as sound as sound could be.
+And then I dreamt--so dread a dream!
+Fuseli has no such theme;
+Lewis never wrote or borrowed
+Any horror half so horrid!
+
+Methought the Prince in whiskered state
+Before me at his breakfast sate;
+On one side lay unread Petitions,
+On t'other, Hints from five Physicians!
+_Here_ tradesmen's bills,--official papers,
+Notes from my Lady, drams for vapors
+_There_ plans of Saddles, tea and toast.
+Death-warrants and _The Morning Post_.
+
+ When lo! the Papers, one and all.
+As if at some magician's call.
+Began to flutter of themselves
+From desk and table, floor and shelves,
+And, cutting each some different capers,
+Advanced, oh jacobinic papers!
+As tho' they said, "Our sole design is
+"To suffocate his Royal Highness!"
+The Leader of this vile sedition
+Was a huge Catholic Petition,
+With grievances so full and heavy,
+It threatened worst of all the bevy;
+Then Common-Hall Addresses came
+In swaggering sheets and took their aim
+Right at the Regent's well-drest head,
+As if _determined_ to be read.
+Next Tradesmen's bills began to fly,
+And Tradesmen's bills, we know, mount high;
+Nay even Death-warrants thought they'd best
+Be lively too and join the rest.
+
+ But, oh the basest of defections!
+His letter about "predilections"!--
+His own dear letter, void of grace,
+Now flew up in its parent's face!
+Shocked with this breach of filial duty,
+He just could murmur "_et_ Tu _Brute_?"
+Then sunk, subdued upon the floor
+At Fox's bust, to rise no more!
+
+I waked--and prayed, with lifted hand,
+"Oh! never may this Dream prove true;
+"Tho' paper overwhelms the land,
+ "Let it not crush the Sovereign, too!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PARODY OF A CELEBRATED LETTER.[1]
+
+
+At length, dearest Freddy, the moment is night
+When, with Perceval's leave, I may throw my chains by;
+And, as time now is precious, the first thing I do
+Is to sit down and write a wise letter to you.
+
+ * * * *
+ * * * *
+ * * * *
+ * * * *
+ * * * *
+ * * * *
+I meant before now to have sent you this Letter,
+But Yarmouth and I thought perhaps 'twould be better
+To wait till the Irish affairs are decided--
+(That is, till both Houses had prosed and divided,
+With all due appearance of thought and digestion)--
+For, tho' Hertford House had long settled the question,
+I thought it but decent, between me and you,
+That the two _other_ Houses should settle it too.
+
+ I need not remind you how cursedly bad
+Our affairs were all looking, when Father went mad;[2]
+A strait waistcoat on him and restrictions on me,
+A more _limited_ Monarchy could not well be.
+I was called upon then, in that moment of puzzle.
+To choose my own Minister--just as they muzzle
+A playful young bear, and then mock his disaster
+By bidding him choose out his own dancing-master.
+
+ I thought the best way, as a dutiful son,
+Was to do as Old Royalty's self would have done.[3]
+So I sent word to say, I would keep the whole batch in,
+The same chest of tools, without cleansing or patching:
+For tools of this kind, like Martinus's sconce.[4]
+Would loose all their beauty if purified once;
+And think--only think--if our Father should find.
+Upon graciously coming again to his mind,[5]
+That improvement had spoiled any favorite adviser--
+That Rose was grown honest, or Westmoreland wiser--
+That R--d--r was, even by one twinkle, the brighter--
+Or Liverpool speeches but half a pound lighter--
+What a shock to his old royal heart it would be!
+No!--far were such dreams of improvement from me:
+And it pleased me to find, at the House, where, you know,[6]
+There's such good mutton cutlets, and strong curaçoa,[7]
+That the Marchioness called me a duteous old boy,
+And my Yarmouth's red whiskers grew redder for joy.
+
+ You know, my dear Freddy, how oft, if I _would_,
+By the law of last sessions I _might_ have done good.
+I _might_ have withheld these political noodles
+From knocking their heads against hot Yankee Doodles;
+I _might_ have told Ireland I pitied her lot,
+Might have soothed her with hope--but you know I did not.
+
+And my wish is, in truth, that the best of old fellows
+Should not, on recovering, have cause to be jealous,
+But find that while he has been laid on the shelf
+We've been all of us nearly as mad as himself.
+You smile at my hopes--but the Doctors and I
+Are the last that can think the King _ever_ will die.[8]
+
+ A new era's arrived[9]--tho' you'd hardly believe it--
+And all things of course must be new to receive it.
+New villas, new fêtes (which even Waithman attends)--
+New saddles, new helmets, and--why not _new friends_?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I repeat it, "New Friends"--for I cannot describe
+The delight I am in with this Perceval tribe.
+Such capering!--Such vaporing!--Such rigor!--Such vigor!
+North, South, East, and West, they have cut such a figure,
+That soon they will bring the whole world round our ears,
+And leave us no friends--but Old Nick and Algiers.
+
+ When I think of the glory they've beamed on my chains,
+'Tis enough quite to turn my illustrious brains.
+It is true we are bankrupts in commerce and riches,
+But think how we find our Allies in new breeches!
+We've lost the warm hearts of the Irish, 'tis granted,
+But then we've got Java, an island much wanted,
+To put the last lingering few who remain,
+Of the Walcheren warriors, out of their pain.
+Then how Wellington fights! and how squabbles his brother!
+_For_ Papists the one and _with_ Papists the other;
+_One_ crushing Napoleon by taking a City,
+While t'other lays waste a whole Catholic Committee.
+Oh deeds of renown!--shall I boggle or flinch,
+With such prospects before me? by Jove, not an inch.
+No--let _England's_ affairs go to rack, if they will,
+We'll look after the affairs of the _Continent_ still;
+And with nothing at home but starvation and riot,
+Find Lisbon in bread and keep Sicily quiet.
+
+ I am proud to declare I have no predilections,[10]
+My heart is a sieve where some scattered affections
+Are just danced about for a moment or two,
+And the _finer_ they are, the more sure to run thro';
+Neither feel I resentments, nor wish there should come ill
+To mortal--except (now I think on't) Beau Brummel,
+Who threatened last year, in a superfine passion,
+To cut _me_ and bring the old King into fashion.
+This is all I can lay to my conscience at present;
+When such is my temper, so neutral, so pleasant,
+So royally free from all troublesome feelings,
+So little encumbered by faith in my dealings
+(And that I'm consistent the world will allow,
+What I was at Newmarket the same I am now).
+When such are my merits (you know I hate cracking),
+I hope, like the Vender of Best Patent Blacking,
+"To meet with the generous and kind approbation
+"Of a candid, enlightened, and liberal nation."
+
+ By the by, ere I close this magnificent Letter,
+(No man, except Pole, could have writ you a better,)
+'Twould please me if those, whom I've humbugged so long[11]
+With the notion (good men!) that I knew right from wrong,
+Would a few of them join me--mind, only a few--
+To let _too_ much light in on me never would do;
+But even Grey's brightness shan't make me afraid,
+While I've Camden and Eldon to fly to for shade;
+Nor will Holland's clear intellect do us much harm,
+While there's Westmoreland near him to weaken the charm.
+As for Moira's high spirit, if aught can subdue it.
+Sure joining with Hertford and Yarmouth will do it!
+Between R-d-r and Wharton let Sheridan sit,
+And the fogs will soon quench even Sheridan's wit:
+And against all the pure public feeling that glows
+Even in Whitbread himself we've a Host in George Rose!
+So in short if they wish to have Places, they may,
+And I'll thank you to tell all these matters to Grey.[12]
+Who, I doubt not, will write (as there's no time to lose)
+By the twopenny post to tell Grenville the news;
+And now, dearest Fred (tho' I've no predilection),
+Believe me yours always with truest affection.
+
+P.S. A copy of this is to Perceval going[13]
+Good Lord, how St. Stephen's will ring with his crowing!
+
+
+[1] Letter from his Royal Highness the Prince Regent to the Duke of York,
+Feb. 13, 1812.
+
+[2] "I think it hardly necessary to call your recollection to the recent
+circumstances under which I assumed the authority delegated to me by
+Parliament.--_Prince's Letter_.
+
+[3] "My sense of duty to our Royal father solely decided that choice."--
+_Ibid_.
+
+[4] The antique shield of Martinus Scriblerus, which, upon scouring,
+turned out to be only an old sconce.
+
+[5] "I waived any personal gratification, in order that his Majesty might
+resume, on his restoration to health, every power and prerogative," etc.--
+_Prince's Letter_.
+
+[6] "And I have the satisfaction of knowing that such was the opinion of
+persons for whose judgment," etc--_Ibid_.
+
+[7] The letter-writer's favorite luncheon.
+
+[8] I certainly am the last person in the kingdom to whom it can be
+permitted to despair of our royal father's recovery."--_Prince's
+Letter_.
+
+[9] "A new era is now arrived, and I cannot but reflect with
+satisfaction," etc.--_Ibid_.
+
+[10] "I have no predilections to indulge,--no resentments to gratify."--
+_Prince's Letter_.
+
+[11] "I cannot conclude without expressing the gratification I should feel
+if some of those persons with whom the early habits of my public life were
+formed would strengthen my hands, and constitute a part of my
+government"--
+_Prince's Letter_.
+
+[12] "You are authorized to communicate these sentiments to Lord Grey,
+who, I have no doubt, will make them known to Lord Grenville."--
+_Prince's Letter_.
+
+[13] "I shall send a copy of this letter immediately to Mr. Perceval."-
+_Prince's Letter_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ANACREONTIC
+
+TO A PLUMASSIER.
+
+
+Fine and feathery artisan,
+Best of Plumists (if you can
+With your art so far presume)
+Make for me a Prince's Plume--
+Feathers soft and feathers rare,
+Such as suits a Prince to wear.
+
+ First thou downiest of men,
+Seek me out a fine Pea-hen;
+Such a Hen, so tall and grand,
+As by Juno's side might stand,
+If there were no cocks at hand.
+Seek her feathers, soft as down,
+Fit to shine on Prince's crown;
+If thou canst not find them, stupid!
+Ask the way of Prior's Cupid.
+
+Ranging these in order due,
+Pluck me next an old Cuckoo;
+Emblem of the happy fates
+Of easy, kind, cornuted mates.
+Pluck him well--be sure you do--
+_Who_ wouldn’t be an old Cuckoo,
+Thus to have his plumage blest,
+Beaming on a Royal crest?
+
+ Bravo, Plumist!--now what bird
+Shall we find for Plume the third?
+You must get a learned Owl,
+Bleakest of black-letter fowl--
+Bigot bird that hates the light,[1]
+Foe to all that's fair and bright.
+Seize his quills, (so formed to pen
+Books[2] that shun the search of men;
+Books that, far from every eye,
+In "sweltered venom sleeping" lie,)
+Stick them in between the two,
+Proud Pea-hen and Old Cuckoo.
+Now you have the triple feather,
+Bind the kindred stems together
+With a silken tie whose hue
+Once was brilliant Buff and Blue;
+Sullied now--alas, how much!
+Only fit for Yarmouth's touch.
+
+ There--enough--thy task is done;
+Present, worthy George's Son;
+Now, beneath, in letters neat,
+Write "I SERVE," and all's complete.
+
+
+[1] Perceval.
+
+[2] In allusion to "the Book" which created such a sensation at that
+period.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACTS
+
+FROM THE DIARY OF A POLITICIAN.
+
+
+_Wednesday_.
+
+Thro' Manchester Square took a canter just now--
+Met the _old yellow chariot_[1] and made a low bow.
+This I did, of course, thinking 'twas loyal and civil,
+But got such a look--oh! 'twas black as the devil!
+How unlucky!--_incog_. he was travelling about,
+And I like a noodle, must go find him out.
+_Mem_.--when next by the old yellow chariot I ride,
+To remember there _is_ nothing princely inside.
+
+_Thursday_.
+
+At Levee to-day made another sad blunder--
+What _can_ be come over me lately, I wonder?
+The Prince was as cheerful as if all his life
+He had never been troubled with Friends or a Wife--
+"Fine weather," says he--to which I, who _must_ prate,
+Answered, "Yes, Sir, but _changeable_ rather, of late."
+He took it, I fear, for he lookt somewhat gruff,
+And handled his new pair of whiskers so rough,
+That before all the courtiers I feared they'd come off,
+And then, Lord, how Geramb[2] would triumphantly scoff!
+
+_Mem_.--to buy for son Dicky some unguent or lotion
+To nourish his whiskers--sure road to promotion![3]
+
+_Saturday_.
+
+Last night a Concert--vastly gay--
+Given by Lady Castlereagh.
+My Lord loves music, and we know
+Has "two strings always to his bow."[4]
+In choosing songs, the Regent named
+"_Had I a heart for falsehood framed_."
+While gentle Hertford begged and prayed
+For "_Young I am and sore afraid_."
+
+
+[1] The _incog_. vehicle of the Prince.
+
+[2] Baron Geramb, the rival of his R. H. in whiskers.
+
+[3] England is not the only country where merit of this kind is noticed
+and rewarded. "I remember," says Tavernier, "to have seen one of the King
+of Persia's porters, whose mustaches were so long that he could tie them
+behind his neck, for which reason he had a double pension."
+
+[4] A rhetorical figure used by Lord Castlereagh, in one of his speeches.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EPIGRAM.
+
+
+What news to-day?--"Oh! worse and worse--
+"Mac[1] is the Prince's Privy Purse!"--
+The Prince's _Purse_! no, no, you fool,
+You mean the Prince's _Ridicule_.
+
+
+[1] Colonel M'Mahon.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+KING CRACK[1] AND HIS IDOLS.
+
+WRITTEN AFTER THE LATE NEGOTIATION FOR A NEW MINISTRY.
+
+
+King Crack was the best of all possible Kings,
+ (At least, so his Courtiers would swear to you gladly,)
+But Crack now and then would do heterodox things,
+ And at last took to worshipping _Images_ sadly.
+
+Some broken-down Idols, that long had been placed
+ In his father's old _Cabinet_, pleased him so much,
+That he knelt down and worshipt, tho'--such was his taste!--
+ They were monstrous to look at and rotten to touch.
+
+And these were the beautiful Gods of King Crack!--
+ But his People disdaining to worship such things
+Cried aloud, one and all, "Come, your Godships must pack--
+ "You'll not do for _us_, tho' you _may_ do for _Kings_."
+
+Then trampling these images under their feet,
+ They sent Crack a petition, beginning "Great Caesar!
+"We're willing to worship; but only entreat
+ "That you'll find us some _decenter_ godheads than these are."
+
+"I'll try," says King Crack--so they furnisht him models
+ Of better shaped Gods but he sent them all back;
+Some were chiselled too fine, some had heads stead of noddles,
+ In short they were all _much_ too godlike for Crack.
+
+So he took to his darling old Idols again,
+ And just mending their legs and new bronzing their faces,
+In open defiance of Gods and of man,
+ Set the monsters up grinning once more in their places.
+
+[1] One of these antediluvian Princes, with whom Manetho and Whiston seem
+so intimately acquainted. If we had the Memoirs of Thoth, from which
+Manetho compiled his History, we should find, I dare say, that Crack was
+only a Regent, and that he, perhaps, succeeded Typhon, who (as Whiston
+says) was the last King of the Antediluvian Dynasty.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WHAT'S MY THOUGHT LIKE?
+
+
+_Quest_. Why is a Pump like Viscount Castlereagh?
+_Answ_. Because it is a slender thing of wood,
+ That up and down its awkward arm doth sway,
+ And coolly spout and spout and spout away,
+In one weak, washy, everlasting flood!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EPIGRAM.
+
+DIALOGUE BETWEEN A CATHOLIC DELEGATE AND
+HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUKE OF CUMBERLAND.
+
+
+Said his Highness to Ned,[1] with that grim face of his,
+ "Why refuse us the _Veto_, dear Catholic Neddy?"
+"Because, Sir," said Ned, looking full in his phiz,
+ "You're forbidding enough, in all conscience, already!"
+
+
+[1] Edward Byrne the head of the Delegates of the Irish Catholics.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WREATHS FOR THE MINISTERS.
+
+AN ANACREONTIC.
+
+
+Hither, Flora, Queen of Flowers!
+Haste thee from old Brompton's bowers--
+Or, (if sweeter that abode)
+From the King's well-odored Road,
+Where each little nursery bud
+Breathes the dust and quaffs the mud.
+Hither come and gayly twine
+Brightest herbs and flowers of thine
+Into wreaths for those who rule us,
+Those who rule and (some say) fool us--
+Flora, sure, will love to please
+England's Household Deities![1]
+
+ First you must then, willy-nilly,
+Fetch me many an orange lily--
+Orange of the darkest dye
+Irish Gifford can supply;--
+Choose me out the longest sprig,
+And stick it in old Eldon's wig.
+
+ Find me next a Poppy posy,
+Type of his harangues so dozy,
+Garland gaudy, dull and cool,
+To crown the head of Liverpool.
+'Twill console his brilliant brows
+For that loss of laurel boughs,
+Which they suffered (what a pity!)
+On the road to Paris City.
+
+ Next, our Castlereagh to crown,
+Bring me from the County Down,
+Withered Shamrocks which have been
+Gilded o'er to hide the green--
+(Such as Headfort brought away
+From Pall-Mall last Patrick's Day)[2]--
+Stitch the garland thro' and thro'
+With shabby threads _of every hue_--
+And as, Goddess!--_entre nous_--
+His Lordship loves (tho' best of men)
+A little _torture_ now and then,
+Crimp the leaves, thou first of Syrens,
+Crimp them with thy curling-irons.
+
+ That's enough--away, away--
+Had I leisure, I could say
+How the _oldest rose_ that grows
+Must be pluckt to deck Old Rose--
+How the Doctor's[3] brow should smile
+Crowned with wreaths of camomile.
+But time presses--to thy taste
+I leave the rest, so, prithee, haste!
+
+
+[1] The ancients, in like manner, crowned their Lares, or
+Household Gods.
+
+[2] Certain tinsel imitations of the Shamrock which are
+distributed by the Servants of Carleton House every Patrick's Day.
+
+[3] The _sobriquet_ given to Lord Sidmouth.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EPIGRAM.
+
+DIALOGUE BETWEEN A DOWAGER AND HER MAID ON THE NIGHT OF LORD YARMOUTH'S
+FETE.
+
+
+"I want the Court Guide," said my lady, "to look
+ "If the House, Seymour Place, be at 30. or 20."--
+"We've lost the _Court Guide_, Ma'am, but here's _the Red Book_.
+ "Where you'll find, I dare say, Seymour _Places_ in plenty!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HORACE, ODE XI. LIB. II.
+
+FREELY TRANSLATED BY THE PRINCE REGENT.[1]
+
+
+Come, Yarmouth, my boy, never trouble your brains,
+ About what your old crony,
+ The Emperor Boney,
+Is doing or brewing on Muscovy's plains;
+
+Nor tremble, my lad, at the state of our granaries:
+ Should there come famine,
+ Still plenty to cram in
+You always shall have, my dear Lord of the Stannaries.
+
+Brisk let us revel, while revel we may;
+For the gay bloom of fifty soon passes away,
+ And then people get fat,
+ And infirm, and--all that,
+And a wig (I confess it) so clumsily sits,
+That it frightens the little Loves out of their wits;
+
+Thy whiskers, too, Yarmouth!--alas, even they,
+ Tho' so rosy they burn,
+ Too quickly must turn
+(What a heart-breaking change for thy whiskers!) to Grey.
+
+Then why, my Lord Warden, oh! why should you fidget
+ Your mind about matters you don’t understand?
+Or why should you write yourself down for an idiot,
+ Because "_you_," forsooth, "_have the pen in your hand_!"
+
+ Think, think how much better
+ Than scribbling a letter,
+ (Which both you and I
+ Should avoid by the by,)
+How much pleasanter 'tis to sit under the bust
+ Of old Charley,[2] my friend here, and drink like a new one;
+
+While Charley looks sulky and frowns at me, just
+ As the Ghost in the Pantomime frowns at Don Juan.
+ To Crown us, Lord Warden,
+ In Cumberland's garden
+Grows plenty of _monk's hood_ in venomous sprigs:
+ While Otto of Roses
+ Refreshing all noses
+Shall sweetly exhale from our
+ whiskers and wigs.
+
+What youth of the Household will cool our Noyau
+ In that streamlet delicious,
+ That down midst the dishes,
+ All full of gold fishes,
+ Romantic doth flow?--
+ Or who will repair
+Unto Manchester Square,
+And see if the gentle _Marchesa_ be there?
+
+ Go--bid her haste hither,
+ And let her bring with her
+The newest No-Popery Sermon that's going--
+Oh! let her come, with her dark tresses flowing,
+All gentle and juvenile, curly and gay,
+In the manner of--Ackerman's Dresses for May!
+
+
+[1] This and the following are extracted from a Work, which may, some time
+or other, meet the eye of the Public--entitled "Odes of Horace, done into
+English by several Persons of Fashion."
+
+[2] Charles Fox.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HORACE, ODE XXII. LIB. I.
+
+FREELY TRANSLATED BY LORD ELDON.
+
+
+The man who keeps a conscience pure,
+ (If not his own, at least his Prince's,)
+Thro' toil and danger walks secure,
+ Looks big and black and never winces.
+
+No want has he of sword or dagger,
+ Cockt hat or ringlets of Geramb;
+Tho' Peers may laugh and Papists swagger,
+ He doesn’t care one single damn.
+
+Whether midst Irish chairmen going.
+ Or thro' St. Giles's alleys dim,
+Mid drunken Sheelahs, blasting, blowing,
+ No matter, 'tis all one to him.
+
+For instance, I, one evening late,
+ Upon a gay vacation sally,
+Singing the praise of Church and State,
+ Got (God knows how) to Cranbourne Alley.
+
+When lo! an Irish Papist darted
+ Across my path, gaunt, grim, and big--
+I did but frown and off he started,
+ Scared at me even without my wig.
+
+Yet a more fierce and raw-boned dog
+ Goes not to Mass in Dublin City,
+Nor shakes his brogue o'er Allen's Bog,
+ Nor spouts in Catholic Committee.
+
+Oh! place me midst O'Rourkes, O'Tooles,
+ The ragged royal-blood of Tara;
+Or place me where Dick Martin rules
+ The houseless wilds of Connemara;[1]
+
+Of Church and State I'll warble still,
+ Though even Dick Martin's self should grumble;
+Sweet Church and State, like Jack and Jill,
+So lovingly upon a hill--
+ Ah! ne'er like Jack and Jill to tumble![2]
+
+
+[1] I must here remark, that the said Dick Martin being a very good
+fellow, it was not at all fair to make a "_malus Jupiter_" of him.
+
+[2] There cannot be imagined a more happy illustration of the
+inseparability of Church and State, and their (what is called) "standing
+and falling together," than this ancient apologue of Jack and Jill. Jack,
+of course, represents the State in this ingenious little Allegory.
+
+ Jack fell down,
+ And broke his _Crown_,
+ And Jill came tumbling after.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE NEW COSTUME OF THE MINISTERS.
+
+
+ --_nova monstra creavit_.
+ OVID. "_Metamorph_." 1. i. v. 417.
+
+
+Having sent off the troops of brave Major Camac,
+With a swinging horse-tail at each valorous back.
+And such helmets, God bless us! as never deckt any
+Male creature before, except Signor Giovanni--
+"Let's see," said the Regent (like Titus, perplext
+With the duties of empire,) "whom _shall_ I dress next?"
+
+ He looks in the glass--but perfection is there,
+Wig, whiskers, and chin-tufts all right to a hair;[1]
+Not a single _ex_-curl on his forehead he traces--
+For curls are like Ministers, strange as the case is,
+The _falser_ they are, the more firm in their places.
+His coat he next views--but the coat who could doubt?
+For his Yarmouth's own Frenchified hand cut it out;
+Every pucker and seam were made matters of state,
+And a Grand Household Council was held on each plait.
+
+ Then whom shall he dress? shall he new-rig his brother,
+Great Cumberland's Duke, with some kickshaw or other?
+And kindly invent him more Christianlike shapes
+For his feather-bed neckcloths and pillory capes.
+Ah! no--here his ardor would meet with delays,
+For the Duke had been lately packt up in new Stays,
+So complete for the winter, he saw very plain
+'Twould be devilish hard work to _un_pack him again.
+
+ So what's to be done?--there's the Ministers, bless 'em!--
+As he _made_ the puppets, why shouldn’t he _dress_ 'em?
+"An excellent thought!--call the tailors--be nimble--
+"Let Cum bring his spy-glass, and Hertford her thimble;
+"While Yarmouth shall give us, in spite of all quizzers,
+"The last Paris cut with his true Gallic scissors."
+
+ So saying, he calls Castlereagh and the rest
+Of his heaven-born statesmen, to come and be drest.
+While Yarmouth, with snip-like and brisk expedition,
+Cuts up all at once a large Catholic Petition
+In long tailors' measures, (the Prince crying "Well-done!")
+And first _puts in hand_ my Lord Chancellor Eldon.
+
+
+[1] That model of Princes, the Emperor Commodus, was particularly
+luxurious in the dressing and ornamenting of his hair. His conscience,
+however, would not suffer him to trust himself with a barber, and he used,
+accordingly, to burn off his beard.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN A LADY AND GENTLEMAN,
+
+UPON THE ADVANTAGE OF (WHAT IS CALLED) "HAVING LAW[1] ON ONE'S SIDE."
+
+
+_The Gentleman's Proposal_.
+
+ _Legge aurea,
+ S'ei piace, ei lice_."
+
+Come fly to these arms nor let beauties so bloomy
+ To one frigid owner be tied;
+Your prudes may revile and your old ones look gloomy,
+ But, dearest, we've _Law_ on our side.
+
+Oh! think the delight of two lovers congenial,
+ Whom no dull decorums divide;
+Their error how sweet and their raptures how _venial_,
+ When once they've got Law on their side.
+
+'Tis a thing that in every King's reign has been done too:
+ Then why should it now be decried?
+If the Father has done it why shouldn’t the Son too?
+ For so argues Law on our side.
+
+And even should our sweet violation of duty
+ By cold-blooded jurors be tried,
+They can _but_ bring it in "misfortune," my beauty,
+ As long as we've Law on our side.
+
+_The Lady's Answer_.
+
+Hold, hold, my good Sir, go a little more slowly;
+ For grant me so faithless a bride,
+Such sinners as we, are a little too _lovely_,
+ To hope to have Law on our side.
+
+Had you been a great Prince, to whose star shining o'er 'em
+ The People should look for their guide,
+Then your Highness (and welcome!) might kick down decorum--
+ You'd always have Law on your side.
+
+Were you even an old Marquis, in mischief grown hoary,
+ Whose heart tho' it long ago died
+To the _pleasures_ of vice, is alive to its _glory_--
+ You still would have Law on your side.
+
+But for _you_, Sir, Crim. Con. is a path full of troubles;
+ By _my_ advice therefore abide,
+And leave the pursuit to those Princes and Nobles
+ Who have _such_ a _Law_ on their side.
+
+
+[1] In allusion to Lord Ellenborough.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+OCCASIONAL ADDRESS
+
+FOR THE OPENING OF THE NEW THEATRE OF ST. STEPHEN,
+
+INTENDED TO HAVE BEEN SPOKEN BY THE PROPRIETOR IN FULL COSTUME, ON THE
+24TH OF NOVEMBER, 1812.
+
+
+This day a New House for your edification
+We open, most thinking and right-headed nation!
+Excuse the materials--tho' rotten and bad,
+They're the best that for money just now could be had;
+And if _echo_ the charm of such houses should be,
+You will find it shall echo my speech to a T.
+
+ As for actors, we've got the old Company yet,
+The same motley, odd, tragicomical set;
+And considering they all were but clerks t'other day,
+It is truly surprising how well they can play.
+Our Manager,[1] (he who in Ulster was nurst,
+And sung _Erin go Bragh_ for the galleries first,
+But on finding _Pitt_-interest a much better thing,
+Changed his note of a sudden to _God save the King_,)
+Still wise as he's blooming and fat as he's clever,
+Himself and his speeches as _lengthy_ as ever.
+Here offers you still the full use of his breath,
+Your devoted and long-winded proser till death.
+
+ You remember last season, when things went perverse on.
+We had to engage (as a block to rehearse on)
+One Mr. Vansittart, a good sort of person,
+Who's also employed for this season to play,
+In "Raising the Wind," and "the Devil to Pay."[2]
+We expect too--at least we've been plotting and planning--
+To get that great actor from Liverpool, Canning;
+And, as at the Circus there's nothing attracts
+Like a good _single combat_ brought in 'twixt the acts,
+If the Manager should, with the help of Sir Popham,
+Get up new _diversions_ and Canning should stop 'em,
+Who knows but we'll have to announce in the papers,
+"Grand fight--second time--with additional capers."
+
+ Be your taste for the ludicrous, humdrum, or sad,
+There is plenty of each in this House to be had.
+Where our Manager ruleth, there weeping will be,
+For a _dead hand at tragedy_ always was he;
+And there never was dealer in dagger and cup,
+Who so _smilingly_ got all his tragedies up.
+His powers poor Ireland will never forget,
+And the widows of Walcheren weep o'er them yet.
+
+ So much for the actors;--for secret machinery,
+Traps, and deceptions, and shifting of scenery,
+Yarmouth and Cum are the best we can find,
+To transact all that trickery business behind.
+The former's employed too to teach us French jigs,
+Keep the whiskers in curl and look after the wigs.
+
+ In taking my leave now, I've only to say,
+A few _Seats in the House_, not as yet sold away,
+May be had of the Manager, Pat Castlereagh.
+
+
+[1] Lord Castlereagh.
+
+[2] He had recently been appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SALE OF THE TOOLS.
+
+
+ _Instrumenta regni_.--TACITUS.
+
+
+Here's a choice set of Tools for you, Ge'mmen and Ladies,
+They'll fit you quite handy, whatever your trade is;
+(Except it be _Cabinet-making_;--no doubt,
+In that delicate service they're rather worn out;
+Tho' their owner, bright youth! if he'd had his own will,
+Would have bungled away with them joyously still.)
+You see they've been pretty well _hackt_--and alack!
+What tool is there job after job will not hack?
+Their edge is but dullish it must be confest,
+And their temper, like Ellenborough's, none of the best;
+But you'll find them good hardworking Tools, upon trying,
+Were't but for their _brass_ they are well worth the buying;
+They're famous for making _blinds_, _sliders_, and _screens_,
+And are some of them excellent _turning_ machines.
+
+ The first Tool I'll put up (they call it a _Chancellor_),
+Heavy concern to both purchaser _and_ seller.
+Tho' made of pig iron yet worthy of note 'tis,
+'Tis ready to _melt_ at a half minute's notice.[1]
+Who bids? Gentle buyer! 'twill turn as thou shapest;
+'Twill make a good thumb-screw to torture a Papist;
+Or else a cramp-iron to stick in the wall
+Of some church that old women are fearful will fall;
+Or better, perhaps, (for I'm guessing at random,)
+A heavy _drag-chain_ for some Lawyer's old _Tandem_.
+Will nobody bid? It is cheap, I am sure, Sir--
+Once, twice,--going, going,--thrice, gone!--it is yours, Sir.
+To pay ready money you sha'n't be distrest,
+As a _bill_ at _long date_ suits the Chancellor best.
+
+ Come, where's the next Tool?--
+Oh! 'tis here in a trice--
+This implement, Ge'mmen, at first was a _Vice_;
+(A tenacious and close sort of tool that will let
+Nothing out of its grasp it once happens to get;)
+But it since has received a new coating of _Tin_,
+Bright enough for a Prince to behold himself in.
+Come, what shall we say for it? briskly! bid on,
+We'll the sooner get rid of it--going--quite gone.
+God be with it, such tools, if not quickly knockt down,
+Might at last cost their owner--how much? why, a _Crown_!
+
+ The next Tool I'll set up has hardly had handsel or
+Trial as yet and is _also_ a Chancellor--
+Such dull things as these should be sold by the gross;
+Yet, dull as it is, 'twill be found to _shave close_,
+And like _other_ close shavers, some courage to gather,
+This _blade_ first began by a flourish on _leather_.[2]
+You shall have it for nothing--then, marvel with me
+At the terrible _tinkering_ work there must be,
+Where a Tool such as this is (I'll leave you to judge it)
+Is placed by ill luck at the top of _the Budget_!
+
+
+[1] An allusion to Lord Eldon's lachrymose tendencies.
+
+[2] Of the taxes proposed by Mr. Vansittart, that principally
+opposed in Parliament was the additional duty on leather."--_Ann.
+Register_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE MAN AND LITTLE SOUL.
+
+A BALLAD.
+
+_To the tune of "There was a little man, and he wooed a little
+maid."_
+
+DEDICATED TO THE RT. HON. CHARLES ABBOT.
+
+
+ _arcades ambo et cantare pares_
+
+
+1813.
+
+
+There was a little Man and he had a little Soul,
+And he said, "Little Soul, let us try, try, try.
+ "Whether it's within our reach
+ "To make up a little Speech,
+"Just between little you and little I, I, I,
+ "Just between little you and little I!"
+
+ Then said his little Soul,
+ Peeping from her little hole,
+"I protest, little Man, you are stout, stout, stout,
+ "But, if it's not uncivil,
+ "Pray tell me what the devil,
+"Must our little, little speech be about, bout, bout,
+ "Must our little, little speech be about?"
+
+ The little Man lookt big,
+ With the assistance of his wig,
+And he called his little Soul to order, order, order,
+ Till she feared he'd make her jog in
+ To jail, like Thomas Croggan,
+(As she wasn't Duke or Earl) to reward her, ward her, ward her,
+ As she wasn't Duke or Earl, to reward her.
+
+ The little Man then spoke,
+ "Little Soul, it is no joke,
+"For as sure as Jacky Fuller loves a sup, sup, sup,
+ "I will tell the Prince and People
+ "What I think of Church and Steeple.
+"And my little patent plan to prop them up, up, up,
+ "And my little patent plan to prop them up."
+
+ Away then, cheek by jowl,
+ Little Man and little Soul
+Went and spoke their little speech to a tittle, tittle, tittle,
+ And the world all declare
+ That this priggish little pair
+Never yet in all their lives lookt so little, little, little.
+ Never yet in all their lives lookt so little!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+REINFORCEMENTS FOR LORD WELLINGTON.
+
+
+ _suosque tibi commendat, Troja Penates hos cape fatorum comites_.
+ VERGIL.
+
+
+1813.
+
+
+As recruits in these times are not easily got
+And the Marshal _must_ have them--pray, why should we not,
+As the last and, I grant it, the worst of our loans to him,
+Ship off the Ministry, body and bones to him?
+There's not in all England, I'd venture to swear,
+Any men we could half so conveniently spare;
+And tho' they've been helping the French for years past,
+We may thus make them useful to England at last.
+Castlereagh in our sieges might save some disgraces,
+Being used to the _taking_ and _keeping_ of _places_;
+And Volunteer Canning, still ready for joining,
+Might show off his talent for sly _under-mining_.
+Could the Household but spare us its glory and pride,
+Old Headfort at _horn-works_ again might be tried,
+And as Chief Justice make a _bold charge_ at his side:
+While Vansittart could victual the troops _upon tick_,
+And the Doctor look after the baggage and sick.
+
+ Nay, I do not see why the great Regent himself
+Should in times such as these stay at home on the shelf:
+Tho' thro' narrow defiles he's not fitted to pass,
+Yet who could resist, if he bore down _en masse_?
+And tho' oft of an evening perhaps he might prove,
+Like our Spanish confederates, "unable to move,"[1]
+Yet there's _one_ thing in war of advantage unbounded,
+Which is, that he could not with ease be _surrounded_.
+
+ In my next I shall sing of their arms and equipment:
+At present no more, but--good luck to the shipment!
+
+
+[1] The character given to the Spanish soldier, in Sir John
+Murray's memorable despatch.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HORACE, ODE I. LIB. III.
+
+A FRAGMENT.
+
+
+ _odi profanum, valgus et arceo;
+ favete linguis: carmina non prius
+ audila Musarum sacerdos
+ virginibus puerisque canto.
+ regum timendorum in proprios greges,
+ reges in ipsos imperium est Jovis_.
+
+
+1813.
+
+
+I hate thee, oh, Mob, as my Lady hates delf;
+ To Sir Francis I'll give up thy claps and thy hisses,
+Leave old Magna Charta to shift for itself,
+ And, like Godwin, write books for young masters and misses.
+Oh! it _is_ not high rank that can make the heart merry,
+ Even monarchs themselves are not free from mishap:
+Tho' the Lords of Westphalia must quake before Jerry,
+ Poor Jerry himself has to quake before Nap.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HORACE, ODE XXXVIII. LIB. I.
+
+A FRAGMENT.
+
+
+ _persico odi, puer, adparatus;
+ displicent nexae philyra coronae;_
+ mitte sectari, _Rosa_ quo locorum
+ sera moretur.
+
+
+TRANSLATED BY A TREASURY CLERK, WHILE WAITING DINNER FOR THE RIGHT HON.
+GEORGE ROBE.
+
+
+Boy, tell the Cook that I hate all nicknackeries.
+Fricassees, vol-au-vents, puffs, and gim-crackeries--
+Six by the Horse-Guards!--old Georgy is late--
+But come--lay the table-cloth--zounds! do not wait,
+Nor stop to inquire, while the dinner is staying,
+At which of his places Old Rose is delaying!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IMPROMPTU.
+
+UPON BEING OBLIGED TO LEAVE A PLEASANT PARTY, FROM THE WANT OF A PAIR OF
+BREECHES TO DRESS FOR DINNER IN.
+
+1810.
+
+
+Between Adam and me the great difference is,
+ Tho' a paradise each has been forced to resign,
+That he never wore breeches, till turned out of his,
+ While for want of my breeches, I'm banisht from mine.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LORD WELLINGTON AND THE MINISTERS.
+
+1813.
+
+
+So gently in peace Alcibiades smiled,
+ While in battle he shone forth so terribly grand,
+That the emblem they graved on his seal, was a child
+ With a thunderbolt placed in its innocent hand.
+
+Oh Wellington, long as such Ministers wield
+Your magnificent arm, the same emblem will do;
+For while _they_'re in the Council and _you_ in the Field.
+We've the _babies_ in _them_, and the _thunder_ in _you_!
+
+
+
+
+The following trifles, having enjoyed in their circulation through the
+newspapers all the celebrity and length of life to which they were
+entitled, would have been suffered to pass quietly into oblivion without
+pretending to any further distinction, had they not already been
+published, in a collective form, both in London and Paris, and, in each
+case, been mixed up with a number of other productions, to which, whatever
+may be their merit, the author of the following pages has no claim. A
+natural desire to separate his own property, worthless as it is, from that
+of others, is, he begs to say, the chief motive of the publication of this
+volume.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO SIR HUDSON LOWE.
+
+
+ _effare causam nominis,
+ utrumne mores hoc tui
+ nomen dedere, an nomen hoc
+ secuta morum regula_. AUSONIUS.
+
+
+1816.
+
+
+ Sir Hudson Lowe, Sir Hudson _Low_,
+(By name, and ah! by nature so)
+ As thou art fond of persecutions,
+Perhaps thou'st read, or heard repeated,
+How Captain Gulliver was treated,
+ When thrown among the Lilliputians.
+
+They tied him down--these little men did--
+And having valiantly ascended
+ Upon the Mighty Man's protuberance,
+They did so strut!--upon my soul,
+It must have been extremely droll
+ To see their pigmy pride's exuberance!
+
+And how the doughty mannikins
+Amused themselves with sticking pins
+ And needles in the great man's breeches:
+And how some _very_ little things,
+That past for Lords, on scaffoldings
+ Got up and worried him with speeches,
+
+Alas, alas! that it should happen
+To mighty men to be caught napping!--
+ Tho' different too these persecutions;
+For Gulliver, _there_, took the nap,
+While, _here_, the _Nap_, oh sad mishap,
+ Is taken by the Lilliputians!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AMATORY COLLOQUY BETWEEN BANK AND GOVERNMENT.
+
+1826.
+
+
+BANK.
+
+Is all then forgotten? those amorous pranks
+ You and I in our youth, my dear Government, played;
+When you called me the fondest, the truest of Banks,
+ And enjoyed the endearing _advances_ I made!
+
+When left to ourselves, unmolested and free,
+ To do all that a dashing young couple should do,
+A law against _paying_ was laid upon me,
+ But none against _owing_, dear helpmate, on you.
+
+And is it then vanisht?--that "hour (as Othello
+ So happily calls it) of Love and _Direction_?"
+And must we, like other fond doves, my dear fellow,
+ Grow good in our old age and cut the connection?
+
+GOVERNMENT.
+
+Even so, my beloved Mrs. Bank, it must be;
+ This paying in cash plays the devil with wooing:
+We've both had our swing, but I plainly foresee
+ There must soon be a stop to our _bill_ing and cooing.
+
+Propagation in reason--a small child or two--
+ Even Reverend Malthus himself is a friend to;
+The issue of some folks is moderate and few--
+ But _ours_, my dear corporate Bank, there's no end to!
+
+So--hard tho' it be on a pair, who've already
+ Disposed of so many pounds, shillings and pence;
+And in spite of that pink of prosperity, Freddy,[1]
+ So lavish of cash and so sparing of sense--
+
+The day is at hand, my Papyria[2] Venus,
+ When--high as we once used to carry our capers--
+Those soft _billet-doux_ we're now passing between us,
+ Will serve but to keep Mrs. Coutts in curl-papers:
+
+And when--if we _still_ must continue our love,
+ (After all that has past)--our amour, it is clear,
+Like that which Miss Danäe managed with Jove,
+ Must all be transacted in _bullion_, my dear!
+
+_February, 1826_.
+
+
+[1] Honorable Fredrick Robinson.
+
+[2] So called, to distinguish her from the Aure or _Golden_ Venus.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DIALOGUE BETWEEN A SOVEREIGN AND A ONE POUND NOTE.
+
+
+ _"o ego non felix, quam tu fugis, ut pavet acres
+ agna lupos, capreaeque leones."_--HOR.
+
+
+ Said a Sovereign to a Note,
+ In the pocket of his coat,
+Where they met in a neat purse of leather,
+ "How happens it, I prithee,
+ "That, tho' I'm wedded _with_ thee,
+"Fair Pound, we can never live together?
+
+ "Like your sex, fond of _change_
+ "With Silver you can range,
+"And of lots of young sixpences be mother;
+ "While with _me_--upon my word,
+ "Not my Lady and my Lord
+"Of Westmouth see so little of each other!"
+
+ The indignant Note replied
+ (Lying crumpled by his side),
+"Shame, shame, it is _yourself_ that roam, Sir--
+ "One cannot look askance,
+ "But, whip! you're off to France,
+"Leaving nothing but old rags at home, Sir.
+
+ "Your scampering began
+ "From the moment Parson Van,
+"Poor man, made us _one_ in Love's fetter;
+ "'For better or for worse'
+ "Is the usual marriage curse,
+"But ours is all 'worse' and no 'better.'
+
+ "In vain are laws past,
+ "There's nothing holds you fast,
+"Tho' you know, sweet Sovereign, I adore you--
+ "At the smallest hint in life,
+ "You forsake your lawful wife,
+"As _other_ Sovereigns did before you.
+
+ "I flirt with Silver, true--
+ "But what can ladies do,
+"When disowned by their natural protectors?
+ "And as to falsehood, stuff!
+ "I shall soon be _false_ enough,
+"When I get among those wicked Bank Directors."
+
+ The Sovereign, smiling on her,
+ Now swore upon his honor,
+To be henceforth domestic and loyal;
+ But, within an hour or two,
+ Why--I sold him to a Jew,
+And he's now at No. 10, Palais Royal.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AN EXPOSTULATION TO LORD KING.
+
+
+ _"quem das finem, rex magne, laborum?"_
+ VERGIL.
+
+
+1826.
+
+
+How _can_ you, my Lord, thus delight to torment all
+ The Peers of the realm about cheapening their corn,[1]
+When you know, if one hasn't a very high rental,
+ 'Tis hardly worth while being very high born?
+
+Why bore them so rudely, each night of your life,
+ On a question, my Lord, there's so much to abhor in?
+A question-like asking one, "How is your wife?"--
+ At once so confounded _domestic_ and _foreign_.
+
+As to weavers, no matter how poorly they feast;
+ But Peers and such animals, fed up for show,
+(Like the well-physickt elephant, lately deceased,)
+ Take a wonderful quantum of cramming, you know.
+
+You might see, my dear Baron, how bored and distrest
+ Were their high noble hearts by your merciless tale,
+When the force of the agony wrung even a jest
+ From the frugal Scotch wit of my Lord Lauderdale![2]
+
+Bright Peer! to whom Nature and Berwickshire gave
+ A humor endowed with effects so provoking,
+That when the whole House looks unusually grave
+ You may always conclude that Lord Lauderdale's joking!
+
+And then, those unfortunate weavers of Perth--
+ Not to know the vast difference Providence dooms
+Between weavers of Perth and Peers of high birth,
+ 'Twixt those who have _heir_looms, and those who've but looms!
+
+"To talk _now_ of starving!"--as great Athol said[3]--
+ (And the nobles all cheered and the bishops all wondered,)
+"When some years ago he and others had fed
+ "Of these same hungry devils about fifteen hundred!"
+
+It follows from hence--and the Duke's very words
+ Should be publisht wherever poor rogues of this craft are--
+That weavers, _once_ rescued from starving by Lords,
+ Are bound to be starved by said Lords ever after.
+
+When Rome was uproarious, her knowing patricians
+ Made "Bread and the Circus" a cure for each _row_;
+But not so the plan of _our_ noble physicians,
+ "No Bread and the Treadmill,"'s the regimen now.
+
+So cease, my dear Baron of Ockham, your prose,
+ As I shall my poetry--_neither_ convinces;
+And all we have spoken and written but shows,
+ When you tread on a nobleman's _corn_,[4]
+how he winces.
+
+
+[1] See the proceedings of the Lords, Wednesday, March 1, 1826,
+when Lord King was severely reproved by several of the noble Peers, for
+making so many speeches against the Corn Laws.
+
+[2] This noble Earl said, that "when he heard the petition came
+from ladies' boot and shoe-makers, he thought it must be against the
+'corns' which they inflicted on the fair sex."
+
+[3] The Duke of Athol said, that "at a former period, when these
+weavers were in great distress, the landed interest of Perth had supported
+1500 of them, it was a poor return for these very men now to petition
+against the persons who had fed them."
+
+[4] An improvement, we flatter ourselves, on Lord L.'s joke.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SINKING FUND CRIED.
+
+
+ "Now what, we ask, is become of this Sinking Fund--these eight
+ millions of surplus above expenditure, which were to reduce the
+ interest of the national debt by the amount of four hundred thousand
+ pounds annually? Where, indeed, is the Sinking Fund itself?"
+ --_The Times_.
+
+
+ Take your bell, take your bell,
+ Good Crier, and tell
+To the Bulls and the Bears, till their ears are stunned,
+ That, lost or stolen,
+ Or fallen thro' a hole in
+The Treasury floor, is the Sinking Fund!
+
+ O yes! O yes!
+ Can anybody guess
+What the deuce has become of this Treasury wonder?
+ It has Pitt's name on't,
+ All brass, in the front,
+And Robinson's scrawled with a goose-quill under.
+
+ Folks well knew what
+ Would soon be its lot,
+When Frederick and Jenky set hob-nobbing,[1]
+ And said to each other,
+ "Suppose, dear brother,
+"We make this funny old Fund worth robbing."
+
+ We are come, alas!
+ To a very pretty pass--
+Eight Hundred Millions of score, to pay,
+
+ With but Five in the till,
+ To discharge the bill,
+And even that Five, too, whipt away!
+
+ Stop thief! stop thief!--
+ From the Sub to the Chief,
+These _Gemmen_ of Finance are plundering cattle--
+ Call the watch--call Brougham,
+ Tell Joseph Hume,
+That best of Charleys, to spring his rattle.
+
+ Whoever will bring
+ This aforesaid thing
+To the well-known House of Robinson and Jenkin,
+ Shall be paid, with thanks,
+ In the notes of banks,
+Whose Funds have all learned "the Art of Sinking."
+
+ O yes! O yes!
+ Can anybody guess
+What the devil has become of this Treasury wonder?
+ It has Pitt's name on't,
+ All brass, in the front,
+And Robinson's, scrawled with a goose-quill under.
+
+
+[1] In 1824, when the Sinking Fund was raised by the imposition of new
+taxes to the sum of five millions.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO THE GODDESS CERES.
+
+BY SIR THOMAS LETHBRIDGE.
+
+
+ "legiferoe Cereri Phoeboque."--VERGIL.
+
+
+Dear Goddess of Corn whom the ancients, we know,
+ (Among other odd whims of those comical bodies,)
+Adorned with somniferous poppies to show
+ Thou wert always a true Country-gentleman's Goddess.
+
+Behold in his best shooting-jacket before thee
+ An eloquent 'Squire, who most humbly beseeches.
+Great Queen of Mark-lane (if the thing doesn’t bore thee),
+ Thou'lt read o'er the last of his--_never_-last speeches.
+
+Ah! Ceres, thou knowest not the slander and scorn
+ Now heapt upon England's 'Squirearchy, so boasted;
+Improving on Hunt,[1] 'tis no longer the Corn,
+ 'Tis the _growers_ of Corn that are now, alas! roasted.
+
+In speeches, in books, in all shapes they attack us--
+ Reviewers, economists--fellows no doubt
+That you, my dear Ceres and Venus and Bacchus
+ And Gods of high fashion, know little about.
+
+There's Bentham, whose English is all his own making,--
+ Who thinks just as little of settling a nation
+As he would of smoking his pipe or of taking
+ (What he himself calls) his "postprandial vibration."[2]
+
+There are two Mr. Mills to whom those that love reading
+ Thro' all that's unreadable call very clever;--
+And whereas Mill Senior makes war on _good_ breeding,
+ Mill Junior makes war on all _breeding_ whatever!
+
+In short, my dear Goddess, old England's divided
+ Between _ultra_ blockheads and superfine sages;--
+With _which_ of these classes we landlords have sided
+ Thou'lt find in my Speech if thou'lt read a few pages.
+
+For therein I've proved to my own satisfaction
+ And that of all 'Squires I've the honor of meeting
+That 'tis the most senseless and foul-mouthed detraction
+ To say that poor people are fond of cheap eating.
+
+On the contrary, such the "_chaste_ notions"[3] of food
+ That dwell in each pale manufacturer's heart,
+They would scorn any law, be it ever so good,
+ That would make thee, dear Goddess, less dear than thou art!
+
+And, oh! for Monopoly what a blest day,
+ Whom the Land and the Silk[4] shall in fond combination
+(Like _Sulky_ and _Silky_, that pair in the play,)[5]
+ Cry out with one voice for High Rents and Starvation!
+
+Long life to the Minister!--no matter who,
+ Or how dull he may be, if with dignified spirit he
+Keeps the ports shut--and the people's mouths too--
+ We shall all have a long run of Freddy's prosperity,
+
+And, as for myself, who've, like Hannibal, sworn
+ To hate the whole crew who would take our rents from us,
+Had England but _One_ to stand by thee, Dear Corn,
+ That last, honest Uni-Corn[6] would be Sir Thomas!
+
+
+[1] A sort of "breakfast-power," composed of roasted corn, was
+about this time introduced by Mr. Hunt, as a substitute for coffee.
+
+[2] The venerable Jeremy's phrase for his after-dinner walk.
+
+[3] A phrase in one of Sir Thomas's last speeches.
+
+[4] Great efforts were, at that time, making for the exclusion of
+foreign silk.
+
+[5] "Road to Ruin."
+
+[6] This is meant not so much for a pun, as in allusion to the natural
+history of the Unicorn, which is supposed to be, something between the
+_Bos_ and the _Asinus_, and, as Rees's Cyclopaedia assures us,
+has a particular liking for everything "chaste."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A HYMN OF WELCOME AFTER THE RECESS.
+
+
+ _"animas sapientiores fieri quiescendo."_
+
+
+And now-cross-buns and pancakes o'er--
+Hail, Lords and Gentlemen, once more!
+ Thrice hail and welcome, Houses Twain!
+The short eclipse of April-Day
+Having (God grant it!) past away,
+ Collective Wisdom, shine again!
+
+Come, Ayes and Noes, thro' thick and thin,--
+With Paddy Holmes for whipper-in,--
+ Whate'er the job, prepared to back it;
+Come, voters of Supplies--bestowers
+Of jackets upon trumpet-blowers,
+ At eighty mortal pounds the jacket![1]
+
+Come--free, at length, from Joint-Stock cares--
+Ye Senators of many Shares,
+ Whose dreams of premium knew no boundary;
+So fond of aught like _Company_,
+That you would even have taken _tea_
+ (Had you been askt) with Mr. Goundry.[2]
+
+Come, matchless country-gentlemen;
+Come, wise Sir Thomas--wisest then
+ When creeds and corn-lords are debated;
+Come, rival even the Harlot Red,
+And show how wholly into _bread_
+ A 'Squire is _transubstantiated_,
+
+Come, Lauderdale, and tell the world,
+That--surely as thy scratch is curled
+ As never scratch was curled before--
+Cheap eating does more harm than good,
+And working-people spoiled by food,
+ The less they eat, will work the more.
+
+Come, Goulburn, with thy glib defence
+(Which thou'dst have made for Peter's Pence)
+ Of Church-rates, worthy of a halter;
+Two pipes of port (_old_ port, 'twas said
+By honest _New_port)[3] bought and paid
+ By Papists for the Orange Altar![4]
+
+Come, Horton, with thy plan so merry
+For peopling Canada from Kerry--
+ Not so much rendering Ireland quiet,
+As grafting on the dull Canadians
+That liveliest of earth's contagions,
+ The _bull_-pock of Hibernian riot!
+
+Come all, in short, ye wondrous men
+Of wit and wisdom, come again;
+ Tho' short your absence, all deplore it--
+Oh, come and show, whate'er men say,
+That you can _after_ April-Day,
+ Be just as--sapient as _before_ it.
+
+
+[1] An item of expense which Mr. Hume in vain endeavored tog et rid of:--
+trumpeters, it appears like the men of All-Souls, must be "_bene
+vestiti_."
+
+[2] The gentleman, lately before the public, who kept his _Joint_-Stock
+Tea Company all to himself, singing "Te _solo adoro_."
+
+[3] Sir John Newport.
+
+[4] This charge of two pipes of port for the sacramental wine is a
+precious specimen of the sort of rates levied upon their Catholic fellow-
+parishioners by the Irish Protestants. "The thirst that from the soul doth
+rise Doth ask a drink divine."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MEMORABILIA OF LAST WEEK.
+
+MONDAY, MARCH 13, 1826.
+
+
+The Budget--quite charming and witty--no hearing,
+For plaudits and laughs, the good things that were in it;--
+Great comfort to find, tho' the speech isn't _cheering_,
+ That all its gay auditors _were_ every minute.
+
+What, _still_ more prosperity!--mercy upon us,
+ "This boy'll be the death of me"--oft as, already,
+Such smooth Budgeteers have genteelly undone us,
+ For _Ruin made easy_ there's no one like Freddy.
+
+TUESDAY.
+
+Much grave apprehension exprest by the Peers,
+ Lest--calling to life the old Peachums and Lockitts--
+The large stock of gold we're to have in three years,
+ Should all find its way into highwaymen's pockets![1]
+
+WEDNESDAY.
+
+Little doing--for sacred, oh Wednesday, thou art
+ To the seven-o'-clock joys of full many a table--
+When _the Members_ all meet, to make much of that part,
+ With which they so rashly fell out in the Fable.
+
+It appeared, tho', to-night, that--as church-wardens yearly,
+ Eat up a small baby--those cormorant sinners.
+The Bankrupt Commissioners, _bolt_ very nearly
+ A moderate-sized bankrupt, _tout chaud_, for their dinners![2]
+
+_Nota bene_--a rumor to-day, in the city,
+"Mr. Robinson just has resigned"--what a pity!
+
+The Bulls and the Bears all fell a sobbing,
+When they heard of the fate of poor Cock _Robin_:
+While thus, to the nursery tune, so pretty,
+A murmuring _Stock_-dove breathed her ditty:--
+
+Alas, poor _Robin_, he crowed as long
+ And as sweet as a prosperous Cock could crow;
+But his _note_ was _small_ and the _gold_-finch's song
+ Was a pitch too high for Robin to go.
+ Who'll make his shroud?
+
+"I," said the Bank, "tho' he played me a prank,
+ "While I have a rag, poor _Rob_ shall be rolled in't,
+"With many a pound I'll paper him round,
+ "Like a plump rouleau--_without_ the gold in it."
+
+
+[1] "Another objection to a metallic currency was, that it produced a
+greater number of highway robberies."--_Debate in the Lords_.
+
+[2] Mr. Abercromby's statement of the enormous tavern bills of the
+Commissioners of Bankrupts.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ALL IN THE FAMILY WAY.
+
+A NEW PASTORAL BALLAD.
+
+(SUNG IN THE CHARACTER OF BRITANNIA.)
+
+
+ "The Public Debt is due from ourselves to ourselves, and resolves
+ itself into a Family Account."--_Sir Robert Peel's Letter_.
+
+
+Tune--_My banks are all furnisht with bees_.
+
+
+My banks are all furnisht with rags,
+ So thick, even Freddy can't thin 'em;
+I've torn up my old money-bags,
+ Having little or nought to put in 'em.
+My tradesmen are smashing by dozens,
+ But this is all nothing, they say;
+For bankrupts since Adam are cousins,--
+ So, it's all in the family way.
+
+My Debt not a penny takes from me.
+ As sages the matter explain;--
+Bob owes it to Tom, and then Tommy
+ Just owes it to Bob back again.
+Since all have thus taken to _owing_,
+ There's nobody left that can _pay_;
+And this is the way to keep going,--
+ All quite in the family way.
+
+My senators vote away millions,
+ To put in Prosperity's budget;
+And tho' it were billions or trillions,
+ The generous rogues wouldn’t grudge it.
+'Tis all but a family _hop_,
+ 'Twas Pitt began dancing the hay;
+Hands round!--why the deuce should we stop?
+ 'Tis all in the family way.
+
+My laborers used to eat mutton,
+ As any great man of the State does;
+And now the poor devils are put on
+ Small rations of tea and potatoes.
+But cheer up, John, Sawney, and Paddy,
+ The King is your father, they say;
+So even if you starve for your Daddy,
+ 'Tis all in the family way.
+
+My rich manufacturers tumble,
+ My poor ones have nothing to chew;
+And even if themselves do not grumble
+ Their stomachs undoubtedly do.
+But coolly to fast _en famille_,
+ Is as good for the soul as to pray;
+And famine itself is genteel,
+ When one starves in a family way.
+
+I have found out a secret for Freddy,
+ A secret for next Budget day;
+Tho' perhaps he may know it already,
+ As he too's a sage in his way.
+When next for the Treasury scene he
+ Announces "the Devil to pay,"
+Let him write on the bills, "_nota bene_,
+ "'Tis all in the family way."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BALLAD FOR THE CAMBRIDGE ELECTION.
+
+
+ "I authorized my Committee to take the step which they did, of
+ proposing a fair comparison of strength, upon the understanding that
+ _whichever of the two should prove to be the weakest_, should
+ give way to the other."
+ --_Extract from Mr. W. J. Bankes's Letter to Mr. Goulbourn_.
+
+
+Bankes is weak, and Goulbourn too,
+ No one e'er the fact denied;--
+Which is "weakest" of the two,
+ Cambridge can alone decide.
+Choose between them, Cambridge, pray,
+Which is weakest, Cambridge, say.
+
+Goulbourn of the Pope afraid is,
+ Bankes, as much afraid as he;
+Never yet did two old ladies
+ On this point so well agree.
+Choose between them, Cambridge, pray,
+Which is weakest. Cambridge, say.
+
+Each a different mode pursues,
+ Each the same conclusion reaches;
+Bankes is foolish in Reviews,
+ Goulbourn foolish in his speeches.
+Choose between them, Cambridge, pray,
+Which is weakest, Cambridge, say.
+
+Each a different foe doth damn,
+ When his own affairs have gone ill;
+Bankes he damneth Buckingham,
+ Goulbourn damneth Dan O'Connell.
+Choose between them, Cambridge, pray,
+Which is weakest, Cambridge, say.
+Once we know a horse's neigh
+ Fixt the election to a throne,
+So whichever first shall _bray_
+ Choose him, Cambridge, for thy own.
+Choose him, choose him by his bray,
+Thus elect him, Cambridge, pray.
+
+_June_, 1826.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MR. ROGER DODSWORTH.
+
+1826.
+
+
+TO THE EDITOR OF THE TIMES.
+
+Sir--Having just heard of the wonderful resurrection of Mr. Roger
+Dodsworth from under an _avalanche_, where he had remained, _bien
+frappe_, it seems, for the last 166 years, I hasten to impart to you a
+few reflections on the subject.--Yours, etc.
+
+ _Laudator Temporis Acti_.
+
+
+What a lucky turn-up!--just as Eldon's withdrawing,
+ To find thus a gentleman, frozen in the year
+Sixteen hundred and sixty, who only wants thawing
+ To serve for _our_ times quite as well as the Peer;--
+
+To bring thus to light, not the Wisdom alone
+ Of our Ancestors, such as 'tis found on our shelves,
+But in perfect condition, full-wigged and full-grown,
+ To shovel up one of those wise bucks themselves!
+
+Oh thaw Mr. Dodsworth and send him safe home--
+ Let him learn nothing useful or new on the way;
+With his wisdom kept snug from the light let him come,
+ And our Tories will hail him with "Hear!" and "Hurrah!"
+
+What a God-send to _them_!--a good, obsolete man,
+ Who has never of Locke or Voltaire been a reader;--
+Oh thaw Mr. Dodsworth as fast as you can,
+ And the Lonsdales and Hertfords shall choose him for leader.
+
+Yes, Sleeper of Ages, thou _shalt_ be their chosen;
+ And deeply with thee will they sorrow, good men,
+To think that all Europe has, since thou wert frozen,
+ So altered thou hardly wilt know it again.
+
+And Eldon will weep o'er each sad innovation
+ Such oceans of tears, thou wilt fancy that he
+Has been also laid up in a long congelation,
+ And is only now thawing, dear Roger, like thee.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+COPY OF AN INTERCEPTED DESPATCH.
+
+FROM HIS EXCELLENCY DON STREPITOSO DIABOLO, ENVOY EXTRAORDINARY TO HIS
+SATANIC MAJESTY.
+
+St. James's Street, July 1, 1826.
+
+
+Great Sir, having just had the good luck to catch
+ An official young demon, preparing to go,
+Ready booted and spurred, with a black-leg despatch
+ From the Hell here at Crockford's, to _our_ Hell below--
+
+I write these few lines to your Highness Satanic,
+ To say that first having obeyed your directions
+And done all the mischief I could in "the Panic,"
+ My next special care was to help the Elections.
+
+Well knowing how dear were those times to thy soul,
+ When every good Christian tormented his brother,
+And caused, in thy realm, such a saving of coal,
+ From all coming down, ready grilled by each other;
+
+Remembering besides how it pained thee to part
+ With the old Penal Code--that _chef-d'oeuvre_ of Law,
+In which (tho' to own it too modest thou art)
+ We could plainly perceive the fine touch of thy claw;
+
+I thought, as we ne'er can those good times revive,
+ (Tho' Eldon, with help from your Highness would try,)
+'Twould still keep a taste for Hell's music alive,
+ Could we get up a thundering No-Popery cry;--
+
+That yell which when chorused by laics and clerics,
+ So like is to _ours_, in its spirit and tone.
+That I often nigh laugh myself into hysterics,
+ To think that Religion should make it her own.
+
+So, having sent down for the original notes
+ Of the chorus as sung by your Majesty's choir
+With a few pints of lava to gargle the throats
+ Of myself and some others who sing it "with fire,"[1]
+
+Thought I, "if the Marseillais Hymn could command
+ "Such audience, tho' yelled by a _Sans-culotte_ crew
+"What wonders shall _we_ do, who've men in our band,
+ "That not only wear breeches but petticoats too."
+
+Such _then_ were my hopes, but with sorrow, your Highness,
+ I'm forced to confess--be the cause what it will,
+Whether fewness of voices or hoarseness or shyness,--
+ Our Beelzebub Chorus has gone off but ill.
+
+The truth is no placeman now knows his right key,
+ The Treasury pitch-pipe of late is so various;
+And certain _base_ voices, that lookt for a fee
+ At the _York_ music-meeting now think it precarious.
+
+Even some of our Reverends _might_ have been warmer,--
+ Tho' one or two capital roarers we've had;
+Doctor Wise[2]is for instance a charming performer,
+ And _Huntingdon_ Maberley's yell was not bad!
+
+Altogether however the thing was not hearty;--
+ Even Eldon allows we got on but so so;
+And when next we attempt a No-Popery party,
+ We _must_, please your Highness, recruit _from below_.
+
+But hark! the young Black-leg is cracking his whip--
+ Excuse me, Great Sir-there's no time to be civil;--
+The next opportunity shan't be let slip,
+ But, till then,
+ I'm, in haste, your most dutiful
+ DEVIL.
+
+ _July, 1826_
+
+
+[1] _Con fuoco_--a music-book direction.
+
+[2] This reverend gentleman distinguished himself at the Reading election.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MILLENNIUM.
+
+SUGGESTED BY THE LATE WORK OF THE REVEREND MR. IRVING "ON PROPHECY."
+
+1826
+
+
+A millennium at hand!--I'm delighted to hear it--
+ As matters both public and private now go,
+With multitudes round us all starving or near it.
+ A good, rich Millennium will come _à-propos_.
+
+Only think, Master Fred, what delight to behold,
+ Instead of thy bankrupt old City of Rags,
+A bran-new Jerusalem built all of gold,
+ Sound bullion throughout from the roof to the flags--
+
+A City where wine and cheap corn[1] shall abound--
+ A celestial _Cocaigne_ on whose buttery shelves
+We may swear the best things of this world will be found,
+ As your Saints seldom fail to take care of themselves!
+
+Thanks, reverend expounder of raptures Elysian,
+ Divine Squintifobus who, placed within reach
+Of two opposite worlds, by a twist of your vision
+ Can cast at the same time a sly look at each;--
+
+Thanks, thanks for the hope thou affordest, that we
+ May even in our own times a Jubilee share.
+Which so long has been promist by prophets like thee,
+ And so often postponed, we began to despair.
+
+There was Whiston[2] who learnedly took Prince Eugene
+ For the man who must bring the Millennium about;
+There's Faber whose pious productions have been
+ All belied ere his book's first edition was out;--
+
+There was Counsellor Dobbs, too, an Irish M. P.,
+ Who discoursed on the subject with signal _eclat_,
+And, each day of his life sat expecting to see
+ A Millennium break out in the town of Armagh![3]
+
+There was also--but why should I burden my lay
+ With your Brotherses, Southcotes, and names less deserving,
+When all past Millenniums henceforth must give way
+ To the last new Millennium of Orator Irving.
+
+Go on, mighty man,--doom them all to the shelf,--
+ And when next thou with Prophecy troublest thy sconce,
+Oh forget not, I pray thee, to prove that thyself
+ Art the Beast (Chapter iv.) that sees nine ways at once.
+
+
+[1] "A measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley
+for a penny."--Rev. vi.
+
+[2] When Whiston presented to Prince Eugene the Essay in which he
+attempted to connect his victories over the Turks with Revelation, the
+Prince is said to have replied, that "he was not aware he had ever had
+ever had honor of being known to St. John".
+
+[3] Mr. Dobbs was a member of the Irish Parliament, and, on all other
+subjects but the Millennium, a very sensible person: he chose Armagh as
+the scene of his Millennium on account of the name Armageddon mentioned in
+Revelation.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE THREE DOCTORS.
+
+
+ _doctoribus loetamur tribus_.
+
+
+1826.
+
+
+Tho' many great Doctors there be,
+ There are three that all Doctors out-top,
+Doctor Eady, that famous M. D.,
+ Doctor Southey, and dear Doctor Slop.[1]
+
+The purger, the proser, the bard--
+ All quacks in a different style;
+Doctor Southey writes books by the yard.
+ Doctor Eady writes puffs by the mile![2]
+
+Doctor Slop, in no merit outdone
+ By his scribbling or physicking brother,
+Can dose us with stuff like the one.
+ Ay, and _doze_ us with stuff like the other.
+
+Doctor Eady good company keeps
+ With "No Popery" scribes, on the walls;
+Doctor Southey as gloriously sleeps
+ With "No Popery" scribes on the stalls.
+
+Doctor Slop, upon subjects divine,
+ Such bedlamite slaver lets drop,
+Taat if Eady should take the _mad_ line,
+ He'll be sure of a patient in Slop.
+
+Seven millions of Papists, no less,
+ Doctor Southey attacks, like a Turk;
+Doctor Eady, less bold, I confess,
+ Attacks but his maid-of-all-work
+
+Doctor Southey, for _his_ grand attack,
+ Both a laureate and pensioner is;
+While poor Doctor Eady, alack,
+ Has been _had up_ to Bow-street for his!
+
+And truly, the law does so blunder,
+ That tho' little blood has been spilt, he
+May probably suffer as, under
+ The _Chalking_ Act, _known_ to be guilty.
+
+So much for the merits sublime
+ (With whose catalogue ne'er should I stop)
+Of the three greatest lights of our time,
+ Doctor Eady and Southey and Slop!
+
+Should you ask me, to _which_ of the three
+ Great Doctors the preference should fall,
+As a matter of course I agree
+ Doctor Eady must go to _the wall_.
+
+But as Southey with laurels is crowned,
+ And Slop with a wig and a tail is,
+Let Eady's bright temples be bound
+ With a swingeing "Corona _Muralis_!"[3]
+
+
+[1] The editor of the Morning Herald, so nicknamed.
+
+[2] Alluding to the display of this doctor's name, in chalk, on all the
+walls round the metropolis.
+
+[3] A crown granted as a reward among the Romans to persons who performed
+any extraordinary exploits upon wall, such as scaling them, battering
+them, etc.--No doubt, writing upon them, to the extent Dr. Eady does,
+would equally establish a claim to the honor.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EPITAPH ON A TUFT-HUNTER.
+
+
+Lament, lament, Sir Isaac Heard,
+ Put mourning round thy page, Debrett,
+For here lies one who ne'er preferred
+ A Viscount to a Marquis yet.
+
+Beside him place the God of Wit,
+ Before him Beauty's rosiest girls,
+Apollo for a _star_ he'd quit,
+ And Love's own sister for an Earl's.
+
+Did niggard fate no peers afford,
+ He took of course to peers' relations;
+And rather than not sport a Lord
+ Put up with even the last creations;
+
+Even Irish names could he but tag 'em
+ With "Lord" and "Duke," were sweet to call;
+And at a pinch Lord Ballyraggum
+ Was better than no Lord at all.
+
+Heaven grant him now some noble nook,
+ For rest his soul! he'd rather be
+Genteelly damned beside a Duke,
+ Than saved in vulgar company.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO A HAT.
+
+
+ --_altum aedificat caput_."
+ JUVENAL
+
+1826.
+
+
+Hail, reverent Hat!--sublime mid all
+ The minor felts that round thee grovel;--
+Thou that the Gods "a Delta" call
+ While meaner mortals call the "shovel."
+When on thy shape (like pyramid,
+ Cut horizontally in two)[1]
+I raptured gaze, what dreams unbid
+ Of stalls and mitres bless my view!
+
+That brim of brims so sleekly good--
+ Not flapt, like dull Wesleyans', down,
+But looking (as all churchmen's should)
+ Devoutly upward--towards the _crown_.
+
+Gods! when I gaze upon that brim,
+ So redolent of Church all over,
+What swarms of Tithes in vision dim,--
+Some-pig-tailed, some like cherubim,
+ With ducklings' wings--around it hover!
+Tenths of all dead and living things,
+That Nature into being brings,
+From calves and corn to chitterlings.
+
+Say, holy Hat, that hast, of cocks,
+The very cock most orthodox.
+To _which_ of all the well-fed throng
+Of Zion,[2] joy'st thou to belong?
+Thou'rt _not_ Sir Harcourt Lees's--no-
+ For hats grow like the heads that wear 'em:
+And hats, on heads like his, would grow
+ Particularly _harum-scarum_.
+
+Who knows but thou mayst deck the pate
+Of that famed Doctor Ad-mth-te,
+(The reverend rat, whom we saw stand
+On his hind-legs in Westmoreland,)
+Who changed so quick from _blue_ to _yellow_,
+ And would from _yellow_ back to _blue_,
+And back again, convenient fellow,
+ If 'twere his interest so to do.
+
+Or haply smartest of triangles,
+ Thou art the hat of Doctor Owen;
+The hat that, to his vestry wrangles,
+ That venerable priest doth go in,--
+And then and there amid the stare
+Of all St. Olave's, takes the chair
+And quotes with phiz right orthodox
+ The example of his reverend brothers,
+To prove that priests all fleece their flocks
+ And _he_ must fleece as well as others.
+
+Blest Hat! (whoe'er thy lord may be)
+Thus low I take off mine to thee,
+The homage of a layman's _castor_,
+To the spruce _delta_ of his pastor.
+Oh mayst thou be, as thou proceedest,
+ Still smarter cockt, still brusht the brighter,
+Till, bowing all the way, thou leadest
+ Thy sleek possessor to a mitre!
+
+
+[1] So described by a Reverend Historian of the Church:--"A Delta hat like
+the horizontal section of a pyramid."--GRANT'S "History of the English
+Church."
+
+[2] Archbishop Magee affectionately calls the Church Establishment of
+Ireland "the little Zion."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NEWS FOR COUNTRY COUSINS.
+
+
+Dear Coz, as I know neither you nor Miss Draper,
+When Parliament's up, ever take in a paper,
+But trust for your news to such stray odds and ends
+As you chance to pick up from political friends-
+Being one of this well-informed class, I sit down
+To transmit you the last newest news that's in town.
+
+As to Greece and Lord Cochrane, things couldn't look better--
+His Lordship (who promises now to fight faster)
+Has just taken Rhodes and despatched off a letter
+To Daniel O'Connell, to make him Grand Master;
+Engaging to change the old name, if he can,
+From the Knights of St. John to the Knights of St. Dan;--
+Or if Dan should prefer (as a still better whim)
+Being made the Colossus, 'tis all one to him.
+
+From Russia the last accounts are that the Tsar--
+Most generous and kind as all sovereigns are,
+And whose first princely act (as you know, I suppose)
+Was to give away all his late brother's old clothes[1]--
+Is now busy collecting with brotherly care
+The late Emperor's nightcaps, and thinks, of bestowing
+One nightcap apiece (if he has them to spare)
+On all the distinguisht old ladies now going.
+(While I write, an arrival from Riga--the "Brothers"--
+Having nightcaps on board for Lord Eldon and others.)
+
+Last advices from India--Sir Archy, 'tis thought,
+Was near catching a Tartar (the first ever caught
+In N. Lat. 2l.)--and his Highness Burmese,
+Being very hard prest to shell out the rupees,
+And not having rhino sufficient, they say, meant
+To pawn his august Golden Foot[2] for the payment.
+
+(How lucky for monarchs, that thus when they choose
+Can establish a _running_ account with the Jews!)
+The security being what Rothschild calls "goot,"
+A loan will be shortly, of course, set _on foot_;
+The parties are Rothschild, A. Baring and Co.
+With three other great pawnbrokers: each takes a toe,
+And engages (lest Gold-foot should give us _leg_-bail,
+As he did once before) to pay down _on the nail_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This is all for the present--what vile pens and paper!
+Yours truly, dear Cousin--best love to Miss Draper.
+
+_September_, 1826.
+
+
+[1] A distribution was made of the Emperor Alexander's military wardrobe
+by his successor.
+
+[2] This potentate styles himself the Monarch of the Golden foot.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A VISION.
+
+BY THE AUTHOR OF "CHRISTABEL."
+
+
+"Up!" said the Spirit and ere I could pray
+One hasty orison, whirled me away
+To a Limbo, lying--I wist not where--
+Above or below, in earth or air;
+For it glimmered o'er with a _doubtful_ light,
+One couldn't say whether 'twas day or night;
+And 'twas crost by many a mazy track,
+One didn't know how to get on or back;
+And I felt like a needle that's going astray
+(With its _one_ eye out) thro' a bundle of hay;
+When the Spirit he grinned, and whispered me,
+"Thou'rt now in the Court of Chancery!"
+
+Around me flitted unnumbered swarms
+Of shapeless, bodiless, tailless forms;
+(Like bottled-up babes that grace the room
+Of that worthy knight, Sir Everard Home)--
+All of them, things half-killed in rearing;
+Some were lame--some wanted _hearing_;
+Some had thro' half a century run,
+Tho' they hadn't a leg to stand upon.
+Others, more merry, as just beginning,
+Around on a _point of law_ were spinning;
+Or balanced aloft, 'twixt _Bill_ and _Answer_,
+Lead at each end, like a tight-rope dancer.
+Some were so _cross_ that nothing could please 'em;-
+Some gulpt down _affidavits_ to ease 'em--
+All were in motion, yet never a one,
+Let it _move_ as it might, could ever move _on_,
+"These," said the Spirit, "you plainly see,
+"Are what they call suits in Chancery!"
+
+I heard a loud screaming of old and young,
+Like a chorus by fifty Vellutis sung;
+Or an Irish Dump ("the words by Moore ")
+At an amateur concert screamed in score;--
+So harsh on my ear that wailing fell
+Of the wretches who in this Limbo dwell!
+It seemed like the dismal symphony
+Of the shapes' Aeneas in hell did see;
+Or those frogs whose legs a barbarous cook
+Cut off and left the frogs in the brook,
+To cry all night, till life's last dregs,
+"Give us our legs!--give us our legs!"
+Touched with the sad and sorrowful scene,
+I askt what all this yell might mean,
+When the Spirit replied, with a grin of glee,
+"'Tis the cry of the Suitors in Chancery!"
+
+I lookt and I saw a wizard rise,[1]
+With a wig like a cloud before men's eyes.
+In his aged hand he held a wand,
+Wherewith he beckoned his embryo band,
+And they moved and moved as he waved it o'er,
+But they never get on one inch the more.
+And still they kept limping to and fro,
+Like Ariels round old Prospero--
+Saying, "Dear Master, let us go,"
+But still old Prospero answered "No."
+And I heard the while that wizard elf
+Muttering, muttering spells to himself,
+While o'er as many old papers he turned,
+As Hume e'er moved for or Omar burned.
+He talkt of his virtue--"tho' some, less nice,
+(He owned with a sigh) preferred his _Vice_"--
+And he said, "I think"--"I doubt"--"I hope,"
+Called God to witness, and damned the Pope;
+With many more sleights of tongue and hand
+I couldn't for the soul of me understand.
+Amazed and posed, I was just about
+To ask his name, when the screams without,
+The merciless clack of the imps within,
+And that conjuror's mutterings, made such a din,
+That, startled, I woke--leapt up in my bed--
+Found the Spirit, the imps, and the conjuror fled,
+And blest my stars, right pleased to see,
+That I wasn't as yet in Chancery.
+
+
+[1] The Lord Chancellor Eldon.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE PETITION OF THE ORANGEMEN OF IRELAND.
+
+1826.
+
+
+To the people of England, the humble Petition
+ Of Ireland's disconsolate Orangemen, showing--
+That sad, very sad, is our present condition;--
+ Our jobbing all gone and our noble selves going;--
+
+That forming one seventh, within a few fractions,
+ Of Ireland's seven millions of hot heads and hearts,
+We hold it the basest of all base transactions
+ To keep us from murdering the other six parts;--
+
+That as to laws made for the good of the many,
+ We humbly suggest there is nothing less true;
+As all human laws (and our own, more than any)
+ Are made _by_ and _for_ a particular few:--
+
+That much it delights every true Orange brother
+ To see you in England such ardor evince,
+In discussing _which_ sect most tormented the other,
+ And burned with most _gusto_ some hundred years since;--
+
+That we love to behold, while old England grows faint,
+ Messrs. Southey and Butler nigh coming to blows,
+To decide whether Dunstan, that strong-bodied Saint,
+ Ever truly and really pulled the De'il's nose;
+
+Whether t'other Saint, Dominic, burnt the De'il's paw--
+ Whether Edwy intrigued with Elgiva's odd mother--
+And many such points, from which Southey can draw
+ Conclusions most apt for our hating each other.
+
+That 'tis very well known this devout Irish nation
+ Has now for some ages, gone happily on
+Believing in two kinds of Substantiation,
+ One party in _Trans_ and the other in _Con_;[1]
+
+That we, your petitioning _Cons_, have in right
+ Of the said monosyllable ravaged the lands
+And embezzled the goods and annoyed, day and night,
+ Both the bodies and souls of the sticklers for _Trans_;--
+
+That we trust to Peel, Eldon, and other such sages,
+ For keeping us still in the same state of mind;
+Pretty much as the world used to be in those ages,
+ When still smaller syllables maddened mankind;--
+
+When the words _ex_ and _per_[2] served as well to annoy
+ One's neighbors and friends with, as _con_ and _trans_ now;
+And Christians, like Southey, who stickled for _oi_,
+ Cut the throats of all Christians who stickled for _ou_.[3]
+
+That relying on England whose kindness already
+ So often has helpt us to play this game o'er,
+We have got our red coats and our carabines ready,
+ And wait but the word to show sport as before.
+
+That as to the expense--the few millions or so,
+ Which for all such diversions John Bull has to pay--
+'Tis at least a great comfort to John Bull to know
+ That to Orangemen's pockets 'twill all find its way.
+For which your petitioners ever will pray,
+ Etc., etc., etc., etc., etc.
+
+
+[1] Consubstantiation--the true Reformed belief; at least, the belief of
+Luther, and, as Mosheim asserts, of Melancthon also.
+
+[2] When John of Ragusa went to Constantinople (at the time this dispute
+between "_ex_" and "_per_" was going on), he found the Turks, we
+are told, "laughing at the Christians for being divided by two such
+insignificant particles."
+
+[3] The Arian controversy.--Before that time, says Hooker, "in order to be
+a sound believing Christian, men were not curious what syllables or
+particles of speech they used."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+COTTON AND CORN.
+
+A DIALOGUE.
+
+
+Said Cotton to Corn, t'other day,
+ As they met and exchanged a salute--
+(Squire Corn in his carriage so gay,
+ Poor Cotton half famished on foot):
+
+"Great Squire, if it isn't uncivil
+ "To hint at starvation before you,
+"Look down on a poor hungry devil,
+ "And give him some bread, I implore you!"
+
+Quoth Corn then in answer to Cotton,
+ Perceiving he meant to make _free_--
+"Low fellow, you've surely forgotten
+ "The distance between you and me!
+
+"To expect that we Peers of high birth
+ "Should waste our illustrious acres,
+"For no other purpose on earth
+ "Than to fatten curst calico-makers!--
+
+"That Bishops to bobbins should bend--
+ "Should stoop from their Bench's sublimity,
+"Great dealers in _lawn_, to befriend
+ "Such contemptible dealers in dimity!
+
+"No--vile Manufacture! ne'er harbor
+ "A hope to be fed at our boards;--
+"Base offspring of Arkwright the barber,
+ "What claim canst _thou_ have upon Lords?
+
+"No--thanks to the taxes and debt,
+ "And the triumph of paper o'er guineas,
+"Our race of Lord Jemmys, as yet,
+ "May defy your whole rabble of _Jennys_!"
+
+So saying--whip, crack, and away
+ Went Corn in his chaise thro' the throng,
+So headlong, I heard them all say,
+ "Squire Corn will be _down_ before long."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE CANONIZATION OF SAINT BUTTERWORTH.
+
+
+ "A Christian of the best edition."--RABELAIS.
+
+
+Canonize him!--yea, verily, we'll canonize him,
+ Tho' Cant is his hobby and meddling his bliss,
+Tho' sages may pity and wits may despise him,
+ He'll ne'er make a bit the worse Saint for all this.
+
+Descend, all ye Spirits, that ever yet spread
+ The dominion of Humbug o'er land and o'er sea,
+Descend on our Butterworth's biblical head,
+ Thrice-Great, Bibliopolist, Saint, and M. P.
+
+Come, shade of Joanna, come down from thy sphere.
+ And bring little Shiloh--if 'tisn't too far--
+Such a sight will to Butterworth's bosom be dear,
+ _His_ conceptions and _thine_ being much on a par.
+
+Nor blush, Saint Joanna, once more to behold
+ A world thou hast honored by cheating so many;
+Thou'lt find still among us one Personage old,
+ Who also by tricks and the _Seals_[1] makes a penny.
+
+Thou, too, of the Shakers, divine Mother Lee![2]
+ Thy smiles to beatified Butterworth deign;
+Two "lights of the Gentiles" are thou, Anne, and he,
+ _One_ hallowing Fleet Street, and _t'other_ Toad Lane![3]
+
+The heathen, we know, made their Gods out of wood,
+ And Saints may be framed of as handy materials;--
+Old women and Butterworths make just as good
+As any the Pope ever _bookt_ as Ethereals.
+
+Stand forth, Man of Bibles!--not Mahomet's pigeon,
+ When perched on the Koran, he dropt there, they say,
+Strong marks of his faith, ever shed o'er religion
+ Such glory as Butterworth sheds every day.
+
+Great Galen of souls, with what vigor he crams
+ Down Erin's idolatrous throats, till they crack again,
+Bolus on bolus, good man!--and then damns
+ Both their stomachs and souls, if they dare cast them back again.
+
+How well might his shop--as a type representing
+ The creed of himself and his sanctified clan--
+On its counter exhibit "the Art of Tormenting,"
+ Bound neatly, and lettered "Whole Duty of Man!"
+
+Canonize him!--by Judas, we _will_ canonize him;
+ For Cant is his hobby and twaddling his bliss;
+And tho' wise men may pity and wits may despise him,
+ He'll make but the better _shop_-saint for all this.
+
+Call quickly together the whole tribe of Canters,
+ Convoke all the _serious_ Tag-rag of the nation;
+Bring Shakers and Snufflers and Jumpers and Ranters
+ To witness their Butterworth's Canonization!
+
+Yea, humbly I've ventured his merits to paint,
+ Yea, feebly have tried all his gifts to portray,
+And they form a sum-total for making a Saint.
+ That the Devil's own advocate could not gainsay.
+
+Jump high, all ye Jumpers, ye Ranters all roar,
+ While Butterworth's spirit, upraised from your eyes,
+Like a kite made of foolscap, in glory shall soar,
+ With a long tail of rubbish behind, to the skies!
+
+
+[1] A great part of the income of Joanna Southcott arose from the Seals of
+the Lord's protection which she sold to her followers.
+
+[2] Mrs. Anne Lee, the "chosen vessel" of the Shakers, and "Mother of all
+the children of regeneration."
+
+[3] Toad Lane, in Manchester, where Mother Lee was born. In her "Address
+to Young Believers," she says, that "it is a matter of no importance with
+them from whence the means of their deliverance come, whether from a
+stable in Bethlehem, or from Toad Lane, Manchester."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AN INCANTATION.
+
+SUNG BY THE BUBBLE SPIRIT.
+
+
+Air.--_Come with me, and we will go
+ Where the rocks of coral grow_.
+
+
+Come with me and we will blow
+Lots of bubbles as we go;
+Bubbles bright as ever Hope
+Drew from fancy--or from soap;
+Bright as e'er the South Sea sent
+From its frothy element!
+Come with me and we will blow
+Lots of bubbles as we go.
+Mix the lather, Johnny Wilks,
+Thou, who rhym'st so well to bilks;[1]
+Mix the lather--who can be
+Fitter for such tasks than thee,
+Great M. P. for _Suds_bury!
+
+Now the frothy charm is ripe,
+Puffing Peter,[2] bring thy pipe,--
+Thou whom ancient Coventry
+Once so dearly loved that she
+Knew not which to her was sweeter,
+Peeping Tom or Puffing Peter;--
+Puff the bubbles high in air,
+Puff thy best to keep them there.
+
+Bravo, bravo, Peter More!
+Now the rainbow humbugs[3] soar.
+Glittering all with golden hues
+Such as haunt the dreams of Jews;--
+Some reflecting mines that lie
+Under Chili's glowing sky,
+Some, those virgin pearls that sleep
+Cloistered in the southern deep;
+Others, as if lent a ray
+From the streaming Milky Way,
+Glistening o'er with curds and whey
+From the cows of Alderney.
+
+Now's the moment--who shall first
+Catch the bubbles ere they burst?
+Run, ye Squires, ye Viscounts, run,
+Brogden, Teynham, Palmerston;--
+John Wilks junior runs beside ye!
+Take the good the knaves provide ye!
+See, with upturned eyes and hands,
+Where the _Share_man, Brogden, stands,
+Gaping for the froth to fall
+Down his gullet--_lye_ and all.
+See!--
+
+ But, hark, my time is out--
+Now, like some great water-spout,
+Scattered by the cannon's thunder,
+Burst ye bubbles, all asunder!
+
+[_Here the stage darkens--a discordant crash is heard from the orchestra
+--the broken bubbles descend in a saponaceous but uncleanly mist over the
+heads of the_ Dramatis Personae_, and the scene drops, leaving the
+bubble-hunters--all in the suds_.]
+
+
+[1] Strong indications of character may be sometimes traced in the rhymes
+to names. Marvell thought so when he wrote "Sir Edward Button, The foolish
+Knight who rhymes to mutton."
+
+[2] The member, during a long period, for Coventry.
+
+[3] An humble imitation of one of our modern poets, who, in a poem against
+War, after describing the splendid habiliments of the soldier, thus
+apostrophizes him--"thou rainbow ruffian!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A DREAM OF TURTLE.
+
+BY SIR W. CURTIS.
+
+1826.
+
+
+'Twas evening time, in the twilight sweet
+I sailed along, when--whom should I meet
+But a Turtle journeying o'er the sea,
+"On the service of his Majesty."[1]
+When spying him first thro' twilight dim,
+I didn't know what to make of him;
+But said to myself, as slow he plied
+His fins and rolled from side to side
+Conceitedly o'er the watery path--
+"'Tis my Lord of Stowell taking a bath,
+"And I hear him now, among the fishes,
+"Quoting Vatel and Burgersdicius!"
+But, no--'twas, indeed, a Turtle wide
+And plump as ever these eyes descried;
+A turtle juicy as ever yet
+Glued up the lips of a Baronet!
+And much did it grieve my soul to see
+That an animal of such dignity,
+Like an absentee abroad should roam,
+When he _ought_ to stay and be ate at home.
+
+But now "a change came o'er my dream,"
+ Like the magic lantern's shifting slider;
+I lookt and saw by the evening beam
+ On the back of that Turtle sat a rider--
+A goodly man with an eye so merry,
+I knew 'twas our Foreign Secretary,[2]
+Who there at his ease did sit and smile,
+Like Waterton on his crocodile;[3]
+Cracking such jokes, at every motion,
+ As made the Turtle squeak with glee
+And own they gave him a lively notion
+ Of what his _forced_-meat balls would be.
+So, on the Sec. in his glory went.
+Over that briny element,
+Waving his hand as he took farewell
+With graceful air, and bidding me tell
+Inquiring friends that the Turtle and he
+Were gone on a foreign embassy--
+To soften the heart of a _Diplomat_,
+Who is known to dote upon verdant fat,
+And to let admiring Europe see,
+That _calipash_ and _calipee_
+Are the English forms of Diplomacy.
+
+
+[1] We are told that the passport of this grand diplomatic Turtle (sent by
+the Secretary for Foreign Affairs to a certain noble envoy) described him
+as "on his majesty's service."
+
+[2] Mr. Canning.
+
+[3] _Wanderings in South America_. "It was the first and last time [says
+Mr. Waterton] I was ever on a crocodile's back."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DONKEY AND HIS PANNIERS.
+
+A FABLE.
+
+
+ --_"fessus jam sudat asellus,
+ "parce illi; vestrum delicium est asinus."_
+ VERGIL. _Copa_.
+
+
+A donkey whose talent for burdens was wondrous,
+ So much that you'd swear he rejoiced in a load,
+One day had to jog under panniers so ponderous,
+ That--down the poor Donkey fell smack on the road!
+
+His owners and drivers stood round in amaze
+ What! Neddy, the patient, the prosperous Neddy,
+So easy to drive thro' the dirtiest ways
+ For every description of job-work so ready!
+
+One driver (whom Ned might have "hailed" as a "brother")[1]
+ Had just been proclaiming his Donkey's renown
+For vigor, for spirit, for one thing or other--
+ When, lo! mid his praises the Donkey came down!
+But how to upraise him?--_one_ shouts, _t'other_ whistles,
+ While Jenky, the Conjuror, wisest of all,
+Declared that an "over-production of thistles[2]--
+ (Here Ned gave a stare)--was the cause of his fall."
+
+Another wise Solomon cries as he passes--
+ "There, let him alone and the fit will soon cease;
+"The beast has been fighting with other jack-asses,
+ "And this is his mode of '_transition to peace_.'"
+
+Some lookt at his hoofs, and with learned grimaces
+ Pronounced that too long without shoes he had gone--
+"Let the blacksmith provide him a _sound metal basis_,"
+ (The wise-acres said), "and he's sure to jog on."
+
+Meanwhile, the poor Neddy in torture and fear
+ Lay under his panniers, scarce able to groan;
+And--what was still dolefuller--lending an ear
+ To advisers whose ears were a match for his own.
+
+At length a plain rustic whose wit went so far
+ As to see others' folly, roared out, as he past--
+"Quick--off with the panniers, all dolts as ye are,
+ "Or your prosperous Neddy will soon kick his last!"
+
+October, 1826.
+
+
+[1] Alluding to an early poem of Mr. Coleridge's, addressed to an Ass, and
+beginning, "I hail thee, brother!"
+
+[2] A certain country gentleman having said in the House, "that we must
+return at last to the food of our ancestors," somebody asked Mr. T. "what
+food the gentleman meant?"--"Thistles, I suppose," answered Mr. T.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO THE SUBLIME PORTE.
+
+1826.
+
+
+Great Sultan, how wise are thy state compositions!
+ And oh! above all I admire that Decree,
+In which thou command'st that all _she_ politicians
+ Shall forthwith be strangled and cast in the sea.
+
+'Tis my fortune to know a lean Benthamite spinster--
+ A maid who her faith in old Jeremy puts,
+Who talks with a lisp of "the last new West_minster_,"
+ And hopes you're delighted with "Mill upon Gluts;"
+
+Who tells you how clever one Mr. Funblank is,
+ How charming his Articles 'gainst the Nobility;--
+And assures you that even a gentleman's rank is
+ In Jeremy's school, of no sort of _utility_.
+
+To see her, ye Gods, a new Number perusing--
+ ART. 1.--"On the _Needle's_ variations," by Pl--ce;[1]
+ ART. 2.--By her Favorite Funblank[2]--"so amusing!
+ "Dear man! he makes Poetry quite a _Law_ case."
+
+ART. 3.--"Upon Fallacies," Jeremy's own--
+ (Chief Fallacy being his hope to find readers);-
+ART. 4.--"Upon Honesty," author unknown;--
+ ART. 5.--(by the young Mr. Mill) "Hints to Breeders."
+
+Oh, Sultan, oh, Sultan, tho' oft for the bag
+ And the bowstring, like thee, I am tempted to call--
+Tho' drowning's too good for each blue-stocking hag,
+ I would bag this _she_ Benthamite first of them all!
+
+And lest she should ever again lift her head
+ From the watery bottom, her clack to renew--
+As a clog, as a sinker, far better than lead,
+ I would hang around her neck her own darling Review.
+
+
+[1] A celebrated political tailor.
+
+[2] This pains-taking gentleman has been at the trouble of counting, with
+the assistance of Cocker, the number of metaphors in Moore's "_Life of
+Sheridan_," and has found them to amount, as nearly as possible, to 2235--
+and some _fractions_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CORN AND CATHOLICS.
+
+
+ _utrum horum
+ dirius_ borun? _Incerti Auctoris_.
+
+
+What! _still_ those two infernal questions,
+ That with our meals our slumbers mix--
+That spoil our tempers and digestions--
+ Eternal Corn and Catholics!
+
+Gods! were there ever two such bores?
+ Nothing else talkt of night or morn--
+Nothing _in_ doors or _out_ of doors,
+ But endless Catholics and Corn!
+
+Never was such a brace of pests--
+ While Ministers, still worse than either,
+Skilled but in feathering their nests,
+ Plague us with both and settle neither.
+
+So addled in my cranium meet
+ Popery and Corn that oft I doubt,
+Whether, this year, 'twas bonded Wheat,
+ Or bonded Papists, they let out.
+
+_Here_, landlords, _here_ polemics nail you,
+ Armed with all rubbish they can rake up;
+_Prices_ and _Texts_ at once assail you--
+ From Daniel _these_, and _those_ from Jacob,
+
+And when you sleep, with head still torn
+ Between the two, their shapes you mix,
+Till sometimes Catholics seem Corn--
+ Then Corn again seems Catholics.
+
+Now Dantsic wheat before you floats--
+ Now Jesuits from California--
+Now Ceres linkt with Titus _Oats_,
+ Comes dancing thro' the "Porta _Corn_ea."[1]
+
+Oft too the Corn grows animate,
+ And a whole crop of heads appears,
+Like Papists, _bearding_ Church and State--
+ Themselves, together _by the ears_!
+
+In short these torments never cease,
+ And oft I wish myself transferred off
+To some far, lonely land of peace
+ Where Corn or Papists ne'er were heard of.
+
+Yes, waft me, Parry, to the Pole;
+ For--if my fate is to be chosen
+'Twixt bores and icebergs--on my soul,
+ I'd rather, of the two, be frozen!
+
+
+[1] The Horn Gate, through which the ancients supposed all true
+dreams (such as those of the Popish Plot, etc.) to pass.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A CASE OF LIBEL.
+
+
+ "The greater the truth, the worse the libel."
+
+
+A certain Sprite, who dwells below,
+ ('Twere a libel perhaps to mention where,)
+Came up _incog_. some years ago
+ To try for a change the London air.
+
+So well he lookt and drest and talkt,
+ And hid his tail and horns so handy,
+You'd hardly have known him as he walkt
+ From C----e, or any other Dandy.
+
+(His horns, it seems, are made to unscrew;
+ So he has but to take them out of the socket,
+And--just as some fine husbands do--
+ Conveniently clap them into his pocket.)
+
+In short, he lookt extremely natty,
+ And even contrived--to his own great wonder--
+By dint of sundry scents from Gattie,
+ To keep the sulphurous _hogo_ under.
+
+And so my gentleman hoofed about,
+ Unknown to all but a chosen few
+At White's and Crockford's, where no doubt
+ He had many _post-obits_ falling due.
+
+Alike a gamester and a wit,
+ At night he was seen with Crockford's crew,
+At morn with learned dames would sit--
+ So past his time 'twixt _black_ and _blue_.
+
+Some wisht to make him an M. P.,
+ But, finding Wilks was also one, he
+Swore, in a rage, "he'd be damned, if he
+ "Would ever sit in one house with Johnny."
+
+At length as secrets travel fast,
+ And devils, whether he or she,
+Are sure to be found out at last,
+ The affair got wind most rapidly.
+
+The Press, the impartial Press, that snubs
+ Alike a fiend's or an angel's capers--
+Miss Paton's soon as Beelzebub's,
+ Fired off a squib in the morning papers:
+
+"We warn good men to keep aloof
+ "From a grim old Dandy seen about
+"With a fire-proof wig and a cloven hoof
+ "Thro' a neat-cut Hoby smoking out."
+
+Now,--the Devil being gentleman,
+ Who piques himself on well-bred dealings,--
+You may guess, when o'er these lines he ran,
+ How much they hurt and shockt his feelings.
+
+Away he posts to a Man of Law,
+ And 'twould make you laugh could you have seen 'em,
+As paw shook hand, and hand shook paw,
+ And 'twas "hail, good fellow, well met," between 'em.
+
+Straight an indictment was preferred--
+ And much the Devil enjoyed the jest,
+When, asking about the Bench, he heard
+ That, of all the Judges, his own was _Best_.[1]
+
+In vain Defendant proffered proof
+ That Plaintiff's self was the Father of Evil--
+Brought Hoby forth to swear to the hoof
+ And Stultz to speak to the tail of the Devil.
+
+The Jury (saints, all snug and rich,
+ And readers of virtuous Sunday papers)
+Found for the Plaintiff--on hearing which
+ The Devil gave one of his loftiest capers.
+
+For oh, 'twas nuts to the Father of Lies
+ (As this wily fiend is named in the Bible)
+To find it settled by laws so wise,
+ That the greater the truth, the worse the libel!
+
+
+[1] A celebrated Judge, so named.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LITERARY ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+
+Wanted--Authors of all-work to job for the season,
+ No matter which party, so faithful to neither;
+Good hacks who, if posed for a rhyme or a reason.
+ Can manage, like ******, to do without either.
+
+If in jail, all the better for out-o'-door topics;
+ Your jail is for travellers a charming retreat;
+They can take a day's rule for a trip to the Tropics,
+ And sail round the world at their ease in the Fleet.
+
+For a dramatist too the most useful of schools--
+ He can study high life in the King's Bench community;
+Aristotle could scarce keep him more _within rules_,
+ And of _place_ he at least must adhere to the _unity_.
+
+Any lady or gentleman, come to an age
+ To have good "Reminiscences" (three-score or higher)
+Will meet with encouragement--so much, _per_ page,
+ And the spelling and grammar both found by the buyer.
+
+No matter with _what_ their remembrance is stockt,
+ So they'll only remember the _quantum_ desired;--
+Enough to fill handsomely Two Volumes, _oct_.,
+ Price twenty-four shillings, is all that's required.
+
+They may treat us, like Kelly, with old _jeu-d'esprits_,
+ Like Dibdin, may tell of each farcical frolic;
+Or kindly inform us, like Madame Genlis,[1]
+ That gingerbread-cakes always give them the colic.
+
+Wanted also a new stock of Pamphlets on Corn
+ By "Farmers" and "Landholders"--(worthies whose lands
+Enclosed all in bow-pots their attics adorn,
+ Or whose share of the soil maybe seen on their hands).
+
+No-Popery Sermons, in ever so dull a vein,
+ Sure of a market;--should they too who pen 'em
+Be renegade Papists, like Murtagh O'Sullivan,[2]
+ Something _extra_ allowed for the additional venom.
+
+Funds, Physics, Corn, Poetry, Boxing, Romance,
+ All excellent subjects for turning a penny;--
+To write upon _all_ is an author's sole chance
+ For attaining, at last, the least knowledge of _any_.
+
+Nine times out of ten, if his _title_ is good,
+ The material _within_ of small consequence is;--
+Let him only write fine, and, if not understood,
+ Why--that's the concern of the reader, not his.
+
+_Nota Bene_--an Essay, now printing, to show,
+ That Horace (as clearly as words could express it)
+Was for taxing the Fund-holders, ages ago,
+ When he wrote thus--"Quodcunque _in Fund is, assess it."_
+
+
+[1] This lady also favors us, in her Memoirs, with the address of those
+apothecaries, who have, from time to time, given her pills that agreed
+with her; always desiring that the pills should be ordered "_comme pour
+elle_."
+
+[2] A gentleman, who distinguished himself by his evidence before the
+Irish Committees.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE IRISH SLAVE.[1]
+
+1827.
+
+
+I heard as I lay, a wailing sound,
+ "He is dead--he is dead," the rumor flew;
+And I raised my chain and turned me round,
+ And askt, thro' the dungeon-window, "Who?"
+
+I saw my livid tormentors pass;
+ Their grief 'twas bliss to hear and see!
+For never came joy to them alas!
+ That didn't bring deadly bane to me.
+
+Eager I lookt thro' the mist of night,
+ And askt, "What foe of my race hath died?
+"Is it he--that Doubter of law and right,
+ "Whom nothing but wrong could e'er decide--
+
+"Who, long as he sees but wealth to win,
+ "Hath never yet felt a qualm or doubt
+"What suitors for justice he'd keep in,
+ "Or what suitors for freedom he'd shut out--
+
+"Who, a clog for ever on Truth's advance,
+ "Hangs round her (like the Old Man of the Sea
+"Round Sinbad's neck[2]), nor leaves a chance
+ "Of shaking him off--is't he? is't he?"
+
+Ghastly my grim tormentors smiled,
+ And thrusting me back to my den of woe,
+With a laughter even more fierce and wild
+ Than their funeral howling, answered "No."
+
+But the cry still pierced my prison-gate,
+ And again I askt, "What scourge is gone?
+"Is it he--that Chief, so coldly great,
+ "Whom Fame unwillingly shines upon--
+
+"Whose name is one of the ill-omened words
+ "They link with hate on his native plains;
+"And why?--they lent him hearts and swords,
+ "And he in return gave scoffs and chains!
+
+"Is it he? is it he?" I loud inquired,
+ When, hark!--there sounded a Royal knell;
+And I knew what spirit had just expired,
+ And slave as I was my triumph fell.
+
+He had pledged a hate unto me and mine,
+ He had left to the future nor hope nor choice,
+But sealed that hate with a Name Divine,
+ And he now was dead and--I _couldn't_ rejoice!
+
+He had fanned afresh the burning brands
+ Of a bigotry waxing cold and dim;
+He had armed anew my torturers' hands,
+ And _them_ did I curse--but sighed for him.
+
+For, _his_ was the error of head not heart;
+ And--oh! how beyond the ambushed foe,
+Who to enmity adds the traitor's part,
+ And carries a smile with a curse below!
+
+If ever a heart made bright amends
+ For the fatal fault of an erring head--
+Go, learn _his_ fame from the lips of friends,
+ In the orphan's tear be his glory read.
+
+A Prince without pride, a man without guile,
+ To the last unchanging, warm, sincere,
+For Worth he had ever a hand and smile,
+ And for Misery ever his purse and tear.
+
+Touched to the heart by that solemn toll,
+ I calmly sunk in my chains again;
+While, still as I said, "Heaven rest his soul!"
+ My mates of the dungeon sighed "Amen!"
+
+January, 1827.
+
+
+[1] Written on the death of the Duke of York.
+
+[2] "You fell, said they, into the hands of the Old Man of the Sea, and
+are the first who ever escaped strangling by his malicious
+tricks."--_Story of Sinbad_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO FERDINAND.
+
+1827.
+
+
+Quit the sword, thou King of men,
+Grasp the needle once again;
+Making petticoats is far
+Safer sport than making war;
+Trimming is a better thing,
+Than the _being_ trimmed, oh King!
+Grasp the needle bright with which
+Thou didst for the Virgin stitch
+Garment, such as ne'er before
+Monarch stitched or Virgin wore,
+Not for her, oh semster nimble!
+Do I now invoke thy thimble;
+Not for her thy wanted aid is,
+But for certain grave old ladies,
+Who now sit in England's cabinet,
+Waiting to be clothed in tabinet,
+Or whatever choice _étoffe_ is
+Fit for Dowagers in office.
+First, thy care, oh King, devote
+To Dame Eldon's petticoat.
+Make it of that silk whose dye
+Shifts for ever to the eye,
+Just as if it hardly knew
+Whether to be pink or blue.
+Or--material fitter yet--
+If thou couldst a remnant get
+Of that stuff with which, of old,
+Sage Penelope, we're told,
+Still by doing and undoing,
+Kept her _suitors_ always wooing--
+That's the stuff which I pronounce, is
+Fittest for Dame Eldon's flounces.
+
+After this, we'll try thy hand,
+Mantua-making Ferdinand,
+For old Goody Westmoreland;
+One who loves, like Mother Cole,
+Church and State with all her soul;
+And has past her life in frolics
+Worthy of our Apostolics.
+Choose, in dressing this old flirt,
+Something that won't show the dirt,
+As, from habit, every minute
+Goody Westmoreland is in it.
+
+This is all I now shall ask,
+Hie thee, monarch, to thy task;
+Finish Eldon's frills and borders,
+Then return for further orders.
+Oh what progress for our sake,
+Kings in millinery make!
+Ribands, garters, and such things,
+Are supplied by _other_ Kings--
+Ferdinand his rank denotes
+By providing petticoats.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HAT _VERSUS_ WIG.
+
+1827.
+
+
+ "At the interment of the Duke of York, Lord Eldon, in order to guard
+ against the effects of the damp, stood upon his hat during the whole
+ of the ceremony."
+
+
+ --_metus omnes et inexorabile fatum
+ subjecit pedibus, strepitumque Acherontis
+ avari_.
+
+
+'Twixt Eldon's Hat and Eldon's Wig
+ There lately rose an altercation,--
+Each with its own importance big,
+ Disputing _which_ most serves the nation.
+
+Quoth Wig, with consequential air,
+ "Pooh! pooh! you surely can't design,
+"My worthy beaver, to compare
+ "Your station in the state with mine.
+
+"Who meets the learned legal crew?
+ "Who fronts the lordly Senate's pride?
+"The Wig, the Wig, my friend--while you
+ "Hang dangling on some peg outside.
+
+"Oh! 'tis the Wig, that rules, like Love,
+ "Senate and Court, with like _éclat_--
+"And wards below and lords above,
+ "For Law is Wig and Wig is Law!
+
+"Who tried the long, _Long_ WELLESLEY suit,
+ "Which tried one's patience, in return?
+"Not thou, oh Hat!--tho' _couldst_ thou do't,
+ "Of other _brims_[1] than thine thou'dst learn.
+
+"'Twas mine our master's toil to share;
+ "When, like 'Truepenny,' in the play,[2]
+"He, every minute, cried out 'Swear,'
+ "And merrily to swear went they;--[3]
+
+"When, loath poor WELLESLEY to condemn, he
+ "With nice discrimination weighed,
+"Whether 'twas only 'Hell and Jemmy,'
+ Or 'Hell and Tommy' that he played.
+
+"No, no, my worthy beaver, no--
+ "Tho' cheapened at the cheapest hatter's,
+"And smart enough as beavers go
+ "Thou ne'er wert made for public matters."
+
+Here Wig concluded his oration,
+ Looking, as wigs do, wondrous wise;
+While thus, full cockt for declamation,
+ The veteran Hat enraged replies:--
+
+"Ha! dost thou then so soon forget
+ "What thou, what England owes to me?
+"Ungrateful Wig!--when will a debt,
+ "So deep, so vast, be owed thee?
+
+"Think of that night, that fearful night,
+ "When, thro' the steaming vault below,
+"Our master dared, in gout's despite,
+ "To venture his podagric toe!
+
+"Who was it then, thou boaster, say
+ "When thou hadst to thy box sneaked off,
+"Beneath his feet protecting lay,
+ "And saved him from a mortal cough?
+
+"Think, if Catarrh had quenched that sun,
+ "How blank this world had been to thee!
+"Without that head to shine upon,
+ "Oh Wig, where would thy glory be?
+
+"You, too, ye Britons,--had this hope
+ "Of Church and State been ravisht from ye,
+"Oh think, how Canning and the Pope
+ "Would then have played up 'Hell and Tommy'!
+
+"At sea, there's but a plank, they say,
+ "'Twixt seamen and annihilation;
+"A Hat, that awful moment, lay
+ "'Twixt England and Emancipation!
+
+"Oh!!!--"
+
+At this "Oh!!!" _The Times_ Reporter
+ Was taken poorly, and retired;
+Which made him cut Hat's rhetoric shorter,
+ Than justice to the case required.
+
+On his return, he found these shocks
+ Of eloquence all ended quite;
+And Wig lay snoring in his box,
+ And Hat was--hung up for the night.
+
+
+[1] "_Brim_--a naughty woman."--GROSE.
+
+[2]"_Ghost_[beneath].--Swear!
+"_Hamlet_.--Ha, ha! say'st thou so!
+Art thou there, Truepenny? Come on."
+
+[3] His Lordship's demand for fresh affidavits was incessant.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE PERIWINKLES AND THE LOCUSTS.
+
+A SALMAGUNDIAN HYMN.
+
+
+ "To Panurge was assigned the Laird-ship of Salmagundi, which was
+ yearly worth 6,789,106,789 ryals besides the revenue of the
+ _Locusts_ and _Periwinkles_, amounting one year with another
+ to the value of 2,485,768," etc.--RABELAIS.
+
+
+"Hurra! hurra!" I heard them say,
+And they cheered and shouted all the way,
+As the Laird of Salmagundi went.
+To open in state his Parliament.
+
+The Salmagundians once were rich,
+Or thought they were--no matter which--
+For, every year, the Revenue
+From their Periwinkles larger grew;
+And their rulers, skilled in all the trick
+And legerdemain of arithmetic,
+Knew how to place 1, 2, 3, 4,
+ 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 and 10,
+Such various ways, behind, before,
+That they made a unit seem a score,
+ And proved themselves most wealthy men!
+So, on they went, a prosperous crew,
+ The people wise, the rulers clever--
+And God help those, like me and you,
+Who dared to doubt (as some now do)
+That the Periwinkle Revenue
+ Would thus go flourishing on for ever.
+
+"Hurra! hurra!" I heard them say,
+And they cheered and shouted all the way,
+As the Great Panurge in glory went
+To open his own dear Parliament.
+
+But folks at length began to doubt
+What all this conjuring was about;
+For, every day, more deep in debt
+They saw their wealthy rulers get:--
+"Let's look (said they) the items thro'
+"And see if what we're told be true
+"Of our Periwinkle Revenue,"
+But, lord! they found there wasn't a tittle
+ Of truth in aught they heard before;
+For they gained by Periwinkles little
+ And lost by Locusts ten times more!
+These Locusts are a lordly breed
+Some Salmagundians love to feed.
+Of all the beasts that ever were born,
+Your Locust most delights in _corn_;
+And tho' his body be but small,
+To fatten him takes the devil and all!
+"Oh fie! oh fie!" was now the cry,
+As they saw the gaudy show go by,
+As the Laird of Salmagundi went
+To open his Locust Parliament!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NEW CREATION OF PEERS.
+
+BATCH THE FIRST.
+
+
+ "His 'prentice han'
+ He tried on man,
+ And then he made the lasses."
+
+
+1827.
+
+
+"And now," quoth the Minister, (eased of his panics,
+ And ripe for each pastime the summer affords,)
+"Having had our full swing at destroying mechanics,
+ "By way of _set-off_, let us make a few Lords.
+
+"'Tis pleasant--while nothing but mercantile fractures,
+ "Some simple, some _compound_, is dinned in our ears--
+"To think that, tho' robbed all coarse manufactures,
+ "We still have our fine manufacture of Peers;--
+
+"Those _Gotielin_ productions which Kings take a pride
+ "In engrossing the whole fabrication and trade of;
+"Choice tapestry things very grand on _one_ side,
+ "But showing, on t'other, what rags they are made of.
+
+The plan being fixt, raw material was sought,--
+ No matter how middling, if Tory the creed be;
+And first, to begin with, Squire W---, 'twas thought,
+ For a Lord was as raw a material as need be.
+
+Next came with his _penchant_ for painting and pelf
+ The tasteful Sir Charles,[1] so renowned far and near
+For purchasing pictures and selling himself--
+ And _both_ (as the public well knows) very dear.
+
+Beside him Sir John comes, with equal _éclat_, in;--
+ Stand forth, chosen pair, while for titles we measure ye;
+Both connoisseur baronets, both fond of _drawing_,
+ Sir John, after nature, Sir Charles, on the Treasury.
+
+But, bless us!--behold a new candidate come--
+ In his hand he upholds a prescription, new written:
+He poiseth a pill-box 'twixt finger and thumb,
+ And he asketh a seat 'mong the Peers of Great Britain!
+
+"Forbid it," cried Jenky, "ye Viscounts, ye Earls!
+ "Oh Rank, how thy glories would fall disenchanted,
+"If coronets glistend with pills stead of pearls,
+ "And the strawberry-leaves were by rhubarb supplanted!
+
+"No--ask it not, ask it not, dear Doctor Holford--
+ "If naught but a Peerage can gladden thy life,
+"And young Master Holford as yet is too small for't,
+ "Sweet Doctor, we'll make a _she_ Peer of thy wife.
+
+"Next to bearing a coronet on our _own_ brows
+ "Is to bask in its light from the brows of another;
+"And grandeur o'er thee shall reflect from thy spouse,
+ "As o'er Vesey Fitzgerald 'twill shine thro' his mother."[2]
+
+Thus ended the _First_ Batch--and Jenky, much tired
+ (It being no joke to make Lords by the heap),
+Took a large dram of ether--the same that inspired
+ His speech 'gainst the Papists--and prosed off to sleep.
+
+
+[1] Created Lord Farnborough.
+
+[2] Among the persons mentioned as likely to be raised to the
+Peerage are the mother of Mr. Vesey Fitzgerald, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SPEECH ON THE UMBRELLA QUESTION.[1]
+
+BY LORD ELDON.
+
+1827.
+
+
+ "_vos_ inumbrelles _video_."--_Ex Juvenil_.
+ GEORGII CANNINGII.[2]
+
+
+My Lords, I'm accused of a trick that God knows is
+ The last into which at my age I could fall--
+Of leading this grave House of Peers by their noses,
+ Wherever I choose, princes, bishops and all.
+
+My Lords, on the question before us at present,
+ No doubt I shall hear, "'Tis that cursed old fellow,
+"That bugbear of all that is liberal and pleasant,
+ "Who won't let the Lords give the man his umbrella!"
+
+God forbid that your Lordships should knuckle to me;
+ I am ancient--but were I as old as King Priam,
+Not much, I confess, to your credit 'twould be,
+ To mind such a twaddling old Trojan as I am.
+
+I own, of our Protestant laws I am jealous,
+ And long as God spares me will always maintain,
+That _once_ having taken men's rights, or umbrellas,
+ We ne'er should consent to restore them again.
+
+What security have you, ye Bishops and Peers,
+ If thus you give back Mr. Bell's _parapluie_,
+That he mayn't with its stick, come about all your ears,
+ And then--_where_ would your Protestant periwigs be?
+
+No! heaven be my judge, were I dying to-day,
+ Ere I dropt in the grave, like a medlar that's mellow,
+"For God's sake"--at that awful moment I'd say--
+ "For God's sake, _don't_ give Mr. Bell his umbrella."
+
+["This address," says a ministerial journal, "delivered with amazing
+emphasis and earnestness, occasioned an extraordinary sensation in the
+House. Nothing since the memorable address of the Duke of York has
+produced so remarkable an impression."]
+
+
+[1] A case which interested the public very much at this period. A
+gentleman, of the name, of Bell, having left his umbrella behind him in
+the House of Lords, the doorkeepers (standing, no doubt, on the privileges
+of that noble body) refused to restore it to him; and the above speech,
+which may be considered as a _pendant_ to that of the Learned Earl on
+the Catholic Question, arose out of the transaction.
+
+[2] From Mr. Canning's translation of Jekyl's--
+
+ "I say, my good fellows,
+ As you've no umbrellas."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A PASTORAL BALLAD.
+
+BY JOHN BULL.
+
+
+ _Dublin, March 12, 1827_.--Friday, after the arrival of the
+ packet bringing the account of the defeat of the Catholic Question, in
+ the House of Commons, orders were sent to the Pigeon-House to forward
+ 5,000,000 rounds of musket-ball cartridge to the different garrisons
+ round the country.--_Freeman's Journal_.
+
+
+I have found out a gift for my Erin,
+ A gift that will surely content her:--
+Sweet pledge of a love so endearing!
+ Five millions of bullets I've sent her.
+
+She askt me for Freedom and Right,
+ But ill she her wants understood;--
+Ball cartridges, morning and night,
+ Is a dose that will do her more good.
+
+There is hardly a day of our lives
+ But we read, in some amiable trials,
+How husbands make love to their wives
+ Thro' the medium of hemp and of vials.
+
+_One_ thinks, with his mistress or mate
+ A good halter is sure to agree--
+That love-knot which, early and late,
+ I have tried, my dear Erin, on thee.
+
+While _another_, whom Hymen has blest
+ With a wife that is not over placid,
+Consigns the dear charmer to rest,
+ With a dose of the best Prussic acid.
+
+Thus, Erin! my love do I show--
+ Thus quiet thee, mate of my bed!
+And, as poison and hemp are too slow,
+ Do thy business with bullets instead.
+
+Should thy faith in my medicine be shaken,
+ Ask Roden, that mildest of saints;
+He'll tell thee, lead, inwardly taken,
+ Alone can remove thy complaints;--
+
+That, blest as thou art in thy lot,
+ Nothing's wanted to make it more pleasant
+But being hanged, tortured and shot,
+ Much oftener than thou art at present.
+
+Even Wellington's self hath averred
+ Thou art yet but half sabred and hung,
+And I loved him the more when I heard
+ Such tenderness fall from his tongue.
+
+So take the five millions of pills,
+ Dear partner, I herewith inclose;
+'Tis the cure that all quacks for thy ill,
+ From Cromwell to Eldon, propose.
+
+And you, ye brave bullets that go,
+ How I wish that, before you set out,
+The _Devil_ of the Freischütz could know
+ The good work you are going about.
+
+For he'd charm ye, in spite of your lead.
+ Into such supernatural wit.
+That you'd all of you know, as you sped,
+ Where a bullet of sense _ought_ to hit.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A LATE SCENE AT SWANAGE.[1]
+
+
+ _regnis_ EX _sul ademptis_.--Verg. 1827.
+
+
+To Swanage--that neat little town in whose bay
+ Fair Thetis shows off in her best silver slippers--
+Lord Bags[2] took his annual trip t'other day,
+ To taste the sea breezes and chat with the dippers.
+
+There--learned as he is in conundrums and laws--
+ Quoth he to his dame (whom he oft plays the wag on),
+ "Why are chancery suitors like bathers?"--"Because
+ Their _suits_ are _put off_, till they haven't a rag on."
+
+Thus on he went chatting--but, lo! while he chats,
+ With a face full of wonder around him he looks;
+For he misses his parsons, his dear shovel hats,
+ Who used to flock round him at Swanage like rooks.
+
+"How is this, Lady Bags?--to this region aquatic
+"Last year they came swarming to make me their bow,
+"As thick as Burke's cloud o'er the vales of Carnatic,
+"Deans, Rectors, D.D.'s--where the devil are they now?"
+
+"My dearest Lord Bags!" saith his dame, "_can_ you doubt?
+ "I am loath to remind you of things so unpleasant;
+"But _don't_ you perceive, dear, the Church have found out
+ "That you're one of the people called _Ex's_, at present?"
+
+"Ah, true--you have hit it--I _am_, indeed, one
+ "Of those ill-fated _Ex's_ (his Lordship replies),
+"And with tears, I confess--God forgive me the pun!--
+ "We X's have proved ourselves _not_ to be Y's."
+
+
+[1] A small bathing-place on the coast of Dorsetshire, long a favorite
+summer resort of the ex-nobleman in question and, _till this season_, much
+frequented also by gentlemen of the church.
+
+[2] The Lord Chancellor Eldon.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WO! WO![1]
+
+
+Wo, wo unto him who would check or disturb it--
+ That beautiful Light which is now on its way;
+Which beaming, at first, o'er the bogs of Belturbet,
+ Now brightens sweet Ballinafad with its ray!
+
+Oh Farnham, Saint Farnham, how much do we owe thee!
+ How formed to all tastes are thy various employs.
+The old, as a catcher of Catholics, know thee;
+ The young, as an amateur scourger of boys.
+
+Wo, wo to the man who such doings would smother!--
+ On, Luther of Bavan! On, Saint of Kilgroggy!
+With whip in one hand and with Bible in t'other,
+ Like Mungo's tormentor, both "preachee and floggee."
+
+Come, Saints from all quarters, and marshal his way;
+ Come, Lorton, who, scorning profane erudition,
+Popt Shakespeare, they say, in the river one day,
+ Tho' 'twas only old Bowdler's _Velluti_ edition.
+
+Come, Roden, who doubtest--so mild are thy views--
+ Whether Bibles or bullets are best for the nation;
+Who leav'st to poor Paddy no medium to choose
+ 'Twixt good _old_ Rebellion and _new_ Reformation.
+
+What more from her Saints can Hibernia require?
+ St. Bridget of yore like a dutiful daughter
+Supplied her, 'tis said, with perpetual fire,[2]
+ And Saints keep her _now_ in eternal hot water.
+
+Wo, wo to the man who would check their career,
+ Or stop the Millennium that's sure to await us,
+When blest with an orthodox crop every year,
+ We shall learn to raise Protestants fast as potatoes.
+
+In kidnapping Papists, our rulers, we know,
+ Had been trying their talent for many a day;
+Till Farnham, when all had been tried, came to show,
+ Like the German flea-catcher, "anoder goot way."
+
+And nothing's more simple than Farnham's receipt;--
+ "Catch your Catholic, first--soak him well in _poteen_,
+"Add _salary_ sauce,[3] and the thing is complete.
+ "You may serve up your Protestant smoking and clean."
+
+"Wo, wo to the wag, who would laugh at such cookery!"
+ Thus, from his perch, did I hear a black crow[4]
+Caw angrily out, while the rest of the rookery
+ Opened their bills and re-echoed "Wo! wo!"
+
+
+[1] Suggested by a speech of the Bishop of Chester on the subject of the
+New Reformation in Ireland, in which his Lordship denounced "Wo! Wo! Wo!"
+pretty abundantly on all those who dared to interfere with its progress.
+
+[2] The inextenguishable fire of St. Bridget, at Kildare.
+
+[3] "We understand that several applications have lately been made to the
+Protestant clergymen of this town by fellows, inquiring 'What are they
+giving a head for converts?'"--_Wexford Post_.
+
+[4] Of the rook species--_Corvus frugilegus_, i.e. a great consumer of
+corn.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TOUT POUR LA TRIPE.
+
+
+ "If in China or among the natives of India, we claimed civil
+ advantages which were connected with religious usages, little as
+ we might value those forms in our hearts, we should think common
+ decency required us to abstain from treating them with offensive
+ contumely; and, though unable to consider them sacred, we would not
+ sneer at the name of _Fot_, or laugh at the imputed divinity
+ of _Visthnou_."--_Courier, Tuesday. Jan_. 16.
+
+
+1827.
+
+
+Come take my advice, never trouble your cranium,
+ When "civil advantages" are to be gained,
+What god or what goddess may help to obtain you 'em,
+ Hindoo or Chinese, so they're only obtained.
+
+In this world (let me hint in your organ auricular)
+ All the good things to good hypocrites fall;
+And he who in swallowing creeds is particular,
+ Soon will have nothing to swallow at all.
+
+Oh place me where _Fo_ (or, as some call him, _Fot_)
+ Is the god from whom "civil advantages" flow,
+And you'll find, if there's anything snug to be got,
+ I shall soon be on excellent terms with old _Fo_.
+
+Or were I where _Vishnu_, that four-handed god,
+ Is the quadruple giver of pensions and places,
+I own I should feel it unchristian and odd
+ Not to find myself also in _Vishnu's_ good graces.
+
+For among all the gods that humanely attend
+ To our wants in this planet, the gods to _my_ wishes
+Are those that, like _Vishnu_ and others, descend
+ In the form so attractive, of loaves and of fishes![1]
+
+So take my advice--for if even the devil
+ Should tempt men again as an idol to try him,
+'Twere best for us Tories even then to be civil,
+ As nobody doubts we should get something by him.
+
+
+[1] Vishnu was (as Sir W. Jones calls him) "a pisciform god,"--his first
+Avatar being in the shape of a fish.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ENIGMA.
+
+
+ _monstrum nulla virtute_ redemptum.
+
+
+Come, riddle-me-ree, come, riddle-me-ree,
+ And tell me what my name may be.
+I am nearly one hundred and thirty years old,
+ And therefore no chicken, as you may suppose;--
+Tho' a dwarf in my youth (as my nurses have told),
+ I have, every year since, been out-growing my clothes:
+Till at last such a corpulent giant I stand,
+ That if folks were to furnish me now with a suit,
+It would take every morsel of _scrip_ in the land
+ But to measure my bulk from the head to the foot.
+Hence they who maintain me, grown sick of my stature,
+ To cover me nothing but _rags_ will supply;
+And the doctors declare that in due course of nature
+ About the year 30 in rags I shall die.
+Meanwhile, I stalk hungry and bloated around,
+ An object of _interest_ most painful to all;
+In the warehouse, the cottage, the place I'm found,
+ Holding citizen, peasant, and king in nay thrall.
+ Then riddle-me-ree, oh riddle-me-ree,
+ Come tell me what my name may be.
+
+When the lord of the counting-house bends o'er his book,
+ Bright pictures of profit delighting to draw,
+O'er his shoulders with large cipher eyeballs I look,
+ And down drops the pen from his paralyzed paw!
+When the Premier lies dreaming of dear Waterloo,
+ And expects thro' _another_ to caper and prank it,
+You'd laugh did you see, when I bellow out "Boo!"
+ How he hides his brave Waterloo head in the blanket.
+When mighty Belshazzar brims high in the hall
+ His cup, full of gout, to the Gaul's overthrow,
+Lo, "_Eight Hundred Millions_" I write on the wall,
+ And the cup falls to earth and--the gout to his toe!
+But the joy of my heart is when largely I cram
+ My maw with the fruits of the Squirearchy's acres,
+And knowing who made me the thing that I am,
+ Like the monster of Frankenstein, worry my makers.
+ Then riddle-me-ree, come, riddle-me-ree,
+ And tell, if thou know'st, who _I_ may be.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DOG-DAY REFLECTIONS.
+
+BY A DANDY KEPT IN TOWN.
+
+
+ _"vox clamantis in deserto."_
+
+
+1827.
+
+
+Said Malthus one day to a clown
+ Lying stretched on the beach in the sun,--
+"What's the number of souls in this town?"--
+ "The number! Lord bless you, there's none.
+
+"We have nothing but _dabs_ in this place,
+ "Of them a great plenty there are;--
+But the _soles_, please your reverence and grace,
+ "Are all t'other side of the bar."
+
+And so 'tis in London just now,
+ Not a soul to be seen up or down;--
+Of _dabs_? a great glut, I allow,
+ But your _soles_, every one, out of town.
+
+East or west nothing wondrous or new,
+ No courtship or scandal worth knowing;
+Mrs. B---, and a Mermaid[1] or two,
+ Are the only loose fish that are going.
+
+Ah, where is that dear house of Peers
+ That some weeks ago kept us merry?
+Where, Eldon, art thou with thy tears?
+And thou with thy sense, Londonderry?
+
+Wise Marquis, how much the Lord Mayor,
+ In the dog-days, with _thee_ must be puzzled!--
+It being his task to take care
+ That such animals shan't go unmuzzled.
+
+Thou too whose political toils
+ Are so worthy a captain of horse--
+Whose amendments[2] (like honest Sir Boyle's)
+ Are "_amendments_, that make matters _worse_;"[3]
+
+Great Chieftain, who takest such pains
+ To prove--what is granted, _nem_. _con_.--
+With how moderate a portion of brains
+ Some heroes contrive to get on.
+
+And thou too my Redesdale, ah! where
+ Is the peer with a star at his button,
+Whose _quarters_ could ever compare
+ With Redesdale's five quarters of mutton?[4]
+
+Why, why have ye taken your flight,
+ Ye diverting and dignified crew?
+How ill do three farces a night,
+ At the Haymarket, pay us for you!
+
+For what is Bombastes to thee,
+ My Ellenbro', when thou look'st big
+Or where's the burletta can be
+ Like Lauderdale's wit and his wig?
+
+I doubt if even Griffinhoof[5] could
+ (Tho' Griffin's a comical lad)
+Invent any joke half so good
+ As that precious one, "This is too bad!"
+
+Then come again, come again Spring!
+ Oh haste thee, with Fun in thy train;
+And--of all things the funniest--bring
+ These exalted Grimaldis again!
+
+
+[1] One of the shows of London.
+
+[2] More particularly his Grace's celebrated amendment to the Corn Bill:
+for which, and the circumstances connected with it, see Annual Register
+for A. D. 1827.
+
+[3] From a speech of Sir Boyle Roche's, in the Irish House of Commons.
+
+[4] The learning his Lordship displayed on the subject of the butcher's
+"fifth quarter" of mutton will not speedily be forgotten.
+
+[5] The _nom de guerre_ under which Colman has written some of his
+best farces.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE "LIVING DOG" AND "THE DEAD LION."
+
+1828.
+
+
+Next week will be published (as "Lives" are the rage)
+ The whole Reminiscences, wondrous and strange,
+Of a small puppy-dog that lived once in the cage
+ Of the late noble Lion at Exeter 'Change.
+
+Tho' the dog is a dog of the kind they call "sad,"
+ 'Tis a puppy that much to good breeding pretends;
+And few dogs have such opportunities had
+ Of knowing how Lions behave--among friends;
+
+How that animal eats, how he snores, how he drinks,
+ Is all noted down by this Boswell so small;
+And 'tis plain from each sentence, the puppy-dog thinks
+ That the Lion was no such great things after all.
+
+Tho' he roared pretty well--this the puppy allows--
+ It was all, he says, borrowed--all second-hand roar;
+And he vastly prefers his own little bow-wows
+ To the loftiest war-note the Lion could pour.
+
+'Tis indeed as good fun as a _Cynic_ could ask,
+ To see how this cockney-bred setter of rabbits
+Takes gravely the Lord of the Forest to task,
+ And judges of lions by puppy-dog habits.
+
+Nay, fed as he was (and this makes it a dark case)
+ With sops every day from the Lion's own pan,
+He lifts up his leg at the noble beast's carcass.
+ And does all a dog so diminutive can.
+
+However, the book's a good book, being rich in
+ Examples and warnings to lions high-bred,
+How they suffer small mongrelly curs in their kitchen,
+ Who'll feed on them living and foul them when dead.
+
+T. PIDCOCK
+
+_Exeter 'Change_,
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO DON MIGUEL.
+
+
+ Et tu, _Brute_!
+
+
+1828.[1]
+
+
+What! Miguel, _not_ patriotic! oh, fy!
+ After so much good teaching 'tis quite a _take-in_, Sir;
+First schooled as you were under Metternich's eye,
+ And then (as young misses say) "finisht" at Windsor![2]
+
+I ne'er in my life knew a case that was harder;--
+ Such feasts as you had when you made us a call!
+Three courses each day from his Majesty's larder,--
+ And now to turn absolute Don after all!!
+
+Some authors, like Bayes, to the style and the matter
+ Of each thing they _write_ suit the way that they _dine_,
+Roast sirloin for Epic, broiled devils for Satire,
+ And hotchpotch and _trifle_ for rhymes such as mine.
+
+That Rulers should feed the same way, I've no doubt;--
+ Great Despots on _bouilli_ served up _à la Russe_,[3]
+Your small German Princes on frogs and sour crout,
+ And your Viceroy of Hanover always on _goose_.
+
+_Some_ Dons too have fancied (tho' this may be fable)
+ A dish rather dear, if in cooking they blunder it;--
+Not content with the common _hot_ meat _on_ a table,
+ They're partial (eh, Mig?) to a dish of _cold under_ it![4]
+
+No wonder a Don of such appetites found
+ Even Windsor's collations plebeianly plain;
+Where the dishes most _high_ that my Lady sends round
+ Are here _Maintenon_ cutlets and soup _à la Reine_.
+
+Alas! that a youth with such charming beginnings,
+ Should sink all at once to so sad a conclusion,
+And what is still worse, throw the losings and winnings
+ Of worthies on 'Change into so much confusion!
+
+The Bulls, in hysterics--the Bears just as bad--
+ The few men who _have_, and the many who've _not_ tick,
+All shockt to find out that that promising lad,
+ Prince Metternich's pupil, is--_not_ patriotic!
+
+
+[1] At the commencement of this year, the designs of Don Miguel and his
+partisans against the constitution established by his brother had begun
+more openly to declare themselves.
+
+[2] Don Miguel had paid a visit to the English court at the close of the
+year 1827.
+
+[3] Dressed with a pint of the strongest spirits--a favorite dish of the
+Great Frederick of Prussia, and which he persevered in eating even on his
+death-bed, much to the horror of his physician Zimmerman.
+
+[4] This quiet case of murder, with all its particulars--the hiding the
+body under the dinner-table, etc.--is, no doubt, well known to the reader.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS ON THE PRESENT GOVERNMENT OF IRELAND.
+
+1828.
+
+
+Oft have I seen, in gay, equestrian pride,
+Some well-rouged youth round Astley's Circus ride
+Two stately steeds--standing, with graceful straddle,
+Like him of Rhodes, with foot on either saddle,
+While to soft tunes--some jigs and some _andantes_--
+He steers around his light-paced Rosinantes.
+
+So rides along, with canter smooth and pleasant,
+That horseman bold, Lord Anglesea, at present;--
+_Papist_ and _Protestant_ the coursers twain,
+That lend their necks to his impartial rein,
+And round the ring--each honored, as they go,
+With equal pressure from his gracious toe--
+
+To the old medley tune, half "Patrick's Day"
+And half "Boyne Water," take their cantering way,
+While Peel, the showman in the middle, cracks
+His long-lasht whip to cheer the doubtful hacks.
+Ah, ticklish trial of equestrian art!
+How blest, if neither steed would bolt or start;--
+If _Protestant's_ old restive tricks were gone,
+And _Papist's_ winkers could be still kept on!
+But no, false hopes--not even the great Ducrow
+'Twixt two such steeds could 'scape an overthrow:
+If _solar_ hacks played Phaëton a trick,
+What hope, alas, from hackneys _lunatic_?
+
+If once my Lord his graceful balance loses,
+Or fails to keep each foot where each horse chooses;
+If Peel but gives one _extra_ touch of whip
+To _Papist's_ tail or _Protestant's_ ear-tip--
+That instant ends their glorious horsmanship!
+Off bolt the severed steeds, for mischief free.
+And down between them plumps Lord Anglesea!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LIMBO OF LOST REPUTATIONS.
+
+A DREAM.
+
+
+ "_Cio che si perde qui, là si raguna_."
+ ARIOSTO.
+
+ "---a valley, where he sees
+ Things that on earth were lost."
+ MILTON.
+
+
+1828.
+
+
+Knowest thou not him[1] the poet sings,
+ Who flew to the moon's serene domain,
+And saw that valley where all the things,
+ That vanish on earth are found again--
+The hopes of youth, the resolves of age,
+The vow of the lover, the dream of the sage,
+The golden visions of mining cits,
+ The promises great men strew about them;
+And, packt in compass small, the wits
+ Of monarchs who rule as well without them!--
+Like him, but diving with wing profound,
+I have been to a Limbo underground,
+Where characters lost on earth, (and _cried_,
+In vain, like Harris's, far and wide,)
+In heaps like yesterday's orts, are thrown
+And there, so worthless and flyblown
+That even the imps would not purloin them,
+Lie till their worthy owners join them.
+
+Curious it was to see this mass
+ Of lost and torn-up reputations;--
+Some of them female wares, alas!
+ Mislaid at _innocent_ assignations;
+Some, that had sighed their last amen
+ From the canting lips of saints that would be;
+And some once owned by "the best of men,"
+ Who had proved-no better than they should be.
+'Mong others, a poet's fame I spied,
+ Once shining fair, now soakt and black--
+"No wonder" (an imp at my elbow cried),
+ "For I pickt it out of a butt of sack!"
+
+Just then a yell was heard o'er head,
+ Like a chimney-sweeper's lofty summons;
+And lo! a devil right downward sped,
+Bringing within his claws so red
+Two statesmen's characters, found, he said,
+ Last night, on the floor of the House of Commons;
+The which, with black official grin,
+He now to the Chief Imp handed in;--
+_Both_ these articles much the worse
+ For their journey down, as you may suppose;
+But _one_ so devilish rank--"Odd's curse!".
+ Said the Lord Chief Imp, and held his nose.
+"Ho, ho!" quoth he, "I know full well
+ "From whom these two stray matters fell;"--
+Then, casting away, with loathful shrug,
+The uncleaner waif (as he would a drug
+The Invisible's own dark hand had mixt),
+His gaze on the other[2] firm he fixt,
+And trying, tho' mischief laught in his eye,
+To be moral because of the _young_ imps by,
+"What a pity!" he cried--"so fresh its gloss,
+"So long preserved--'tis a public loss!
+"This comes of a man, the careless blockhead,
+"Keeping his character in his pocket;
+"And there--without considering whether
+"There's room for that and his gains together--
+"Cramming and cramming and cramming away,
+"Till--out slips character some fine day!
+
+"However"--and here he viewed it round--
+"This article still may pass for sound.
+"Some flaws, soon patched, some stains are all
+"The harm it has had in its luckless fall.
+"Here, Puck!" and he called to one of his train--
+"The owner may have this back again.
+"Tho' damaged for ever, if used with skill,
+"It may serve perhaps to _trade on_ still;
+"Tho' the gem can never as once be set,
+"It will do for a Tory Cabinet."
+
+
+[1] Astolpho.
+
+[2] Huskisson.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO WRITE BY PROXY.
+
+
+ _qui facit per alium facit per se_.
+
+
+'Mong our neighbors, the French, in the good olden time
+ When Nobility flourisht, great Barons and Dukes
+Often set up for authors in prose and in rhyme,
+ But ne'er took the trouble to write their own books.
+
+Poor devils were found to do this for their betters;--
+ And one day a Bishop, addressing a _Blue_,
+Said, "Ma'am, have you read my new Pastoral Letters?"
+ To which the _Blue_ answered--"No, Bishop, have you?"
+
+The same is now done by _our_ privileged class;
+ And to show you how simple the process it needs,
+If a great Major-General[1] wishes to pass
+ For an author of History, thus he proceeds:--
+
+First, scribbling his own stock of notions as well
+ As he can, with a _goose_-quill that claims him as _kin_,
+He settles his neckcloth--takes snuff--rings the bell,
+ And yawningly orders a Subaltern in.
+
+The Subaltern comes--sees his General seated,
+ In all the self-glory of authorship swelling;--
+"There look," saith his Lordship, "my work is completed,--
+"It wants nothing now but the grammar and spelling."
+
+Well used to a _breach_, the brave Subaltern dreads
+ Awkward breaches of syntax a hundred times more;
+And tho' often condemned to see breaking of heads,
+ He had ne'er seen such breaking of Priscian's before.
+
+However, the job's sure to _pay_--that's enough--
+ So, to it he sets with his tinkering hammer,
+Convinced that there never was job half so tough
+As the mending a great Major-General's grammar.
+
+But lo! a fresh puzzlement starts up to view--
+ New toil for the Sub.--for the Lord new expense:
+'Tis discovered that mending his _grammar_ won't do,
+ As the Subaltern also must find him in _sense_!
+
+At last--even this is achieved by his aid;
+ Friend Subaltern pockets the cash and--the story;
+Drums beat--the new Grand March of Intellect's played--
+ And off struts my Lord, the Historian, in glory!
+
+
+[1] Or Lieutenant-General, as it may happen to be.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IMITATION OF THE INFERNO OF DANTE.
+
+
+ _"Cosi quel fiato gli spiriti mali
+ Di quà, di là, di giu, di su gli mena."_
+
+
+ _Inferno_, canto 5.
+
+
+I turned my steps and lo! a shadowy throng
+Of ghosts came fluttering towards me--blown along,
+Like cockchafers in high autumnal storms,
+By many a fitful gust that thro' their forms
+Whistled, as on they came, with wheezy puff,
+And puft as--tho' they'd never puff enough.
+
+"Whence and what are ye?" pitying I inquired
+Of these poor ghosts, who, tattered, tost, and tired
+With such eternal puffing, scarce could stand
+On their lean legs while answering my demand.
+"We once were authors"--thus the Sprite, who led
+This tag-rag regiment of spectres, said--
+"Authors of every sex, male, female, neuter,
+"Who, early smit with love of praise and--_pewter_,[1]
+"On C--lb--n's shelves first saw the light of day,
+"In ---'s puffs exhaled our lives away--
+"Like summer windmills, doomed to dusty peace,
+"When the brisk gales that lent them motion, cease.
+"Ah! little knew we then what ills await
+"Much-lauded scribblers in their after-state;
+"Bepuft on earth--how loudly Str--t can tell--
+"And, dire reward, now doubly puft in hell!"
+
+ Touched with compassion for this ghastly crew,
+Whose ribs even now the hollow wind sung thro'
+In mournful prose,--such prose as Rosa's[2] ghost
+Still, at the accustomed hour of eggs and toast,
+Sighs thro' the columns of the _Morning Post_,--
+Pensive I turned to weep, when he who stood
+Foremost of all that flatulential brood,
+Singling a _she_-ghost from the party, said,
+"Allow me to present Miss X. Y. Z.,[3]
+"One of our _lettered_ nymphs--excuse the pun--
+"Who gained a name on earth by--having none;
+"And whose initials would immortal be,
+"Had she but learned those plain ones, A. B. C.
+
+"Yon smirking ghost, like mummy dry and neat,
+"Wrapt in his own dead rhymes--fit winding-sheet--
+"Still marvels much that not a soul should care
+"One single pin to know who wrote 'May Fair;'--
+"While this young gentleman," (here forth he drew
+A dandy spectre, puft quite thro' and thro',
+As tho' his ribs were an AEolian lyre
+For the whole Row's soft _trade_winds to inspire,)
+"This modest genius breathed one wish alone,
+"To have his volume read, himself unknown;
+"But different far the course his glory took,
+"All knew the author, and--none read the book.
+
+"Behold, in yonder ancient figure of fun,
+"Who rides the blast, Sir Jonah Barrington;--
+"In tricks to raise the wind his life was spent,
+"And now the wind returns the compliment.
+"This lady here, the Earl of ---'s sister,
+"Is a dead novelist; and this is Mister--
+"Beg pardon--_Honorable_ Mister Lister,
+"A gentleman who some weeks since came over
+"In a smart puff (wind S. S. E.) to Dover.
+"Yonder behind us limps young Vivian Grey,
+"Whose life, poor youth, was long since blown away--
+"Like a torn paper-kite on which the wind
+"No further purchase for a puff can find."
+
+"And thou, thyself"--here, anxious, I exclaimed--
+"Tell us, good ghost, how thou, thyself, art named."
+"Me, Sir!" he blushing cried--"Ah! there's the rub--
+"Know, then--a waiter once at Brooks's Club,
+"A waiter still I might have long remained,
+"And long the club-room's jokes and glasses drained;
+"But ah! in luckless hour, this last December,
+"I wrote a book,[4] and Colburn dubbed me 'Member'--
+"'Member of Brooks's!'--oh Promethean puff,
+"To what wilt thou exalt even kitchen-stuff!
+"With crumbs of gossip, caught from dining wits,
+"And half-heard jokes, bequeathed, like half-chewed bits,
+"To be, each night, the waiter's perquisites;--
+"With such ingredients served up oft before,
+"But with fresh fudge and fiction garnisht o'er,
+"I managed for some weeks to dose the town,
+"Till fresh reserves of nonsense ran me down;
+"And ready still even waiters' souls to damn,
+"The Devil but rang his bell, and--here I am;--
+"Yes--'Coming _up_, Sir,' once my favorite cry,
+"Exchanged for 'Coming _down_, Sir,' here am I!"
+
+Scarce had the Spectre's lips these words let drop,
+When, lo! a breeze--such as from ---'s shop
+Blows in the vernal hour when puffs prevail,
+And speeds the _sheets_ and swells the lagging _sale_--
+Took the poor waiter rudely in the poop,
+And whirling him and all his grisly group
+Of literary ghosts--Miss X. Y. Z.--
+The nameless author, better known than read--
+Sir Jo--the Honorable Mr. Lister,
+And last, not least, Lord Nobody's twin-sister--
+Blew them, ye gods, with all their prose and rhymes
+And sins about them, far into those climes
+"Where Peter pitched his waistcoat"[5] in old times,
+Leaving me much in doubt as on I prest,
+With my great master, thro' this realm unblest,
+Whether Old Nick or Colburn puffs the best.
+
+
+[1] The classical term for money.
+
+[2] Rosa Matilda, who was for many years the writer of the political
+articles in the journal alluded to, and whose spirit still seems to
+preside--"_regnat Rosa_"--over its pages.
+
+[3] _Not_ the charming L. E. L., and still less, Mrs. F. H., whose poetry
+is among the most beautiful of the present day.
+
+[4] "History of the Clubs of London," announced as by "a Member of
+Brooks's."
+
+[5]A _Dantesque_ allusion to the old saying "Nine miles beyond Hell, where
+Peter pitched his waistcoat."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LAMENT FOR THE LOSS OF LORD BATHURST'S TAIL.[1]
+
+
+All _in_ again--unlookt for bliss!
+Yet, ah! _one_ adjunct still we miss;--
+One tender tie, attached so long
+To the same head, thro' right and wrong.
+Why, Bathurst, why didst thou cut off
+ That memorable tail of thine?
+Why--as if _one_ was not enough--
+ Thy pig-tie with thy place resign,
+And thus at once both _cut_ and _run_?
+Alas! my Lord, 'twas not well done,
+'Twas not, indeed,--tho' sad at heart,
+From office and its sweets to part,
+Yet hopes of coming in again,
+Sweet Tory hopes! beguiled our pain;
+But thus to miss that tail of thine,
+Thro' long, long years our rallying sign--
+As if the State and all its powers
+By tenancy _in tail_ were ours--
+To see it thus by scissors fall,
+_This_ was "the unkindest _cut_ of all!"
+It seemed as tho' the ascendant day
+Of Toryism had past away,
+And proving Samson's story true,
+She lost her vigor with her _queue_.
+
+Parties are much like fish, 'tis said--
+The tail directs them, not the head;
+Then how could _any_ party fail,
+That steered its course by Bathurst's tail?
+Not Murat's plume thro' Wagram's fight
+ E'er shed such guiding glories from it,
+As erst in all true Tories sight,
+ Blazed from our old Colonial comet!
+If you, my Lord, a Bashaw were,
+(As Wellington will be anon)
+Thou mightst have had a tail to spare;
+ But no! alas! thou hadst but one,
+ And _that_--like Troy, or Babylon,
+ A tale of other times--is gone!
+Yet--weep ye not, ye Tories true--
+ Fate has not yet of all bereft us;
+Though thus deprived of Bathurst's _queue_,
+ We've Ellenborough's _curls_ still left us:--
+Sweet curls, from which young Love, so vicious,
+His shots, as from nine-pounders, issues;
+Grand, glorious curls, which in debate
+Surcharged with all a nation's fate,
+His Lordship shakes, as Homer's God did,[2]
+ And oft in thundering talk comes near him;
+Except that there the _speaker_ nodded
+ And here 'tis only those who hear him.
+Long, long, ye ringlets, on the soil
+ Of that fat cranium may ye flourish,
+With plenty of Macassar oil
+ Thro' many a year your growth to nourish!
+And ah! should Time too soon unsheath
+ His barbarous shears such locks to sever,
+Still dear to Tories even in death,
+Their last loved relics we'll bequeath,
+ A _hair_-loom to our sons for ever.
+
+
+[1] The noble Lord, as is well known, cut off this much-respected
+appendage on his retirement from office some months since.
+
+[2] "Shakes his ambrosial curls, and gives the nod."--Pope's _Homer_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE CHERRIES.
+
+A PARABLE.[1]
+
+1838.
+
+
+See those cherries, how they cover
+ Yonder sunny garden wall;--
+Had they not that network over,
+ Thieving birds would eat them all.
+
+So to guard our posts and pensions,
+ Ancient sages wove a net,
+Thro' whose holes of small dimensions
+ Only _certain_ knaves can get.
+
+Shall we then this network widen;
+ Shall we stretch these sacred holes,
+Thro' which even already slide in
+ Lots of small dissenting souls?
+
+"God forbid!" old Testy crieth;
+ "God forbid!" so echo I;
+Every ravenous bird that flieth
+ Then would at our cherries fly.
+
+Ope but half an inch or so,
+ And, behold! what bevies break in;--
+_Here_ some curst old Popish crow
+ Pops his long and lickerish beak in;
+
+_Here_ sly Arians flock unnumbered,
+ And Socinians, slim and spare,
+Who with small belief encumbered
+ Slip in easy anywhere;--
+
+Methodists, of birds the aptest,
+ Where there's _pecking_ going on;
+And that water-fowl, the Baptist--
+ All would share our fruits anon;
+
+Every bird of every city,
+ That for years with ceaseless din,
+Hath reverst the starling's ditty,
+ Singing out "I can't get in."
+
+"God forbid!" old _Testy_ snivels;
+ "God forbid!" I echo too;
+Rather may ten thousand devils
+ Seize the whole voracious crew!
+
+If less costly fruits won't suit 'em,
+ Hips and haws and such like berries,
+Curse the cormorants! stone 'em, shoot 'em,
+ Anything--to save our cherries.
+
+
+[1] Written during the late discussion on the Test and Corporation Acts.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+STANZAS WRITTEN IN ANTICIPATION OF DEFEAT.[1]
+
+1828.
+
+
+Go seek for some abler defenders of wrong,
+ If we _must_ run the gantlet thro' blood and expense;
+Or, Goths as ye are, in your multitude strong,
+ Be content with success and pretend not to sense.
+
+If the words of the wise and the generous are vain,
+ If Truth by the bowstring _must_ yield up her breath,
+Let Mutes do the office--and spare her the pain
+ Of an Inglis or Tyndal to talk her to death.
+
+Chain, persecute, plunder--do all that you will--
+ But save us, at least, the old womanly lore
+Of a Foster, who, dully prophetic of ill,
+ Is at once the _two_ instruments, AUGUR[2] and BORE.
+
+Bring legions of Squires--if they'll only be mute--
+ And array their thick heads against reason and right,
+Like the Roman of old, of historic repute,[3]
+ Who with droves of dumb animals carried the fight;
+
+Pour out from each corner and hole of the Court
+ Your Bedchamber lordlings, your salaried slaves,
+Who, ripe for all job-work, no matter what sort,
+ Have their consciences tackt to their patents and staves.
+
+Catch all the small fry who, as Juvenal sings,
+ Are the Treasury's creatures, wherever they swim;
+With all the base, time-serving _toadies_ of Kings,
+ Who, if Punch were the monarch, would worship even him;
+
+And while on the _one_ side each name of renown
+ That illumines and blesses our age is combined;
+While the Foxes, the Pitts, and the Cannings look down,
+ And drop o'er the cause their rich mantles of Mind;
+
+Let bold Paddy Holmes show his troops on the other,
+ And, counting of noses the quantum desired,
+Let Paddy but say, like the Gracchi's famed mother,
+ "Come forward, my _jewels_"--'tis all that's required.
+
+And thus let your farce be enacted hereafter--
+ Thus honestly persecute, outlaw and chain;
+But spare even your victims the torture of laughter,
+ And never, oh never, try _reasoning_ again!
+
+
+[1] During the discussion of the Catholic question in the House of Commons
+last session.
+
+[2] This rhyme is more for the ear than the eye, as the carpenter's tool
+is spelt _auger_.
+
+[3] Fabius, who sent droves of bullock against the enemy.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ODE TO THE WOODS AND FORESTS.
+
+BY ONE OF THE BOARD.
+
+1828.
+
+
+Let other bards to groves repair,
+ Where linnets strain their tuneful throats;
+Mine be the Woods and Forests where
+ The Treasury pours its sweeter _notes_.
+
+No whispering winds have charms for me,
+ Nor zephyr's balmy sighs I ask;
+To raise the wind for Royalty
+ Be all our Sylvan zephyr's task!
+
+And 'stead of crystal brooks and floods,
+ And all such vulgar irrigation,
+Let Gallic rhino thro' our Woods
+ Divert its "course of liquidation."
+
+Ah, surely, Vergil knew full well
+ What Woods and Forests _ought_ to be,
+When sly, he introduced in hell
+ His guinea-plant, his bullion-tree;[1]--
+
+Nor see I why, some future day,
+ When short of cash, we should not send
+Our Herries down--he knows the way--
+ To see if Woods in hell will _lend_.
+
+Long may ye flourish, sylvan haunts,
+ Beneath whose "_branches_ of expense"
+Our gracious King gets all he wants,--
+ _Except_ a little taste and sense.
+
+Long, in your golden shade reclined.
+ Like him of fair Armida's bowers,
+May Wellington some _wood_-nymph find,
+ To cheer his dozenth lustrum's hours;
+
+To rest from toil the Great Untaught,
+ And soothe the pangs his warlike brain
+Must suffer, when, unused to thought,
+ It tries to think and--tries in vain.
+
+Oh long may Woods and Forests be
+ Preserved in all their teeming graces,
+To shelter Tory bards like me
+ Who take delight in Sylvan _places_!
+
+
+[1] Called by Vergil, botanically, "species _aurifrondentis_."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+STANZAS FROM THE BANKS OF THE SHANNON.[1]
+
+1828.
+
+
+ "Take back the virgin page."
+ MOORE'S _Irish Melodies_.
+
+
+No longer dear Vesey, feel hurt and uneasy
+ At hearing it said by the Treasury brother,
+That thou art a sheet of blank paper, my Vesey,
+ And he, the dear, innocent placeman, another.[2]
+
+For lo! what a service we Irish have done thee;--
+ Thou now art a sheet of blank paper no more;
+By St. Patrick, we've scrawled such a lesson upon thee
+ As never was scrawled upon foolscap before.
+
+Come--on with your spectacles, noble Lord Duke,
+ (Or O'Connell has _green_ ones he haply would lend you,)
+Read Vesey all o'er (as you _can't_ read a book)
+ And improve by the lesson we bog-trotters send you;
+
+A lesson, in large _Roman_ characters traced,
+ Whose awful impressions from you and your kin
+Of blank-sheeted statesmen will ne'er be effaced--
+ Unless, 'stead of _paper_, you're mere _asses' skin_.
+
+Shall I help you to construe it? ay, by the Gods,
+ Could I risk a translation, you _should_ have a rare one;
+But pen against sabre is desperate odds,
+ And you, my Lord Duke (as you _hinted_ once), wear one.
+
+Again and again I say, read Vesey o'er;--
+ You will find him worth all the old scrolls of papyrus
+That Egypt e'er filled with nonsensical lore,
+ Or the learned Champollion e'er wrote of, to tire us.
+
+All blank as he was, we've returned him on hand,
+ Scribbled o'er with a warning to Princes and Dukes,
+Whose plain, simple drift if they _won't_ understand,
+ Tho' carest at St. James's, they're fit for St. Luke's.
+
+Talk of leaves of the Sibyls!--more meaning conveyed is
+ In one single leaf such as now we have spelled on,
+Than e'er hath been uttered by all the old ladies
+ That ever yet spoke, from the Sibyls to Eldon.
+
+
+[1] These verses were suggested by the result of the Clare election, in
+the year 1828, when the Right Honorable W. Vesey Fitzgerald was rejected,
+and Mr. O'Connell returned.
+
+[2] Some expressions to this purport, in a published letter of one of
+these gentlemen, had then produced a good deal of amusement.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE ANNUAL PILL.
+
+
+Supposed to be sung by OLD PROSY, the Jew, in the character of Major
+CARTWRIGHT.
+
+
+Vill nobodies try my nice _Annual Pill_,
+ Dat's to purify every ting nashty avay?
+Pless ma heart, pless ma heart, let ma say vat I vill,
+ Not a Chrishtian or Shentleman minds vat I say.
+ 'Tis so pretty a bolus!--just down let it go,
+ And, at vonce, such a _radical_ shange you vill see,
+Dat I'd not be surprished, like de horse in de show,
+ If your heads all vere found, vere your tailsh ought to be!
+ Vill nobodies try my nice _Annual Pill_, etc.
+
+'Twill cure all Electors and purge away clear
+ Dat mighty bad itching dey've got in deir hands--
+'Twill cure too all Statesmen of dulness, ma tear,
+ Tho' the case vas as desperate as poor Mister VAN'S.
+Dere is noting at all vat dis Pill vill not reach--
+ Give the Sinecure Ghentleman van little grain,
+Pless ma heart, it vill act, like de salt on de leech,
+ And he'll throw de pounds, shillings, and pence, up again!
+ Vill nobodies try my nice _Annual Pill_, etc.
+
+'Twould be tedious, ma tear, all its peauties to paint--
+ "But, among oder tings _fundamentally_ wrong,
+It vill cure de Proad Pottom[1]--a common complaint
+ Among M.P.'s and weavers--from _sitting_ too long.
+Should symptoms of _speeching_ preak out on a dunce
+ (Vat is often de case), it vill stop de disease,
+And pring avay all de long speeches at vonce,
+ Dat else vould, like tape-worms, come by degrees!
+
+Vill nobodies try my nice _Annual Pill_,
+ Dat's to purify every ting nashty avay?
+Pless ma heart, pless ma heart, let me say vat I vill,
+ Not a Chrishtian or Shentleman minds vat I say!
+
+
+[1] Meaning, I presume, _Coalition_ Administrations.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+"IF" AND "PERHAPS."[1]
+
+
+Oh tidings of freedom! oh accents of hope!
+ Waft, waft them, ye zephyrs, to Erin's blue sea,
+And refresh with their sounds every son of the Pope,
+ From Dingle-a-cooch to far Donaghadee.
+
+"_If_ mutely the slave will endure and obey,
+ "Nor clanking his fetters nor breathing his pains,
+"His masters _perhaps_ at some far distant day
+ "May _think_ (tender tyrants!) of loosening his chains."
+
+Wise "if" and "perhaps!"--precious salve for our wounds,
+ If he who would rule thus o'er manacled mutes,
+Could check the free spring-tide of Mind that resounds,
+ Even now at his feet, like the sea at Canute's.
+
+But, no, 'tis in vain--the grand impulse is given--
+ Man knows his high Charter, and knowing will claim;
+And if ruin _must_ follow where fetters are riven,
+ Be theirs who have forged them the guilt and the shame.
+
+"_If_ the slave will be silent!"--vain Soldier, beware--
+ There _is_ a dead silence the wronged may assume,
+When the feeling, sent back from the lips in despair,
+ But clings round the heart with a deadlier gloom;--
+
+When the blush that long burned on the suppliant's cheek,
+ Gives place to the avenger's pale, resolute hue;
+And the tongue that once threatened, disdaining to _speak_,
+ Consigns to the arm the high office--to _do_.
+
+_If_ men in that silence should think of the hour
+ When proudly their fathers in panoply stood,
+Presenting alike a bold front-work of power
+ To the despot on land and the foe on the flood:--
+
+That hour when a Voice had come forth from the west,
+ To the slave bringing hopes, to the tyrant alarms;
+And a lesson long lookt for was taught the opprest,
+ That kings are as dust before freemen in arms!
+
+_If_, awfuller still, the mute slave should recall
+ That dream of his boyhood, when Freedom's sweet day
+At length seemed to break thro' a long night of thrall,
+ And Union and Hope went abroad in its ray;--
+
+_If_ Fancy should tell him, that Dayspring of Good,
+ Tho' swiftly its light died away from his chain,
+Tho' darkly it set in a nation's best blood,
+ Now wants but invoking to shine out again;
+
+_If--if_, I say--breathings like these should come o'er
+ The chords of remembrance, and thrill as they come,
+Then,--_perhaps_--ay, _perhaps_--but I dare not say more;
+ Thou hast willed that thy slaves should be mute--I am dumb.
+
+
+[1] Written after hearing a celebrated speech in the House of Lords, June
+10, 1828, when the motion in favor of Catholic Emancipation, brought
+forward by the Marquis of Lansdowne, was rejected by the House of Lords.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WRITE ON, WRITE ON.
+
+A BALLAD.
+
+
+Air.--"_Sleep on, sleep on, my Kathleen dear.
+ salvete, fratres Asini_. ST. FRANCIS.
+
+
+Write on, write on, ye Barons dear,
+ Ye Dukes, write hard and fast;
+The good we've sought for many a year
+ Your quills will bring at last.
+One letter more, Newcastle, pen,
+ To match Lord Kenyon's _two_,
+And more than Ireland's host of men,
+ One brace of Peers will do.
+ Write on, write on, etc.
+
+Sure never since the precious use
+ Of pen and ink began,
+Did letters writ by fools produce
+ Such signal good to man.
+While intellect, 'mong high and low,
+ Is marching _on_, they say,
+Give _me_ the Dukes and Lords who go
+Like crabs, the _other_ way.
+ Write on, write on, etc.
+
+Even now I feel the coming light--
+ Even now, could Folly lure
+My Lord Mountcashel too to write,
+ Emancipation's sure.
+By geese (we read in history),
+ Old Rome was saved from ill;
+And now to _quills_ of geese we see
+ Old Rome indebted still.
+ Write on, write on, etc.
+
+Write, write, ye Peers, nor stoop to style,
+ Nor beat for sense about--
+Things little worth a Noble's while
+ You're better far without.
+Oh ne'er, since asses spoke of yore,
+ Such miracles were done;
+For, write but four such letters more,
+ And Freedom's cause is won!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE DEPARTING SPIRIT OF TITHE.
+
+
+ "The parting Genius is with sighing sent."
+ MILTON.
+
+
+It is o'er, it is o'er, my reign is o'er;
+I hear a Voice, from shore to shore,
+From Dunfanaghy to Baltimore,
+And it saith, in sad, parsonic tone,
+"Great Tithe and Small are dead and gone!"
+
+Even now I behold your vanishing wings,
+Ye Tenths of all conceivable things,
+Which Adam first, as Doctors deem,
+Saw, in a sort of night-mare dream,[1]
+After the feast of fruit abhorred--
+First indigestion on record!--
+Ye decimate ducks, ye chosen chicks,
+Ye pigs which, tho' ye be Catholics,
+Or of Calvin's most select depraved,
+In the Church must have your bacon saved;--
+Ye fields, where Labor counts his sheaves,
+And, whatsoever _himself_ believes,
+Must bow to the Establisht _Church_ belief,
+That the tenth is always a _Protestant_ sheaf;--
+Ye calves of which the man of Heaven
+Takes _Irish_ tithe, one calf in seven;[2]
+Ye tenths of rape, hemp, barley, flax,
+Eggs, timber, milk, fish and bees' wax;
+All things in short since earth's creation,
+Doomed, by the Church's dispensation,
+To suffer eternal decimation--
+Leaving the whole _lay_-world, since then,
+Reduced to nine parts out of ten;
+Or--as we calculate thefts and arsons--
+Just _ten per cent_. the worse for Parsons!
+
+Alas! and is all this wise device
+For the saving of souls thus gone in a trice?--
+The whole put down, in the simplest way,
+By the souls resolving _not_ to pay!
+And even the Papist, thankless race
+Who have had so much the easiest case--
+To _pay_ for our sermons doomed, 'tis true,
+But not condemned to _hear them_, too--
+(Our holy business being, 'tis known,
+With the ears of their barley, not their own,)
+Even _they_ object to let us pillage
+By right divine their tenth of tillage,
+And, horror of horrors, even decline
+To find us in sacramental wine![3]
+
+It is o'er, it is o'er, my reign is o'er,
+Ah! never shall rosy Rector more,
+Like the shepherds of Israel, idly eat,
+And make of his flock "a prey and meat."[4]
+No more shall be his the pastoral sport
+Of suing his flock in the Bishop's Court,
+Thro' various steps, Citation, Libel--
+_Scriptures_ all, but _not_ the Bible;
+Working the Law's whole apparatus,
+To get at a few predoomed potatoes,
+And summoning all the powers of wig,
+To settle the fraction of a pig!--
+Till, parson and all committed deep
+In the case of "Shepherds _versus_ Sheep,"
+The Law usurps the Gospel's place,
+And on Sundays meeting face to face,
+While Plaintiff fills the preacher's station,
+Defendants form the congregation.
+
+So lives he, Mammon's priest, not Heaven's,
+For _tenths_ thus all at _sixes_ and _sevens_,
+Seeking what parsons love no less
+Than tragic poets--a good _distress_.
+Instead of studying St. Augustin,
+Gregory Nyss., or old St. Justin
+(Books fit only to hoard dust in),
+His reverence stints his evening readings
+To learned Reports of Tithe Proceedings,
+Sipping the while that port so ruddy,
+Which forms his only _ancient_ study;--
+Port so old, you'd swear its tartar
+Was of the age of Justin Martyr,
+And, had he sipt of such, no doubt
+His martyrdom would have been--to gout.
+
+Is all then lost?--alas, too true--
+Ye Tenths beloved, adieu, adieu!
+My reign is o'er, my reign is o'er--
+Like old Thumb's ghost, "I can no more."
+
+
+[1] A reverend prebendary of Hereford, in an Essay on the Revenues of the
+Church of England, has assigned the origin of Tithes to "some unrecorded
+revelation made to Adam."
+
+[2] "The tenth calf is due to the parson of common right; and if there are
+seven he shall have one."--REES'S _Cyclopaedia_, art. "_Tithes_."
+
+[3] Among the specimens laid before Parliament of the sort of Church rates
+levied upon Catholics in Ireland, was a charge of two pipes of port for
+sacramental wine.
+
+[4] Ezekiel, xxxiv., 10.--"Neither shall the shepherds feed themselves any
+more; for I will deliver my flock from their mouth, that they may not be
+meat for them."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE EUTHANASIA OF VAN.
+
+
+ "We are told that the bigots are growing old and fast wearing out. If
+ it be so why not let us die in peace?"
+ --LORD BEXLEY'S _Letter to the Freeholders of Kent_.
+
+
+Stop, Intellect, in mercy stop,
+ Ye curst improvements, cease;
+And let poor Nick Vansittart drop
+ Into his grave in peace.
+
+Hide, Knowledge, hide thy rising sun,
+ Young Freedom, veil thy head;
+Let nothing good be thought or done,
+ Till Nick Vansittart's dead!
+
+Take pity on a dotard's fears,
+ Who much doth light detest;
+And let his last few drivelling years
+ Be dark as were the rest.
+
+You too, ye fleeting one-pound notes,
+ Speed not so fast away--
+Ye rags on which old Nicky gloats,
+ A few months longer stay.
+
+Together soon, or much I err,
+ You _both_ from life may go--
+The notes unto the scavenger,
+ And Nick--to Nick below.
+
+Ye Liberals, whate'er your plan,
+ Be all reforms suspended;
+In compliment to dear old Van,
+ Let nothing bad be mended.
+
+Ye Papists, whom oppression wrings,
+ Your cry politely cease,
+And fret your hearts to fiddle-strings
+ That Van may die in peace.
+
+So shall he win a fame sublime
+ By few old rag-men gained;
+Since all shall own, in Nicky's time,
+ Nor sense nor justice reigned.
+
+So shall his name thro' ages past,
+ And dolts ungotten yet,
+Date from "the days of Nicholas,"
+ With fond and sad regret;--
+
+And sighing say, "Alas, had he
+ "Been spared from Pluto's bowers,
+"The blessed reign of Bigotry
+ "And Rags might still be ours!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE REVEREND ----.
+
+ONE OF THE SIXTEEN REQUISITIONISTS OF NOTTINGHAM.
+
+1828.
+
+
+What, _you_, too, my ******, in hashes so knowing,
+ Of sauces and soups Aristarchus profest!
+Are _you_, too, my savory Brunswicker, going
+ To make an old fool of yourself with the rest?
+
+Far better to stick to your kitchen receipts;
+ And--if you want _something_ to tease--for variety,
+Go study how Ude, in his "Cookery," treats
+ Live eels when he fits them for polisht society.
+
+Just snuggling them in, 'twixt the bars of the fire,
+ He leaves them to wriggle and writhe on the coals,[1]
+In a manner that Horner himself would admire,
+ And wish, 'stead of _eels_, they were Catholic souls.
+
+Ude tells us the fish little suffering feels;
+ While Papists of late have more sensitive grown;
+So take my advice, try your hand at live eels,
+ And for _once_ let the other poor devils alone.
+
+I have even a still better receipt for your cook--
+ How to make a goose die of confirmed _hepatitis;_[2]
+And if you'll, for once, _fellow_-feelings o'erlook,
+ A well-tortured goose a most capital sight is.
+
+First, catch him, alive--make a good steady fire--
+ Set your victim before it, both legs being tied,
+(As if left to himself he _might_ wish to retire,)
+ And place a large bowl of rich cream by his side.
+
+There roasting by inches, dry, fevered, and faint,
+ Having drunk all the cream you so civilly laid, off,
+He dies of as charming a liver complaint
+ As ever sleek person could wish a pie made of.
+
+Besides, only think, my dear one of Sixteen,
+ What an emblem this bird, for the epicure's use meant.
+Presents of the mode in which Ireland has been
+ Made a tid-bit for yours and your brethren's amusement:
+
+Tied down to the stake, while her limbs, as they quiver,
+ A slow fire of tyranny wastes by degrees--
+No wonder disease should have swelled up her liver,
+ No wonder you, Gourmands, should love her disease.
+
+
+[1] The only way, Monsieur Ude assures us, to get rid of the oil so
+objectionable in this fish.
+
+[2] A liver complaint. The process by which the livers of geese are
+enlarged for the famous _Pates de foie d'oie_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IRISH ANTIQUITIES.
+
+
+According to some learned opinions
+The Irish once were Carthaginians;
+But trusting to more late descriptions
+I'd rather say they were Egyptians.
+My reason's this:--the Priests of Isis,
+ When forth they marched in long array,
+Employed, 'mong other grave devices,
+ A Sacred Ass to lead the way;
+And still the antiquarian traces
+ 'Mong Irish Lords this Pagan plan,
+For still in all religious cases
+ They put Lord Roden in the van.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A CURIOUS FACT.
+
+
+The present Lord Kenyon (the Peer who writes letters,
+For which the waste-paper folks much are his debtors)
+Hath one little oddity well worth reciting,
+Which puzzleth observers even more than his writing.
+Whenever Lord Kenyon doth chance to behold
+A cold Apple-pie--mind, the pie _must_ be cold--
+His Lordship looks solemn (few people know why),
+And he makes a low bow to the said apple-pie.
+This idolatrous act in so "vital" a Peer,
+Is by most serious Protestants thought rather queer--
+Pie-worship, they hold, coming under the head
+(Vide _Crustium_, chap, iv.) of the Worship of Bread.
+Some think 'tis a tribute, as author he owes
+For the service that pie-crust hath done to his prose;--
+The only good things in his pages, they swear,
+Being those that the pastry-cook sometimes put there.
+_Others_ say, 'tis a homage, thro' piecrust conveyed,
+To our Glorious Deliverer's much-honored shade;
+As that Protestant Hero (or Saint, if you please)
+Was as fond of cold pie as he was of green pease,[1]
+And 'tis solely in loyal remembrance of that,
+My Lord Kenyon to apple-pie takes off his hat.
+While others account for this kind salutation;"--
+By what Tony Lumpkin calls "concatenation;"
+A certain good-will that, from sympathy's ties,
+'Twixt old _Apple_-women and _Orange_-men lies.
+
+But 'tis needless to add, these are all vague surmises,
+For thus, we're assured, the whole matter arises:
+Lord Kenyon's respected old father (like many
+Respected old fathers) was fond of a penny;
+And loved so to save,[2] that--there's not the least question--
+His death was brought on by a bad indigestion,
+From cold apple-pie-crust his Lordship _would_ stuff in
+At breakfast to save the expense of hot muffin.
+Hence it is, and hence only, that cold apple-pies
+Are beheld by his Heir with such reverent eyes--
+Just as honest King Stephen his beaver might doff
+To the fishes that carried his kind uncle off--
+And while _filial_ piety urges so many on,
+ 'Tis pure _apple_-pie-ety moves my Lord Kenyon.
+
+
+[1] See the anecdote, which the Duchess of Marlborough relates in her
+Memoirs, of this polite hero appropriating to himself one day, at dinner,
+a whole dish of green peas--the first of the season--while the poor
+Princess Anne, who was then in a longing condition, sat by vainly
+entreating with her eyes for a share.
+
+[2] The same prudent propensity characterizes his descendant, who (as is
+well known) would not even go to the expense of a diphthong on his
+father's monument, but had the inscription spelled, economically,
+thus:--"_mors janua vita_"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NEW-FASHIONED ECHOES.
+
+
+Sir,--
+
+Most of your readers are no doubt acquainted with the anecdote told of a
+certain not over-wise judge who, when in the act of delivering a charge in
+some country court-house, was interrupted by the braying of an ass at the
+door. "What noise is that?" asked the angry judge. "Only an extraordinary
+_echo_ there is in court, my Lord," answered one of the counsel.
+
+As there are a number of such "extraordinary echoes" abroad just now, you
+will not, perhaps, be unwilling, Mr. Editor, to receive the following few
+lines suggested by them.
+
+Yours, etc. S.
+
+1828
+
+
+ _huc coeamus,[1] ait; nullique libentius unquam responsura sono,
+ coeamus, retulit echo_.
+ OVID.
+
+
+There are echoes, we know, of all sorts,
+ From the echo that "dies in the dale,"
+To the "airy-tongued babbler" that sports
+ Up the tide of the torrent her "tale."
+
+There are echoes that bore us, like Blues,
+ With the latest smart _mot_ they have heard;
+There are echoes extremely like shrews
+ Letting nobody have the last word.
+
+In the bogs of old Paddy-land, too.
+ Certain "talented" echoes[2] there dwell,
+Who on being askt, "How do you do?"
+ Politely reply, “Pretty well,"
+
+But why should I talk any more
+ Of such old-fashioned echoes as these,
+When Britain has new ones in store,
+ That transcend them by many degrees?
+
+For of all repercussions of sound
+ Concerning which bards make a pother,
+There's none like that happy rebound
+ When one blockhead echoes an other;--
+
+When Kenyon commences the bray,
+ And the Borough-Duke follows his track;
+And loudly from Dublin's sweet bay
+ Rathdowne brays, with interest, back!--
+
+And while, of _most_ echoes the sound
+ On our ear by reflection doth fall,
+These Brunswickers[3] pass the bray round,
+ Without any reflection at all.
+
+Oh Scott, were I gifted like you,
+ Who can name all the echoes there are
+From Benvoirlich to bold Benvenue,
+ From Benledi to wild Uamvar;
+
+I might track thro' each hard Irish name
+ The rebounds of this asinine strain,
+Till from Neddy to Neddy, it came
+ To the _chief_ Neddy, Kenyon, again;
+
+Might tell how it roared in Rathdowne,
+ How from Dawson it died off genteelly--
+How hollow it hung from the crown
+ Of the fat-pated Marquis of Ely;
+
+How on hearing my Lord of Glandine,
+ Thistle-eaters the stoutest gave way,
+Outdone in their own special line
+ By the forty-ass power of his bray!
+
+But, no--for so humble a bard
+ 'Tis a subject too trying to touch on;
+Such noblemen's names are too hard,
+ And their noddles too soft to dwell much on.
+
+Oh Echo, sweet nymph of the hill,
+ Of the dell and the deep-sounding shelves;
+If in spite of Narcissus you still
+ Take to fools who are charmed with themselves,
+
+Who knows but, some morning retiring,
+ To walk by the Trent's wooded side,
+You may meet with Newcastle, admiring
+ His own lengthened ears in the tide!
+
+Or, on into Cambria straying,
+ Find Kenyon, that double tongued elf,
+In his love of _ass_-cendency, braying
+ A Brunswick duet with himself!
+
+
+[1] "Let us from Clubs."
+
+[2] Commonly called "Paddy Blake's Echoes".
+
+[3] Anti-Catholic associations, under the title of Brunswick Clubs, were
+at this time becoming numerous both in England and Ireland.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+INCANTATION.
+
+FROM THE NEW TRAGEDY OF "THE BRUNSWICKERS."
+
+
+SCENE.--_Penenden Plain. In the middle, a caldron boiling. Thunder.--
+Enter three Brunswickers_.
+
+ _1st Bruns_.--Thrice hath scribbling Kenyon scrawled,
+
+ _2d Bruns_.--Once hath fool Newcastle bawled,
+
+ _3d Bruns_.--Bexley snores:--'tis time, 'tis time,
+
+ _1st Bruns_.--Round about the caldron go;
+In the poisonous nonsense throw.
+Bigot spite that long hath grown
+Like a toad within a stone,
+Sweltering in the heart of Scott,
+Boil we in the Brunswick pot.
+
+ _All_.--Dribble, dribble, nonsense dribble,
+Eldon, talk, and Kenyon, scribble.
+
+ _2d Bruns_.--Slaver from Newcastle's quill
+In the noisome mess distil,
+Brimming high our Brunswick broth
+Both with venom and with froth.
+Mix the brains (tho' apt to hash ill,
+Being scant) of Lord Mountcashel,
+With that malty stuff which Chandos
+Drivels as no other man does.
+Catch (_i. e._ if catch you can)
+One idea, spick and span,
+From my Lord of Salisbury,--
+One idea, tho' it be
+Smaller than the "happy flea"
+Which his sire in sonnet terse
+Wedded to immortal verse.[1]
+Tho' to rob the son is sin,
+Put his _one_ idea in;
+And, to keep it company,
+Let that conjuror Winchelsea
+Drop but _half_ another there,
+If he hath so much to spare.
+Dreams of murders and of arsons,
+Hatched in heads of Irish parsons,
+Bring from every hole and corner,
+Where ferocious priests like Horner
+Purely for religious good
+Cry aloud for Papist's blood,
+Blood for Wells, and such old women,
+At their ease to wade and swim in.
+
+ _All_.--Dribble, dribble, nonsense dribble,
+Bexley, talk, and Kenyon, scribble.
+
+ _3d Bruns_.--Now the charm begin to brew;
+Sisters, sisters, add thereto
+Scraps of Lethbridge's old speeches,
+Mixt with leather from his breeches,
+Rinsings of old Bexley's brains,
+Thickened (if you'll take the pains)
+With that pulp which rags create,
+In their middle _nympha_ state,
+Ere, like insects frail and sunny,
+Forth they wing abroad as money.
+There--the Hell-broth we've enchanted--
+Now but _one_ thing more is wanted.
+Squeeze o'er all that Orange juice,
+Castlereagh keeps corkt for use,
+Which, to work the better spell, is
+Colored deep with blood of ----,
+Blood, of powers far more various,
+Even than that of Januarius,
+Since so great a charm hangs o'er it,
+England's parsons bow before it,
+ _All_.--Dribble, dribble, nonsense dribble,
+Bexley, talk, and Kenyon, scribble.
+ _2d Bruns_.--Cool it now with ----'s blood,
+So the charm is firm and good.
+ [_exeunt_.
+
+
+[1] Alluding to a well-known lyric composition of the late Marquis, which,
+with a slight alteration, might be addressed either to a flea or a fly.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO MAKE A GOOD POLITICIAN.
+
+
+Whene'er you're in doubt, said a Sage I once knew,
+'Twixt two lines of conduct _which_ course to pursue,
+Ask a woman's advice, and, whate'er she advise,
+Do the very reverse and you're sure to be wise.
+
+Of the same use as guides the Brunswicker throng;
+In their thoughts, words and deeds, so instinctively wrong,
+That whatever they counsel, act, talk or indite,
+Take the opposite course and you're sure to be right.
+
+So golden this rule, that, had nature denied you
+The use of that finger-post, Reason, to guide you--
+Were you even more doltish than any given man is,
+More soft than Newcastle, more twaddling than Van is.
+I'd stake my repute, on the following conditions,
+To make you the soundest of sound politicians.
+
+Place yourself near the skirts of some high-flying Tory--
+Some Brunswicker parson, of port-drinking glory,--
+Watch well how he dines, during any great Question--
+What makes him feel gayly, what spoils his digestion--
+And always feel sure that _his_ joy o'er a stew
+Portends a clear case of dyspepsia to _you_.
+Read him backwards, like Hebrew--whatever he wishes
+Or praises, note down as absurd or pernicious.
+Like the folks of a weather-house, shifting about,
+When he's _out_ be an _In_-when he's _in_ be an _Out_.
+Keep him always reversed in your thoughts, night and day,
+Like an Irish barometer turned the wrong way:--
+If he's _up_ you may swear that foul weather is nigh;
+If he's _down_ you may look for a bit of blue sky.
+Never mind what debaters or journalists say,
+Only ask what _he_ thinks and then think t'other way.
+Does he hate the Small-note Bill? then firmly rely
+The Small-note Bill's a blessing, tho' _you_ don't know why.
+Is Brougham his aversion? then Harry's your man.
+Does he quake at O'Connell? take doubly to Dan.
+Is he all for the Turks? then at once take the whole
+Russian Empire (Tsar, Cossacks and all) to your soul.
+In short, whatsoever he talks, thinks or is,
+Be your thoughts, words and essence the contrast of his.
+Nay, as Siamese ladies--at least the polite ones,--
+All paint their teeth black, 'cause the devil has white ones-
+If even by the chances of time or of tide
+Your Tory for once should have sense on his side,
+Even _then_ stand aloof--for be sure that Old Nick
+When a Tory talks sensibly, means you some trick.
+
+Such my recipe is--and, in one single verse,
+I shall now, in conclusion, its substance rehearse,
+Be all that a Brunswicker _is_ not nor _could_ be,
+And then--you’ll be all that an honest man should be.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EPISTLE OF CONDOLENCE.
+
+FROM A SLAVE-LORD, TO A COTTON-LORD.
+
+
+Alas! my dear friend, what a state of affairs!
+ How unjustly we both are despoiled of our rights!
+Not a pound of black flesh shall I leave to my heirs,
+ Nor must you any more work to death little whites.
+
+Both forced to submit to that general controller
+ Of King, Lords and cotton mills, Public Opinion,
+No more shall _you_ beat with a big billy-roller.
+ Nor _I_ with the cart-whip assert my dominion.
+
+Whereas, were we suffered to do as we please
+ With our Blacks and our Whites, as of yore we were let,
+We might range them alternate, like harpsichord keys,
+ And between us thump out a good piebald duet.
+
+But this fun is all over;--farewell to the zest
+ Which Slavery now lends to each teacup we sip;
+Which makes still the cruellest coffee the best,
+ And that sugar the sweetest which smacks of the whip.
+
+Farewell too the Factory's white pickaninnies--
+ Small, living machines which if flogged to their tasks
+Mix so well with their namesakes, the "Billies" and "Jennies,"
+ That _which_ have got souls in 'em nobody asks;--
+
+Little Maids of the Mill, who themselves but ill-fed,
+ Are obliged, 'mong their other benevolent cares,
+To "keep feeding the scribblers,"[1]--and better, 'tis said,
+ Than old Blackwood or Fraser have ever fed theirs.
+
+All this is now o'er and so dismal _my_ loss is,
+ So hard 'tis to part from the smack of the throng,
+That I mean (from pure love for the old whipping process),
+ To take to whipt syllabub all my life long.
+
+
+[1] One of the operations in cotton mills usually performed by children.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GHOST OF MILTIADES.
+
+
+ _ah quoties dubies Scriptis exarsit amator_.
+ OVID.
+
+
+The Ghost of Miltiades came at night,
+And he stood by the bed of the Benthamite,
+And he said, in a voice that thrilled the frame,
+"If ever the sound of Marathon's name
+ Hath fired thy blood or flusht thy brow,
+"Lover of Liberty, rouse thee now!"
+
+The Benthamite yawning left his bed--
+Away to the Stock Exchange he sped,
+And he found the Scrip of Greece so high,
+That it fired his blood, it flusht his eye,
+And oh! 'twas a sight for the Ghost to see,
+For never was Greek more Greek than he!
+And still as the premium higher went,
+His ecstasy rose--so much _per cent_.
+(As we see in a glass that tells the weather
+The heat and the _silver_ rise together,)
+And Liberty sung from the patriot's lip,
+While a voice from his pocket whispered "Scrip!"
+The Ghost of Miltiades came again;--
+He smiled, as the pale moon smiles thro' rain,
+For his soul was glad at that patriot strain;
+(And poor, dear ghost--how little he knew
+The jobs and the tricks of the Philhellene crew!)
+"Blessings and thanks!" was all he said,
+Then melting away like a night-dream fled!
+
+The Benthamite hears--amazed that ghosts
+Could be such fools--and away he posts,
+A patriot still? Ah no, ah no--
+Goddess of Freedom, thy Scrip is low,
+And warm and fond as thy lovers are,
+Thou triest their passion, when under _par_,
+The Benthamite's ardor fast decays,
+By turns he weeps and swears and prays.
+And wishes the devil had Crescent and Cross,
+Ere _he_ had been forced to sell at a loss.
+They quote him the Stock of various nations,
+But, spite of his classic associations,
+Lord! how he loathes the Greek _quotations_!
+
+"Who'll buy my Scrip? Who'll buy my Scrip?"
+Is now the theme of the patriot's lip,
+As he runs to tell how hard his lot is
+To Messrs. Orlando and Luriottis,
+And says, "Oh Greece, for Liberty's sake,
+"Do buy my Scrip, and I vow to break
+"Those dark, unholy _bonds_ of thine--
+"If you'll only consent to buy up _mine_!"
+The Ghost of Miltiades came once more;--
+His brow like the night was lowering o'er,
+And he said, with a look that flasht dismay,
+"Of Liberty's foes the worst are they,
+"Who turn to a trade her cause divine,
+"And gamble for gold on Freedom's shrine!"
+Thus saying, the Ghost, as he took his flight,
+Gave a Parthian kick to the Benthamite,
+Which sent him, whimpering, off to Jerry--
+And vanisht away to the Stygian ferry!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ALARMING INTELLIGENCE!
+
+REVOLUTION IN THE DICTIONARY--ONE _GALT_ AT THE HEAD OF IT.
+
+
+God preserve us!--there's nothing now safe from assault;--
+ Thrones toppling around, churches brought to the hammer;
+And accounts have just reached us that one Mr. _Galt_
+ Has declared open war against English and Grammar!
+
+He had long been suspected of some such design,
+ And, the better his wicked intents to arrive at,
+Had lately 'mong Colburn's troops of _the line_
+ (The penny-a-line men) enlisted as private.
+
+There schooled, with a rabble of words at command,
+ Scotch, English and slang in promiscuous alliance.
+He at length against Syntax has taken his stand,
+ And sets all the Nine Parts of Speech at defiance.
+
+Next advices, no doubt, further facts will afford:
+ In the mean time the danger most imminent grows,
+He has taken the Life of one eminent Lord,
+ And whom he'll _next_ murder the Lord only knows.
+
+_Wednesday evening_.
+Since our last, matters, luckily, look more serene;
+ Tho' the rebel, 'tis stated, to aid his defection,
+Has seized a great Powder--no, Puff Magazine,
+ And the explosions are dreadful in every direction.
+
+What his meaning exactly is, nobody knows,
+ As he talks (in a strain of intense botheration)
+Of lyrical "ichor,"[1] "gelatinous" prose,[2]
+ And a mixture called amber immortalization.[3]
+
+_Now_, he raves of a bard he once happened to meet,
+Seated high "among rattlings" and churning a sonnet;[4]
+_Now_, talks of a mystery, wrapt in a sheet,
+ With a halo (by way of a nightcap) upon it![5]
+
+We shudder in tracing these terrible lines;
+ Something bad they must mean, tho' we can't make it out;
+For whate'er may be guessed of Galt's secret designs,
+ That they're all _Anti_-English no Christian can doubt.
+
+
+[1] "That dark disease ichor which colored her effusions."--GALT'S _Life
+of Byron_.
+
+[2] "The gelatinous character of their effusions." _Ibid_.
+
+[3] "The poetical embalmment or rather amber immortalization."--
+_Ibid_.
+
+[4] "Sitting amidst the shrouds and rattlings, churning an inarticulate
+melody."--_Ibid_.
+
+[5] "He was a mystery in a winding sheet, crowned with a halo."--
+_Ibid_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+RESOLUTIONS
+
+PASSED AT A LATE MEETING OF REVERENDS AND RIGHT REVERENDS.
+
+
+Resolved--to stick to every particle
+Of every Creed and every Article;
+Reforming naught, or great or little,
+We'll stanchly stand by every tittle,
+And scorn the swallow of that soul
+Which cannot boldly bolt the whole.[1]
+Resolved that tho' St. Athanasius
+In damning souls is rather spacious--
+Tho' wide and far his curses fall,
+Our Church "hath stomach for them all;"
+And those who're not content with such,
+May e'en be damned ten times as much.
+
+Resolved--such liberal souls are we--
+Tho' hating Nonconformity,
+We yet believe the cash no worse is
+That comes from Nonconformist purses.
+Indifferent _whence_ the money reaches
+The pockets of our reverend breeches,
+To us the Jumper's jingling penny
+Chinks with a tone as sweet as any;
+And even our old friends Yea and Nay
+May thro' the nose for ever pray,
+If _also_ thro' the nose they'll pay.
+
+Resolved that Hooper,[2] Latimer,[3]
+And Cranmer,[4] all extremely err,
+In taking such a low-bred view
+Of what Lords Spiritual ought to do:--
+All owing to the fact, poor men,
+That Mother Church was modest then,
+Nor knew what golden eggs her goose,
+The Public, would in time produce.
+One Pisgah peep at modern Durham
+To far more lordly thoughts would stir 'em.
+
+Resolved that when we Spiritual Lords
+Whose income just enough affords
+To keep our Spiritual Lordships cosey,
+Are told by Antiquarians prosy
+How ancient Bishops cut up theirs,
+Giving the poor the largest shares--
+Our answer is, in one short word,
+We think it pious but absurd.
+Those good men made the world their debtor,
+But we, the Church reformed, know better;
+And taking all that all can pay,
+Balance the account the other way.
+
+Resolved our thanks profoundly due are
+To last month's Quarterly Reviewer,
+Who proves by arguments so clear
+(One sees how much he holds _per_ year)
+That England's Church, tho' out of date,
+Must still be left to lie in state,
+As dead, as rotten and as grand as
+The mummy of King Osymandyas,
+All pickled snug--the brains drawn out--
+With costly cerements swathed about,--
+And "Touch me not," those words terrific,
+Scrawled o'er her in good hieroglyphic.
+
+
+[1] One of the questions propounded to the Puritans in 1573 was--"Whether
+the Book of Service was good and godly, every tittle grounded on the Holy
+Scripture?" On which an honest Dissenter remarks--"Surely they had a
+wonderful opinion of their Service Book that there was not a _tittle_
+amiss, in it."
+
+[2] "They," the Bishops, "know that the primitive Church had no such
+Bishops. If the fourth part of the bishopric remained unto the Bishop, it
+were sufficient."--_On the Commandments_, p. 72.
+
+[3] "Since the Prelates were made Lords and Nobles, the plough standeth,
+there is no work done, the people starve."--_Lat. Serm_.
+
+[4] "Of whom have come all these glorious titles, styles, and pomps into
+the Church. But I would that I, and all my brethren, the Bishops, would
+leave all our styles, and write the styles of our offices," etc.--_Life
+of Cranmer, by Strype, Appendix_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SIR ANDREW'S DREAM.
+
+
+ "_nec tu sperne piis venientia somnia portis:
+ cum pia venerunt somnia, pondus liubent_."
+ PROPERT. _lib. iv. eleg_. 7.
+
+
+As snug, on a Sunday eve, of late,
+In his easy chair Sir Andrew sate,
+Being much too pious, as every one knows,
+To do aught, of a Sunday eve, but doze,
+He dreamt a dream, dear, holy man,
+And I'll tell you his dream as well as I can.
+He found himself, to his great amaze,
+In Charles the First's high Tory days,
+And just at the time that gravest of Courts
+Had publisht its Book of Sunday Sports.[1]
+
+_Sunday_ Sports! what a thing for the ear
+Of Andrew even in sleep to hear!--
+It chanced to be too a Sabbath day
+When the people from church were coming away;
+And Andrew with horror heard this song.
+As the smiling sinners flockt along;--
+"Long life to the Bishops, hurrah! hurrah!
+"For a week of work and a Sunday of play
+"Make the poor man's life run merry away."
+
+"The Bishops!" quoth Andrew, "Popish, I guess,"
+And he grinned with conscious holiness.
+But the song went on, and, to brim the cup
+Of poor Andy's grief, the fiddles struck up!
+
+"Come, take out the lasses--let's have a dance--
+ "For the Bishops allow us to skip our fill,
+"Well knowing that no one's the more in advance
+ "On the road to heaven, for standing still.
+"Oh! it never was meant that grim grimaces
+ "Should sour the cream of a creed of love;
+"Or that fellows with long, disastrous faces,
+ "Alone should sit among cherubs above.
+ "Then hurrah for the Bishops, etc.
+
+"For Sunday fun we never can fail,
+ "When the Church herself each sport points out;--
+"There's May-games, archery, Whitsun-ale,
+ "And a May-pole high to dance about.
+"Or should we be for a pole hard driven,
+ "Some lengthy saint of aspect fell,
+"With his pockets on earth and his nose in heaven,
+ "Will do for a May-pole just as well.
+"Then hurrah for the Bishops, hurrah! hurrah!
+"A week of work and a Sabbath of play
+"Make the poor man's life run merry away."
+
+To Andy, who doesn't much deal in history,
+This Sunday scene was a downright mystery;
+And God knows where might have ended the joke,
+But, in trying to stop the fiddles, he woke,
+And the odd thing is (as the rumor goes)
+That since that dream--which, one would suppose,
+Should have made his godly stomach rise.
+Even more than ever 'gainst Sunday pies--
+He has viewed things quite with different eyes;
+Is beginning to take, on matters divine,
+Like Charles and his Bishops, the _sporting_ line--
+Is all for Christians jigging in pairs,
+As an interlude 'twixt Sunday prayers:--
+Nay, talks of getting Archbishop Howley
+To bring in a Bill enacting duly
+That all good Protestants from this date
+May freely and lawfully recreate,
+Of a Sunday eve, their spirits moody,
+With Jack in the Straw or Punch and Judy.
+
+
+[1] _The Book of Sports_ drawn up by Bishop Moreton was first put forth in
+the reign of James I., 1618, and afterwards republished, at the advice of
+Laud, by Charles I., 1633, with an injunction that it should be "made
+public by order from the Bishops." We find it therein declared, that "for
+his good people's recreation, his Majesty's pleasure was, that after the
+end of divine service they should not be disturbed, letted, or discouraged
+from any lawful recreations, such as dancing, either of men or women,
+archery for men, leaping, vaulting, or any such harmless recreations, nor
+having of May-games, Whitsun-ales, or Morris-dances, or setting up of May
+poles, or other sports therewith used." etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A BLUE LOVE SONG.
+
+TO MISS-----.
+
+
+Air-"_Come live with me and be my love_."
+
+
+Come wed with me and we will write,
+My Blue of Blues, from morn till night.
+Chased from our classic souls shall be
+All thoughts of vulgar progeny;
+And thou shalt walk through smiling rows
+Of chubby duodecimos,
+While I, to match thy products nearly,
+Shall lie-in of a quarto yearly.
+'Tis true, even books entail some trouble;
+But _live_ productions give one double.
+
+Correcting children is _such_ bother,--
+While printers' devils correct the other.
+Just think, my own Malthusian dear,
+How much more decent 'tis to hear
+From male or female--as it may be--
+"How is your book?" than "How's your baby?"
+And whereas physic and wet nurses
+Do much exhaust paternal purses,
+Our books if rickety may go
+And be well dry-nurst in _the Row_;
+And when God wills to take them hence,
+Are buried at _the Row's_ expense.
+
+Besides, (as 'tis well proved by thee,
+In thy own Works, vol. 93.)
+The march, just now, of population
+So much outscrips all moderation,
+That even prolific herring-shoals
+Keep pace not with our erring souls.[1]
+Oh far more proper and well-bred
+To stick to writing books instead;
+And show the world how two Blue lovers
+Can coalesce, like two book-covers,
+(Sheep-skin, or calf, or such wise leather,)
+Lettered at back and stitched together
+Fondly as first the binder fixt 'em,
+With naught but--literature betwixt 'em.
+
+
+[1] See "Ella of Garveloch."--Garveloch being a place where there
+was a large herring-fishery, but where, as we are told by the author, "the
+people increased much faster than the produce."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SUNDAY ETHICS.
+
+A SCOTCH ODE.
+
+
+Puir, profligate Londoners, having heard tell
+ That the De'il's got amang ye, and fearing 'tis true,
+We ha' sent ye a mon wha's a match for his spell,
+A chiel o' our ain, that the De'il himsel
+ Will be glad to keep clear of, ane Andrew Agnew.
+
+So at least ye may reckon for one day entire
+ In ilka lang week ye'll be tranquil eneugh,
+As Auld Nick, do him justice, abhors a Scotch squire,
+An' would sooner gae roast by his ain kitchen fire
+ Than pass a hale Sunday wi' Andrew Agnew.
+
+For, bless the gude mon, gin he had his ain way,
+ He'd na let a cat on the Sabbath say "mew;"
+Nae birdie maun whistle, nae lambie maun play,
+An Phoebus himsel could na travel that day.
+ As he'd find a new Joshua in Andie Agnew.
+
+Only hear, in your Senate, how awfu' he cries,
+ "Wae, wae to a' sinners who boil an' who stew!
+"Wae, wae to a' eaters o' Sabbath baked pies,
+"For as surely again shall the crust thereof rise
+ "In judgment against ye," saith Andrew Agnew!
+
+Ye may think, from a' this, that our Andie's the lad
+ To ca' o'er the coals your nobeelity too;
+That their drives, o' a Sunday, wi' flunkies,[1] a' clad
+Like Shawmen, behind 'em, would mak the mon mad--
+ But he's nae sic a noodle, our Andie Agnew.
+
+If Lairds an' fine Ladies, on Sunday, think right
+ To gang to the deevil--as maist o' 'em do--
+To stop them our Andie would think na polite;
+And 'tis odds (if the chiel could get onything by't)
+ But he'd follow 'em, booing, would Andrew Agnew.
+
+
+[1] Servants in livery.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+AWFUL EVENT.
+
+
+Yes, Winchelsea (I tremble while I pen it),
+Winehelsea's Earl hath _cut_ the British Senate--
+Hath said to England's Peers, in accent gruff,
+ "_That_ for ye all"[snapping his fingers] and exit in a huff!
+
+Disastrous news!--like that of old which spread,
+From shore to shore, "our mighty Pan is dead,"
+O'er the cross benches (cross from _being_ crost)
+Sounds the loud wail, "Our Winchelsea is lost!"
+
+Which of ye, Lords, that heard him can forget
+The deep impression of that awful threat,
+"I quit your house!!"--midst all that histories tell,
+I know but _one_ event that's parallel:--
+
+It chanced at Drury Lane, one Easter night,
+When the gay gods too blest to be polite
+Gods at their ease, like those of learned Lucretius,
+Laught, whistled, groaned, uproariously facetious--
+A well-drest member of the middle gallery,
+Whose "ears polite" disdained such low canaillerie,
+Rose in his place--so grand, you'd almost swear
+Lord Winchelsea himself stood towering there--
+And like that Lord of dignity and _nous_,
+Said, "Silence, fellows, or--I'll leave the house!!"
+
+How brookt the gods this speech? Ah well-a-day,
+That speech so fine should be so thrown away!
+In vain did this mid-gallery grandee
+Assert his own two-shilling dignity--
+In vain he menaced to withdraw the ray
+Of his own full-price countenance away--
+Fun against Dignity is fearful odds,
+And as the Lords laugh _now_, so giggled _then_ the gods!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE NUMBERING OF THE CLERGY.
+
+PARODY ON SIR CHARLES HAN. WILLIAMS'S FAMOUS ODE,
+"COME, CLOE, and GIVE ME SWEET KISSES."
+
+
+ "We want more Churches and more Clergymen."
+ _Bishop of London's late Charge_.
+
+
+ _"rectorum numerum, terris pereuntibus augent."
+ Claudian in Eutrop_.
+
+
+Come, give us more Livings and Rectors,
+ For, richer no realm ever gave;
+But why, ye unchristian objectors,
+ Do ye ask us how many we crave?[1]
+
+Oh there can't be too many rich Livings
+ For souls of the Pluralist kind,
+Who, despising old Crocker's misgivings,
+ To numbers can ne'er be confined.[2]
+
+Count the cormorants hovering about,[3]
+ At the time their fish season sets in,
+When these models of keen diners-out
+ Are preparing their beaks to begin.
+
+Count the rooks that, in clerical dresses,
+ Flock round when the harvest's in play,
+And not minding the farmer's distresses,
+ Like devils in grain peck away.
+
+Go, number the locusts in heaven,[4]
+ On the way to some titheable shore;
+And when so many Parsons you've given,
+ We still shall be craving for more.
+
+Then, unless ye the Church would submerge, ye
+ Must leave us in peace to augment.
+For the wretch who could number the Clergy,
+ With few will be ever content.
+
+
+[1]
+Come, Cloe, and give me sweet kisses,
+ For sweeter sure never girl gave;
+But why, in the midst of my blisses,
+ Do you ask me how many I'd have?
+
+[2]
+For whilst I love thee above measure,
+To numbers I'll ne'er be confined.
+
+[3]
+Count the bees that on Hybla are playing,
+ Count the flowers that enamel its fields,
+Count the flocks, etc.
+
+[4]
+Go number the stars in the heaven,
+ Count how many sands on the shore,
+When so many kisses you've given,
+ I still shall be craving for more.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A SAD CASE.
+
+
+ "If it be the undergraduate season at which this _rabies
+ religiosa_ is to be so fearful, what security has Mr. Goulburn
+ against it at this moment, when his son is actually exposed to the
+ full venom of an association with Dissenters?"
+ --_The Times_, March 25.
+
+
+How sad a case!--just think of it--
+If Goulburn junior should be bit
+By some insane Dissenter, roaming
+Thro' Granta's halls, at large and foaming,
+And with that aspect _ultra_ crabbed
+Which marks Dissenters when they're rabid!
+God only knows what mischiefs might
+Result from this one single bite,
+Or how the venom, once suckt in,
+Might spread and rage thro' kith and kin.
+Mad folks of all denominations
+First turn upon their own relations:
+So that _one_ Goulburn, fairly bit,
+Might end in maddening the whole kit,
+Till ah! ye gods! we'd have to rue
+Our Goulburn senior bitten too;
+The Hychurchphobia in those veins,
+Where Tory blood now redly reigns;--
+And that dear man who now perceives
+Salvation only in lawn sleeves,
+Might, tainted by such coarse infection,
+Run mad in the opposite direction.
+And think, poor man, 'tis only given
+To linsey-woolsey to reach Heaven!
+
+Just fancy what a shock 'twould be
+Our Goulburn in his fits to see,
+Tearing into a thousand particles
+His once-loved Nine and Thirty Articles;
+(Those Articles his friend, the Duke,[1]
+For Gospel, t'other night, mistook;)
+Cursing cathedrals, deans and singers--
+Wishing the ropes might hang the ringers--
+Pelting the church with blasphemies,
+Even worse than Parson Beverley's;--
+And ripe for severing Church and State,
+Like any creedless reprobate,
+Or like that class of Methodists
+Prince Waterloo styles "Atheists!"
+
+But 'tis too much--the Muse turns pale,
+And o'er the picture drops a veil,
+Praying, God save the Goulburns all
+From mad Dissenters great and small!
+
+
+[1] The Duke of Wellington, who styled them "the Articles of
+Christianity."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A DREAM OF HINDOSTAN.
+
+
+ --risum _tenaetis, amici_
+
+
+"The longer one lives, the more one learns,"
+ Said I, as off to sleep I went,
+Bemused with thinking of Tithe concerns,
+And reading a book by the Bishop of FERNS,[1]
+ On the Irish Church Establishment.
+But lo! in sleep not long I lay,
+ When Fancy her usual tricks began,
+And I found myself bewitched away
+ To a goodly city in Hindostan--
+A city where he who dares to dine
+ On aught but rice is deemed a sinner;
+Where sheep and kine are held divine,
+ And accordingly--never drest for dinner.
+
+"But how is this?" I wondering cried--
+As I walkt that city fair and wide,
+And saw, in every marble street,
+ A row of beautiful butchers' shops--
+"What means, for men who don't eat meat,
+ "This grand display of loins and chops?"
+In vain I askt--'twas plain to see
+That nobody dared to answer me.
+
+So on from street to street I strode:
+And you can't conceive how vastly odd
+ The butchers lookt--a roseate crew,
+Inshrined in _stalls_ with naught to do;
+While some on a _bench_, half dozing, sat,
+And the Sacred Cows were not more fat.
+Still posed to think what all this scene
+Of sinecure trade was _meant_ to mean,
+"And, pray," askt I--"by whom is paid
+The expense of this strange masquerade?"--
+"The expense!--oh! that's of course defrayed
+(Said one of these well-fed Hecatombers)
+"By yonder rascally rice-consumers."
+"What! _they_ who mustn't eat meat!"--
+ No matter--
+(And while he spoke his cheeks grew fatter,)
+"The rogues may munch their _Paddy_ crop,
+"But the rogues must still support _our_ shop,
+"And depend upon it, the way to treat
+ "Heretical stomachs that thus dissent,
+"Is to burden all that won't eat meat,
+ "With a costly MEAT ESTABLISHMENT."
+
+On hearing these words so gravely said,
+ With a volley of laughter loud I shook,
+And my slumber fled and my dream was sped,
+And I found I was lying snug in bed,
+ With my nose in the Bishop of FERNS'S book.
+
+
+[1] An indefatigable scribbler of anti-Catholic pamphlets.
+
+
+
+
+THE BRUNSWICK CLUB.
+
+
+A letter having been addressed to a very distinguished personage,
+requesting him to become the Patron of this Orange Club, a polite answer
+was forthwith returned, of which we have been fortunate enough to obtain a
+copy.
+
+
+_Brimstone-hall, September 1, 1828_.
+
+_Private_,--Lord Belzebub presents
+To the Brunswick Club his compliments.
+And much regrets to say that he
+Can not at present their Patron be.
+In stating this, Lord Belzebub
+Assures on his honor the Brunswick Club,
+That 'tisn't from any lukewarm lack
+Of zeal or fire he thus holds back--
+As even Lord _Coal_ himself is not[1]
+For the Orange party more red-hot:
+But the truth is, still their Club affords
+A somewhat decenter show of Lords,
+And on its list of members gets
+A few less rubbishy Baronets,
+Lord Belzebub must beg to be
+Excused from keeping such company.
+
+Who the devil, he humbly begs to know,
+Are Lord Glandine, and Lord Dunlo?
+Or who, with a grain of sense, would go
+To sit and be bored by Lord Mayo?
+What living creature--_except his nurse_--
+For Lord Mountcashel cares a curse,
+Or think 'twould matter if Lord Muskerry
+Were 'tother side of the Stygian ferry?
+Breathes there a man in Dublin town,
+Who'd give but half of half-a-crown
+To save from drowning my Lord Rathdowne,
+Or who wouldn't also gladly hustle in
+Lords Roden, Bandon, Cole and Jocelyn?
+In short, tho' from his tenderest years,
+Accustomed to all sorts of Peers,
+Lord Belzebub much questions whether
+He ever yet saw mixt together
+As 'twere in one capacious tub.
+Such a mess of noble silly-bub
+As the twenty Peers of the Brunswick Club.
+'Tis therefore impossible that Lord B.
+Could stoop to such society,
+Thinking, he owns (tho' no great prig),
+For one in his station 'twere _infra dig_.
+But he begs to propose, in the interim
+(Till they find some properer Peers for him),
+His Highness of Cumberland, as _Sub_
+To take his place at the Brunswick Club--
+Begging, meanwhile, himself to dub
+Their obedient servant,
+ BELZEBUB.
+
+It luckily happens, the Royal Duke
+Resembles so much, in air and look,
+The head of the Belzebub family,
+That few can any difference see;
+Which makes him of course the better suit
+To serve as Lord B.'s substitute.
+
+
+[1] Usually written Cole.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PROPOSALS FOR A GYNAECOCRACY.
+
+ADDRESSED TO A LATE RADICAL MEETING.
+
+
+ --"_quas ipsa decus sibi dia Camilla
+ delegit pacisque bonas bellique ministras_."
+ VERGIL.
+
+
+As Whig Reform has had its range,
+ And none of us are yet content,
+Suppose, my friends, by way of change,
+ We try a _Female Parliament_;
+And since of late with _he_ M.P.'s
+We've fared so badly, take to she's--
+Petticoat patriots, flounced John Russells,
+Burdetts in _blonde_ and Broughams in _bustles_.
+
+The plan is startling, I confess--
+But 'tis but an affair of dress;
+Nor see I much there is to choose
+ 'Twixt Ladies (so they're thorough-bred ones)
+In ribands of all sorts of hues,
+ Or Lords in only blue or red ones.
+
+At least the fiddlers will be winners,
+ Whatever other trade advances
+As then, instead of Cabinet dinners
+ We'll have, at Almack's, Cabinet dances;
+Nor let this world's important questions
+Depend on Ministers' digestions.
+
+If Ude's receipts have done things ill,
+ To Weippert's band they may go better;
+There's Lady **, in one quadrille,
+ Would settle Europe, if you'd let her:
+And who the deuce or asks or cares
+ When Whigs or Tories have undone 'em,
+Whether they've _danced_ thro' State affairs,
+ Or simply, dully, _dined_ upon 'em?
+
+Hurrah then for the Petticoats!
+To them we pledge our free-born votes;
+We'll have all _she_, and only _she_--
+ Pert blues shall act as "best debaters,"
+Old dowagers our Bishops be,
+ And termagants our agitators.
+If Vestris to oblige the nation
+ Her own Olympus will abandon
+And help to prop the Administration,
+ It _can't_ have better legs to stand on.
+The famed Macaulay (Miss) shall show
+ Each evening, forth in learned oration;
+Shall move (midst general cries of "Oh!")
+ For full returns of population:
+And finally to crown the whole,
+The Princess Olive, Royal soul,[1]
+Shall from her bower in Banco Regis,
+Descend to bless her faithful lieges,
+And mid our Union's loyal chorus
+Reign jollily for ever o'er us.
+
+
+[1] A personage so styled herself who attained considerable notoriety at
+that period.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE EDITOR OF THE * * *.
+
+
+Sir,
+
+Having heard some rumors respecting the strange and awful visitation under
+which Lord Henley has for some time past been suffering, in consequence of
+his declared hostility to "anthems, solos, duets,"[1] etc., I took the
+liberty of making inquiries at his Lordship's house this morning and lose
+no time in transmitting to you such particulars as I could collect. It is
+said that the screams of his Lordship, under the operation of this nightly
+concert, (which is no doubt some trick of the Radicals), may be heard all
+over the neighborhood. The female who personates St. Cecilia is supposed
+to be the same that last year appeared in the character of Isis at the
+Rotunda. How the cherubs are managed, I have not yet ascertained.
+
+Yours, etc.
+
+P. P.
+
+[1] In a work, on Church Reform, published by his Lordship in 1832.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LORD HENLEY AND ST. CECILIA
+
+
+ --_in Metii decenaat Judicis aures_.
+ HORAT.
+
+
+As snug in his bed Lord Henley lay,
+ Revolving much his own renown,
+And hoping to add thereto a ray
+ By putting duets and anthems down,
+
+Sudden a strain of choral sounds
+ Mellifluous o'er his senses stole;
+Whereat the Reformer muttered "Zounds!"
+ For he loathed sweet music with all his soul.
+
+Then starting up he saw a sight
+ That well might shock so learned a snorer--
+Saint Cecilia robed in light
+ With a portable organ slung before her.
+
+And round were Cherubs on rainbow wings,
+ Who, his Lordship feared, might tire of flitting,
+So begged they'd sit--but ah! poor things,
+ They'd, none of them, got the means of sitting.
+
+"Having heard," said the Saint, "you're fond of hymns,
+ "And indeed that musical snore betrayed you,
+"Myself and my choir of cherubims
+ "Are come for a while to serenade you."
+
+In vain did the horrified Henley say
+ "'Twas all a mistake--she was misdirected;"
+And point to a concert over the way
+ Where fiddlers and angels were expected.
+
+In vain--the Saint could see in his looks
+ (She civilly said) much tuneful lore;
+So at once all opened their music-books,
+ And herself and her Cherubs set off at score.
+
+All night duets, terzets, quartets,
+ Nay, long quintets most dire to hear;
+Ay, and old motets and canzonets
+ And glees in sets kept boring his ear.
+
+He tried to sleep--but it wouldn't do;
+ So loud they squalled, he _must_ attend to 'em.
+Tho' Cherubs' songs to his cost he knew
+ Were like themselves and had no end to 'em.
+
+Oh judgment dire on judges bold,
+ Who meddle with music's sacred strains!
+Judge Midas tried the same of old
+ And was punisht like Henley for his pains.
+
+But worse on the modern judge, alas!
+ Is the sentence launched from Apollo's throne;
+For Midas was given the ears of an ass,
+ While Henley is doomed to keep his own!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.[1]
+
+1830.
+
+
+Missing or lost, last Sunday night,
+ A Waterloo coin whereon was traced
+The inscription, "Courage!" in letters bright,
+ Tho' a little by rust of years defaced.
+
+The metal thereof is rough and hard,
+ And ('tis thought of late) mixt up with brass;
+But it bears the stamp of Fame's award,
+ And thro' all Posterity's hands will pass.
+
+_How_ it was lost God only knows,
+ But certain _City_ thieves, they say,
+Broke in on the owner's evening doze,
+ And filched this "gift of gods" away!
+
+One ne'er could, of course, the Cits suspect,
+ If we hadn't that evening chanced to see,
+At the robbed man's door a _Mare_ elect
+ With an ass to keep her company.
+
+Whosoe'er of this lost treasure knows,
+ Is begged to state all facts about it,
+As the owner can't well face his foes,
+ Nor even his friends just now without it.
+
+And if Sir Clod will bring it back,
+ Like a trusty Baronet, wise and able,
+He shall have a ride on the whitest hack[2]
+ That's left in old King George's stable.
+
+
+[1] Written at that memorable crisis when a distinguished duke, then Prime
+Minister, acting under the inspirations of Sir Claudius Hunter, and other
+City worthies, advised his Majesty to give up his announced intention of
+dining with the Lord Mayor.
+
+[2] Among other remarkable attributes by which Sir Claudius distinguished
+himself, the dazzling whiteness of his favorite steed vas not the least
+conspicuous.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MISSING.
+
+Carlton Terrace, 1832.
+
+
+Whereas, Lord ---- de ----
+Left his home last Saturday,
+And, tho' inquired for round and round
+Thro' certain purlieus, can't be found;
+And whereas, none can solve our queries
+As to where this virtuous Peer is,
+Notice is hereby given that all
+May forthwith to inquiring fall,
+As, once the thing's well set about,
+No doubt but we shall hunt him out.
+
+His Lordship's mind, of late, they say,
+Hath been in an uneasy way,
+Himself and colleagues not being let
+To climb into the Cabinet,
+To settle England's state affairs,
+Hath much, it seems, _un_settled theirs;
+And chief to this stray Plenipo
+Hath been a most distressing blow.
+Already,-certain to receive a
+Well-paid mission to the Neva,
+And be the bearer of kind words
+To tyrant Nick from Tory Lords,-
+To fit himself for free discussion,
+His Lordship had been learning Russian;
+And all so natural to him were
+The accents of the Northern bear,
+That while his tones were in your ear, you
+Might swear you were in sweet Siberia.
+And still, poor Peer, to old and young,
+He goes on raving in that tongue;
+Tells you how much you would enjoy a
+Trip to Dalnodubrovrkoya;[1]
+Talks of such places by the score on
+As Oulisflirmchinagoboron,[2]
+And swears (for he at nothing sticks)
+That Russia swarms with Raskolniks,
+Tho' _one_ such Nick, God knows, must be
+A more than ample quantity.
+
+Such are the marks by which to know
+This strayed or stolen Plenipo;
+And whosoever brings or sends
+The unhappy statesman to his friends
+On Carlton Terrace, shall have thanks,
+And--any paper but the Bank's.
+
+P.S.--Some think the disappearance
+Of this our diplomatic Peer hence
+Is for the purpose of reviewing,
+_In person_, what dear Mig is doing,
+So as to 'scape all tell-tale letters
+'Bout Beresford, and such abetters,--
+The only "wretches" for whose aid[3]
+Letters seem _not_ to have been made.
+
+
+[1] In the Government of Perm.
+
+[2] Territory belonging to the mines of Kolivano-Kosskressense.
+
+[3] "Heaven first taught letters for some wretch's aid." POPE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DANCE OF BISHOPS;
+
+OR, THE EPISCOPAL QUADRILLE.[1]
+
+A DREAM.
+
+1833.
+
+
+ "Solemn dances were, on great festivals and celebrations, admitted
+ among the primitive Christians, in which even the Bishops and
+ dignified Clergy were performers. Scaliger says, that the first
+ Bishops were called _praesules_[2] for other reason than that
+ they led off these dances."--"_Cyclopaedia_," art. _Dances_.
+
+
+I've had such a dream--a frightful dream--
+Tho' funny mayhap to wags 'twill seem,
+By all who regard the Church, like us,
+'Twill be thought exceedingly ominous!
+
+As reading in bed I lay last night--
+Which (being insured) is my delight--
+I happened to doze off just as I got to
+The singular fact which forms my motto.
+Only think, thought I, as I dozed away,
+Of a party of Churchmen dancing the hay!
+Clerks, curates and rectors capering all
+With a neat-legged Bishop to open the ball!
+Scarce had my eyelids time to close,
+When the scene I had fancied before me rose--
+An Episcopal Hop on a scale so grand
+As my dazzled eyes could hardly stand.
+For Britain and Erin clubbed their Sees
+To make it a Dance of Dignities,
+And I saw--oh brightest of Church events!
+A quadrille of the two Establishments,
+Bishop to Bishop _vis-à-vis_,
+Footing away prodigiously.
+
+There was Bristol capering up to Derry,
+And Cork with London making merry;
+While huge Llandaff, with a See, so so,
+Was to dear old Dublin pointing his toe.
+There was Chester, hatched by woman's smile,
+Performing a _chaine des Dames_ in style;
+While he who, whene'er the Lords' House dozes,
+Can waken them up by citing Moses,[3]
+The portly Tuam, was all in a hurry
+To set, _en avant_, to Canterbury.
+
+Meantime, while pamphlets stuft his pockets,
+(All out of date like spent skyrockets,)
+Our Exeter stood forth to caper,
+As high on the floor as he doth on paper--
+like a dapper Dancing Dervise,
+Who pirouettes his whole church-service--
+Performing, midst those reverend souls,
+Such _entrechats_, such _cabrioles_,
+Such _balonnés_, such--rigmaroles,
+Now high, now low, now this, that,
+That none could guess what the devil he'd be at;
+Tho', watching his various steps, some thought
+That a step in the Church was all he sought.
+
+But alas, alas! while thus so gay.
+These reverend dancers friskt away,
+Nor Paul himself (not the saint, but he
+Of the Opera-house) could brisker be,
+There gathered a gloom around their glee--
+A shadow which came and went so fast,
+That ere one could say "'Tis there," 'twas past--
+And, lo! when the scene again was cleared,
+Ten of the dancers had disappeared!
+Ten able-bodied quadrillers swept
+From the hallowed floor where late they stept,
+While twelve was all that footed it still,
+On the Irish side of that grand Quadrille!
+
+Nor this the worst:--still danced they on,
+But the pomp was saddened, the smile was gone;
+And again from time to time the same
+Ill-omened darkness round them came--
+While still as the light broke out anew,
+Their ranks lookt less by a dozen or two;
+Till ah! at last there were only found
+Just Bishops enough for a four-hands-round;
+And when I awoke, impatient getting,
+I left the last holy pair _poussetting_!
+
+N.B.--As ladies in years, it seems,
+Have the happiest knack at solving dreams,
+I shall leave to my ancient feminine friends
+Of the _Standard_ to say what _this_ portends.
+
+
+[1] Written on the passing of the memorable Bill, in the year 1833, for
+the abolition of ten Irish Bishoprics.
+
+[2] Literally, First Dancers.
+
+[3] "And what does Moses say?"--One of the ejaculations with which this
+eminent prelate enlivened his famous speech on the Catholic question.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+DICK * * * *
+
+A CHARACTER.
+
+
+Of various scraps and fragments built,
+ Borrowed alike from fools and wits,
+Dick's mind was like a patchwork quilt,
+ Made up of new, old, motley bits--
+Where, if the _Co_. called in their shares,
+ If petticoats their quota got
+And gowns were all refunded theirs,
+ The quilt would look but shy, God wot.
+
+And thus he still, new plagiaries seeking,
+ Reversed ventriloquism's trick,
+For, 'stead of Dick thro' others speaking,
+ 'Twas others we heard speak thro' Dick.
+A Tory now, all bounds exceeding,
+ Now best of Whigs, now worst of rats;
+One day with Malthus, foe to breeding,
+ The next with Sadler, all for brats.
+
+Poor Dick!--and how else could it be?
+ With notions all at random caught,
+A sort of mental fricassee,
+ Made up of legs and wings of thought--
+The leavings of the last Debate, or
+ A dinner, yesterday, of wits,
+Where Dick sate by and, like a waiter,
+ Had the scraps for perquisites.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A CORRECTED REPORT OF SOME LATE SPEECHES.
+
+1834.
+
+
+ "Then I heard one saint speaking, and
+ another saint said unto that saint,"
+
+
+St. Sinclair rose and declared in smooth,
+That he wouldn't give sixpence to Maynooth.
+He had hated priests the whole of his life,
+For a priest was a man who had no wife,[1]
+And, having no wife, the Church was his mother,
+The Church was his father, sister and brother.
+This being the case, he was sorry to say
+That a gulf 'twixt Papist and Protestant lay,[2]
+So deep and wide, scarce possible was it
+To say even "how d' ye do?" across it:
+And tho' your Liberals, nimble as fleas,
+Could clear such gulfs with perfect ease,
+'Twas a jump that naught on earth could make
+Your proper, heavy-built Christian take.
+No, no,--if a Dance of Sects _must_ be,
+He would set to the Baptist willingly,[3]
+At the Independent deign to smirk,
+And rigadoon with old Mother Kirk;
+Nay even, for once, if needs must be,
+He'd take hands round with all the three;
+But as to a jig with Popery, no,--
+To the Harlot ne'er would he point his toe.
+
+St. Mandeville was the next that rose,--
+A saint who round as pedler goes
+With his pack of piety and prose,
+Heavy and hot enough, God knows,--
+And he said that Papists were much inclined
+To extirpate all of Protestant kind,
+Which he couldn't in truth so much condemn,
+Having rather a wish to extirpate _them_;
+That is,--to guard against mistake,--
+To extirpate them for their doctrine's sake;
+A distinction Churchman always make,--
+Insomuch that when they've prime control,
+Tho' sometimes roasting heretics whole,
+They but cook the body for sake of the soul.
+
+Next jumpt St. Johnston jollily forth,
+The spiritual Dogberry of the North,[4]
+A right "wise fellow, and what's more,
+An officer," like his type of yore;
+And he asked if we grant such toleration,
+Pray, what's the use of our Reformation?
+What is the use of our Church and State?
+Our Bishops, Articles, Tithe and Rate?
+And still as he yelled out "what's the use?"
+Old Echoes, from their cells recluse
+Where they'd for centuries slept, broke loose,
+Yelling responsive, "_What's the use_?"
+
+
+[1] "He objected to the maintenance and education of clergy _bound by
+the particular vows of celibacy, which as it were gave them the Church as
+their only family, making it fill the places of father and mother and
+brother_."--Debate on the Grant to Maynooth College, _The Times_,
+April 19.
+
+[2] "It had always appeared to him that _between the Catholic and
+Protestant a great gulf_ intervened, with rendered it impossible," etc.
+
+[3] The Baptist might acceptably extend the offices of religion to the
+Presbyterian and the Independent, or the member of the Church of England
+to any of the other three; but the Catholic," etc.
+
+[4] "Could he then, holding as he did a spiritual office in the Church of
+Scotland, (cries of hear, and laughter,) with any consistency give his
+consent to a grant of money?" etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MORAL POSITIONS.
+
+A DREAM.
+
+
+ "His Lordship said that it took a long time for a moral position to
+ find its way across the Atlantic. He was very sorry that its voyage
+ had been so long," etc.--Speech of Lord Dudley and Ward on Colonial
+ Slavery, March 8.
+
+
+T'other night, after hearing Lord Dudley's oration
+ (A treat that comes once a year as May-day does),
+I dreamt that I saw--what a strange operation!
+A "moral position" shipt off for Barbadoes.
+
+The whole Bench of Bishops stood by in grave attitudes,
+ Packing the article tidy and neat;--
+As their Reverences know that in southerly latitudes
+ "Moral positions" don't keep very sweet.
+
+There was Bathurst arranging the custom-house pass;
+ And to guard the frail package from tousing and routing,
+There stood my Lord Eldon, endorsing it "Glass,"
+ Tho' as to which side should lie uppermost, doubting.
+The freight was however stowed safe in the hold;
+ The winds were polite and the moon lookt romantic,
+While off in the good ship "The Truth" we were rolled,
+ With our ethical cargo, across the Atlantic.
+Long, dolefully long, seemed the voyage we made;
+ For "The Truth," at all times but a very slow sailer,
+By friends, near as much as by foes, is delayed,
+ And few come aboard her tho' so many hail her.
+
+At length, safe arrived, I went thro' "tare and tret,"
+ Delivered my goods in the primest condition.
+And next morning read in the _Bridge-town Gazette_,
+ "Just arrived by 'The Truth,' a new moral position.
+
+"The Captain"--here, startled to find myself named
+ As "the Captain"--(a thing which, I own it with pain,
+I thro' life have avoided,) I woke--lookt ashamed,
+ Found I _wasn't_ a captain and dozed off again.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MAD TORY AND THE COMET.
+
+FOUNDED ON A LATE DISTRESSING INCIDENT.
+
+1832-3.
+
+
+ _'mutantem regna cometem."_
+ LUCAN.[1]
+
+
+"Tho' all the pet mischiefs we count upon fail,
+ "Tho' Cholera, hurricanes, Wellington leave us,
+"We've still in reserve, mighty Comet, thy tail;--
+ "Last hope" of the Tories, wilt thou too deceive us?
+
+"No--'tis coming, 'tis coming, the avenger is nigh;
+ "Heed, heed not, ye placemen, how Herapath flatters;
+"One whisk from that tail as it passes us by
+ "Will settle at once all political matters;--
+
+"The East-India Question, the Bank, the Five Powers,
+ "(Now turned into two) with their rigmarole Protocols;--
+"Ha! ha! ye gods, how this new friend of ours
+ "Will knock, right and left, all diplomacy's what-d'ye-calls!
+
+"Yes, rather than Whigs at our downfall should mock,
+ "Meet planets and suns in one general hustle!
+"While happy in vengeance we welcome the shock
+ "That shall jerk from their places, Grey, Althorp and Russell."
+
+Thus spoke a mad Lord, as, with telescope raised,
+ His wild Tory eye on the heavens he set:
+And tho' nothing destructive appeared as he gazed,
+ Much hoped that there _would_ before Parliament met.
+
+And still, as odd shapes seemed to flit thro' his glass,
+ "Ha! there it is now," the poor maniac cries;
+While his fancy with forms but too monstrous, alas!
+ From his own Tory zodiac peoples the skies:--
+
+"Now I spy a big body, good heavens, how big!
+ "Whether Bucky[2] or Taurus I cannot well say:--
+"And yonder there's Eldon's old Chancery wig,
+ "In its dusty aphelion fast fading away.
+
+"I see, 'mong those fatuous meteors behind,
+ "Londonderry, _in vacuo_, flaring about;--
+"While that dim double star, of the nebulous kind,
+ "Is the Gemini, Roden and Lorton, no doubt.
+
+"Ah, Ellenborough! 'faith, I first thought 'twas the Comet;
+ "So like that in Milton, it made me quite pale;
+"The head with the same 'horrid hair' coming from it,
+ "And plenty of vapor, but--where is the tail?"
+
+Just then, up aloft jumpt the gazer elated--
+ For lo! his bright glass a phenomenon showed,
+Which he took to be Cumberland, _upwards_ translated,
+ Instead of his natural course, _t'other_ road!
+
+But too awful that sight for a spirit so shaken,--
+ Down dropt the poor Tory in fits and grimaces,
+Then off to the Bedlam in Charles Street was taken,
+ And is now one of Halford's most favorite cases.
+
+
+[1] Eclipses and comets have been always looked to as great changers of
+administrations.
+
+[2] The Duke of Buckingham.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FROM THE HON. HENRY ----, TO LADY EMMA ----.
+
+_Paris, March 30,1833_.
+
+
+You bid me explain, my dear angry Ma'amselle,
+How I came thus to bolt without saying farewell;
+And the truth is,--as truth you _will_ have, my sweet railer,--
+ There are two worthy persons I always feel loath
+To take leave of at starting,--my mistress and tailor,--
+ As somehow one always has _scenes_ with them both;
+The Snip in ill-humor, the Syren in tears,
+ She calling on Heaven, and he on the attorney,--
+Till sometimes, in short, 'twixt his duns and his dears,
+ A young gentleman risks being stopt in his journey.
+
+But to come to the point, tho' you think, I dare say.
+That 'tis debt or the Cholera drives me away,
+'Pon honor you're wrong;--such a mere bagatelle
+ As a pestilence, nobody now-a-days fears;
+And the fact is, my love, I'm thus bolting, pell-mell,
+ To get out of the way of these horrid new Peers;[1]
+This deluge of coronets frightful to think of;
+Which England is now for her sins on the brink of;
+This coinage of _nobles_,--coined all of 'em, badly,
+And sure to bring Counts to a _dis_-count most sadly.
+
+Only think! to have Lords over running the nation,
+As plenty as frogs in a Dutch inundation;
+No shelter from Barons, from Earls no protection,
+And tadpole young Lords too in every direction,--
+Things created in haste just to make a Court list of,
+Two legs and a coronet all they consist of!
+The prospect's quite frightful, and what Sir George Rose
+ (My particular friend) says is perfectly true,
+That, so dire the alternative, nobody knows,
+ 'Twixt the Peers and the Pestilence, what he's to do;
+And Sir George even doubts,--could he choose his disorder,--
+'Twixt coffin and coronet, _which_ he would order.
+This being the case, why, I thought, my dear Emma,
+'Twere best to fight shy of so curst a dilemma;
+And tho' I confess myself somewhat a villain,
+ To've left _idol mio_ without an _addio_,
+Console your sweet heart, and a week hence from Milan
+ I'll send you--some news of Bellini's last trio.
+
+N.B. Have just packt up my travelling set-out,
+Things a tourist in Italy _can't_ go without--
+Viz., a pair of _gants gras_, from old Houbigant's shop,
+Good for hands that the air of Mont Cenis might chap.
+Small presents for ladies,--and nothing so wheedles
+The creatures abroad as your golden-eyed needles.
+A neat pocket Horace by which folks are cozened
+To think one knows Latin, when--one, perhaps, doesn't;
+With some little book about heathen mythology,
+Just large enough to refresh one's theology;
+Nothing on earth being half such a bore as
+Not knowing the difference 'twixt Virgins and Floras.
+Once more, love, farewell, best regards to the girls,
+And mind you beware of damp feet and new Earls.
+
+HENRY.
+
+
+[1] A new creation of Peers was generally expected at this time.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TRIUMPH OF BIGOTRY.
+
+
+ College.--We announced, in our last that Lefroy and Shaw were
+ returned. They were chaired yesterday; the Students of the College
+ determined, it would seem, to imitate the mob in all things,
+ harnessing themselves to the car, and the Masters of Arts bearing
+ Orange flags and bludgeons before, beside, and behind the car."
+ _Dublin Evening Post_, Dec. 20, 1832.
+
+
+Ay, yoke ye to the bigots' car,
+ Ye chosen of Alma Mater's scions;-
+Fleet chargers drew the God of War,
+ Great Cybele was drawn by lions,
+And Sylvan Pan, as Poet's dream,
+Drove four young panthers in his team.
+Thus classical Lefroy, for once, is,
+ Thus, studious of a like turn-out,
+He harnesses young sucking dunces,
+ To draw him as their Chief about,
+And let the world a picture see
+Of Dulness yoked to Bigotry:
+Showing us how young College hacks
+Can pace with bigots at their backs,
+As tho' the cubs were _born_ to draw
+Such luggage as Lefroy and Shaw,
+Oh! shade of Goldsmith, shade of Swift,
+ Bright spirits whom, in days of yore,
+This Queen of Dulness sent adrift,
+ As aliens to her foggy shore;---
+Shade of our glorious Grattan, too,
+ Whose very name her shame recalls;
+Whose effigy her bigot crew
+ Reversed upon their monkish walls,[1]--
+Bear witness (lest the world should doubt)
+ To your mute Mother's dull renown,
+Then famous but for Wit turned _out_,
+ And Eloquence _turned upside down_;
+But now ordained new wreaths to win,
+ Beyond all fame of former days,
+By breaking thus young donkies in
+ To draw M.P.s amid the brays
+ Alike of donkies and M.A.s;--
+ Defying Oxford to surpass 'em
+ In this new "_Gradus ad Parnassum_."
+
+
+[1] In the year 1799, the Board of Trinity College, Dublin, thought
+proper, as a mode of expressing their disapprobation of Mr. Grattan's
+public conduct, to order his portrait, in the Great Hall of the
+University, to be turned upside down, and in this position it remained for
+some time.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSLATION FROM THE GULL LANGUAGE.
+
+
+ _Scripta manet_.
+
+
+1833.
+
+
+'Twas graved on the Stone of Destiny,[1]
+In letters four and letters three;
+And ne'er did the King of the Gulls go by
+But those awful letters scared his eye;
+For he knew that a Prophet Voice had said,
+"As long as those words by man were read,
+"The ancient race of the Gulls should ne'er
+"One hour of peace or plenty share."
+But years on years successive flew,
+And the letters still more legible grew,--
+At top, a T, an H, an E,
+And underneath, D. E. B. T.
+
+Some thought them Hebrew,--such as Jews
+More skilled in Scrip than Scripture use;
+While some surmised 'twas an ancient way
+Of keeping accounts, (well known in the day
+Of the famed Didlerius Jeremias,
+Who had thereto a wonderful bias,)
+And proved in books most learnedly boring,
+'Twas called the Pon_tick_ way of scoring.
+
+Howe'er this be there never were yet
+Seven letters of the alphabet,
+That 'twixt them formed so grim a spell,
+Or scared a Land of Gulls so well,
+As did this awful riddle-me-ree
+Of T. H. E. D. E. B. T.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hark!--it is struggling Freedom's cry;
+"Help, help, ye nations, or I die;
+"'Tis Freedom's fight and on the field
+"Where I expire _your_ doom is sealed."
+The Gull-King hears the awakening call,
+He hath summoned his Peers and Patriots all,
+And he asks. "Ye noble Gulls, shall we
+"Stand basely by at the fall of the Free,
+"Nor utter a curse nor deal a blow?"
+And they answer with voice of thunder, "No."
+
+Out fly their flashing swords in the air!--
+But,--why do they rest suspended there?
+What sudden blight, what baleful charm,
+Hath chilled each eye and checkt each arm?
+Alas! some withering hand hath thrown
+The veil from off that fatal stone,
+And pointing now with sapless finger,
+Showeth where dark those letters linger,--
+Letters four and letters three,
+T. H. E. D. E. B. T.
+
+At sight thereof, each lifted brand
+Powerless falls from every hand;
+In vain the Patriot knits his brow,--
+Even talk, his staple, fails him now.
+In vain the King like a hero treads,
+His Lords of the Treasury shake their heads;
+And to all his talk of "brave and free,"
+No answer getteth His Majesty
+But "T. H. E. D. E. B. T."
+
+In short, the whole Gull nation feels
+They're fairly spell-bound, neck and heels;
+And so, in the face of the laughing world,
+Must e'en sit down with banners furled,
+Adjourning all their dreams sublime
+Of glory and war to-some other time.
+
+
+[1] Liafail, or the Stone of Destiny,--for which see Westminster Abbey.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NOTIONS ON REFORM.
+
+BY A MODERN REFORMER.
+
+
+Of all the misfortunes as yet brought to pass
+ By this comet-like Bill, with its long tail of speeches,
+The saddest and worst is the schism which, alas!
+ It has caused between Wetherel's waistcoat and breeches.
+
+Some symptoms of this Anti-Union propensity
+ Had oft broken out in that quarter before;
+But the breach, since the Bill, has attained such immensity,
+ Daniel himself could have scarce wisht it more.
+
+Oh! haste to repair it, ye friends of good order,
+ Ye Atwoods and Wynns, ere the moment is past;
+Who can doubt that we tread upon Anarchy's border,
+ When the ties that should hold men are loosening so fast?
+
+_Make_ Wetherel yield to "some sort of Reform"
+ (As we all must, God help us! with very wry faces;)
+And loud as he likes let him bluster and storm
+ About Corporate Rights, so he'll only wear braces.
+
+Should those he now sports have been long in possession,
+ And, like his own borough, the worse for the wear,
+Advise him at least as a prudent concession
+ To Intellect's progress, to buy a new pair.
+
+Oh! who that e'er saw him when vocal he stands,
+ With a look something midway 'twixt Filch's and Lockit's,
+While still, to inspire him, his deeply-thrust hands
+ Keep jingling the rhino in both breeches-pockets--
+
+Who that ever has listened thro' groan and thro' cough,
+ To the speeches inspired by this music of pence,--
+But must grieve that there's any thing like _falling off_
+ In that great nether source of his wit and his sense?
+
+Who that knows how he lookt when, with grace debonair,
+ He began first to court--rather late in the season--
+Or when, less fastidious, he sat in the chair
+ Of his old friend, the Nottingham Goddess of Reason;[1]
+
+That Goddess whose borough-like virtue attracted
+ All mongers in _both_ wares to proffer their love;
+Whose chair like the stool of the Pythoness acted,
+ As Wetherel's rants ever since go to prove;
+
+_Who_ in short would not grieve if a man of his graces
+ Should go on rejecting, unwarned by the past,
+The "moderate Reform" of a pair of new braces,
+ Till, some day,--he'll all fall to pieces at last.
+
+
+[1] It will be recollected that the learned gentleman himself boasted, one
+night, in the House of Commons, of having sat in the very chair which this
+allegorical lady had occupied.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TORY PLEDGES.
+
+
+I pledge myself thro' thick and thin,
+ To labor still with zeal devout
+To get the Outs, poor devils, in,
+ And turn the Ins, the wretches, out.
+
+I pledge myself, tho' much bereft
+ Of ways and means of ruling ill,
+To make the most of what are left,
+ And stick to all that's rotten still.
+
+Tho' gone the days of place and pelf,
+ And drones no more take all the honey,
+I pledge myself to cram myself
+ With all I can of public money.
+
+To quarter on that social purse
+ My nephews, nieces, sisters, brothers,
+Nor, so _we_ prosper, care a curse
+ How much 'tis at the expense of others.
+
+I pledge myself, whenever Right
+ And Might on any point divide,
+Not to ask which is black or white.
+ But take at once the strongest side.
+
+For instance, in all Tithe discussions,
+ I'm _for_ the Reverend encroachers:-
+I loathe the Poles, applaud the Russians,--
+ Am _for_ the Squires, _against_ the Poachers.
+
+Betwixt the Corn-lords and the Poor
+ I've not the slightest hesitation,--
+The People _must_ be starved, to insure
+ The Land its due remuneration.
+
+I pledge myself to be no more
+ With Ireland's wrongs beprosed or shammed,--
+I vote her grievances a _bore_,
+ So she may suffer and be damned.
+
+Or if she kick, let it console us,
+ We still have plenty of red coats,
+To cram the Church, that general bolus,
+ Down any given amount of throats.
+
+I dearly love the Frankfort Diet,--
+ Think newspapers the worst of crimes;
+And would, to give some chance of quiet,
+ Hang all the writers of _"The Times;_"
+
+Break all their correspondents' bones,
+ All authors of "Reply," "Rejoinder,"
+From the Anti-Tory, Colonel Jones,
+ To the Anti-Suttee, Mr. Poynder.
+
+Such are the Pledges I propose;
+ And tho' I can't now offer gold,
+There's many a way of buying those
+ Who've but the taste for being sold.
+
+So here's, with three times three hurrahs,
+ A toast of which you'll not complain,--
+"Long life to jobbing; may the days
+ "Of Peculation shine again!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ST. JEROME ON EARTH.
+
+FIRST VISIT.
+
+1832.
+
+
+As St. Jerome who died some ages ago,
+Was sitting one day in the shades below,
+"I've heard much of English bishops," quoth he,
+"And shall now take a trip to earth to see
+"How far they agree in their lives and ways
+"With our good old bishops of ancient days."
+
+He had learned--but learned without misgivings--
+Their love for good living and eke good livings;
+Not knowing (as ne'er having taken degrees)
+That good _living_ means claret and fricassees,
+While its plural means simply--pluralities.
+
+"From all I hear," said the innocent man,
+"They are quite on the good old primitive plan.
+"For wealth and pomp they little can care,
+"As they all say _'No'_ to the Episcopal chair;
+"And their vestal virtue it well denotes
+"That they all, good men, wear petticoats."
+
+Thus saying, post-haste to earth he hurries,
+And knocks at the Archbishop of Canterbury's.
+The door was oped by a lackey in lace,
+Saying, "What's your business with his Grace?"
+"His Grace!" quoth Jerome--for posed was he,
+Not knowing what _sort_ this Grace could be;
+Whether Grace _preventing_, Grace _particular_,
+Grace of that breed called _Quinquarticular_--[1]
+
+In short he rummaged his holy mind
+The exact description of Grace to find,
+Which thus could represented be
+By a footman in full livery.
+At last, out loud in a laugh he broke,
+(For dearly the good saint loved his joke)[2]
+And said--surveying, as sly he spoke,
+The costly palace from roof to base--
+"Well, it isn't, at least, a _saving_ Grace!"
+"Umph!" said the lackey, a man of few words,
+"The Archbishop is gone to the House of Lords."
+
+"To the House of the Lord, you mean, my son,
+"For in _my_ time at least there was but one;
+Unless such many-_fold_ priests as these
+"Seek, even in their LORD, pluralities!"[3]
+"No time for gab," quoth the man in lace:
+Then slamming the door in St. Jerome's face
+With a curse to the single knockers all
+Went to finish his port in the servants' hall,
+And propose a toast (humanely meant
+To include even Curates in its extent)
+"To all as _serves_ the Establishment."
+
+
+[1] So called from the proceedings of the Synod of Dort.
+
+[2] Witness his well known pun on the name of his adversary Vigilantius,
+whom he calls facetiously Dormitantius.
+
+[3] The suspicion attached to some of the early Fathers of being Arians in
+their doctrine would appear to derive some confirmation, from this
+passage.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ST. JEROME ON EARTH.
+
+SECOND VISIT.
+
+
+ "This much I dare say, that, since _lording_ and loitering hath
+ come up, preaching hath come down, contrary to the Apostles' times.
+ For they preached and _lorded_ not; and now they _lord_ and
+ preach not.... Ever since the Prelates were made Lords and Nobles, the
+ plough standeth; there is no work done, people starve."
+ --_Latimer, "Sermon of the Plough."_
+
+
+"Once more," said Jerome, "I'll run up and see
+How the Church goes on,"--and off set he.
+Just then the packet-boat which trades
+Betwixt our planet and the shades
+Had arrived below with a freight so queer,
+"My eyes!" said Jerome, "what have we here?"--
+For he saw, when nearer he explored,
+They'd a cargo of Bishops' wigs aboard.
+
+"They are ghosts of wigs," said Charon, "all,
+"Once worn by nobs Episcopal.[1]
+"For folks on earth, who've got a store
+"Of cast off things they'll want no more,
+"Oft send them down, as gifts, you know,
+"To a certain Gentleman here below.
+"A sign of the times, I plainly see,"
+Said the Saint to himself as, pondering, he
+Sailed off in the death-boat gallantly.
+
+Arrived on earth, quoth he, "No more
+"I'll affect a body as before;
+"For I think I'd best, in the company
+"Of Spiritual Lords, a spirit be,
+"And glide unseen from See to See."
+But oh! to tell what scenes he saw,--
+It was more than Rabelais's pen could draw.
+For instance, he found Exeter,
+Soul, body, inkstand, all in a stir,--
+For love of God? for sake of King?
+For good of people?--no such thing;
+But to get for himself, by some new trick,
+A shove to a better bishoprick.
+
+He found that pious soul, Van Mildert,
+Much with his money-bags bewildered;
+Snubbing the Clerks of the Diocese,
+Because the rogues showed restlessness
+At having too little cash to touch,
+While he so Christianly bears too much.
+He found old Sarum's wits as gone
+As his own beloved text in John,--[2]
+Text he hath prosed so long upon,
+That 'tis thought when askt, at the gate of heaven,
+His name, he'll answer, "John, v. 7."
+
+"But enough of Bishops I've had to-day,"
+Said the weary Saint,--"I must away.
+"Tho' I own I should like before I go
+"To see for once (as I'm askt below
+"If really such odd sights exist)
+"A regular six-fold Pluralist."
+Just then he heard a general cry--
+"There's Doctor Hodgson galloping by!"
+"Ay, that's the man," says the Saint, "to follow,"
+And off he sets with a loud view-hello,
+At Hodgson's heels, to catch if he can
+A glimpse of this singular plural man.
+But,--talk of Sir Boyle Roche's bird![3]
+To compare him with Hodgson is absurd.
+"Which way, sir, pray, is the doctor gone?"--
+"He is now at his living at Hillingdon."--
+"No, no,--you're out, by many a mile,
+"He's away at his Deanery in Carlisle."--
+"Pardon me, sir; but I understand
+"He's gone to his living in Cumberland."--
+"God bless me, no,--he can’t be there;
+"You must try St. George's, Hanover Square."
+
+Thus all in vain the Saint inquired,
+From living to living, mockt and tired;--
+'Twas Hodgson here, 'twas Hodgson there,
+'Twas Hodgson nowhere, everywhere;
+Till fairly beat the Saint gave o'er
+And flitted away to the Stygian shore,
+To astonish the natives underground
+With the comical things he on earth had found.
+
+
+[1] The wig, which had so long formed an essential part of the dress of an
+English bishop, was at this time beginning to be dispensed with.
+
+[2] 1 John v. 7. A text which, though long given up by all the rest of the
+orthodox world, is still pertinaciously adhered to by this Right Reverend
+scholar.
+
+[3] It was a saying of the well-known Sir Boyle, that "a man could not be
+in two places at once, unless he was a bird."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS ON TAR BARRELS.
+
+(VIDE DESCRIPTION OF A LATE FÊTE.)[1]
+
+1832.
+
+
+What a pleasing contrivance! how aptly devised
+ 'Twixt tar and magnolias to puzzle one's noses!
+And how the tar-barrels must all be surprised
+ To find themselves seated like "Love among roses!"
+
+What a pity we can't, by precautions like these,
+ Clear the air of that other still viler infection;
+That radical pest, that old whiggish disease,
+ Of which cases, true-blue, are in every direction.
+
+Stead of barrels, let's light up an _Auto da Fe_
+ Of a few good combustible Lords of "the Club;"
+They would fume in a trice, the Whig cholera away,
+ And there's Bucky would burn like a barrel of bub.
+
+How Roden would blaze! and what rubbish throw out!
+ A volcano of nonsense in active display;
+While Vane, as a butt, amidst laughter, would spout
+ The hot nothings he's full of, all night and all day.
+
+And then, for a finish, there's Cumberland's Duke,--
+ Good Lord, how his chin-tuft would crackle in air!
+Unless (as is shrewdly surmised from his look)
+ He's already bespoke for combustion elsewhere.
+
+
+[1] The Marquis of Hertford's Fête.--From dread of cholera his Lordship
+had ordered tar-barrels to be burned in every direction.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE CONSULTATION.[1]
+
+
+ "When they _do_ agree, their unanimity is
+ wonderful. _The Critic_.
+
+
+1833.
+
+
+_Scene discovers Dr. Whig and Dr. Tory in consultation. Patient on the
+floor between them_.
+
+ _Dr. Whig_.--This wild Irish patient _does_ pester me so.
+That what to do with him, I'm curst if I know.
+I've _promist_ him anodynes--
+ _Dr. Tory_. Anodynes!--Stuff.
+Tie him down--gag him well--he'll be tranquil enough.
+That's _my_ mode of practice.
+ _Dr Whig_. True, quite in _your_ line,
+But unluckily not much, till lately, in _mine_.
+'Tis so painful--
+ _Dr. Tory_.--Pooh, nonsense--ask Ude how he feels,
+When, for Epicure feasts, he prepares his live eels,
+By flinging them in, 'twixt the bars of the fire,
+And letting them wriggle on there till they tire.
+_He_, too, says "'tis painful"--"quite makes his heart bleed"--
+But "Your eels are a vile, oleaginous breed."--
+He would fain use them gently, but Cookery says "No,"
+And--in short--eels were _born_ to be treated just so.[2]
+'Tis the same with these Irish,--who're odder fish still,--
+Your tender Whig heart shrinks from using them ill;
+I myself in my youth, ere I came to get wise,
+Used at some operations to blush to the eyes:--
+But, in fact, my dear brother,--if I may make bold
+To style you, as Peachum did Lockit, of old,--
+We, Doctors, _must_ act with the firmness of Ude,
+And, indifferent like him,--so the fish is _but_ stewed,--
+_Must_ torture live Pats for the general good.
+ [_Here patient groans and kicks a little_.]
+ _Dr. Whig_.--But what, if one's patient's so devilish perverse,
+That he _won't_ be thus tortured?
+ _Dr. Tory_. Coerce, sir, coerce.
+You're a juvenile performer, but once you begin,
+You can’t think how fast you may train your hand in:
+And (_smiling_) who knows but old Tory may take to the shelf,
+With the comforting thought that, in place and in pelf,
+He's succeeded by one just as--bad as himself?
+ _Dr. Whig_ (_looking flattered_).--
+Why, to tell you the truth, I've a small matter here,
+Which you helped me to make for my patient last year,--
+ [_Goes to a cupboard and brings out a strait-waistcoat
+ and gag_.]
+And such rest I've enjoyed from his raving since then
+That I've made up my mind he shall wear it again.
+ _Dr. Tory_ (_embracing him_).—
+Oh, charming!—-My dear Doctor Whig, you're a treasure,
+Next to torturing, _myself_, to help _you_ is a pleasure.
+ [_Assisting Dr. Whig_.]
+Give me leave--I've some practice in these mad machines;
+There--tighter--the gag in the mouth, by all means.
+Delightful!--all's snug--not a squeak need you fear,--
+You may now put your anodynes off till next year.
+ [_Scene closes_.]
+
+
+[1] These verses, as well as some others that follow, were extorted from
+me by that lamentable measure of the Whig ministry, the Irish Coercion
+Act.
+
+[2] This eminent artist, in the second edition of the work wherein he
+propounds this mode of purifying his eels, professes himself much
+concerned at the charge of inhumanity brought against his practice, but
+still begs leave respectfully to repeat that it _is_ the only proper
+mode of preparing eels for the table.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE REV. CHARLES OVERTON,
+
+CURATE OF ROMALDKIRK.
+
+AUTHOR OF THE POETICAL PORTRAITURE OF THE CHURCH.
+
+1833.
+
+
+Sweet singer of Romaldkirk, thou who art reckoned,
+By critics Episcopal, David the Second,[1]
+If thus, as a Curate, so lofty your flight,
+Only think, in a Rectory, how you _would_ write!
+Once fairly inspired by the "Tithe-crowned Apollo,"
+(Who beats, I confess it, our lay Phoebus hollow,
+Having gotten, besides the old _Nine's_ inspiration,
+The _Tenth_ of all eatable things in creation.)
+There's nothing in fact that a poet like you,
+So be-_nined_ and be-_tenthed_, couldn't easily do.
+
+Round the lips of the sweet-tongued Athenian[2] they say,
+While yet but a babe in his cradle he lay,
+Wild honey-bees swarmed as presage to tell
+Of the sweet-flowing words that thence afterwards fell.
+Just so round our Overton's cradle, no doubt,
+Tenth ducklings and chicks were seen flitting about;
+Goose embryos, waiting their doomed decimation,
+Came, shadowing forth his adult destination,
+And small, sucking tithe-pigs, in musical droves,
+Announced the Church poet whom Chester approves.
+O Horace! when thou, in thy vision of yore,
+Didst dream that a snowy-white plumage came o'er
+Thy etherealized limbs, stealing downily on,
+Till, by Fancy's strong spell, thou wert turned to a swan,
+Little thought'st thou such fate could a poet befall,
+Without any effort of fancy, at all;
+Little thought'st thou the world would in Overton find
+A bird, ready-made, somewhat different in kind,
+But as perfect as Michaelmas' self could produce,
+By gods yclept _anser_, by mortals a _goose_.
+
+
+[1] "Your Lordship," says Mr. Overton, in the Dedication of his Poem to
+the Bishop of Chester," has kindly expressed your persuasion that my Muse
+will always be a 'Muse of sacred song and that it will be tuned as David's
+was.'"
+
+[2] Sophocles.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SCENE FROM A PLAY, ACTED AT OXFORD, CALLED "MATRICULATION."[1]
+
+
+[Boy discovered at a table, with the Thirty-Nine Articles before him.--
+Enter the Rt. Rev. Doctor Phillpots.]
+
+_Doctor P_.--There, my lad, lie the
+Articles--(_Boy begins to count them_) just thirty nine--
+No occasion to count--you've now only to sign.
+At Cambridge where folks are less High-church than we,
+The whole Nine-and-Thirty are lumped into Three.
+Let's run o'er the items;--there 'a Justification,
+Predestination, and Supererogation--
+Not forgetting Salvation and Creed Athanasian,
+Till we reach, at last, Queen Bess's Ratification.
+That is sufficient--now, sign--having read quite enough,
+You "believe in the full and true meaning thereof?"
+
+(_Boy stares_.)
+
+Oh! a mere form of words, to make things smooth and brief,--
+A commodious and short make-believe of belief,
+Which our Church has drawn up in a form thus articular
+To keep out in general all who're particular.
+But what's the boy doing? what! reading all thro',
+And my luncheon fast cooling!--this never will do.
+_Boy_ (_poring over the Articles_).--
+Here are points which--pray, Doctor, what's "Grace of Congruity?"
+_Doctor P._ (_sharply_).--You'll find out, young sir, when
+you've more ingenuity.
+At present, by signing, you pledge yourself merely.
+Whate'er it may be, to believe it sincerely,
+Both in _dining_ and _signing_ we take the same plan,--
+First, swallow all down, then digest--as we can.
+_Boy_ (_still reading_).--I've to gulp, I see, St. Athanasius's
+ Creed,
+Which. I'm told, is a very tough morsel indeed;
+As he damns--
+
+ _Doctor P. (aside)_.--Ay, and so would _I_, willingly, too,
+All confounded particular young boobies, like you.
+This comes of Reforming!--all's o'er with our land,
+When people won’t stand what they can't _under_-stand;
+Nor perceive that our ever-revered Thirty-Nine
+Were made not for men to _believe_ but to _sign_.
+ _Exit Dr. P. in a passion_.
+
+[1] It appears that when a youth of fifteen went to be matriculated at
+Oxford, he was required first to subscribe the Thirty-Nine Articles of
+Religious Belief.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LATE TITHE CASE.
+
+
+ _"sic vos non vobis."_
+
+
+1833.
+
+
+ "The Vicar of Birmingham desires me to state that, in consequence of
+ the passing of a recent Act of Parliament, he is compelled to adopt
+ measures which may by some be considered harsh or precipitate; but,
+ _in duty to what he owes to his successors_, he feels bound to
+ preserve the rights of the vicarage."
+ --_Letter from Mr. S. Powell_, August 6.
+
+
+No, _not_ for yourselves, ye reverend men,
+Do you take one pig in every ten,
+But for Holy Church's future heirs,
+Who've an abstract right to that pig, as theirs;
+The law supposing that such heirs male
+Are already seized of the pig, in tail.
+No, _not_ for himself hath Birmingham's priest
+His "well-beloved" of their pennies fleeced:
+But it is that, before his prescient eyes,
+All future Vicars of Birmingham rise,
+With their embryo daughters, nephews, nieces,
+And 'tis for _them_ the poor he fleeces.
+He heareth their voices, ages hence
+Saying, "Take the pig"--"oh take the pence;"
+The cries of little Vicarial dears,
+The unborn Birminghamites, reach his ears;
+And, did he resist that soft appeal,
+He would _not_ like a true-born Vicar feel.
+Thou, too, Lundy of Lackington!
+A rector true, if e'er there was one,
+Who, for sake of the Lundies of coming ages,
+Gripest the tenths of laborer's wages.[1]
+'Tis true, in the pockets of _thy_ small-clothes
+The claimed "obvention"[2]of four-pence goes;
+But its abstract spirit, unconfined,
+Spreads to all future Rector-kind,
+Warning them all to their rights to wake,
+And rather to face the block, the stake,
+Than give up their darling right _to take_.
+
+One grain of musk, it is said, perfumes
+(So subtle its spirit) a thousand rooms,
+And a single four-pence, pocketed well,
+Thro' a thousand rectors' lives will tell.
+Then still continue, ye reverend souls,
+And still as your rich Pactolus rolls,
+Grasp every penny on every side,
+From every wretch, to swell its tide:
+Remembering still what the Law lays down,
+In that pure poetic style of its own.
+"If the parson _in esse_ submits to loss, he
+"Inflicts the same on the parson _in posse_."
+
+
+[1] Fourteen agricultural laborers (one of whom received so little as six
+guineas for yearly wages, one eight, one nine, another ten guineas, and
+the best paid of the whole not more than 18_l_. annually) were all, in the
+course of the autumn of 1832, served with demands of tithe at the rate of
+4_d_. in the 1_l_. sterling, on behalf of the Rev. F. Lundy, Rector of
+Lackington, etc.--_The Times_, August, 1833.
+
+[2] One of the various general terms under which oblations, tithes, etc.,
+are comprised.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FOOLS' PARADISE.
+
+DREAM THE FIRST.
+
+
+I have been, like Puck, I have been, in a trice,
+To a realm they call Fool's Paradise,
+Lying N.N.E. of the Land of Sense,
+And seldom blest with a glimmer thence.
+But they wanted not in this happy place,
+Where a light of its own gilds every face;
+Or if some wear a shadowy brow,
+'Tis the _wish_ to look wise,--not knowing _how_.
+Self-glory glistens o'er all that's there,
+The trees, the flowers have a jaunty air;
+The well-bred wind in a whisper blows,
+The snow, if it snows, is _couleur de rose_,
+The falling founts in a titter fall,
+And the sun looks simpering down on all.
+
+Oh, 'tisn't in tongue or pen to trace
+The scenes I saw in that joyous place.
+There were Lords and Ladies sitting together,
+In converse sweet, "What charming weather!--
+"You'll all rejoice to hear, I'm sure,
+"Lord Charles has got a good sinecure;
+"And the Premier says, my youngest brother
+"(Him in the Guards) shall have another.
+
+"Isn’t this very, _very_ gallant!--
+"As for my poor old virgin aunt,
+"Who has lost her all, poor thing, at whist,
+"We must quarter _her_ on the Pension List."
+Thus smoothly time in that Eden rolled;
+It seemed like an Age of _real_ gold,
+Where all who liked might have a slice,
+So rich was that Fools' Paradise.
+
+But the sport at which most time they spent,
+Was a puppet-show, called Parliament
+Performed by wooden Ciceros,
+As large as life, who rose to prose,
+While, hid behind them, lords and squires,
+Who owned the puppets, pulled the wires;
+And thought it the very best device
+Of that most prosperous Paradise,
+To make the vulgar pay thro' the nose
+For them and their wooden Ciceros.
+
+And many more such things I saw
+In this Eden of Church and State and Law;
+Nor e'er were known such pleasant folk
+As those who had the _best_ of the joke.
+There were Irish Rectors, such as resort
+To Cheltenham yearly, to drink--port,
+And bumper, "Long may the Church endure,
+"May her cure of souls be a sinecure,
+"And a score of Parsons to every soul
+"A moderate allowance on the whole."
+There were Heads of Colleges lying about,
+From which the sense had all run out,
+Even to the lowest classic lees,
+Till nothing was left but _quantities_;
+Which made them heads most fit to be
+Stuck up on a University,
+Which yearly hatches, in its schools,
+Such flights of young Elysian fools.
+Thus all went on, so snug and nice,
+In this happiest possible Paradise.
+
+But plain it was to see, alas!
+That a downfall soon must come to pass.
+For grief is a lot the good and wise
+Don’t quite so much monopolize,
+But that ("lapt in Elysium" as they are)
+Even blessed fools must have their share.
+And so it happened:--but what befell,
+In Dream the Second I mean to tell.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE RECTOR AND HIS CURATE;
+
+OR, ONE POUND TWO.
+
+
+ "I trust we shall part as we met, in peace and charity. My last
+ payment to you paid your salary up to the 1st of this month. Since
+ that, I owe you for one month, which, being a long month, of
+ thirty-one days, amounts, as near as I can calculate, to six pounds
+ eight shillings. My steward returns you as a debtor to the amount of
+ SEVEN POUNDS TEN SHILLINGS FOR COX-ACRE-GROUND, which leaves some
+ trifling balance in my favor."--_Letter of Dismissal from the Rev.
+ Marcus Beresford to his Curate, the Rev. T. A. Lyons_.
+
+
+The account is balanced--the bill drawn out,--
+The debit and credit all right, no doubt--
+The Rector rolling in wealth and state,
+Owes to his Curate six pound eight;
+The Curate, that _least_ well-fed of men,
+Owes to his Rector seven pound ten,
+Which maketh the balance clearly due
+From Curate to Rector, one pound two.
+
+Ah balance, on earth unfair, uneven!
+But sure to be all set right in heaven,
+Where bills like these will be checkt, some day,
+And the balance settled the other way:
+Where Lyons the curate's hard-wrung sum
+Will back to his shade with interest come;
+And Marcus, the rector, deep may rue
+This tot, in his favor, of one pound two.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+PADDY'S METAMORPHOSIS.
+
+1833.
+
+
+About fifty years since, in the days of our daddies,
+ That plan was commenced which the wise now applaud,
+Of shipping off Ireland's most turbulent Paddies,
+ As good raw material for _settlers_, abroad.
+Some West-India island, whose name I forget,
+ Was the region then chosen for this scheme so romantic;
+And such the success the first colony met,
+ That a second, soon after, set sail o'er the Atlantic.
+
+Behold them now safe at the long-lookt-for shore,
+ Sailing in between banks that the Shannon might greet,
+And thinking of friends whom, but two years before,
+ They had sorrowed to lose, but would soon again meet.
+
+And, hark! from the shore a glad welcome there came--
+ "Arrah, Paddy from Cork, is it you, my sweet boy?"
+While Pat stood astounded, to hear his own name
+ Thus hailed by black devils, who capered for joy!
+
+Can it possibly be?--half amazement--half doubt,
+ Pat listens again--rubs his eyes and looks steady;
+Then heaves a deep sigh, and in horror yells out,
+ "Good Lord! only think,--black and curly already!"
+
+Deceived by that well-mimickt brogue in his ears,
+ Pat read his own doom in these wool-headed figures,
+And thought, what a climate, in less than two years,
+ To turn a whole cargo of Pats into niggers!
+
+MORAL.
+
+'Tis thus,--but alas! by a marvel more true
+ Than is told in this rival of Ovid's best stories,--
+Your Whigs, when in office a short year or two,
+ By a _lusus naturae_, all turn into Tories.
+
+And thus, when I hear them "strong measures" advise,
+ Ere the seats that they sit on have time to get steady,
+I say, while I listen, with tears in my eyes,
+ "Good Lord! only think,--black and curly already!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+COCKER, ON CHURCH REFORM.
+
+FOUNDED UPON SOME LATE CALCULATIONS.
+
+1833.
+
+
+Fine figures of speech let your orators follow,
+Old Cocker has figures that beat them all hollow.
+Tho' famed for his rules _Aristotle_ may be,
+In but _half_ of this Sage any merit I see,
+For, as honest Joe Hume says, the "_tottle_" for me!
+
+For instance, while others discuss and debate,
+It is thus about Bishops _I_ ratiocinate.
+
+In England, where, spite of the infidel's laughter,
+'Tis certain our souls are lookt _very_ well after,
+Two Bishops can well (if judiciously sundered)
+Of parishes manage two thousand two hundred.--
+Said number of parishes, under said teachers,
+Containing three millions of Protestant creatures,--
+So that each of said Bishops full ably controls
+One million and five hundred thousands of souls.
+
+And now comes old Cocker. In Ireland we're told,
+_Half_ a million includes the whole Protestant fold;
+If, therefore, for three million souls, 'tis conceded
+_Two_ proper-sized Bishops are all that is needed,
+'Tis plain, for the Irish _half_ million who want 'em,
+_One-third_ of _one_ Bishop is just the right quantum.
+And thus, by old Cocker's sublime Rule of Three,
+The Irish Church question's resolved to a T;
+Keeping always that excellent maxim in view,
+That, in saving men's souls, we must save money too.
+
+Nay, if--as St. Roden complains is the case--
+The half million of _soul_ is decreasing apace,
+The demand, too, for _bishop_ will also fall off,
+Till the _tithe_ of one, taken in kind be enough.
+But, as fractions imply that we'd have to dissect,
+And to cutting up Bishops I strongly object.
+We've a small, fractious prelate whom well we could spare,
+Who has just the same decimal worth, to a hair,
+And, not to leave Ireland too much in the lurch.
+We'll let her have Exeter, _sole_, as her Church.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LES HOMMES AUTOMATES.
+
+1834.
+
+
+ "We are persuaded that this our artificial man will not only walk and
+ speak and perform most of the outward functions of animal life, but
+ (being wound up once a week) will perhaps reason as well as most of
+ your country parsons."--"_Memoirs of Martinus Scriblerus_,"
+ chap. xii.
+
+
+It being an object now to meet
+With Parsons that don’t want to eat,
+Fit men to fill those Irish rectories,
+Which soon will have but scant refectories,
+It has been suggested,--lest that Church
+Should all at once be left in the lurch
+For want of reverend men endued
+With this gift of never requiring food,--
+To try, by way of experiment, whether
+There couldn’t be made of wood and leather,[1]
+(Howe'er the notion may sound chimerical,)
+Jointed figures, not _lay_,[2] but clerical,
+Which, wound up carefully once a week,
+Might just like parsons look and speak,
+Nay even, if requisite, reason too,
+As well as most Irish parsons do.
+
+The experiment having succeeded quite,
+(Whereat those Lords must much delight,
+Who've shown, by stopping the Church's food,
+They think it isn’t for her spiritual good
+To be served by parsons of flesh and blood,)
+The Patentees of this new invention
+Beg leave respectfully to mention,
+They now are enabled to produce
+An ample supply for present use,
+Of these reverend pieces of machinery,
+Ready for vicarage, rectory, deanery,
+Or any such-like post of skill
+That wood and leather are fit to fill.
+
+N.B.--In places addicted to arson,
+We can’t recommend a wooden parson:
+But if the Church any such appoints,
+They'd better at least have iron joints.
+In parts, not much by Protestants haunted,
+A figure to _look at_'s all that's wanted--
+A block in black, to eat and sleep,
+Which (now that the eating's o'er) comes cheap.
+
+P.S.--Should the Lords, by way of a treat,
+Permit the clergy again to eat,
+The Church will of course no longer need
+Imitation-parsons that never feed;
+And these _wood_ creatures of ours will sell
+For secular purposes just as well--
+Our Beresfords, turned to bludgeons stout,
+May, 'stead of beating their own about,
+Be knocking the brains of Papists out;
+While our smooth O'Sullivans, by all means,
+Should transmigrate into _turning_ machines.
+
+
+[1] The materials of which those Nuremberg Savans, mentioned by
+Scriblerus, constructed their artificial man.
+
+[2] The wooden models used by painters are, it is well known, called "lay
+figures".
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO MAKE ONE'S SELF A PEER.
+
+ACCORDING TO THE NEWEST RECEIPT AS DISCLOSED IN A LATE HERALDIC WORK,[1]
+
+1834.
+
+
+Choose some title that's dormant--the Peerage hath many--
+Lord Baron of Shamdos sounds nobly as any.
+Next, catch a dead cousin of said defunct Peer,
+And marry him, off hand, in some given year,
+To the daughter of somebody,--no matter who,--
+Fig, the grocer himself, if you're hard run, will do;
+For, the Medici _pills_ still in heraldry tell,
+And why shouldn't _lollypops_ quarter as well?
+Thus, having your couple, and one a lord's cousin,
+Young materials for peers may be had by the dozen;
+And 'tis hard if, inventing each small mother's son of 'em,
+You can't somehow manage to prove _yourself_ one of 'em.
+
+Should registers, deeds and such matters refractory,
+Stand in the way of this lord-manufactory,
+I've merely to hint, as a secret auricular,
+One _grand_ rule of enterprise,--_don't_ be particular.
+A man who once takes such a jump at nobility,
+Must _not_ mince the matter, like folks of nihility,
+But clear thick and thin with true lordly agility.
+
+'Tis true, to a would-be descendant from Kings,
+Parish-registers sometimes are troublesome things;
+As oft, when the vision is near brought about,
+Some goblin, in shape of a grocer, grins out;
+Or some barber, perhaps, with my Lord mingles bloods,
+And one's patent of peerage is left in the suds.
+
+But there _are_ ways--when folks are resolved to be lords--
+Of expurging even troublesome parish records.
+What think ye of scissors? depend on't no heir
+Of a Shamdos should go unsupplied with a pair,
+As whate'er _else_ the learned in such lore may invent,
+Your scissors does wonders in proving descent.
+Yes, poets may sing of those terrible shears
+With which Atropos snips off both bumpkins and peers,
+But they're naught to that weapon which shines in the hands
+Of some would-be Patricians, when proudly he stands
+O'er the careless churchwarden's baptismal array,
+And sweeps at each cut generations away.
+By some babe of old times is his peerage resisted?
+
+One snip,--and the urchin hath _never_ existed!
+Does some marriage, in days near the Flood, interfere
+With his one sublime object of being a Peer?
+Quick the shears at once nullify bridegroom and bride,--
+No such people have ever lived, married or died!
+
+Such the newest receipt for those high minded elves,
+Who've a fancy for making great lords of themselves.
+Follow this, young aspirer who pant'st for a peerage,
+Take S--m for thy model and B--z for thy steerage,
+Do all and much worse than old Nicholas Flam does,
+And--_who_ knows but you'll be Lord Baron of Shamdos?
+
+
+[1] The claim to the barony of Chandos (if I recollect right) advanced by
+the late Sir Egerinton Brydges.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DUKE IS THE LAD.
+
+
+ Air.--"A master I have, and I am his man,
+ Galloping dreary dun."
+ "_Castle of Andalusia_."
+
+
+The Duke is the lad to frighten a lass.
+ Galloping, dreary duke;
+ The Duke is the lad to frighten a lass,
+ He's an ogre to meet, and the devil to pass,
+ With his charger prancing,
+ Grim eye glancing,
+ Chin, like a Mufti,
+ Grizzled and tufty,
+ Galloping, dreary Duke.
+
+Ye misses, beware of the neighborhood
+ Of this galloping dreary Duke;
+Avoid him, all who see no good
+In being run o'er by a Prince of the Blood.
+ For, surely, no nymph is
+ Fond of a grim phiz.
+ And of the married,
+ Whole crowds have miscarried
+ At sight of this dreary Duke.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EPISTLE
+
+FROM ERASMUS ON EARTH TO CICERO IN THE SHADES.
+
+
+Southampton.
+
+As 'tis now, my dear Tully, some weeks since I started
+By railroad for earth, having vowed ere we parted
+To drop you a line by the Dead-Letter post,
+Just to say how I thrive in my new line of ghost,
+And how deucedly odd this live world all appears,
+To a man who's been dead now for three hundred years,
+I take up my pen, and with news of this earth
+Hope to waken by turns both your spleen and your mirth.
+
+In my way to these shores, taking Italy first,
+Lest the change from Elysium too sudden should burst,
+I forgot not to visit those haunts where of yore
+You took lessons from Paetus in cookery's lore.
+Turned aside from the calls of the rostrum and Muse,
+To discuss the rich merits of _rôtis_ and stews,
+And preferred to all honors of triumph or trophy,
+A supper on prawns with that rogue, little Sophy.
+
+Having dwelt on such classical musings awhile,
+I set off by a steam-boat for this happy isle,
+(A conveyance _you_ ne'er, I think, sailed by, my Tully,
+And therefore, _per_ next, I'll describe it more fully,)
+Having heard on the way what distresses me greatly,
+That England's o'errun by _idolaters_ lately,
+Stark, staring adorers of wood and of stone,
+Who will let neither stick, stock or statue alone.
+Such the sad news I heard from a tall man in black,
+Who from sports continental was hurrying back,
+To look after his tithes;--seeing, doubtless, 'twould follow,
+That just as of old your great idol, Apollo,
+Devoured all the Tenths, so the idols in question,
+These wood and stone gods, may have equal digestion,
+And the idolatrous crew whom this Rector despises,
+May eat up the tithe-pig which _he_ idolizes.
+
+London.
+
+'Tis all but too true--grim Idolatry reigns
+In full pomp over England's lost cities and plains!
+On arriving just now, as my first thought and care
+Was as usual to seek out some near House of Prayer,
+Some calm holy spot, fit for Christians to pray on,
+I was shown to--what think you?--a downright Pantheon!
+
+A grand, pillared temple with niches and halls,
+Full of idols and gods, which they nickname St. Paul's;--
+Tho' 'tis clearly the place where the idolatrous crew
+Whom the Rector complained of, their dark rites pursue;
+And, 'mong all the "strange gods" Abr'ham's father carved out,[1]
+That he ever carv'd _stranger_ than these I much doubt.
+
+ Were it even, my dear TULLY, your Hebes and Graces,
+And such pretty things, that usurpt the Saints' places,
+I shouldn’t much mind,--for in this classic dome
+Such folks from Olympus would feel quite at home.
+But the gods they've got here!--such a queer omnium gatherum
+Of misbegot things that no poet would father 'em;--
+Britannias in light summer-wear for the skies,--
+Old Thames turned to stone, to his no small surprise,--
+Father Nile, too,--a portrait, (in spite of what's said,
+That no mortal e'er yet got a glimpse of his _head_,)
+And a Ganges which India would think somewhat fat for't,
+Unless 'twas some full-grown Director had sat for't;--
+Not to mention the _et caeteras_ of Genii and Sphinxes,
+Fame, Victory, and other such semi-clad minxes;--
+Sea Captains,[2]--the idols here most idolized;
+And of whom some, alas! might too well be comprized
+Among ready-made Saints, as they died _cannonized_;
+With a multitude more of odd cockneyfied deities,
+Shrined in such pomp that quite shocking to see it 'tis;
+Nor know I what better the Rector could do
+Than to shrine there his own beloved quadruped too;
+As most surely a tithe-pig, whate'er the world thinks, is
+A much fitter beast for a church than a Sphinx is.
+
+ But I'm called off to dinner--grace just has been said,
+And my host waits for nobody, living or dead.
+
+
+[1] Joshua xxiv 2.
+
+[2] Captains Mosse, Riou etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LINES ON THE DEPARTURE OF LORD CASTLEREAGH
+AND STEWART FOR THE CONTINENT.[1]
+
+
+ _at Paris[2] et Fratres, et qui rapure sub illis.
+ vix tenuere manus (scis hoc, Menelae) nefandas_.
+ OVID. _Metam. lib_. xiii. v. 202.
+
+
+Go, Brothers in wisdom--go, bright pair of Peers,
+ And my Cupid and Fame fan you both with their pinions!
+The _one_, the best lover we have--_of his years_,
+ And the other Prime Statesman of Britain's dominions.
+
+Go, Hero of Chancery, blest with the smile
+ Of the Misses that love and the monarchs that prize thee;
+Forget Mrs. Angelo Taylor awhile,
+ And all tailors but him who so well _dandifies_ thee.
+
+Never mind how thy juniors in gallantry scoff,
+ Never heed how perverse affidavits may thwart thee,
+But show the young Misses thou'rt scholar enough
+ To translate "_Amor Fortis_" a love, _about forty_!
+
+And sure 'tis no wonder, when, fresh as young Mars,
+ From the battle you came, with the Orders you'd earned in't,
+That sweet Lady Fanny should cry out "_My stars_!"
+ And forget that the _Moon_, too, was some way concerned in't.
+
+For not the great Regent himself has endured
+ (Tho' I've seen him with badges and orders all shine,
+Till he lookt like a house that was _over_ insured)
+ A much heavier burden of glories than thine.
+
+And 'tis plain, when a wealthy young lady so mad is,
+ Or _any_ young ladies can so go astray,
+As to marry old Dandies that might be their daddies,
+ The _stars_ are in fault, my Lord Stewart, not they!
+
+Thou, too, t'other brother, thou Tully of Tories,
+ Thou _Malaprop_ Cicero, over whose lips
+Such a smooth rigmarole about; "monarchs," and "glories,"
+ And "_nullidge_," and "features," like syllabub slips.
+
+Go, haste, at the Congress pursue thy vocation
+ Of adding fresh sums to this National Debt of ours,
+Leaguing with Kings, who for mere recreation
+ Break promises, fast as your Lordship breaks metaphors.
+
+Fare ye well, fare ye well, bright Pair of Peers,
+ And may Cupid and Fame fan you both with their pinions!
+The one, the best lover we have--_of his years_,
+And the other, Prime Statesman of Britain's dominions.
+
+
+[1] This and the following squib, which must have been written about the
+year 1815-16, have been by some oversight misplaced.
+
+[2] Ovid is mistaken in saying that it was "at Paris" these rapacious
+transactions took place--we should read "at Vienna."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE SHIP IN WHICH LORD CASTLEREAGH SAILED FOR THE CONTINENT.
+
+_Imitated from Horace, lib. i, ode 3_.
+
+
+So may my Lady's prayers prevail,
+ And Canning's too, and _lucid_ Bragge's,
+And Eldon beg a favoring gale
+ From Eolus, that _older_ Bags,
+To speed thee on thy destined way,
+Oh ship, that bearest our Castlereagh,
+Our gracious Regent's better half
+ And _therefore_ quarter of a King--
+(As Van or any other calf
+ May find without much figuring).
+Waft him, oh ye kindly breezes,
+ Waft this Lord of place and pelf,
+Any where his Lordship pleases,
+ Tho' 'twere to Old Nick himself!
+
+Oh, what a face of brass was his.
+Who first at Congress showed his phiz--
+To sign away the Rights of Man
+ To Russian threats and Austrian juggle;
+And leave the sinking African
+ To fall without one saving struggle--
+'Mong ministers from North and South,
+ To show his lack of shame and sense,
+And hoist the sign of "Bull and Mouth"
+ For blunders and for eloquence!
+
+In vain we wish our _Secs_, at home
+ To mind their papers, desks, and shelves,
+If silly _Secs_, abroad _will_ roam
+ And make such noodles of themselves.
+
+But such hath always been the case--
+For matchless impudence of face,
+There's nothing like your Tory race!
+First, Pitt, the chosen of England, taught her
+A taste for famine, fire and slaughter.
+Then came the Doctor, for our ease,
+With Eldons, Chathams, Hawksburies,
+And other deadly maladies.
+When each in turn had run their rigs,
+Necessity brought in the Whigs:
+
+And oh! I blush, I blush to say,
+ When these, in turn, were put to flight, too,
+Illustrious TEMPLE flew away
+ With _lots of pens he had no right to_.[1]
+In short, what _will_ not mortal man do?
+ And now, that--strife and bloodshed past--
+We've done on earth what harm we can do,
+ We gravely take to heaven at last
+And think its favoring smile to purchase
+(Oh Lord, good Lord!) by--building churches!
+
+
+[1] This alludes to the 1200_l_. worth of stationery, which his Lordship
+is said to have ordered, when on the point of _vacating_ his place.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SKETCH OF THE FIRST ACT OF A NEW ROMANTIC DRAMA.
+
+
+"And now," quoth the goddess, in accents jocose,
+"Having got good materials, I'll brew such a dose
+"Of Double X mischief as, mortals shall say,
+"They've not known its equal for many a long day."
+Here she winkt to her subaltern imps to be steady,
+And all wagged their fire-tipt tails and stood ready.
+
+"So, now for the ingredients:--first, hand me that bishop;"
+Whereupon, a whole bevy of imps run to fish up
+From out a large reservoir wherein they pen 'em
+The blackest of all its black dabblers in venom;
+And wrapping him up (lest the virus should ooze,
+And one "drop of the immortal"[1] Right Rev.[2] they might lose)
+In the sheets of his own speeches, charges, reviews,
+Pop him into the caldron, while loudly a burst
+From the by-standers welcomes ingredient the first!
+
+"Now fetch the Ex-Chancellor," muttered the dame--
+"He who's called after Harry the Older, by name."
+"The Ex-Chancellor!" echoed her imps, the whole crew of 'em--
+"Why talk of _one_ Ex, when your Mischief has _two_ of 'em?"
+"True, true," said the hag, looking arch at her elves,
+"And a double-_Ex_ dose they compose, in themselves."
+This joke, the sly meaning of which was seen lucidly,
+Set all the devils a laughing most deucedly.
+So, in went the pair, and (what none thought surprising)
+Showed talents for sinking as great as for rising;
+While not a grim phiz in that realm but was lighted
+With joy to see spirits so twin-like united--
+Or (plainly to speak) two such birds of a feather,
+In one mess of venom thus spitted together.
+Here a flashy imp rose--some connection, no doubt,
+Of the young lord in question--and, scowling about,
+"Hoped his fiery friend, Stanley, would not be left out;
+"As no schoolboy unwhipt, the whole world must agree,
+"Loved mischief, _pure_ mischief, more dearly than he."
+
+But, no--the wise hag wouldn’t hear of the whipster;
+Not merely because, as a shrew, he eclipst her,
+And nature had given him, to keep him still young,
+Much tongue in his head and no head in his tongue;
+But because she well knew that, for change ever ready,
+He'd not even to mischief keep properly steady:
+That soon even the _wrong_ side would cease to delight,
+And, for want of a change, he must swerve to the _right_;
+While, on _each_, so at random his missiles he threw,
+That the side he attackt was most safe, of the two.--
+This ingredient was therefore put by on the shelf,
+There to bubble, a bitter, hot mess, by itself.
+"And now," quoth the hag, as her caldron she eyed.
+And the tidbits so friendlily rankling inside,
+"There wants but some seasoning;--so, come, ere I stew 'em,
+"By way of a relish we'll throw in John Tuam.'
+"In cooking up mischief, there's no flesh or fish
+"Like your meddling High Priest, to add zest to the dish."
+Thus saying, she pops in the Irish Grand Lama--
+Which great event ends the First Act of the Drama.
+
+
+[1] To lose no drop of the immortal man.
+
+[2] The present Bishop of Exeter.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ANIMAL MAGNETISM.
+
+
+Tho' famed was Mesmer, in his day,
+Nor less so, in ours, is Dupotet,
+To say nothing of all the wonders done
+By that wizard, Dr. Elliotson,
+When, standing as if the gods to invoke, he
+Up waves his arm, and--down drops Okey![1]
+Tho' strange these things, to mind and sense,
+ If you wish still stranger things to see--
+If you wish to know the power immense
+Of the true magnetic influence,
+ Just go to her Majesty's Treasury,
+And learn the wonders working there--
+And I'll be hanged if you don’t stare!
+Talk of your animal magnetists,
+And that wave of the hand no soul resists,
+Not all its witcheries can compete
+With the friendly beckon towards Downing Street,
+Which a Premier gives to one who wishes
+To taste of the Treasury loaves and fishes.
+It actually lifts the lucky elf,
+Thus acted upon, _above_ himself;--
+He jumps to a state of _clairvoyance_,
+And is placeman, statesman, all, at once!
+
+These effects, observe (with which I begin),
+Take place when the patient's motioned _in_;
+Far different of course the mode of affection,
+When the wave of the hand's in the _out_ direction;
+The effects being then extremely unpleasant,
+As is seen in the case of Lord Brougham, at present;
+In whom this sort of manipulation,
+Has lately produced such inflammation,
+Attended with constant irritation,
+That, in short--not to mince his situation--
+It has workt in the man a transformation
+That puzzles all human calculation!
+Ever since the fatal day which saw
+That "pass" performed on this Lord of Law--
+A pass potential, none can doubt,
+As it sent Harry Brougham to the right about--
+The condition in which the patient has been
+Is a thing quite awful to be seen.
+Not that a casual eye could scan
+ This wondrous change by outward survey;
+It being, in fact, the _interior_ man
+ That's turned completely topsy-turvy:--
+Like a case that lately, in reading o'er 'em,
+I found in the _Acta Eruditorum_,
+Of a man in whose inside, when disclosed,
+The whole order of things was found transposed;
+By a _lusus naturae_, strange to see,
+The liver placed where the heart should be,
+And the _spleen_ (like Brougham's, since laid on the shelf)
+As diseased and as much _out of place_ as himself.
+
+In short, 'tis a case for consultation,
+If e'er there was one, in this thinking nation;
+And therefore I humbly beg to propose,
+That those _savans_ who mean, as the rumor goes,
+To sit on Miss Okey's wonderful case,
+Should also Lord Parry's case embrace;
+And inform us, in _both_ these patients' states,
+Which _ism_ it is that predominates,
+Whether magnetism and somnambulism,
+Or, simply and solely, mountebankism.
+
+
+[1] The name of the heroine of the performances at the North London
+Hospital.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SONG OF THE BOX.
+
+
+Let History boast of her Romans and Spartans,
+And tell how they stood against tyranny's shock;
+They were all, I confess, in _my_ eye, Betty Martins
+ Compared to George Grote and his wonderful Box.
+
+Ask, where Liberty now has her seat?--Oh, it isn't
+ By Delaware's banks or on Switzerland's rocks;--
+Like an imp in some conjuror's bottle imprisoned,
+ She's slyly shut up in Grote's wonderful Box.
+
+How snug!--'stead of floating thro' ether's dominions,
+ Blown _this_ way and _that_, by the "_populi vox_,"
+To fold thus in silence her sinecure pinions,
+ And go fast asleep in Grote's wonderful Box.
+
+Time was, when free speech was the life-breath of freedom--
+ So thought once the Seldens, the Hampdens, the Lockes;
+But mute be _our_ troops, when to ambush we lead 'em,
+ "For Mum" is the word with us Knights of the Box.
+
+Pure, exquisite Box! no corruption can soil it;
+ There's Otto of Rose in each breath it unlocks;
+While Grote is the "Betty," that serves at the toilet,
+ And breathes all Arabia around from his Box.
+
+'Tis a singular fact, that the famed Hugo Grotius
+ (A namesake of Grote's--being both of Dutch stocks),
+Like Grote, too, a genius profound as precocious,
+ Was also, like him, much renowned for a Box;--
+
+An immortal old clothes-box, in which the great Grotius
+ When suffering in prison for views heterodox,
+Was packt up incog. spite of jailers ferocious,[1]
+ And sent to his wife,[2] carriage free, in a Box!
+
+But the fame of old Hugo now rests on the shelf,
+ Since a rival hath risen that all parallel mocks;--
+_That_ Grotius ingloriously saved but himself,
+ While _ours_ saves the whole British realm by a Box!
+
+And oh! when, at last, even this greatest of Grotes
+ Must bend to the Power that at every door knocks,
+May he drop in the urn like his own "silent votes,"
+ And the tomb of his rest be a large Ballot-Box.
+
+While long at his shrine, both from county and city,
+ Shall pilgrims triennially gather in flocks,
+And sing, while they whimper, the appropriate ditty,
+ "Oh breathe not his _name_, let it sleep--in the Box."
+
+
+[1] For the particulars of this escape of Grotius from the Castle of
+Louvenstein, by means of a box (only three feet and a half long, it is
+said) in which books used to be occasionally sent to him and foul linen
+returned, see any of the Biographical Dictionaries.
+
+[2] This is not quite according to the facts of the case; his wife having
+been the contriver of the stratagem, and remained in the prison herself to
+give him time for escape.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ANNOUNCEMENT OF A NEW THALABA.
+
+ADDRESSED TO ROBERT SOUTHEY, ESQ.
+
+
+When erst, my Southey, thy tuneful tongue
+The terrible tale of Thalaba sung--
+Of him, the Destroyer, doomed to rout
+That grim divan of conjurors out,
+Whose dwelling dark, as legends say,
+Beneath the roots of the ocean lay,
+(Fit place for deep ones, such as they,)
+How little thou knewest, dear Dr. Southey,
+Altho' bright genius all allow thee,
+That, some years thence, thy wondering eyes
+Should see a second Thalaba rise--
+As ripe for ruinous rigs as thine,
+Tho' his havoc lie in a different line,
+And should find this new, improved Destroyer
+Beneath the wig of a Yankee lawyer;
+A sort of an "alien," _alias_ man,
+Whose country or party guess who can,
+Being Cockney half, half Jonathan;
+And his life, to make the thing completer,
+Being all in the genuine Thalaba metre,
+Loose and irregular as thy feet are;--
+First, into Whig Pindarics rambling,
+Then in low Tory doggrel scrambling;
+Now _love_ his theme, now _Church_ his glory
+(At once both Tory and ama-tory),
+Now in the Old Bailey-_lay_ meandering,
+Now in soft _couplet_ style philandering;
+And, lastly, in lame Alexandrine,
+Dragging his wounded length along,
+When scourged by Holland's silken thong.
+
+In short, dear Bob, Destroyer the Second
+May fairly a match for the First be reckoned;
+Save that _your_ Thalaba's talent lay
+In sweeping old conjurors clean away,
+While ours at aldermen deals his blows,
+(Who no great conjurors are, God knows,)
+Lays Corporations, by wholesale, level,
+Sends Acts of Parliament to the devil,
+Bullies the whole Milesian race--
+Seven millions of Paddies, face to face;
+And, seizing that magic wand, himself,
+Which erst thy conjurors left on the shelf,
+Transforms the boys of the Boyne and Liffey
+All into _foreigners_, in a jiffy--
+Aliens, outcasts, every soul of 'em,
+Born but for whips and chains, the whole of 'em?
+
+Never in short did parallel
+Betwixt two heroes _gee_ so well;
+And among the points in which they fit,
+There's one, dear Bob, I can’t omit.
+That hacking, hectoring blade of thine
+Dealt much in the _Domdaniel_ line;
+And 'tis but rendering justice due,
+To say that ours and his Tory crew
+_Damn Daniel_ most devoutly too.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+RIVAL TOPICS.[1]
+
+AN EXTRAVAGANZA.
+
+
+Oh Wellington and Stephenson,
+ Oh morn and evening papers,
+_Times_, _Herald_, _Courier_, _Globe_, and _Sun_,
+When will ye cease our ears to stun
+ With these two heroes' capers?
+Still "Stephenson" and "Wellington,"
+ The everlasting two!--
+Still doomed, from rise to set of sun,
+To hear what mischief one has done,
+ And t'other means to do:--
+What bills the banker past to friends,
+ But never meant to pay;
+What Bills the other wight intends,
+ As honest, in their way;--
+Bills, payable at distant sight,
+ Beyond the Grecian kalends,
+When all good deeds will come to light,
+When Wellington will do what's right,
+ And Rowland pay his balance.
+
+To catch the banker all have sought,
+ But still the rogue unhurt is;
+While t'other juggler--who'd have thought?
+Tho' slippery long, has just been caught
+ By old Archbishop Curtis;--
+And, such the power of papal crook,
+ The crosier scarce had quivered
+About his ears, when, lo! the Duke
+ Was of a Bull delivered!
+Sir Richard Birnie doth decide
+ That Rowland "must be mad,"
+In private coach, with crest, to ride,
+ When chaises could be had.
+And t'other hero, all agree,
+ St. Luke's will soon arrive at,
+If thus he shows off publicly,
+ When he might pass in private.
+Oh Wellington, oh Stephenson,
+ Ye ever-boring pair,
+Where'er I sit, or stand, or run,
+ Ye haunt me everywhere.
+Tho' Job had patience tough enough,
+ Such duplicates would try it;
+Till one's turned out and t'other off,
+ We Shan’ have peace or quiet.
+But small's the chance that Law affords--
+ Such folks are daily let off;
+And, 'twixt the old Bailey and the Lords,
+ They both, I fear, will get off.
+
+
+[1] The date of this squib must have been, I think, about 1828-9.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BOY STATESMAN.
+
+BY A TORY.
+
+
+ "That boy will be the death of me."
+ _Matthews at Home_.
+
+
+Ah, Tories dear, our ruin is near,
+ With Stanley to help us, we can’t but fall;
+Already a warning voice I hear,
+Like the late Charles Matthews' croak in my ear,
+ "That boy--that boy'll be the death of you all."
+
+He will, God help us!--not even Scriblerius
+ In the "Art of Sinking" his match could be;
+And our case is growing exceeding serious,
+ For, all being in the same boat as he,
+ If down my Lord goes, down go we,
+ Lord Baron Stanley and Company,
+As deep in Oblivion's swamp below
+As such "Masters Shallow," well could go;
+And where we shall all both low and high,
+Embalmed in mud, as forgotten lie
+As already doth Graham of Netherby!
+But that boy, that boy!--there's a tale I know,
+Which in talking of him comes à_propos_.
+Sir Thomas More had an only son,
+And a foolish lad was that only one,
+ And Sir Thomas said one day to his wife,
+"My dear, I can’t but wish you joy.
+"For you prayed for a boy, and you now have a boy,
+"Who'll continue a boy to the end of his life."
+
+Even such is our own distressing lot,
+With the ever-young statesman we have got;
+Nay even still worse; for Master More
+Wasn't more a youth than he'd been before,
+While _ours_ such power of boyhood shows,
+That the older he gets the more juvenile he grows,
+And at what extreme old age he'll close
+His schoolboy course, heaven only knows;--
+Some century hence, should he reach so far,
+ And ourselves to witness it heaven condemn,
+We shall find him a sort of _cub_ Old Parr,
+ A whipper-snapper Methusalem;
+Nay, even should he make still longer stay of it,
+The boy'll want _judgment_, even to the day of it!
+Meanwhile, 'tis a serious, sad infliction;
+ And day and night with awe I recall
+The late Mr. Matthews' solemn prediction,
+ "That boy'll be the death, the death of you all."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER
+
+FROM LARRY O'BRANIGAN TO THE REV. MURTHAGH O'MULLIGAN.
+
+
+Arrah, where were _you_, Murthagh, that beautiful day?--
+ Or how came it your riverence was laid on the shelf,
+When that poor craythur, Bobby--as _you_ were away--
+ Had to make _twice_ as big a Tomfool of _himself_.
+
+Troth, it wasn’t at all civil to lave in the lurch
+ A boy so deserving your tindhr'est affection:--
+Too such iligant Siamase twins of the Church,
+ As Bob and yourself, ne'er should cut the connection.
+
+If thus in two different directions you pull,
+ 'Faith, they'll swear that yourself and your riverend brother
+Are like those quare foxes, in Gregory's Bull,
+ Whose tails were joined _one_ way, while they lookt
+_another_![1]
+
+Och blest be he, whosomdever he be,
+ That helpt soft Magee to that Bull of a Letther!
+Not even my own self, tho' I sometimes make free
+ At such bull-manufacture, could make him a betther.
+
+To be sure, when a lad takes to _forgin_', this way,
+ 'Tis a thrick he's much timpted to carry on gayly;
+Till, at last, his "injanious devices,"[2]
+ Show him up, not at Exether Hall, but the Ould Bailey.
+
+That parsons should forge thus appears mighty odd,
+ And (as if somethin' "odd" in their _names_, too, must be,)
+_One_ forger, of ould, was a riverend Dod,
+ "While a riverend Todd's now his match, to a T.[3]
+
+But, no matther _who_ did it all blessin's betide him,
+ For dishin' up Bob, in a manner so nate;
+And there wanted but _you_, Murthagh 'vourneen, beside him,
+ To make the whole grand dish of _bull_-calf complate.
+
+
+[1] "You will increase the enmity with which they are regarded by their
+associates in heresy, thus tying these foxes by the tails, that their
+faces may tend in opposite directions."--Bob's _Bull_ read, at Exeter
+Hall, July 14.
+
+[2] "An ingenious device of my learned friend."--Bob's _Letter to
+Standard_.
+
+[3] Had I consulted only my own wishes, I should not have allowed this
+hasty at tack on Dr. Todd to have made its appearance in this Collection;
+being now fully convinced that the charge brought against that reverend
+gentleman of intending to pass off as genuine his famous mock Papal Letter
+was altogether unfounded. Finding it to be the wish, however, of my
+reverend friend--as I am now glad to be permitted to call him--that both
+the wrong and the reparation, the Ode and, the Palinode, should be thus
+placed in juxtaposition, I have thought it but due to him, to comply with
+his request.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MUSINGS OF AN UNREFORMED PEER.
+
+
+Of all the odd plans of this monstrously queer age,
+The oddest is that of reforming the peerage;--
+Just as if we, great dons, with a title and star,
+Did not get on exceedingly well as we are,
+And perform all the functions of noodles by birth
+As completely as any born noodles on earth.
+
+How _acres_ descend, is in law-books displayed,
+But we as _wise_acres descend, ready made;
+And by right of our rank in Debrett's nomenclature,
+Are all of us born legislators by nature;--
+Like ducklings to water instinctively taking,
+So we with like quackery take to lawmaking;
+And God forbid any reform should come o'er us,
+To make us more wise than our sires were before us.
+
+The Egyptians of old the same policy knew--
+If your sire was a cook, you must be a cook too:
+Thus making, from father to son, a good trade of it,
+Poisoners _by right_ (so no more could be said of it),
+The cooks like our lordships a pretty mess made of it;
+While, famed for _conservative_ stomachs, the Egyptians
+Without a wry face bolted all the prescriptions.
+
+It is true, we've among us some peers of the past,
+Who keep pace with the present most awfully fast--
+Fruits that ripen beneath the new light now arising
+With speed that to _us_, old conserves, is surprising.
+Conserves, in whom--potted, for grandmamma uses--
+'Twould puzzle a sunbeam to find any juices.
+'Tis true too. I fear, midst the general movement,
+Even _our_ House, God help it, is doomed to improvement,
+And all its live furniture, nobly descended
+But sadly worn out, must be sent to be mended.
+With _movables_ 'mong us, like Brougham and like Durham,
+No wonder even _fixtures_ should learn to bestir 'em;
+And distant, ye gods, be that terrible day,
+When--as playful Old Nick, for his pastime, they say,
+Flies off with old houses, sometimes, in a storm--
+So _ours_ may be whipt off, some night, by Reform;
+And as up, like Loretto's famed house,[1] thro' the air,
+Not angels, but devils, our lordships shall bear,
+Grim, radical phizzes, unused to the sky,
+Shall flit round, like cherubs, to wish us "good-by,"
+While perched up on clouds little imps of plebeians,
+Small Grotes and O'Connells, shall sing Io Paeans.
+
+
+[1] The _Casa Santa_, supposed to have been carried by angels through
+the air from Galilee to Italy.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE REVEREND PAMPHLETEER.
+
+A ROMANTIC BALLAD.
+
+
+Oh, have you heard what hapt of late?
+ If not, come lend an ear,
+While sad I state the piteous fate
+ Of the Reverend Pamphleteer.
+
+All praised his skilful jockeyship,
+ Loud rung the Tory cheer,
+While away, away, with spur and whip,
+ Went the Reverend Pamphleteer.
+
+The nag he rode--how _could_ it err?
+ 'Twas the same that took, last year,
+That wonderful jump to Exeter
+ With the Reverend Pamphleteer.
+
+Set a beggar on horseback, wise men say,
+ The course he will take is clear:
+And in _that_ direction lay the way
+ Of the Reverend Pamphleteer,
+
+"Stop, stop," said Truth, but vain her cry--
+ Left far away in the rear,
+She heard but the usual gay "Good-by"
+ From her faithless Pamphleteer.
+
+You may talk of the jumps of Homer's gods,
+ When cantering o'er our sphere--
+I'd back for a _bounce_, 'gainst any odds,
+ This Reverend Pamphleteer.
+
+But ah! what tumbles a jockey hath!
+ In the midst of his career,
+A file of the _Times_ lay right in the path
+ Of the headlong Pamphleteer.
+
+Whether he tript or shyed thereat,
+ Doth not so clear appear:
+But down he came, as his sermons flat--
+ This Reverend Pamphleteer!
+
+Lord King himself could scarce desire
+ To see a spiritual Peer
+Fall much more dead, in the dirt and mire,
+ Than did this Pamphleteer.
+
+Yet pitying parsons many a day
+ Shall visit his silent bier,
+And, thinking the while of Stanhope, say
+ "Poor dear old Pamphleteer!
+
+"He has finisht at last his busy span,
+ "And now _lies coolly_ here--
+"As often he did in life, good man,
+ "Good, Reverend Pamphleteer!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+RECENT DIALOGUE.
+
+1825.
+
+
+A Bishop and a bold dragoon,
+ Both heroes in their way,
+Did thus, of late, one afternoon,
+ Unto each other say:--
+"Dear bishop," quoth the brave huzzar,
+ "As nobody denies
+"That you a wise logician are,
+ "And I am--otherwise,
+"'Tis fit that in this question, we
+ "Stick each to his own art--
+"That _yours_ should be the sophistry,
+ "And _mine_ the _fighting_ part.
+"My creed, I need not tell you, is
+ "Like that of Wellington,
+"To whom no harlot comes amiss,
+ "Save her of Babylon;
+"And when we're at a loss for words,
+ "If laughing reasoners flout us,
+"For lack of sense we'll draw our swords--
+ "The sole thing sharp about us."--
+
+"Dear bold dragoon," the bishop said,
+ "'Tis true for war thou art meant;
+"And reasoning--bless that dandy head!
+ "Is not in thy department.
+"So leave the argument to me--
+ "And, when my holy labor
+"Hath lit the fires of bigotry,
+ "Thou'lt poke them with thy sabre.
+"From pulpit and from sentrybox,
+ "We'll make our joint attacks,
+"I at the head of my _Cassocks_,
+ "And you, of your _Cossacks_.
+"So here's your health, my brave huzzar,
+ "My exquisite old fighter--
+"Success to bigotry and war,
+ "The musket and the mitre!"
+Thus prayed the minister of heaven--
+ While York, just entering then,
+Snored out (as if some _Clerk_ had given
+ His nose the cue) "Amen."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WELLINGTON SPA.
+
+
+ "And drink _oblivion_ to our woes."
+ Anna Matilda.
+
+
+1829.
+
+
+Talk no more of your Cheltenham and Harrowgate springs,
+ 'Tis from _Lethe_ we now our potations must draw;
+Yon _Lethe_'s a cure for--all possible things,
+ And the doctors have named it the Wellington Spa.
+
+Other physical waters but cure you in part;
+ _One_ cobbles your gout--_t'other_ mends your digestion--
+Some settle your stomach, but _this_--bless your heart!--
+ It will settle for ever your Catholic Question.
+
+Unlike too the potions in fashion at present,
+ This Wellington nostrum, restoring by stealth,
+So purges the memory of all that's unpleasant,
+ That patients _forget_ themselves into rude health.
+For instance, the inventor--his having once said
+ "He should think himself mad if at _any one's_ call,
+"He became what he is"--is so purged from his head
+ That he now doesn’t think he's a madman at all.
+Of course, for your memories of very long standing--
+ Old chronic diseases that date back undaunted
+To Brian Boroo and Fitz-Stephens' first landing--
+ A devil of a dose of the _Lethe_ is wanted.
+
+But even Irish patients can hardly regret
+ An oblivion so much in their own native style,
+So conveniently planned that, whate'er they forget,
+ They may go on remembering it still all the while!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A CHARACTERLESS
+
+1834.
+
+
+Half Whig, half Tory, like those mid-way things,
+'Twixt bird and beast, that by mistake have wings;
+A mongrel Stateman, 'twixt two factions nurst,
+Who, of the faults of each, combines the worst--
+The Tory's loftiness, the Whigling's sneer,
+The leveller's rashness, and the bigot's fear:
+The thirst for meddling, restless still to show
+How Freedom's clock, repaired by Whigs, will go;
+The alarm when others, more sincere than they,
+Advance the hands to the true time of day.
+
+By Mother Church, high-fed and haughty dame,
+The boy was dandled, in his dawn of fame;
+Listening, she smiled, and blest the flippant tongue
+On which the fate of unborn tithe-pigs hung.
+Ah! who shall paint the grandam's grim dismay,
+When loose Reform enticed her boy away;
+When shockt she heard him ape the rabble's tone,
+And in Old Sarum's fate foredoom her own!
+Groaning she cried, while tears rolled down her cheeks,
+"Poor, glib-tongued youth, he means not what he speaks.
+"Like oil at top, these Whig professions flow,
+"But, pure as lymph, runs Toryism below.
+"Alas! that tongue should start thus, in the race,
+"Ere mind can reach and regulate its pace!--
+"For, once outstript by tongue, poor, lagging mind,
+"At every step, still further limps behind.
+"But, bless the boy!--whate'er his wandering be,
+"Still turns his heart to Toryism and me.
+"Like those odd shapes, portrayed in Dante's lay.
+"With heads fixt on, the wrong and backward way,
+"His feet and eyes pursue a diverse track,
+"While _those_ march onward, _these_ look fondly back."
+And well she knew him--well foresaw the day,
+Which now hath come, when snatched from Whigs away
+The self-same changeling drops the mask he wore,
+And rests, restored, in granny's arms once more.
+
+But whither now, mixt brood of modern light
+And ancient darkness, canst thou bend thy flight?
+Tried by both factions and to neither true,
+Feared by the _old_ school, laught at by the _new_;
+For _this_ too feeble and for _that_ too rash,
+_This_ wanting more of fire, _that_ less of flash,
+Lone shalt thou stand, in isolation cold,
+Betwixt two worlds, the new one and the old,
+A small and "vext Bermoothes," which the eye
+Of venturous seaman sees--and passes by.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A GHOST STORY.
+
+To THE AIR OF "UNFORTUNATE MISS BAILEY."
+
+1835.
+
+
+Not long in bed had Lyndhurst lain,
+ When, as his lamp burned dimly,
+The ghosts of corporate bodies slain,[1]
+ Stood by his bedside grimly.
+Dead aldermen who once could feast,
+ But now, themselves, are fed on,
+And skeletons of mayors deceased,
+ This doleful chorus led on:--
+ Oh Lord Lyndhurst,
+ "Unmerciful Lord Lyndhurst,
+ "Corpses we,
+ "All burkt by thee,
+ "Unmerciful Lord Lyndhurst!"
+
+"Avaunt, ye frights!" his Lordship cried,
+ "Ye look most glum and whitely."
+"Ah, Lyndhurst dear!" the frights replied,
+ "You've used us unpolitely.
+"And now, ungrateful man! to drive
+ "Dead bodies from your door so,
+"Who quite corrupt enough, alive,
+ "You've made by death still more so.
+ "Oh, Ex-Chancellor,
+ "Destructive Ex-Chancellor,
+ "See thy work,
+ "Thou second Burke,
+ "Destructive Ex-Chancellor!"
+
+Bold Lyndhurst then, whom naught could keep
+ Awake or surely _that_ would,
+Cried "Curse you all"--fell fast asleep--
+ And dreamt of "Small _v_. Attwood."
+While, shockt, the bodies flew downstairs,
+ But courteous in their panic
+Precedence gave to ghosts of mayors,
+ And corpses aldermanic,
+ Crying, "Oh, Lord Lyndhurst,
+ "That terrible Lord Lyndhurst,
+ "Not Old Scratch
+ "Himself could match
+ "That terrible Lord Lyndhurst."
+
+
+[1] Referring to the line taken by Lord Lyndhurst, on the question of
+Municipal Reform.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS ON THE LATE DESTRUCTIVE PROPOSITIONS OF THE TORIES.[1]
+
+BY A COMMON-COUNCILMAN.
+
+1835.
+
+
+I sat me down in my easy chair,
+ To read, as usual, the morning papers;
+But--who shall describe my look of despair,
+ When I came to Lefroy's "destructive" capers!
+That _he_--that, of all live men, Lefroy
+Should join in the cry "Destroy, destroy!"
+Who, even when a babe, as I've heard said,
+On Orange conserve was chiefly fed,
+And never, till now, a movement made
+That wasn’t manfully retrograde!
+Only think--to sweep from the light of day
+Mayors, maces, criers and wigs away;
+To annihilate--never to rise again--
+A whole generation of aldermen,
+Nor leave them even the accustomed tolls,
+To keep together their bodies and souls!--
+At a time too when snug posts and places
+ Are falling away from us one by one,
+Crash--crash--like the mummy-cases
+ Belzoni, in Egypt, sat upon,
+Wherein lay pickled, in state sublime,
+Conservatives of the ancient time;--
+To choose such a moment to overset
+The few snug nuisances left us yet;
+To add to the ruin that round us reigns,
+By knocking out mayors' and town-clerks' brains;
+By dooming all corporate bodies to fall,
+Till they leave at last no bodies at all--
+Naught but the ghosts of by-gone glory,
+Wrecks of a world that once was Tory!--
+Where pensive criers, like owls unblest,
+ Robbed of their roosts, shall still hoot o'er them:
+ Nor _mayors_ shall know where to seek a _nest_,
+ Till Gaily Knight shall _find_ one for them;--
+Till mayors and kings, with none to rue 'em,
+ Shall perish all in one common plague;
+And the _sovereigns_ of Belfast and Tuam
+ Must join their brother, Charles Dix, at Prague.
+
+Thus mused I, in my chair, alone,
+(As above described) till dozy grown,
+And nodding assent to my own opinions,
+I found myself borne to sleep's dominions,
+Where, lo! before my dreaming eyes,
+A new House of Commons appeared to rise,
+Whose living contents, to fancy's survey,
+Seemed to me all turned topsy-turvy--
+A jumble of polypi--nobody knew
+Which was the head or which the queue.
+_Here_, Inglis, turned to a sansculotte,
+Was dancing the hays with Hume and Grote;
+_There_, ripe for riot, Recorder Shaw
+Was learning from Roebuck "Çaira:"
+While Stanley and Graham, as _poissarde_ wenches,
+Screamed "_à-bas_!" from the Tory benches;
+And Peel and O'Connell, cheek by jowl,
+Were dancing an Irish carmagnole.
+
+The Lord preserve us!--if dreams come true,
+What _is_ this hapless realm to do?
+
+
+[1] These verses were written in reference to the Bill brought in at this
+time, for the reform of Corporations, and the sweeping amendments proposed
+by Lord Lyndhurst and other Tory Peers, in order to obstruct the measure.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ANTICIPATED MEETING OF THE BRITISH ASSOCIATION IN THE YEAR 1836.
+
+1836
+
+
+After some observations from Dr. M'Grig
+On that fossil reliquium called Petrified Wig,
+Or _Perruquolithus_--a specimen rare
+Of those wigs made for antediluvian wear,
+Which, it seems, stood the Flood without turning a hair--
+Mr. Tomkins rose up, and requested attention
+To facts no less wondrous which he had to mention.
+
+Some large fossil creatures had lately been found,
+Of a species no longer now seen above ground,
+But the same (as to Tomkins most clearly appears)
+With those animals, lost now for hundreds of years,
+Which our ancestors used to call "Bishops" and "Peers,"
+But which Tomkins more erudite names has bestowed on,
+Having called the Peer fossil the _Aris_-tocratodon,[1]
+And, finding much food under t'other one's thorax,
+Has christened that creature the Episcopus Vorax.
+
+Lest the _savantes_ and dandies should think this all fable,
+Mr. Tomkins most kindly produced, on the table,
+A sample of each of these species of creatures,
+Both tolerably human, in structure and features,
+Except that the Episcopus seems, Lord deliver us!
+To've been carnivorous as well as granivorous;
+And Tomkins, on searching its stomach, found there
+Large lumps, such as no modern stomach could bear,
+Of a substance called Tithe, upon which, as 'tis said,
+The whole _Genus Clericum_ formerly fed;
+And which having lately himself decompounded,
+Just to see what 'twas made of, he actually found it
+Composed of all possible cookable things
+That e'er tript upon trotters or soared upon wings--
+All products of earth, both gramineous, herbaceous,
+Hordeaceous, fabaceous and eke farinaceous,
+All clubbing their quotas, to glut the oesophagus
+Of this ever greedy and grasping Tithophagus.[2]
+"Admire," exclaimed Tomkins. "the kind dispensation
+"By Providence shed on this much-favored nation,
+"In sweeping so ravenous a race from the earth,
+"That might else have occasioned a general dearth--
+"And thus burying 'em, deep as even Joe Hume would sink 'em,
+"With the Ichthyosaurus and Paloeorynchum,
+"And other queer _ci-devant_ things, under ground--
+"Not forgetting that fossilized youth,[3] so renowned,
+"Who lived just to witness the Deluge--was gratified
+"Much by the sight, and has since been found _stratified_!"
+
+This picturesque touch--quite in Tomkins's way--
+Called forth from the _savantes_ a general hurrah;
+While inquiries among them, went rapidly round,
+As to where this young stratified man could be found.
+The "learned Theban's" discourse next as livelily flowed on,
+To sketch t'other wonder, the _Aris_tocratodon--
+An animal, differing from most human creatures
+Not so much in speech, inward structure or features,
+As in having a certain excrescence, T. said,
+Which in form of a coronet grew from its head,
+And devolved to its heirs, when the creature was dead;
+Nor mattered it, while this heirloom was transmitted,
+How unfit were the _heads_, so the _coronet_ fitted.
+
+He then mentioned a strange zoölogical fact,
+Whose announcement appeared much applause to attract.
+In France, said the learned professor, this race
+Had so noxious become, in some centuries' space,
+From their numbers and strength, that the land was o'errun with 'em,
+Every one's question being, "What's to be done with em?"
+When, lo! certain knowing ones--_savans_, mayhap,
+Who, like Buckland's deep followers, understood _trap_,[4]
+Slyly hinted that naught upon earth was so good
+For _Aris_tocratodons, when rampant and rude,
+As to stop or curtail their allowance of food.
+This expedient was tried and a proof it affords
+Of the effect that short commons will have upon lords;
+For this whole race of bipeds, one fine summer's morn,
+Shed their coronets, just as a deer sheds his horn,
+And the moment these gewgaws fell off, they became
+Quite a new sort of creature--so harmless and tame,
+That zoölogists might, for the first time, maintain 'em
+To be near akin to the _genius humanum_,
+And the experiment, tried so successfully then,
+Should be kept in remembrance when wanted again.
+
+
+[1] A term formed on the model of the Mastodon, etc.
+
+[2] The zoölogical term for a tithe-eater.
+
+[3] The man found by Scheuchzer, and supposed by him to have witnessed the
+Deluge ("_homo diluvii testis_"), but who turned out, I am sorry to
+say, to be merely a great lizard.
+
+[4] Particularly the formation called _Transition_ Trap.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE CHURCH.
+
+No. 1.
+
+LEAVE ME ALONE.
+
+A PASTORAL BALLAD.
+
+
+ "We are ever standing on the defensive. All that we say to them is,
+ '_leave us alone_.' The Established Church is part and parcel of
+ the constitution of this country. You are bound to conform to this
+ constitution. We ask of you nothing more:--_let us alone_."
+ --Letter in _The Times_, Nov. 1838.
+
+
+1838.
+
+
+Come, list to my pastoral tones,
+ In clover my shepherds I keep;
+My stalls are well furnisht with drones,
+ Whose preaching invites one to sleep.
+At my _spirit_ let infidels scoff,
+ So they leave but the _substance_ my own;
+For in sooth I'm extremely well off
+ If the world will but let me alone.
+
+Dissenters are grumblers, we know;--
+ Tho' excellent men in their way,
+They never like things to be _so_,
+ Let things be however they may.
+But dissenting's a trick I detest;
+ And besides 'tis an axiom well known,
+The creed that's best paid is the best,
+ If the _un_paid would let it alone.
+
+To me, I own, very surprising
+ Your Newmans and Puseys all seem,
+Who start first with rationalizing,
+ Then jump to the other extreme.
+Far better, 'twixt nonsense and sense,
+ A nice _half_-way concern, like our own,
+Where piety's mixt up with pence,
+ And the latter are _ne'er_ left alone.
+
+Of all our tormentors, the Press is
+ The one that most tears us to bits;
+And now, Mrs. Woolfrey's "excesses"
+ Have thrown all its imps into fits.
+The devils have been at us, for weeks,
+ And there's no saying when they'll have done;--
+Oh dear! how I wish Mr. Breeks
+ Had left Mrs. Woolfrey alone!
+
+If any need pray for the dead,
+ 'Tis those to whom post-obits fall;
+Since wisely hath Solomon said,
+ 'Tis "money that answereth all."
+But ours be the patrons who _live_;-
+ For, once in their glebe they are thrown,
+The dead have no living to give,
+ And therefore we leave them alone.
+
+Tho' in morals we may not excel,
+ Such perfection is rare to be had;
+A good life is, of course, very well,
+ But good living is also-not bad.
+And when, to feed earth-worms, I go.
+Let this epitaph stare from my stone,
+"Here lies the Right Rev. so and so;
+ "Pass, stranger, and--leave him alone."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EPISTLE FROM HENRY OF EXETER TO JOHN OF TUAM.
+
+
+Dear John, as I know, like our brother of London,
+You've sipt of all knowledge, both sacred and mundane,
+No doubt, in some ancient Joe Miller, you've read
+What Cato, that cunning old Roman, once said--
+That he ne'er saw two reverend sooth-say ers meet,
+Let it be where it might, in the shrine or the street,
+Without wondering the rogues, mid their solemn grimaces,
+Didn’t burst out a laughing in each other's faces.
+What Cato then meant, tho' 'tis so long ago,
+Even we in the present times pretty well know;
+Having soothsayers also, who--sooth to say, John--
+Are no better in some points than those of days gone,
+And a pair of whom, meeting (between you and me),
+Might laugh in their sleeves, too--all lawn tho' they be.
+
+But this, by the way--my intention being chiefly
+In this, my first letter, to hint to you briefly,
+That, seeing how fond you of _Tuum_[1] must be,
+While _Meum's_ at all times the main point with me,
+We scarce could do better than form an alliance,
+To set these sad Anti-Church times at defiance:
+You, John, recollect, being still to embark,
+With no share in the firm but your title and _mark_;
+Or even should you feel in your grandeur inclined
+To call yourself Pope, why, I shouldn’t much mind;
+While _my_ church as usual holds fast by your Tuum,
+And every one else's, to make it all Suum.
+
+Thus allied, I've no doubt we shall nicely agree,
+As no twins can be liker, in most points, than we;
+Both, specimens choice of that mixt sort of beast,
+(See Rev. xiii. I) a political priest:
+Both mettlesome _chargers_, both brisk pamphleteers,
+Ripe and ready for all that sets men by the ears;
+And I, at least one, who would scorn to stick longer
+By any given cause than I found it the stronger,
+And who, smooth in my turnings, as if on a swivel,
+When the tone ecclesiastic won’t do, try the _civil_.
+
+In short (not to bore you, even _jure divino_)
+We've the same cause in common, John--all but the rhino;
+And that vulgar surplus, whate'er it may be,
+As you're not used to cash, John, you'd best leave to me.
+And so, without form--as the postman won’t tarry--
+I'm, dear Jack of Tuain,
+ Yours,
+ EXETER HARRY.
+
+
+[1] So spelled in those ancient versicles which John, we understand,
+frequently chants:--
+ "Had every one _Suum_,
+ You wouldn’t have _Tuum_,
+ But I should have _Meum_,
+ And sing _Te Deum_."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF OLD PUCK.
+
+
+ "And those things do best please me,
+ That befall preposterously."
+ PUCK Junior, _Midsummer Night's Dream_.
+
+
+Who wants old Puck? for here am I,
+A mongrel imp, 'twixt earth and sky,
+Ready alike to crawl or fly;
+Now in the mud, now in the air,
+And, so 'tis for mischief, reckless where.
+
+As to my knowledge, there's no end to't,
+For, where I haven't it, I pretend to't:
+And, 'stead of taking a learned degree
+At some dull university,
+Puck found it handier to commence
+With a certain share of impudence,
+Which passes one off as learned and clever,
+Beyond all other degrees whatever;
+And enables a man of lively sconce
+To be Master of _all_ the Arts at once.
+No matter what the science may be--
+Ethics, Physics, Theology,
+Mathematics, Hydrostatics,
+Aerostatics or Pneumatics--
+Whatever it be, I take my luck,
+'Tis all the same to ancient Puck;
+Whose head's so full of all sorts of wares,
+That a brother imp, old Smugden, swears
+If I had but of _law_ a little smattering,
+I'd then be _perfect_--which is flattering.
+
+My skill as a linguist all must know
+Who met me abroad some months ago;
+(And heard me _abroad_ exceedingly,
+In the moods and tenses of _parlez vous_)
+When, as old Chambaud's shade stood mute,
+I spoke such French to the Institute
+As puzzled those learned Thebans much,
+To know if 'twas Sanscrit or High Dutch,
+And _might_ have past with the unobserving
+As one of the unknown tongues of Irving.
+As to my talent for ubiquity,
+There's nothing like it in all antiquity.
+Like Mungo (my peculiar care)
+"I'm here, I'm dere, I'm ebery where."
+
+If any one's wanted to take the chair
+Upon any subject, any where,
+Just look around, and--Puck is there!
+When slaughter's at hand, your bird of prey
+Is never known to be out of the way:
+And wherever mischief's to be got,
+There's Puck _instanter_, on the spot.
+
+Only find me in negus and applause,
+And I'm your man for _any_ cause.
+If _wrong_ the cause, the more my delight;
+But I don’t object to it, even when _right_,
+If I only can vex some old friend by't;
+There's Durham, for instance;--to worry _him_
+Fills up my cup of bliss to the brim!
+
+(NOTE BY THE EDITOR.)
+
+Those who are anxious to run a muck
+Can’t do better than join with Puck.
+They'll find him _bon diable_--spite of his phiz--
+And, in fact, his great ambition is,
+While playing old Puck in first-rate style,
+To be _thought_ Robin Good-fellow all the while.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+POLICE REPORTS.
+
+CASE OF IMPOSTURE.
+
+
+Among other stray flashmen disposed of, this week,
+ Was a youngster named Stanley, genteelly connected,
+Who has lately been passing off coins as antique,
+ Which have proved to be _sham_ ones, tho' long unsuspected.
+
+The ancients, our readers need hardly be told,
+ Had a coin they called "Talents," for wholesale demands;
+And 'twas some of said coinage this youth was so bold
+ As to fancy he'd got, God knows how, in his hands.
+
+People took him, however, like fools, at his word;
+ And these talents (all prized at his own valuation,)
+Were bid for, with eagerness even more absurd
+ Than has often distinguisht this great thinking nation.
+
+Talk of wonders one now and then sees advertised,
+ "Black swans"--"Queen Anne farthings"--or even "a child's caul"--
+Much and justly as all these rare objects are prized,
+ "Stanley's talents" outdid them--swans, farthings and all!
+
+At length some mistrust of this coin got abroad;
+ Even quondam believers began much to doubt of it;
+Some rung it, some rubbed it, suspecting a fraud--
+ And the hard rubs it got rather took the shine out of it.
+
+Others, wishing to break the poor prodigy's fall,
+ Said 'twas known well to all who had studied the matter,
+That the Greeks had not only _great_ talents but _small_,
+ And those found on the youngster were clearly _the latter_.
+
+While others who viewed the grave farce with a grin--
+ Seeing counterfeits pass thus for coinage so massy,
+By way of a hint to the dolts taken in,
+ Appropriately quoted Budaeus "de _Asse_."
+
+In short, the whole sham by degrees was found out,
+ And this coin which they chose by such fine names to call,
+Proved a mere lackered article--showy, no doubt,
+ But, ye gods! not the true Attic Talent at all.
+
+As the impostor was still young enough to repent,
+ And, besides, had some claims to a grandee connection,
+Their Worships--considerate for once--only sent
+ The young Thimblerig off to the House of Correction.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+REFLECTIONS.
+
+ADDRESSED TO THE AUTHOR OF THE ARTICLE OF THE CHURCH IN THE LAST NUMBER OF
+_The Quarterly Review_.
+
+
+I'm quite of your mind;--tho' these Pats cry aloud
+ That they've got "too much Church," 'tis all nonsense and stuff;
+For Church is like Love, of which Figaro vowed
+ That even _too much_ of it's not quite enough.
+
+Ay! dose them with parsons, 'twill cure all their ills;--
+ Copy Morrison's mode when from pill-box undaunted he
+Pours thro' the patient his black-coated pills,
+ Nor cares what their quality, so there's but quantity.
+
+I verily think 'twould be worth England's while
+ To consider, for Paddy's own benefit, whether
+'Twould not be as well to give up the green isle
+ To the care, wear and tear of the Church altogether.
+
+The Irish are well used to treatment so pleasant;
+ The harlot Church gave them to Henry Plantagenet,[1]
+And now if King William would make them a present
+ To t'other chaste lady--ye Saints, just imagine it!
+
+Chief Secs., Lord-Lieutenants, Commanders-in-chief,
+ Might then all be culled from the episcopal benches;
+While colonels in black would afford some relief
+ From the hue that reminds one of the old scarlet wench's.
+
+Think how fierce at a _charge_ (being practised therein)
+ The Right Reverend Brigadier Phillpotts would slash on!
+How General Blomfield, thro' thick and thro' thin,
+ To the end of the chapter (or chapters) would dash on!
+
+For in one point alone do the amply fed race
+ Of bishops to beggars similitude bear--
+That, set them on horseback, in full steeple chase,
+ And they'll ride, if not pulled up in time--you know where.
+
+But, bless you! in Ireland, that matters not much,
+ Where affairs have for centuries gone the same way;
+And a good stanch Conservative's system is such
+ That he'd back even Beelzebub's long-founded sway.
+
+I am therefore, dear _Quarterly_, quite of your mind;--
+ Church, Church, in all shapes, into Erin let's pour:
+And the more she rejecteth our medicine so kind.
+ The more let's repeat it--"Black dose, as before."
+
+Let Coercion, that peace-maker, go hand in hand
+ With demure-eyed Conversion, fit sister and brother;
+And, covering with prisons and churches the land,
+ All that won't _go_ to _one_, we'll put _into_ the other.
+
+For the sole, leading maxim of us who're inclined
+ To rule over Ireland, not well but religiously,
+Is to treat her like ladies who've just been confined
+ (Or who _ought_ to be so), and to _church_ her prodigiously.
+
+
+[1] Grant of Ireland to Henry II. by Pope Adrian.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NEW GRAND EXHIBITION OF MODELS OF THE TWO HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+
+Come, step in, gentlefolks, here ye may view
+ An exact and natural representation
+(Like Siburn's Model of Waterloo[1])
+ Of the Lords and Commons of this here nation.
+
+There they are--all cut out in cork--
+ The "Collective Wisdom" wondrous to see;
+My eyes! when all them heads are at work,
+ What a vastly weighty consarn it must be.
+
+As for the "wisdom,"--_that_ may come anon;
+ Tho', to say truth, we sometimes see
+(And I find the phenomenon no uncommon 'un)
+ A man who's M.P. with a head that's M.T.
+
+Our Lords are _rather_ too small, 'tis true;
+ But they do well enough for Cabinet shelves;
+And, besides,--_what's_ a man with creeturs to do
+ That make such _werry_ small figures themselves?
+
+There--don’t touch those lords, my pretty dears--(_Aside_.)
+ Curse the children!--this comes of reforming a nation:
+Those meddling young brats have so damaged my peers,
+ I must lay in more cork for a new creation.
+
+Them yonder's our bishops--"to whom much is given,"
+ And who're ready to take as much more as you please:
+The seers of old time saw visions of heaven,
+ But these holy seers see nothing but Sees.
+
+Like old Atlas[2](the chap, in Cheapside, there below,)
+ 'Tis for so much _per cent_, they take heaven on their shoulders;
+And joy 'tis to know that old High Church and Co.,
+ Tho' not capital priests, are such capital-holders.
+
+There's one on 'em, Phillpotts, who now is away,
+ As we're having him filled with bumbustible stuff,
+Small crackers and squibs, for a great gala-day,
+ When we annually fire his Right Reverence off.
+
+'Twould do your heart good, ma'am, then to be by,
+ When, bursting with gunpowder, 'stead of with bile,
+Crack, crack, goes the bishop, while dowagers cry,
+ "How like the dear man, both in matter and style!"
+
+Should you want a few Peers and M.P.s, to bestow,
+ As presents to friends, we can recommend these:--
+Our nobles are come down to nine-pence, you know,
+ And we charge but a penny a piece for M.P.s.
+
+Those of _bottle_-corks made take most with the trade,
+ (At least 'mong such as my _Irish_ writ summons,)
+Of old _whiskey_ corks our O'Connells are made,
+ But those we make Shaws and Lefroys of, are _rum_ 'uns.
+ So, step in, gentlefolks, etc.
+ _Da Capo_.
+
+
+[1] One of the most interesting and curious of all the exhibitions of the
+day.
+
+[2] The sign of the Insurance Office in Cheapside.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ANNOUNCEMENT OF A NEW GRAND ACCELERATION COMPANY
+FOR THE PROMOTION OF THE SPEED OF LITERATURE.
+
+
+Loud complaints being made in these quick-reading times,
+Of too slack a supply both of prose works and rhymes,
+A new Company, formed on the keep-moving plan,
+First proposed by the great firm of Catch-'em-who-can,
+Beg to say they've now ready, in full wind and speed,
+Some fast-going authors, of quite a new breed--
+Such as not he who _runs_ but who _gallops_ may read--
+And who, if well curried and fed, they've no doubt,
+Will beat even Bentley's swift stud out and out.
+
+It is true in these days such a drug is renown,
+We've "Immortals" as rife as M.P.s about town;
+And not a Blue's rout but can offhand supply
+Some invalid bard who's insured "not to die."
+Still let England but once try _our_ authors, she'll find
+How fast they'll leave even these Immortals behind;
+And how truly the toils of Alcides were light,
+Compared with _his_ toil who can read all they write.
+
+In fact there's no saying, so gainful the trade,
+How fast immortalities now may be made;
+Since Helicon never will want an "Undying One,"
+As long as the public continues a Buying One;
+And the company hope yet to witness the hour.
+When, by strongly applying the mare-motive[1] power,
+A three-decker novel, midst oceans of praise,
+May be written, launched, read and--forgot, in three days!
+
+In addition to all this stupendous celerity,
+Which--to the no small relief of posterity--
+Pays off at sight the whole debit of fame,
+Nor troubles futurity even with a name
+(A project that won’t as much tickle Tom Tegg as _us_,
+Since 'twill rob _him_ of his second-priced Pegasus);
+We, the Company--still more to show how immense
+Is the power o'er the mind of pounds, shillings, and pence;
+And that not even Phoebus himself, in our day,
+Could get up a _lay_ without first an _out_-lay--
+Beg to add, as our literature soon may compare,
+In its quick make and vent, with our Birmingham ware,
+And it doesn’t at all matter in either of these lines,
+How _sham_ is the article, so it but _shines_,--
+We keep authors ready, all perched, pen in hand,
+To write off, in any given style, at command.
+No matter what bard, be he living or dead,
+Ask a work from his pen, and 'tis done soon as said:
+There being on the establishment six Walter Scotts,
+One capital Wordsworth and Southeys in lots;--
+Three choice Mrs. Nortons, all singing like syrens,
+While most of our pallid young clerks are Lord Byrons.
+Then we've ***s and ***s (for whom there's small call),
+And ***s and ***s (for whom no call at all).
+In short, whosoe'er the last "Lion" may be,
+We've a Bottom who'll copy his _roar_[2] to a T,
+And so well, that not one of the buyers who've got 'em
+Can tell which is lion, and which only Bottom.
+
+N. B.--The company, since they set up in this line,
+Have moved their concern and are now at the sign
+Of the Muse's Velocipede, _Fleet_ Street, where all
+Who wish well to the scheme are invited to call.
+
+
+[1] "'Tis money makes the mare to go."
+
+[2] "Bottom: Let me play the lion; I will roar you as 'twere any
+nightingale."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LATE DINNER TO DAN.
+
+
+From tongue to tongue the rumor flew;
+All askt, aghast, "Is't true? is't true?"
+ But none knew whether 'twas fact or fable:
+And still the unholy rumor ran,
+From Tory woman to Tory man,
+ Tho' none to come at the truth was able--
+Till, lo! at last, the fact came out,
+The horrible fact, beyond all doubt,
+ That Dan had dined at the Viceroy's table;
+Had flesht his Popish knife and fork
+In the heart of the Establisht mutton and pork!
+
+Who can forget the deep sensation
+That news produced in this orthodox nation?
+Deans, rectors, curates, all agreed,
+If Dan was allowed at the Castle to feed,
+'Twas clearly _all up_ with the Protestant creed!
+There hadn’t indeed such an apparition
+ Been heard of in Dublin since that day
+When, during the first grand exhibition
+ Of Don Giovanni, that naughty play,
+There appeared, as if raised by necromancers,
+An _extra_ devil among the dancers!
+Yes--every one saw with fearful thrill
+That a devil too much had joined the quadrille;
+And sulphur was smelt and the lamps let fall
+A grim, green light o'er the ghastly ball,
+And the poor _sham_ devils didn’t like it at all;
+For they knew from whence the intruder had come,
+Tho' he left, that night, his tail at home.
+
+This fact, we see, is a parallel case
+To the dinner that some weeks since took place.
+With the difference slight of fiend and man,
+ It shows what a nest of Popish sinners
+That city must be, where the devil and Dan
+ May thus drop in at quadrilles and dinners!
+
+But mark the end of these foul proceedings,
+These demon hops and Popish feedings.
+Some comfort 'twill be--to those, at least,
+ Who've studied this awful dinner question--
+To know that Dan, on the night of that feast,
+ Was seized with a dreadful indigestion;
+That envoys were sent post-haste to his priest
+To come and absolve the suffering sinner,
+For eating so much at a heretic dinner;
+And some good people were even afraid
+That Peel's old confectioner--still at the trade--
+Had poisoned the Papist with _orangeade_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NEW HOSPITAL FOR SICK LITERATI.
+
+
+With all humility we beg
+To inform the public, that Tom Tegg--
+Known for his spunky speculations
+In buying up dead reputations,
+And by a mode of galvanizing
+Which, all must own, is quite surprising,
+Making dead authors move again,
+As tho' they still were living men;--
+All this too managed, in a trice,
+By those two magic words, "Half Price,"
+Which brings the charm so quick about,
+That worn-out poets, left without
+A second _foot_ whereon to stand,
+Are made to go at second _hand_;--
+'Twill please the public, we repeat,
+To learn that Tegg who works this feat,
+And therefore knows what care it needs
+To keep alive Fame's invalids,
+Has oped an Hospital in town,
+For cases of knockt-up renown--
+Falls, fractures, dangerous Epic _fits_
+(By some called _Cantoes_), stabs from wits;
+And of all wounds for which they're nurst,
+_Dead cuts_ from publishers, the worst;--
+All these, and other such fatalities,
+That happen to frail immortalities,
+By Tegg are so expertly treated,
+That oft-times, when the cure's completed,
+The patient's made robust enough
+To stand a few more rounds of _puff_,
+Till like the ghosts of Dante's lay
+He's puft into thin air away!
+As titled poets (being phenomenons)
+Don’t like to mix with low and common 'uns,
+Tegg's Hospital has separate wards,
+Express for literary lords,
+Where _prose_-peers, of immoderate length,
+Are nurst, when they've outgrown their strength,
+And poets, whom their friends despair of,
+Are--put to bed and taken care of.
+
+Tegg begs to contradict a story
+Now current both with Whig and Tory,
+That Doctor Warburton, M.P.,
+Well known for his antipathy,
+His deadly hate, good man, to all
+The race of poets great and small--
+So much, that he's been heard to own,
+He would most willingly cut down
+The holiest groves on Pindus' mount,
+To turn the timber to account!--
+The story actually goes, that he
+Prescribes at Tegg's Infirmary;
+And oft not only stints for spite
+The patients in their copy-right,
+But that, on being called in lately
+To two sick poets suffering greatly,
+This vaticidal Doctor sent them
+So strong a dose of Jeremy Bentham,
+That one of the poor bards but cried,
+"Oh, Jerry, Jerry!" and then died;
+While t'other, tho' less stuff was given,
+Is on his road, 'tis feared, to heaven!
+
+Of this event, howe'er unpleasant,
+Tegg means to say no more at present,--
+Intending shortly to prepare
+A statement of the whole affair,
+With full accounts, at the same time,
+Of some late cases (prose and rhyme),
+Subscribed with every author's name,
+That's now on the Sick List of Fame.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+RELIGION AND TRADE.
+
+
+ "Sir Robert Peel believed it was necessary to originate all
+ respecting religion and trade in a Committee of the House."
+ --_Church Extension_, May 22, 1830.
+
+
+Say, who was the wag, indecorously witty,
+ Who first in a statute this libel conveyed;
+And thus slyly referred to the selfsame committee,
+ As matters congenial, Religion and Trade?
+
+Oh surely, my Phillpotts, 'twas thou didst the deed;
+ For none but thyself or some pluralist brother,
+Accustomed to mix up the craft with the creed,
+ Could bring such a pair thus to twin with each other.
+
+And yet, when one thinks of times present and gone,
+ One is forced to confess on maturer reflection
+That 'tisn't in the eyes of committees alone
+ That the shrine and the shop seem to have some connection.
+
+Not to mention those monarchs of Asia's fair land,
+ Whose civil list all is in "god-money" paid;
+And where the whole people, by royal command,
+ Buy their gods at the government mart, ready made;[1]--
+
+There was also (as mentioned, in rhyme and in prose, is)
+ Gold heaped throughout Egypt on every shrine,
+To make rings for right reverend crocodiles' noses--
+Just such as, my Phillpotts, would look well in thine.
+
+But one needn't fly off in this erudite mood;
+ And 'tis clear without going to regions so sunny
+That priests love to do the _least_ possible good
+ For the largest _most_ possible quantum of money.
+
+"Of him," saith the text, "unto whom much is given,
+ "Of him much, in turn, will be also required:"--
+"By _me_," quoth the sleek and obese man of heaven--
+ "Give as much as you will--more will still be desired."
+
+More money! more churches!--oh Nimrod, hadst thou
+ 'Stead of _Tower_-extension, some shorter way gone--
+Hadst thou known by what methods we mount to heaven _now_,
+ And tried _Church_-extension, the feat had been done!
+
+
+[1] The Birmans may not buy the sacred marble in mass but must purchase
+figures of the deity already made.--_SYMES_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MUSINGS.
+
+SUGGESTED BY THE LATE PROMOTION OF MRS. NETHERCOAT.
+
+
+ "The widow of Nethercoat is appointed jailer of Loughrea, in the room
+ of her deceased husband."--_Limerick Chronicle_.
+
+
+Whether as queens or subjects, in these days,
+ Women seem formed to grace alike each station:--
+As Captain Flaherty gallantly says,
+ "You ladies, are the lords of the creation!"
+
+Thus o'er my mind did prescient visions float
+ Of all that matchless woman yet may be;
+When hark! in rumors less and less remote,
+ Came the glad news o'er Erin's ambient sea,
+The important news--that Mrs. Nethercoat
+ Had been appointed jailer of Loughrea;
+Yes, mark it, History--Nethercoat is dead,
+And Mrs. N. now rules his realm instead;
+Hers the high task to wield the uplocking keys,
+To rivet rogues and reign o'er Rapparees!
+
+Thus, while your blusterers of the Tory school
+Find Ireland's sanest sons so hard to rule,
+One meek-eyed matron in Whig doctrines nurst
+Is all that's askt to curb the maddest, worst!
+
+Show me the man that dares with blushless brow
+Prate about Erin's rage and riot now;
+Now, when her temperance forms her sole excess;
+ When long-loved whiskey, fading from her sight,
+"Small by degrees and beautifully less,"
+ Will soon like other _spirits_ vanish quite;
+When of red coats the number's grown so small,
+ That soon, to cheer the warlike parson's eyes,
+No glimpse of scarlet will be seen at all,
+ Save that which she of Babylon supplies;--
+Or, at the most, a corporal's guard will be,
+ Of Ireland's _red_ defence the sole remains;
+While of its jails bright woman keeps the key,
+ And captive Paddies languish in her chains!
+
+Long may such lot be Erin's, long be mine!
+Oh yes--if even this world, tho' bright it shine,
+ In Wisdom's eyes a prison-house must be,
+At least let woman's hand our fetters twine,
+ And blithe I'll sing, more joyous than if free,
+ The Nethercoats, the Nethercoats for me!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+INTENDED TRIBUTE
+
+TO THE AUTHOR OF AN ARTICLE IN THE LAST NUMBER OF
+_The Quarterly Review_,
+ENTITLED "ROMANISM IN IRELAND."
+
+
+It glads us much to be able to say,
+That a meeting is fixt for some early day,
+Of all such dowagers--_he_ or _she_--
+(No matter the sex, so they dowagers be,)
+Whose opinions concerning Church and State
+From about the time of the Curfew date--
+Stanch sticklers still for days bygone,
+And admiring _them_ for their rust alone--
+To whom if we would a leader give,
+Worthy their tastes conservative,
+We need but some mummy-statesman raise,
+Who was pickled and potted in Ptolemy's days;
+For _that's_ the man, if waked from his shelf,
+To conserve and swaddle this world like himself.
+Such, we're happy to state, are the old _he_-dames
+Who've met in committee and given their names
+(In good hieroglyphics), with kind intent
+To pay some handsome compliment
+To their sister author, the nameless he,
+Who wrote, in the last new _Quarterly_,
+That charming assault upon Popery;
+An article justly prized by them
+As a perfect antediluvian gem--
+The work, as Sir Sampson Legend would say,
+Of some "fellow the Flood couldn’t wash away."[1]
+
+The fund being raised, there remained but to see
+What the dowager-author's gift was to be.
+And here, I must say, the Sisters Blue
+Showed delicate taste and judgment too.
+For finding the poor man suffering greatly
+From the awful stuff he has thrown up lately--
+So much so indeed to the alarm of all,
+As to bring on a fit of what doctors call
+The Antipapistico-monomania
+(I'm sorry with such a long word to detain ye),
+They've acted the part of a kind physician,
+By suiting their gift to the patient's condition;
+And as soon as 'tis ready for presentation,
+We shall publish the facts for the gratification
+Of this highly-favored and Protestant nation.
+
+Meanwhile, to the great alarm of his neighbors,
+He still continues his _Quarterly_ labors;
+And often has strong No-Popery fits,
+Which frighten his old nurse out of her wits.
+Sometimes he screams, like Scrub in the play,[2]
+"Thieves! Jesuits! Popery!" night and day;
+Takes the Printer's Devil for Doctor Dens,
+And shies at him heaps of High-church pens;[3]
+Which the Devil (himself a touchy Dissenter)
+Feels all in his hide, like arrows, enter.
+'Stead of swallowing wholesome stuff from the druggist's,
+He _will_ keep raving of "Irish Thuggists;"[4]
+Tells us they all go murdering for fun
+From rise of morn till set of sun,
+Pop, pop, as fast as a minute-gun![5]
+If askt, how comes it the gown and cassock are
+Safe and fat, mid this general massacre--
+How hap sit that Pat's own population
+But swarms the more for this trucidation--
+He refers you, for all such memoranda,
+To the "_archives of the Propaganda_!"
+
+This is all we've got, for the present, to say--
+But shall take up the subject some future day.
+
+
+[1] See Congreve's "Love for Love."
+
+[2] "Beaux' Stratagem."
+
+[3] "Pray, may we ask, has there been any rebellious movement of Popery in
+Ireland, since the planting of the Ulster colonies, in which something of
+the kind was not visible among the Presbyterians of the north."--
+_Quarterly Review_.
+
+[4] "Lord Lorton, for instance, who, for clearing his estate of a village
+of Irish Thuggists," etc.--_Quarterly Review_.
+
+[5] "Observe how murder after murder is committed like minute-guns."--
+_Ibid_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+GRAND DINNER OF TYPE AND CO.
+
+A POOR POET'S DREAM.[1]
+
+
+As I sate in my study, lone and still,
+Thinking of Sergeant Talfourd's Bill,
+And the speech by Lawyer Sugden made,
+In spirit congenial, for "the Trade,"
+Sudden I sunk to sleep and lo!
+ Upon Fancy's reinless nightmare flitting,
+I found myself, in a second or so,
+At the table of Messrs. Type and Co.
+ With a goodly group of diners sitting;--
+All in the printing and publishing line,
+Drest, I thought, extremely fine,
+And sipping like lords their rosy wine;
+While I in a state near inanition
+ With coat that hadn't much nap to spare
+(Having just gone into its second edition),
+ Was the only wretch of an author there.
+But think, how great was my surprise,
+When I saw, in casting round my eyes,
+That the dishes, sent up by Type's she-cooks,
+Bore all, in appearance, the shape of books;
+Large folios--God knows where they got 'em,
+In these _small_ times--at top and bottom;
+And quartos (such as the Press provides
+For no one to read them) down the sides.
+Then flasht a horrible thought on my brain,
+And I said to myself, "'Tis all too plain,
+"Like those well known in school quotations,
+"Who ate up for dinner their own relations,
+"I see now, before me, smoking here,
+"The bodies and bones of my brethren dear;--
+"Bright sons of the lyric and epic Muse,
+"All cut up in cutlets, or hasht in stews;
+"Their _works_, a light thro' ages to go,--
+"_Themselves_, eaten up by Type and Co.!"
+
+While thus I moralized, on they went,
+Finding the fare most excellent:
+And all so kindly, brother to brother,
+Helping the tidbits to each other:
+"A slice of Southey let me send you"--
+"This cut of Campbell I recommend you"--
+"And here, my friends, is a treat indeed,
+"The immortal Wordsworth fricasseed!"
+Thus having, the cormorants, fed some time,
+Upon joints of poetry--all of the prime--
+With also (as Type in a whisper averred it)
+"Cold prose on the sideboard, for such as preferred it"--
+They rested awhile, to recruit their force,
+Then pounced, like kites, on the second course,
+Which was singing-birds merely--Moore and others--
+Who all went the way of their larger brothers;
+And, numerous now tho' such songsters be,
+'Twas really quite distressing to see
+A whole dishful of Toms--Moore, Dibdin, Bayly,--
+Bolted by Type and Co. so gayly!
+
+Nor was this the worst--I shudder to think
+What a scene was disclosed when they came to drink.
+The warriors of Odin, as every one knows,
+Used to drink out of skulls of slaughtered foes:
+And Type's old port, to my horror I found,
+Was in skulls of bards sent merrily round.
+And still as each well-filled cranium came,
+A health was pledged to its owner's name;
+While Type said slyly, midst general laughter,
+"We eat them up first, then drink to them after."
+There was _no_ standing this--incensed I broke
+From my bonds of sleep, and indignant woke,
+Exclaiming, "Oh shades of other times,
+"Whose voices still sound, like deathless chimes,
+"Could you e'er have foretold a day would be,
+"When a dreamer of dreams should live to see
+"A party of sleek and honest John Bulls
+"Hobnobbing each other in poets' skulls!"
+
+
+[1] Written during the late agitation of the question of Copyright.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHURCH EXTENSION.
+
+TO THE EDITOR OF THE MORNING CHRONICLE.
+
+
+ Sir--A well-known classical traveller, while employed in exploring,
+ some time since, the supposed site of the Temple of Diana of Ephesus,
+ was so fortunate, in the course of his researches, as to light upon a
+ very ancient bark manuscript, which has turned out, on examination,
+ to be part of an old Ephesian newspaper;--a newspaper published, as
+ you will see, so far back as the time when Demetrius, the great
+ Shrine-Extender,[1] flourished.
+
+ I am, Sir, yours, etc.
+
+ EPHESIAN GAZETTE.
+
+
+_Second edition_.
+
+Important event for the rich and religious!
+ Great Meeting of Silversmiths held in Queen Square;--
+Church Extension, their object,--the excitement prodigious;--
+ Demetrius, head man of the craft, takes the chair!
+
+_Third edition_.
+
+The Chairman still up, when our devil came away;
+ Having prefaced his speech with the usual state prayer,
+That the Three-headed Dian would kindly, this day,
+ Take the Silversmiths' Company under her care.
+
+Being askt by some low, unestablisht divines,
+ "When your churches are up, where are flocks to be got?"
+He manfully answered, "Let _us_ build the shrines,[2]
+ "And we care not if flocks are found for them or not."
+
+He then added--to show that the Silversmiths' Guild
+ Were above all confined and intolerant views--
+"Only _pay_ thro' the nose to the altars we build,
+ "You may _pray_ thro' the nose to what altars you choose."
+
+This tolerance, rare from a shrine-dealer's lip
+ (Tho' a tolerance mixt with due taste for the till)--
+So much charmed all the holders of scriptural scrip,
+ That their shouts of "Hear!" "Hear!" are re-echoing still.
+
+_Fourth edition_.
+
+Great stir in the Shrine Market! altars to Phoebus
+ Are going dog-cheap--may be had for a rebus.
+Old Dian's, as usual, outsell all the rest;--
+ But Venus's also are much in request.
+
+
+[1] "For a certain man named Demetrius, a silversmith, which made shrines
+for Diana, brought no small gain unto the craftsmen: whom he called
+together with the workmen of like occupation, and said, Sirs, ye know that
+by this craft we have our wealth[...to be completed...
+
+[2] The "shrines" are supposed to have been small churches, or chapels,
+adjoining to the great temples.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LATEST ACCOUNTS FROM OLYMPUS.
+
+
+As news from Olympus has grown rather rare,
+Since bards, in their cruises, have ceased to _touch_ there,
+We extract for our readers the intelligence given,
+In our latest accounts from that _ci-devant_ Heaven--
+That realm of the By-gones, where still sit in state
+Old god-heads and nod-heads now long out of date.
+
+Jove himself, it appears, since his love-days are o'er,
+Seems to find immortality rather a bore;
+Tho' he still asks for news of earth's capers and crimes,
+And reads daily his old fellow-Thunderer, _the Times_.
+He and Vulcan, it seems, by their wives still hen-_peckt_ are,
+And kept on a stinted allowance of nectar.
+
+Old Phoebus, poor lad, has given up inspiration,
+And packt off to earth on a _puff_ speculation.
+The fact is, he found his old shrines had grown dim,
+Since bards lookt to Bentley and Colburn, not him.
+So he sold off his stud of ambrosia-fed nags.
+Came incog. down to earth, and now writes for the _Mags_;
+Taking care that his work not a gleam hath to linger in't,
+From which men could guess that the god had a finger in't.
+
+There are other small facts, well deserving attention,
+Of which our Olympic despatches make mention.
+Poor Bacchus is still very ill, they allege,
+Having never recovered the Temperance Pledge.
+"What, the Irish!" he cried--"those I lookt to the most!
+"If they give up the _spirit_, I give up the ghost:"
+While Momus, who used of the gods to make fun,
+Is turned Socialist now and declares there are none!
+
+But these changes, tho' curious, are all a mere farce
+Compared to the new "_casus belli_" of Mars,
+Who, for years, has been suffering the horrors of quiet,
+Uncheered by one glimmer of bloodshed or riot!
+In vain from the clouds his belligerent brow
+Did he pop forth, in hopes that somewhere or somehow,
+Like Pat at a fair, he might "coax up a row:"
+But the joke wouldn't take--the whole world had got wiser;
+Men liked not to take a Great Gun for adviser;
+And, still less, to march in fine clothes to be shot,
+Without very well knowing for whom or for what.
+The French, who of slaughter had had their full swing,
+Were content with a shot, now and then, at their King;
+While, in England, good fighting's a pastime so hard to gain,
+Nobody's left to fight _with_, but Lord Cardigan.
+
+'Tis needless to say then how monstrously happy
+Old Mars has been made by what's now on the _tapis_;
+How much it delights him to see the French rally,
+In Liberty's name, around Mehemet Ali;
+Well knowing that Satan himself could not find
+A confection of mischief much more to his mind
+Than the old _Bonnet Rouge_ and the Bashaw combined.
+Right well, too, he knows, that there ne'er were attackers,
+Whatever their cause, that they didn’t find backers;
+While any slight care for Humanity's woes
+May be soothed by that "_Art Diplomatique_," which shows
+How to come in the most approved method to blows.
+
+This is all for to-day--whether Mars is much vext
+At his friend Thiers's exit, we'll know by our next.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE TRIUMPHS OF FARCE.
+
+
+Our earth, as it rolls thro' the regions of space,
+ Wears always two faces, the dark and the sunny;
+And poor human life runs the same sort of race,
+ Being sad on one side--on the other side, funny.
+
+Thus oft we, at eve, to the Haymarket hie,
+ To weep o'er the woes of Macready;--but scarce
+Hath the tear-drop of Tragedy past from the eye,
+ When lo! we're all laughing in fits at the Farce.
+
+And still let us laugh--preach the world as it may--
+ Where the cream of the joke is, the swarm will soon follow;
+Heroics are very grand things in their way,
+ But the laugh at the long run will carry it hollow.
+
+For instance, what sermon on human affairs
+ Could equal the scene that took place t'other day
+'Twixt Romeo and Louis Philippe, on the stairs--
+ The Sublime and Ridiculous meeting half-way!
+
+Yes, Jocus! gay god, whom the Gentiles supplied,
+ And whose worship not even among Christians declines,
+In our senate thou'st languisht since Sheridan died,
+ But Sydney still keeps thee alive in our shrines.
+
+Rare Sydney! thrice honored the stall where he sits,
+ And be his every honor he deigneth to climb at!
+Had England a hierarchy formed all of wits,
+ Who but Sydney would England proclaim as its primate?
+
+And long may he flourish, frank, merry and brave--
+ A Horace to hear and a Paschal to read;
+While he _laughs_, all is safe, but, when Sydney grows grave,
+ We shall then think the Church is in danger _indeed_.
+
+Meanwhile it much glads us to find he's preparing
+ To teach _other_ bishops to "seek the right way;"[1]
+And means shortly to treat the whole Bench to an airing,
+ Just such as he gave to Charles James t'other day.
+
+For our parts, gravity's good for the soul,
+ Such a fancy have we for the side that there's fun on,
+We'd rather with Sydney southwest take a "stroll,"
+ Than _coach_ it north-east with his Lordship of Lunnun.
+
+
+[1] "This stroll in the metropolis is extremely well contrived for your
+Lordship's speech; but suppose, my dear Lord, that instead of going E. and
+N. E. you had turned about," etc.--SYDNEY SMITH'S _Last Letter to the
+Bishop of London_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS ON PATRONS, PUFFS, AND OTHER MATTERS.
+
+IN AN EPISTLE FROM THOMAS MOORE TO SAMUEL ROGERS.
+
+
+What, _thou_, my friend! a man of rhymes,
+ And, better still, a man of guineas,
+To talk of "patrons," in these times,
+ When authors thrive like spinning-jennies,
+And Arkwright's twist and Bulwer's page
+ Alike may laugh at patronage!
+
+No, no--those times are past away,
+ When, doomed in upper floors to star it.
+The bard inscribed to lords his lay,--
+ Himself, the while, my Lord Mountgarret.
+No more he begs with air dependent.
+His "little bark may sail attendant"
+ Under some lordly skipper's steerage;
+But launched triumphant in the Row,
+Or taken by Murray's self in tow.
+ Cuts both _Star Chamber_ and the peerage.
+
+Patrons, indeed! when scarce a sail
+Is whiskt from England by the gale.
+But bears on board some authors, shipt
+For foreign shores, all well equipt
+With proper book-making machinery,
+To sketch the morals, manners, scenery,
+Of all such lands as they shall see,
+Or _not_ see, as the case may be:--
+It being enjoined on all who go
+To study first Miss Martineau,
+And learn from her the method true,[too.
+To _do_ one's books--and readers,
+For so this nymph of _nous_ and nerve
+Teaches mankind "How to Observe;"
+And, lest mankind at all should swerve,
+Teaches them also "_What_ to Observe."
+
+No, no, my friend--it can’t be blinkt--
+The Patron is a race extinct;
+As dead as any Megatherion
+That ever Buckland built a theory on.
+Instead of bartering in this age
+Our praise for pence and patronage,
+We authors now more prosperous elves,
+Have learned to patronize ourselves;
+And since all-potent Puffing's made
+The life of song, the soul of trade.
+More frugal of our praises grown,
+We puff no merits but our own.
+
+Unlike those feeble gales of praise
+Which critics blew in former days,
+Our modern puffs are of a kind
+That truly, really _raise the wind;_
+And since they've fairly set in blowing,
+We find them the best _trade_-winds going.
+'Stead of frequenting paths so slippy
+As her old haunts near Aganippe,
+The Muse now taking to the till
+Has opened shop on Ludgate Hill
+(Far handier than the Hill of Pindus,
+As seen from bard's back attic windows):
+And swallowing there without cessation
+Large draughts (_at sight_) of inspiration,
+Touches the _notes_ for each new theme,
+While still fresh "_change_ comes o'er her dream."
+
+What Steam is on the deep--and more--
+Is the vast power of Puff on shore;
+Which jumps to glory's future tenses
+Before the present even commences;
+And makes "immortal" and "divine" of us
+Before the world has read one line of us.
+In old times, when the God of Song
+Drove his own two-horse team along,
+Carrying inside a bard or two,
+Bookt for posterity "all thro';"--
+Their luggage, a few close-packt rhymes,
+(Like yours, my friend,) for after-times--
+So slow the pull to Fame's abode,
+That folks oft slept upon the road;--
+And Homer's self, sometimes, they say,
+Took to his night-cap on the way.
+Ye Gods! how different is the story
+With our new galloping sons of glory,
+Who, scorning all such slack and slow time,
+Dash to posterity in _no_ time!
+Raise but one general blast of Puff
+To start your author--that's enough.
+In vain the critics set to watch him
+Try at the starting post to catch him:
+He's off--the puffers carry it hollow--
+The _critics_, if they please, may follow.
+Ere _they_'ve laid down their first positions,
+He's fairly blown thro' six editions!
+In vain doth Edinburgh dispense
+Her blue and yellow pestilence
+(That plague so awful in my time
+To young and touchy sons of rhyme)--
+The _Quarterly_, at three months' date,
+To catch the Unread One, comes too late;
+And nonsense, littered in a hurry,
+Becomes "immortal," spite of Murray.
+But bless me!--while I thus keep fooling,
+I hear a voice cry, "Dinner's cooling."
+That postman too (who, truth to tell,
+'Mong men of letters bears the bell,)
+Keeps ringing, ringing, so infernally
+That I _must_ stop--
+ Yours sempiternally.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHTS ON MISCHIEF.
+
+BY LORD STANLEY.
+
+(HIS FIRST ATTEMPT IN VERSE.)
+
+
+ "Evil, be thou my good."
+ --MILTON.
+
+
+How various are the inspirations
+Of different men in different nations!
+As genius prompts to good or evil,
+Some call the Muse, some raise the devil.
+Old Socrates, that pink of sages,
+Kept a pet demon on board wages
+To go about with him incog.,
+And sometimes give his wits a jog.
+So Lyndhurst, in _our_ day, we know,
+Keeps fresh relays of imps below,
+To forward from that nameless spot;
+His inspirations, hot and hot.
+
+But, neat as are old Lyndhurst's doings--
+Beyond even Hecate's "hell-broth" brewings--
+Had I, Lord Stanley, but my will,
+I'd show you mischief prettier still;
+Mischief, combining boyhood's tricks
+With age's sourest politics;
+The urchin's freaks, the veteran's gall,
+Both duly mixt, and matchless all;
+A compound naught in history reaches
+But Machiavel, when first in breeches!
+
+Yes, Mischief, Goddess multiform,
+Whene'er thou, witch-like, ridest the storm,
+Let Stanley ride cockhorse behind thee--
+No livelier lackey could they find thee.
+And, Goddess, as I'm well aware,
+So mischief's _done_, you care not _where_,
+I own, 'twill most _my_ fancy tickle
+In Paddyland to play the Pickle;
+Having got credit for inventing
+A new, brisk method of tormenting--
+A way they call the Stanley fashion,
+Which puts all Ireland in a passion;
+So neat it hits the mixture due
+Of injury and insult too;
+So legibly it bears upon't
+The stamp of Stanley's brazen front.
+
+Ireland, we're told, means the land of _Ire_;
+And _why_ she's so, none need inquire,
+Who sees her millions, martial, manly,
+Spat upon thus by me, Lord Stanley.
+Already in the breeze I scent
+The whiff of coming devilment;
+Of strife, to me more stirring far
+Than the Opium or the Sulphur war,
+Or any such drug ferments are.
+Yes--sweeter to this Tory soul
+Than all such pests, from pole to pole,
+Is the rich, "sweltered venom" got
+By stirring Ireland's "charmed pot;"
+And thanks to practice on that land
+I stir it with a master-hand.
+
+Again thou'lt see, when forth have gone
+The War-Church-cry, "On, Stanley, on!"
+How Caravats and Shanavests
+Shall swarm from out their mountain nests,
+With all their merry moonlight brothers,
+To whom the Church (_step_-dame to others)
+Hath been the best of nursing mothers.
+Again o'er Erin's rich domain
+Shall Rockites and right reverends reign;
+And both, exempt from vulgar toil,
+Between them share that titheful soil;
+Puzzling ambition _which_ to climb at,
+The post of Captain, or of Primate.
+
+And so, long life to Church and Co.--
+Hurrah for mischief!--here we go.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EPISTLE FROM CAPTAIN ROCK TO LORD LYNDHURST.
+
+
+Dear Lyndhurst,--you'll pardon my making thus free,--
+But form is all fudge 'twixt such "comrogues" as we,
+Who, whate'er the smooth views we, in public, may drive at,
+Have both the same praiseworthy object, in private--
+Namely, never to let the old regions of riot,
+Where Rock hath long reigned, have one instant of quiet,
+But keep Ireland still in that liquid we've taught her
+To love more than meat, drink, or clothing--_hot water_.
+
+All the difference betwixt you and me, as I take it,
+Is simply, that _you_ make the law and _I_ break it;
+And never, of big-wigs and small, were there two
+Played so well into each other's hands as we do;
+Insomuch, that the laws you and yours manufacture,
+Seem all made express for the Rock-boys to fracture.
+Not Birmingham's self--to her shame be it spoken--
+E'er made things more neatly contrived to be broken;
+And hence, I confess, in this island religious,
+The breakage of laws--and of heads _is_ prodigious.
+
+And long may it thrive, my Ex-Bigwig, say I,--
+Tho', of late, much I feared all our fun was gone by;
+As, except when some tithe-hunting parson showed sport,
+Some rector--a cool hand at pistols and port,
+Who "keeps dry" his _powder_, but never _himself_--
+One who, leaving his Bible to rust on the shelf,
+Sends his pious texts home, in the shape of ball-cartridges,
+Shooting his "dearly beloved," like partridges;
+Except when some hero of this sort turned out,
+Or, the Exchequer sent, flaming, its tithe-writs[1] about--
+A contrivance more neat, I may say, without flattery,
+Than e'er yet was thought of for bloodshed and battery;
+So neat, that even _I_ might be proud, I allow,
+To have bit off so rich a receipt for a _row_;--
+Except for such rigs turning up, now and then,
+I was actually growing the dullest of men;
+And, had this blank fit been allowed to increase,
+Might have snored myself down to a Justice of Peace.
+Like you, Reformation in Church and in State
+Is the thing of all things I most cordially hate.
+If once these curst Ministers do as they like,
+All's o'er, my good Lord, with your wig and my pike,
+And one may be hung up on t'other, henceforth,
+Just to show what _such_ Captains and Chancellors were worth.
+
+But we must not despair--even already Hope sees
+You're about, my bold Baron, to kick up a breeze
+Of the true baffling sort, such as suits me and you,
+Who have boxt the whole compass of party right thro',
+And care not one farthing, as all the world knows,
+So we _but_ raise the wind, from what quarter it blows.
+Forgive me, dear Lord, that thus rudely I dare
+My own small resources with thine to compare:
+Not even Jerry Diddler, in "raising the wind," durst
+Complete, for one instant, with thee, my dear Lyndhurst.
+
+But, hark, there's a shot!--some parsonic practitioner?
+No--merely a bran-new Rebellion Commissioner;
+The Courts having now, with true law erudition,
+Put even Rebellion itself "in commission."
+As seldom, in _this_ way, I'm any man's debtor,
+I'll just _pay my shot_ and then fold up this letter.
+In the mean time, hurrah for the Tories and Rocks!
+Hurrah for the parsons who fleece well their flocks!
+Hurrah for all mischief in all ranks and spheres,
+And, above all, hurrah for that dear House of Peers!
+
+
+[1] Exchequer tithe processes, served under a commission of
+rebellion.--_Chronicle_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CAPTAIN ROCK IN LONDON.
+
+LETTER FROM THE CAPTAIN TO TERRY ALT, ESQ.[1]
+
+
+Here I am, at headquarters, dear Terry, once more,
+Deep in Tory designs, as I've oft been before:
+For, bless them! if 'twasn't for this wrong-headed crew,
+You and I, Terry Alt, would scarce know what to do;
+So ready they're always, when dull we are growing,
+To set our old concert of discord a-going,
+While Lyndhurst's the lad, with his Tory-Whig face,
+To play in such concert the true _double-base_.
+I had feared this old prop of my realm was beginning
+To tire of his course of political sinning,
+And, like Mother Cole, when her heyday was past,
+Meant by way of a change to try virtue at last.
+But I wronged the old boy, who as staunchly derides
+All reform in himself as in most things besides;
+And, by using _two_ faces thro' life, all allow,
+Has acquired face sufficient for _any_-thing now.
+
+In short, he's all right; and, if mankind's old foe,
+My "Lord Harry" himself--who's the leader, we know,
+Of another red-hot Opposition below--
+If that "Lord," in his well-known discernment, but spares
+Me and Lyndhurst, to look after Ireland's affairs,
+We shall soon such a region of devilment make it,
+That Old Nick himself for his own may mistake it.
+Even already--long life to such Bigwigs, say I,
+For, as long as they flourish, we Rocks cannot die--
+
+He has served our right riotous cause by a speech
+Whose perfection of mischief he only could reach;
+As it shows off both _his_ and _my_ merits alike,
+Both the swell of the wig and the point of the pike;
+Mixes up, with a skill which one can’t but admire,
+The lawyer's cool craft with the incendiary's fire,
+And enlists, in the gravest, most plausible manner,
+Seven millions of souls under Rockery's banner!
+Oh Terry, my man, let this speech _never_ die;
+Thro' the regions of Rockland, like flame, let it fly;
+Let each syllable dark the Law-Oracle uttered
+By all Tipperary's wild echoes be muttered.
+Till naught shall be heard, over hill, dale or flood,
+But "_You're aliens in language, in creed and in blood;_"
+While voices, from sweet Connemara afar,
+Shall answer, like true _Irish_ echoes, "We are!"
+And, tho' false be the cry, and the sense must abhor it,
+Still the echoes may quote _Law_ authority for it,
+And naught Lyndhurst cares for my spread of dominion
+So he, in the end, touches cash "for the _opinion_."
+
+But I've no time for more, my dear Terry, just now,
+Being busy in helping these Lords thro' their __row_.
+They're bad hands at mob-work, but once they begin,
+They'll have plenty of practice to break them well in.
+
+[1] The subordinate officer or lieutenant of Captain Rock.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+POLITICAL AND SATIRICAL POEMS.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LINES ON THE DEATH OF MR. PERCEVAL.
+
+
+In the dirge we sung o'er him no censure was heard,
+ Unembittered and free did the tear-drop descend;
+We forgot, in that hour, how the statesman had erred,
+ And wept for the husband, the father and friend.
+
+Oh! proud was the meed his integrity won,
+ And generous indeed were the tears that we shed,
+When in grief we forgot all the ill he had done,
+ And tho' wronged by him living, bewailed him, when dead.
+
+Even now if one harsher emotion intrude,
+ 'Tis to wish he had chosen some lowlier state,
+Had known what he was--and, content to be _good_,
+ Had ne'er for our ruin aspired to be _great_.
+
+So, left thro' their own little orbit to move,
+ His years might have rolled inoffensive away;
+His children might still have been blest with his love,
+ And England would ne'er have been curst with his sway.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TO THE EDITOR OF "THE MORNING CHRONICLE."
+
+
+ _Sir_,--In order to explain the following Fragment, it is
+ necessary to refer your readers to a late florid description of the
+ Pavilion at Brighton, in the apartments of which, we are told, "FUM,
+ _The Chinese Bird of Royalty_," is a principal ornament.
+ I am, Sir, yours, etc.
+ MUM.
+
+
+FUM AND HUM, THE TWO BIRDS OF ROYALTY.
+
+One day the Chinese Bird of Royalty, FUM,
+Thus accosted our own Bird of Royalty, HUM,
+In that Palace or China-shop (Brighton, which is it?)
+Where FUM had just come to pay HUM a short visit.--
+Near akin are these Birds, tho' they differ in nation
+(The breed of the HUMS is as old as creation);
+Both, full-crawed Legitimates--both, birds of prey,
+Both, cackling and ravenous creatures, half way
+'Twixt the goose and the vulture, like Lord Castlereagh.
+While FUM deals in Mandarins Bonzes, Bohea,
+Peers, Bishops and Punch, HUM.--are sacred to thee
+So congenial their tastes, that, when FUM first did light on
+The floor of that grand China-warehouse at Brighton,
+The lanterns and dragons and things round the dome
+Where so like what he left, "Gad," says FUM, "I'm at home,"--
+And when, turning, he saw Bishop L--GE, "Zooks, it is."
+Quoth the Bird, "Yes--I know him--a Bonze, by his phiz-
+"And that jolly old idol he kneels to so low
+"Can be none but our round-about god-head, fat Fo!"
+It chanced at this moment, the Episcopal Prig
+Was imploring the Prince to dispense with his wig,[1]
+Which the Bird, overhearing, flew high o'er his head,
+And some TOBIT-like marks of his patronage shed,
+Which so dimmed the poor Dandy's idolatrous eye,
+That, while FUM cried "Oh Fo!" all the court cried "Oh fie!"
+
+But a truce to digression;--these Birds of a feather
+Thus talkt, t'other night, on State matters together;
+(The PRINCE just in bed, or about to depart for't,
+His legs full of gout, and his arms full of HARTFORD,)
+"I say, HUM," says FUM--FUM, of course, spoke Chinese,
+But, bless you! that's nothing--at Brighton one sees
+Foreign lingoes and Bishops _translated_ with ease--
+"I say, HUM, how fares it with Royalty now?
+"Is it _up_? is it _prime_? is it _spooney_-or how?"
+(The Bird had just taken a flash-man's degree
+Under BARRYMORE, YARMOUTH, and young Master L--E,)
+"As for us in Pekin"--here, a devil of a din
+From the bed-chamber came, where that long Mandarin,
+Castlereagh (whom FUM calls the _Confucius_ of Prose),
+Was rehearsing a speech upon Europe's repose
+To the deep, double bass of the fat Idol's nose.
+
+(_Nota bene_--his Lordship and LIVERPOOL come,
+In collateral lines, from the old Mother HUM,
+CASTLEREAGH a HUM-bug--LIVERPOOL a HUM-drum,)
+The Speech being finisht, out rusht CASTLEREAGH.
+Saddled HUM in a hurry, and, whip, spur, away!
+Thro' the regions of air, like a Snip on his hobby,
+Ne'er paused till he lighted in St. Stephen's lobby.
+
+
+[1] In consequence of an old promise, that he should be allowed to wear
+his own hair, whenever he might be elevated to a Bishopric by his Royal
+Highness.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LINES ON THE DEATH OF SHERIDAN.
+
+
+ _principibus placuisse viris_!
+ --HORAT.
+
+
+Yes, grief will have way--but the fast falling tear
+ Shall be mingled with deep execrations on those
+Who could bask in that Spirit's meridian career.
+ And yet leave it thus lonely and dark at its close:--
+
+Whose vanity flew round him, only while fed
+ By the odor his fame in its summer-time gave;--
+Whose vanity now, with quick scent for the dead,
+ Like the Ghoul of the East, comes to feed at his grave.
+
+Oh! it sickens the heart to see bosoms so hollow,
+ And spirits so mean in the great and high-born;
+To think what a long line of titles may follow
+ The relics of him who died--friendless and lorn!
+
+How proud they can press to the funeral array
+ Of one whom they shunned in his sickness and sorrow:--
+How bailiffs may seize his last blanket to-day,
+ Whose palls shall be held up by nobles to-morrow!
+
+And Thou too whose life, a sick epicure's dream,
+ Incoherent and gross, even grosser had past,
+Were it not for that cordial and soul-giving beam
+ Which his friendship and wit o'er thy nothingness cast:--
+
+No! not for the wealth of the land that supplies thee
+ With millions to heap upon Foppery's shrine;--
+No! not for the riches of all who despise thee,
+ Tho' this would make Europe's whole opulence mine;--
+
+Would I suffer what--even in the heart that thou hast--
+ All mean as it is--must have consciously burned.
+When the pittance, which shame had wrung from thee at last,
+ And which found all his wants at an end, was returned![1]
+
+"Was this then the fate,"--future ages will say,
+ When _some_ names shall live but in history's curse;
+When Truth will be heard, and these Lords of a day
+ Be forgotten as fools or remembered as worse;--
+
+"Was this then the fate of that high-gifted man,
+ "The pride of the palace, the bower and the hall,
+"The orator,--dramatist,--minstrel,--who ran
+ "Thro' each mode of the lyre and was master of all;--
+
+"Whose mind was an essence compounded with art
+ "From the finest and best of all other men's powers;-
+"Who ruled, like a wizard, the world of the heart,
+ "And could call up its sunshine or bring down its showers;--
+
+"Whose humor, as gay as the firefly's light,
+ "Played round every subject and shone as it played;--
+"Whose wit in the combat, as gentle as bright,
+ "Ne'er carried a heart-stain away on its blade;--
+
+"Whose eloquence--brightening whatever it tried,
+ "Whether reason or fancy, the gay or the grave,--
+"Was as rapid, as deep and as brilliant a tide,
+ "As ever bore Freedom aloft on its wave!"
+
+Yes--such was the man and so wretched his fate;--
+ And thus, sooner or later, shall all have to grieve,
+Who waste their morn's dew in the beams of the Great,
+ And expect 'twill return to refresh them at eve.
+
+In the woods of the North there are insects that prey
+ On the brain of the elk till his very last sigh;[2]
+Oh, Genius! thy patrons, more cruel than they,
+ First feed on thy brains and then leave thee to die!
+
+
+[1] The sum was two hundred pounds--offered when Sheridan could no longer
+take any sustenance, and declined, for him, by his friends.
+
+[2] Naturalists have observed that, upon dissecting an elk, there was
+found in its head some large flies, with its brain almost eaten away by
+them,--_History of Poland_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EPISTLE FROM TOM CRIB TO BIG BEN.[1]
+
+CONCERNING SOME FOUL PLAY IN A LATE TRANSACTION.[2]
+
+
+ _"Ahi, mio Ben!"_
+ --METASTASIO.[3]
+
+
+What! BEN, my old hero, is this your renown?
+Is _this_ the new _go_?--kick a man when he's down!
+When the foe has knockt under, to tread on him then--
+By the fist of my father, I blush for thee, BEN!
+"Foul! foul!" all the lads of the Fancy exclaim--
+CHARLEY SHOCK is electrified--BELCHER spits flame--
+And MOLYNEUX--ay, even BLACKY[4] cries "shame!"
+
+Time was, when JOHN BULL little difference spied
+'Twixt the foe at his feet and the friend at his side:
+When he found (such his humor in fighting and eating)
+His foe, like his beef-steak, the sweeter for beating.
+But this comes, Master BEN, of your curst foreign notions,
+Your trinkets, wigs, thingumbobs, gold lace and lotions;
+Your Noyaus, Curacoas, and the devil knows what--
+(One swig of _Blue Ruin_[5] is worth the whole lot!)
+
+Your great and small _crosses_--my eyes, what a brood!
+(A _cross_-buttock from _me_ would do some of them good!)
+Which have spoilt you, till hardly a drop, my old porpoise,
+Of pure English _claret_ is left in your _corpus_;
+And (as JIM says) the only one trick, good or bad,
+Of the Fancy you're up to, is _fibbing_, my lad.
+Hence it comes,--BOXIANA, disgrace to thy page!--
+Having floored, by good luck, the first _swell_ of the age,
+Having conquered the _prime one_, that _milled_ us all round,
+You kickt him, old BEN, as he gaspt on the ground!
+Ay--just at the time to show spunk, if you'd got any--
+Kickt him and jawed him and _lagged_[6] him to Botany!
+Oh, shade of the _Cheesemonger_![7] you, who, alas!
+_Doubled up_ by the dozen those Moun-seers in brass,
+On that great day of _milling_, when blood lay in lakes,
+When Kings held the bottle, and Europe the stakes,
+Look down upon BEN--see him, _dung-hill_ all o'er,
+Insult the fallen foe that can harm him no more!
+Out, cowardly _spooney_!--again and again,
+By the fist of my father, I blush for thee, BEN.
+To _show the white feather_ is many men's doom,
+But, what of _one_ feather?--BEN shows a _whole Plume_.
+
+
+[1] A nickname given, at this time, to the Prince Regent.
+
+[2] Written soon after Bonaparte's transportation to St. Helena.
+
+[3] Tom, I suppose, was "assisted" to this Motto by Mr. Jackson, who, it
+is well known, keeps the most learned company going.
+
+[4] Names and nicknames of celebrated pugilists at that time.
+
+[5] Gin.
+
+[6] Transported.
+
+[7] A Life-Guardsman, one of _the Fancy_ who distinguished himself
+and was killed in the memorable _set-to_ at Waterloo.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FABLES FOR THE HOLY ALLIANCE.
+
+
+ _tu Regibus alas eripe_
+ VERGIL, _Georg. lib_. iv.
+
+
+ --Clip the wings Of these high-flying arbitrary Kings.
+ DRYDEN'S _Translation_.
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION.
+
+TO LORD BYRON.
+
+Dear Lord Byron,--Though this Volume should possess no other merit in your
+eyes, than that of reminding you of the short time we passed together at
+Venice, when some of the trifles which it contains were written, you will,
+I am sure, receive the dedication of it with pleasure, and believe that I
+am,
+
+My dear Lord,
+
+Ever faithfully yours,
+
+T. B.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+Though it was the wish of the Members of the Poco-curante Society (who
+have lately done me the honor of electing me their Secretary) that I
+should prefix my name to the following Miscellany, it is but fair to them
+and to myself to state, that, except in the "painful pre-eminence" of
+being employed to transcribe their lucubrations, my claim to such a
+distinction in the title-page is not greater than that of any other
+gentleman, who has contributed his share to the contents of the volume.
+
+I had originally intended to take this opportunity of giving some account
+of the origin and objects of our Institution, the names and characters of
+the different members, etc.--but as I am at present preparing for the
+press the First Volume of the "Transactions of the Pococurante Society," I
+shall reserve for that occasion all further details upon the subject, and
+content myself here with referring, for a general insight into our tenets,
+to a Song which will be found at the end of this work and which is sung to
+us on the first day of every month, by one of our oldest members, to the
+tune of (as far as I can recollect, being no musician,) either "Nancy
+Dawson" or "He stole away the Bacon."
+
+It may be as well also to state for the information of those critics who
+attack with the hope of being answered, and of being thereby brought into
+notice, that it is the rule of this Society to return no other answer to
+such assailants, than is contained in the three words "_non curat
+Hippoclides_" (meaning, in English, "Hippoclides does not care a fig,")
+which were spoken two thousand years ago by the first founder of Poco-
+curantism, and have ever since been adopted as the leading _dictum_ of the
+sect.
+
+THOMAS BROWN.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FABLES FOR THE HOLY ALLIANCE.
+
+
+
+
+FABLE I.
+
+THE DISSOLUTION OF THE HOLY ALLIANCE.
+
+A DREAM.
+
+
+I've had a dream that bodes no good
+Unto the Holy Brotherhood.
+I may be wrong, but I confess--
+ As far as it is right or lawful
+For one, no conjurer, to guess--
+ It seems to me extremely awful.
+
+Methought, upon the Neva's flood
+A beautiful Ice Palace stood,
+A dome of frost-work, on the plan
+Of that once built by Empress Anne,[1]
+Which shone by moonlight--as the tale is--
+Like an Aurora Borealis.
+
+In this said Palace, furnisht all
+ And lighted as the best on land are,
+I dreamt there was a splendid Ball,
+ Given by the Emperor Alexander,
+To entertain with all due zeal,
+ Those holy gentlemen, who've shown a
+Regard so kind for Europe's weal,
+ At Troppau, Laybach and Verona.
+
+The thought was happy--and designed
+To hint how thus the human Mind
+May, like the stream imprisoned there,
+Be checkt and chilled, till it can bear
+The heaviest Kings, that ode or sonnet
+E'er yet be-praised, to dance upon it.
+And all were pleased and cold and stately,
+ Shivering in grand illumination--
+Admired the superstructure greatly,
+ Nor gave one thought to the foundation.
+Much too the Tsar himself exulted,
+ To all plebeian fears a stranger,
+For, Madame Krudener, when consulted,
+ Had pledged her word there was no danger
+So, on he capered, fearless quite,
+ Thinking himself extremely clever,
+And waltzed away with all his might,
+ As if the Frost would last forever.
+
+Just fancy how a bard like me,
+ Who reverence monarchs, must have trembled
+To see that goodly company,
+ At such a ticklish sport assembled.
+
+Nor were the fears, that thus astounded
+My loyal soul, at all unfounded--
+For, lo! ere long, those walls so massy
+ Were seized with an ill-omened dripping,
+And o'er the floors, now growing glassy,
+ Their Holinesses took to slipping.
+The Tsar, half thro' a Polonaise,
+ Could scarce get on for downright stumbling;
+And Prussia, tho' to slippery ways
+ Well used, was cursedly near tumbling.
+
+Yet still 'twas, _who_ could stamp the floor most,
+Russia and Austria 'mong the foremost.--
+And now, to an Italian air,
+ This precious brace would, hand in hand, go;
+Now--while old Louis, from his chair,
+Intreated them his toes to spare--
+ Called loudly out for a Fandango.
+
+And a Fandango, 'faith, they had,
+At which they all set to, like mad!
+Never were Kings (tho' small the expense is
+Of wit among their Excellencies)
+So out of all their princely senses,
+But ah! that dance--that Spanish dance--
+ Scarce was the luckless strain begun,
+When, glaring red, as 'twere a glance
+ Shot from an angry Southern sun,
+A light thro' all the chambers flamed,
+ Astonishing old Father Frost,
+Who, bursting into tears, exclaimed,
+ "A thaw, by Jove--we're lost, we're lost!
+"Run, France--a second _Water_loo
+"Is come to drown you-_sauve qui peut_!"
+
+Why, why will monarchs caper so
+ In palaces without foundations?--
+Instantly all was in a flow,
+ Crowns, fiddles, sceptres, decorations--
+Those Royal Arms, that lookt so nice,
+Cut out in the resplendent ice--
+Those Eagles, handsomely provided
+ With double heads for double dealings--
+How fast the globes and sceptres glided
+ Out of their claws on all the ceilings!
+Proud Prussia's double bird of prey
+Tame as a spatch cock, slunk away;
+While--just like France herself, when she
+ Proclaims how great her naval skill is--
+Poor Louis's drowning fleurs-de-lys
+ Imagined themselves _water_-lilies.
+
+And not alone rooms, ceilings, shelves,
+ But--still more fatal execution--
+The Great Legitimates themselves
+ Seemed in a state of dissolution.
+The indignant Tsar--when just about
+ To issue a sublime Ukase,
+"Whereas all light must be kept out"--
+ Dissolved to nothing in its blaze.
+Next Prussia took his turn to melt,
+And, while his lips illustrious felt
+The influence of this southern air,
+ Some word, like "Constitution"--long
+Congealed in frosty silence there--
+ Came slowly thawing from his tongue.
+While Louis, lapsing by degrees,
+ And sighing out a faint adieu
+To truffles, salmis, toasted cheese
+ And smoking _fondus_, quickly grew,
+ Himself, into a _fondu_ too;--
+Or like that goodly King they make
+Of sugar for a Twelfth-night cake,
+When, in some urchin's mouth, alas!
+It melts into a shapeless mass!
+
+In short, I scarce could count a minute,
+Ere the bright dome and all within it,
+Kings, Fiddlers, Emperors, all were gone--
+ And nothing now was seen or heard
+But the bright river, rushing on,
+ Happy as an enfranchised bird,
+And prouder of that natural ray,
+Shining along its chainless way--
+More proudly happy thus to glide
+ In simple grandeur to the sea,
+Than when, in sparkling fetters tied,
+'Twas deckt with all that kingly pride
+ Could bring to light its slavery!
+
+Such is my dream--and, I confess,
+I tremble at its awfulness.
+That Spanish Dance--that southern beam--
+But I say nothing--there's my dream--
+And Madame Krüdener, the she-prophet,
+May make just what she pleases of it.
+
+
+[1] "It is well-known that the Empress Anne built a palace of ice on the
+Neva, in 1740, which was fifty-two feet in length, and when illuminated
+had a surprising effect."--PINKERTON.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FABLE II.
+
+THE LOOKING-GLASSES.
+
+
+PROEM.
+
+Where Kings have been by mob-elections
+ Raised to the throne, 'tis strange to see
+What different and what odd perfections
+ Men have required in Royalty.
+Some, liking monarchs large and plumpy,
+ Have chosen their Sovereigns by the weight;--
+Some wisht them tall, some thought your Dumpy,
+ Dutch-built, the true Legitimate.[1]
+The Easterns in a Prince, 'tis said,
+Prefer what's called a jolterhead:[2]
+The Egyptians weren't at all partic'lar,
+ So that their Kings had _not_ red hair--
+_This_ fault not even the greatest stickler
+ For the blood-royal well could bear.
+
+A thousand more such illustrations
+Might be adduced from various nations.
+But, 'mong the many tales they tell us,
+ Touching the acquired or natural right
+Which some men have to rule their fellows,
+ There's one which I shall here recite:--
+
+FABLE.
+
+There was a land--to _name_ the place
+ Is neither now my wish nor duty--
+Where reigned a certain Royal race,
+ By right of their superior beauty.
+
+What was the cut legitimate
+ Of these great persons' chins and noses,
+By right of which they ruled the state,
+ No history I have seen discloses.
+
+But so it was--a settled case--
+ Some Act of Parliament, past snugly,
+Had voted _them_ a beauteous race,
+ And all their faithful subjects ugly.
+
+As rank indeed stood high or low,
+ Some change it made in visual organs;
+Your Peers were decent--Knights, so so--
+ But all your _common_ people, gorgons!
+
+Of course, if any knave but hinted
+ That the King's nose was turned awry,
+Or that the Queen (God bless her!) squinted--
+ The judges doomed that knave to die.
+
+But rarely things like this occurred,
+ The people to their King were duteous,
+And took it, on his Royal word,
+ That they were frights and He was beauteous.
+
+The cause whereof, among all classes,
+ Was simply this--these island elves
+Had never yet seen looking-glasses,
+ And therefore did not _know themselves_.
+
+Sometimes indeed their neighbors' faces
+ Might strike them as more full of reason,
+More fresh than those in certain places--
+ But, Lord, the very thought was treason!
+
+Besides, howe'er we love our neighbor,
+ And take his face's part, 'tis known
+We ne'er so much in earnest labor,
+ As when the face attackt's our own.
+
+So on they went--the crowd believing--
+ (As crowds well governed always do)
+Their rulers, too, themselves deceiving--
+ So old the joke, they thought 'twas true.
+
+But jokes, we know, if they too far go,
+ Must have an end--and so, one day,
+Upon that coast there was a cargo
+ Of looking-glasses cast away.
+
+'Twas said, some Radicals, somewhere,
+ Had laid their wicked heads together,
+And forced that ship to founder there,--
+ While some believe it was the weather.
+
+However this might be, the freight
+ Was landed without fees or duties;
+And from that hour historians date
+ The downfall of the Race of Beauties.
+
+The looking-glasses got about,
+ And grew so common thro' the land,
+That scarce a tinker could walk out,
+ Without a mirror in his hand.
+
+Comparing faces, morning, noon,
+ And night, their constant occupation--
+By dint of looking-glasses, soon,
+ They grew a most reflecting nation.
+
+In vain the Court, aware of errors
+ In all the old, establisht mazards,
+Prohibited the use of mirrors
+ And tried to break them at all hazards:--
+
+In vain--their laws might just as well
+ Have been waste paper on the shelves;
+That fatal freight had broke the spell;
+ People had lookt--and knew themselves.
+
+If chance a Duke, of birth sublime,
+ Presumed upon his ancient face,
+(Some calf-head, ugly from all time,)
+ They popt a mirror to his Grace;--
+
+Just hinting, by that gentle sign,
+ How little Nature holds it true,
+That what is called an ancient line,
+ Must be the line of Beauty too.
+
+From Dukes' they past to regal phizzes,
+ Compared them proudly with their own,
+And cried. "How _could_ such monstrous quizzes
+ "In Beauty's name usurp the throne!"--
+
+They then wrote essays, pamphlets, books,
+ Upon Cosmetical Oeconomy,
+Which made the King try various looks,
+ But none improved his physiognomy.
+
+And satires at the Court were levelled,
+ And small lampoons, so full of slynesses,
+That soon, in short, they quite bedeviled
+ Their Majesties and Royal Highnesses.
+
+At length--but here I drop the veil,
+ To spare some royal folks' sensations;--
+Besides, what followed is the tale
+ Of all such late-enlightened nations;
+
+Of all to whom old Time discloses
+ A truth they should have sooner known--
+That kings have neither rights nor noses
+ A whit diviner than their own.
+
+
+[1] The Goths had a law to choose always a short, thick man for their
+King.--Munster, "_Cosmog." lib_. iii. p. 164.
+
+[2] "In a Prince a jolter-head is invaluable."--_Oriental Field Sports_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FABLE III.
+
+THE TORCH OF LIBERTY.
+
+
+I saw it all in Fancy's glass--
+ Herself, the fair, the wild magician,
+Who bade this splendid day-dream pass,
+ And named each gliding apparition.
+
+'Twas like a torch-race--such as they
+ Of Greece performed, in ages gone,
+When the fleet youths, in long array,
+ Past the bright torch triumphant on.
+
+I saw the expectant nations stand,
+ To catch the coming flame in turn;--
+I saw, from ready hand to hand,
+ The clear tho' struggling glory burn.
+
+And oh! their joy, as it came near,
+ 'Twas in itself a joy to see;--
+While Fancy whispered in my ear.
+ "That torch they pass is Liberty!"
+
+And each, as she received the flame,
+ Lighted her altar with its ray;
+Then, smiling, to the next who came,
+ Speeded it on its sparkling way.
+
+From ALBION first, whose ancient shrine
+Was furnisht with the fire already,
+COLUMBIA caught the boon divine,
+ And lit a flame, like ALBION'S, steady.
+
+The splendid gift then GALLIA took,
+ And, like a wild Bacchante, raising
+The brand aloft, its sparkles shook,
+ As she would set the world _a-blazing_!
+
+Thus kindling wild, so fierce and high
+ Her altar blazed into the air,
+That ALBION, to that fire too nigh,
+ Shrunk back and shuddered at its glare!
+
+Next, SPAIN, so new was light to her,
+ Leapt at the torch--but, ere the spark
+That fell upon her shrine could stir,
+ 'Twas quenched--and all again was dark.
+
+Yet, no--_not_ quenched--a treasure worth
+ So much to mortals rarely dies:
+Again her living light lookt forth,
+ And shone, a beacon, in all eyes.
+
+Who next received the flame? alas!
+ Unworthy NAPLES--shame of shames,
+That ever thro' such hands should pass
+ That brightest of all earthly flames!
+
+Scarce had her fingers touched the torch.
+ When, frighted by the sparks it shed,
+Nor waiting even to feel the scorch,
+ She dropt it to the earth--and fled.
+
+And fallen it might have long remained;
+ But GREECE, who saw her moment now,
+Caught up the prize, tho' prostrate, stained,
+ And waved it round her beauteous brow.
+
+And Fancy bade me mark where, o'er
+ Her altar, as its flame ascended,
+Fair, laurelled spirits seemed to soar,
+ Who thus in song their voices blended:--
+
+"Shine, shine for ever, glorious Flame,
+ "Divinest gift of Gods to men!
+"From GREECE thy earliest splendor came,
+ "To GREECE thy ray returns again.
+
+"Take, Freedom, take thy radiant round,
+ "When _dimmed_, revive, when lost, return,
+"Till not a shrine thro' earth be found,
+ "On which thy glories shall not burn."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FABLE IV.
+
+THE FLY AND THE BULLOCK.
+
+
+PROEM.
+
+Of all that, to the sage's survey,
+This world presents of topsy-turvy,
+There's naught so much disturbs one's patience,
+As little minds in lofty stations.
+'Tis like that sort of painful wonder.
+Which slender columns, laboring under
+ Enormous arches, give beholders;--
+Or those poor Caryatides,
+Condemned to smile and stand at ease,
+ With a whole house upon their shoulders.
+
+If as in some few royal cases,
+Small minds are _born_ into such places--
+If they are there by Right Divine
+ Or any such sufficient reason,
+Why--Heaven forbid we should repine!--
+ To wish it otherwise were treason;
+Nay, even to see it in a vision,
+Would be what lawyers call _misprision_.
+
+SIR ROBERT FILMER saith--and he,
+ Of course, knew all about the matter--
+"Both men and beasts love Monarchy;"
+ Which proves how rational the latter.
+SIDNEY, we know, or wrong or right.
+Entirely differed from the Knight:
+Nay, hints a King may lose his head.
+ By slipping awkwardly his bridle:--
+But this is treasonous, ill-bred,
+And (now-a-days, when Kings are led
+ In patent snaffles) downright idle.
+
+No, no--it isn’t right-line Kings,
+(Those sovereign lords in leading strings
+Who, from their birth, are Faith-Defenders,)
+That move my wrath--'tis your pretenders,
+Your mushroom rulers, sons of earth,
+Who--not, like t'others, bores by birth,
+Establisht _gratiâ Dei_ blockheads,
+Born with three kingdoms in their pockets--
+Yet, with a brass that nothing stops,
+ Push up into the loftiest stations,
+And, tho' too dull to manage shops,
+ Presume, the dolts, to manage nations!
+
+This class it is, that moves my gall,
+And stirs up bile, and spleen and all.
+While other senseless things appear
+To know the limits of their sphere--
+While not a cow on earth romances
+So much as to conceit she dances--
+While the most jumping frog we know of,
+Would scarce at Astley's hope to show off--
+Your ***s, your ***s dare,
+ Untrained as are their minds, to set them
+To _any_ business, _any_ where,
+At _any_ time that fools will let them.
+
+But leave we here these upstart things--
+My business is just now with Kings;
+To whom and to their right-line glory,
+I dedicate the following story.
+
+FABLE
+
+The wise men of Egypt were secret as dummies;
+ And even when they most condescended to teach,
+They packt up their meaning, as they did their mummies,
+ In so many wrappers, 'twas out of one's reach.
+
+They were also, good people, much given to Kings--
+ Fond of craft and of crocodiles, monkeys and mystery;
+But blue-bottle flies were their best beloved things--
+ As will partly appear in this very short history.
+
+A Scythian philosopher (nephew, they say,
+ To that other great traveller, young Anacharsis,)
+Stept into a temple at Memphis one day,
+To have a short peep at their mystical farces.
+
+He saw a brisk blue-bottle Fly on an altar,
+ Made much of, and worshipt, as something divine;
+While a large, handsome Bullock, led there in a halter,
+ Before it lay stabbed at the foot of the shrine.
+
+Surprised at such doings, he whispered his teacher--
+ "If 'tisn't impertinent, may I ask why
+"Should a Bullock, that useful and powerful creature,
+ "Be thus offered up to a bluebottle Fly?"
+
+"No wonder"--said t'other--"you stare at the sight,
+ "But we as a Symbol of Monarchy view it--
+"That Fly on the shrine is Legitimate Right,
+ "And that Bullock, the People that's sacrificed to it."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FABLE V.
+
+CHURCH AND STATE.
+
+
+PROEM
+
+
+ "The moment any religion becomes national, or established, its purity
+ must certainly be lost, because it is then impossible to keep it
+ unconnected with men's interests; and, if connected, it must
+ inevitably be perverted by them."
+ --SOAME JENYNS
+
+
+Thus did SOAME JENYNS--tho' a Tory,
+ A Lord of Trade and the Plantations;
+Feel how Religion's simple glory
+ Is stained by State associations.
+
+When CATHARINE, ere she crusht the Poles,
+ Appealed to the benign Divinity;
+Then cut them up in protocols,
+Made fractions of their very souls--
+ All in the name of the blest Trinity;
+Or when her grandson, ALEXANDER,
+That mighty Northern salamander,[1]
+Whose icy touch, felt all about,
+Puts every fire of Freedom out--
+When he, too, winds up his Ukases
+With God and the Panagia's praises--
+When he, of royal Saints the type,
+ In holy water dips the sponge,
+With which, at one imperial wipe,
+ He would all human rights expunge;
+When LOUIS (whom as King, and eater,
+Some name _Dix-huit_, and some _Deshuitres_.)
+Calls down "St. Louis's God" to witness
+The right, humanity, and fitness
+Of sending eighty thousand Solons,
+ Sages with muskets and laced coats,
+To cram instruction, _nolens volens_,
+ Down the poor struggling Spaniards' throats--
+I can’t help thinking, (tho' to Kings
+ I must, of course, like other men, bow,)
+That when a Christian monarch brings
+Religion's name to gloss these things--
+ Such blasphemy out-Benbows Benbow![2]
+
+ Or--not so far for facts to roam,
+Having a few much nearer home-
+When we see Churchmen, who, if askt,
+"Must Ireland's slaves be tithed, and taskt,
+"And driven, like Negroes or Croats,
+ "That _you_ may roll in wealth and bliss?"
+Look from beneath their shovel hats
+ With all due pomp and answer "Yes!"
+But then, if questioned, "Shall the brand
+"Intolerance flings throughout that land,--
+"Shall the fierce strife now taught to grow
+'Betwixt her palaces and hovels,
+"Be ever quenched?"--from the same shovels
+Look grandly forth and answer "No."--
+Alas, alas! have _these_ a claim
+To merciful Religion's name?
+If more you seek, go see a bevy
+Of bowing parsons at a levee--
+(Choosing your time, when straw's before
+Some apoplectic bishop's door,)
+Then if thou canst with life escape
+That rush of lawn, that press of crape,
+Just watch their reverences and graces,
+ As on each smirking suitor frisks,
+And say, if those round shining faces
+ To heaven or earth most turn their disks?
+This, this it is--Religion, made,
+Twixt Church and State, a truck, a trade--
+This most ill-matched, unholy _Co_.,
+From whence the ills we witness flow;
+The war of many creeds with one--
+The extremes of _too_ much faith and none--
+Till, betwixt ancient trash and new,
+'Twixt Cant and Blasphemy--the two
+Rank ills with which this age is curst--
+We can no more tell which is worst,
+Than erst could Egypt, when so rich
+In various plagues, determine which
+She thought most pestilent and vile,
+Her frogs, like Benbow and Carlisle,
+Croaking their native mud-notes loud,
+Or her fat locusts, like a cloud
+Of pluralists, obesely lowering,
+At once benighting and devouring!--
+
+This--this it is--and here I pray
+ Those sapient wits of the Reviews.
+Who make us poor, dull authors say,
+ Not what we mean, but what they choose;
+Who to our most abundant shares
+Of nonsense add still more of theirs,
+And are to poets just such evils
+ As caterpillars find those flies,[3]
+Which, not content to sting like devils,
+ Lay eggs upon their backs like wise--
+To guard against such foul deposits
+ Of other's meaning in my rhymes,
+(A thing more needful here because it's
+ A subject, ticklish in these times)--
+I, here, to all such wits make known,
+ Monthly and Weekly, Whig and Tory,
+'Tis _this_ Religion--this alone--
+ I aim at in the following story:--
+
+FABLE.
+
+When Royalty was young and bold,
+ Ere, touched by Time, he had become--
+If 'tisn't civil to say _old_,
+ At least, a _ci-devant jeune homme_;
+
+One evening, on some wild pursuit
+ Driving along, he chanced to see
+Religion, passing by on foot,
+ And took him in his vis-à-vis.
+
+This said Religion was a Friar,
+ The humblest and the best of men,
+Who ne'er had notion or desire
+ Of riding in a coach till then.
+
+"I say"--quoth Royalty, who rather
+ Enjoyed a masquerading joke--
+"I say, suppose, my good old father,
+ "You lend me for a while your cloak."
+
+The Friar consented--little knew
+ What tricks the youth had in his head;
+Besides, was rather tempted too
+ By a laced coat he got instead.
+
+Away ran Royalty, slap-dash,
+ Scampering like mad about the town;
+Broke windows, shivered lamps to smash,
+ And knockt whole scores of watchmen down.
+
+While naught could they, whose heads were broke,
+ Learn of the "why" or the "wherefore,"
+Except that 'twas Religion's cloak
+ The gentleman, who crackt them, wore,
+
+Meanwhile, the Friar, whose head was turned
+ By the laced coat, grew frisky too;
+Lookt big--his former habits spurned--
+ And stormed about, as great men do:
+
+Dealt much in pompous oaths and curses--
+ Said "Damn you" often, or as bad--
+Laid claim to other people's purses--
+ In short, grew either knaves or mad.
+
+As work like this was unbefitting,
+ And flesh and blood no longer bore it,
+The Court of Common Sense, then sitting,
+ Summoned the culprits both before it.
+
+Where, after hours in wrangling spent
+ (As Courts must wrangle to decide well).
+Religion to St. Luke's was sent,
+ And Royalty packt off to Bridewell.
+
+With this proviso--should they be
+ Restored, in due time, to their senses,
+They both must give security,
+ In future, against such offences--
+Religion ne'er to _lend his cloak_,
+ Seeing what dreadful work it leads to;
+And Royalty to crack his joke,--
+ But _not_ to crack poor people's heads too.
+
+
+[1] The salamander is supposed to have the power of extinguishing fire by
+its natural coldness and moisture.
+
+[2] A well-known publisher of irreligious books.
+
+[3] "The greatest number of the ichneumon tribe are seen settling upon the
+back of the caterpillar, and darting at different intervals their stings
+into its body--at every dart they deposit an egg"--GOLDSMITH.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FABLE VI.
+
+THE LITTLE GRAND LAMA.
+
+
+PROEM.
+
+Novella, a young Bolognese,
+ The daughter of a learned Law Doctor,[1]
+Who had with all the subtleties
+ Of old and modern jurists stockt her,
+Was so exceeding fair, 'tis said,
+ And over hearts held such dominion,
+That when her father, sick in bed,
+Or busy, sent her, in his stead,
+ To lecture on the Code Justinian,
+She had a curtain drawn before her,
+ Lest, if her charms were seen, the students
+Should let their young eyes wander o'er her,
+ And quite forget their jurisprudence.
+Just so it is with Truth, when _seen_,
+ Too dazzling far,--'tis from behind
+A light, thin allegoric screen,
+ She thus can safest leach mankind.
+
+FABLE.
+
+In Thibet once there reigned, we're told,
+A little Lama, one year old--
+Raised to the throne, that realm to bless,
+Just when his little Holiness
+Had cut--as near as can be reckoned--
+Some say his _first_ tooth, some his _second_.
+Chronologers and Nurses vary,
+Which proves historians should be wary.
+We only know the important truth,
+His Majesty _had_ cut a tooth.
+And much his subjects were enchanted,--
+ As well all Lamas' subjects _may_ be,
+And would have given their heads, if wanted,
+ To make tee-totums for the baby.
+Throned as he was by Right Divine--
+ (What Lawyers call _Jure Divino_,
+Meaning a right to yours and mine
+ And everybody's goods and rhino.)
+Of course, his faithful subjects' purses
+ Were ready with their aids and succors;
+Nothing was seen but pensioned Nurses;
+ And the land groaned with bibs and tuckers.
+
+Oh! had there been a Hume or Bennet,
+Then sitting in the Thibet Senate,
+Ye Gods! what room for long debates
+Upon the Nursery Estimates!
+What cutting down of swaddling-clothes
+ And pinafores, in nightly battles!
+What calls for papers to expose
+ The waste of sugar-plums and rattles!
+But no--if Thibet _had_ M.P.s,
+They were far better bred than these;
+Nor gave the slightest opposition,
+During the Monarch's whole dentition.
+
+But short this calm;--for, just when he,
+Had reached the alarming age of three,
+When Royal natures and no doubt
+Those of _all_ noble beasts break out--
+The Lama, who till then was quiet,
+Showed symptoms of a taste for riot;
+And, ripe for mischief, early, late,
+Without regard for Church or State,
+Made free with whosoe'er came nigh;
+ Tweakt the Lord Chancellor by the nose,
+Turned all the Judges' wigs awry,
+ And trod on the old Generals' toes;
+Pelted the Bishops with hot buns,
+ Rode cock-horse on the City maces,
+And shot from little devilish guns,
+ Hard peas into the subjects' faces.
+In short, such wicked pranks he played,
+ And' grew so mischievous, God bless him!
+That his Chief Nurse--with even the aid
+Of an Archbishop--was afraid.
+ When in these moods, to comb or dress him.
+Nay, even the persons most inclined
+ Thro' thick and thin, for Kings to stickle,
+Thought him (if they'd but speak their mind;
+ Which they did _not_) an odious pickle.
+
+At length some patriot lords--a breed
+ Of animals they've got in Thibet,
+Extremely rare and fit indeed
+ For folks like Pidcock, to exhibit--
+Some patriot lords, who saw the length
+To which things went, combined their strength,
+And penned a manly, plain and free,
+Remonstrance to the Nursery;
+Protesting warmly that they yielded
+To none that ever went before 'em,
+In loyalty to him who wielded
+ The hereditary pap-spoon o'er 'em;
+That, as for treason, 'twas a thing
+ That made them almost sick to think of--
+That they and theirs stood by the King,
+ Throughout his measles and his chincough,
+When others, thinking him consumptive,
+Had ratted to the Heir Presumptive!--
+But, still--tho' much admiring Kings
+(And chiefly those in leading-strings),
+They saw, with shame and grief of soul,
+ There was no longer now the wise
+And constitutional control
+ Of _birch_ before their ruler's eyes;
+But that of late such pranks and tricks
+ And freaks occurred the whole day long,
+As all but men with bishoprics
+ Allowed, in even a King, were wrong.
+Wherefore it was they humbly prayed
+ That Honorable Nursery,
+That such reforms be henceforth made,
+ As all good men desired to see;--
+In other words (lest they might seem
+Too tedious), as the gentlest scheme
+For putting all such pranks to rest,
+ And in its bud the mischief nipping--
+They ventured humbly to suggest
+ His Majesty should have a whipping!
+
+When this was read, no Congreve rocket,
+ Discharged into the Gallic trenches
+E'er equalled the tremendous shock it
+ Produced upon the Nursery benches.
+The Bishops, who of course had votes,
+By right of age and petticoats,
+Were first and foremost in the fuss--
+ "What, whip a Lama! suffer birch
+"To touch his sacred--infamous!
+"Deistical!--assailing thus
+ "The fundamentals of the Church!--
+"No--no--such patriot plans as these,
+"(So help them Heaven--and their Sees!)
+"They held to be rank blasphemies."
+
+The alarm thus given, by these and other
+ Grave ladies of the Nursery side,
+Spread thro' the land, till, such a pother,
+ Such party squabbles, far and wide,
+Never in history's page had been
+Recorded, as were then between
+The Whippers and Non-whippers seen.
+Till, things arriving at a state,
+ Which gave some fears of revolution,
+The patriot lords' advice, tho' late,
+ Was put at last in execution.
+The Parliament of Thibet met--
+ The little Lama, called before it,
+Did, then and there, his whipping get,
+And (as the _Nursery Gazette_
+ Assures us) like a hero bore it.
+
+And tho', 'mong Thibet Tories, some
+Lament that Royal Martyrdom
+(Please to observe, the letter D
+In this last word's pronounced like B),
+Yet to the example of that Prince
+ So much is Thibet's land a debtor,
+That her long line of Lamas, since,
+ Have all behaved themselves _much_ better.
+
+
+[1] Andreas.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FABLE VII.
+
+THE EXTINGUISHERS.
+
+
+PROEM.
+
+Tho' soldiers are the true supports,
+The natural allies of Courts,
+Woe to the Monarch, who depends
+Too _much_ on his red-coated friends;
+For even soldiers sometimes _think_--
+ Nay, Colonels have been known to _reason_,--
+
+And reasoners, whether clad in pink
+Or red or blue, are on the brink
+ (Nine cases out of ten) of treason
+
+Not many soldiers, I believe, are
+ As fond of liberty as Mina;
+Else--woe to Kings! when Freedom's fever
+ Once turns into a _Scarletina_!
+For then--but hold--'tis best to veil
+My meaning in the following tale:--
+
+FABLE.
+
+A Lord of Persia, rich and great,
+Just come into a large estate,
+Was shockt to find he had, for neighbors,
+Close to his gate, some rascal Ghebers,
+Whose fires, beneath his very nose,
+In heretic combustion rose.
+But Lords of Persia can, no doubt,
+ Do what they will--so, one fine morning,
+He turned the rascal Ghebers out,
+ First giving a few kicks for warning.
+Then, thanking Heaven most piously,
+ He knockt their Temple to the ground,
+Blessing himself for joy to see
+ Such Pagan ruins strewed around.
+But much it vext my Lord to find,
+ That, while all else obeyed his will,
+The Fire these Ghebers left behind,
+ Do what he would, kept burning still.
+Fiercely he stormed, as if his frown
+Could scare the bright insurgent down;
+But, no--such fires are headstrong things,
+And care not much for Lords or Kings.
+Scarce could his Lordship well contrive
+ The flashes in _one_ place to smother,
+Before--hey presto!--all alive,
+ They sprung up freshly in another.
+
+At length when, spite of prayers and damns,
+ 'Twas found the sturdy flame defied him,
+His stewards came, with low _salams_,
+ Offering, by _contract_, to provide him
+Some large Extinguishers, (a plan,
+Much used, they said, at Ispahan,
+Vienna, Petersburg--in short,
+Wherever Light's forbid at court),
+Machines no Lord should be without,
+Which would at once put promptly out
+All kinds of fires,--from staring, stark
+Volcanoes to the tiniest spark;
+Till all things slept as dull and dark,
+As in a great Lord's neighborhood
+'Twas right and fitting all things should.
+
+Accordingly, some large supplies
+ Of these Extinguishers were furnisht
+(All of the true Imperial size),
+ And there, in rows, stood black and burnisht,
+Ready, where'er a gleam but shone
+Of light or fire, to be clapt on.
+
+But ah! how lordly wisdom errs,
+In trusting to extinguishers!
+One day, when he had left all sure,
+(At least, so thought he) dark, secure--
+The flame, at all its exits, entries,
+ Obstructed to his heart's content,
+And black extinguishers, like sentries,
+ Placed over every dangerous vent--
+Ye Gods, imagine his amaze,
+ His wrath, his rage, when, on returning,
+He found not only the old blaze,
+ Brisk as before, crackling and burning,--
+Not only new, young conflagrations,
+Popping up round in various stations--
+But still more awful, strange and dire,
+The Extinguishers themselves on fire!![1]
+They, they--those trusty, blind machines
+ His Lordship had so long been praising,
+As, under Providence, the means
+ Of keeping down all lawless blazing,
+Were now, themselves--alas, too true,
+The shameful fact--turned blazers too,
+And by a change as odd as cruel
+Instead of dampers, served for fuel!
+Thus, of his only hope bereft,
+ "What," said the great man, "must be done?"--
+All that, in scrapes like this, is left
+ To great men is--to cut and run.
+So run he did; while to their grounds,
+ The banisht Ghebers blest returned;
+And, tho' their Fire had broke its bounds,
+ And all abroad now wildly burned,
+Yet well could they, who loved the flame,
+Its wandering, its excess reclaim;
+And soon another, fairer Dome
+Arose to be its sacred home,
+Where, cherisht, guarded, not confined,
+The living glory dwelt inshrined,
+And, shedding lustre strong, but even,
+Tho' born of earth, grew worthy heaven.
+
+MORAL.
+
+The moral hence my Muse infers
+ Is, that such Lords are simple elves,
+In trusting to Extinguishers,
+ That are combustible themselves.
+
+
+[1] The idea of this Fable was caught from one of those brilliant _mots_,
+which abound in the conversation of my friend, the author of the "Letters
+to Julia,"--a production which contains some of the happiest specimens of
+playful poetry that have appeared in this or any age.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FABLE VIII.
+
+LOUIS FOURTEENTH'S WIG.
+
+
+The money raised--the army ready--
+Drums beating, and the Royal Neddy
+Valiantly braying in the van,
+To the old tune "_"Eh, eh, Sire Àne_!"[1]--
+Naught wanting, but some _coup_ dramatic,
+ To make French _sentiment_ explode,
+Bring in, at once, the _goût_ fanatic,
+ And make the war "_la dernière mode_"--
+Instantly, at the _Pavillon Marsan_,
+ Is held an Ultra consultation--
+What's to be done, to help the farce on?
+ What stage-effect, what decoration,
+To make this beauteous France forget,
+In one, grand, glorious _pirouette_,
+All she had sworn to but last week,
+And, with a cry of _Magnifique_!"
+Rush forth to this, or _any_ war,
+Without inquiring once--"What for?"
+After some plans proposed by each.
+Lord Chateaubriand made a speech,
+(Quoting, to show what men's rights are,
+ Or rather what men's rights _should be_,
+From Hobbes, Lord Castlereagh, the Tsar,
+ And other friends to Liberty,)
+Wherein he--having first protested
+'Gainst humoring the mob--suggested
+(As the most high-bred plan he saw
+For giving the new War _éclat_)
+A grand, Baptismal Melo-drame,
+To be got up at Notre Dame,
+In which the Duke (who, bless his Highness!
+ Had by his _hilt_ acquired such fame,
+'Twas hoped that he as little shyness
+ Would show, when to _the point_ he came,)
+Should, for his deeds so lion-hearted,
+Be christened _Hero_, ere he started;
+With power, by Royal Ordonnance,
+To bear that name--at least in France.
+Himself--the Viscount Chateaubriand--
+(To help the affair with more _esprit_ on)
+Offering, for this baptismal rite,
+ Some of his own famed Jordan water[2]--
+(Marie Louise not having quite
+ Used all that, for young Nap, he brought her.)
+The baptism, in _this_ case, to be
+Applied to that extremity,
+Which Bourbon heroes most expose;
+And which (as well all Europe knows)
+Happens to be, in this Defender
+Of the true Faith, extremely tender.
+
+Or if (the Viscount said) this scheme
+Too rash and premature should seem--
+If thus discounting heroes, _on_ tick--
+ This glory, by anticipation,
+Was too much in the _genre romantique_
+ For such a highly classic nation,
+He begged to say, the Abyssinians
+A practice had in their dominions,
+Which, if at Paris got up well.
+In full _costume_, was sure to tell.
+At all great epochs, good or ill,
+ They have, says BRUCE (and BRUCE ne'er budges
+From the strict truth), a Grand Quadrille
+ In public danced by the Twelve Judges[3]--
+And he assures us, the grimaces,
+The _entre-chats_, the airs and graces
+Of dancers, so profound and stately,
+Divert the Abyssinians greatly.
+
+"Now (said the Viscount), there's but few
+"Great Empires where this plan would do:
+"For instance, England;--let them take
+ "What pains they would--'twere vain to strive--
+"The twelve stiff Judges there would make
+ "The worst Quadrille-set now alive.
+"One must have seen them, ere one could
+"Imagine properly JUDGE WOOD,
+"Performing, in hie wig, so gayly,
+"A _queue-de chat_ with JUSTICE BAILLY!
+"_French_ Judges, tho', are, by no means,
+"This sort of stiff, be-wigged machines;
+"And we, who've seen them at _Saumur_
+"And _Poitiers_ lately, may be sure
+"They'd dance quadrilles or anything,
+"That would be pleasing to the King--
+"Nay, stand upon their heads, and more do,
+"To please the little Duc de Bordeaux!"
+
+After these several schemes there came
+Some others--needless now to name,
+Since that, which Monsieur planned, himself,
+Soon doomed all others to the shelf,
+And was received _par acclamation_
+As truly worthy the _Grande Nation_.
+
+It seems (as Monsieur told the story)
+That LOUIS the Fourteenth,--that glory,
+That _Coryphée_ of all crowned pates,--
+That pink of the Legitimates--
+Had, when, with many a pious prayer, he
+Bequeathed unto the Virgin Mary
+His marriage deeds, and _cordon bleu_,
+Bequeathed to her his State Wig too--
+(An offering which, at Court, 'tis thought,
+The Virgin values as she ought)--
+That Wig, the wonder of all eyes,
+The Cynosure of Gallia's skies,
+To watch and tend whose curls adored,
+ Re-build its towering roof, when flat,
+And round its rumpled base, a Board
+ Of sixty barbers daily sat,
+With Subs, on State-Days, to assist,
+Well pensioned from the Civil List:--
+That wondrous Wig, arrayed in which,
+And formed alike to awe or witch.
+He beat all other heirs of crowns,
+In taking mistresses and towns,
+Requiring but a shot at _one_,
+A smile at _t'other_, and 'twas done!--
+
+ "That Wig" (said Monsieur, while his brow
+Rose proudly,) "is existing now;--
+"That Grand Perruque, amid the fall
+ "Of every other Royal glory,
+"With curls erect survives them all,
+ "And tells in every hair their story.
+"Think, think, how welcome at this time
+"A relic, so beloved, sublime!
+"What worthier standard of the Cause
+ "Of Kingly Right can France demand?
+"Or who among our ranks can pause
+ "To guard it, while a curl shall stand?
+"Behold, my friends"--(while thus he cried,
+A curtain, which concealed this pride
+Of Princely Wigs was drawn aside)
+"Behold that grand Perruque--how big
+ "With recollections for the world--
+"For France--for us--Great Louis's Wig,
+ "By HIPPOLYTE new frizzed and curled--
+"_New frizzed_! alas, 'tis but too true,
+"Well may you start at that word _new_--
+"But such the sacrifice, my friends,
+"The Imperial Cossack recommends;
+"Thinking such small concessions sage,
+"To meet the spirit of the age,
+"And do what best that spirit flatters,
+"In Wigs--if not in weightier matters.
+ "Wherefore to please the Tsar, and show
+"That _we_ too, much-wronged Bourbons, know
+"What liberalism in Monarchs is,
+"We have conceded the New Friz!
+"Thus armed, ye gallant Ultras, say,
+"Can men, can Frenchmen, fear the fray?
+"With this proud relic in our van,
+ "And D'ANGOULEME our worthy leader,
+"Let rebel Spain do all she can,
+ "Let recreant England arm and feed her,--
+"Urged by that pupil of HUNT'S school,
+"That Radical, Lord LIVERPOOL--
+"France can have naught to fear--far from it--
+ "When once astounded Europe sees
+"The Wig of LOUIS, like a Comet,
+ "Streaming above the Pyrenées,
+"All's o'er with Spain--then on, my sons,
+ "On, my incomparable Duke,
+"And, shouting for the Holy Ones,
+ "Cry _Vive la Guerre--et la Perrugue!"_
+
+
+[1] They celebrated in the dark ages, at many churches, particularly at
+Rouen, what was called the Feast of the Ass. On this occasion the ass,
+finely drest, was brought before the altar, and they sung before him this
+elegant anthem, "_Eh, eh, eh, Sire Àne, eh, eh, eh. Sire Àne_."--
+WARTEN'S Essay on Pope.
+
+[2] Brought from the river Jordan by M. Chateaubriand, and presented to
+the French Empress for the christening of young Napoleon.
+
+[3] "On certain great occasions, the twelve Judges (who are generally
+between sixty and seventy years of age) sing the song and dance the
+figure-dance," etc.--Book. v.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FUDGE FAMILY IN PARIS.
+
+
+ _Le Leggi della Maschera richiedono che una persona mascherata non
+ sia salutata per nome da uno che la conosce malgrado il suo
+ travestimento_.
+ CASTIGLIONE.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+In what manner the following Epistles came into my hands, it is not
+necessary for the public to know. It will be seen by Mr. FUDGE'S Second
+Letter, that he is one of those gentlemen whose _Secret Services_ in
+Ireland, under the mild ministry of my Lord CASTLEREAGH, have been so
+amply and gratefully remunerated. Like his friend and associate, THOMAS
+REYNOLDS, Esq., he had retired upon the reward of his honest industry; but
+has lately been induced to appear again in active life, and superintend
+the training of that _Delatorian Cohort_ which Lord SIDMOUTH, in his
+wisdom and benevolence, has organized.
+
+Whether Mr. FUDGE, himself, has yet made any discoveries, does not appear
+from the following pages. But much may be expected from a person of his
+zeal and sagacity, and, indeed, to _him_, Lord SIDMOUTH, and the
+Greenland-bound ships, the eyes of all lovers of _discoveries_ are now
+most anxiously directed.
+
+I regret much that I have been obliged to omit Mr. BOB FUDGE'S Third
+Letter, concluding the adventures of his Day with the Dinner, Opera, etc.;
+--but, in consequence of some remarks upon Marinette's thin drapery,
+which, it was thought, might give offence to certain well-meaning persons,
+the manuscript was sent back to Paris for his revision and had not
+returned when the last sheet was put to press.
+
+It will not, I hope, be thought presumptuous, if I take this opportunity
+of complaining of a very serious injustice I have suffered from the
+public. Dr. KING wrote a treatise to prove that BENTLEY "was not the
+author of his own book," and a similar absurdity has been asserted of
+_me_, in almost all the best-informed literary circles. With the name of
+the real author staring them in the face, they have yet persisted in
+attributing my works to other people; and the fame of the "Twopenny Post-
+Bag"--such as it is--having hovered doubtfully over various persons, has
+at last settled upon the head of a certain little gentleman, who wears it,
+I understand, as complacently as if it actually belonged to him.
+
+I can only add, that if any lady or gentleman, curious in such matters,
+will take the trouble of calling at my lodgings, 245 Piccadilly, I shall
+have the honor of assuring them, _in propriâ personâ_, that I am--his, or
+her,
+
+Very obedient and very humble Servant,
+
+_April_ 17, 1818.
+
+THOMAS BROWN THE YOUNGER.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FUDGE FAMILY IN PARIS
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER I.
+
+FROM MISS BIDDY FUDGE TO MISS DOROTHY ----,
+OF CLONKILTY, IN IRELAND.
+
+
+Amiens.
+
+Dear DOLL, while the tails of our horses are plaiting,
+ The trunks tying on, and Papa, at the door,
+Into very bad French is as usual translating
+ His English resolve not to give a _sou_ more,
+I sit down to write you a line--only think!--
+A letter from France, with French pens and French ink,
+How delightful! tho', would you believe it, my dear?
+I have seen nothing yet _very_ wonderful here;
+No adventure, no sentiment, far as we've come,
+But the cornfields and trees quite as dull as at home;
+And _but_ for the post-boy, his boots and his queue,
+I might _just_ as well be at Clonkilty with you!
+In vain, at DESSEIN'S, did I take from my trunk
+That divine fellow, STERNE, and fall reading "The Monk;"
+In vain did I think of his charming Dead Ass,
+And remember the crust and the wallet--alas!
+No monks can be had now for love or for money,
+(All owing, Pa says, to that infidel BONEY;)
+And, tho' _one_ little Neddy we saw in our drive
+Out of classical Nampont, the beast was alive!
+
+ By the by, tho' at Calais, Papa _had_ a touch
+Of romance on the pier, which affected me much.
+At the sight of that spot, where our darling DIXHUIT
+Set the first of his own dear legitimate feet,[1]
+(Modelled out so exactly, and--God bless the mark!
+'Tis a foot, DOLLY, worthy so _Grand a Monarque_).
+He exclaimed, "_Oh, mon Roi_!" and, with tear-dropping eye,
+Stood to gaze on the spot--while some Jacobin, nigh,
+Muttered out with a shrug (what an insolent thing!)
+"_Ma foi_, he be right--'tis de Englishman's King;
+And dat _gros pied de cochon_--begar me vil say
+Dat de foot look mosh better, if turned toder way."
+There's the pillar, too--Lord! I had nearly forgot--
+What a charming idea!--raised close to the spot;
+The mode being now, (as you've heard, I suppose,)
+To build tombs over legs and raise pillars to toes.
+ This is all that's occurred sentimental as yet;
+Except indeed some little flower-nymphs we've met,
+Who disturb one's romance with pecuniary views,
+Flinging flowers in your path, and then--bawling for _sous_!
+And some picturesque beggars, whose multitudes seem
+To recall the good days of the _ancien regime_,
+All as ragged and brisk, you'll be happy to learn,
+And as thin as they were in the time of poor STERNE.
+
+ Our party consists (in a neat Calais job)
+Of Papa and myself, Mr. CONNOR and BOB.
+You remember how sheepish BOB lookt at Kilrandy,
+But, Lord! he's quite altered--they've made him a Dandy;
+A thing, you know, whiskered, great-coated, and laced,
+Like an hour-glass, exceedingly small in the waist;
+Quite a new sort of creatures, unknown yet to scholars,
+With beads so immovably stuck in shirt-collars,
+That seats, like our music-stools, soon must be found them,
+To twirl, when the creatures may wish, to look round them,
+In short, dear, "a Dandy" describes what I mean,
+And BOB's far the best of the _genus_ I've seen:
+An improving young man, fond of learning, ambitious,
+And goes now to Paris to study French dishes.
+Whose names--think, how quick! he already knows pat,
+_À la braise, petits pâtés_, and--what d' ye call that
+They inflict on potatoes?--oh! _maître d'hôtel_--
+I assure you, dear DOLLY, he knows them as well
+As if nothing else all his life he had eat,
+Tho' a bit of them BOBBY has never touched yet;
+But just knows the names of French dishes and cooks,
+As dear Pa knows the titles of authors and books.
+
+As to Pa, what d' ye think?--mind, it's all _entre nous_,
+But you know, love, I never keep secrets from you--
+Why, he's writing a book--what! a tale? a romance?
+No, we Gods, would it were!--but his travels in France;
+At the special desire (he let out t'other day)
+Of his great friend and patron, my Lord CASTLEREAGH,
+Who said, "My dear FUDGE"--I forget the exact words,
+And, it's strange, no one ever remembers my Lord's;
+But 'twas something to say that, as all must allow
+A good orthodox work is much wanting just now,
+To expound to the world the new--thingummie--science,
+Found out by the--what's-its-name--Holy Alliance,
+And prove to mankind that their rights are but folly,
+Their freedom a joke (which it _is_, you know, DOLLY),
+"There's none," said his Lordship, "if _I_ may be judge,
+Half so fit for this great undertaking as FUDGE!"
+
+The matter's soon, settled--Pa flies to _the Row_
+(The _first_ stage your tourists now usually go),
+Settles all for his quarto--advertisements, praises--
+Starts post from the door, with his tablets--French phrases--
+"SCOTT'S Visit" of course--in short, everything _he_ has
+An author can want, except words and ideas:--
+And, lo! the first thing, in the spring of the year,
+Is PHIL. FUDGE at the front of a Quarto, my dear!
+But, bless me, my paper's near out, so I'd better
+Draw fast to a close:--this exceeding long letter
+You owe to a _déjeûner à la fourchette_,
+Which BOBBY _would_ have, and is hard at it yet.--
+What's next? oh? the tutor, the last of the party,
+Young CONNOR:--they say he's so like BONAPARTE,
+His nose and his chin--which Papa rather dreads,
+As the Bourbons, you know, are suppressing all heads
+That resemble old NAP'S, and who knows but their honors
+May think, in their fright, of suppressing poor CONNOR'S?
+_Au reste_ (as we say), the young lad's well enough,
+Only talks much of Athens, Rome, virtue and stuff;
+A third cousin of ours, by the way--poor as Job
+ (Tho' of royal descent by the side of Mamma),
+And for charity made private tutor to BOB;
+ _Entre nous_, too, a Papist--how liberal of Pa!
+
+This is all, dear,--forgive me for breaking off thus,
+But BOB'S _déjeûner_'s done, and Papa's in a fuss.
+
+B. F.
+
+P. S.
+
+How provoking of Pa! he will not let me stop
+Just to run in and rummage some milliner's shop;
+And my _début_ in Paris, I blush to think on it,
+Must now, DOLL, be made in a hideous low bonnet.
+But Paris, dear Paris!--oh, _there_ will be joy,
+And romance, and high bonnets, and Madame Le Roi![2]
+
+
+[1] To commemorate the landing of Louis le Désiré from England,
+the impression of his foot is marked out on the pier at Calais, and a
+pillar with an inscription raised opposite to the spot.
+
+[2] A celebrated mantua-maker in Paris.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER II.
+
+FROM PHIL. FUDGE, ESQ., TO THE LORD VISCOUNT CASTLEREAGH.
+
+
+Paris.
+
+At length, my Lord, I have the bliss
+To date to you a line from this
+"Demoralized" metropolis;
+Where, by plebeians low and scurvy,
+The throne was turned quite topsy-turvy,
+And Kingship, tumbled from its seat,
+"Stood prostrate" at the people's feet;
+Where (still to use your Lordship's tropes)
+The _level_ of obedience _slopes_
+Upward and downward, as the _stream_
+Of _hydra_ faction _kicks the beam_![1]
+Where the poor Palace changes masters
+ Quicker than a snake its skin,
+And LOUIS is rolled out on castors,
+ While BONEY'S borne on shoulders in:--
+But where, in every change, no doubt,
+ One special good your Lordship traces,--
+That 'tis the _Kings_ alone turn out,
+The _Ministers_ still keep their places.
+
+How oft, dear Viscount CASTLEREAGH,
+I've thought of thee upon the way,
+As in my _job_ (what place could be
+More apt to wake a thought of thee?)--
+Or, oftener far, when gravely sitting
+Upon my dicky, (as is fitting
+For him who writes a Tour, that he
+May more of men and manners see.)
+I've thought of thee and of thy glories,
+Thou guest of Kings and King of Tories!
+Reflecting how thy fame has grown
+ And spread, beyond man's usual share,
+At home, abroad, till thou art known,
+ Like Major SEMPLE, everywhere!
+And marvelling with what powers of breath
+Your Lordship, having speeched to death
+Some hundreds of your fellow-men,
+Next speeched to Sovereign's ears,--and when
+All Sovereigns else were dozed, at last
+Speeched down the Sovereign of Belfast.
+Oh! mid the praises and the trophies
+Thou gain'st from Morosophs and Sophis;
+Mid all the tributes to thy fame,
+ There's one thou shouldst be chiefly pleased at--
+That Ireland gives her snuff thy name,
+ And CASTLEREAGH'S the thing now sneezed at!
+
+But hold, my pen!--a truce to praising--
+ Tho' even your Lordship will allow
+The theme's temptations are amazing;
+ But time and ink run short, and now,
+(As _thou_ wouldst say, my guide and teacher
+ In these gay metaphorie fringes,
+I must _embark_ into the _feature_
+ On which this letter chiefly _hinges_;)
+My Book, the Book that is to prove--
+And _will_, (so help ye Sprites above,
+That sit on clouds, as grave as judges,
+Watching the labors of the FUDGES!)
+_Will_ prove that all the world, at present,
+Is in a state extremely pleasant;
+That Europe--thanks to royal swords
+ And bayonets, and the Duke commanding--
+Enjoys a peace which, like the Lord's,
+ Passeth all human understanding:
+That France prefers her go-cart King
+ To such a coward scamp as BONEY;
+Tho' round, with each a leading-string.
+ There standeth many a Royal crony,
+For fear the chubby, tottering thing
+ Should fall, if left there _loney-poney_;--
+That England, too, the more her debts,
+The more she spends, the richer gets;
+And that the Irish, grateful nation!
+ Remember when by _thee_ reigned over,
+And bless thee for their flagellation,
+As HELOISA did her lover![2]--
+That Poland, left for Russia's lunch
+ Upon the sideboard, snug reposes:
+While Saxony's as pleased as Punch,
+ And Norway "on a bed of roses!"
+That, as for some few million souls,
+ Transferred by contract, bless the clods!
+If half were strangled--Spaniards, Poles,
+ And Frenchmen--'twouldn't make much odds,
+So Europe's goodly Royal ones
+Sit easy on their sacred thrones;
+So FERDINAND embroiders gayly,[3]
+And Louis eats his _salmi_ daily;
+So time is left to Emperor SANDY
+To be _half_ Caesar and _half_ Dandy;
+And GEORGE the REGENT (who'd forget
+That doughtiest chieftain of the set?)
+Hath wherewithal for trinkets new,
+ For dragons, after Chinese models,
+And chambers where Duke Ho and Soo
+ Might come and nine times knock their noddles!--
+All this my Quarto'll prove--much more
+Than Quarto ever proved before:--
+In reasoning with the _Post_ I'll vie,
+My facts the _Courier_ shall supply,
+My jokes VANSITTART, PEELE my sense,
+And thou, sweet Lord, my eloquence!
+
+My Journal, penned by fits and starts,
+ On BIDDY'S back or BOBBY'S shoulder,
+(My son, my Lord, a youth of parts,
+ Who longs to be a small placeholder,)
+Is--tho' _I_ say't, that shouldn’t say--
+Extremely good; and, by the way,
+_One_ extract from it--_only_ one--
+To show its spirit, and I've done.
+_"Jul. thirty-first_.--Went, after snack,
+ "To the Cathedral of St. Denny;
+"Sighed o'er the Kings of ages back,
+ "And--gave the old Concierge a penny.
+"(_Mem_.--Must see _Rheims_, much famed, 'tis said,
+"For making Kings and ginger-bread.)
+"Was shown the tomb where lay, so stately,
+"A little Bourbon, buried lately,
+"Thrice high and puissant, we were told,
+"Tho' only twenty-four hours old!
+"Hear this, thought I, ye Jacobins:
+"Ye Burdetts, tremble in your skins!
+"If Royalty, but aged a day,
+"Can boast such high and puissant sway
+"What impious hand its power would fix,
+"Full fledged and wigged at fifty-six!"
+
+The argument's quite new, you see,
+And proves exactly Q. E. D.
+So now, with duty to the KEGENT,
+I am dear Lord,
+ Your most obedient,
+ P. F.
+
+_Hôtel Breteuil, Rue Rivoli_.
+Neat lodgings--rather dear for me;
+But BIDDY said she thought 'twould look!
+Genteeler thus to date my Book;
+And BIDDY'S right--besides, it curries
+Some favor with our friends at MURRAY'S,
+Who scorn what any man can say,
+That dates from Rue St. Honoré![4]
+
+
+[1] This excellent imitation of the noble Lord's style shows how deeply
+Mr. Fudge must have studied his great original. Irish oratory, indeed,
+abounds with such startling peculiarities. Thus the eloquent Counsellor
+B----, in describing some hypocritical pretender to charity, said, "He put
+his hand in his breeches-pocket, like a crocodile, and," etc.
+
+[2] See her Letters.
+
+[3] It would be an edifying thing to write a history of the private
+amusements of sovereigns, tracing them down from the fly-sticking of
+Domitian, the mole-catching of Artabanus, the, hog-mimicking of
+Parmenides, the horse-currying of Aretas, to the petticoat-embroidering of
+Ferdinand, and the patience-playing of the Prince Regent!
+
+[4] See the _Quarterly Review_ for May, 1816 where Mr. Hobhouse is
+accused of having written his book "in a back street of the French
+capital."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER III.
+
+FROM MR. BOB FUDGE TO RICHARD ----, ESQ.
+
+
+Oh Dick! you may talk of your writing and reading,
+Your Logic and Greek, but there's nothing like feeding;
+And _this_ is the place for it, DICKY, you dog,
+Of all places on earth--the headquarters of Prog!
+Talk of England--her famed _Magna Charta_, I swear, is
+A humbug, a flam, to the Carte[1] at old VÉRY'S;
+And as for your Juries--_who_ would not set o'er 'em
+A Jury of Tasters, with woodcocks before 'em?
+Give CARTWRIGHT his Parliaments, fresh every year;
+But those friends of _short Commons_ would never do here;
+And, let ROMILLY speak as he will on the question.
+No Digest of Law's like the laws of digestion!
+
+By the by, DICK, _I_ fatten--but _n'importe_ for that,
+'Tis the mode--your Legitimates always get fat.
+There's the REGENT, there's LOUIS--and BONEY tried too,
+But, tho' somewhat imperial in paunch, 'twouldn't do:--
+He improved indeed much in this point when he wed,
+But he ne'er grew right royally fat _in the head_.
+
+DICK, DICK, what a place is this Paris!--but stay--
+As my raptures may bore you, I'll just sketch a Day,
+As we pass it, myself and some comrades I've got,
+All thorough-bred _Gnostics_, who know what is what.
+
+After dreaming some hours of the land of Cocaigne,
+ That Elysium of all that is _friand_ and nice,
+Where for hail they have _bon-bons_, and claret for rain,
+ And the skaters in winter show off on _cream_-ice;
+Where so ready all nature its cookery yields,
+_Macaroni au parmesan_ grows in the fields;
+Little birds fly about with the true pheasant taint,
+And the geese are all born with a liver complaint!
+I rise--put on neck-cloth--stiff, tight, as can be--
+For a lad who _goes into the world_, DICK, like me,
+Should have his neck tied up, you know--there's no doubt of it--
+Almost as tight as _some_ lads who _go out of it_.
+With whiskers well oiled, and with boots that "hold up
+"The mirror to nature"--so bright you could sup
+Off the leather like china; with coat, too, that draws
+On the tailor, who suffers, a martyr's applause!--
+With head bridled up, like a four-in-hand leader,
+And stays--devil's in them--too tight for a feeder,
+I strut to the old Café Hardy, which yet
+Beats the field at a _déjeûner a la fourchette_.
+There, DICK, what a breakfast!--oh! not like your ghost
+Of a breakfast in England, your curst tea and toast;
+But a side-board, you dog, where one's eye roves about,
+Like a turk's in the Haram, and thence singles out
+One's pâté of larks, just to tune up the throat,
+One's small limbs of chickens, done _en papillote_.
+One's erudite cutlets, drest all ways but plain,
+Or one's kidneys--imagine, DICK--done with champagne!
+Then, some glasses of _Beaune_, to dilute--or, mayhap,
+_Chambertin_,[2]which you know's the pet tipple of NAP,
+And which Dad, by the by, that legitimate stickler,
+Much scruples to taste, but I'm not so partic'lar.--
+Your coffee comes next, by prescription: and then DICK's
+The coffee's ne'er-failing and glorious appendix,
+(If books had but such, my old Grecian, depend on't,
+I'd swallow e'en Watkins', for sake of the end on't,)
+A neat glass of _parfait-amour_, which one sips
+Just as if bottled velvet tipt over one's lips.
+This repast being ended, and _paid for_--(how odd!
+Till a man's used to paying, there's something so queer in't!)--
+The sun now well out, and the girls all abroad,
+ And the world enough aired for us Nobs to appear in't,
+We lounge up the boulevards, where--oh! DICK, the phizzes,
+The turn-outs, we meet--what a nation of quizzes!
+Here toddles along some old figure of fun,
+With a coat you might date Anno Domini 1.;
+A laced hat, worsted stockings, and--noble old soul!
+A fine ribbon and cross in his best button-hole;
+Just such as our PRINCE, who nor reason nor fun dreads,
+Inflicts, without even a court-martial, on hundreds.
+Here trips a _grisette_, with a fond, roguish eye,
+(Rather eatable things these _grisettes_, by the by);
+And there an old _demoiselle_, almost as fond,
+In a silk that has stood since the time of the Fronde.
+There goes a French Dandy--ah, DICK! unlike some ones
+We've seen about WHITE'S--the Mounseers are but rum ones;
+Such hats!--fit for monkies--I'd back Mrs. DRAPER
+To cut neater weather-boards out of brown paper:
+And coats--how I wish, if it wouldn't distress 'em,
+They'd club for old BRUMMEL, from Calais, to dress 'em!
+The collar sticks out from the neck such a space,
+ That you'd swear 'twas the plan of this head-lopping nation,
+To leave there behind them a snug little place
+ For the head to drop into, on decapitation.
+In short, what with mountebanks, counts and friseurs,
+_Some_ mummers by trade and the rest amateurs--
+What with captains in new jockey-boots and silk breeches,
+ Old dustmen with swinging great opera-hats,
+And shoeblacks, reclining by statues in niches,
+ There never was seen such a race of Jack Sprats!
+
+From the Boulevards--but hearken!--yes--as I'm a sinner,
+The clock is just striking the half-hour to dinner:
+So _no_ more at present--short time for adorning--
+My Day must be finisht some other fine morning.
+Now, hey for old BEAUVILLIERS'S[3] larder, my boy!
+And, once _there_, if the Goddess of Beauty and Joy
+Were to write "Come and kiss me, dear BOB!" I'd not budge--
+Not a step, DICK, as sure as my name is
+ R. FUDGE.
+
+
+[1] The Bill of Fare.--Véry, a well-known _Restaurateur_.
+
+[2] The favorite wine of Napoleon.
+
+[3] A celebrated restaurateur.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER IV.
+
+FROM PHELIM CONNOR TO ----
+
+
+"Return!"--no, never, while the withering hand
+Of bigot power is on that hapless land;
+While, for the faith my fathers held to God,
+Even in the fields where free those fathers trod,
+I am proscribed, and--like the spot left bare
+In Israel's halls, to tell the proud and fair
+Amidst their mirth, that Slavery had been there[1]--
+On all I love, home, parents, friends, I trace
+The mournful mark of bondage and disgrace!
+No!--let _them_ stay, who in their country's pangs
+See naught but food for factions and harangues;
+Who yearly kneel before their masters' doors
+And hawk their wrongs, as beggars do their sores:
+Still let your . . . .[2]
+ . . . . .
+Still hope and suffer, all who can!--but I,
+Who durst not hope, and cannot bear, must fly.
+
+But whither?--every where the scourge pursues--
+Turn where he will, the wretched wanderer views,
+In the bright, broken hopes of all his race,
+Countless reflections of the Oppressor's face.
+Every where gallant hearts and spirits true,
+Are served up victims to the vile and few;
+While England, every where--the general foe
+Of Truth and Freedom, wheresoe'er they glow--
+Is first, when tyrants strike, to aid the blow.
+
+Oh, England! could such poor revenge atone
+For wrongs, that well might claim the deadliest one;
+Were it a vengeance, sweet enough to sate
+The wretch who flies from thy intolerant hate,
+To hear his curses on such barbarous sway
+Echoed, where'er he bends his cheerless way;--
+Could _this_ content him, every lip he meets
+Teems for his vengeance with such poisonous sweets;
+Were _this_ his luxury, never is thy name
+Pronounced, but he doth banquet on thy shame;
+Hears maledictions ring from every side
+Upon that grasping power, that selfish pride,
+Which vaunts its own and scorns all rights beside;
+That low and desperate envy which to blast
+A neighbor's blessings risks the few thou hast;--
+That monster, Self, too gross to be concealed,
+Which ever lurks behind thy proffered shield;--
+That faithless craft, which, in thy hour of need,
+Can court the slave, can swear he shall be freed,
+Yet basely spurns him, when thy point is gained,
+Back to his masters, ready gagged and chained!
+Worthy associate of that band of Kings,
+That royal, ravening flock, whose vampire wings
+O'er sleeping Europe treacherously brood,
+And fan her into dreams of promist good,
+Of hope, of freedom--but to drain her blood!
+If _thus_ to hear thee branded be a bliss
+That Vengeance loves, there's yet more sweet than this,
+That 'twas an Irish head, an Irish heart,
+Made thee the fallen and tarnisht thing thou art;
+That, as the centaur gave the infected vest
+In which he died, to rack his conqueror's breast,
+We sent thee CASTLEREAGH:--as heaps of dead
+Have slain their slayers by the pest they spread,
+So hath our land breathed out, thy fame to dim,
+Thy strength to waste and rot thee soul and limb,
+Her worst infections all condensed in him!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When will the world shake off such yokes? oh, when
+Will that redeeming day shine out on men,
+That shall behold them rise, erect and free
+As Heaven and Nature meant mankind should be!
+When Reason shall no longer blindly bow
+To the vile pagod things, that o'er her brow,
+Like him of Jaghernaut, drive trampling now;
+Nor Conquest dare to desolate God's earth;
+Nor drunken Victory, with a NERO'S mirth,
+Strike her lewd harp amidst a people's groans;--
+But, built on love, the world's exalted thrones
+Shall to the virtuous and the wise be given--
+Those bright, those sole Legitimates of Heaven!
+
+_When_ will this be?--or, oh! is it, in truth,
+But one of those sweet, day-break dreams of youth,
+In which the Soul, as round her morning springs,
+'Twixt sleep and waking, see such dazzling things!
+And must the hope, as vain as it is bright,
+Be all resigned?--and are _they_ only right,
+Who say this world of thinking souls was made
+To be by Kings partitioned, truckt and weighed
+In scales that, ever since the world begun,
+Have counted millions but as dust to one?
+Are _they_ the only wise, who laugh to scorn
+The rights, the freedom to which man was born?
+Who . . . . .
+ . . . . .
+Who, proud to kiss each separate rod of power,
+Bless, while he reigns, the minion of the hour;
+Worship each would-be god, that o'er them moves,
+And take the thundering of his brass for JOVE'S!
+If _this_ be wisdom, then farewell, my books,
+Farewell, ye shrines of old, ye classic brooks.
+Which fed my soul with currents, pure and fair,
+Of living Truth that now must stagnate there!--
+Instead of themes that touch the lyre with light,
+Instead of Greece and her immortal fight
+For Liberty which once awaked my strings,
+Welcome the Grand Conspiracy of Kings,
+The High Legitimates, the Holy Band,
+Who, bolder' even than He of Sparta's land,
+Against whole millions, panting to be free,
+Would guard the pass of right line tyranny.
+Instead of him, the Athenian bard whose blade
+Had stood the onset which his pen portrayed,
+Welcome . . . .
+ . . . . .
+And, ‘stead of ARISTIDES--woe the day
+Such names should mingle!--welcome Castlereagh!
+
+Here break we off, at this unhallowed name.[3]
+Like priests of old, when words ill-omened came.
+My next shall tell thee, bitterly shall tell.
+Thoughts that . . . .
+ . . . . .
+Thoughts that--could patience hold--'twere wiser far
+To leave still hid and burning where they are.
+
+
+[1] "They used to leave a square yard of the wall of the house
+unplastered, on which they write, in large letters, either the fore-
+mentioned verse of the Psalmist ('If I forget thee, O Jerusalem,' etc.) or
+the words--'The memory of the desolation.'"--Leo of Modena.
+
+[2] I have thought it prudent to omit some parts of Mr. Phelim Connor's
+letter. He is evidently an intemperate young man, and has associated with
+his cousins, the Fudges, to very little purpose.
+
+[3] The late Lord C. of Ireland had a curious theory about names;--he
+held that every man with _three_ names was a Jacobin.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER V.
+
+FROM MISS BIDDY FUDGE TO MISS DOROTHY ----.
+
+
+What a time since I wrote!--I'm a sad, naughty girl--
+For, tho' like a tee-totum, I'm all in a twirl;--
+Yet even (as you wittily say) a tee-totum
+Between all its twirls gives a _letter_ to note 'em.
+But, Lord, such a place! and then, DOLLY, my dresses,
+My gowns, so divine!--there's no language expresses,
+Except just the _two_ words "_superbe_, _magnifique_,"
+The trimmings of that which I had home last week!
+It is called--I forget--_à la_--something which sounded
+Like _alicampane_--but in truth I'm confounded
+And bothered, my dear, 'twixt that troublesome boy's
+(BOB'S) cookery language, and Madame LE ROI'S:
+What with fillets of roses, and fillets of veal,
+Things _garni_ with lace, and things _garni_ with eel,
+One's hair and one's cutlets both _en papillote_,
+And a thousand more things I shall ne'er have by rote,
+I can scarce tell the difference, at least as to phrase,
+Between beef _à la Psyche_ and curls _à la braise_.--
+But in short, dear, I'm trickt out quite _à la Francaise_,
+With my bonnet--so beautiful!--high up and poking,
+Like things that are put to keep chimneys from smoking.
+
+Where _shall_ I begin with the endless delights
+Of this Eden of milliners, monkeys and sights--
+This dear busy place, where there's nothing transacting
+But dressing and dinnering, dancing and acting?
+Imprimis, the Opera--mercy, my ears!
+ Brother BOBBY'S remark, t'other night, was a true one:--
+"This _must_ be the music," said he, "of the _spears_,
+ For I'm curst if each note of it doesn’t run thro' one!"
+Pa says (and you know, love, his Book's to make out
+'Twas the Jacobins brought every mischief about)
+That this passion for roaring has come in of late,
+Since the rabble all tried for a _voice_ in the State.--
+What a frightful idea, one's mind to o'erwhelm!
+ What a chorus, dear DOLLY, would soon be let loose of it,
+If, when of age, every man in the realm
+ Had a voice like old LAIS,[1] and chose to make use of it!
+No--never was known in this riotous sphere
+Such a breach of the peace as their singing, my dear.
+So bad too, you'd swear that the God of both arts,
+ Of Music and Physic, had taken a frolic
+For setting a loud fit of asthma in parts,
+ And composing a fine rumbling bass to a cholic!
+
+But, the dancing--_ah parlez-moi_, DOLLY, _de ca_--
+There, _indeed_, is a treat that charms all but Papa.
+Such beauty--such grace--oh ye sylphs of romance!
+ Fly, fly to TITANIA, and ask her if _she_ has
+One light-footed nymph in her train, that can dance
+ Like divine BIGOTTINI and sweet FANNY BIAS!
+FANNY BIAS in FLORA--dear creature!--you'd swear,
+ When her delicate feet in the dance twinkle round,
+That her steps are of light, that her home is the air,
+ And she only _par complaisance_ touches the ground.
+And when BIGOTTINI in PSYCHE dishevels
+ Her black flowing hair, and by daemons is driven,
+Oh! who does not envy those rude little devils,
+ That hold her and hug her, and keep her from heaven?
+Then, the music--so softly its cadences die,
+So divinely--oh, DOLLY! between you and I,
+It's as well for my peace that there's nobody nigh
+To make love to me then--_you've_ a soul, and can judge
+What a crisis 'twould be for your friend BIDDY FUDGE!
+ The next place (which BOBBY has near lost his heart in)
+They call it the Play-house--I think--of St. Martin;[2]
+Quite charming--and _very_ religious--what folly
+To say that the French are not pious, dear DOLLY,
+Where here one beholds, so correctly and rightly,
+The Testament turned into melodrames nightly;[3]
+And doubtless so fond they're of scriptural facts,
+They will soon get the Pentateuch up in five acts.
+Here DANIEL, in pantomime,[4] bids bold defiance
+To NEBUCHADNEZZAR and all his stuft lions,
+While pretty young Israelites dance round the Prophet,
+In very thin clothing, and _but_ little of it;--
+Here BEGRAND,[5] who shines in this scriptural path,
+ As the lovely SUSANNA, without even a relic
+Of drapery round her, comes out of the bath
+ In a manner that, BOB says, is quite _Eve-angelic_!
+But in short, dear, 'twould take me a month to recite
+All the exquisite places we're at, day and night;
+And, besides, ere I finish, I think you'll be glad
+Just to hear one delightful adventure I've had.
+Last night, at the Beaujon, a place where--I doubt
+If its charms I can paint--there are cars, that set out
+From a lighted pavilion, high up in the air,
+And rattle you down, DOLL--you hardly know where.
+These vehicles, mind me, in which you go thro'
+This delightfully dangerous journey, hold _two_,
+Some cavalier asks, with humility, whether
+ You'll venture down _with_ him--you smile--'tis a match;
+In an instant you're seated, and down both together
+ Go thundering, as if you went post to old scratch![6]
+Well, it was but last night, as I stood and remarkt
+On the looks and odd ways of the girls who embarkt,
+The impatience of some for the perilous flight,
+The forced giggle of others, 'twixt pleasure and fright,--
+That, there came up--imagine, dear DOLL, if you can--
+A fine sallow, sublime, sort of Werterfaced man,
+With mustachios that gave (what we read of so oft)
+The dear Corsair expression, half savage, half soft,
+As Hyenas in love may be fancied to look, or
+A something between ABELARD and old BLUCHER!
+Up he came, DOLL, to me, and uncovering his head,
+(Rather bald, but so warlike!) in bad English said,
+"Ah! my dear--if Ma'mselle vil be so very good--
+Just for von littel course"--tho' I scarce understood
+What he wisht me to do, I said, thank him, I would.
+Off we set--and, tho' 'faith, dear, I hardly knew whether
+ My head or my heels were the uppermost then,
+For 'twas like heaven and earth, DOLLY, coming together,--
+ Yet, spite of the danger, we dared it again.
+And oh! as I gazed on the features and air
+ Of the man, who for me all this peril defied,
+I could fancy almost he and I were a pair
+ Of unhappy young lovers, who thus, side by side,
+Were taking, instead of rope, pistol, or dagger, a
+Desperate dash down the falls of Niagara!
+
+This achieved, thro' the gardens we sauntered about,
+ Saw the fire-works, exclaimed "_magnifique_!" at each cracker,
+And, when 'twas all o'er, the dear man saw us out
+ With the air I _will_ say, of a Prince, to our _fiacre_.
+
+Now, hear me--this Stranger,--it may be mere folly--
+But _who_ do you think we all think it is, DOLLY?
+Why, bless you, no less than the great King of Prussia,
+Who's here now incog.[7]--he, who made so much fuss, you
+Remember, in London, with BLUCHER and PLATOF,
+When SAL was near kissing old BLUCHER'S cravat off!
+Pa says he's come here to look after his money,
+(Not taking things now as he used under BONEY,)
+Which suits with our friend, for BOB saw him, he swore,
+Looking sharp to the silver received at the door.
+Besides, too, they say that his grief for his Queen
+(Which was plain in this sweet fellow's face to be seen)
+Requires such a stimulant dose as this car is,
+Used three times a day with young ladies in Paris.
+Some Doctor, indeed, has declared that such grief
+ Should--unless 'twould to utter despairing its folly push--
+Fly to the Beaujon, and there seek relief
+ By rattling, as BOB says, "like shot thro' a holly-bush."
+
+I must now bid adieu;--only think, DOLLY, think
+If this _should_ be the King--I have scarce slept a wink
+With imagining how it will sound in the papers,
+ And how all the Misses my good luck will grudge,
+When they read that Count RUPPIN, to drive away vapors,
+ Has gone down the Beaujon with Miss BIDDY FUDGE.
+
+_Nota Bene_.--Papa's almost certain 'tis he--
+For he knows the Legitimate cut and could see,
+In the way he went poising and managed to tower
+So erect in the car, the true _Balance of Power_.
+
+
+[1] The oldest, most celebrated, and most noisy of the singers at the
+French Opera.
+
+[2] The Théâtre de la Porte St. Martin which was built when the Opera
+House in the Palais Royal was burned down, in 1781.
+
+[3] "The Old Testament," says the theatrical Critic in the _Gazette de
+France_, "is a mine of gold for the managers of our small play-houses. A
+multitude crowd round the Théâtre de la Gaieté every evening to see the
+Passage of the Red Sea."
+
+[4] A piece very popular last year, called "_Daniel, ou La Fosse aux
+Lions_."
+
+[5] Madame Bégrand, a finely formed woman, who acts in "Susanna and the
+Elders,"--"_L'Amour et la Folie_." etc.
+
+[6] According to Dr. Cotterel the cars go at the rate of forty-eight miles
+an hour.
+
+[7] His Majesty, who was at Paris under the travelling name of Count
+Ruppin, is known to have gone down the Beaujon very frequently.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER VI.
+
+FROM PHIL. FUDGE, ESQ., TO HIS BROTHER
+TIM FUDGE, ESQ., BARRISTER AT LAW.
+
+
+Yours of the 12th received, just now--
+ Thanks, for the hint, my trusty brother!
+'Tis truly pleasing to see how
+ We, FUDGES, stand by one another.
+But never fear--I know my chap,
+And he knows _me_ too--_verbum sap_,
+My Lord and I are kindred spirits,
+Like in our ways as two young ferrets;
+Both fashioned, as that supple race is,
+To twist into all sorts of places;--
+Creatures lengthy, lean and hungering,
+Fond of blood and _burrow_-mongering.
+
+As to my Book in 91,
+ Called "Down with Kings, or, Who'd have thought it?"
+Bless you! the Book's long dead and gone,--
+ Not even the Attorney-General bought it.
+And tho' some few seditious tricks
+I played in '95 and '6,
+As you remind me in your letter,
+His Lordship likes me all the better;--
+We proselytes, that come with news full,
+Are, as he says, so vastly useful!
+
+REYNOLDS and I--(you know TOM REYNOLDS--
+ Drinks his claret, keeps his chaise--
+Lucky the dog that first unkennels
+ Traitors and Luddites now-a-days;
+Or who can help to _bag_ a few,
+When SIDMOUTH wants a death, or two;)
+REYNOLDS and I and some few more,
+ All men like us of _information_,
+Friends whom his Lordship keeps in store,
+ As _under_-saviors of the nation[1]--
+Have, formed a Club this season, where
+His Lordship sometimes takes the chair,
+And gives us many a bright oration
+In praise of our sublime vocation;
+Tracing it up to great King MIDAS,
+Who, tho' in fable typified as
+A royal Ass, by grace, divine
+And right of ears, most asinine,
+Was yet no more, in fact historical,
+ Than an exceeding well-bred tyrant;
+And these, his _ears_, but allegorical,
+ Meaning Informers, kept at high rent--
+Gem'men, who touched the Treasury glisteners,
+Like us, for being trusty listeners;
+And picking up each tale and fragment,
+For royal MIDAS'S Green Bag meant.
+"And wherefore," said this best of Peers,
+"Should not the REGENT too have ears,
+"To reach as far, as long and wide as
+"Those of his model, good King MIDAS?"
+This speech was thought extremely good,
+And (rare for him) was understood--
+Instant we drank "The REGENT'S Ears,"
+With three times three illustrious cheers,
+ Which made the room resound like thunder--
+"The REGENT'S Ears, and may he ne'er
+"From foolish shame, like MIDAS, wear
+ "Old paltry _wigs_ to keep them[2] under!"
+This touch at our old friends, the Whigs,
+Made us as merry all as grigs.
+In short (I'll thank you not to mention
+ These things again), we get on gayly;
+And thanks to pension and Suspension,
+ Our little Club increases daily.
+CASTLES, and OLIVER, and such,
+Who don’t as yet full salary touch,
+Nor keep their chaise and pair, nor buy
+Houses and lands, like TOM and I,
+Of course don’t rank with us _salvators_,[3]
+But merely serve the Club as waiters,
+Like Knights, too, we've our _collar_ days,
+(For _us_, I own, an awkward phrase,)
+When, in our new costume adorned,--
+The REGENT'S buff-and-blue coats _turned_--
+We have the honor to give dinners
+ To the chief Rats in upper stations:
+Your WEMYS, VAUGHANS,--half-fledged sinners,
+ Who shame us by their imitations;
+Who turn, 'tis true--but what of that?
+Give me the useful _peaching_ Rat;
+_Not_ things as mute as Punch, when bought,
+Whose wooden heads are all they've brought;
+Who, false enough to shirk their friends,
+ But too faint-hearted to betray,
+Are, after all their twists and bends,
+ But souls in Limbo, damned half way.
+No, no, we nobler vermin are
+A _genus_ useful as we're rare;
+Midst all the things miraculous
+ Of which your natural histories brag,
+The rarest must be Rats like us,
+ Who _let the cat out of the bag_.
+Yet still these Tyros in the cause
+Deserve, I own, no small applause;
+And they're by us received and treated
+With all due honors--only seated
+In the inverse scale of their reward,
+The merely _promised_ next my Lord;
+Small pensions then, and so on, down,
+ Rat after rat, they graduate
+Thro' job, red ribbon and silk gown,
+ To Chancellorship and Marquisate.
+This serves to nurse the ratting spirit;
+The less the bribe the more the merit.
+
+Our music's good, you may be sure;
+My Lord, you know, 's an amateur[4]--
+Takes every part with perfect ease,
+ Tho' to the Base by nature suited;
+And, formed for all, as best may please,
+For whips and bolts, or chords and keys,
+Turns from his victims to his glees,
+ And has them both well _executed_.[5]
+HERTFORD, who, tho' no Rat himself,
+ Delights in all such liberal arts,
+Drinks largely to the House of Guelph,
+ And superintends the _Corni_ parts.
+While CANNING, who'd be _first_ by choice,
+Consents to take an _under_ voice;
+And GRAVES,[6] who well that signal knows,
+Watches the _Volti Subitos_.[7]
+
+In short, as I've already hinted,
+ We take of late prodigiously;
+But as our Club is somewhat stinted
+ For _Gentlemen_, like TOM and me,
+We'll take it kind if you'll provide
+A few _Squireens_[8] from t'other side;--
+Some of those loyal, cunning elves
+ (We often tell the tale with laughter),
+Who used to hide the pikes themselves,
+ Then hang the fools who found them after.
+I doubt not you could find us, too,
+Some Orange Parsons that might do:
+Among the rest, we've heard of one,
+The Reverend--something--HAMILTON,
+Who stuft a figure of himself
+ (Delicious thought!) and had it shot at,
+To bring some Papists to the shelf,
+ That couldn't otherwise be got at--
+If _he_'ll but join the Association,
+We'll vote him in by acclamation.
+
+And now, my brother, guide and friend,
+This somewhat tedious scrawl must end.
+I've gone into this long detail,
+ Because I saw your nerves were shaken
+With anxious fears lest I should fail
+ In this new, _loyal_, course I've taken.
+But, bless your heart! you need not doubt--
+We FUDGES know what we're about.
+Look round and say if you can see
+A much more thriving family.
+There's JACK, the Doctor--night and day
+ Hundreds of patients so besiege him,
+You'd swear that all the rich and gay
+ Fell sick on purpose to oblige him.
+And while they think, the precious ninnies,
+ He's counting o'er their pulse so steady,
+The rogue but counts how many guineas
+ He's fobbed for that day's work already.
+I'll ne'er forget the old maid's alarm,
+ When, feeling thus Miss Sukey Flirt, he
+Said, as he dropt her shrivelled arm,
+ "Damned bad this morning--only thirty!"
+
+Your dowagers, too, every one,
+ So generous are, when they call _him_ in,
+That he might now retire upon
+ The rheumatisms of three old women.
+Then whatsoe'er your ailments are,
+ He can so learnedly explain ye'em--
+Your cold of course is a _catarrh_,
+ Your headache is a _hemi-cranium_:--
+His skill too in young ladies' lungs,
+ The grace with which, most mild of men,
+He begs them to put out their tongues.
+ Then bids them--put them in again;
+In short, there's nothing now like JACK!--
+ Take all your doctors great and small,
+Of present times and ages back,
+ Dear Doctor FUDGE is worth them all.
+
+So much for physic--then, in law too,
+ Counsellor TIM, to thee we bow;
+Not one of us gives more éclat to
+ The immortal name of FUDGE than thou.
+Not to expatiate on the art
+With which you played the patriot's part,
+Till something good and snug should offer;--
+ Like one, who, by the way he acts
+The _enlightening_ part of candle-snuffer,
+ The manager's keen eye attracts,
+And is promoted thence by him
+To strut in robes, like thee, my TIM!--
+_Who_ shall describe thy powers of face,
+Thy well-fed zeal in every case,
+Or wrong or right--but ten times warmer
+(As suits thy calling) in the former--
+Thy glorious, lawyer-like delight
+In puzzling all that's clear and right,
+Which, tho' conspicuous in thy youth,
+ Improves so with a wig and band on,
+That all thy pride's to waylay Truth,
+ And leave her not a leg to stand on.
+Thy patent prime morality,--
+ Thy cases cited from the Bible--
+Thy candor when it falls to thee
+ To help in trouncing for a libel;--
+"God knows, I, from my soul, profess
+ "To hate all bigots and be-nighters!
+"God knows, I love, to even excess,
+"The sacred Freedom of the Press,
+ "My only aim's to--crush the writers."
+These are the virtues, TIM, that draw
+ The briefs into thy bag so fast;
+And these, oh TIM--if Law be Law--
+ Will raise thee to the Bench at last.
+
+I blush to see this letter's length--
+ But 'twas my wish to prove to thee
+How full of hope, and wealth, and strength,
+ Are all our precious family.
+And, should affairs go on as pleasant
+As, thank the Fates, they do at present--
+Should we but still enjoy the sway
+Of SIDMOUTH and of CASTLEREAGH,
+I hope, ere long, to see the day
+When England's wisest statesmen, judges,
+Lawyers, peers, will all be--FUDGES!
+
+Good-by--my paper's out so nearly,
+I've room only for
+ Yours sincerely.
+
+
+[1] Lord C.'s tribute to the character of his friend, Mr. Reynolds, will
+long be remembered with equal credit to both.
+
+[2] It was not under wigs, but tiaras, that King Midas endeavored to
+conceal these appendages. The Noble Giver of the toast, however, had
+evidently, with his usual clearness, confounded King Midas, Mr. Liston,
+and the Prince Regent together.
+
+[3] Mr. Fudge and his friends ought to go by this name--as the man who,
+some years since, saved the late Right Hon. George Rose from drowning, was
+ever after called _Salvator Rosa_.
+
+[4] His Lordship, during one of the busiest periods of his Ministerial
+career, took lessons three times a week from a celebrated music-master, in
+glee-singing.
+
+[5] How amply these two propensities of the Noble Lord would have been
+gratified among that ancient people of Etruria, who, as Aristotle tells
+us, used to whip their slaves once a year to the sound of flutes!
+
+[6] The rapidity of this Noble Lord's transformation, at the same instant,
+into a Lord of the Bed-chamber and an opponent of the Catholic Claims, was
+truly miraculous.
+
+[7] _Turn instantly_--a frequent direction in music-books.
+
+[8] The Irish diminutive of _Squire_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER VII.
+
+FROM PHELIM CONNOR TO--.
+
+
+Before we sketch the Present--let us cast
+A few, short, rapid glances to the Past.
+
+When he, who had defied all Europe's strength,
+Beneath his own weak rashness sunk at length;--
+When, loosed as if by magic from a chain
+That seemed like Fate's the world was free again,
+And Europe saw, rejoicing in the sight,
+The cause of Kings, _for once_, the cause of Right;--
+Then was, indeed, an hour of joy to those
+Who sighed for justice--liberty--repose,
+And hoped the fall of _one_ great vulture's nest
+Would ring its warning round, and scare the rest.
+All then was bright with promise;--Kings began
+To own a sympathy with suffering Man,
+And man was grateful; Patriots of the South
+Caught wisdom from a Cossack Emperor's mouth,
+And heard, like accents thawed in Northern air,
+Unwonted words of freedom burst forth there!
+
+Who did not hope, in that triumphant time,
+When monarchs, after years of spoil and crime,
+Met round the shrine of Peace, and Heaven lookt on;--
+_Who_ did not hope the lust of spoil was gone;
+That that rapacious spirit, which had played
+The game of Pilnitz o'er so oft, was laid;
+And Europe's Rulers, conscious of the past,
+Would blush and deviate into right at last?
+But no--the hearts, that nurst a hope so fair,
+Had yet to learn what men on thrones can dare;
+Had yet to know, of all earth's ravening things,
+The only _quite_ untameable are Kings!
+Scarce had they met when, to its nature true,
+The instinct of their race broke out anew;
+Promises, treaties, charters, all were vain,
+And "Rapine! rapine!" was the cry again.
+How quick they carved their victims, and how well,
+Let Saxony, let injured Genoa tell;-
+Let all the human stock that, day by day,
+Was, at that Royal slave-mart, truckt away,--
+The million souls that, in the face of heaven,
+Were split to fractions, bartered, sold or given
+To swell some despot Power, too huge before,
+And weigh down Europe with one Mammoth more.
+How safe the faith of Kings let France decide;--
+Her charter broken, ere its ink had dried;--
+Her Press enthralled--her Reason mockt again
+With all the monkery it had spurned in vain;
+Her crown disgraced by one, who dared to own
+He thankt not France but England for his throne;
+Her triumphs cast into the shade by those,
+Who had grown old among her bitterest foes,
+And now returned, beneath her conqueror's shields,
+Unblushing slaves! to claim her heroes' fields;
+To tread down every trophy of her fame,
+And curse that glory which to them was shame!--
+Let these--let all the damning deeds, that then
+Were dared thro' Europe, cry aloud to men,
+With voice like that of crashing ice that rings
+Round Alpine huts, the perfidy of Kings;
+And tell the world, when hawks shall harmless bear
+The shrinking dove, when wolves shall learn to spare
+The helpless victim for whose blood they lusted,
+Then and then only monarchs may be trusted.
+
+It could not last--these horrors _could_ not last--
+France would herself have risen in might to cast
+The insulters off--and oh! that then as now,
+Chained to some distant islet's rocky brow,
+NAPOLEON ne'er had come to force, to blight,
+Ere half matured, a cause so proudly bright;--
+To palsy patriot arts with doubt and shame,
+And write on Freedom's flag a despot's name;--
+To rush into the list, unaskt, alone,
+And make the stake of _all_ the game of _one_!
+Then would the world have seen again what power
+A people can put forth in Freedom's hour;
+Then would the fire of France once more have blazed;--
+For every single sword, reluctant raised
+In the stale cause of an oppressive throne,
+Millions would then have leaped forth in her own;
+And never, never had the unholy stain
+Of Bourbon feet disgraced her shores again.
+
+But fate decreed not so--the Imperial Bird,
+That, in his neighboring cage, unfeared, unstirred,
+Had seemed to sleep with head beneath his wing,
+Yet watched the moment for a daring spring;--
+Well might he watch, when deeds were done, that made
+His own transgressions whiten in their shade;
+Well might he hope a world thus trampled o'er
+By clumsy tyrants would be his once more:--
+Forth from his cage the eagle burst; to light,
+From steeple on to steeple[1] winged his flight,
+With calm and easy grandeur, to that throne
+From which a Royal craven just had flown;
+And resting there, as in his eyry, furled
+Those wings, whose very rustling shook the world!
+
+ What was your fury then, ye crowned array,
+Whose feast of spoil, whose plundering holiday
+Was thus broke up, in all its greedy mirth,
+By one bold chieftain's stamp on Gallic earth!
+Fierce was the cry, and fulminant the ban,--
+"Assassinate, who will--enchain, who can,
+"The vile, the faithless, outlawed, lowborn man!"
+"Faithless!"--and this from _you_--from _you_, forsooth,
+Ye pious Kings, pure paragons of truth,
+Whose honesty all knew, for all had tried;
+Whose true Swiss zeal had served on every side;
+Whose fame for breaking faith so long was known,
+Well might ye claim the craft as all your own,
+And lash your lordly tails and fume to see
+Such low-born apes of Royal perfidy!
+Yes--yes--to you alone did it belong
+To sin for ever, and yet ne'er do wrong,--
+The frauds, the lies of Lords legitimate
+Are but fine policy, deep strokes of state;
+But let some upstart dare to soar so high
+In Kingly craft, and "outlaw" is the cry!
+What, tho' long years of mutual treachery
+Had peopled full your diplomatic shelves
+With ghosts of treaties, murdered 'mong yourselves;
+Tho' each by turns was knave and dupe--what then?
+A holy League would set all straight again;
+Like JUNO'S virtue, which a dip or two
+In some blest fountain made as good as new!
+Most faithful Russia--faithful to whoe'er
+Could plunder best and give him amplest share;
+Who, even when vanquisht, sure to gain his ends,
+For want of _foes_ to rob, made free with _friends_,[2]
+And, deepening still by amiable gradations,
+When foes were stript of all, then fleeced relations![3]
+Most mild and saintly Prussia--steeped to the ears
+In persecuted Poland's blood and tears,
+And now, with all her harpy wings outspread
+O'er severed Saxony's devoted head!
+Pure Austria too--whose history naught repeats
+But broken leagues and subsidized defeats;
+Whose faith, as Prince, extinguisht Venice shows,
+Whose faith, as man, a widowed daughter knows!
+And thou, oh England--who, tho' once as shy
+As cloistered maids, of shame or perfidy,
+Art now _broke in_, and, thanks to CASTLEREAGH,
+In all that's worst and falsest lead'st the way!
+
+Such was the pure divan, whose pens and wits
+The escape from Elba frightened into fits;--
+Such were the saints, who doomed NAPOLEON'S life,
+In virtuous frenzy, to the assassin's knife.
+Disgusting crew!--_who_ would not gladly fly
+To open, downright, bold-faced tyranny,
+To honest guilt, that dares do all but lie,
+From the false, juggling craft of men like these,
+Their canting crimes and varnisht villanies;--
+These Holy Leaguers, who then loudest boast
+Of faith and honor, when they've stained them most;
+From whose affection men should shrink as loath
+As from their hate, for they'll be fleeced by both;
+Who, even while plundering, forge Religion's name
+To frank their spoil, and without fear or shame
+Call down the Holy Trinity[4] to bless
+Partition leagues and deeds of devilishness!
+But hold--enough--soon would this swell of rage
+O'erflow the boundaries of my scanty page;--
+So, here I pause--farewell--another day,
+Return we to those Lords of prayer and prey,
+Whose loathsome cant, whose frauds by right divine,
+Deserve a lash--oh! weightier far than mine!
+
+
+[1] Napoleon's Proclamation on landing from Elba.
+
+[2] At the Peace of Tilsit, where he abandoned his ally, Prussia, to
+France, and received a portion of her territory.
+
+[3] The seizure of Finland from his relative of Sweden.
+
+[4] The usual preamble of these flagitious compacts. In the same spirit,
+Catherine, after the dreadful massacre of Warsaw, ordered a solemn
+"thanksgiving to God in all the churches, for the blessings conferred upon
+the Poles"; and commanded that each of them should "swear fidelity and
+loyalty to her, and to shed in her defence the last drop of their blood,
+as they should answer for it to God, and his terrible judgment, kissing
+the holy word and cross of their Saviour!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER VIII.
+
+FROM MR. BOB FUDGE TO RICHARD ----, ESQ.
+
+
+Dear DICK, while old DONALDSON'S[1] mending my stays,--
+Which I _knew_ would go smash with me one of these days,
+And, at yesterday's dinner, when, full to the throttle,
+We lads had begun our dessert with a bottle
+Of neat old Constantia, on _my_ leaning back
+Just to order another, by Jove, I went crack!--
+Or, as honest TOM said, in his nautical phrase,
+"Damn my eyes, BOB, in _doubling_ the _Cape_ you've _missed
+ stays_."[2]
+So, of course, as no gentleman's seen out without them,
+They're now at the _Schneider's_[3]--and, while he's about them,
+Here goes for a letter, post-haste, neck and crop.
+Let us see--in my last I was--where did I stop?
+Oh! I know--at the Boulevards, as motley a road as
+ Man ever would wish a day's lounging upon;
+With its cafés and gardens, hotels and pagodas,
+ Its founts and old Counts sipping beer in the sun:
+With its houses of all architectures you please,
+From the Grecian and Gothic, DICK, down by degrees
+To the pure Hottentot or the Brighton Chinese;
+Where in temples antique you may breakfast or dinner it,
+Lunch at a mosque and see Punch from a minaret.
+Then, DICK, the mixture of bonnets and bowers.
+Of foliage and frippery, _fiacres_ and flowers,
+Green-grocers, green gardens--one hardly knows whether
+'Tis country or town, they're so messed up together!
+And there, if one loves the romantic, one sees
+Jew clothes-men, like shepherds, reclined under trees;
+Or Quidnuncs, on Sunday, just fresh from the barber's,
+Enjoying their news and _groseille_[4] in those arbors;
+While gayly their wigs, like the tendrils, are curling,
+And founts of red currant-juice[5] round them are purling.
+
+Here, DICK, arm in arm as we chattering stray,
+And receive a few civil "Goddems" by the way,--
+For, 'tis odd, these mounseers,--tho' we've wasted our wealth
+ And our strength, till we've thrown ourselves into a phthisic;--
+To cram down their throats an old King for their health.
+ As we whip little children to make them take physic;--
+Yet, spite of our good-natured money and slaughter,
+They hate us, as Beelzebub hates holy-water!
+But who the deuce cares, DICK, as long as they nourish us
+Neatly as now, and good cookery flourishes--
+Long as, by bayonets protected, we Natties
+May have our full fling at their _salmis_ and _pâtés_?
+And, truly, I always declared 'twould be pity
+To burn to the ground such a choice-feeding city.
+Had _Dad_ but his way, he'd have long ago blown
+The whole batch to old Nick--and the _people_, I own,
+If for no other cause than their curst monkey looks,
+Well deserve a blow-up--but then, damn it, their Cooks!
+As to Marshals, and Statesmen, and all their whole lineage,
+For aught that _I_ care, you may knock them to spinage;
+But think, DICK, their Cooks--what a loss to mankind!
+What a void in the world would their art leave behind!
+Their chronometer spits--their intense salamanders--
+Their ovens--their pots, that can soften old ganders,
+All vanisht for ever,--their miracles o'er,
+And the _Marmite Perpétuelle_ bubbling no more!
+Forbid it, forbid it, ye Holy Allies!
+ Take whatever ye fancy--take statues, take money--
+But leave them, oh leave them, their Perigueux pies,
+ Their glorious goose-livers and high pickled tunny!
+Tho' many, I own, are the evils they've brought us,
+ Tho' Royalty's here on her very last legs,
+Yet who can help loving the land that has taught us
+ Six hundred and eighty-five ways to dress eggs?
+
+You see, DICK, in spite of them cries of "God-dam,"
+_"Coquin Anglais," et cetera_--how generous I am!
+And now (to return, once again, to my "Day,"
+Which will take us all night to get thro' in this way.)
+From the Boulevards we saunter thro' many a street,
+Crack jokes on the natives--mine, all very neat--
+Leave the Signs of the Times to political fops,
+And find _twice_ as much fun in the Signs of the Shops;--
+_Here_, a Louis Dix-huit--_there_, a Martinmas goose,
+(Much in vogue since your eagles are gone out of use)--
+Henri Quatres in shoals, and of Gods a great many,
+But Saints are the most on hard duty of any:--
+St. TONY, who used all temptations to spurn,
+_Here_ hangs o'er a beer-shop, and tempts in his turn;
+While _there_ St. VENECIA[6] sits hemming and frilling her
+Holy _mouchoir_ o'er the door of some milliner;--
+Saint AUSTIN'S the "outward and visible sign
+"Of an inward" cheap dinner, and pint of small wine;
+While St. DENYS hangs out o'er some hatter of _ton_,
+And possessing, good bishop, no head of his own,[7]
+Takes an interest in Dandies, who've got--next to none!
+Then we stare into shops--read the evening's _affiches_--
+Or, if some, who're Lotharios in feeding, should wish
+Just to flirt with a luncheon, (a devilish bad trick,
+As it takes off the bloom of one's appetite, DICK.)
+To the _Passage des_--what d'ye call't--_des Panoramas_[8]
+We quicken our pace, and there heartily cram as
+Seducing young _pâtés_, as ever could cozen
+One out of one's appetite, down by the dozen.
+We vary, of course--_petits pâtés_ do _one_ day,
+The _next_ we've our lunch with the Gauffrier Hollandais,[9]
+That popular artist, who brings out, like SCOTT,
+His delightful productions so quick, hot and hot;
+Not the worse for the exquisite comment that follows,--
+Divine _maresquino_, which--Lord, how one swallows!
+Once more, then, we saunter forth after our snack, or
+Subscribe a few francs for the price of a _fiacre_,
+And drive far away to the old _Montagnes Russes_,
+Where we find a few twirls in the car of much use
+To regenerate the hunger and thirst of us sinners,
+Who've lapst into snacks--the perdition of dinners.
+And here, DICK--in answer to one of your queries,
+ About which we Gourmands have had much discussion--
+I've tried all these mountains, Swiss, French, and Ruggieri's,
+ And think, for _digestion_,[10] there's none like the Russian;
+So equal the motion--so gentle, tho' fleet--
+ It in short such a light and salubrious scamper is,
+That take whom you please--take old Louis DIX-HUIT,
+ And stuff him--ay, up to the neck--with stewed lampreys,[11]
+So wholesome these Mounts, such a _solvent_ I've found them,
+That, let me but rattle the Monarch well down them,
+The fiend, Indigestion, would fly far away,
+And the regicide lampreys[12] be foiled of their prey!
+Such, DICK, are the classical sports that content us,
+Till five o'clock brings on that hour so momentous,
+That epoch--but whoa! my lad--here comes the _Schneider_,
+And, curse him, has made the stays three inches wider--
+Too wide by an inch and a half--what a Guy!
+But, no matter--'twill all be set right by-and-by.
+As we've MASSINOT's[13] eloquent _carte_ to eat still up.
+An inch and a half's but a trifle to fill up.
+So--not to lose time, DICK--here goes for the task;
+_Au revoir_, my old boy--of the Gods I but ask
+That my life, like "the Leap of the German," may be,
+_"Du lit à la table, d'la table du lit!"_
+
+R. F.
+
+
+[1] An English tailor at Paris.
+
+[2] A ship is said to miss stays, when she does not obey the helm in
+tacking.
+
+[3] The dandy term for a tailor.
+
+[4] "Lemonade and _eau-de-groseille_ are measured out at every corner
+of every street, from fantastic vessels, jingling with bells, to thirsty
+tradesmen or wearied messengers."--See Lady Morgan's lively description of
+the streets of Paris, in her very amusing work upon France, book vi.
+
+[5] These gay, portable fountains, from which the groseille water is
+administered, are among the most characteristic ornaments of the streets
+of Paris.
+
+[6] Veronica, the Saint of the Holy Handkerchief, is also, under the name
+of Venisse or Venecia, the tutelary saint of milliners.
+
+[7] St. Denys walked three miles after his head was cut off.
+
+[8] Off the Boulevards Italiens.
+
+[9] In the Palais Royal; successor, I believe, to the Flamaud, so long
+celebrated for the _moëlleux_ of his Gaufres.
+
+[10] Doctor Cotterel recommends, for this purpose, the Beaujon or French
+Mountains.
+
+[11] A dish so indigestible that a late novelist at the end of his book,
+could imagine no more summary mode of getting rid of all his heroes and
+heroines than by a hearty supper of stewed lampreys.
+
+[12] They killed Henry I. of England:-"a food [says Hume, gravely], which
+always agreed better with his palate than his constitution."
+
+[13] A famous Restaurateur--now Dupont.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER IX.
+
+PROM PHIL. FUDGE, ESQ., TO
+THE LORD VISCOUNT CASTLEREAGH.
+
+
+My Lord, the Instructions, brought to-day,
+"I shall in all my best obey."
+Your Lordship talks and writes so sensibly!
+And--whatsoe'er some wags may say--
+Oh! not at _all_ incomprehensibly.
+
+I feel the inquiries in your letter
+ About my health and French most flattering;
+Thank ye, my French, tho' somewhat better,
+ Is, on the whole, but weak and smattering:--
+Nothing, of course, that can compare
+With his who made the Congress stare
+(A certain Lord we need not name),
+ Who, even in French, would have his trope,
+And talk of "_batir_ un systême
+ "Sur _l'équilibre_ de l'Europe!"
+Sweet metaphor!--and then the Epistle,
+Which bid the Saxon King go whistle,--
+That tender letter to _"Mon Prince"_[1]
+Which showed alike thy French and sense;--
+Oh no, my Lord--there's none can do
+Or say _un-English_ things like you:
+And, if the schemes that fill thy breast
+ Could but a vent congenial seek,
+And use the tongue that suits them best,
+ What charming Turkish wouldst thou speak!
+But as for _me_, a Frenchless grub,
+ At Congress never born to stammer,
+Nor learn like thee, my Lord, to snub
+ Fallen Monarchs, out of CHAMBAUD'S grammar--
+Bless you, you do not, _can not_, know
+How far a little French will go;
+For all one's stock, one need but draw
+ On some half-dozen words like toese--
+_Comme ça--par-là--là-bas--ah ha_!
+ They'll take you all thro' France with ease.
+Your Lordship's praises of the scraps
+ I sent you from my Journal lately,
+(Enveloping a few laced caps
+ For Lady C,) delight me greatly.
+_Her_ flattering speech--"What pretty things
+ "One finds in Mr. FUDGE's pages!"
+Is praise which (as some poet sings)
+ Would pay one for the toils of ages.
+
+Thus flattered, I presume to send
+A few more extracts by a friend;
+And I should hope they'll be no less
+Approved of than my last MS.--
+The former ones, I fear, were creased,
+ As BIDDY round the caps _would_ pin them;
+But these will come to hand, at least
+ Unrumpled, for there's--nothing in them.
+
+_Extracts from Mr. Fudge's Journal, addressed to Lord C._
+
+_August 10_.
+
+Went to the Mad-house--saw the man[2]
+ Who thinks, poor wretch, that, while the Fiend
+Of Discord here full riot ran,
+ _He_, like the rest, was guillotined;--
+But that when, under BONEY'S reign,
+ (A more discreet, tho' quite as strong one,)
+The heads were all restored again,
+ He, in the scramble, got a _wrong one_.
+Accordingly, he still cries out
+ This strange head fits him most unpleasantly;
+And always runs, poor devil, about,
+Inquiring for his own incessantly!
+
+While to his case a tear I dropt,
+ And sauntered home, thought I--ye Gods!
+How many heads might thus be swopt,
+ And, after all, not make much odds!
+For instance, there's VANSITTART'S head--
+("Tam _carum_" it may well be said)
+If by some curious chance it came
+ To settle on BILL SOAMES'S[3] shoulders,
+The effect would turn out much the same
+ On all respectable cash-holders;
+Except that while, in its _new_ socket,
+ The head was planning schemes to win
+A _zig-zag_ way into one's pocket,
+ The hands would plunge directly in.
+
+Good Viscount SIDMOUTH, too, instead
+Of his own grave, respected head,
+Might wear (for aught I see that bars)
+ Old Lady WILHELMINA FRUMP'S--
+So while the hand signed _Circulars_,
+ The head might lisp out "What is trumps?"--
+The REGENT'S brains could we transfer
+To some robust man-milliner,
+The shop, the shears, the lace, and ribbon
+Would go, I doubt not, quite as glib on;
+And, _vice versa_, take the pains
+To give the PRINCE the shopman's brains,
+One only change from thence would flow,
+_Ribbons_ would not be wasted so.
+
+'Twas thus I pondered on, my Lord;
+ And, even at night, when laid in bed,
+I found myself, before I snored,
+ Thus chopping, swopping head for head.
+At length I thought, fantastic elf!
+How such a change would suit _myself_.
+'Twixt sleep and waking, one by one,
+ With various pericraniums saddled,
+At last I tried your Lordship's on,
+ And then I grew completely addled--
+Forgot all other heads, od rot 'em!
+And slept, and dreamt that I was--BOTTOM.
+
+_August 21_.
+
+Walked out with daughter BID--was shown
+The House of Commons and the Throne,
+Whose velvet cushion's just the same
+NAPOLEON sat on--what a shame!
+Oh! can we wonder, best of speechers,
+ When LOUIS seated thus we see,
+That France's "fundamental features"
+ Are much the same they used to be?
+However,--God preserve the Throne,
+ And _cushion_ too--and keep them free;
+From accidents, which _have_ been known
+ To happen even to Royalty![4]
+
+_August 28_.
+
+Read, at a stall (for oft one pops
+On something at these stalls and shops,
+That does to _quote_ and gives one's Book
+A classical and knowing look.--
+Indeed, I've found, in Latin, lately,
+A course of stalls improves me greatly)--
+'Twas thus I read that in the East
+ A monarch's _fat_'s a serious matter;
+And once in every year, at least,
+ He's weighed--to see if he gets fatter:[5]
+Then, if a pound or two he be
+Increased, there's quite a jubilee![6]
+Suppose, my Lord--and far from me
+To treat such things with levity--
+But just suppose the Regent's weight
+Were made thus an affair of state;
+And, every sessions, at the close,--
+ 'Stead of a speech, which, all can see, is
+Heavy and dull enough, God knows--
+ We were to try how heavy _he_ is.
+Much would it glad all hearts to hear--
+ That, while the Nation's Revenue
+Loses so many pounds a year,
+ The PRINCE, God bless him! _gains_ a few.
+With bales of muslin, chintzes, spices,
+ I see the Easterns weigh their Kings;--
+But, for the REGENT, my advice is,
+ We should throw in much _heavier_ things:
+For instance-----'s quarto volumes,
+ Which, tho' not spices, serve to wrap them;
+_Dominie_ STODDART'S Daily columns,
+ "Prodigious!"--in, of course, we'd clap them--
+Letters, that CARTWRIGHT'S[7] pen indites,
+ In which, with logical confusion,
+The _Major_ like a _Minor_ writes,
+ And never comes to a _Conclusion_:--
+Lord SOMERS'S pamphlet--or his head--
+(Ah! _that_ were worth its weight in lead!)
+Along with which we _in_ may whip, sly,
+The Speeches of Sir JOHN COX HIPPISLY;
+That Baronet of many words,
+Who loves so, in the House of Lords,
+To whisper Bishops--and so nigh
+ Unto their wigs in whispering goes,
+That you may always know him by
+ A patch of powder on his nose!--
+If this won’t do, we in must cram
+The "Reasons" of Lord BUCKINGHAM;
+(A Book his Lordship means to write,
+ Entitled "Reasons for my Ratting":)
+Or, should these prove too small and light,
+ His rump's a host--we'll bundle _that_ in!
+And, _still_ should all these masses fail
+To stir the REGENT'S pondrous scale,
+Why, then, my Lord, in heaven's name,
+ Pitch in, without reserve or stint,
+The whole of RAGLEY'S beauteous Dame--
+ If _that_ won’t raise him, devil's in it!
+
+_August 31_.
+
+Consulted MURPHY'S TACITUS
+ About those famous spies at Rome,[8]
+Whom certain Whigs--to make a fuss--
+Describe as much resembling us,
+ Informing gentlemen, at home.
+But, bless the fools, they _can't_ be serious,
+To say Lord SIDMOUTH'S like TIBERIUS!
+What! _he_, the Peer, that injures no man,
+Like that severe, blood-thirsty Roman!--
+'Tis true, the Tyrant lent an ear to
+All sorts of spies--so doth the Peer, too.
+'Tis true, my Lord's elect tell fibs,
+And deal in perjury--_ditto_ TIB's.
+'Tis true, the Tyrant screened and hid
+His rogues from justice--_ditto_ SID.
+'Tis true the Peer is grave and glib
+At moral speeches--_ditto_ TIB.
+'Tis true the feats the Tyrant did
+Were in his dotage--_ditto_ SID.
+
+So far, I own, the parallel
+'Twixt TIB and SIB goes vastly well;
+But there are points in TIB that strike
+My humble mind as much more like
+_Yourself_, my dearest Lord, or him,
+Of the India Board--that soul of whim!
+Like him, TIBERIUS loved his joke,
+ On matters, too, where few can bear one;
+_E. g._ a man cut up, or broke
+ Upon the wheel--a devilish fair one!
+Your common fractures, wounds and fits,
+Are nothing to such wholesale wits;
+But, let the sufferer gasp for life,
+ The joke is then, worth any money;
+And, if he writhe beneath a knife,--
+ Oh dear, that's something _quite_ too funny.
+In this respect, my Lord, you see
+The Roman wag and ours agree:
+Now as to _your_ resemblance--mum--
+ This parallel we need not follow:
+Tho' 'tis, in Ireland, said by some
+ Your Lordship beats TIBERIUS hollow;
+Whips, chains--but these are things too serious
+ For me to mention or discuss;
+Whene'er your Lordship acts TIBERIUS,
+ PHIL. FUDGE'S part is _Tacitus_!
+
+_September 2_.
+
+Was thinking, had Lord SIDMOUTH got
+Any good decent sort of Plot
+Against the winter-time--if not,
+Alas, alas, our ruin's fated;
+All done up and _spiflicated_!
+Ministers and all their vassals,
+Down from CASTLEREAGH to CASTLES,--
+Unless we can kick up a riot,
+Ne'er can hope for peace or quiet!
+What's to be done?--Spa-Fields was clever;
+ But even _that_ brought gibes and mockings
+Upon our heads--so, _mem._--must never
+ Keep ammunition in old stockings;
+For fear some wag should in his curst head
+Take it to say our force was _worsted.
+Mem._ too--when SID an army raises,
+It must not be "_incog._" like _Bayes's_:
+Nor must the General be a hobbling
+Professor of the art of cobbling;
+Lest men, who perpetrate such puns,
+Should say, with Jacobinic grin,
+He felt, from _soleing Wellingtons_,[9]
+ A _Wellington's_ great _soul_ within!
+Nor must an old Apothecary
+ Go take the Tower, for lack of pence,
+With (what these wags would call, so merry,)
+ _Physical_ force and _phial_-ence!
+No--no--our Plot, my Lord, must be
+Next time contrived more skilfully.
+John Bull, I grieve to say, is growing
+So troublesomely sharp and knowing,
+So wise--in short, so Jacobin--
+'Tis monstrous hard to _take him in_.
+
+_September 6_.
+
+Heard of the fate of our Ambassador
+ In China, and was sorely nettled;
+But think, my Lord, we should not pass it o'er
+ Till all this matter's fairly settled;
+And here's the mode occurs to _me_:--
+As none of our Nobility,
+Tho' for their _own_ most gracious King
+(They would kiss hands, or--anything),
+Can be persuaded to go thro'
+This farce-like trick of the _Ko-tou_;
+And as these Mandarins _won't_ bend,
+ Without some mumming exhibition,
+Suppose, my Lord, you were to send
+ GRIMALDI to them on a mission:
+As _Legate_, JOE could play his part,
+And if, in diplomatic art,
+The "_volto sciolto_"'s meritorius,[10]
+Let JOE but grin, he has it, glorious!
+
+A _title_ for him's easily made;
+ And, by the by, one Christmas time,
+If I remember right, he played
+ Lord MORLEY in some pantomime:--[1]
+As Earl of Morley then gazette him,
+If _t'other_ Earl of MORLEY'll let him,
+(And why should not the world be blest
+"With _two_ such stars, for East and West?)
+Then, when before the Yellow Screen
+ He's brought--and, sure, the very essence
+Of etiquette would be that scene
+ Of JOE in the Celestial Presence!--
+
+He thus should say:--"Duke Ho and Soo,
+"I'll play what tricks you please for you,
+"If you'll, in turn, but do for me
+"A few small tricks you now shall see.
+"If I consult _your_ Emperor's liking,
+"At least you'll do the same for _my_ King."
+
+He then should give them nine such grins,
+As would astound even Mandarins;
+And throw such somersets before
+ The picture of King GEORGE (God bless him!)
+As, should Duke Ho but try them o'er,
+ Would, by CONFUCIUS, _much_ distress him!
+
+I start this merely as a hint,
+But think you'll find some wisdom in't;
+And, should you follow up the job,
+My son, my Lord (you _know_ poor BOB),
+Would in the suite be glad to go
+And help his Excellency, JOE:--
+At least, like noble AMHERST'S son,
+The lad will do to _practise_ on.
+
+
+[1] The celebrated letter to Prince Hardenburgh (written, however, I
+believe, originally in English) in which his Lordship, professing to see
+"no moral or political objection" to the dismemberment of Saxony,
+denounced the unfortunate King as "not only the most devoted, but the most
+favored, of Bonaparte's vassals".
+
+[2] This extraordinary madman is, I believe, in the Bicêtre. He imagines,
+exactly as Mr. Fudge states it, that when the heads of those who had been
+guillotined were restored, he by mistake got some other person's instead
+of his own.
+
+[3] A celebrated pickpocket.
+
+[4] I am afraid that Mr. Fudge alludes here to a very awkward accident,
+which is well known to have happened to poor Louis le Désiré, some years
+since, at one of the Regent's Fêtes. He was sitting next our gracious
+Queen at the time.
+
+[5] "The third day of the Feast the King causeth himself to be weighed
+with great care,"--_F. Bernier's "Voyage to Surat," etc_.
+
+[6] "I remember," says Bernier, "that all the Omrahs expressed great joy
+that the King weighed two pounds more now than the year preceding."--
+Another author tells us that "Fatness, as well as a very large head, is
+considered, throughout India, as one of the most precious gifts of
+heaven." An enormous skull is absolutely revered, and the happy owner is
+looked up to as a superior being. To a _Prince_ a joulter head is
+invaluable."--_Oriental Field Sports_.
+
+[7] Major Cartwright.
+
+[8] The name of the first worthy who set up the trade of informer at Rome
+(to whom our Olivers and Castleses ought to erect a statue) was Romanus
+Hispo.
+
+[9] Short boots so called.
+
+[10] The _open countenance_, recommended by Lord Chesterfield.
+
+[11] Mr. Fudge is a little mistaken here. It was _not_ Grimaldi, but some
+very inferior performer, who played this part of "Lord Morley" in the
+Pantomime,--so much to the horror of the distinguished Earl of that name.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER X.
+
+FROM MISS BIDDY FUDGE TO MISS DOROTHY ----.
+
+
+Well, it _isn't_ the King, after all, my dear creature!
+ But _don't_ you go laugh, now--there's nothing to quiz in't--
+For grandeur of air and for grimness of feature,
+ He _might_ be a King, DOLL, tho', hang him, he isn't.
+At first, I felt hurt, for I wisht it, I own,
+If for no other cause but to vex Miss MALONE,--
+(The great heiress, you know, of Shandangan, who's here,
+Showing off with _such_ airs, and a real Cashmere,
+While mine's but a paltry, old rabbit-skin, dear!)
+But Pa says, on deeply considering the thing,
+"I am just as well pleased it should _not_ be the King;
+"As I think for my BIDDY, so _gentille_ and _jolie_.
+ "Whose charms may their price in an _honest_ way fetch,
+"That a Brandenburgh"--(what _is_ a Brandenburgh, DOLLY?)--
+ "Would be, after all, no such very great catch.
+"If the REGENT indeed"--added he, looking sly--
+(You remember that comical squint of his eye)
+But I stopt him with "La, Pa, how _can_ you say so,
+"When the REGENT loves none but old women, you know!"
+Which is fact, my dear DOLLY--we, girls of eighteen,
+And so slim--Lord, he'd think us not fit to be seen:
+And would like us much better as old-as, as old
+As that Countess of DESMOND, of whom I've been told
+That she lived to much more than a hundred and ten,
+And was killed by a fall from a cherry-tree then!
+What a frisky old girl! but--to come to my lover,
+Who, tho' not a King, is a _hero_ I'll swear,--
+You shall hear all that's happened, just briefly run over,
+Since that happy night, when we whiskt thro' the air!
+
+Let me see--'twas on Saturday--yes, DOLLY, yes--
+From that evening I date the first dawn of my bliss;
+When we both rattled off in that dear little carriage,
+Whose journey, BOB says, is so like Love and Marriage,
+"Beginning gay, desperate, dashing, down-hilly,
+"And ending as dull as a six-inside Dilly!"[1]
+Well, scarcely a wink did I sleep the night thro';
+And, next day, having scribbled my letter to you,
+With a heart full of hope this sweet fellow to meet,
+I set out with Papa, to see Louis DIX-HUIT
+Make his bow to some half-dozen women and boys,
+Who get up a small concert of shrill _Vive le Rois_-
+And how vastly genteeler, my dear, even this is,
+Than vulgar Pall-Mall's oratorio of hisses!
+The gardens seemed full--so, of Course, we walkt o'er 'em,
+'Mong orange-trees, clipt into town-bred decorum,
+And daphnes and vases and many a statue
+There staring, with not even a stitch on them, at you!
+The ponds, too, we viewed--stood awhile on the brink
+To contemplate the play of those pretty gold fishes--
+"_Live bullion_," says merciless BOB, "which, I think,
+"Would, if _coined_, with a little _mint_ sauce, be delicious!"
+
+But _what_, DOLLY, what, is the gay orange-grove,
+Or gold fishes, to her that's in search of her love?
+In vain did I wildly explore every chair
+Where a thing _like_ a man was--no lover sat there!
+In vain my fond eyes did I eagerly cast
+At the whiskers, mustachios and wigs that went past,
+To obtain if I could but a glance at that curl,--
+A glimpse of those whiskers, as sacred, my girl,
+As the lock that, Pa says,[2]is to Mussulman given,
+For the angel to hold by that "lugs them to heaven!"
+Alas, there went by me full many a quiz,
+And mustachios in plenty, but nothing like his!
+Disappointed, I found myself sighing out "well-a-day,"--
+Thought of the words of TOM MOORE'S Irish Melody,
+Something about the "green spot of delight"
+(Which, you know, Captain MACKINTOSH sung to us one day):
+Ah DOLLY, _my_ "spot" was that Saturday night,
+And its verdure, how fleeting, had withered by Sunday!
+We dined at a tavern--La, what do I say?
+
+ If BOB was to know!--a _Restaurateur's_, dear;
+Where your _properest_ ladies go dine every day,
+ And drink Burgundy out of large tumblers, like beer.
+Fine BOB (for he's really grown _super_-fine)
+ Condescended for once to make one of the party;
+Of course, tho' but three, we had dinner for nine,
+ And in spite of my grief, love, I own I ate hearty.
+Indeed, DOLL, I know not how 'tis, but, in grief,
+I have always found eating a wondrous relief;
+And BOB, who's in love, said he felt the same, _quite_--
+ "My sighs," said he, "ceased with the first glass I drank you;
+"The _lamb_ made me tranquil, the _puffs_ made me light,
+ "And--now that all's o'er--why, I'm--pretty well, thank you!"
+
+To _my_ great annoyance, we sat rather late;
+For BOBBY and Pa had a furious debate
+About singing and cookery--BOBBY, of course,
+Standing up for the latter Fine Art in full force;
+And Pa saying, "God only knows which is worst,
+ "The French Singers or Cooks, but I wish us well over it--
+"What with old LAÏ'S and VÉRY, I'm curst
+ "If _my_ head or my stomach will ever recover it!"
+
+'Twas dark when we got to the Boulevards to stroll,
+ And in vain did I look 'mong the street Macaronis,
+When, sudden it struck me--last hope of my soul--
+ That some angel might take the dear man to TORTONI'S![3]
+We entered--and, scarcely had BOB, with an air,
+ For a _grappe à la jardinière_ called to the waiters,
+When, oh DOLL! I saw him--my hero was there
+ (For I knew his white small-clothes and brown leather gaiters),
+A group of fair statues from Greece smiling o'er him,[4]
+And lots of red currant-juice sparkling before him!
+Oh! DOLLY, these heroes--what creatures they are;
+ In the _boudoir_ the same as in fields full of slaughter!
+As cool in the Beaujon's precipitous car,
+ As when safe at TORTONI'S, o'er iced currant water!
+He joined us--imagine, dear creature, my ecstasy--
+Joined by the man I'd have broken ten necks to see!
+BOB wished to treat him with Punch _à la glace_,
+But the sweet fellow swore that my _beaute_, my _grâce_,
+And my _ja-ne-sais-quoi_ (then his whiskers he twirled)
+Were to him, "on de top of all Ponch in de vorld."--
+How pretty!--tho' oft (as of course it must be)
+Both his French and his English are Greek, DOLL, to me.
+But, in short, I felt happy as ever fond heart did;
+And happier still, when 'twas fixt, ere we parted,
+That, if the next day should be _pastoral_ weather.
+We all would set off, in French buggies, _together_,
+To see _Montmorency_--that place which, you know,
+Is so famous for cherries and JEAN JACQUES ROUSSEAU.
+His card then he gave us--the _name_, rather creased--
+But 'twas CALICOT--something--a Colonel, at least!
+
+After which--sure there never was hero so civil--he
+Saw us safe home to our door in _Rue Rivoli_,
+Where his _last_ words, as, at parting, he threw
+A soft look o'er his shoulders, were--"How do you do!"
+But, lord!--there's Papa for the post--I'm so vext--
+_Montmorency_ must now, love, be kept for my next.
+That dear Sunday night--I was charmingly drest,
+And--_so_ providential!--was looking my best;
+Such a sweet muslin gown, with a flounce--and my frills,
+You've no notion how rich--(tho' Pa has by the bills)
+And you'd smile had you seen, when we sat rather near,
+Colonel CALICOT eyeing the cambric, my dear.
+Then the flowers in my bonnet--but, la! it's in vain--
+So, good-by, my sweet DOLL--I shall soon write again.
+
+B. F.
+
+_Nota bene_--our love to all neighbors about--
+Your Papa in particular--how is his gout?
+
+P.S.--I've just opened my letter to say,
+In your next you must tell me, (now _do_, DOLLY, pray,
+For I hate to ask BOB, he's so ready to quiz,)
+What sort of a thing, dear, a _Brandenburgh_ is.
+
+
+[1] The cars, on return, are dragged up slowly by a chain.
+
+[2] For this scrap of knowledge "Pa" was, I suspect, indebted to a note
+upon Volney's "Ruins:"
+
+"It is by this tuft of hair (on the crown of the head), worn by the
+majority of Mussulmans, that the Angel of the Tomb is to take the elect
+and carry them to Paradise."
+
+[3] A fashionable _café glacier_ on the Italian Boulevards.
+
+[4] "You eat your ice at Tortoni's," says Mr. Scott, "under a Grecian
+group."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER XI.
+
+FROM PHELIM CONNOR TO ----.
+
+
+Yes, 'twas a cause, as noble and as great
+As ever hero died to vindicate--
+A Nation's right to speak a Nation's voice,
+And own no power but of the Nation's choice!
+Such was the grand, the glorious cause that now
+Hung trembling on NAPOLEON'S single brow;
+Such the sublime arbitrament, that poured,
+In patriot eyes, a light around his sword,
+A hallowing light, which never, since the day
+Of his young victories, had illumed its way!
+
+Oh 'twas not then the time for tame debates,
+Ye men of Gaul, when chains were at your gates;
+When he, who late had fled your Chieftain's eye.
+As geese from eagles on Mount Taurus fly,[1]
+Denounced against the land, that spurned his chain,
+Myriads of swords to bind it fast again--
+Myriads of fierce invading swords, to track
+Thro' your best blood his path of vengeance back;
+When Europe's Kings, that never yet combined
+But (like those upper Stars, that, when conjoined,
+Shed war and pestilence,) to scourge mankind,
+Gathered around, with hosts from every shore,
+Hating NAPOLEON much, but Freedom more,
+And, in that coming strife, appalled to see
+The world yet left one chance for liberty!--
+No, 'twas not _then_ the time to weave a net
+Of bondage round your Chief; to curb and fret
+Your veteran war-horse, pawing for the fight,
+When every hope was in his speed and might--
+To waste the hour of action in dispute,
+And coolly plan how freedom's _boughs_ should shoot,
+When your Invader's axe was at the _root_!
+No sacred Liberty! that God, who throws,
+Thy light around, like His own sunshine, knows
+How well I love thee and how deeply hate
+_All_ tyrants, upstart and Legitimate--
+Yet, in that hour, were France my native land,
+I would have followed, with quick heart and hand,
+NAPOLEON, NERO--ay, no matter whom--
+To snatch my country from that damning doom,
+That deadliest curse that on the conquered waits--
+A Conqueror's satrap, throned within her gates!
+
+True, he was false--despotic--all you please--
+Had trampled down man's holiest liberties--
+Had, by a genius, formed for nobler things
+Than lie within the grasp of _vulgar_ Kings,
+But raised the hopes of men--as eaglets fly
+With tortoises aloft into the sky--
+To dash them down again more shatteringly!
+All this I own--but still
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[1] See Aellan, _lib_. v. _cap_. 29.,--who tells us that these
+geese, from a consciousness of their own loquacity, always cross Mount
+Taurus with stones in their bills, to prevent any unlucky cackle from
+betraying them to the eagles.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER XII.
+
+FROM MISS BIDDY FUDGE TO MISS DOROTHY ----.
+
+
+At last, DOLLY,--thanks to potent emetic,
+Which BOBBY and Pa, grimace sympathetic,
+Have swallowed this morning, to balance the bliss,
+Of an eel _matelote_ and a _bisque d'écrevisses_--
+I've a morning at home to myself, and sit down
+To describe you our heavenly trip out of town.
+How agog you must be for this letter, my dear!
+Lady JANE, in the novel, less languisht to hear,
+If that elegant cornet she met at Lord NEVILLE'S
+Was actually dying with love or--blue devils.
+But Love, DOLLY, Love is the theme _I_ pursue;
+With Blue Devils, thank heaven, I have nothing to do--
+Except, indeed, dear Colonel CALICOT spies
+Any imps of that color in _certain_ blue eyes,
+Which he stares at till _I_, DOLL, at _his_ do the same;
+Then he simpers--I blush--and would often exclaim,
+If I knew but the French for it, "Lord, Sir, for shame!"
+
+ Well, the morning was lovely--the trees in full dress
+For the happy occasion--the sunshine _express_--
+Had we ordered it, dear, of the best poet going,
+It scarce could be furnisht more golden and glowing.
+Tho' late when we started, the scent of the air
+Was like GATTIE'S rose-water,--and, bright, here and there,
+On the grass an odd dew-drop was glittering yet,
+Like my aunt's diamond pin on her green tabbinet!
+While the birds seemed to warble as blest on the boughs,
+As if _each_ a plumed Calicot had for her spouse;
+And the grapes were all blushing and kissing in rows,
+And--in short, need I tell you wherever one goes
+With the creature one loves, 'tis _couleur de rose_;
+And ah! I shall ne'er, lived I ever so long, see
+A day such as that at divine Montmorency!
+
+There was but _one_ drawback--at first when we started,
+The Colonel and I were inhumanly parted;
+How cruel--young hearts of such moments to rob!
+He went in Pa's buggy, and I went with BOB:
+And, I own, I felt spitefully happy to know
+That Papa and his comrade agreed but so-so.
+For the Colonel, it seems, is a stickler of BONEY'S--
+Served _with_ him of course--nay, I'm sure they were cronies.
+So martial his features! dear DOLL, you can trace
+Ulm, Austerlitz, Lodi, as plain in his face
+As you do on that pillar of glory and brass,[1]
+Which the poor DUC DE BERRI must hate so to pass!
+It appears, too, he made--as most foreigners do--
+About English affairs an odd blunder or two.
+For example misled by the names, I dare say--
+He confounded JACK CASTLES with LORD CASTLEREAGH;
+And--sure such a blunder no mortal hit ever on--
+Fancied the _present_ Lord CAMDEN the _clever_ one!
+
+But politics ne'er were the sweet fellow's trade;
+'Twas for war and the ladies my Colonel was made.
+And oh! had you heard, as together we walkt
+Thro' that beautiful forest, how sweetly he talkt;
+And how perfectly well he appeared, DOLL, to know
+All the life and adventures of JEAN JACQUES ROUSSEAU?--
+"'Twas there," said he--not that his _words_ I can state--
+'Twas a gibberish that Cupid alone could translate;--
+But "there," said he, (pointing where, small and remote,
+The dear Hermitage rose), "there his JULIE he wrote,--
+"Upon paper gilt-edged, without blot or erasure;
+"Then sauded it over with silver and azure,
+"And--oh, what will genius and fancy not do!--
+"Tied the leaves up together with _nonpareille_ blue!"
+What a trait of Rousseau! what a crowd of emotions
+ From sand and blue ribbons are conjured up here!
+Alas, that a man of such exquisite notions
+Should send his poor brats to the Foundling, my dear!
+ "'Twas here too perhaps," Colonel CALICOT said--
+As down the small garden he pensively led--
+(Tho' once I could see his sublime forehead wrinkle
+With rage not to find there the loved periwinkle)
+"'Twas here he received from the fair D'ÉPINAY
+"(Who called him so sweetly _her Bear_, every day,)
+"That dear flannel petticoat, pulled off to form
+"A waistcoat, to keep the enthusiast warm!"
+
+Such, DOLL, were the sweet recollections we pondered,
+As, full of romance, thro' that valley we wandered.
+The flannel (one's train of ideas, how odd it is!)
+Led us to talk about other commodities,
+Cambric, and silk, and--I ne'er shall forget,
+For the sun was then hastening in pomp to its set.
+
+And full on the Colonel's dark whiskers shone down,
+When he askt me, with eagerness,--who made my gown?
+The question confused me--for, DOLL, you must know,
+And I _ought_ to have told my best friend long ago,
+That, by Pa's strict command, I no longer employ[2]
+That enchanting _couturière_, Madame LE ROI;
+But am forced now to have VICTORINE, who--deuce take her!--
+It seems is, at present, the King's mantua-maker--
+I mean _of his party_--and, tho' much the smartest,
+LE ROI is condemned as a rank Bonapartist.[3]
+Think, DOLL, how confounded I lookt--so well knowing
+The Colonel's opinions--my cheeks were quite glowing;
+I stammered out something--nay, even half named
+The _legitimate_ sempstress, when, loud, he exclaimed,
+"Yes; yes, by the stitching 'tis plain to be seen
+"It was made by that Bourbonite bitch, VICTORINE!"
+What a word for a hero!--but heroes _will_ err,
+And I thought, dear, I'd tell you things _just_ as they were.
+Besides tho' the word on good manners intrench,
+I assure you 'tis not _half_ so shocking in French.
+
+But this cloud, tho' embarrassing, soon past away,
+And the bliss altogether, the dreams of that day,
+The thoughts that arise, when such dear fellows woo us,--
+The _nothings_ that then, love, are--_everything_ to us--
+That quick correspondence of glances and sighs,
+And what BOB calls the "Two-penny-post of the Eyes"--
+Ah, DOLL! tho' I _know_ you've a heart, 'tis in vain,
+To a heart so unpractised these things to explain.
+They can only be felt, in their fulness divine,
+By her who has wandered, at evening's decline,
+Thro' a valley like that, with a Colonel like mine!
+
+But here I must finish--for BOB, my dear DOLLY,
+Whom physic, I find, always makes melancholy,
+Is seized with a fancy for churchyard reflections;
+And, full of all yesterday's rich recollections,
+Is just setting off for Montmartre--"for _there_ is,"
+Said he, looking solemn, "the tomb of the VÉRYS![4]
+"Long, long have I wisht as a votary true,
+ "O'er the grave of such talents to utter my moans;
+"And, to-day--as my stomach is not in good cue
+ "For the _flesh_ of the VÉRYS--I'll visit their _bones_!"
+He insists upon _my_ going with him--how teasing!
+ This letter, however, dear DOLLY, shall lie
+Unsealed in my drawer, that, if anything pleasing
+ Occurs while I'm out, I may tell you--good-by.
+
+B.F.
+
+_Four o'clock_.
+
+Oh, DOLLY, dear DOLLY, I'm ruined for ever--
+I ne'er shall be happy again, DOLLY, never!
+To think of the wretch--what a victim was I!
+'Tis too much to endure--I shall die, I shall die--
+"My brain's in a fever--my pulses beat quick--
+I shall die or at least be exceedingly sick!
+Oh! what do you think? after all my romancing,
+My visions of glory, my sighing, my glancing,
+This Colonel--I scarce can commit it to paper--
+This Colonel's no more than a vile linen-draper!!
+'Tis true as I live--I had coaxt brother BOB so,
+(You'll hardly make out what I'm writing, I sob so,)
+For some little gift on my birthday--September
+The thirtieth, dear, I'm eighteen, you remember--
+That BOB to a shop kindly ordered the coach,
+ (Ah! little I thought who the shopman would prove,)
+To bespeak me a few of those _mouchoirs de poche_,
+ Which, in happier hours, I have sighed for, my love--
+(The most beautiful things--two Napoleons the price--
+And one's name in the corner embroidered so nice!)
+Well, with heart full of pleasure, I entered the shop.
+But--ye Gods, what a phantom!--I thought I should drop--
+There he stood, my dear DOLLY--no room for a doubt--
+ There, behind the vile counter, these eyes saw him stand,
+With a piece of French cambric, before him rolled out,
+ And that horrid yard-measure upraised in his hand!
+Oh!--Papa, all along, knew the secret,' is clear--
+'Twas _a shopman_ he meant by a "Brandenburgh," dear!
+The man, whom I fondly had fancied a King,
+ And, when _that_ too delightful illusion was past,
+As a hero had worshipt--vile, treacherous thing--
+ To turn out but a low linen-draper at last!
+My head swam around--the wretch smiled, I believe,
+But his smiling, alas, could no longer deceive--
+I fell back on BOB--my whole heart seemed to wither--
+And, pale as a ghost, I was carried back hither!
+I only remember that BOB, as I caught him,
+ With cruel facetiousness said, "Curse the Kiddy!
+"A stanch Revolutionist always I've thought him,
+ "But now I find out he's a _Counter_ one, BIDDY!"
+
+Only think, my dear creature, if this should be known
+To that saucy, satirical thing, Miss MALONE!
+What a story 'twill be at Shandangan for ever!
+ What laughs and what quizzing she'll have with the men!
+It will spread thro' the country--and never, oh! never
+ Can BIDDY be seen at Kilrandy again!
+Farewell--I shall do something desperate, I fear--
+And, ah! if my fate ever reaches your ear,
+One tear of compassion my DOLL will not grudge
+To her poor--broken-hearted--young friend, BIDDY FUDGE.
+
+_Nota bene_--I am sure you will hear, with delight,
+That we're going, all three, to see BRUNET to-night.
+A laugh will revive me--and kind Mr. COX
+(Do you know him?) has got us the Governor's box.
+
+
+[1] The column in the Place Vendôme.
+
+[2] Miss Biddy's notions of French pronunciation may be perceived in the
+rhymes which she always selects for "_Le Roi_."
+
+[3] LE ROI, who was the _Couturière_ of the Empress Maria Louisa, is at
+present, of course, out of fashion, and is succeeded in her station by the
+Royalist mantua-maker, VICTORINE.
+
+[4] It is the _brother_ of the present excellent _Restaurateur_ who lies
+entombed so magnificently in the Cimetière Monmartre.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FUDGES IN ENGLAND
+
+BEING A SEQUEL TO THE
+
+"FUDGE FAMILY IN PARIS."
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The name of the country town, in England--a well-known fashionable
+watering-place--in which the events that gave rise to the following
+correspondence occurred, is, for obvious reasons, suppressed. The interest
+attached, however, to the facts and personages of the story, renders it
+independent of all time and place; and when it is recollected that the
+whole train of romantic circumstances so fully unfolded in these Letters
+has passed during the short period which has now elapsed since the great
+Meetings in Exeter Hall, due credit will, it is hoped, be allowed to the
+Editor for the rapidity with which he has brought the details before the
+Public; while, at the same time any errors that may have been the result
+of such haste will, he trusts, with equal consideration, be pardoned.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FUDGES IN ENGLAND
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER I.
+
+FROM PATRICK MAGAN, ESQ., TO
+THE REV. RICHARD ----; CURATE
+OF ----, IN IRELAND.
+
+
+Who d' ye think we've got here?--quite reformed from the giddy.
+ Fantastic young thing that once made such a noise--
+Why, the famous Miss Fudge--that delectable Biddy,
+ Whom you and I saw once at Paris, when boys,
+In the full blaze of bonnets, and ribands, and airs--
+ Such a thing as no rainbow hath colors to paint;
+Ere time had reduced her to wrinkles and prayers,
+ And the Flirt found a decent retreat in the Saint.
+
+Poor "Pa" hath popt off--gone, as charity judges,
+To some choice Elysium reserved for the Fudges;
+And Miss, with a fortune, besides expectations
+From some much revered and much palsied relations,
+Now wants but a husband, with requisites meet,--
+Age, thirty, or thereabouts--stature six feet,
+And warranted godly--to make all complete.
+_Nota bene_--a Churchman would suit, if he's _high_,
+But Socinians or Catholics need not apply.
+
+What say you, Dick? doesn’t this tempt your ambition?
+ The whole wealth of Fudge, that renowned man of pith.
+All brought to the hammer, for Church competition,--
+ Sole encumbrance, Miss Fudge to be taken therewith.
+Think, my boy, for a Curate how glorious a catch!
+While, instead of the thousands of souls you _now_ watch,
+To save Biddy Fudge's is all you need do;
+And her purse will meanwhile be the saving of _you_.
+
+You may ask, Dick, how comes it that I, a poor elf,
+Wanting substance even more than your spiritual self,
+Should thus generously lay my own claims on the shelf,
+When, God knows! there ne'er was young gentleman yet
+So much lackt an old spinster to rid him from debt,
+Or had cogenter reasons than mine to assail her
+With tender love-suit--at the suit of his tailor.
+
+But thereby there hangs a soft secret, my friend,
+Which thus to your reverend breast I commend:
+Miss Fudge hath a niece--such a creature!--with eyes
+Like those sparklers that peep out from summer-night skies
+At astronomers-royal, and laugh with delight
+To see elderly gentlemen spying all night.
+
+While her figure--oh! bring all the gracefullest things
+That are borne thro' the light air by feet or by wings,
+Not a single new grace to that form could they teach,
+Which combines in itself the perfection of each;
+While, rapid or slow, as her fairy feet fall,
+The mute music of symmetry modulates all.
+
+Ne'er in short was there creature more formed to bewilder
+ A gay youth like me, who of castles aërial
+(And _only_ of such) am, God help me! a builder;
+ Still peopling each mansion with lodgers ethereal,
+And now, to this nymph of the seraph-like eye,
+Letting out, as you see, my first floor next the sky.
+
+But, alas! nothing's perfect on earth--even she,
+ This divine little gipsy, does odd things sometimes;
+Talks learning--looks wise (rather painful to see),
+ Prints already in two County papers her rhymes;
+And raves--the sweet, charming, absurd little dear,
+About _Amulets, Bijous_, and _Keepsakes_, next year.
+In a manner which plainly bad symptoms portends
+Of that Annual _blue_ fit, so distressing to friends;
+A fit which, tho' lasting but one short edition,
+Leaves the patient long after in sad inanition.
+
+However, let's hope for the best--and, meanwhile,
+Be it mine still to bask in the niece's warm smile;
+While you, if you're wise, Dick, will play the gallant
+(Uphill work, I confess,) to her Saint of an Aunt.
+Think, my boy, for a youngster like you, who've a lack,
+Not indeed of rupees, but of all other specie.
+
+What luck thus to find a kind witch at your back,
+ An old goose with gold eggs, from all debts to release ye!
+Never mind, tho' the spinster be reverend and thin,
+ What are all the Three Graces to her Three per Cents?
+While her aeres!--oh Dick, it don’t matter one pin
+ How she touches the affections, so _you_ touch the rents;
+And Love never looks half so pleased as when, bless him, he
+Sings to an old lady's purse "Open, Sesame."
+
+By the way, I've just heard, in my walks, a report,
+Which, if true, will insure for your visit some sport.
+'Tis rumored our Manager means to bespeak
+The Church tumblers from Exeter Hall for next week;
+And certainly ne'er did a queerer or rummer set
+Throw, for the amusement of Christians, a summerset.
+'Tis feared their chief "Merriman," C--ke, cannot come,
+Being called off, at present, to play Punch at home;
+And the loss of so practised a wag in divinity
+Will grieve much all lovers of jokes on the Trinity;--
+His pun on the name Unigenitus, lately
+Having pleased Robert Taylor, the _Reverend_, greatly.
+'Twill prove a sad drawback, if absent he be,
+As a wag Presbyterian's a thing quite to see;
+And, 'mong the Five Points of the Calvinists, none of 'em
+Ever yet reckoned a point of wit one of 'em.
+But even tho' deprived of this comical elf,
+We've a host of _buffoni_ in Murtagh himself.
+Who of all the whole troop is chief mummer and mime,
+And Coke takes the _Ground_ Tumbling, _he_ the
+_Sublime_;[1]
+And of him we're quite certain, so pray come in time.
+
+
+[1] In the language of the play-bills, "Ground and _Lofty_ Tumbling."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER II.
+
+FROM MISS BIDDY FUDGE TO MRS. ELIZABETH ----.
+
+
+Just in time for the post, dear, and monstrously busy,
+ With godly concernments--and worldly ones, too;
+Things carnal and spiritual mixt, my dear Lizzy,
+In this little brain till, bewildered and dizzy,
+ 'Twixt heaven and earth, I scarce know what I do.
+
+First, I've been to see all the gay fashions from Town,
+Which our favorite Miss Gimp for the spring has had down.
+Sleeves _still_ worn (which _I_ think is wise), _à la
+folle_,
+Charming hats, _pou de soie_--tho' the shape rather droll.
+But you can’t think how nicely the caps of _tulle_ lace,
+With the _mentonnières_ look on this poor sinful face;
+And I mean, if the Lord in his mercy thinks right,
+To wear one at Mrs. Fitz-wigram's to-night.
+
+The silks are quite heavenly:--I'm glad too to say
+Gimp herself grows more godly and good every day;
+Hath had sweet experience--yea, even doth begin
+To turn from the Gentiles, and put away sin--
+And all since her last stock of goods was laid in.
+What a blessing one's milliner, careless of pelf,
+Should thus "walk in newness," as well as one's self!
+So much for the blessings, the comforts of Spirit
+I've had since we met, and they're more than I merit!--
+Poor, sinful, weak creature in every respect,
+Tho' ordained (God knows why) to be one of the Elect.
+But now for the picture's reverse.--You remember
+That footman and cook-maid I hired last December;
+_He_ a Baptist Particular--_she_, of some sect
+Not particular, I fancy, in any respect;
+But desirous, poor thing, to be fed with the Word,
+And "to wait," as she said, "on Miss Fudge and the Lord."
+
+Well, my dear, of all men, that Particular Baptist
+At preaching a sermon, off hand, was the aptest;
+And, long as he staid, do him justice, more rich in
+Sweet savors of doctrine, there never was kitchen.
+He preached in the parlor, he preached in the hall,
+He preached to the chambermaids, scullions and all.
+ All heard with delight his reprovings of sin,
+But above all, the cook-maid:--oh, ne'er would she tire--
+Tho', in learning to save sinful souls from the fire,
+ She would oft let the soles she was frying fall in.
+(God forgive me for punning on points thus of piety!--
+A sad trick I've learned in Bob's heathen society.)
+But ah! there remains still the worst of my tale;
+Come, Asterisks, and help me the sad truth to veil--
+Conscious stars, that at even your own secret turn pale!
+ * * * * *
+ * * * * *
+In short, dear, this preaching and psalm-singing pair,
+Chosen "vessels of mercy," as _I_ thought they were,
+Have together this last week eloped; making bold
+To whip off as much goods as both vessels could hold--
+Not forgetting some scores of sweet Tracts from my shelves,
+Two Family Bibles as large as themselves,
+And besides, from the drawer--I neglecting to lock it--
+My neat "Morning Manna, done up for the pocket."[1]
+Was there e'er known a case so distressing, dear Liz?
+It has made me quite ill:-and the worst of it is,
+When rogues are _all_ pious, 'tis hard to detect
+_Which_ rogues are the reprobate, _which_ the elect.
+This man "had a _call_," he said--impudent mockery!
+What call had he to _my_ linen and crockery?
+
+I'm now and have been for this week past in chase
+Of some godly young couple this pair to replace.
+The enclosed two announcements have just met my eyes
+In that venerable Monthly where Saints advertise
+For such temporal comforts as this world supplies;
+And the fruits of the Spirit are properly made
+An essential in every craft, calling and trade.
+Where the attorney requires for his 'prentice some youth
+Who has "learned to fear God and to walk in the truth;"
+Where the sempstress, in search of employment, declares
+That pay is no object, so she can have prayers;
+And the Establisht Wine Company proudly gives out
+That the whole of the firm, Co. and all, are devout.
+
+Happy London, one feels, as one reads o'er the pages,
+Where Saints are so much more abundant than sages;
+Where Parsons may soon be all laid on the shelf,
+As each Cit can cite chapter and verse for himself,
+And the _serious_ frequenters of market and dock
+All lay in religion as part of their stock.[2]
+Who can tell to what lengths we may go on improving,
+When thus thro' all London the Spirit keeps moving,
+And heaven's so in vogue that each shop adver_tise_ment
+Is now not so much for the earth as the skies meant?
+
+P. S.
+
+Have mislaid the two paragraphs--can’t stop to look,
+But both describe charming--both Footman and Cook.
+She, "decidedly pious"--with pathos deplores
+The increase of French cookery and sin on our shores;
+And adds--(while for further accounts she refers
+To a great Gospel preacher, a cousin of hers,)
+That "tho' _some_ make their Sabbaths mere matter-of-fun days,
+She asks but for tea and the Gospel, on Sundays."
+The footman, too, full of the true saving knowledge;--
+Has late been to Cambridge--to Trinity College;
+Served last a young gentleman, studying divinity,
+But left--not approving the morals of Trinity.
+
+P. S.
+
+I enclose, too, according to promise, some scraps
+ Of my Journal--that Day-book I keep of my heart;
+Where, at some little items, (partaking, perhaps,
+ More of earth than of heaven,) thy prudery may start,
+ And suspect something tender, sly girl as thou art.
+For the present, I'm mute--but, whate'er may befall,
+Recollect, dear, (in Hebrews, xiii. 4,) St. Paul
+Hath himself declared, "marriage is honorable in all."
+
+EXTRACTS FROM MY DIARY.
+
+_Monday_.
+
+Tried a new chälé gown on--pretty.
+No one to see me in it--pity!
+Flew in a passion with Fritz, my maid;--
+The Lord forgive me!--she lookt dismayed;
+But got her to sing the 100th Psalm,
+While she curled my hair, which made me calm.
+Nothing so soothes a Christian heart
+As sacred music--heavenly art!
+
+_Tuesday_
+
+At two a visit from Mr. Magan--
+A remarkably handsome, nice young man;
+And, all Hibernian tho' he be,
+As civilized, strange to say, as we!
+I own this young man's spiritual state
+Hath much engrossed my thoughts of late;
+And I mean, as soon as my niece is gone,
+To have some talk with him thereupon.
+At present I naught can do or say,
+But that troublesome child is in the way;
+Nor is there, I think, a doubt that he
+ Would also her absence much prefer,
+As oft, while listening intent to me,
+ He's forced, from politeness, to look at her.
+
+Heigho!--what a blessing should Mr. Magan
+Turn out, after all, a "renewed" young man;
+And to me should fall the task, on earth,
+To assist at the dear youth's second birth.
+Blest thought! and ah! more blest the tie,
+Were it Heaven's high will, that he and I--
+But I blush to write the nuptial word--
+Should wed, as St. Paul says, "in the Lord";
+Not _this_ world's wedlock--gross, gallant,
+But pure--as when Amram married his aunt.
+
+Our ages differ--but who would count
+One's natural sinful life's amount,
+Or look in the Register's vulgar page
+For a regular twice-born Christian's age,
+Who, blessed privilege! only then
+Begins to live when he's born again?
+And, counting in _this_ way--let me see--
+I myself but five years old shall be.
+And dear Magan, when the event takes place,
+An actual new-born child of grace--
+Should Heaven in mercy so dispose--
+A six-foot baby, in _swaddling_ clothes.
+
+_Wednesday_.
+
+Finding myself, by some good fate,
+With Mr. Magan left _téte-à-téte_,
+Had just begun--having stirred the fire,
+And drawn my chair near his--to inquire,
+What his notions were of Original Sin,
+When that naughty Fanny again bounced in;
+And all the sweet things I had got to say
+Of the Flesh and the Devil were whiskt away!
+
+Much grieved to observe that Mr. Magan
+Is actually pleased and, amused with Fan!
+What charms any sensible man can see
+In a child so foolishly young as she--
+But just eighteen, come next Mayday,
+With eyes, like herself, full of naught but play--
+Is, I own, an exceeding puzzle to me.
+
+
+[1] "Morning Manna, or British Verse-book, neatly done up for the pocket,"
+and chiefly intended to assist the members of the British Verse
+Association, whose design is, we are told, "to induce the inhabitants of
+Great Britain and Ireland to commit one and the same verse of Scripture to
+memory every morning. Already, it is known, several thousand persons in
+Scotland, besides tens of thousands in America and Africa, _are every
+morning learning the same verse_."
+
+[2] According to the late Mr. Irving, there is even a peculiar form of
+theology got up expressly for the money-market, "I know how far wide," he
+says, "of the mark my views of Christ's work in the flesh will be viewed
+by those who are working with the stock-jobbing theology of the religious
+world." "Let these preachers." he adds, "(for I will not call them
+theologians), cry up, brother like, their article,"--_Morning Watch_."--
+No. iii, 442. 443.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER III.
+
+FROM MISS FANNY FUDGE, TO HER COUSIN, MISS KITTY ----.
+
+STANZAS ENCLOSED.
+
+
+TO MY SHADOW; OR, WHY?--WHAT?--HOW?
+
+Dark comrade of my path! while earth and sky
+ Thus wed their charms, in bridal light arrayed,
+Why in this bright hour, walkst thou ever nigh;
+ Blackening my footsteps, with thy length of shade--
+ Dark comrade, WHY?
+
+Thou mimic Shape that, mid these flowery scenes,
+ Glidest beside me o'er each sunny spot,
+Saddening them as thou goest--say, what means
+ So dark an adjunct to so bright a lot--
+ Grim goblin, WHAT?
+
+Still, as to pluck sweet flowers I bend my brow,
+ Thou bendest, too--then risest when I rise;--
+Say, mute, mysterious Thing! how is't that thou
+ Thus comest between me and those blessed skies--
+ Dim shadow, HOW?
+
+(ADDITIONAL STANZA, BY ANOTHER HAND.)
+
+Thus said I to that Shape, far less in grudge
+ Than gloom of soul; while, as I eager cried,
+Oh Why? What? How?--a Voice, that one might judge
+ To be some Irish echo's, faint replied,
+ Oh fudge, fudge, fudge!
+
+You have here, dearest Coz, my last lyric effusion;
+ And, with it, that odious "additional stanza,
+Which Aunt _will_ insist I must keep, as conclusion,
+ And which, you'll _at once_ see, is Mr. Magan's;--a
+ Most cruel and dark-designed extravaganza,
+And part of that plot in which he and my Aunt are
+To stifle the flights of my genius by banter.
+
+Just so 'twas with Byron's young eagle-eyed strain,
+Just so did they taunt him;--but vain, critics, vain
+All your efforts to saddle Wit's fire with a chain!
+To blot out the splendor of Fancy's young stream,
+Or crop, in its cradle, her newly-fledged beam!!!
+Thou perceivest, dear, that, even while these lines I indite,
+Thoughts burn, brilliant fancies break out, wrong or right,
+And I'm all over poet, in Criticism's spite!
+
+That my Aunt, who deals only in Psalms, and regards
+Messrs. Sternhold and Co. as the first of all bards--
+That _she_ should make light of my works I can’t blame;
+But that nice, handsome, odious Magan--what a shame!
+Do you know, dear, that, high as on most points I rate him,
+I'm really afraid--after all, I--_must_ hate him,
+He is _so_ provoking--naught's safe from his tongue;
+He spares no one authoress, ancient or young.
+Were you Sappho herself, and in _Keepsake_ or _Bijou_
+Once shone as contributor, Lord! how he'd quiz you!
+He laughs at _all_ Monthlies--I've actually seen
+A sneer on his brow at _The Court Magazine_!--
+While of Weeklies, poor things, there's but one he peruses,
+And buys every book which that Weekly abuses.
+But I care not how others such sarcasm may fear,
+_One_ spirit, at least, will not bend to his sneer;
+And tho' tried by the fire, my young genius shall burn as
+Uninjured as crucified gold in the furnace!
+(I suspect the word "crucified" must be made "crucible,"
+Before this fine image of mine is producible.)
+And now, dear--to tell you a secret which, pray
+Only trust to such friends as with safety you may--
+You know and indeed the whole country suspects
+(Tho' the Editor often my best things rejects),
+That the verses signed so,[symbol: hand], which you now and then see
+In our County _Gazette_ (vide _last_) are by me.
+But 'tis dreadful to think what provoking mistakes
+The vile country Press in one's prosody makes.
+For you know, dear--I may, without vanity, hint--
+Tho' an angel should write, still 'tis _devils_ must print;
+And you can’t think what havoc these demons sometimes
+Choose to make of one's sense, and what's worse, of one's rhymes.
+But a week or two since, in my Ode upon Spring,
+Which I _meant_ to have made a most beautiful thing,
+Where I talkt of the "dewdrops from freshly-blown roses,"
+The nasty things made it "from freshly-blown noses!"
+And once when to please my cross Aunt, I had tried
+To commemorate some saint of her _cligue_, who'd just died,
+Having said he "had taken up in heaven his position,"
+They made it, he'd "taken up to heaven his physician!"
+
+This is very disheartening;--but brighter days shine,
+I rejoice, love, to say both for me and the Nine;
+For what do you think?--so delightful! next year,
+ Oh, prepare, dearest girl, for the grand news prepare--
+I'm to write in "_The Keepsake_"--yes, Kitty, my dear.
+ To write in "_The Keepsake_," as sure as you're there!!
+T' other night, at a Ball, 'twas my fortunate chance
+With a very nice elderly Dandy to dance,
+Who, 'twas plain, from some hints which I now and then caught.
+Was the author of _something_--one couldn’t tell what;
+But his satisfied manner left no room to doubt
+It was something that Colburn had lately brought out.
+
+We conversed of _belles-lettres_ thro' all the quadrille,--
+Of poetry, dancing, of prose, standing still;
+Talkt of Intellect's march--whether right 'twas or wrong--
+And then settled the point in a bold _en avant_.
+In the course of this talk 'twas that, having just hinted
+That _I_ too had Poems which--longed to be printed,
+He protested, kind man! he had seen, at first sight,
+I was actually _born_ in "_The Keepsake_" to write.
+"In the Annals of England let some," he said, "shine,
+"But a place in her Annuals, Lady, be thine!
+"Even now future '_Keepsakes_' seem brightly to rise,
+"Thro' the vista of years, as I gaze on those eyes,--
+"All lettered and prest, and of large-paper size!"
+How un_like_ that Magan, who my genius would smother,
+And how we true geniuses find out each other!
+
+This and much more he said with that fine frenzied glance
+One so rarely now sees, as we slid thro' the dance;
+Till between us 'twas finally fixt that, next year,
+ In this exquisite task I my pen should engage;
+And, at parting, he stoopt down and lispt in my ear
+These mystical words, which I could but _just_ hear,
+ "Terms for rhyme--if it's _prime_--ten and sixpence per page."
+Think, Kitty, my dear, if I heard his words right,
+ What a mint of half-guineas this small head contains;
+If for nothing to write is itself a delight,
+ Ye Gods, what a bliss to be paid for one's strains!
+
+Having dropt the dear fellow a courtesy profound,
+ Off at once, to inquire all about him, I ran;
+And from what I could learn, do you know, dear, I've found
+ That he's quite a new species of literary man;
+One, whose task is--to what will not fashion accustom us?--
+To _edit_ live authors, as if they were posthumous.
+For instance--the plan, to be sure, is the oddest!--
+If any young he or she author feels modest
+In venturing abroad, this kind gentleman-usher
+Lends promptly a hand to the interesting blusher;
+Indites a smooth Preface, brings merit to light,
+Which else might, by accident, shrink out of sight,
+And, in short, renders readers and critics polite.
+My Aunt says--tho' scarce on such points one can credit her--
+He was Lady Jane Thingumbob's last novel's editor.
+'Tis certain the fashion's but newly invented;
+ And quick as the change of all things and all names is,
+Who knows but as authors like girls are _presented_,
+ We girls may be _edited_ soon at St. James's?
+
+I must now close my letter--there's Aunt, in full screech,
+Wants to take me to hear some great Irvingite preach.
+God forgive me, I'm not much inclined, I must say,
+To go and sit still to be preached at to-day.
+And besides--'twill be all against dancing, no doubt,
+Which my poor Aunt abhors with such hatred devout,
+That so far from presenting young nymphs with a head,
+For their skill in the dance, as of Herod is said,
+She'd wish their own heads in the platter instead.
+There again--coming, Ma'am!--I'll write more, if I can,
+Before the post goes,
+ Your affectionate Fan.
+
+_Four o'clock_.
+
+Such a sermon!--tho' _not_ about dancing, my dear;
+'Twas only on the end of the world being near.
+Eighteen Hundred and Forty's the year that some state
+As the time for that accident--some Forty Eight[1]
+And I own, of the two, I'd prefer much the latter,
+As then I shall be an old maid, and 'twon't matter.
+Once more, love, good-by--I've to make a new cap;
+But am now so dead tired with this horrid mishap
+Of the end of the world that I _must_ take a nap.
+
+
+[1] With regard to the exact time of this event, there appears to be a
+difference only of about two or three years among the respective
+calculators. M. Alphonse Nicole, Docteur en Droit. et Avocat, merely
+doubts whether it is to be in 1846 or 1847.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER IV.
+
+FROM PATRICK MAGAN, ESQ., TO THE REV. RICHARD ----.
+
+
+He comes from Erin's speechful shore
+Like fervid kettle, bubbling o'er
+ With hot effusions--hot and weak;
+Sound, Humbug, all your hollowest drums,
+He comes, of Erin's martyrdoms
+ To Britain's well-fed Church to speak.
+
+Puff him, ye Journals of the Lord,[1]
+Twin prosers, _Watchman_ and _Record_!
+Journals reserved for realms of bliss,
+Being much too good to sell in this,
+Prepare, ye wealthier Saints, your dinners,
+ Ye Spinsters, spread your tea and crumpets;
+And you, ye countless Tracts for Sinners,
+ Blow all your little penny trumpets.
+He comes, the reverend man, to tell
+ To all who still the Church's part take,
+Tales of parsonic woe, that well
+ Might make even grim Dissenter's heart ache:--
+Of ten whole bishops snatched away
+For ever from the light of day;
+(With God knows, too, how many more,
+For whom that doom is yet in store)--
+Of Rectors cruelly compelled
+ From Bath and Cheltenham to haste home,
+Because the tithes, by Pat withheld,
+ Will _not_ to Bath or Cheltenham come;
+Nor will the flocks consent to pay
+Their parsons thus to stay away;--
+Tho' with _such_ parsons, one may doubt
+If 'tisn't money well laid out;--
+Of all, in short, and each degree
+Of that once happy Hierarchy,
+ Which used to roll in wealth so pleasantly;
+But now, alas! is doomed to see
+Its surplus brought to nonplus presently!
+
+Such are the themes this man of pathos,
+Priest of prose and lord of bathos,
+Will preach and preach t'ye, till you're dull again;
+Then, hail him, Saints, with joint acclaim,
+Shout to the stars his tuneful name,
+Which Murtagh _was_, ere known to fame,
+But now is _Mortimer_ O'Mulligan!
+
+All true, Dick, true as you're alive--
+I've seen him, some hours since, arrive.
+Murtagh is come, the great Itinerant--
+And Tuesday, in the market-place,
+Intends, to every saint and sinner in't,
+ To state what _he_ calls Ireland's Case;
+Meaning thereby the case of _his_ shop,-
+Of curate, vicar, rector, bishop,
+And all those other grades seraphic,
+That make men's souls their special traffic,
+Tho' caring not a pin _which_ way
+The erratic souls go, so they _pay_.--
+Just as some roguish country nurse,
+ Who takes a foundling babe to suckle,
+First pops the payment in her purse,
+ Then leaves poor dear to--suck its knuckle:
+Even so these reverend rigmaroles
+Pocket the money--starve the souls.
+Murtagh, however, in his glory,
+Will tell, next week, a different story;
+Will make out all these men of barter,
+As each a saint, a downright martyr,
+Brought to the _stake_--i.e. a _beef_ one,
+Of all their martyrdoms the chief one;
+Tho' try them even at this, they'll bear it,
+If tender and washt down with claret.
+
+Meanwhile Miss Fudge, who loves all lions.
+Your saintly, _next_ to great and high 'uns--
+(A Viscount, be he what he may,
+Would cut a Saint out any day,)
+Has just announced a godly rout,
+Where Murtagh's to be first brought out,
+And shown in his tame, _week-day_ state:--
+"Prayers, half-past seven, tea at eight."
+Even so the circular missive orders--
+Pink cards, with cherubs round the borders.
+
+Haste, Dick--you're lost, if you lose time;--
+ Spinsters at forty-five grow giddy,
+And Murtagh with his tropes sublime
+ Will surely carry off old Biddy,
+Unless some spark at once propose,
+And distance him by downright prose.
+That sick, rich squire, whose wealth and lands
+All pass, they say, to Biddy's hands,
+(The patron, Dick, of three fat rectories!)
+Is dying of _angina pectoris_;--
+So that, unless you're stirring soon.
+ Murtagh, that priest of puff and pelf,
+May come in for a honey-_moon_,
+ And be the _man_ of it, himself!
+
+As for _me_, Dick--'tis whim, 'tis folly,
+But this young niece absorbs me wholly.
+'Tis true, the girl's a vile verse-maker--
+ Would rhyme all nature, if you'd let her;--
+But even her oddities, plague take her,
+ But made me love her all the better.
+_Too_ true it is, she's bitten sadly
+With this new rage for rhyming badly,
+Which late hath seized all ranks and classes,
+Down to that new Estate, "the masses ";
+ Till one pursuit all tastes combines--
+One common railroad o'er Parnassus,
+Where, sliding in those tuneful grooves,
+Called couplets, all creation moves,
+ And the whole world runs mad _in lines_.
+Add to all this--what's even still worse,
+As rhyme itself, tho' still a curse,
+Sounds better to a chinking purse--
+Scarce sixpence hath my charmer got,
+While I can muster just a groat;
+So that, computing self and Venus,
+Tenpence would clear the amount between us.
+However, things may yet prove better:--
+Meantime, what awful length of letter!
+And how, while heaping thus with gibes
+The Pegasus of modern scribes,
+My own small hobby of farrago
+Hath beat the pace at which even _they_ go!
+
+
+[1] "Our anxious desire is to be found on the side of the Lord."--_Record
+Newspaper_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER V.
+
+FROM LARRY O'BRANIGAN, IN ENGLAND, TO HIS WIFE JUDY, AT MULLINAFAD.
+
+
+Dear Judy, I sind you this bit of a letther,
+By mail-coach conveyance--for want of a betther--
+To tell you what luck in this world I have had
+Since I left the sweet cabin, at Mullinafad.
+Och, Judy, that night!--when the pig which we meant
+To dry-nurse in the parlor, to pay off the rent,
+Julianna, the craythur--that name was the death of her--[1]
+Gave us the shlip and we saw the last breath of her!
+And _there_ were the childher, six innocent sowls,
+For their nate little play-fellow turning up howls;
+While yourself, my dear Judy (tho' grievin's a folly),
+Stud over Julianna's remains, melancholy--
+Cryin', half for the craythur and half for the money,
+"Arrah, why did ye die till we'd sowled you, my honey?"
+
+But God's will be done!--and then, faith, sure enough,
+As the pig was desaiced, 'twas high time to be off.
+So we gothered up all the poor duds we could catch,
+Lock the owld cabin-door, put the kay in the thatch,
+Then tuk laave of each other's sweet lips in the dark,
+And set off, like the Chrishtians turned out of the Ark;
+The six childher with you, my dear Judy, ochone!
+And poor I wid myself, left condolin' alone.
+
+How I came to this England, o'er say and o'er lands,
+And what cruel hard walkin' I've had on my hands,
+Is, at this present writin', too tadious to speak,
+So I'll mintion it all in a postscript, next week:--
+Only starved I was, surely, as thin as a lath,
+Till I came to an up-and-down place they call Bath,
+Where, as luck was, I managed to make a meal's meat,
+By dhraggin' owld ladies all day thro' the street--
+Which their docthors (who pocket, like fun, the pound starlins,)
+Have brought into fashion to plase the owld darlins.
+Divil a boy in all Bath, tho' _I_ say it, could carry
+The grannies up hill half so handy as Larry;
+And the higher they lived, like owld crows, in the air,
+The more _I_ was wanted to lug them up there.
+
+But luck has two handles, dear Judy, they say,
+And mine has _both_ handles put on the wrong way.
+For, pondherin', one morn, on a drame I'd just had
+Of yourself and the babbies, at Mullinafad,
+Och, there came o'er my sinses so plasin' a flutther,
+That I spilt an owld Countess right clane in the gutther,
+Muff, feathers and all!--the descint was most awful,
+And--what was still worse, faith--I knew'twas unlawful:
+For, tho', with mere _women_, no very great evil,
+'Tupset an owld _Countess_ in Bath is the divil!
+So, liftin' the chair, with herself safe upon it,
+(for nothin' about her--was _kilt_, but her bonnet,)
+Without even mentionin' "By your lave, ma'am,"
+I tuk to my heels and--here, Judy, I am!
+
+What's the name of this town I can't say very well,
+But your heart sure will jump when you hear what befell
+Your own beautiful Larry, the very first day,
+(And a Sunday it was, shinin' out mighty gay,)
+When his brogues to this city of luck found their way.
+Bein' hungry, God help me and happenin' to stop,
+Just to dine on the shmell of a pasthry-cook's shop,
+I saw, in the window, a large printed paper.
+And read there a name, och! that made my heart caper--
+Though printed it was in some quare ABC,
+That might bother a schoolmaster, let alone _me_.
+By gor, you'd have laughed Judy, could you've but listened,
+As, doubtin', I cried, "why is it!--no, it _isn't_:"
+But it _was_, after all--for, by spellin' quite slow,
+First I made out "Rev. Mortimer"--then a great "O";
+And, at last, by hard readin' and rackin' my skull again,
+Out it came, nate as imported, "O'Mulligan!"
+
+Up I jumpt like a sky-lark, my jewel, at that name,--
+Divil a doubt on my mind, but it _must_ be the same
+"Master Murthagh, himself," says I, "all the world over!
+My own fosther-brother--by jinks, I'm in clover.
+Tho' _there_, in the play-bill, he figures so grand,
+One wet-nurse it was brought us both up by hand,
+And he'll not let me shtarve in the inemy's land!"
+
+Well, to make a long hishtory short, niver doubt
+But I managed, in no time, to find the lad out:
+And the joy of the meetin' bethuxt him and me,
+Such a pair of owld cumrogues--was charmin' to see.
+Nor is Murthagh less plased with the evint than _I_ am,
+As he just then was wanting a Valley-de-sham;
+And, for _dressin'_ a gintleman, one way or t'other,
+Your nate Irish lad is beyant every other.
+
+But now, Judy, comes the quare part of the case;
+And, in throth, it's the only drawback on my place.
+'Twas Murthagh's ill luck to be crost, as you know,
+With an awkward mishfortune some short time ago;
+That's to say, he turned Protestant--_why_, I can'tlarn;
+But, of coorse, he knew best, an' it's not _my_ consarn.
+All I know is, we both were good Catholics, at nurse,
+And myself am so still--nayther better not worse.
+Well, our bargain was all right and tight in a jiffy,
+And lads more contint never yet left, the Liffey,
+When Murthagh--or Morthimer, as he's _now_ chrishened,
+His _name_ being convarted, at laist, if _he_ isn't--
+Lookin' sly at me (faith, 'twas divartin' to see)
+"_Of coorse_, you're a Protestant, Larry," says he.
+Upon which says myself, wid a wink just as shly,
+"Is't a Protestant?--oh yes, _I am_, sir," says I;--
+And there the chat ended, and divil a more word
+Controvarsial between us has since then occurred.
+
+What Murthagh could mane, and, in troth, Judy dear,
+What _I myself_ meant, doesn'tseem mighty clear;
+But the truth is, tho' still for the Owld Light a stickler,
+I was just then too shtarved to be over partic'lar:--
+And, God knows, between us, a comic'ler pair
+Of twin Protestants couldn't be seen _any_ where.
+
+Next Tuesday (as towld in the play-bills I mintioned,
+Addrest to the loyal and godly intintioned,)
+His Riverence, my master, comes forward to preach,--
+Myself doesn'tknow whether sarmon or speech,
+But it's all one to him, he's a dead hand at each;
+Like us Paddys in gin'ral, whose skill in orations
+Quite bothers the blarney of all other nations.
+
+But, whisht!--there's his Riverence, shoutin' out "Larry,"
+And sorra a word more will this shmall paper carry;
+So, here, Judy, ends my short bit of a letther,
+Which, faix, I'd have made a much bigger and betther.
+But divil a one Post-office hole in this town
+Fit to swallow a dacent sized billy-dux down.
+So good luck to the childer!--tell Molly, I love her;
+Kiss Oonagh's sweet mouth, and kiss Katty all over--
+Not forgettin' the mark of the red-currant whiskey
+She got at the fair when yourself was so frisky.
+The heavens be your bed!--I will write, when I can again,
+Yours to the world's end,
+
+LARRY O'BRANIGAN.
+
+
+[1] The Irish peasantry are very fond of giving fine names to their pigs.
+I have heard of one instance in which a couple of young pigs were named,
+at their birth, Abelard and Eloisa.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER VI.
+
+FROM MISS BIDDY FUDGE, TO MRS. ELIZABETH ----.
+
+
+How I grieve you're not with us!--pray, come, if you can,
+Ere we're robbed of this dear, oratorical man,
+Who combines in himself all the multiple glory
+Of, Orangeman, Saint, _quondam_ Papist and Tory;--
+(Choice mixture! like that from which, duly confounded,
+The best sort of _brass_ was, in old times, compounded.)--
+The sly and the saintly, the worldly and godly,
+All fused down, in brogue so deliciously oddly!
+In short, he's a _dear_--and _such_ audiences draws,
+Such loud peals of laughter and shouts of applause,
+As _can't_ but do good to the Protestant cause.
+
+Poor dear Irish Church!--he today sketched a view
+Of her history and prospect, to _me_ at least new,
+And which (if it _takes_ as it ought) must arouse
+The whole Christian world her just rights to espouse.
+As to _reasoning_--you know, dear, that's now of no use,
+People still will their _facts_ and dry _figures_ produce,
+As if saving the souls of a Protestant flock were
+A thing to be managed "according to Cocker!"
+In vain do we say, (when rude radicals hector
+At paying some thousands a year to a Rector,
+In places where Protestants _never yet were_,)
+"Who knows but young Protestants _may_ be born there?"
+And granting such accident, think, what a shame,
+If they didn’t find Rector and Clerk when they came!
+It is clear that, without such a staff on full pay,
+These little Church embryos _must_ go astray;
+And, while fools are computing what Parsons would cost,
+Precious souls are meanwhile to the Establishment lost!
+
+In vain do we put the case sensibly thus;--
+They'll still with their figures and facts make a fuss,
+And ask "if, while all, choosing each his own road,
+Journey on, as we can, towards the Heavenly Abode,
+It is right that _seven_ eighths of the travellers should pay
+For _one_ eighth that goes quite a different way?"--
+Just as if, foolish people, this wasn't, in reality,
+A proof of the Church's extreme liberality,
+That tho' hating Popery in _other_ respects,
+She to Catholic _money_ in no way objects;
+And so liberal her very best Saints, in this sense,
+That they even go to heaven at the Catholic's expense.
+
+But tho' clear to _our_ minds all these arguments be,
+People cannot or _will_ not their cogency see;
+And I grieve to confess, did the poor Irish Church
+Stand on reasoning alone, she'd be left in the lurch.
+It was therefore, dear Lizzy, with joy most sincere,
+That I heard this nice Reverend O'_something_ we've here,
+Produce, from the depths of his knowledge and reading,
+A view of that marvellous Church, far exceeding,
+In novelty, force, and profoundness of thought,
+All that Irving himself in his glory e'er taught.
+
+Looking thro' the whole history, present and past,
+Of the Irish Law Church, from the first to the last;
+Considering how strange its original birth--
+Such a thing having _never_ before been on earth--
+How opposed to the instinct, the law and the force
+Of nature and reason has been its whole course;
+Thro' centuries encountering repugnance, resistance,
+Scorn, hate, execration--yet still in existence!
+Considering all this, the conclusion he draws
+Is that Nature exempts this one Church from her laws--
+That Reason, dumb-foundered, gives up the dispute,
+And before the portentous anomaly stands mute;
+That in short 'tis a Miracle! and, _once_ begun,
+And transmitted thro' ages, from father to son,
+For the honor of miracles, _ought to go on_.
+
+Never yet was conclusion so cogent and sound,
+Or so fitted the Church's weak foes to confound.
+For observe the more low all her merits they place,
+The more they make out the miraculous case,
+And the more all good Christians must deem it profane
+To disturb such a prodigy's marvellous reign.
+
+As for scriptural proofs, he quite placed beyond doubt
+That the whole in the Apocalypse may be found out,
+As clear and well-proved, he would venture to swear,
+As anything else has been _ever_ found there:--
+While the mode in which, bless the dear fellow, he deals
+With that whole lot of vials and trumpets and seals,
+And the ease with which vial on vial he strings,
+Shows him quite a _first-rate_ at all these sort of things.
+
+So much for theology:--as for the affairs
+Of this temporal world--the light drawing-room cares
+And gay toils of the toilet, which, God knows, I seek,
+From no love of such things, but in humbleness meek,
+And to be, as the Apostle, was, "weak with the weak,"
+Thou wilt find quite enough (till I'm somewhat less busy)
+In the extracts inclosed, my dear news-loving Lizzy.
+
+EXTRACTS FROM MY DIARY.
+
+_Thursday_.
+
+Last night, having naught more holy to do,
+Wrote a letter to dear Sir Andrew Agnew,
+About the "Do-nothing-on-Sunday-club,"
+Which we wish by some shorter name to dub:--
+As the use of more vowels and Consonants
+Than a Christian on Sunday _really_ wants,
+Is a grievance that ought to be done away,
+And the Alphabet left to rest, that day.
+
+_Sunday_.
+
+Sir Andrew's answer!--but, shocking to say,
+Being franked unthinkingly yesterday.
+To the horror of Agnews yet unborn,
+It arrived on this blessed Sunday morn!!--
+How shocking!--the postman's self cried "shame on't,"
+Seeing the immaculate Andrew's name on't!!
+What will the Club do?--meet, no doubt.
+'Tis a matter that touches the Class Devout,
+And the friends of the Sabbath _must_ speak out.
+
+_Tuesday_.
+
+Saw to-day, at the raffle--and saw it with pain--
+That those stylish Fitzwigrams begin to dress plain.
+Even gay little Sophy smart trimmings renounces--
+She who long has stood by me thro' all sorts of flounces,
+And showed by upholding the toilet's sweet rites,
+That we girls may be Christians without being frights.
+This, I own, much alarms me; for tho' one's religious,
+And strict and--all that, there's no need to be hideous;
+And why a nice bonnet should stand in the way
+Of one's going to heaven, 'tisn't easy to say.
+
+Then, there's Gimp, the poor thing--if her custom we drop,
+Pray what's to become of her soul and her shop?
+If by saints like ourselves no more orders are given,
+She'll lose all the interest she now takes in heaven;
+And this nice little "fire-brand, pluckt from the burning,"
+May fall in again at the very next turning.
+
+_Wednesday_.
+
+_Mem_.--To write to the India Mission Society;
+And send £20--heavy tax upon piety!
+
+Of all Indian luxuries we now-a-days boast,
+Making "Company's Christians" perhaps costs the most.
+And the worst of it is, that these converts full grown,
+Having lived in _our_ faith mostly die in their _own_,[1]
+Praying hard, at the last, to some god who, they say,
+When incarnate on earth, used to steal curds and whey.[2]
+Think, how horrid, my dear!--so that all's thrown away;
+And (what is still worse) for the rum and the rice
+They consumed, while believers, we saints pay the price.
+
+Still 'tis cheering to find that we _do_ save a few--
+The Report gives six Christians for Cunnangcadoo;
+Doorkotchum reckons seven, and four Trevandrum,
+While but one and a half's left at Cooroopadum.
+In this last-mentioned place 'tis the barbers enslave 'em,
+For once they turn Christians no barber will shave 'em.[3]
+
+To atone for this rather small Heathen amount,
+Some Papists, turned Christians,[4] are tackt to the account.
+And tho' to catch Papists, one needn't go so far,
+Such fish are worth hooking, wherever they are;
+And _now_, when so great of such converts the lack is,
+_One_ Papist well caught is worth millions of Blackies.
+
+_Friday_.
+
+Last night had a dream so odd and funny,
+ I cannot resist recording it here.--
+Methought that the Genius of Matrimony
+ Before me stood with a joyous leer,
+Leading a husband in each hand,
+ And both for _me_, which lookt rather queer;--
+_One_ I could perfectly understand,
+But why there were _two_ wasn’t quite so clear.
+T'was meant however, I soon could see,
+ To afford me a _choice_--a most excellent plan;
+And--who should this brace of candidates be,
+ But Messrs. O'Mulligan and Magan:--
+A thing, I suppose, unheard of till then,
+To dream, at once, of _two_ Irishmen!--
+That handsome Magan, too, with wings on his shoulders
+ (For all this past in the realms of the Blest.)
+And quite a creature to dazzle beholders;
+ While even O'Mulligan, feathered and drest
+ As an elderly cherub, was looking his best.
+Ah Liz, you, who know me, scarce can doubt
+As to _which_ of the two I singled out.
+But--awful to tell--when, all in dread
+ Of losing so bright a vision's charms,
+I graspt at Magan, his image fled,
+Like a mist, away, and I found but the head
+ Of O'Mulligan, wings and all, in my arms!
+The Angel had flown to some nest divine.
+And the elderly Cherub alone was mine!
+
+Heigho!--it is certain that foolish Magan
+Either can'tor won’t see that he _might_ be the man;
+And, perhaps, dear--who knows?--if naught better befall
+But--O'Mulligan _may_ be the man, after all.
+
+N. B.
+
+Next week mean to have my first scriptural rout,
+For the special discussion of matters devout;--
+Like those _soirées_, at Powerscourt, so justly renowned,
+For the zeal with which doctrine and negus went round;
+Those theology-routs which the pious Lord Roden,
+That pink of Christianity, first set the mode in;
+Where, blessed down-pouring[5]from tea until nine,
+The subjects lay all in the Prophecy line;--
+Then, supper--and then, if for topics hard driven,
+From thence until bed-time to Satan was given;
+While Roden, deep read in each topic and tome,
+On all subjects (especially the last) was _at home_.
+
+
+[1] Of such relapses we find innumerable instances in the accounts of the
+Missionaries.
+
+[2] The god Krishna, one of the incarnations of the god Vishnu. "One day
+[says the Bhagavata] Krishna's playfellows complained to Tasuda that he
+had pilfered and ate their curds."
+
+[3] "Roteen wants shaving; but the barber here will not do it. He is run
+away lest he should be compelled. He says he will not shave Yesoo Kreest's
+people."--_Bapt. Mission Society_, vol. ii., p. 498.
+
+[4] In the Reports of the Missionaries, the Roman Catholics are almost
+always classed along with the Heathen.
+
+[5] "About eight o'clock the Lord began to pour down his spirit copiously
+upon us--for they had all by this time assembled in my room for the
+purpose of prayer. This down-pouring continued till about ten o'clock."--
+Letter from Mary Campbell to the Rev. John Campbell, of Row, dated
+Feruicary, April 4, 1830, giving an account of her "miraculous cure."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER VII.
+
+FROM MISS FANNY FUDGE, TO HER COUSIN, MISS KITTY ----.
+
+
+IRREGULAR ODE.
+
+Bring me the slumbering souls of flowers,
+ While yet, beneath some northern sky,
+Ungilt by beams, ungemmed by showers,
+They wait the breath of summer hours,
+ To wake to light each diamond eye,
+ And let loose every florid sigh!
+
+Bring me the first-born ocean waves,
+From out those deep primeval caves,
+Where from the dawn of Time they've lain--
+ THE EMBRYOS OF A FUTURE MAIN!--
+Untaught as yet, young things, to speak
+ The language of their PARENT SEA
+(Polyphlysbaean named, in Greek),
+Tho' soon, too soon, in bay and creek,
+Round startled isle and wondering peak,
+ They'll thunder loud and long as HE!
+
+Bring me, from Hecla's iced abode,
+ Young fires--
+
+ I had got, dear, thus far in my ODE
+Intending to fill the whole page to the bottom,
+ But, having invoked such a lot of fine things,
+ Flowers, billows and thunderbolts, rainbows and wings,
+Didn’t know _what_ to do with 'em, when I had got 'em.
+The truth is, my thoughts are too full, at this minute,
+ Of Past MSS. any new ones to try.
+This very night's coach brings my destiny in it--
+ Decides the great question, to live or to die!
+And, whether I'm henceforth immortal or no,
+All depends on the answer of Simpkins and Co.!
+
+You'll think, love, I rave, so 'tis best to let out
+ The whole secret, at once--I have publisht a book!!!
+Yes, an actual Book:--if the marvel you doubt,
+ You have only in last Monday's _Courier_ to look,
+And you'll find "This day publisht by Simpkins and Co.
+A Romaunt, in twelve Cantos, entitled 'Woe Woe!'
+By Miss Fanny F----, known more commonly so [symbol: hand]."
+This I put that my friends mayn't be left in the dark
+But may guess at my _writing_ by knowing my _mark_.
+
+How I managed, at last, this great deed to achieve,
+Is itself a "Romaunt" which you'd scarce, dear believe;
+Nor can I just now, being all in a whirl,
+Looking out for the Magnet,[1] explain it, dear girl.
+Suffice it to say, that one half the expense
+Of this leasehold of fame for long centuries hence--
+(Tho' "God knows," as aunt says my humble ambition
+Aspires not beyond a small Second Edition)--
+One half the whole cost of the paper and printing,
+I've managed, to scrape up, this year past, by stinting
+My own little wants in gloves, ribands, and shoes,
+Thus defrauding the toilet to fit out the Muse!
+
+And who, my dear Kitty; would not do the same?
+What's _eau de Cologne_ to the sweet breath of fame?
+Yards of riband soon end--but the measures of rhyme,
+Dipt in hues of the rainbow, stretch out thro' all time.
+Gloves languish and fade away pair after pair,
+While couplets shine out, but the brighter for wear,
+And the dancing-shoe's gloss in an evening is gone,
+While light-footed lyrics thro' ages trip on.
+
+The remaining expense, trouble, risk--and, alas!
+My poor copyright too--into other hands pass;
+And my friend, the Head Devil of the "_County Gazette_"
+(The only Mecaenas I've ever had yet),
+He who set up in type my first juvenile lays,
+Is now see up by them for the rest of his days;
+And while Gods (as my "Heathen Mythology" says)
+Live on naught but ambrosia, _his_ lot how much sweeter
+To live, lucky devil, on a young lady's metre!
+
+As for _puffing_--that first of all literary boons,
+And essential alike both to bards and balloons,
+As, unless well supplied with inflation, 'tis found
+Neither bards nor balloons budge an inch from the ground;--
+In _this_ respect, naught could more prosperous befall;
+As my friend (for no less this kind imp can I call)
+
+Knows the whole would of critics--the _hypers_ and all.
+I suspect he himself, indeed, dabbles in rhyme,
+Which, for imps diabolic, is not the first time;
+As I've heard uncle Bob say, 'twas known among Gnostics,
+That the Devil on Two Sticks was a devil at Acrostics.
+
+But hark! there's the Magnet just dasht in from Town--
+How my heart, Kitty, beats! I shall surely drop down.
+That awful _Court Journal, Gazette Athenaeum_,
+All full of my book--I shall sink when I see 'em.
+And then the great point--whether Simpkins and Co.
+Are actually pleased with their bargain or no!--
+
+_Five o'clock_.
+
+All's delightful--such praises!--I really fear
+That this poor little head will turn giddy, my dear,
+I've but time now to send you two exquisite scraps--
+All the rest by the Magnet, on Monday, perhaps.
+
+FROM THE "MORNING POST."
+
+'Tis known that a certain distinguisht physician
+ Prescribes, for _dyspepsia_, a course of light reading;
+And Rhymes by young Ladies, the first, fresh edition
+(Ere critics have injured their powers of nutrition,)
+ Are he thinks, for weak stomachs, the best sort of feeding.
+Satires irritate--love-songs are found calorific;
+But smooth, female sonnets he deems a specific,
+And, if taken at bedtime, a sure soporific.
+Among works of this kind, the most pleasing we know,
+Is a volume just published by Simpkins and Co.,
+Where all such ingredients--the flowery, the sweet,
+And the gently narcotic--are mixt _per_ receipt,
+With a hand so judicious, we've no hesitation
+To say that--'bove all, for the young generation--
+'Tis an elegant, soothing and safe preparation.
+
+_Nota bene_--for readers, whose object's _to sleep_,
+And who read, in their nightcaps, the publishers keep
+Good fire-proof binding, which comes very cheap.
+
+ANECDOTE--FROM THE "COURT JOURNAL."
+
+T' other night, at the Countess of ***'s rout,
+An amusing event was much whispered about.
+It was said that Lord ---, at the Council, that day,
+ Had, move than once, jumpt from his seat, like a rocket,
+And flown to a corner, where--heedless, they say,
+How the country's resources were squandered away--
+ He kept reading some papers he'd brought in his pocket.
+Some thought them despatches from Spain or the Turk,
+ Others swore they brought word we had lost the Mauritius;
+But it turned out 'twas only Miss Fudge's new work,
+ Which his Lordship devoured with such zeal expeditious--
+Messrs. Simpkins and Co., to avoid all delay,
+Having sent it in sheets, that his Lordship might say,
+He had distanced the whole reading world by a day!
+
+
+[1] A day-coach of that name.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER VIII.
+
+FROM BOB FUDGE, ESQ., TO THE REV. MORTIMER O'MULLIGAN.
+
+
+_Tuesday evening_,
+
+I much regret, dear Reverend Sir,
+ I could not come to * * * to meet you;
+But this curst gout won’t let me stir--
+ Even now I but by proxy greet you;
+As this vile scrawl, whate'er its sense is,
+Owes all to an amanuensis.
+Most other scourges of disease
+Reduce men to _extremities_--
+But gout won’t leave one even _these_.
+
+From all my sister writes, I see
+That you and I will quite agree.
+I'm a plain man who speak the truth,
+ And trust you'll think me not uncivil,
+When I declare that from my youth
+ I've wisht your country at the devil:
+Nor can I doubt indeed from all
+ I've heard of your high patriot fame--
+From every word your lips let fall--
+ That you most truly wish the same.
+It plagues one's life out--thirty years
+Have I had dinning in my ears,
+ "Ireland wants this and that and t'other,"
+And to this hour one nothing hears
+ But the same vile, eternal bother.
+While, of those countless things she wanted,
+Thank God, but little has been granted,
+And even that little, if we're men
+And Britons, we'll have back again!
+
+I really think that Catholic question
+Was what brought on my indigestion;
+And still each year, as Popery's curse
+Has gathered round us, I've got worse;
+Till even my pint of port a day
+Can’t keep the Pope and bile away.
+And whereas, till the Catholic bill,
+I never wanted draught or pill,
+The settling of that cursed question
+Has quite _un_settled my digestion.
+
+Look what has happened since--the Elect
+Of all the bores of every sect,
+The chosen triers of men's patience,
+From all the Three Denominations.
+Let loose upon us;--even Quakers
+Turned into speechers and lawmakers,
+Who'll move no question, stiff-rumpt elves,
+Till first the Spirit moves themselves;
+And whose shrill Yeas and Nays, in chorus,
+Conquering our Ayes and Noes sonorous,
+Will soon to death's own slumber snore us.
+Then, too, those Jews!--I really sicken
+ To think of such abomination;
+Fellows, who won’t eat ham with chicken,
+ To legislate for this great nation!--
+Depend upon't, when once they've sway,
+ With rich old Goldsmid at the head o' them,
+The Excise laws will be done away,
+ And _Circumcise_ ones past instead o' them!
+
+In short, dear sir, look where one will,
+Things all go on so devilish ill,
+That, 'pon my soul, I rather fear
+ Our reverend Rector may be right,
+Who tells me the Millennium's near;
+Nay, swears he knows the very year,
+ And regulates his leases by 't;--
+Meaning their terms should end, no doubt,
+Before the world's own lease is out.
+He thinks too that the whole thing's ended
+So much more soon than was intended,
+Purely to scourge those men of sin
+Who brought the accurst Reform Bill in.
+
+However, let's not yet despair;
+ Tho' Toryism's eclipst, at present.
+And--like myself, in this old chair--
+ Sits in a state by no means pleasant;
+Feet crippled--hands, in luckless hour,
+Disabled of their grasping power;
+And all that rampant glee, which revelled
+In this world's sweets, be-dulled, be-deviled--
+
+Yet, tho' condemned to frisk no more,
+ And both in Chair of Penance set,
+There's something tells me, all's not o'er
+ With Toryism or Bobby yet;
+That tho', between us, I allow
+We've not a leg to stand on now;
+Tho' curst Reform and _colchicum_
+Have made us both look deuced glum,
+Yet still, in spite of Grote and Gout,
+Again we'll shine triumphant out!
+
+Yes--back again shall come, egad,
+_Our_ turn for sport, my reverend lad.
+And then, O'Mulligan--oh then,
+When mounted on our nags again,
+You, on your high-flown Rosinante,
+Bedizened out, like Show-Gallantee
+(Glitter great from substance scanty);--
+While I, Bob Fudge, Esquire, shall ride
+Your faithful Sancho, by your side;
+Then--talk of tilts and tournaments!
+Dam'me, we'll--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ 'Squire Fudge's clerk presents
+To Reverend Sir his compliments;
+Is grieved to say an accident
+Has just occurred which will prevent
+The Squire--tho' now a little better--
+From finishing this present letter.
+Just when he'd got to "Dam'me, we'll"--
+His Honor, full of martial zeal,
+Graspt at his crutch, but not being able
+ To keep his balance or his hold,
+ Tumbled, both self and crutch, and rolled,
+Like ball and bat, beneath the table.
+
+All's safe--the table, chair and crutch;--
+Nothing, thank God, is broken much,
+But the Squire's head, which in the fall
+Got bumped considerably--that's all.
+At this no great alarm we feel,
+As the Squire's head can bear a deal.
+
+_Wednesday morning_
+
+Squire much the same--head rather light--
+Raved about "Barbers' Wigs" all night.
+
+Our housekeeper, old Mrs. Griggs,
+Suspects that he meant "barbarous Whigs."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER IX.
+
+FROM LARRY O'BRANIGAN, TO HIS WIFE JUDY.
+
+
+As it was but last week that I sint you a letther,
+You'll wondher, dear Judy, what this is about;
+And, throth, it's a letther myself would like betther,
+Could I manage to lave the contints of it out;
+For sure, if it makes even _me_ onaisy,
+Who takes things quiet, 'twill dhrive _you_ crazy.
+
+Oh! Judy, that riverind Murthagh, bad scran to him!
+That e'er I should come to've been sarvant-man to him,
+Or so far demane the O'Branigan blood,
+And my Aunts, the Diluvians (whom not even the Flood
+Was able to wash away clane from the earth)[1]
+As to sarve one whose name, of mere yestherday's birth,
+Can no more to a great O, _before_ it, purtend,
+Than mine can to wear a great Q at its _end_.
+
+But that's now all over--last night I gev warnin,'
+And, masth'r as he is, will discharge him this mornin'.
+The thief of the world!--but it's no use balraggin'[2]--
+All I know is, I'd fifty times rather be draggin'
+Ould ladies up hill to the ind of my days,
+
+Than with Murthagh to rowl in a chaise, at my aise,
+And be forced to discind thro' the same dirty ways.
+Arrah, sure, if I'd heerd where he last showed his phiz,
+I'd have known what a quare sort of monsthsr he is;
+For, by gor, 'twas at Exether Change, sure enough,
+That himself and his other wild Irish showed off;
+And it's pity, so 'tis, that they hadn't got no man
+Who knew the wild crathurs to act as their showman--
+Sayin', "Ladies and Gintlemen, plaze to take notice,
+"How shlim and how shleek this black animal's coat is;
+"All by raison, we're towld, that the natur o' the baste
+"Is to change its coat _once_ in its lifetime, _at laste_;
+"And such objiks, in _our_ counthry, not bein' common ones,
+"Are _bought up_, as this was, by way of Fine Nomenons.
+"In regard of its _name_--why, in throth, I'm consarned
+"To differ on this point so much with the Larned,
+"Who call it a '_Morthimer_,' whereas the craythur
+"Is plainly a 'Murthagh,' by name and by nathur."
+
+This is how I'd have towld them the righst of it all.
+Had _I_ been their showman at Exether Hail--
+Not forgettin' that other great wondher of Airin
+(Of the owld bitther breed which they call Prosbetairin),
+The famed Daddy Coke--who, by gor, I'd have shown 'em
+As proof how such bastes may be tamed, when you've thrown 'em
+A good frindly sop of the rale _Raigin Donem_.[3]
+But throth, I've no laisure just now, Judy dear,
+For anything, barrin' our own doings here,
+And the cursin' and dammin' and thund'rin like mad,
+We Papists, God help us, from Murthagh have had.
+He says we're all murtherers--divil a bit less--
+And that even our priests, when we go to confess,
+Give us lessons in murthering and wish us success!
+
+When axed how he daared, by tongue or by pen,
+To belie, in this way, seven millions of men,
+Faith, he said'twas all towld him by Docthor Den![4]
+"And who the divil's _he_?" was the question that flew
+From Chrishtian to Chrishtian--but not a sowl knew.
+While on went Murthagh, in iligant style,
+Blasphaming us Cath'lics all the while,
+As a pack of desaivers, parjurers, villains,
+All the whole kit of the aforesaid millions;--
+Yourself, dear Judy, as well as the rest,
+And the innocent craythur that's at your breast,
+All rogues together, in word and deed,
+Owld Den our insthructor and Sin our creed!
+
+When axed for his proofs again and again,
+Divil an answer he'd give but Docthor Den.
+Couldn'the call into coort some _livin'_ men?
+"No, thank you"--he'd stick to Docthor Den--
+An ould gintleman dead a century or two,
+Who all about _us_, live Catholics, knew;
+And of coorse was more handy, to call in a hurry,
+Than Docthor MacHale or Docthor Murray!
+
+But, throth, it's no case to be jokin' upon,
+Tho' myself, from bad habits, is _makin'_ it one.
+Even _you_, had you witnessed his grand climactherics,
+Which actially threw one owld maid in hysterics--
+Or, och! had you heerd such a purty remark as his,
+That Papists are only "_Humanity's carcasses_,
+"_Risen_"--but, by dad, I'm afeared I can't give it ye--
+"_Risen from the sepulchre of--inactivity_;
+"_And, like owld corpses, dug up from antikity_,
+"_Wandrin' about in all sorts of inikity_!!"--[5]
+Even you, Judy, true as you are to the Owld Light,
+Would have laught, out and out, at this iligant flight
+Of that figure of speech called the Blatherumskite.
+As for me, tho' a funny thought now and then came to me,
+Rage got the betther at last--and small blame to me,
+So, slapping my thigh, "by the Powers of Delf,"
+Says I bowldly "I'll make a noration myself."
+And with that up I jumps--but, my darlint, the minit
+I cockt up my head, divil a sinse remained in it.
+Tho', _saited_, I could have got beautiful on,
+When I tuk to my legs, faith, the gab was all gone:--
+Which was odd, for us, Pats, who, whate'er we've a hand in,
+At laste in our _legs_ show a sthrong understandin'.
+
+Howsumdever, detarmined the chaps should pursaive
+What I thought of their doin's, before I tuk lave,
+"In regard of all that," says I--there I stopt short--
+Not a word more would come, tho' I shtruggled hard for't.
+So, shnapping my fingers at what's called the Chair,
+And the owld Lord (or Lady, I believe) that sat there--
+"In regard of all that," says I bowldly again--
+"To owld Nick I pitch Mortimer--_and_ Docthor Den";--
+Upon which the whole company cried out "Amen";
+And myself was in hopes 'twas to what _I_ had said,
+But, by gor, no such thing--they were not so well bred:
+For, 'twas all to a prayer Murthagh just had read out,
+By way of fit finish to job so devout:
+That is--_afther_ well damning one half the community,
+To pray God to keep all in pace an' in unity!
+
+This is all I can shtuff in this letter, tho' plinty
+Of news, faith, I've got to fill more--if 'twas twinty.
+But I'll add, on the _outside_, a line, should I need it,
+(Writin' "Private" upon it, that no one may read it,)
+To tell you how _Mortimer_ (as the Saints chrishten him)
+Bears the big shame of his sarvant's dismisshin' him.
+
+(_Private outside_.)
+
+Just come from his riv'rence--the job is all done--
+By the powers, I've discharged him as sure as a gun!
+And now, Judy dear, what on earth I'm to do
+With myself and my appetite--both good as new--
+Without even a single traneen in my pocket,
+Let alone a good, dacent pound--starlin', to stock it--
+Is a mysht'ry I lave to the One that's above,
+Who takes care of us, dissolute sawls, when hard dhrove!
+
+
+[1] "I am of your Patriarchs, I, a branch of one of your antediluvian
+families--fellows that the Flood could not wash away."--CONGREVE, "_Love
+for Love_."
+
+[2] To _balrag_ is to abuse--Mr. Lover makes it _ballyrag_, and
+he is high authority: but if I remember rightly, Curran in his national
+stories used to employ the word as above.--See Lover's most amusing and
+genuinely Irish work, the "Legends and Stories of Ireland."
+
+[3] Larry evidently means the _Regium Donum_;--a sum contributed by
+the government annually to the support of the Presbyterian churches in
+Ireland.
+
+[4]Correctly, Dens--Larry not being very particular in his nomenclature.
+
+[5] "But she (Popery) is no longer _the tenant of the sepulchre of
+inactivity_. She has come from the burial-place, walking forth a monster,
+as if the spirit of evil had corrupted _the carcass of her departed
+humanity_; noxious and noisome an object of abhorrence and dismay to all
+who are not _leagued with her in iniquity_."--Report of the Rev.
+Gentleman's Speech, June 20, in the Record Newspaper.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER X.
+
+FROM THE REV. MORTIMER O'MULLIGAN, TO THE REV. ----.
+
+
+These few brief lines, my reverend friend,
+By a safe, private hand I send
+(Fearing lest some low Catholic wag
+Should pry into the Letter-bag),
+To tell you, far as pen can dare
+How we, poor errant martyrs, fare;--
+Martyrs, not quite to fire and rack,
+As Saints were, some few ages back.
+But--scarce less trying in its way--
+To laughter, wheresoe'er we stray;
+To jokes, which Providence mysterious
+Permits on men and things so serious,
+Lowering the Church still more each minute,
+And--injuring our preferment in it.
+
+Just think, how worrying 'tis, my friend,
+To find, where'er our footsteps bend,
+ Small jokes, like squibs, around us whizzing;
+And bear the eternal torturing play
+Of that great engine of our day,
+ Unknown to the Inquisition--quizzing!
+Your men of thumb-screws and of racks
+Aimed at the _body_ their attack;
+But modern torturers, more refined,
+Work _their_ machinery on the _mind_.
+Had St. Sebastian had the luck
+ With me to be a godly rover,
+Instead of arrows, he'd be stuck
+ With stings of ridicule all over;
+And poor St. Lawrence who was killed
+By being on a gridiron grilled,
+Had he but shared _my_ errant lot,
+Instead of grill on gridiron hot,
+A _moral_ roasting would have got.
+
+Nor should I (trying as all this is)
+ Much heed the suffering or the shame--
+As, like an actor, _used_ to hisses,
+ I long have known no other fame,
+But that (as I may own to _you_,
+Tho' to the _world_ it would not do,)
+No hope appears of fortune's beams
+Shining on _any_ of my schemes;
+No chance of something more _per ann_,
+As supplement to Kellyman;
+No prospect that, by fierce abuse
+Of Ireland, I shall e'er induce
+The rulers of this thinking nation
+To rid us of Emancipation:
+To forge anew the severed chain,
+And bring back Penal Laws again.
+
+Ah happy time! when wolves and priests
+Alike were hunted, as wild beasts;
+And five pounds was the price, _per_ head,
+For bagging _either_, live or dead;--[1]
+Tho' oft, we're told, _one_ outlawed brother
+Saved cost, by eating up _the other_,
+Finding thus all those schemes and hopes
+I built upon my flowers and tropes
+ All scattered, one by one, away,
+As flashy and unsound as they,
+The question comes--what's to be done?
+And there's but one course left me--_one_.
+Heroes, when tired of war's alarms,
+Seek sweet repose in Beauty's arms.
+The weary Day-God's last retreat is
+The breast of silvery-footed Thetis;
+And mine, as mighty Love's my judge,
+Shall be the arms of rich Miss Fudge!
+
+Start not, my friend,--the tender scheme,
+Wild and romantic tho' it seem,
+Beyond a parson's fondest dream,
+Yet shines, too, with those golden dyes,
+So pleasing to a parson's eyes
+That only _gilding_ which the Muse
+Can not around _her_ sons diffuse:--
+Which, whencesoever flows its bliss,
+From wealthy Miss or benefice,
+To Mortimer indifferent is,
+So he can only make it _his_.
+There is but one slight damp I see
+Upon this scheme's felicity,
+And that is, the fair heroine's claim
+That I shall take _her_ family name.
+To this (tho' it may look henpeckt),
+I can’t quite decently object,
+Having myself long chosen to shine
+Conspicuous in the _alias_[2] line;
+So that henceforth, by wife's decree,
+ (For Biddy from this point won’t budge)
+Your old friend's new address must be
+ The _Rev. Mortimer O'Fudge_--
+The "O" being kept, that all may see
+We're _both_ of ancient family.
+
+Such, friend, nor need the fact amaze you,
+My public life's a calm Euthanasia.
+Thus bid I long farewell to all
+The freaks of Exeter's old Hall--
+Freaks, in grimace, its apes exceeding,
+And rivalling its bears in breeding.
+Farewell, the platform filled with preachers--
+The prayer given out, as grace, by speechers,
+Ere they cut up their fellow-creatures:--
+Farewell to dead old Dens's volumes,
+And, scarce less dead, old _Standard's_ columns:--
+From each and all I now retire,
+My task, henceforth, as spouse and sire,
+To bring up little filial Fudges,
+To be M.P.s, and Peers, and Judges--
+_Parsons_ I'd add too, if alas!
+There yet were hope the Church could pass
+The gulf now oped for hers and her,
+Or long survive what _Exeter_--
+Both Hall and Bishop, of that name--
+Have done to sink her reverend fame.
+Adieu, dear friend--you'll oft hear _from_ me,
+ Now I'm no more a travelling drudge;
+ Meanwhile I sign (that you may judge
+How well the surname will become me)
+ Yours truly,
+ MORTIMER O'FUDGE.
+
+
+[1] "Among other amiable enactments against the Catholics at this period
+(1649), the price of five pounds was set on the head of a Romish
+priest--being exactly the same sum offered by the same legislators for the
+head of a wolf."--_Memoirs of Captain Rock_, book i., chap. 10.
+
+[2] In the first edition of his Dictionary, Dr. Johnson very significantly
+exemplified the meaning of the word "alias" by the instance of Mallet, the
+poet, who had exchanged for this more refined name his original Scotch
+patronymic, Malloch. "What _other_ proofs he gave [says Johnson] of
+disrespect to his native country, I know not; but it was remarked of him
+that he was the only Scot whom Scotchmen did not commend."--_Life of
+Mallet_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+LETTER XI.
+
+FROM PATRICK MAGAN, ESQ.,
+TO THE REV. RICHARD ----.
+------, IRELAND.
+
+
+Dear Dick--just arrived at my own humble_gîte_,
+I enclose you, post-haste, the account, all complete,
+Just arrived, _per_ express, of our late noble feat.
+
+ [_Extract from the "County Gazette."_]
+
+This place is getting gay and full again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Last week was married, "in the Lord,"
+The Reverend Mortimer O'Mulligan,
+ Preacher, in _Irish_, of the Word,
+He, who the Lord's force lately led on--
+(Exeter Hall his _Armagh_-geddon,)[1]
+To Miss B. Fudge of Pisgah Place,
+One of the chosen, as "heir of grace,"
+And likewise heiress of Phil. Fudge,
+Esquire, defunct, of Orange Lodge.
+
+Same evening, Miss F. Fudge, 'tis hinted--
+ Niece of the above, (whose "Sylvan Lyre,"
+In our _Gazette_, last week, we printed).
+ Eloped with Pat. Magan, Esquire.
+The fugitives were trackt some time,
+ After they'd left the Aunt's abode,
+By scraps of paper scrawled with rhyme,
+ Found strewed along the Western road;--
+Some of them, _ci-devant_ curlpapers,
+Others, half burnt in lighting tapers.
+This clew, however, to their flight,
+ After some miles was seen no more;
+And, from inquiries made last night,
+ We find they've reached the Irish shore.
+
+Every word of it true, Dick--the escape from Aunt's thrall--
+Western road--lyric fragments--curl-papers and all.
+My sole stipulation, ere linkt at the shrine
+(As some balance between Fanny's numbers and mine),
+Was that, when we were _one_, she must give up the _Nine_;
+Nay, devote to the Gods her whole stock of MS.
+With a vow never more against prose to transgress.
+This she did, like a heroine;--smack went to bits
+The whole produce sublime of her dear little wits--
+Sonnets, elegies, epigrams, odes canzonets--
+Some twisted up neatly, to form _allumettes_,
+Some turned into _papillotes_, worthy to rise
+And enwreathe Berenice's bright locks in the skies!
+While the rest, honest Larry (who's now in my pay),
+Begged, as "lover of _po'thry_," to read on the way.
+
+Having thus of life's _poetry_ dared to dispose,
+How we now, Dick, shall manage to get thro' its _prose_,
+With such slender materials for _style_, Heaven knows!
+But--I'm called off abruptly--_another_ Express!
+What the deuce can it mean?--I'm alarmed, I confess.
+
+P.S.
+
+Hurrah, Dick, hurrah, Dick, ten thousand hurrahs!
+I'm a happy, rich dog to the end of my days.
+There--read the good news--and while glad, for _my_ sake,
+That Wealth should thus follow in Love's shining wake,
+Admire also the _moral_--that he, the sly elf,
+Who has fudged all the world, should be now fudged _himself_!
+
+EXTRACT FROM LETTER ENCLOSED.
+
+With pain the mournful news I write,
+Miss Fudge's uncle died last night;
+And much to mine and friends' surprise,
+By will doth all his wealth devise--
+Lands, dwellings--rectories likewise--
+To his "beloved grand-niece," Miss Fanny,
+Leaving Miss Fudge herself, who many
+Long years hath waited--not a penny!
+Have notified the same to latter,
+And wait instructions in the matter.
+ For self and partners, etc.
+
+
+[1] The rectory which the Rev. gentleman holds is situated in the county
+of _Armagh_!--a most remarkable coincidence--and well worthy of the
+attention of certain expounders of the Apocalypse.
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Thomas Moore]
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE COMPLETE POEMS OF SIR THOMAS MOORE ***
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