Longman C? Paternoster Rcnrl839 THE POETICAL WORKS OF LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON. IN FOUR VOLUMES. A NEW EDITION. VOLUME III. THE GOLDEN VIOLET. iO^ x u v ] ^\ u LONDON: \\\ PRINTED FOR LONGMAN, ORME, BROWN, GREEN, AND LONGMANS, PATERNOSTER-ROW. 1839. PR v.3 LONDON : PRINTED BY MANNING AND MASON, IVY LANE, PATERNOSTER ROW. TO THE REV. JAMES LANDON, RECTOR OF ABERFORD AND AMESTRY MY DEAR UNCLE, I inscribe to you this volume, the greater part of which was written under your affectionate roof, during the two pleasant seasons I have passed with you. To have it deemed worthy of your critical judgment, and your more partial approval, would indeed be the pride and pleasure of Your gratefully attached L. E. L. December, 1826. \ * INTRODUCTION. THE title of the Golden Violet is taken from the Festival alluded to in the close of the Troubadour. There are various accounts of the origin of this metrical competition : the one from which my idea was principally taken is that mentioned by Warton. CONTENTS. PAGE THE GOLDEN VIOLET 1 ERINNA ,. 241 MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. THE CON1STON CURSE 271 THE OMEN 283 ONE DAY 291 LOVE'S LAST LESSON 298 NOTES..., . 307 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. TO-MORROW, to-morrow, thou loveliest May, To-morrow will rise up thy first-born day ; Bride of the Summer, Child of the Spring, To-morrow the year will its favourite bring : The roses will know thee, and fling back their vest, .While the nightingale sings him to sleep on their breast ; The blossoms, in welcomes, will open to meet On the light boughs thy breath, in the soft grass thy feet. To-morrow the dew will have virtue to shed O'er the cheek of the maiden* its loveliest red ; * Gathering the May dew. B ^ THE GOLDEN VIOLET. To-morrow a glory will brighten the earth, While the spirit of beauty rejoicing has birth. Farewell to thee, April, a gentle farewell, Thou hast saved the young rose in its emerald cell ; Sweet nurse, thou hast mingled thy sunshine and showers, Like kisses and tears, on thy children the flowers. As a hope, when fulfilled, to sweet memory turns, We shall think of thy clouds as the odorous urns, Whence colour, and freshness, and fragrance were wept; We shall think of thy rainbows, their promise is kept. There is not a cloud on the morning's blue way, And the daylight is breaking, the first of the May. THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And never yet hath morning light Lovelier vision brought to sight, Or lovelier driven away from dreams, And lovely that which only seems ; The garden, that beneath it lay, From flower and fountain sent the ray Reflected, till all round seem'd blent Into one sunny element. There in the midst rose marble halls, Wreathed pillars upheld the walls ; A fairy castle, not of those Made for storm, and made for foes, But telling of a gentler time, A lady's rule, a summer clime. And all spoke joyousness, for there Thronged the gay, the young, the fair, B 2 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. It was now their meeting hour, They scattered round through grove and bower. Many a high-born beauty made Her seat beneath the chestnut shade ; While, like her shadow hovering near, Came her dark-eyed cavalier, Bidding the rose fade by her cheek, To hint of what he dared not speak. And others wandered with the lute, In such a scene could it be mute ? While from its winged sweetness came, The echo of some treasured name. And many a grot with laughter rung, As gathered there, these gay and young Flung airy jests like arrows round, That hit the mark but to rebound. THE GOLDEN VIOLET. With graceful welcome smiled on all, The lady of the festival Wander'd amid her guests ; at last, Many a courtly greeting past, She stray'd into a little grove, With cypress branches roofed above ; Beneath the path was scarcely seen, Alike the walk and margent green. So dim it was, each precious stone The countess wore a meteor shone. Yet on she went, for nought her heart In the glad revellings took part : Too tender and too sad to share In sportive mirth, in pageant glare ; Dearer to her was the first breath, When morning shakes her early wreath, 6 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And joys in the young smiles of day, Albeit they steal her pearls away : Dearer to her the last pale light That lingers on the brow of night, As if unwilling to be gone, And abdicate its lovely throne : Dearer to her were these than all Than ever shone in lighted hall. The young, the gay, be they allow'd One moment's pleasaunce in the crowd ; The dance, the odours, song, and bloom, Those soft spells of the banquet room : They last not, but the ear, the eye, Catch the checked frown the hidden sigh, Which pierce too soon the shining mask, And prove delight may be a task. THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 11 One of those glowing spots that take The sunbeams prisoners, and make A glory of their own delight, Below all clear, above all bright. And every bank was fair ; but one Most sheltered from the wind and sun Seem'd like a favourite : the rest Bared to the open sky their breast; But this was resting in the shade By two old patriarch chestnuts made, Whose aged trunks peep'd grey and bare Spite of the clustering ivy's care, Which had spread over all its wreath, The boughs above, the ground beneath ; Oft told and true similitude For moralist in pensive mood, THE GOLDEN VIOLET. To mark the green leaves' glad outside, Then search what withered boughs they hide, And here the countess took her seat Beneath the chestnut, shelter meet For one whose presence might beseem The spirit of the shade and stream; As now she lean'd with upraised head, And white veil o'er her bosom spread, Hiding the gems and chains of gold Which too much of rank's baubles told ; Leaving her only with the power Of nature in its loveliest hour, When to its musing look is given The influence of its native heaven. Her cheek was pale, the hue of thought, Like image by the sculptor sought THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 13 For some sweet saint, some muse on whom Beauty has shed all but her bloom, As if it would have nought declare The strife and stain of clay were, there. Braided Madonna-like, the wave Of the black hair a lustre gave To the clear forehead, whose pure snow Was even as an angel's brow : While there was in her gentler eye The touch of human sympathy, That mournful tenderness which still In grief and joy, in good and ill, Lingers with woman through life's void, Sadden'd, subdued, but not destroy'd. And gazed the countess on the lake, Loving it for its beauty's sake ; 14 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Wander'd her look round, till its sight Became itself blent with the light ; Till, as it sought for rest, her eye Now fell upon a green mound nigh. With ivy hung and moss o'ergrown, Beside it stood a broken stone, And on it was a single flower, The orphan growth of some chance shower. Which brought it there, and then forgot All care of the frail nursling's lot, A lily with its silver bells Perfumed like the spring's treasure-cells ; Yet drooping, pale, as if too late Mourning for their neglected state. It was the fittest flower to grow Over the conscious clay below. THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 15 Bethought the countess of a tale Connected with the lonely vale ; Some bard, who died before his fame j Whose songs remain'd, but not his name : It told his tomb was by the wave, In life his haunt, in death his grave. Sadly she mused upon the fate That still too often must await The gifted hand which shall awake The poet's lute, and for its sake All but its own sweet self resign, Thou loved lute ! to be only thine. For what is genius, but deep feeling Waken'd by passion to revealing ? And what is feeling, but to be Alive to every misery, 16 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. While the heart too fond, too weak, Lies open for the vulture's beak ? Alas ! for him possessed of all That wins and keeps a world in thrall, Of all that makes the soul aspire, Yet vow'd to a neglected lyre ; Who finds, the first, a golden mine, Sees the veins yield, the treasures shine, Gazes until his eye grows dim, Then learns that it is not for him ; One who, albeit his wayward mood Pines for and clings to solitude, Has too much humanness of heart To dwell from all his kind apart ; But seeks communion for the dreams With which his vision'd spirit teems ; THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 17 Would fain in other cups infuse His own delights, and fondly woos The world, without that worldliness Which wanting, there is no success ; Hears his song sink unmark'd away,- Swanlike his soul sinks with its lay,- Lifts to his native heaven his eyes, Turns to the earth, despairs and dies ; Leaving a memory whose reward Might lesson many a future bard, Or, harder still, a song whose fame Has long outlived its minstrel's name. "Oh, must this be!" CLEMENZA said, " Thus perish quite the gifted dead! How many a wild and touching song To my own native vales belong, c 18 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Whose lyrist's name will disappear Like his who sleeps forgotten here ! Not so ; it shall be mine to give The praise that bids the poet live. There is a flower, a glorious flower, The very fairest of my bower, With shining leaf, aroma breath, Befitting well a victor wreath ; The Golden Violet shall be The prize of Provence minstrelsy. Open I '11 fling my castle hall To throng of harps and festival, Bidding the bards from wide and far Bring song of love or tale of war, And it shall be mine own to set The victor's crown of Violet." THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 19 THE FIRST DAY. 'T is May again, another May, Looking as if it meant to stay ; So many are its thousand flowers^ So glorious are its sunny hours, So green its earth, so blue its sky, As made for hope's eternity. By night with starlike tapers gleaming, And music like an odour streaming j By day with portals open flung, While bugle note and trumpet rung ; Rose Isaure's towers : and gathered there, Again, the gifted, young and fair Have at CLEMENZA'S summons met, In contest for the Violet. 20 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Her heralds had been to distant lands To call together the joyeuse bands, And they had hasten'd . England had sent Her harp across the blue element ; The Spaniard had come from the land of romam And the flower of her minstrels had gathered in France, From far and from near ; it was strange to see The bards of Erin and Italy Mingle together with those that came From the highland home they so loved to name. Hark to the sound of yon silver horn, And the sweep of the harp to the distance borne ; 'T is the hour of meeting, and welcome now To the gifted hand and the laurel' d brow. THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 21 Young knight, think not of hawk or hound ; Fair maiden, fling not thy smiles around ; Warrior, regard not the sword at thy side ; Baron, relax thou thy brow of pride ; Let worldly coldness and care depart, And yield to the spell of the minstrel's art. T was a spacious hall, and around it rose Carved pillars as white as the snows ; Between, the purple tapestry swept, Where work'd in myriad shades were kept Memories of many an ancient tale, And of many a blooming cheek now pale. The dome above like a glory shone, Or a cloud which the sunset lingers upon, While the tinted pane seem'd the bright resort, Where Iris' self held her minstrel court ; 22 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And beautiful was the coloured fall Of the floating hues round the stately hall. In groups around mix'd the gay throng, Knight, noble, lady, child of song. At one end was upraised a throne, On which the countess sat alone ; Not with droop'd eye and bow'd-down head, And simple white veil round her spread, As lean'd she o'er the lonely wave, Dreaming of the dead minstrel's grave ; But purple robe and golden band Bespoke the ladye of the land ; Rich gems upon her arm were placed, And lit the zone around her waist ; But none were in her braided hair, One only Violet was there, THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 23 The golden flower, which won all eyes, Destined to be the minstrel prize. They passed around the silver urn Whose lot must fix the poet's turn ; To a young Provence bard it came, He drew, and drew CLEMENZA'S name. And forth at once young VIDAL sprung, His light lute o'er his shoulder flung, Then paused, for over cheek and brow, Like lightning, rush'd the crimson glow ; A low sound trembled from that lute, His lip turned pale, his voice was mute ; He sent a hurried glance around As if in search ; at last he found The eyes without whose light to him The very heaven above was dim : 24 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. At once his hand awoke the chords, At once his lip pour'd tuneful words, And, gazing on his lady's smile, Bade his soft notes arise the while. THE BROKEN SPELL : THE FIRST PROVENCAL MINSTREL'S LAY. A FAIRY TALE. WHERE on earth is the truth that may vie With woman's lone and long constancy ? Lovers there have been who have died For the love that they made a warrior's pride ; THE BROKEN SPELL. 25 And a lover once, when a world was the prize, Threw away his chance for a lady's eyes : But not his the love that changes not Mid the trials and griefs of an ill-starr'd lot j Not like the rainbow, that shines on high Brighter and purer as darker the sky. But woman's creed of suffering bears All that the health and the spirit wears 5 Absence but makes her love the more, For her thoughts then feed on their own sweet store ; And is not hers the heart alone That has pleasure and pride in a prize when won ? Her eye may grow dim, her cheek may grow pale, But tell they not both the same fond tale ? Love's lights have fled from her eye and cheek, To burn and die on the heart which they seek. 26 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Alas ! that so often the grave should be The seal of woman's fidelity ! On the horizon is a star, Its earliest, loveliest one by far ; A blush is yet upon the sky, As if too beautiful to die, A last gleam of the setting sun, Like hope when love has just begun ; That hour when the maiden's lute, And minstrel's song, and lover's suit, Seem as that their sweet spells had made This mystery of light and shade That last rich sigh is on the gale Which tells when summer's day is over, THE BROKEN SPELL. The sigh which closing flowers exhale After the bee, their honey lover, As to remind him in his flight Of what will be next noon's delight. 'T is a fair garden, almond trees Throw silver gifts upon the breeze ; Lilies, each a white-robed bride, With treasures of pure gold inside, Like marble towers a king has made; And of its own sweet self afraid, A hyacinth's flower-hung stalk is stooping, Lovelier from its timid drooping : But in the midst is a rose stem, The wind's beloved, the garden's gem. No wonder that it blooms so well : Thy tears have been on every leaf; 27 28 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And, Mirzala, thy heart can tell How lasting that which feeds on grief. ? T was a branch of roses her lover gave Amid her raven curls to wave, When they bade farewell, with that gentle sorrow Of the parting that sighs, "we meet to-morrow;" Yet the maiden knows not if her tears are shed Over the faithless or over the dead. She has not seen his face since that night When she watch'd his shadow by pale moonlight, And that branch has been cherish'd as all that was left To remind her of love and hope bereft. She was one summer evening laid Beneath the tulip tree's green shade, THE BROKEN SPELL. 29 When from her favourite rose a cloud Floated like those at break of day ; She mark'd its silvery folds unshroud, And there a radiant figure lay. And in murmurs soft as those Which sweep the sea at evening close, Spoke the Spirit of the rose : " MIRZALA, thy lover sleeps While his mistress for him weeps. He is bound by magic spell, Of force which woman's love may quell ; I will guide thee to the hall Where thy faith may break his thrall. Think thou if thy heart can dare All that thou must look on there. Turn not thou for hope nor fear, Till the marble hall appear. 30 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. There thou wilt thy lover see Dead to life, and love, and thee. Only truth so pure as thine Could approach the charmed shrine. Press thy lips to the cold stone, He will wake, the spell be done ! Hast thou courage like thy love ? Follow thou the snow-white dove." And MIRZALA rose up, and there Was a fair dove on that rose tree, With white wings glittering on the air, Like foam upon a summer sea. She follow'd it until she stood By where a little boat lay moor'd To the green willow, from the flood But by a water-flag secured. THE BROKEN SPELL. 31 She enter'd, and it cut the tide ; Odours and music fill'd the sail, As if a rose and lute had sigh'd A mingled breath upon the gale. It was at first a lovely scene : Leaves and branches wreathed a screen, Sunbeams there might wander through ; Glimpses of a sky of blue, Like the hopes that smile to cheer The earthliness of sorrow here ; And like summer queens, beside, Roses gazed upon the tide, Each one longing to caress Her own mirror'd loveliness j And the purple orchis shone Rich, as shines an Indian stone; 32 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And the honeysuckle's flower Crimson, as a sunset hour ; But too soon the blooms are past, When did ever beauty last ? And there came a dreary shade, Of the yew and cypress made, Moaning in the sullen breeze ; And at length not even these, But rocks in wild confusion hurl'd, Relics of a ruin'd world - Wide, more wide, the river grew, Blacker changed its dreary hue, Till, oppress'd, the wearied eye Only gazed on sea and sky Sea of death, and sky of night, Where a storm had been like light. THE BROKEN SPELL. 33 MIRZALA was pale, yet still Shrank she not for dread of ill. She cross'd the sea, and she gain'd the shore ; But little it recks to number o'er The wearying days and the heavy fears, When hope could only smile through tears, The perils, the pains, through which she pass'd, Till she came to a castle's gate at last. 'Twas evening; but the glorious sky, With its purple light and Tyrian dye, Was contrast strange to the drear heath Which bleak and desolate lay beneath. Trees, but leafless all, stood there, For the lightning flash had left them bare ; The grass lay wither'd, as if the wind Of the Siroc had mark'd its red course ; behind n 34 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. The bright clouds shone on the river's face, But the death-black waters had not a trace Of the crimson blaze that over them play'd : It seem'd as if a curse were laid On the grass, on the river, the tree, and the flower, And shut them out from the sunbeam's power ; And with the last ray which the sunbeam threw, The dove flew up, and vanished too. And MIRZALA knew she had reach'd that hall Where her lover lay sleeping in magic thrall ; And she sat her down by a blasted tree, To watch for what her fate might be. But at midnight the gates rolled apart with a sound Like the groan sent forth from the yawning ground. On she went with scarce light to show That gulf and darkness were below, THE BROKEN SPELL. 35 Light like the wan blue flames that wave Their death-torch o'er the murderer's grave ; And flickering shapes beset the way, Watching in gloom to seize their prey, More terrible, for that the eye Wandered in dim uncertainty : But MIRZALA pressed fearless on, Till every dreary shade was gone At once bursting into day There a radiant garden lay. There were tall and stately trees With green boughs, in canopies For the rose beneath, that smiled Like a young and favourite child ; With its purple wealth the vine, Mixed with silver jessamine, D 2 36 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Stretch'd around from tree to tree, Like a royal tapestry ; Sweet sounds floated on the air, Lutes and voices mingled there, And a thousand flowers blent Into one delicious scent ; Singing birds and azure skies, Made a spot like Paradise. MIRZALA paused not to lave Her pale forehead in the wave, Though each fountain was as bright As if form'd of dew and light. Paused she not for the sweet song, On the rich air borne along. Fair forms throng' d around with flowers Breathing of spring's earliest hours ; THE BROKEN SPELL. 37 Others from their baskets roll'd Fruits of ruby and of gold. Vainly ! nothing could delay, Nothing win the maiden's stay. And the magic scene again Changed to a white marble fane, And as MIRZALA drew near, Saw she two bright forms appear. The first wore gorgeous coronet, With topaz, pearl, and sapphire set, And a diamond zone embraced The rich robe around her waist ; And as conscious of her power In her great and royal dower, With a smile that seem'd to say, Only gold can clear thy way, 38 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. She her casket show'd, where shone Precious ore and Indian stone. " Oh ! if gold could win his heart, I would from the search depart ; All my offering must be True and spotless constancy." Then to the other shape she turn'd, Whose cheek with crimson blushes burn'd But to think love could be sold For a heartless gift of gold. From her lily-braided hair Took the spirit bud as fair As if to summer suns unknown, Gave it the maiden, and was gone. Then MIRZALA stood by a portal barr'd, Where held the Lion King his guard ; THE BROKEN SPELL. 39 But touch'd by that bud the lion grew tame, And the chained portals asunder came. It was darkness all in that magic room, But a sweet light stream'd from the lily's bloom. And MIRZALA look'd on her lover's face, And he woke at the touch of her soft embrace. Joy, joy for the maiden, her task is done, The spell is broken, her lover is won ! THE next who rose had that martial air, Such as stately warrior wont to wear ; Haughty his step, and sun and toil Had left on his cheek their darker soil, And on his brow of pride was the scar, The soldier's sign of glorious war ; And the notes came forth like the bearing bold Of the knightly deeds which their numbers told. 40 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. THE FALCON: THE LAY OF THE NORMAN KNIGHT, I HEAR a sound o'er hill and plain, It doth not pass away. Is it the valleys that ring forth Their welcome to the day ? Or is it that the lofty woods, Touch'd by the morn, rejoice? No, 't is another sound than these, It is the battle's voice. I see the martial ranks, I see Their banners floating there, And plume and spear rise meteor like Upon the reddening air. One mark'd I most of all, he was Mine own familiar friend ; THE FALCON. 41 A blessing after him was all My distant lip could send. Curse on the feeble arm that hung Then useless by my side ! I lay before my tent and watch'd Onwards the warriors ride. DE VALENCE he was first of all, Upon his foam-white steed ; Never knight curb'd more gallantly A fiery courser's speed. His silver armour shone like light, In the young morning's ray ; And round his helm the snowy plume Danced like the ocean spray. Sudden a bird burst through the air, I knew his falcon's flight ; 42 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. He perch'd beside his master's hand, Loud shouts rose at the sight. For many there deem'd the brave bird Augur' d a glorious day ; To my dark thoughts, his fond caress Seem'd a farewell to say. One moment and he spread his wings, The bird was seen no more ; Like the sea waves, the armed ranks Swept onwards as before. The height whereon I lay look'd down On a thick-wooded land, And soon amid the forest shade I lost the noble band. The snow-white steed, the silver shield, Amid the foliage shone j THE FALCON. But thicker closed the heavy boughs, And even these were gone. Yet still I heard the ringing steps Of soldiers clad in mail, And heard the stirring trumpet send Defiance on the gale. Then rose those deadlier sounds that tell When foes meet hand to hand, The shout, the yell, the iron clang Of meeting spear and brand. I have stood when my own life-blood Pour'd down like winter rain ; But rather would I shed its last Than live that day again. Squire, page, and leech my feverish haste To seek me tidings sent ; 43 44 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And day was closing as I paced Alone beside my tent ; When suddenly upon my hand A bird sank down to rest, The falcon, but its head was droop'd, And soil'd and stain'd its breast. A light glanced through the trees : I ki His courser's snowy hide, But that was dash'd with blood ; one bound, And at my feet it died. I rushed towards my sword, alas ! My arm hung in its sling ; But, as to lead my venture, The falcon spread its wing. I met its large beseeching eye Turn'd to mine, as in prayer; THE FALCON. 45 I follow'd, such was its strange power, Its circuit through the air. It led me on, before my path The tangled branches yield ; It led me on till we had gain'd The morning's battle-field. The fallen confused, and numberless ! " O grief! it is in vain, My own beloved friend, to seek For thee amid the slain." Yet paused the falcon, where heap'd dead Spoke thickest of the fray 5 There, compass'd by a hostile ring, Its noble master lay. None of his band were near, around Were only foes o'erthrown j 46 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. It seem'd as desperate he rush'd, And fought, and fell alone. The helm, with its white plumes, was off; The silver shield blood-stain' d ; But yet within the red right hand The broken sword remained. That night I watch'd beside, and kept The hungry wolves away, And twice the falcon's beak was dipp'd In blood of birds of prey. The morning rose, another step With mine was on the plain ; A hermit, who with pious aid Sought where life might remain. We made DE VALENCE there a grave, The spot which now he prest ; THE FALCON. 47 For shroud, he had his blood-stain'd mail, Such suits the soldier best. A chestnut tree grew on the spot -, It was as if he sought, From the press of surrounding foes, Its shelter while he fought. The grave was dug, a cross was raised, The prayers were duly said, While perch'd upon a low-hung bough The bird moan'd overhead. We laid the last sod on the grave, The falcon dropp'd like lead ; I placed it in my breast in vain, Its gallant life was fled. We bade the faithful creature share Its master's place of rest ; 48 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. I took two feathers from its wing, They are my only crest. Spring leaves were green upon the trees What time DE VALENCE fell Let autumn's yellow forests say if I avenged him well. And then I laid aside my sword, And took my lute to thee, And vow'd for my sworn-brother's sake I would a wanderer be ; Till for a year I had proclaimed In distant lands his fame, And taught to many a foreign court DE VALENCE'S brave name. Never was heart more kind and true, Never was hand more bold ; THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 49 Never was there more loyal knight. Gentles, my tale is told. STRANGE contrast to each gorgeous vest, His rough plaid crost upon his breast, And looking worn, and wild, and rude, As just from mountain solitude ; Though weary brow and drooping eye Told wanderer 'neath a distant sky. Heedless of all, with absent look, The key of his clairshach he took ; But the first breath, oh ! it was sweet, As river gliding at your feet, And leaving, as it murmurs by, Your pleasant dream, half thought, half sigh. 50 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. THE DREAM: THE LAY OF THE SCOTTISH MINSTREL. THERE are no sounds in the wanderer's ear, To breathe of the home that he holds so dear : Your gales pass by on the breath of the rose, The vines on your sunny hills repose ; And your river is clear as its silver tide Had no task save to mirror the flowers beside. Thou art fair, Provence, but not fair to me As the land which my spirit is pining to see, Where the pine rises darkly, the lord of the w< Or stands lone in the pass, where the warrior has stood ; Where the torrent is rushing like youth in its might, And the cavern is black as the slumber of night ; THE DREAM. 51 Where the deer o'er the hills bound, as fleet and as free As the shaft from the bow, as the wave of the sea ; Where the heather is sweet as the sleep that is found By the hunter who makes it his bed on the ground; Where the might of the chieftain goes down to his son In numbers as wild as the deeds that are done; Where the harp has notes caught from the storm and the flood, When foemen are gathering together in blood; Yet has others that whisper the maiden, of love, In tones that re-echo the linnet and dove ; Where the mountain-ash guards us from elfin and fay; Where the broom, spendthrift like, flings its gold wreath away ; And the harebell shines blue in the depth of the vale. Oh ! dear country of mine, of thee be my tale. E2 52 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. The lady awoke from the slumber of night, But the vision had melted away from her sight. She turn'd to her pillow for rest, but again' The same vision of fear became only more plain. She dream'd she stood on a fair hill side, And their lands lay beneath in summer pride, The sky was clear, and the earth was green, Her heart grew light as she gazed on the scene. Two fair oak trees most caught her eye, The one looked proudly up to the sky, The other bent meekly, as if to share The shelter its proud boughs flung on the air. There came no cloud on the face of day, Yet even as she look'd they pass'd away, Unmark'd as though they had never been, Save a young green shoot that had sprung between, THE DREAM. 53 And while she gazed on it, she could see That sapling spring up to a noble tree. Again she woke, and again she slept, But the same dream still on her eyelids kept. The morning came at last, but its light Seem'd not to her as her mornings bright. A sadness hung on her lip and brow, She could not shake off, she shamed to avow. While the hounds that chase the stag and roe Were gathering in the court below, She walk'd with her lord, and mark'd that on him A somewhat of secret shadow lay dim ; And sought she the cause with that sweet art, Which is the science of woman's fond heart, That may not bear the loved one to brood O'er aught of sorrow in solitude ; 54 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And with gentle arm in his entwined, And witching cheek on his reclined, The source of his gloom is to her made known, 'Tis a dream, she starts, for she hears her own. But his cares, at least, to the summons yield Of the baying hound and the cheerful field ; At the horn's glad peal, he downwards flung From the terraced wall, and to stirrup sprung. And the lady forgot her bodings too, As his steed dash'd aside the morning dew, So graceful he sate, while his flashing eye Seem'd proud of his gallant mastery. But the swell of the horn died away on the air, And the hunter and hounds were no longer there ; Then MATILDA turn'd to her loneliness, With a cloud on her spirit she might not repress. THE DREAM. 55 She took up her pencil, unconscious she drew A heavy branch of the funeral yew ; She reach'd her lute and its song awoke, But the string, as she touch'd it, wail'd and broke ; Then turn'd she the poet's gifted leaf, But the tale was death, and the words were grief; And still, with a power she might not quell, The dream of the night o'er her hung like a spell. Day pass'd, but her lord was still away ; Word came he was press' d to a festal array; 'T was a moment's thought, around her was thrown The muffling plaid, and she hasten' d alone To the glen, where dwelt the awful maid To whom the spirits of air had said Unearthly words, and given a power On the wind, and the stars, and the midnight hour. 56 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. She reach' d that glen ; not till then she took One moment's breath, or one moment's look. When paused she in awe 't was so lone, so still ; Silence was laid on the leaf and the rill, It was stillness as that of the tomb around, The beat of her heart was the only sound. On one side, bleak rocks the barrier made, As the first great curse were upon them laid ; Drear and desolate, stern and bare, Tempests and time had been ravaging there. And there gathered darkly the lowering sky, As if fearing its own obscurity ; And spectre like, around the vale, Pale larches flung their long arms on the gale, Till the sward of the glen sloped abruptly away, And a gloomy lake under the precipice lay. THE DREAM. 57 Never was life or sound in its wave, An abyss like that of the depths of the grave. On yet she went ; till, sudden as thought, By her stood the seer whom she wildly sought. She had heard no step, seen no shadow glide, Yet there the prophetess was by her side. As the skilful in music tone their chords, The lady had arm'd her with soothing words ; But she look'd on the face that fronted her there, And her words and their substance melted in air. Pale as the corpse on its death-bed reclining ; And hands through whose shadow the starbeam was shining, As they waved from her forehead the raven cloud Of hair that fell to her feet like a shroud ; And awful eyes, never had earth To their fearful wanderings given birth, 58 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Their light and their haunting darkness came From gazing on those it is sin to name. She spoke, it was low, but it sank on the soul With deadlier force than the thunder's roll ; Yet her voice was sweet, as to it were left The all of human feeling not reft : " I heard the words come on the midnight wind; They pass'd, but their message is left behind ; I watch'd the course of a falling star, And I heard the bode of its cry from afar ; I talk'd with the spirit of yonder lake ; I sorrowed, and, lady, 't was for thy sake. Part from thy face the sunny hair, So young, and yet death is written there. No one is standing beside thee now, Yet mine eyes can see a noble brow, THE DREAM. 59 I can see the flash of a clear dark eye, And a stately hunter is passing by. You will go to the tomb, but not alone, For the doom of that hunter is as your own. Hasten thee home, and kiss the cheek Of thy young fair child, nor fear to break The boy's sweet slumber of peace ; for not With his father's or thine is that orphan's lot. As the sapling sprang up to a stately tree, He will flourish ; but not, thou fond mother, for thee. Now away, for those who would blast thy sight Are gathering fast on the clouds of night ; Away, while yet those small clear stars shine, They'll grow pale at the meeting of me and mine." Alas, for the weird of the wizard maid ! Alas, for the truth of the words which she said ! 60 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Ah, true for aye will those bodings be That tell of mortal misery ! I Ve seen my noble chieftain laid low, And my harp o'er his grave wail'd its song of woe ; And again it wail'd for the gentle bride Who with hastening love soon slept by his side. He pass'd away in the early spring, And she in the summer, whose sun could bring Warmth and life, in its genial hour, To all save the drooping human flower. I left the land, I could not stay Where the gallant, the lovely, had pass'd away ; Yet now my spirit is pining to greet My youthful chief in his parent's seat. I saw him once in a foreign land, With plume on head, and with spear in hand ; THE DREAM. 61 And many a lady's eye was bent On the stranger knight in the tournament j He had his father's stately brow, And the falcon eye that flash'd below ; But when he knelt as the victor down, (Fair was the maiden who gave the crown,) A few low words the young warrior said, And his lip had his mother's smile and red. He is dwelling now in his native glen, And there my harp must waken again ; My last song shall be for him young, him brave, Then away to die at my master's grave ! LED by a child whose sunny air, And rosy cheek young Health might wear, 62 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. When rising from the mountain wave, Fresh as the stream its freshness gave ; But gentle eyes, with softness fraught, As if their tenderness they caught From gazing on the pallid brow Whose only light was from them now. Beautiful it was to see Such love in early infancy. Far from the aged steps she led, Long since the guiding light had fled ; And meek and sad the old man grew, As nearer life's dark goal he drew ; All solace of such weary hour Was that child's love, and his own power O'er music's spirit, and the store He treasured up of legend lore. THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 63 She led him gently to his seat, And took her place beside his feet, Up gazing with fond fixed eye, Lest sigh should pass unnoticed by. A clear rich prelude forth he rang, Brightened his look as thus he sang j The colour lit his forehead pale, As the master told his ancient tale. THE CHILD OF THE SEA : THE LAY OF THE SECOND PROVEN9AL BARD. IT was a summer evening ; and the sea Seem'd to rejoice in its tranquillity ; Rolling its gentle waters to the west, Till the rich crimson blush' d upon their breast, 64 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Uniting lovingly the wave and sky, Like Hope content in its delight to die. A young queen with her maidens sat and sung, While ocean thousands of sweet echoes flung, Delighting them to hear their voices blent With music from the murmuring element. Then cast they on the winds their radiant hair, Then gathered of the pink shells those most rare, To gem their flying curls, that each might seem A Nereid risen from the briny stream. When sudden cried the queen, " Come, gaze with m. At what may yonder in the distance be," All gathered round. A little speck was seen, Like a mere shadow, on the billows green. Nearer and nearer, more distinct it grew, Till came a fragile vessel full in view ; THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 65 As if at random flung to a chance gale, Unchecked, unguided, flapp'd a silken sail ; And saw they all alone a lady there, Her neck and arms to the rude sea-wind bare, And her head bow'd as in its last despair. It came no nearer, on the sea it lay ; The wind, exhausted, had died quite away. They had a fairy boat, in which 't was sport Amid the inland channels to resort ; Their fair hands raised the sail, and plied the oar, And brought the lonely wanderer to their shore ; Then mark'd they how her scarlet mantle's fold Was round a young, a lovely infant rolPd. They brought the wearied stranger to their tent, Flung o'er her face cool water, gifted scent, And touch' d her lips with wine, though all too plain That death was darkening in each frozen vein : F 66 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Eager she gazed where the queen stood beside, Her hands stretch'd to her own fair boy, and died. And thus the babe was left without a name, Child of the Sea, without a kindred claim : He never felt the want ; that gentle queen Nurtured his infancy, as though he had been The brother of her own sweet ISABELLE ; But as he grew she thought it need to tell His history, and gave the cloak whose fold Was heavy with rich work and broider'd gold ; And also gave his mother's carkanet, With precious stones in regal order set. In truth he was well worthy of her care ; None of the court might match his princely air, And those who boasted of their bearing high Quail'd at the flashing of his falcon eye. THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 67 Young as he was, none better ruled the speed Or curb'd the mettle of the wayward steed. None better knew the hunter's gentle craft, None could wing from the bow a truer shaft 5 And noble was his courtesy and bland, Graceful his bearing in the saraband ; He knew the learned scroll the clerk displays, And touch'd the lute to the fine poet's lays ; And many bright eyes would their glances fling On the young victor in the tilters' ring. Young as he was, the seal was on his heart, That burning impress which may not depart tSYhere it has once been set, Love's fiery seal : But little need I dwell on what all feel ; Gray, grave, cold, proud, stern, high, say is there one Whom at some time Love has not breathed upon ? .. OO THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And EGLAMOUR. turn'd to Is A BELLE, As to his destiny's best oracle : 'T was at midnight, beneath her bower, he sung Those gentle words, with which love gifts the tongue. THE SONG. Oh ! give me but my gallant steed, My spurs and sword to serve at need, The shield that has my father's crest, Thy colours, lady, on my breast, And I will forth to wild warfare, And win thee, or will perish there. I am unknown, of a lost line, And thou, love, art the flow'r of thine. I know thou art above me far, Yet still thou art hope's leading star ; THE CHILD OF THE SEA. For love is like the breathing wind, That everywhere may entrance find. I saw thee, sure the fairest one The morning light e'er look'd upon ; No wonder that my heart was moved, 'Twere marvel if I had not loved. Long, long held by a spell too dear, Thy smile has kept thy loiterer here. Almost it seem'd enough for me Of Heav'n to only gaze on thee. But love lights high and gallant thought, A rich prize must be dearly bought. Unworthy votary at thy shrine, I scorn my falchion's idle shine ; To-morrow I will wend away To dim it in the battle fray. 70 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Lady, farewell ! I pray thee give One look whereon may absence live, One word upon my ear to dwell, And then, sweet lady mine, farewell. Then softly open was a casement flung, And a fair face from out the lattice hung ; The trace of heavy tears was on her cheek, But dash'd aside, as though the heart were weak In tenderness, yet it sought strength to show An outward firmness, whatever lurk'd below. 'Twas but a moment's struggle; and the pride That nerves the softness of a hero's bride Was on her lofty forehead, as she gave A sunny curl beside his plume to wave. " I have another gift which you must take, And guard it, EGLAMOUR, well for my sake : THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 70 It is a charmed ring this emerald stone Will be a sign, when thou art from me gone. Mark if it changes ; if a spot be seen On the now spotless ground of lighted green, Danger is round me ; haste thou then to me, Thou know'st how fearless is my trust in thee. There is a weight to-night upon my heart ; Ah ! peace for me can be but where thou art." She spoke no more, she felt her bosom swell, How could her lip find utterance for farewell ? He took the curl, one kiss is on it press'd, Then gave it to its sanctuary, his breast ; And doff'd his plumed helm, " Dear lady, now Take the last offering of thy lover's vow ; And for thy beauty's honour, I will go Bareheaded to the battle, weal or woe. 72 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Never shall crested casque my temples grace Until again I look on thy sweet face." A shriek burst from her it was lost in air ; She calPd upon his name, he was not there. But leave we her, her solitude to keep, To pray the Virgin's pity, wail and weep O'er all the tender thoughts that have such power Upon the constant heart in absent hour ; And go we forth with our young knight, to see What high adventure for his arms may be. Onward he rode upon a barbed steed, Milk-white as is the maiden's bridal weed, Champing his silver bit. From throat to heel Himself was clad in Milan's shining steel ; The surcoat that he wore was work'd with gold ; And from his shoulder fell the scarlet fold THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 73 Of a rich mantle lined with miniver, His mother's once, all that he held from her, Save the bright chain, with pearl and ruby strung, Which rainbow-like outside his hauberk hung j His ashen lance lay ready in its rest ; His shield was poised beside him, and its crest Was a young eaglet trying its first flight, The motto, " I must seek to win my right :" Two greyhounds ran beside ; and mortal sight Had never look'd upon more gallant knight. Bareheaded so his features met the view Touch'd by the tender morning's early hue : And eyes like the wild merlin's when she springs After long prison on her eager wings, Fierce in their beauty, with that flashing glance Which dazzles as it were a flying lance, 74 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Giving the sternness of a warrior's air To what had else seem'd face almost too fair : And, as in mockery of the helm, behind, Like plumes, his bright curls danced upon the wind ; Curls of that -tint o'er which a sunbeam flings A thousand colours on their auburn rings. Two days he journey 'd, till he reach'd a wood, A very dwelling-place of solitude ; Where the leaves grew by myriads, and the boughs Were fill'd with linnets, singing their sweet vows ; And dreaming, lover-like with open eye, He envied the gay birds that they might fly As with a thought from green tree to green tree, And wing their way with their dear loves to be. THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 75 Even as he mused on this, he heard a cry, A bitter shriek for mercy pleading high. He rush'd and saw two combatants with one Whose strength seem'd in th' unequal battle done ; And praying, weeping, knelt a maiden near, Whose piercing voice it was had reach' d his ear. His lance flies, and one felon bites the ground ; The other turns, and turns for a death wound. Their champion moved the rescued twain to greet, Just one embrace, and they are at his feet. And gazed Sir EGLAMOUR on their strange dress, But more on the fair dame's great loveliness ; For, saving one, to him still beauty's queen, A face so radiant had he never seen. Together, for the sun was high in June, They sought a shelter from the sultry noon. 76 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. There was shade all around, but had one place Somewhat more softness in its gentler grace ; There of fair moss a pleasant couch was made, And a small fountain o'er the wild flowers play'd, A natural lute, plaining amid the grove, Less like the voice of sorrow than of love. They told their history : the maiden came From a far heathen land, of foreign name ; The Soldan's daughter, but she fled her state, To share a Christian lover's humbler fate : That lover was from Italy, his hand Had o'er a cunning art a strange command ; For he had curious colours that could give The human face, so like, it seem'd to live. He had cross'd over land and over sea To gaze on the fair Saracen ; and she, THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 77 When seen, was like the visions that were brought In unreal beauty on his sleeping thought. And Love is like the lightning in its might, Winging where least bethought its fiery flight, Melting the blade, despite the scabbard's guard. Love, passionate Love, hast thou not thy reward, Despite of all the soil and stain that clings When earth thou touchest with thy heavenly wings, In rich returned affection, which doth make Light of all suffering, for its own dear sake ? Together they had fled by sea and land, And the youth led her to Italians strand, Where he had a lone home in Arno's vale, A fit nest for his lovely nightingale, Till stopp'd by those fierce outlaws, who had paid Their life's base forfeit to the victor's blade. 78 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Mused EGLAMOUR, in silence, on the art Which even to absence pleasure could impart ; Ever before the eyes the one loved face, Aiding the memory with its present grace. Beautiful art, in pity surely sent To soothe the banish'd lover's discontent ! Then pray'd they too his history and name, Wherefore and whence their gallant champion came? And told he of his vow, and of the maid For whose sake each high venture was essay 'd. t With earnest tone the painter said his way Beside the palace of the princess lay ; And pray'd of his deliverer that he might Bear off his likeness to his lady's sight. And soon saw EGLAMOUR, with glad surprise, The colours darken, and the features rise. THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 79 He gazed within the fountain, and the view Was not more than the tablet's likeness true. At length they parted, as those part, in pain, Who rather wish than hope to meet again. 'T was night, but night which the imperial moon, Regal in her full beauty, turn'd to noon, But still the noon of midnight; though the ray Was clear and bright, it was not that of day ; -When EGLA.MOUR came to a gate : 'twas roll'd On its vast hinges back; his eyes behold " He who counts his life but light, Let him hunt my deer to-night." Needed no more, honour might be to win, Eager our gallant spurr'd his courser in. A noble park it was : the sweep of green Seem'd like a sea touched with the silver sheen 80 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Of moonlight, with the floating isles of shade Lithe coppices of shrubs sweet-scented made ; 'Twas dotted with small pools, upon whose brej The radiance seem'd to have a favourite rest, So bright each crystal surface shone ; and, round, Lines of tall stately trees flung on the ground Huge mass of shade, while others stood alone, As if too mighty for companions grown. And yielded EGLAMOUR to the delight Which ever must be born of such a night. When, starting from his dream, he saw stand near, Bright as the lake they drank from, the white deer. Instant the leash was from his greyhounds flung, They would not to the chase, but backwards hung ; To cheer them on he wound his bugle-horn ; And, ere the sound was in the distance borne THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 81 Away to silence, rang another strain, And furious spurred a steed across the plain, Huge like its giant rider. As he pass'd, His shadow fell, as if a storm had cast A sudden night around ; grasp'd his right hand A spear, to which our youth's was but a wand; Black as his shadow on the darkened field Was horse and armour ; and his gloomy shield Was as a cloud passing before the stars. EGLAMOUR set his lance ; scarcely it jars The mail'd rings of the hauberk : down he bent In time to shun the one his foeman sent ; Wasting its strength it reach'd the lake beside, And like a fallen tree dash'd in the tide. Their swords are out like lightning ; one whose stroke Is as the bolt that fells the forest oak, G 82 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. The other with light arm and ready wound. At length the black knight's steed rolls on ground ; He rises like a tower. One desperate blow, And the blood wells from EGLAMOUR'S fair brow ; His shield is dash'd in pieces : but just then, Ere the recovered blow was aim'd again, He stakes his life upon a sudden thrust, And his fierce foe is levelled in the dust. Gazed he in wonder on each giant limb, Yet scarce he deem'd victory was won by him. He went on bended knee; " Now, virgin queen, Who hast my succour in this danger been, Mother of God, these fair white deer shall be Offer'd to-morrow at thy sanctuary." He sat down by a fountain near, and tame These gentle hinds now at his beckon came ; THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 83 He lean'd on the soft grassy bed and slept, And when he waked found they their watch had kept. Then sprang he on his steed. The sun was high, Morning's last blush was fading from the sky O'er a fair city ; there with pious will He turn'd, his vow'd thanksgiving to fulfil. He enter'd victor ; and around him drew The multitude, who could not sate their view, Gazing upon him who the black knight slew, And yet so young, so fair. Though somewhat now His cheek had lost its custom'd summer glow, With paleness from his wound, yet was not one Could say his peer they e'er had look'd upon. He found a stately church, and, bending there, His spoil devoted, pray'd his lover prayer j G 2 84 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. When, rising from his knee, he saw a train With cross and chaunt enter the holy fane, Led by a man, though aged, of stately air, With purple robe, though head and feet were bare. He ask'd the cause, and he was told, the king Thus sought some mercy on his suffering ; For that he had, in causeless jealousy, Exposed his wife and child to the rude sea. Hope thrill' d the bosom of our ocean knight, Anxious he stay'd and watch'd the sacred rite ; He saw the old man kneel before the shrine Where was the image of the Maid Divine. He pray'd to her that Heaven, now reconciled, Would pardon his great fault, and give his child Back to his arms. With that the stranger set Full in his view the cloak and carkanet. THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 85 One moment gazed the king upon his face ; The next, and they are lock'd in fast embrace, While from their mutual eyes the warm tears run. The Virgin Mother hath restored his son. Hasty thanksgivings, anxious words were said ; Joy for the living, sorrow for the dead, Mingled together. Oh ! for those sweet ties By which blood links affection's sympathies ; Out on the heartless creed which nulls the claim Upon the heart of kindred, birth, and name. Together seek they now the regal hall So long unknown to aught of festival; One fill'd with mourning, as now filPd with joy, While thousands gather round the princely boy. Open'd the king his treasury, and gave His bounty forth free as the boundless wave ; 00 . THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Feasting was spread, the dance, the masque, song, Whatever might to revelry belong : Seem'd the young prince as if he had a charm, Love to take prisoner, envy to disarm. Yet e'en while floating thus on fortune's tide, While each delight the past delight outvied, Never omitted he at twilight hour, When sleep and dew fall on the painted flower, There for the night like bosom friends to dwell, To kiss the ring of his sweet ISABELLE. He told his father, whose consent had seal'd The gentle secret, half in fear reveal'd. True love is timid, as it knew its worth, And that such happiness is scarce for earth. Waited he only for the princely band With which he was to seek his foster-land, THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 87 When gazing on his treasured ring one night He saw clouds gather on the emerald's light. Like lightning he has flung him on the steed His hasty spur then urged to fiery speed. But leave we him to press his anxious way, His band to follow with what haste they may ; And turn to the lorn princess who had kept, With all a woman's truth, the faith she wept Rather than spoke at parting. It was One Whose love another faith had bade her shun, Ah ! shame and sign of this our mortal state, That ever gentle love can turn to hate, Had caused her all this misery. He brought A charge that she with arts unholy wrought : For he had seen his rival's picture pressed To its soft home and altar on her breast ; OO THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And hitherto unknown in that far land Was the sweet cunning of the limner's hand. It was a fearful charge, all hope was vain, And she must die the fire's red death of pain,* Unless that she could find some gentle knight Who would do battle for a maiden's right, And win ; but her accuser never yet In field or tourney had an equal met. The fatal day is come, the pile is raised, As eager for its victim fierce it blazed. They led her forth : her brow and neck were bare, Save for the silken veil of unbound hair ; So beautiful, few were there who could brook To cast on her sweet face a second look. THE CHILD OF THE SEA. 89 There stood she, even as a statue stands, With head droop'd downward, and with clasped hands; Such small white hands that match' d her ivory feet, How may they bear that scorching fire to meet ! On her pale cheek there lay a tear, but one Cold as the icicle of carved stone. Despair weeps not. Her lip moved as in prayer Unconsciously ; as if prayers had been there, And they moved now from custom. Triumphing, SIR AMICE rode around the weeping ring : Once, twice, the trumpet challenges : all fear To meet th' accuser's never erring spear. Her lip grows ghastly pale, closes her eye, It cannot meet its last of agony. But, hark ! there comes a distant rushing sound, The crowd gives way before a courser's bound. 90 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. She turns her face ; her scarce raised eyes behold The unhelm'd head shine with its curls of gold. SIR AMICE knew his rival. What! so slight, So young, would he dare cope with him in fight ? Their blades flash out, but only one is red ; Rolls on the ground the traitor's felon head, The dust around with his life-blood is dyed, And EGLA.MOUR darts to his maiden's side. Her lip is red, her eyes with tears are dim, But she is safe, and she is saved by him. My tale is told. May minstrel words express The light at noon, or young love's happiness ? Enow, I trow, of that sweet dream can tell Without my aiding. Gentles, fare ye well. THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 91 WILD and pale was the strange brow Of the bard advancing now ; Eyeballs with such wandering light Like the meteors of the night, As if they that fearful look From their own dark mountains took, Where the evil ones are found Gloomy haunt, and cursed ground ; Sank his voice to mutter'd breath, The tale of sorrow, sin, and death. THE RING: THE GERMAN MEINNESlNGEIl's TALE. BOTH were young, and both were fair: She with her shower of golden hair 92 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Falling like flowers, and her bright blue eye Like the sparkling wave the oar dashes by ; And he with lip and brow as fine As the statues his country has made divine. And the pair at the holy altar are kneeling, While the priest that bond of love is sealing, When pleasures and sorrows are blent in one, And Heaven blesses what earth has done. They love, they are loved, that youth and maid. Yet over them hangs a nameless shade ; They are contrasts each : the broider'd gold And red gems shine on his mantle's fold ; While the young bride's simple russet dress, Though well it suits with her loveliness, Is not a bridal robe fit for the bride Of one so begirt with pomp and pride : THE RING. 93 And on his brow and on his cheek Are signs that of wildest passions speak, Of one whose fiery will is his law ; And his beauty, it strikes on the heart with awe : And the maiden, hers is no smile to brook In meekness the storm of an angry look; For her forehead is proud, and her eyes' deep blue Hath at times a spirit flashing through, That speaks of feelings too fierce to dwell In, woman, thy heart's sweet citadel. He placed on the golden nuptial band ; But the ring hath cut the maiden's hand, And the blood dripp'd red on the altar stone, Never that stain from the floor hath gone. Away he flung, with a curse, that ring, And replaced it with one more glittering ; 94 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And AGATHA smiled, as pleased to bear Gems that a queen might be joyed to wear. The priest urged that ring had been bless'd in vain, And the count and the maiden left the fane. Change and time take together their flight, AGATHA wanders alone by night. Has change so soon over passion pass'd, So soon has the veil from love been cast ? The day at the chase, and the night at the wine, VIVALDI has left his young bride to pine, To pine if she would : but not hers the eye To droop in its weeping, the lip but to sigh ; There is rage in that eye, on that lip there is pride, As it scorn'd the sorrow its scorn could not hide. THE RING. 95 Oh ! frail are the many links that are In the chain of affection's tender care, And light at first : but, alas ! few know How much watching is ask'd to keep them so. The will that yields, and the winning smile That soothes till anger forgets the while ; Words whose music never yet caught The discord of one angry thought j And all those nameless cares that prove Their heaviest labour work of love. Ay, these are spells to keep the heart, When passion's thousand dreams depart : But none of this sweet witchcraft came To fan the young count's waning flame. Passionate as his own wild skies, Rank and wealth seem'd light sacrifice ) THE GOLDEN VIOLET. To his German maiden's lowly state ; Chose he as chooses the wood-dove his mate But when his paradise was won, It was not what his fancy had fed upon. i Alas ! when angry words begin Their entrance on the lip to win ; When sullen eye and flushing cheek Say more than bitterest tone could speak ; And look and word, than fire or steel, Give wounds more deep, time cannot heal ; And anger digs, with taun tings vain, A gulf it may not pass again. Her lord is gone to some hunter's rite, Where the red wine-cup passes night ; THE RING. 97 What now hath AGATHA at home ? And she has left it lone to roam. But evil thoughts are on her, now Sweeps the dark shadow o'er her brow. What doth she forth at such an hour, When hath the fallen fiend his power ? On through the black-pine forest she pass'd : Drearily moan'd around her the blast ; Hot and heavy the thick boughs grew, Till even with pain her breath she drew ; Flicker' d the moonlight over her path, As the clouds had gathered together in wrath, Like the vague hopes whose false lures give birth To one half the miseries haunting our earth. H 98 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Maiden, ah ! where is thy way address'd ? Where is the red cross that hung on thy breast, Safety and solace in danger and fear ? Both are around thee, why is it not near ? Enter not thou yon cursed dell. Thy rash step has entered. Lost maiden, farewell ! Closed the huge and shapeless crags around, There was not of life a sight or sound; The earth was parched, the trees were sear'd, And blasted every branch appeared ; At one end yawned a gloomy cave, Black, as its mouth were that of the grave ; And dark, as if the waters of death Were in its depths, rose a well beneath. But the deadliest sight of that deadly place Was to gaze on the human wanderer's face : THE RING. 99 Pale it was, as if fell despair Had written its worst of lessons there ; The features set like funeral stone, All of good or kind from their meaning gone ; And the look of defiance to heaven cast, As if feeling such look must be the last. Down she knelt by the well, to say What never prayer may wash away. It was not a sound that pass'd along, Nor aught that might to our earth belong. And her words at once in their terror died, For the spirit she calPd on stood by her side ; Not one of those fearful shapes that teem On the midnight fears of the maniac's dream. But better she could have brook'd to gaze On the loathliest semblance the grave displays, H 2 100 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Than to meet that brow, whose beauty and power Had somewhat yet of their earlier hour, Deeper the present contrast to show ; But pride still struggled in- vain with woe, And in the wild light of the fiery eye Was written hell's immortality. He spoke : " Now the vow of thy faith resign, And in life or in death VIVALDI is thine. Seal with thy blood." She bared her arm, And the life-stream flow'd for the godless charm. One single drop on her ring was shed, And the diamond shone as the ruby red. " Sealed mine own, now this be the sign That in life or in death VIVALDI is thine." Farewell, Allemaigne, farewell to thy strand, They are bound to another, a southern land. THE RING. 101 As yet she is not to be own'd as his bride, For feared VIVALDI his kinsmen's pride ; But safely their anchor at Venice is cast, And the queen of the ocean is reached at last. Long had AGATHA wished to see The sunny vineyards of Italy. Little was here of what she had dream' d : Funeral-like the gondolas seem'd ; While the dark waters, parting beneath the oar, Were too like those she had seen before ; And the count, with his stern and haughty brow, Seem'd the shadow of one ever present now. Dreary it is the path to trace, Step by step of sin's wild race. Pass we on to a lovely night, Shone the sea with silver moonlight ; 102 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Who would ever dream, but such time Must be sacred from human crime ? I see two silent figures glide Moodily by the radiant tide ; I see one fall, in AGATHA'S breast VIVALDI'S dagger hath found a nest : I hear a heavy plunge, the flood, Oh ! 't is crimson'd with human blood ; I see a meteor shining fair, It is the sweep of golden hair ; Float the waters from the shore, The waves roll on, I see no more. Long years have pass'd, VIVALDI'S name Is foremost in the lists of fame. Are there, then spirits, that may steep Conscience in such a charmed sleep ? THE RING. 103 No : haggard eye and forehead pale Tell sadly of a different tale ; And some said, not his wealth nor power Could bribe them share his midnight hour. Tis morn, and shout and trumpet's call Proclaim that it is festival ; The Doge VIVALDI weds to-day The bride that owns his city's sway ; Banner and barge float o'er that bride, The peerless Adriatic tide. The galleys paused, the ring he took. Why starts the Doge with such wild look 1 He bends again, his heart-streams creep ; A pale hand beckons from the deep ; 104 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. All marvel that he doth not fling To the sea-bride the marriage ring. He heard the murmur ; none then scann'd, Save his own eye, the spectral hand ! He drops the ring, then bends again To snatch it from that hand in vain. He follows what he could not save, One false step sinks him in the wave ! All rush the victim to restore, But never eye beheld him more. 'Twas strange, for there they found the ring. Some said it was fit gift to bring, And lay upon the Virgin's shrine, Of human vanity a sign. And there, as if by miracle, One drop of blood beneath it fell ; THE RING. 105 And, pale as twilight's earliest dew, Lost the bright ring its ruby hue. There still may curious eye behold The relic. But my tale is told. " Now welcome, fair MARGUERITE, to thee, Fair flower of Provence minstrelsy." Came a lovely lady in place, Like the twilight star in her pensive grace. White daisies were wreathed in the dark-brown shade Of her tresses, parted in simple braid : Her long eyelash was the shadow of night, And the eye beneath was the morning bright ; For its colour was that of the diamond dew Which hath caught from the glancing light its hue : 106 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Her cheek was pale, for its blush soon pass'd, Loveliest tints are not those which last ; Then again it redden'd, again was gone, Like a rainbow and rose in unison : Her smile was sad, as if nature meant Those lips to live, in their own content ; But Fate pass'd o'er them her stern decree, And taught them what suffering and sorrow might be : And sang she in sweet but mournful tone, As her heart had the misery it painted known. THE QUEEN OF CYPRUS: THE PROVEN9AL LADY*S LAY. A summer isle, which seem'd to be A very favourite with the sea, THE QUEEN OF CYPRUS. 107 With blue waves but as guardians set, Wearing them like a coronet ; Once sacred to the smile-zoned Queen, Whose reign upon the heart hath been, And is so still. What need hath she Of shrine to her divinity ? Each fair face is her visible shrine ; She hath been, she will be divine. But, rose-lipp'd VENUS, thy sweet power Was unowned in thy myrtle bower, Thy marble temple was no more, Thy worship gone from thine own shore, What time my tale begins : yet still Hadst thou left music in the rill, As if 't had heard thy footstep fall, And from that time grew musical ; 108 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Scent on the flower, as if thy hair Had lost its own rich odour there ; All, the green earth, the sunny clime, Were relics of thy lovely time. Fair Cyprus, dream-like 'twas to land Where myrtle groves stretch'd from thy strand. And paid the freshness of the wave With fragrance which they sighing gave. But sunshine seen, but sunshine felt, You reached the palace where she dwelt ; Cyprus's maiden queen, whose reign Seem'd ancient days restored again, When it was only beauty's smile Claim'd fealty of CYTHEREA'S isle. Mid fair dames of her court, a star, The loveliest of the group by far, THE QUEEN OF CYPRUS. 109 IRENE stood. Was it in pride Her regal gems were laid aside, As if she scorn' d them all, content To be her own best ornament ? The terrace where they stood look'd down On gathered crowds of her fair town ; 'T was a gay scene : on the one side, Gardens and groves stretched far and wide In gay confusion, flower and tree Cover'd the green earth to the sea, One arm of which begirt the walls Where rose IRENE'S marble halls. Upon the terrace, with a band Of the isle's loveliest at her hand, Was the young queen. 'T was as again The goddess claimed her ancient reign, 110 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. So fair she was. At first you thought 'T was some divinity, that brought Her beauty from her native skies ; You met once more those soft dark eyes, You felt that though to them were given The colour and the light of heaven, Yet were they mortal, their deep blue Was soften'd by a shadowy hue Of melancholy, such as earth Will fling upon her fairest birth Woman's foreknowledge of the woe That waits upon her path below. Is it some festival to-day, That hither comes the proud array, Which gathers round the gazing crowd, And rings the air with plaudits loud ? THE QUEEN OF CYPRUS. Ill Sweep seven bold galleys to the land, Spring from their decks a warrior band, Dance their white plumes before the breeze Like summer foam on summer seas, Flashes the lance like meteor light, Hauberk and helm are gleaming bright, And spreads the banner its rich fold, Where shines on purple work'd in gold A lion, which a maiden's hand Holds by a silken rein's command. Well may'st thou bend, fair queen, thy brow To the brave warriors greeting now ; Well have they fought for thee and thine, Sweet flower of thy royal line ; And well may they catch thy sweet eye, And swear beneath its rule to die. 112 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Yet, young IRENE, on thy side Is not all triumph's panting pride ; For, like clouds on a troubled sky, Red and white shades alternate fly Over thy face ; now like the stone Colour hath never breathed upon, Now crimson'd with a sudden flush, As if thy heart had dyed thy blush. The rebel prince is passing near, - Thy bearing droops in sudden fear $ He passes, and thine eye is dim With anxious gazing after him, And tears are darkening its blue, Shining on the long lash like dew. Beautiful weakness ! oh, if weak, That woman's heart should tinge her cheek ! THE QUEEN OF CYPRUS. 113 'T is sad to change it for the strength That heart and cheek must know at length. Many a word of sneer and scorn Must in their harshness have been borne, Many a gentle feeling dead, And all youth's sweet confiding fled, Ere learn' d that task of shame and pride, The tear to check, the blush to hide. 'T is midnight, and a starry shower Weeps its bright tears o'er leaf and flower ; Sweet, silent, beautiful, the night Sufficing for her own delight. But other lights than sky and star From yonder casements gleam afar ; There odorous lamps of argentine Shed that sweet ray, half shade, half shine, i 114 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Soft as it were but beauty's smile That lit her favourite bower the while. Back from each open lattice flew The curtains, like swolPn waves of blue Star-dropt with silvery broidery rare ; And every motion seem'd to bear A message from the grove beneath, Each message was a rose's breath. A thousand flowers were round the room, All with their gifts of scent and bloom ; And at the far end of the hall Like music came a lulling fall Of waters ; at the midnight time Play'd from the fount a liquid chime, As 'twere the honey-dews of sleep ' Lighting, each lid in rest to steep. THE QUEEN OF CYPRUS. 115 Leant on a silken couch, which caught The airs with fragrant rose-breath fraught, Lay the young queen. As if oppress' d With its rich weight, her purple vest Was doff'd, as if with it were laid Aside cares, pomp, and vain parade. While, like a cloud in the moonlight, Floated her graceful robe of white. Just stirred enough the scented air To lift the sunny wreaths of hair, And bear the tresses from the ground, Which the attendant maids unbound. A cheerful meeting wont to be That evening hour's tranquillity. There with the young, the frank, the gay, IRENE would be glad as they, i2 116 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Blithe prisoner 'scaping form and state, Her nature warring with her fate. Glad, but yet tender, gentle, meek, Her fairy hand was all too weak For regal sceptre ; never meant To rule more than the music sent From a light lute, whose gentle tone Was as an echo to her own. But bent and sadden'd is her gaze, Her heart is gone to other days ; When summer buds around her hair Were all the crown she had to wear, And they were twined by him who now Grasp'd fierce at that upon her brow ; Her playmate and her early friend. And thus can young affection end ! THE QUEEN OF CYPRUS. 117 And thus can proud ambition part The kindliest ties around the heart ! And like the desert springs that dry To dust beneath the parching sky, All too soon waste the sweet revealing Of youth's fresh flow of generous feeling. Morn came, but with it tidings came Half timid joy, half crimson shame. Oh ! the rose is a tell-tale flower, And watching looks were on the hour, On the red blush, the drooping eye, The queen wore as the prince pass'd by. Policy read the thoughts within, Ending where love could but begin. 118 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Why might not TANCRED share her seat? They lead the rebel to her feet. Sage counsellor and noble peer Spared maiden blush and maiden fear. Yielding, yet tremulous the while, Her sole reply one downcast smile ; While ordered they the moon that night Should rise upon the nuptial rite. Ill might the youthful maiden brook To fix on his her timid look. She only felt his lip had pressed Her white hand, and hope told the rest. Companion of her infancy, Less than her friend how could he be ? She did not mark the haughty glare Which even now his look could wear ; THE QUEEN OF CYPRUS. 119 The lip of pride as if disdained The fond heart which yet his remain'd ; As scorn'd the empire of the land That must be shared with woman's hand. The moon upon the bridal shone, Treachery, Prince TANCRED he is gone ! Confusion marr'd the fair array ; An armed band are on their way, The rebel banner is displayed, And thus is trusting faith repaid. IRENE flung her marriage veil Aside, her cheek was deadly pale. But, save that, nothing might declare That love or grief were struggling there. Wondering they gazed on their young queen, So firm her step, so proud her mien. 120 . THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Promptly the city was prepared, Summoned to arms the royal guard Were bade their strength and bearing show To awe, but not attack the foe Till further orders. Last of all She calFd her council to the hall. She entered ; it was strange to see How soon such utter change could be. Pale as if lip and cheek had grown Sudden to monumental stone, So fix'd, that, but the lighted eye Show'd it had yet to close and die, It was like the last sleep of death, When hue, warmth, light, have pass'd with breath, Hurriedly had been thrown aside The silver robes that deck'd the bride ; THE QUEEN OF CYPRUS. 121 A night-black garb around her swept : Drear contrast ! for her hair yet kept Amid its wealth of sunny curls The bridal snowy braid of pearls. She paused not, though her breath seem'd given But as the last to waft to heaven, And on the vacant throne laid down The dove-topp'd wand of rule and crown. From many never pass'd away That sweet voice to their dying day. " My hand is all too weak to bear A sceptre which the sword must share. To my bold kinsman I resign All sway and sovereignty of mine ; Bear him the sceptre of the land, No longer fetter'd by that hand." 122 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Rose the red blush, her accents fell, Scarce might they hear her low farewell. When as she turn'd to leave the hall, Rose kindly murmurs of recall j The crown was hers, and many a brand Now waited only her command. One word, one look, on them she cast, "Your queen's request, her first, her last." Silence as deep as in the grave, To the new king his homage gave ; Arose no shout to greet his name, To him no word of welcome came, But pass'd he solemnly and sad To palace halls no longer glad. THE QUEEN OF CYPRUS. 123 Nought was there or of shout or song, That bear young monarch's praise along ; Many there were that bent the knee, But many bent it silently. They led him to a stately room, Yet with somewhat of nameless gloom ; Flowers were there, but withered all ; Music, but with a dying fall ; Maidens, but each with veiled face, TANCRED gazed round, he knew the place ; 'Twas here his interview had been With her its young and radiant queen. There was her couch ; was she there yet ? He started back : the brow was set In its last mould; that marble cheek, Fair as if death were loth to break 124 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Its spell of beauty; the fixed lid, As if the daylight were forbid To brighten the blue orbs that kept Their azure even while they slept All other sleeps, save this dark one. And this the work that he had done. And she was gone, the faithful, fair, In her first moment of life's care ; Gone in her bloom, as if the earth Felt pity for its loveliest birth, And took her like the gentle flower, That falls before the earliest shower; With heart too tender, and too weak, What had such heart to do but break ? THE PILGRIM'S TALE. 125 SUDDEN and harsh the harp-strings rung, As rough the hand now over them flung ; Loud as a warning, omen-like, drear, Sank the deep tones on each listener's ear, 'T was a Palmer, that seem'd from the Holy Land, That now sway'd the harp with his stern right hand; None around could discover his name, Nor tell whence that pilgrim minstrel came. THE PILGRIM'S TALE. I have gone east, I have gone west, To seek for what I cannot find ; A heart at peace with its own thoughts, A quiet and contented mind. 126 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. I have sought high, I have sought low, Alike my search has been in vain ; The same lip mix'd the smile and sigh, The same hour mingled joy and pain. And first I sought 'mid sceptred kings ; Power was, so peace might be, with them : They cast a look of weariness Upon the care-lined diadem. I ask'd the soldier ; and he spoke Of a dear quiet home afar, And whispered of the vanity, The ruin, and the wrong of war. I saw the merchant 'mid his wealth ; Peace surely would with plenty be : But no ! his thoughts were all abroad With their frail ventures on the sea. 127 I heard a lute's soft music float In summer sweetness on the air ; But the poet's brow was worn and wan, I saw peace was not written there. And then I number'd o'er the ills, That wait upon our mortal scene ; No marvel peace was not with them, The marvel were if it had been. First, childhood comes with all to learn, And, even more than all, to bear Restraint, reproof, and punishment, And pleasures seen but not to share. Youth, like the Scriptures' madman, next, Scattering around the burning coal ; With hasty deeds and misused gifts, That leave their ashes on the soul. 128 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Then manhood wearied, wasted, worn, With hopes destroy'd and feelings dead ; And worldly caution, worldly wants, Coldness, and carelessness instead. Then age at last, dark, sullen, drear, The breaking of a worn-out wave ; Letting us know that life has been But the rough passage to the grave. Thus we go on ; hopes change to fears Like fairy gold that turns to clay, And pleasure darkens into pain, And time is measured by decay. First our fresh feelings are our wealth, They pass, and leave a void behind ; Then comes ambition, with its wars, That stir but to pollute the mind. 129 We loathe the present, and we dread To think on what to come may be ; We look back on the past, and trace A thousand wrecks, a troubled sea. I have been over many lands, And each and all I found the same ; Hope in its borrow'd plumes, and care Madden'd and mask'd in pleasure's name. I have no tale of knightly deed : Why should I tell of guilt and death, Of plains deep dyed in human blood, Of fame which lies in mortal breath. I have no tale of lady love, Begun and ended in a sigh, The wilful folly nursed in smiles Though born in bitterness to die. 130 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. I have a tale from Eastern lands, The same shall be my song to-day ; It tells the vanity of life, Apply its lesson as ye may. THE EASTERN KING: THE PILGRIM'S TALE. HE flung back the chaplet, he threw down the wine " Young monarch, what sorrow or care can be thine ? There are gems in thy palace, each one like a star That shines in the bosom of twilight afar ; Thy goblets are mantling in purple and light, The maidens around thee like morning are bright, Ten kingdoms bow down at the sound of thy name, The lands of far countries have heard of thy fame, THE EASTERN KING. 131 The wealth of the earth, and the spoils of the seas, Are thine j oh, young monarch, what ail'st thou, with these ?" " I'm weary, I 'm weary. Oh ! pleasure is pain When its spell has been broken again and again. I am weary of smiles that are bought and are sold, I am weary of beauty whose fetters are gold, I am weary of wealth what makes it of me But that which the basest and lowest might be ? I have drain 'd the red wine-cup, and what found I there ? A beginning of madness, no ending of care! I am weary of each, I am weary of all, Listless my revel, and lonely my hall. Breathe not the song, for its sweetness is flown ; Fling not these flowers at the foot of my throne ; K2 132 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Veil, maidens, veil your warm cheeks of the rose, Ye are slaves of my sceptre, I reck not of those !*' The monarch rose up with the reddening of morn, He rose to the music of trumpet and horn ; His banner is spread to the sun and the wind, In thousands the plain by his warriors is lined. The foot ranks go first, their bows in their hand, In multitudes gathering like waves on the strand ; Behind ride his horsemen, as onwards they come, Each proud steed is covering his bridle with foam. In the midst is the king : there is pride on his brow, As he looks on the myriads that follow him now ; His eye and his sabre are flashing alike, Woe, woe for the warrior that dares him to strike ! THE EASTERN KING. 133 Thousands and thousands are strewn on the ground, AHMED comes back a conqueror, but what hath he found ? The cry of the orphan is loud on his ear, And his eye hath beheld the young bride's bitter tear, And the friend of his youth is left dead on the plain, And the flower of his nobles return not again. There are crowds that are filling the air with his name j Do ye marvel the monarch is loathing his fame? Again to the sunshine the banners are spread ; Again rings the earth with the warriors' tread ; And loud on the wings of the morning are borne The voice of the trumpet, the blast of the horn; 134 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And eager to gaze on the royal array, The people in crowds gather forth on its way. Who would deem they were gazing on death and on doom, That yon purple and gold strew'd the way to the tomb? The canopy glitters ; oh, vainest deceit ! .There the king's robe of state is his coldwinding-sheet. And he at whose beck waited life, waited death, He hath not command on a poor moment's breath, A whole people trembled when that he but frown'd, And his smile was the summer of nations around. Now who is there watches for smile or for frown : For the head of another is girt with his crown ; And he lieth a heap of powerless clay, Where the meanest earth-worm at his pleasure may prey. THE EASTERN KING. 135 They bore the monarch on to his tomb, Black marble suiting such dwelling of gloom : But on it was graven a lesson sublime, A voice from the grave appealing to time ; Were not voice from the living or dead alike On the heart in its foolish pride to strike. " Millions bow'd down at the foot of my throne ; The strength of the north and the south were my own ; I had treasures pour'd forth like the waves of the sea; Success seem'd the slave of my sceptre to be. And pleasures in crowds at my least bidding came, Every wish that the will in its wildness could frame: And yet, amid all that fell to my share, How much was weariness, how much was care ! 136 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. I numbered years of pain and distress, And but fourteen days of happiness. Mortal, nor pleasure, nor wealth, nor power, Are more than the toys of a passing hour ; Earth's flowers bear the foul taint of earth, Lassitude, sorrow, are theirs by their birth. One only pleasure will last, to fulfil, With some shadow of good, the Holy One's will. The only steadfast hope to us given, Is the one which looks in its trust to heaven." THERE was silence around the stately hall, For that song laid the spell of its darkness o'er all ; Some thought of their hopes now low in the tomb ; Others of hopes that were but in their bloom, THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 137 And trembled to think how frail, if how fair, Earth's pleasures in beauty and being are ; Others had thoughts they feared to name, As that pilgrim could read each heart in its shame : But word or sign gave he to none, And away like a shadow in silence hath gone. Rose the Countess, and left her throne, Signal it was that the meeting was done, And spoke her summons, and graceful led To where the sumptuous board was spread. Evening came, and found its hours Vow'd to music, mirth, and flowers. Wide ten gorgeous halls were flung, Each with purple tapestry hung; With wreaths, whose roses were as bright As in the first morning light ; 138 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Mirrors like the glassy plain, Where the beauty beam'd again ; Pictures whose Italian grace Show'd inspiration's finest trace, To whose winged moods were given Moment's visionings of heaven ; And, more than all together fair, Beauty's living soul was there. Follow'd by those who pleasaunce took In converse light and curious look, The Countess led where leaf and flower Made one small hall an Eastern bower. The blush acacia seem'd to keep Watch o'er the rose's purple sleep ; And tulips, like the wine-cups stored Round a monarch's festal board ; THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 139 And the roof above, as art Vied with nature's loveliest part, Was so curiously inlaid, That there another garden play'd. No lamps amid the foliage hung, But silver smiles the moonbeams flung ; And radiance from each distant room Lighted the flowers' and ladies' bloom. A harp was there. The haunt was one, Where, many a summer noon, alone, CLEMENZA lent time music's wings ; And, dreaming o'er the mournful strings, Learn'd other lessons than those taught By pride, and wealth, and worldly thought. Said the band round that it were shame, Such hour should pass unhymn'd away ; 140 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And many a fair lip smiled its claim, As echo sweet to minstrel lay. Pray'd they the Countess that her hand Should first assume the harp's command. She paused, then said that she would wake One, for that nameless poet's sake ; One song snatch'd from oblivion's wave, Like the lone lily on his grave. SONG. MY heart is like the failing hearth Now by my side, One by one its bursts of flame Have burnt and died. There are none to watch the sinking blaze, And none to care, Or if it kindle into strength, Or waste in air. THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 141 My fate is as yon faded wreath Of summer flowers ; They 've spent their store of fragrant health On sunny hours, Which reck'd them not, which heeded not When they were dead : Other flowers, unwarn'd by them, Will spring instead. And my own heart is as the lute I now am waking ; Wound to too fine and high a pitch They both are breaking. And of their song what memory Will stay behind ? An echo, like a passing thought, Upon the wind. 142 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Silence, forgetfulness, and rust, Lute, are for thee : such my lot ; neglect, the grave, These are for me. " Now take the harp, EULALIA mine, For thy sad song ;" and at the sign Came forth a maiden. She was fair And young ; yet thus can spring-time wear The traces of far other hour Than should be on such gentle flower. Her eyes were downcast, as to keep Their secret, for they shamed to weep j Her cheek was pale, but that was lost, So often the bright blushes cross'd ; THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 143 And seem'd her mouth so sweet the while, As if its nature were to smile j Her very birthright hope, but earth Keeps not the promise of its birth. 'Twas whisper' d that young maiden's breast Had harbour'd wild and dangerous guest ; Love had been there, in that is said All that of doom the heart can dread. Oh ! born of Beauty in those isles Which far 'mid Grecian seas arise, They call'd thy mother queen of smiles, But, Love, they only gave thee sighs. She woke the harp : at first her touch Seem'd as it sought some lighter strain ; But the heart breathes itself, and such As suffer deep seek mirth in vain. 144 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. SONG. FAREWELL, farewell, I'll dream no more, 'Tis misery to be dreaming; Farewell, farewell, and I will be At least like thee in seeming. I will go forth to the green vale, Where the sweet wild flowers are dwelling, Where the leaves and the birds together sing, And the woodland fount is welling. Not there, not there, too much of bloom Has spring flung o'er each blossom ; The tranquil place too much contrasts The unrest of my bosom. I will go to the lighted halls, Where midnight passes fleetest; THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 145 Oh ! memory there too much recalls Of saddest and of sweetest. I '11 turn me to the gifted page Where the bard his soul is flinging ; Too well it echoes mine own heart, Breaking e'en while singing. I must have rest ; oh ! heart of mine, When wilt thou lose thy sorrow ? Never, till in the quiet grave ; Would I slept there to-morrow ! ROSE-BUD mouth, sunny brow, Wore she who, fairy-like, sprung now Beside the harp. Careless she hung Over the chords ; her bright hair flung 146 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. A sunshine round her. Light laugh' d she, " All too sad are your songs for me; Let me try if the strings will breathe For minstrel of the aspen wreath." Lightly the answering prelude fell, Thus sang the Lady Is A BELLE. SONG. WHERE do purple bubbles swim, But upon the goblet's brim ? Drink not deep, howe'er it glow, Sparkles never lie below. Beautiful the light that flows From the rich leaves of the rose ; Keep it, then ask, where hath fled Summer's gift of morning red ? THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 147 Earth's fair are her fleeting things ; Heaven, too, lends her angels wings. What can charms to pleasure give, Such as being fugitive ? Thus with love : oh ! never try- Further than a blush or sigh ; Blush gone with the clouds that share it, Sigh passed with the winds that bear it. BUT met she then young VIDAL'S eye, \ His half sad, half reproachful sigh : His ISABELLE ! and could she be Votaress of inconstancy ? As if repentant of her words, Blushing she bent her o'er the chords ; L2 148 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. With fainter tones the harp then rung, As thus, with bow'd down head, she sung. SONG. I have belied my woman's heart, In my false song's deceiving words ; How could I say love would depart, As pass the light songs of spring birds ? Vain, vain love would be Froth upon a summer sea. No, love was made to soothe and share The ills that wait our mortal birth ; No, love was made to teach us where One trace of Eden haunts our earth. Born amid the hours of spring, Soothing autumn's perishing. THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 149 Timid as the tale of woe, Tender as the wood dove's sigh, Lovely as the flowers below, Changeless as the stars on high, Made all chance* and change to prove, And this is a woman's love. " WELL changed, fair lady," laughing said A girl beside, who^e chestnut hair Was wreathed with the wild vine-leaves spread, As if that she some wood nymph were ; And darker were her brow and cheek, And richer in their crimson break, Than those of the fair ring beside. In sooth, LOLOTTE had often tried 150 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. The influence of the wind and sun, That loved the cheek they dwelt upon Too well, to leave it without trace They had known such sweet dwelling-place. And her bright eyes seem'd as they had won The radiance which the summer sun Brought to her valleys lone and wild, Where she had dwelt. And now half child, Half woman, in the gay excess Of all youth's morning happiness, She came to the Lady of Isaure's towers, As fresh and as sweet as the forest bowers Where the gladness had pass'd of her earliest hours. " Now hearken thee, Lady ISABELLE, See if aright I read thy spell, And the rule of thy charmed sway, to keep Watch over Love's enchanted sleep." THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 151 SONG. WHERE, oh! where 's the chain to fling, One that will bind CUPID'S wing, One that will have longer power Than the April sun or shower ? Form it not of Eastern gold, All to weighty it to hold ; Form it neither all of bloom, Never does Love find a tomb Sudden, soon, as when he meets Death amid unchanging sweets : But if you would fling a chain, And not fling it all in vain, Like a fairy form a spell Of all that is changeable, Take the purple tints that deck, Meteor-like, the peacock's neck 5 152 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Take the many hues that play On the rainbow's coloured wayj Never let a hope appear Without its companion fear ; Only smile to sigh, and then Change into a smile again ; Be to-day as sad, as pale, As minstrel with his lovelorn tale ; But to-morrow gay as all Life had been one festival. If a woman would secure All that makes her reign endure, And, alas ! her reign must be Evdr most in phantasy, Never let an envious eye Gaze upon the heart .too nigh j THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 153 Never let the veil be thrown Quite aside, as all were known Of delight and tenderness, In the spirit's last recess; And, one spell all spells above, Never let her own her love. BUT from the harp a darker song Is sweeping like the winds along - The night gale at that dreamy hour When spirit and when storm have power; Yet sadly sweet : and can this be, AMEN AIDE, the wreck of thee? Mind, dangerous and glorious gift, Too much thy native heaven has left 154 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Its nature in thee, for thy light To be content with earthly home : It hath another, and its sight Will too. much to that other roam, And heavenly light and earthly clay But ill bear with alternate sway ; Till jarring elements create The evil which they sought to shun. And deeper feel their mortal state, In struggling for a higher one. There is no rest for the proud mind ; Conscious of its high powers confined, Vain dreams mid its best hopes arise j It is itself its sacrifice. Ah ! sad it is, to see the deck Dismasted, of some noble wreck ; THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 155 And sad to see tne marble stone Defaced, and with grey moss o'ergrown ; And sad to see the broken lute For ever to its music mute ! But what is lute, or fallen tower, Or ship sunk in its proudest hour, To awe and mystery combined In their worst shape the ruin'd mind? To her was trusted that fine power Which rules the bard's enthusiast hour ; The human heart gave up its keys To her, who ruled its sympathies In song, whose influence was brought From what first in herself had wrought Too passionate ; her least emotion Swept like the whirlwind o'er the ocean. 156 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Kind, tender, but too sensitive, None seem'd her equal love to bear ; Affection's ties small joys could give, Tried but by what she hoped they were. Too much on all her feelings threw The colouring of their own hue ; Too much her ardent spirit dream'd Things would be such as she had deem'd. She trusted love, albeit her heart Was ill made for love's happiness ; She ask'd too much, another's part Was cold beside her own excess. She sought for praise ; her share of fame, It went beyond her wildest claim : But ill could her proud spirit bear All that befals the laurel's share ; THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 157 Oh, well they gave the laurel tree A minstrel's coronal to be! Immortal as its changeless hue, The deadly poison circles through, Its venom makes its life ; ah ! still Earth's lasting growths are those of ill ; And mined was the foundation-stone, The spirit's regal shrine o'erthrown. Aimless and dark, the wandering mind Yet had a beauty left behind ; A touch, a tone, a shade, the more To tell of what had pass'd before. She woke the harp, and backward flung The cloud of hair, that pall-like hung O'er her pale brow and radiant eyes, Wild as the light of midnight skies, 158 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. When the red meteor rides the cloud, Telling the storm has burst its shroud : A passionate hue was on her cheek ; Untranquil colours, such as break With crimson light the northern sky : Yet on her wan lip seem'd to lie A faint sweet smile, as if not yet It could its early charm forget. She sang, oh ! well the heart might own The magic of so dear a tone. SONG. I know my heart is as a grave Where the cypress watch is keeping Over hopes and over thoughts In their dark silence sleeping. THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 159 Yet not the less know I that heart Was a goal whence proud steeds started, Though now it be a ruin'd shrine Whose glory is departed. For my spirit hath left her earthly home And found a nobler dwelling, Where the music of light is that of life, And the starry harps are swelling. Yet ever at the midnight hour That spirit within me burneth, And joy comes back on his fairy wings, And glory to me returneth. BUT a shade passed over the maiden's face ; Some darker image her thoughts retrace ; And so sadly the tones from the harp-strings swept, *T was as for very pity they wept. 160 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. A faded flower, a broken gem, Are emblems mine : The flower hath lost its loveliness With its sun-shine; The ruby stone no more is set On lady's brow, Its beauty of unsullied light Is wanting now. Like me, no thought of former worth From doom will save ; They will be flung to earth and air, I to the grave. THE lorn one with her song has pass'd, 'T was meet such song should be the last. THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 161 Now, gentle Sleep! thy honey wing, And roses, with thy poppies bring. Sweet and soft be thy rest to-night ; That at the call of Morning's light, May crimson cheeks and radiant eyes, Lovely as her own, arise. END OF THE FIRST DAY. 1(52 THE GOLDEN VIOLET, THE SECOND DAY. SWEET Spirit of delicious Song, To whom, as of [true right, belong The myriad music notes that swell From the poet's breathing shell; We name thy name, and the heart springs Up to the lip, as if with wings, As if thy very mention brought Snatches of inspired thought. Is it war? At once are borne Words like notes of martial horn Is it love? Comes some sweet tale Like that of the nightingale. Is it Nature's lovely face ? Rise lines touch'd with her own grace. THE GOEDEN VIOLET. 163 Is it some bright garden scene? There, too, hath the minstrel been, Linking words of charmed power With the green leaf and the flower. Is it woman's loveliness ? He hath revell'd to excess, Caught all spells that can beguile In dark eye or rosy smile. Is it deed that hath its claim Upon earth's most holy fame, Or those kindly feelings sent But for hearth and home content ? Lofty thought, or counsel sage, Seek them in the poet's page ; Laurel, laud, and love belong To thee, thou Spirit sweet of Song. M2 164 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Not in courtly hall to-day Meets the lady's congress gay. 'T is a bright and summer sky, They will bear it company ; Odours float upon the gale, Comrades suiting minstrel tale ; Flowers are spreading, carpet meet For the beauty's fairy feet. Shame to stay in marble hall Thus from nature's festival. The garden had one fair resort, As if devised for minstrel court : An amphitheatre of trees Shut from soft cheeks the ruder breeze ; While all around the chestnuts made, With closing boughs, a pleasant shade, THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 165 Where, if a sunbeam wander' d through, 'T was like the silver fall of dew ; The middle was an open space Of softest grass, and those small flowers, Daisies, whose rose-touch' d leaves retrace The gold and blush of morning's hours. To-day the Countess had for throne An ancient trunk with moss o'ergrown ; And at her feet, as if from air A purple cloud had fallen there, Grew thousand violets, whose sighs Breathed forth an Eastern sacrifice ; And, like a canopy, o'erhead A Provence rose luxuriant spread, And its white flowers, pale and meek, Seem'd sisters to the lady's cheek. 166 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And ranged in a graceful order round, A fairy court upon fairy ground, Group'd the bright band ; and, like a tent, Leaves and bloom over all were blent, Flinging bright colours, but changing fast, As ever the varying sunbeams pass'd ; And in the midst grew a myrtle tree, There was the minstrel's place to be, And its buds were delicate, frail, and fair, As the hopes and joys of his own heart are. Dark was the brow, and the bearing proud, Of the bard who first stept forth from the crowd ; A small cloak down from his shoulder hung, And a light guitar o'er his arm was slung ; Many a lady's casement had known The moonlight spell of its magic tone : THE YOUNG AVENGER. 167 But the fire of youth from his cheek had pass'd, And its hopes and its dreams had faded as fast ; The romance of his earlier time was over, The warrior had half forgotten the lover ; And the light grew dark in his radiant eyes, As he told his tale of high emprize. THE YOUNG AVENGER: THE warrior's strength is bow'd.by age, the war- rior's step is slow, And the beard upon his breast is white as is the winter snow ; 168 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Yet his eye shines bright, as if not yet its last of fame were won ; Six sons stand ready in their arms to do as he has done. " Now take your way, ye LARAS bold, and to the battle ride; For loud upon the Christian air, are vaunts of Moorish pride : Your six white steeds stand at the gate ; go forth, and let me see Who will return the first and bring a Moslem head to me." Forth they went, six gallant knights, all maiPd from head to heel ; Is it not death to him who first their fiery strength shall feel? THE YOUNG AVENGER. 169 They spurr'd their steeds, and on they dash'd, as sweeps the midnight wind ; While their youngest brother stood and wept that he must stay behind. "Come here, my child," the father said, "and wherefore dost thou weep ? The time will come when from the fray nought shall my favourite keep 5 When thou wilt be the first of all amid the hostile spears." The boy shook back his raven hair, and laugh'd amid his tears. The sun went down, but lance nor shield reflected back his light ; The moon rose up, but not a sound broke on the rest of night. 170 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. The old man watch'd impatiently, till with morn o'er the plain There came a sound of horses' feet, there came a martial train. But gleam'd not back the sunbeam glad from plume or helm of gold, No, it shone upon the crimson vest, the turban's emerald fold. A Moorish herald ; six pale heads hung at his saddle- bow, Gash'd, changed, yet well the father knew the lines of each fair brow. " Oh! did they fall by numbers, or did they basely yield?" " Not so; beneath the same bold hand thy children press' d the field. THE YOUNG AVENGER. 171 They died as NOURREDDIN would wish all foes of his should die ; Small honour does the conquest boast when won from those who fly. " And thus he saith, * This was the sword that swept down thy brave band, Find thou one who can draw it forth in all thy Christian land.' If from a youth such sorrowing and scathe thou hast endured, Dread thou to wait for vengeance till his summers are matured." The aged chieftain took the sword, in vain his hand essay'd " To draw it from its scabbard forth, or poise the heavy blade ; 172 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. He flung it to his only child, now sadly standing by. " Now weep, for here is cause for tears; alas! mine own are dry." Then answer'd proud the noble boy, " My tears last morning came For weakness of my own right hand ; to shed them now were shame : I will not do my brothers' names such deep and deadly wrong ; Brave were they unto death, success can but to God belong." And years have fled, that boy has sprung unto a goodly height, And fleet of foot and stout of arm in his old father's light; THE YOUNG AVENGER. 173 Yet breathed he never wish to take in glorious strife his part, Arid shame and grief his backwardness was to that father's heart. Cold, silent, stern, he let time pass, until he rush'd one day, Where mourning o'er his waste of youth the weary chieftain lay. Unarm'd he was, but in his grasp he bore a heavy brand, " My father, I can wield his sword; now knight- hood at thine hand. " For years no hour of quiet sleep upon my eyelids came, For NOURREDDIN had poison'd all my slumber with his fame. 174 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. I have waited for my vengeance ; but now, alive or dead, I swear to 'thee by my brothers' graves that thou shalt have his head." It was a [glorious sight to see, when those two warriors met : The one dark as a thunder-cloud, in strength and manhood set ; The other young and beautiful, with lithe and graceful form, But terrible as is the flash that rushes through the storm. And eye to eye, and hand to hand, in deadly strife they stood, And smoked the ground whereon they fought, hot with their mingled blood ; THE YOUNG AVENGER. 175 Till droop'd the valiant infidel, fainter his blows and few, While fiercer from the combat still the youthful Christian grew. NOURREDDIN falls, his sever' d head, it is young LARA'S prize : But dizzily the field of death floats in the victor's eyes. His cheek is as his foeman's pale, his white lips gasp for breath : Ay, this was all he ask'd of Heaven, the victory and death. He raised him on his arm, " My page, come thou and do my will ; Canst thou not see a turban'd band upon yon distant hill ? 176 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Now strip me of my armour, boy, by yonder river's side, Place firm this head upon my breast, and fling me on the tide/' That river wash'd his natal halls, its waters bore him on, Till the moonlight on the hero in his father's pre- sence shone. The old chief to the body drew, his gallant boy was dead, But his vow of vengeance had been kept, he bore NOURREDDIN'S head. THE GOLDEN VIOLET. 177 'T WAS sad to gaze on the wan brow Of him who now awoke the lute, As one last song life must allow. Then would those tuneful lips be mute. His cheek was worn, what was the care Had writ such early lesson there ? Was it Love, blighted in its hour Of earliest and truest power By worldly chills which ever fling Their check and damp on young Love's wing ; Or unrequited, while the heart Could not from its fond worship part ? Or was it but the wasting woe Which every human path must know ; Or hopes, like birds, sent forth in vain, And seeking not their ark again j 178 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Friends in their very love unjust, Or faithless to our utmost trust ; Or fortune's gifts, to win so hard ; Or fame, that is its own reward Or has no other, and is worn Mid envy, falsehood, hate, and scorn ? All these ills had that young bard known, And they had laid his funeral stone. Slowly and sad the numbers pass'd, As thus the minstrel sung his last. THE ROSE: THE ITALIAN MINSTREI/S TALE. THE Count GONFALI held a feast that night, And coloured lamps sent forth their odorous light THE ROSE. 179 Over gold carvings and the purple fall Of ta^pestry ; and around each stately hall Were statues, pale and finely shaped and fair, i As if all beauty save her life were there ; And, like light clouds floating around each room, The censers roll'd their volumes of perfume ; And scented waters mingled with the breath Of flowers, which died as if they joy'd in death ; And the white vases, white as mountain snow, Look'd yet more delicate in the rich glow Of summer blossoms hanging o'er each side, Like sunset reddening o'er a silver tide. There was the tulip with its rainbow globe ; And, like the broidery on a silken robe Made for the beauty's festal midnight hours, The sparkling jessamine shook its silver showers ; N2 180 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Like timid hopes the lily shrank from sight ; The rose leant as it languished with delight, Yet, bride-like, drooping in its crimson shame ; And the anemone, whose cheek of flame Is golden, as it were the flower the sun In his noon-hour most loved to look upon. At first the pillar'd halls were still and lone, As if some fairy palace all unknown To mortal eye or step. This was not long ; Waken* d the lutes, and swelled a burst of song, And the vast mirrors glittered with the crowd Of changing shapes. The young, the fair, the proud Came thronging in ; and the gay cavalier Took some fair flower from the fairest near, And gave it to the dark-eyed beauty's hand, To mark his partner for the saraband ; THE ROSE. 181 And graceful steps pass'd on, whose tender tread Was as the rose-leaf in the autumn shed ; And witching words, raising on the young cheek Blushes that had no need of words to speak. Many were lovely there ; but, of that many, Was one who shone the loveliest of any, The young OLYMPIA. On her face the dyes Were yet warm with the dance's exercise, The laugh upon her full red lip yet hung, And, arrow-like, flash'd light words from her tongue. She had more loveliness than beauty : hers Was that enchantment which the heart confers ; A mouth sweet from its smiles, a glancing eye, Which had o'er all expression mastery ; Laughing its orb, but the long dark lash made Somewhat of sadness with its twilight shade, 182 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. And suiting well the upcast look which seem'd At times as it of melancholy dream'd ; Her cheek was as a rainbow, it so changed, As each emotion o'er its surface ranged ; And every word had its companion blush, But evanescent as the crimson flush That tints the daybreak ; and her step was light As the gale passing o'er the leaves at night ; In truth those snow feet were too like the wind, Too slight to leave a single trace behind. She leaned against a pillar, and one hand Smoothed back the curls that had escaped the band Of wreathed red roses, soft and fitting chain In bondage such bright prisoners to retain. The other was from the white marble known But by the clasping of its emerald zone : THE ROSE. 183 And lighted up her brow, and flash'd her eye, As many that were wandering careless by Caught but a sound, and paused to hear what more Her lip might utter of its honey store. She had that sparkling wit which is like light, Making all things touch'd with its radiance bright ; And a sweet voice whose words would chain all round, Although they had no other charm than sound. And many named her name, and each with praise j Some with her passionate beauty filPd their gaze, Some mark'd her graceful step, and others spoke Of the so many hearts that own'd the yoke Of her bewildering smile ; meantime, her own Seem'd as that it no other love had known 184 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Than its sweet loves of nature, music, song, Which as by right to woman's world belong, And make it lovely for Love's dwelling-place. Alas, that he should leave his fiery trace ! But this bright creature's brow seem'd all too fair, Too gay, for Love to be a dweller there ; For Love brings sorrow : yet you might descry A troubled flashing in that brilliant eye, A troubled colour on that varying cheek, A hurry in the tremulous lip to speak Avoidance of sad topics, as to shun Somewhat the spirit dared not rest upon ; An unquiet feverishness, a change of place, A pretty pettishness, if on her face A look dwelt as in scrutiny to seek What hidden meanings from its change might break. THE ROSE. 185 One gazed with silent homage, one who caught Her every breath, and blush, and look, and thought ; One whose step mingled not with the gay crowd That circled round her as of right allow'd, But one who stood aloof with that lone pride Which ever to deep passion is allied. Half scorning, yet half envying the gay ring That gathered round with gentle blandishing, He stood aloof; and cold and stern and high, Looked as he mock'd at their idolatry : Yet long'd his knee to bend before the shrine Of the sweet image his heart own'd divine ; While, half in anger that she had not known What even to himself he would not own. He knew not how a woman's heart will keep The mystery of itself, and like the deep 186 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Will shine beneath the sunbeam, flash and flow O'er the rich bark that perishes below. She felt he gazed upon her, and her cheek Wore added beauty in its crimson break ; And softer smiles were on her lip, like those The summer moonlight sheds upon the rose ; And her eye sparkled, like the wine-cup's brim, Mantling in light, though it turn'd not to him. Again the dancers gathered; from them one Took gaily her fair hand, and they are gone. LEONI followed not, yet as they pass'd How could OLYMPIADS light step be the last? Yet pass'd she quickly by him, and the haste From her wreathed hair one fragrant rose displaced. LEONI saw it fall; he is alone, And he may make the fairy gift his own . THE ROSE. 187 He took the flower, and to his lip *t was press'd, One moment, and 't is safe within his breast ; But while he lingered dreaming o'er its bloom, OLYMPIA'S step again is in the room With the young cavalier, who urged her way, And said her rose beside the column lay, For there he miss'd it, and some flattering word Fill'd up the whisper which he only heard. LEONI flung it down in carelessness, As he had mark'd them not, and held it less From knowledge of his act than vacant thought, While the mind on some other subject wrought. In haste he left them both, but he could hear The pleading of the gallant cavalier For that rose as a gift. He might not tell What answer from the maiden's lip then fell, 188 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. But when they met again he mark'd her hair Where it had wreathed, the rose-bud was not there. They pass'd and repass'd : he, cold, silently, As was his wont; but she, with flashing eye, And blush lit up to crimson, seem'd to wear More than accustom' d gladness in her air. Ah ! the heart overacts its part ; its mirth, Like light, will all too often take its birth Mid darkness and decay ; those smiles that press, Like the gay crowd round, are not happiness ; For peace broods quiet on her dove-like wings, And this false gaiety a radiance flings, Dazzling but hiding not ; and some who dwelt Upon her meteor beauty, sadness felt; Its very brilliance spoke the fever'd breast ; Thus glitter not the waters when at rest. THE ROSE. 189 The scene is changed, the maiden is alone To brood upon Hope's temple overthrown; The hue has left her lip, the light her eye, And she has flung her down as if to die. Back from her forehead was the rich hair swept, Which yet its festal braid of roses kept. She was in solitude : the silent room Was in the summer's sweet and shadowy gloom; The sole light from the oratory came, Where a small lamp set forth its scented flame Beneath the Virgin's picture; but the wind Stole from the casement, for the jasmine twined, With its luxuriant boughs, too thickly grew, To let the few dim star-beams wander through. In her hand was a rose ; she held the flower As if her eye were spell-bound by its power. 190 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. It was spell-bound ; coldly that flower repress'd Sweet hopes, ay, hopes, albeit unconfess'd. Check'd, vainly check'd, the bitter grief recurs That rose flung down because that rose was hers ! And at the thought paleness in blushes fled, Had he, then, read her heart, and scorn' d when read ? Oh ! better perish, than endure that thought. She started from her couch ; when her eye caught The Virgin's picture. Seem'd it that she took Part in her votary's suffering; the look Spoke mild reproof, touch'd with grave tenderness, Pitying her grief, yt blaming her excess. OLYMPIAD turn'd away, she might not bear To meet such holy brow, such placid air, At least not yet ; for she must teach her breast A lesson of submission, if not rest, THE ROSE. 191 And still each throbbing pulse, ere she might kneel And pray for peace she had not sought to feel. She sought the casement, lured by the soft light Of the young moon, now rising on the night. The cool breeze kiss'd her, and a jasmine spray Caught in her tresses, as to woo her stay. And there were sights and sounds that well might fling A charmed trance on deepest suffering. For stood the palace close on the sea shore ; Not like those northern ones, where breakers roar, And rugged rocks and barren sands are blent, At once both desolate and magnificent; But here the beach had turf and trees that grew Down to the water-side, and made its blue 192 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Mirror for their dark shapes. Is nought so fair But must there come somewhat of shadow there ? Whatever thou touchest there must be some shade, Fair earth, such destiny for thee is made. It was a night to gaze upon the sea, Marvel, and envy its tranquillity ; It was a night to gaze upon the earth, And feel mankind were not her favourite birth ; It was a night to gaze upon the sky, Pine for its loveliness, and pray to die. OLYMPIA felt the hour; from her cheek fled Passion's untranquil rose, she bow'd her head : For the thick tears like hasty childhood's came ; She hid her face, for tears are shed with shame. Her heart had spent its tempest, like the cloud When summer rain bursts from its stormy shroud ; THE ROSE. 193 Pale, sad, but calm, she turn'd, and bent the knee, In meekest prayer, Madonna fair, to thee. Where might the maiden's soul, thus crush'd and riven, Turn from its mortal darkness, but to Heaven ? It is in vain to say that love is not The life and colour of a woman's lot. It is her strength ; for what, like love's caress, Will guard and guide her own weak tenderness ? It is her pride, fleeting and false the while, To see her master suing for her smile. Calls it not all her best affections forth, Pure faith, devotedness, whose fruitless worth Is all too little felt ? O ! man has power Of head and hand, heart is a woman's dower. o 194 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Youth, beauty, rank, and wealth, all these com- bined, Can these be wretched ? Mystery of the mind ! Whose happiness is in itself, but still Has not that happiness at its own will. And she was wretched; she, the young, the fair, The good, the kind, bow'd down in her despair. Ay, bitterest of the bitter, this worst pain, To know love's offering has been in vain ; Rejected, scorn'd, and trampled under foot, Its bloom and leaves destroyed, not so its root. " He loves me not," no other word or sound An echo in OLYMPIADS bosom found. She thought on many a look, and many a tone, From which she gathered hope, now these were gone, THE ROSE. 195 Life were too burthensome, save that it led To death ; and peace, at least was with the dead. One pang remained : perchance, though unconfess'd> Some secret hope yet lingered in her breast ; But this, too, was destroyed. She learn'd next morn Sea winds and waters had LEONI borne Afar to other lands $ and she had now But only to her hapless fate to bow. She changed, she faded, she the young, the gay, Like the first rose Spring yields to pale decay. Still her lip wore the sweetness of a smile, But it forgot its gaiety the while. Her voice had ever a low gentle tone, But now 'twas tremulous as Sorrow's own ; Her step fell softer as it were subdued To suit its motion to her alter'd mood ; o 2 196 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. As if her every movement, gesture, look, Their bearing from the spirit's sadness took ; And yet there was no word which told that grief Prey'd on the heart as blight preys on the leaf. But meeker tenderness to those around, A soothing, sharing love, as if she found Her happiness in theirs; more mild, more kind, As if a holier rule were on her mind. I cannot choose but marvel at the way In which our lives pass on from day to day Learning strange lessons in the human heart, And yet like shadows letting them depart. Is misery so familiar that we bring Ourselves to view it as a usual thing ? Thus is it ; how regardless pass we by The cheek to paleness worn, the heavy eye ! THE ROSE. 197 We do too little feel each other's pain ; We do relax too much the social chain That binds us to each other ; slight the care There is for grief in which we have no share. OLYMPIA felt all this ; it loosed one more Of her heart's ties, and earth's illusions wore The aspect of their truth, a gloomy show, But what it well befits the soul to know. It taught the lesson of how vain the toil To build our hopes upon earth's fragile soil. O ! only those who suffer, those may know How much of piety will spring from woe. Days, weeks, and months pass'd onwards, and once more LEONI stood upon his native shore. 198 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Slight change there was in him : perchance his brow Wore somewhat of more settled shadow now ; Somewhat of inward grief, too, though repressed, Was in his scornful speech and bitter jest ; For misery, like a masquer, mocks at all In which it has no part, or one of gall. I will say that he loved her, but say not That his, like hers, was an all blighted lot ; For ever in man's bosom will man's pride An equal empire with his love divide. It was one glorious sunset, lone and mute, Save a young page who sometimes waked his lute With snatches of sad song; LEONI paced His stately hall, and much might there be traced What were the workings of its owner's mind. Red wine was in a silver vase enshrined, THE ROSE. 199 But rudely down the cup was flung, undrain'd, So hastily, the leaf below was stain'd; For many an open'd volume lay beside, As each for solace had in vain been tried : And now, worn, wearied, with his solitude, He strode, half sad, half listless in his mood, Listening the lute or the deep ocean wave, When an attendant entered in and gave A packet to his hand. Careless he gazed, And broke the seal. Why ! the red flush has raised Its passion to his brow what ! is the name There written? from OLYMPIA, then, it came. " One word, LEONI, 't is* my first and last, And never spoken but that life is past. It is earth's lingering dreaming, that I pine To know these lines will meet one look of thine ; 200 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. If possible upon thy heart to fling One gentle memory, one soft thought to cling To thy more mournful hours ; to bid thee take A pledge too dearly treasured for thy sake, And one of mine. Ah ! this may be forgiven j 'T is the last weakness of the bride of Heaven, Which I shall be or e'er this comes to tell How much thou hast been loved. Fare well, fare well \" He took her gift : well known the pledges there, A withered rose, a tress of silken hair. SUNNY and blue was the minstrel's eye, Like the lake when noontide is passing by j And his hair fell down in its golden rings, As bright and as soft as his own harp-strings, THE ROSE. 201 Yet with somewhat wild upon lip and cheek, As forth the enthusiast spirit would break To wander at times through earth and air, And feed upon all the wonders there. A changeful prelude his light notes rung, As remembering all they had ever sung. Now the deep numbers rolled along, Like the fiery sweep of a battle song j Now sad, yet bold, as those numbers gave Their last farewell to the victor's grave ; Then was it soft and low, as it brought The depths of the maiden's lovelorn thought : Harp of Erin ! hath song a tone Not to thy gifted numbers known? But the latest touch was light and calm, As the voice of a hymn, the night-falling balm ; 202 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Holy and sweet, as its music were given Less from a vision of earth than of heaven, THE HAUNTED LAKE: THE IRISH MINSTREL'S LEGEND. ROSE up the young moon ; back she flung The veil of clouds that o'er her hung : Thus would fair maiden fling aside Her bright curls in their golden pride ; On pass'd she through the sky of blue, Lovelier as she passed it grew ; At last her gentle smiles awake The silence of the azure lake. Lighted to silver, waves arise, As conscious of her radiant eyes. THE HAUNTED LAKE. 203 Hark ! floats around its music's tone, Sweeter than mortal ear hath known : Such, when the sighing night-wind grieves Amid the rose's ruby leaves, Conscious the nightingale is nigh, That too soon his reluctant wing Must rival song and rival sigh To his own fair flower bring ; Such as the lute, touch'd by no hand Save by an angel's, wakes and weeps ; Such is the sound that now to land From the charmed water sweeps. Around the snowy foam-wreaths break, The spirit band are on the lake. First, a gay train form'd of the hues Of morning skies and morning dews : 204 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. A saffron-light around them play'd, As eve's last cloud with them delay'd ; Such tints, when gazing from afar, The dazed eye sees in midnight star. They scatter'd flowers, and the stream Grew like a garden, each small billow Shining with the crimson gleam The young rose flung upon its pillow ; And from their hands, and from their hair, Blossoms and odours fill'd the air ; And some of them bore wreathed shells, Blush-dyed, from their coral cells, Whence the gale at twilight brought The earliest lesson music caught : And gave they now the sweetest tone, That unto the sea-born lyre was known ; THE HAUNTED LAKE. 205 For they were echoes to the song That from spirit lips was fleeting, And the wind bears no charm along Such as the shell and voices meeting. On pass'd they to the lulling tune, Meet pageant for the lady moon. A louder sweep the music gave : The chieftain of the charmed wave, Graceful upon his steed of snow, Rises from his blue halls below ; And rode he like a victor-knight Thrice glorious in his arms of light. But, oh ! the look his features bear Was not what living warriors wear; The glory of his piercing eye Was not that of mortality ; 206 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. Earth's cares may not such calm allow, Man's toil is written on his brow : But here the face was passionless, The holy peace of happiness, With that grave pity spirits feel In watching over human weal ; An awful beauty round him shone But for the good to look upon. Close by his side a maiden rode, Like spray her white robe round her flow'd ; No rainbow hues about her clung, Such as the other maidens flung , And her hair hath no summer crown, But its long tresses floating down Are like a veil of gold which cast A sunshine to each wave that past. THE HAUNTED LAKE. 207 She was not like the rest : her cheek Was pale and pure as moonlight snows ; Her lip had only the faint streak The bee loves in the early rose ; And her dark eye had not the blue The others had, clear, wild, and bright 5 But floating starry, as it drew Its likeness from the radiant night. And more she drew my raised eye Than the bright shadows passing by ; A meeker air, a gentler smile, A timid tenderness the while, Held sympathy of heart, and told The lady was of earthly mould. Blush' d the first blush of coming day, Faded the fairy band away. 208 THE GOLDEN VIOLET. They pass'd, and only left behind A lingering fragrance on the wind, And on the lake their haunted home, One long white wreath of silver foam. Heard I in each surrounding vale What was that mortal maiden's tale : Last of her race, a lonely flower, She dwelt within