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GIFT   OF 
Mr.    Vernon  Howard 


POEMS. 


THE 


VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD; 


AND 


OTHER    POEMS. 


BY 


LADY  EMMELINE  STUART-WORTLEY. 


LONDON : 

LONGMAN,  REES,  ORME,  BROWN,  GREEN,  &  LONGMAN. 
1835. 


LONDON  : 

PRINTED   BY   MANNING   AND    SMITHSON, 
IVY    LANK,   1'ATKRNOSTKR   ROW. 


TO 
HER   ROYAL   HIGHNESS, 

THE     DUCHESS     OF    KENT 


MADAM, 

The  gracious  permission  which  your  Royal 
Highness  has  granted  me,  to  dedicate  this  little 
volume  to  you,  is  but  a  continuation  of  the  con- 
descending kindness  which  I  have  ever  experienced 
from  your  Royal  Highness.  But  I  trust  that  your 
Royal  Highness  will  do  me  the  justice  to  believe, 
that  this  fact  tends  only  to  increase  my  grateful  sense 
of  your  Royal  Highness 's  present  indulgent  kindness. 
I  have  had  one  other  object  in  soliciting  the  permis- 
sion to  which  I  have  alluded — and  it  is,  the  opportunity 
thereby  afforded  me  of  offering  my  humble,  though 

M114550 


VI  DEDICATION. 

heartfelt  tribute  of  admiration,  of  the  many  virtues 
by  which  your  Royal  Highness  is  endeared  to  the 
British  Nation. 

I  have  the  honour  to  remain, 

MADAM, 
With  the  highest  respect, 

Your  Royal  Highness's  most  faithful,  most  obliged, 
and  most  devoted  Servant, 

E.  C.  E.  STUART  WORTLEY. 


CONTENTS. 


PAGE 

THE   VILLAGE    CHURCHYARD        .  .1 

AN   EVENING   BY   THE    SEA  ....  59 

OH  !    THOU    SWEET    ROYALTY    OF    NIGHT  !  .  68 

NO,  NO  !    THE    GAYEST   FESTIVAL  !        .  .  .69 

LINES      SUGGESTED     BY     THE      DEATH     OF     THE 

DUKE    OF    REICHSTADT  ....  73 

THE    MEETING 137 

SONG 139 

SONG 142 

OH  !    SAY   YE    NOT      ......          144 

WOMAN'S  LOVE 153 

LINES  ON  THE  FORGET-ME-NOT        .         .         .165 

SONG 168 

THE   STAR   AND   THE   LIGHTNING         .  .  .170 

LINES    ON    *  *   *  *    SINGING          .  .  .173 

TO    OTHERS    GIVE    THY    LOVELIEST    CHARMS  .          174 

FAREWELL  !    AND    NOT   THE    FIRST    FAREWELL      .          177 


Vlll  CONTENTS. 

TAGS. 

IT    MAY    NOT    BE! 180 

ALONE! 182 

THE  REMONSTRANCE 185 

THE    REPROACH  ......          189 

THE  CONTRAST 192 

LINES  ON  A  BOWER  .....  195 
THE  PIRATE'S  TOMB  .....  201 

SONG 204 

THE  FIRST  SIGHT  OF  DEATH  .  .  .  .208 
THE  FAREWELL  TO  ZEINEB  .  .  .  .212 
LINES  ON  A  LOVELY  CHILD  .  .  ,  .216 
THE  SULTANA'S  LAMENTATION  ...  223 
A  NIGHT  MEDITATION 232 

LINES  ON  AN    ENGRAVING,  REPRESENTING    GIPSY 

CHILDREN  IN  A  STORM          ....  238 

THE    STORY    OF    SADIIU    SING      .             .            .             .  250 

SONG 261 

SONNET              .                         .....  262 

LINES 263 

SONNET 264 

THE    KING   OF   TERRORS  .  .  .  .265 

SONNET  266 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 


OLD,  dim  Churchyard !  I  greet  thee,  while  I  feel 
Thy  sobering,  saddening  influence  o'er  me  steal 
With  half  a  painful,  half  a  pleasing  power, 
Ev'n  in  the  lustrous  glow  of  this  glad  hour. 
The  morning's  warm  luxuriance  of  delight 
Meets  here  a  solemn  check,  a  dreamy  blight, 
Ev'n  from  this  haunted  spot !     Yet,  while  we  own 
The  pensive  gloom  around  these  precincts  thrown, 
A  gentle  vein  of  calm  and  tender  thought 
Is  to  the  entranced  mind  serenely  brought. — 


^  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

A  mournful  place  it  is  !     The  long  grass  waves 
Freshly  and  wildly  o'er  the  hamlet's  graves : 
Sad  in  the  midst,  a  ruined  church-tower  stands, 
Long  since,  by  bold  and  sacrilegious  bands, 
:  t>efaee'd  arid  -  desecrated ;  and  by  hands 
Ofcpfa^d  pious  iJ-r-'-'i -w&s  the  Commonweal thsmen  laid 
These  altars  bare,  and  sternly  disarrayed 
The  House  of  God  of  all  its  seemly  show, 
Daring  those  dedicated  walls  to  o'erthrow. 
And  now,  how  sadly  touching  is  the  scene 
Where   Peace  dwells  deep,    where  fiery  War  hath 

been! 

Ruin  and  Death,  here  join  in  ghastly  state, 
And  look  in  Day's  bright  face  with  gloomy  hate  j 
But  Death  and  Ruin  yet  shall  view  a  day 
Which  must  dissolve  their  icy  bonds  away  \ 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  O 

How  vainly  the  Earth's  green,  flowery  robe  seems 

spread. 

Even  like  a  royal  mantle,  round  the  dead ! 
Vainly  for  them,  in  truth ;  —for  us,  not  so ; 
Since  gently  cheering  is  the  vernal  glow, 
The  fresh  and  living  beauty  spread  around, 
The  balmy  odours  rising  from  the  ground. 
Ay  !  by  these  fairy-like,  slight  wilding-flowers, 
Nature's   sweet  nurselings,    the   offspring   of    glad 

hours, 

Exuberantly  glorified  each  tomb, 
Each  lowly  mound  appears ;  their  bright,  soft  bloom 
Doth  clothe  the  dust  in  a  divine  array, 
Embalming,  sanctifying  dull  decay — 
And  soothing,  softening  all  our  moody  fears, 
Until  the  cheek  is  wet  with  peaceful  tears. 

B2 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Fof  ghastly  images,  that  haunt  us  there. 

Bringing  bright  images  all  pure  and  fair, — 

Hopes,    blossoming   with   those   blossoms;    thoughts 

serene, 

That  share  the  holy  quiet  of  the  scene. 
Thus,  gentle  influences  with  solemn  blend; 
Thus,  peaceful  visions  soothe  us,  and  befriend : 

We  look  beyond  life's  cloud-encircled  end 

On  death,  indeed,  we  muse ;  but  while  we  muse, 

Invest  it  with  more  soft,  more  lovely  hues, 

And  see  the  Angel  standing  by  the  grave, 

To  guard,  to  bless,  to  hallow,  and  to  save ! 

Oh !  Death  and  Love — oh !  Love  and  Death — how  close 

Ye  cling  in  the  fierce  war-embrace  of  foes  ! 

How  sadly,  strangely  ye  're  together  twined 

For  ever  on  the  earth — how  do  ye  bind 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

% 

The  myrtle  and  sad  cypress  in  one  wreath, 

In  joyless  union  leagued ; — Love  !  Love  and  Death ! 

Old,  green  Churchyard  !  but  rustic  tombs  are  found 

Within  the  precincts  of  your  hallowed  ground : 

No  cypress  trees  o'erhang  these  mossy  graves, 

With  their  dark  glory  of  funereal  leaves ; 

No  laboured  monuments  attesting  rise 

Between  Man's  sacred  ashes  and  the  Skies ; 

No  lengthened  and  elaborated  phrase, 

With  prodigality  of  specious  praise, 

Scoring  the  marble  o'er  some  slumbering  head, 

Misleads  the  Living  here,  and  mocks  the  Dead : 

No  mouldering  banners  hang,  in  idle  pride, 

These  simple  tombs,  these  rustic  graves  beside ; 

Nor  sculptured  mourner  here  for  ever  stands, 

With  urn  uplifted  in  the  uplifted  hands ;— 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

These  things  are  found  not  here;  they  are  not  found 
Within  the  precincts  of  this  hallow'd  ground. 
But  mighty  is  the  neighbourhood  of  death — 
Mighty  to  chain  the  thoughts — to  hush  the  breath — 
To  check  the  very  pulses  in  their  play. 
And  stop  the  wanderer  on  his  onward  way — 
Mighty  to  arrest  the  Fancy's  rapid  wings  — 
To  chill  the  quick  and  freely  gushing  springs 
Of  thought  and  feeling,  in  the  heart  and  mind ; 
And  yet  to  make  them  purer,  more  refined ; 
More  stainless,  and  more  innocently  clear, 
Though  trembling,  gathering,  shrinking  to  a  tear ! 
The  golden  summer  heavens,  with  roseate  flush, 
Make  the  earth  a  glory  now — and  the  air,  a  blush ; 
The  whispering  breezes,  soft  and  fragrant,  pass, 
Ruffling  to  gentlest  waves  the  murmurous  grass ; 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  7 

The  mirthful  song-birds  fill  the  dreamy  calm 

With  music,  that  might  fall  like  blessed  balm 

Of  healing  influence  on  the  wrung  heart's  wounds, 

The  soul's  sore  hurts, — so  heavenly  are  the  sounds ! 

On  every  side  the  laughing  sunbeams  play, 

Ev'n  o'er  that  ruined  church-tower  coldly  grey ; 

On  every  side  they  sparkling,  shoot,  and  dance — 

Each  glowing  charm  of  nature  to  enhance — 

In  unobstructed  freedom :  (no  bowered  shades, 

No  leafy  canopies,  no  close  arcades, 

Here  form  a  rich  and  labyrinthine  mass, 

Through  which  the  delicate  breeze  doth  sighing  pass — 

Through  which  the  sunbeam,  like  a  scymetar, 

Making  each  dew-drop  glitter  like  a  star, 

Its  luminous  way  in  joyous  triumph  cleaves  ! — 

Piercing  the  enwreathed  perplexity  of  leaves — 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

The    Gordianed    knots    of    thick-pleached,    matted 

boughs — 

As  the  keen  arrow  its  sharp  passage  ploughs !) 
In  vain  for  man,  this  fair  and  full  display 
Of  splendours  and  delights,  in  glad  array  : 
In  vain  for  man, — since  Death,  strong  Death,  is  nigh — 
The  all-shadowing  gloom,  the  great  arch-mystery  ! 
His  wrecks,  his  spoils,  his  ghastly  trophies  drear, 
Saddening  the  spot,  frown  all  too  sternly  near. 
Apostrophising  him  in  the  atmosphere 
Of  his  dread  presence,  with  fond  sighs,  we  stand, 
And  own  his  sway  of  mystical  command  ! 
And  mighty  is  his  neighbourhood,  in  truth, 
The  soul's  impetuous  waves  to  lull  and  smoothe. 
O,  Death !  thou  haughtiest,  and  thou  mightiest  One ! — 
Thou  that  makest  all  this  rolling  world  thy  throne, 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  9 

And  circlest  round  the  sun — the  glorious  sun — 

Still  with  the  circling  earth !  intent  to  run, 

With  shining  worlds,  the  high  and  wondrous  race — 

Casting  thy  shadows  in  that  sun's  bright  face, 

And  challenging  his  warm  rays  to  revive 

The   unconscious   dust,    that   once   did    breathe  and 

live ! 

Thou  draggest  thy  victims  pitilessly  down, 
Where   lowers   black   midnight's    heaviest,    blackest 

frown ; 

Where  no  commiserable  friends  may  come 
To  soothe  or  share  the  horrors  of  their  doom, 
Until  they  shrink  into  a  mutual  tomb  ! 
Thou    hold'st    the    glass    up    to    the    Bright — the 

Fair- 
To  the  most  Beautiful ;  and  mirror'd  there 


10  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

They  see  themselves,  until  they  shrink  aghast, 

And  own  their  black  deformity  at  last. — 

And  thou  too  beggarest,  wholly  beggarest  those 

Whose  coffers  groaned  with  treasure — whose  repose 

Was  broken  up  by  fear  of  midnight-thieves ! 

Thou  beckonest, — and  at  once  the  Trembler  leaves 

The  amassed  and  glittering  wealth  he  loved  so  well, 

To  lie  down  in  the  cold  and  narrow  cell, 

In  naked  destitution ;  while,  behold ! 

The  spoiler  and  the  spendthrift  seize  his  gold ! 

His  counsel  is  not  asked,  nor  his  consent, 

On  plans  and  on  designs  self-nurtured  bent, 

They  speed  from  hand  to  hand  the  coin  he  stored, 

For  use,  or  avarice'  unproductive  hoard  ! — 

Thou  biddest  the  young,  the  thoughtless,  and  the  gay, 

From  the  fair  scenes  of  joyance  come  away ; 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  11 

And  straightway  that  harsh  mandate  they  obey : 
And,  for  the  halls  of  Pleasure — for  the  sound 
Of  harps,  the  blaze  of  lamps,  the  ringing  bound 
Of  dancers'  feet,  the  festal  wreaths  of  flowers, 
The  honeyed  converse  of  those  brilliant  hours, 
The  gay  carousal  of  the  banquet-room, 
The  song,  the  laugh,  the  splendour,  the  perfume — 
They  have  the  sullen  stillness  of  the  tomb  ! 
Thou  stopp'st  the  Conqueror  on  his  high  career : 
Thou  breathest,  and  his  laurels  all  grow  sere ;" 
And,  withering,  leave  his  brow  for  thy  deep  cloud, 
Beneath  whose  heavy  gloom  't  is  darkly  bowed. 
He  loved  the  rustling  banners — the  shrill  blast 
Of  brazen  trumpets,  pealing  far  and  fast — 
The  loud,  full  war-cry ; — now,  he  shuddering  hears 
Thy  still,  small  voice,  low-murmuring  in  his  ears : 


12  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

His     mind     preyed     on     Excitement  !  —  chastened, 

schooled, 

That  mind  is  now ;  that  fiery  Thought  is  cooled ; 
And,  tamed  by  dull  Exhaustion,  low  he  bends, 
And  wild  Ambition's  hope  for  ever  ends ! 
He  was  a  lover  of  the  war-array ; 
And  joyed  to  gaze,  upon  the  battle-day, 
Along  the  martial  lines,  the  glorious  tide 
Of  billowy-heaving  chivalry's  plumed  pride. 
But  noiv9  to  this  he  shuts  his  heavy  eyes ; 
And  midst  thy  midnight-gloom  of  shadows  lies  ! 
Nor  shall  the  trumpet's  clang,  the  banner's  sweep, 
The   steed's  loud  tramp — e'er  rouse  him  more  from 

sleep. 

Death  !  all  of  great,  of  glorious,  and  of  high, 
Submits  to  thee,  beneath  the  o'er-arching  sky. 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 


13 


Valour  takes  thee  for  his  undoubted  lord ; 

To  thee  yields  up  his  red  and  reeking  sword ; 

And  vails  to  thee  his  proudly  nodding  plume, 

That  shone  through  Battle's  dull,  sulphureous  gloom. 

And  Sorrow — unto  thee,  pale  Sorrow  brings 

The  last,  wild,  desperate  hope  to  which  she  clings ; 

« 

The  shrouded  agonies  of  long,  long  years ; 

And  all  the  costly  treasures  of  her  tears : 

Haply,  to  her  more  dear  than  glittering  mass 

Of  gold  in  miser's  eyes  ! — Alas,  alas ! 

And  this  for  ever  is — for  ever  was — 

For  ever  shall  be; — yet,  not  so  !     Away! — 

Forefend     the     ignoble     thought:     there    comes    a 

day — 

An  awful  day ;  there  comes  a  solemn  hour — 
When  this  shall  not  be ;  when  the  fearful  power, 


14  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Long  delegated,  kingly  Death  !  to  thee — 

The  Pride,  the  Victory,  and  the  Sovereignty — 

Shall  be  reft  from  thee — and  for  evermore : 

When  thou  shalt  render  back — shalt  all  restore, 

The  treasures  thou  hadst  silently  amassed ; — 

And  the  Tremendous  Secret  of  the  Past 

Shalt  yield  up — shalt  unlock  ! — from  Thee  and  Night 

Released,  to  Revelation  and  the  Light. 

Then,  Mighty  Mightiest  One  !  even  thou  shalt  learn 

Utter  submissiveness ;  't  will  be  thy  turn 

To  start — to  shrink — to  tremble  and  to  fail ; 

To  yield — and  like  thy  meanest  victim,  quail ! 

But  now,  the  signs  and  tokens  of  thy  sway 

Are  ever  round  us ;  so  we  may  not  stray 

O'er  the  green,  laughing  bosom  of  our  earth, 

Without  thy  mournful  hints  to  mar  our  mirth : 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  15 

Still  the  discoloured  flower,  the  withering  leaf, 

The  fading  rainbow,  the  red  sunset  brief, 

The  exhausted  fountain,  and  the  vanishing  cloud — 

Remind  us  of  the  charnel-house  and  shroud. 

And  let  it  be  so  ! — yea,  so  be  it  still ; 

Since  lordly  man  must  die,  let  thy  cords  thrill 

Oh,  Nature  !  with  a  sympathetic  swell — 

Yes  !  strange  and  wondrous  as  it  is,  't  is  well. 

Painful 't  would  be,  to  mark  the  unfading  flower? 

Free  from  the  sway  of  Nature's  changeful  hour, 

Amidst  the  haunts  whence  Love's  reluctant  heart 

Hath,  aching,  known  its  precious  things,  depart ; — 

Painful,  to  mark  the  immortal  rose  take  root 

From  the  dull  burial-sod,  where,  cold  and  mute, 

The  friends— the  sweet  friends  of  our  youth,  perchance^ 

Are  laid,  in  dreamless  rest,  in  hopeless  trance ; — 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Bitter,  to  see  the  rainbow's  tints  endure, 
When  gentle  hues,  more  delicately  pure — 
Hues  of  young  hope,  of  love  and  calm  delight — 
Fade,  alter,  vanish  from  our  longing  sight — 
When   the   warm   flush   on    Beauty's   brow   dies 

fast, 

As  though  too  lovely,  and  too  loved,  to  last — 
The  spiritually  soft  and  tender  streak 
Grows  dim  on  Youth's  smooth,  efflorescent  cheek  ;- 
Mournful,  to  view  the  fabric  of  a  cloud 
Stand    strong, — while   bow   the   stately   and  the 

proud 

To  the  Destroyer, — and  the  exhaustless  spring 
Its  rainbowed  spray  fantastically  fling, 
In  joy  around;  so,  scattering  everywhere 
Freshness  and  Promise : — yea  !  save  only  there, 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  17 

Where  our  Life's  promise  withered,  faded,  shrunk, 
Like  some  sweet  star,   midst  vapoury  cloud-wreaths 

sunk ; — 

Where  our  Soul's  living  freshness,  parched,  destroyed, 
Left  the  earth  a  desert,  and  this  life  a  void  ! 
That    Freshness    and    that    Promise — which    nor 

rain, 

Nor  breeze,  nor  sunshine,  can  restore  again  : 
And  sad  't  would  be,  a  never-setting  sun, 
To  view,  when  hopes  are  few,  and  joys  are  none ; 
When  Desolation  yawns  our  footsteps  round, 
And  throbs  the  bosom,  with  some  recent  wound — 
Sad,  strangely  sad,  these  things  would  be  in  sooth, 
And  well  it  is,  't  is  not  so  !  the  great  Truth 
Is  shadowed  forth — 't  is  mirrored,  echoed,  blent 
With  all  things,  wheresoe'er  our  steps  are  bent — 


IB  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Our   looks   are  cast,    our   thoughts   are  drawn—- 
and man 

Is  minded  still,  his  life  is  but  a  span  ! 
Young  bard !  bring  here  thy  many-sounding  lyre, 
Instinct  with  Kingly  Harmonies ;  respire, 
This  gravely- pleasing  air,  till  high  and  higher 
Its  starry  themes  shall  soar,  its  matchless  themes; 
And  all  the  passion  of  mysterious  dreams, 
That  stir  thy  frame  with  rapture — thence  shall  gain 
A  holier,  deeper  might, — till  thy  high  strain 
Of  soul-electrifying  fire  and  force, 
Shall  rush,  like  torrents  on  their  sounding  course, 
While  thou  this  air  respirest,  fraught  with  death, 
If  Faith,  deep  Faith  breathe,  kindling  on  thy  breath ; 
Faith — nursing-mother  of  the  Soul  supreme, 
Bearing  it  up  through  many  a  ivildering  dream, 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  19 

Through  many  a  sharp-besetting,  haunting  ill, 

Supporting  it,  and  cherishing  it  still ; 

Unfolding  endless  vistas  to  its  view ; 

Unfolding  them,  illuminating  too — 

Making  that  soul  bright  Concord's  haunt  serene, 

A  tranquil  ark  of  rest ;  a  cloudless  scene ; 

And  while  within  its  depths  all  conflicts  cease— 

A  perfect  Paradise  of  inborn  peace  ! 

And    strengthening    it,    to   steer    through    billowy 

time 

Unhurt,  untired,  by  such  high  aid  sublime 
Sustained ;  so  shall  it  fail  not,  nor  secede, 
Until  it  gains  the  goal  and  wins  the  meed  ; 
So  shall  it  never  droop,  nor  shrink,  nor  yield, 
Till  it  hath  laboured  out  life's  hard-won  field. 

c2 


20  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Yea  !   Faith  ;  if  thou  exalt  the  poet's  mind, 
If  thy  pure  wealth  be  in  its  depths  enshrined, 
If  thou  'rt  its  holy  guest,  and  thou  its  guide 
'Mongst  life's  bleak  wildernesses,  wild  and  wide  ! 
Then,  then  shall  it  be  girt  with  solemn  power, 
And  win  a  high  and  everlasting  dower ; 
And  put  on  glory,  and  firm  strength  assume, 
And  in  Hope's  daring,  calm  defy  the  Tomb, 
(For  ev'n  Death's  strange  deformity  shall  fail 
To  wring  with  fear,  hearts  clad  in  that  pure  mail !) 
Then,  then  shall  it  the  palm  of  Victory  snatch, 
And  INSPIRATION'S  loftiest  fervours  catch, 
That  breathes  most  rich  contagion  on  the  air, 
Above,  beneath,  around  us,  everywhere, 
If  but  the  sense  be  quickened  to  perceive, 
The  heart  to  feel,  to  acknowledge,  to  believe ; 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  21 

Then  shall  it  mount  rejoicingly  on  high. 
And  shoot  the  gulphs  of  time  and  tread  the  sky. 
Bring  here  thy  haughty-sounding  lyre,  young  Bard  ! 
And   its   fine   chords   shall  send   through   night   the 

starred, 

Or  noon  the  cloudless — or  the  dreamy  calm 
Of  twilight,  bathed  with  odorous  dews  of  balm — 
A  deep  compelling  tone,  a  conquering  sound, 
Wakening  the  solitary  echoes  round. 
For  is  not  this  the  Treasure-hold,  the  Field 
Which  shall  to  Heaven  the  immortal  harvest  yield  ? 
Is  not  this  narrow  Kingdom  of  the  Past, 
The  only  kingdom  that  secure  shall  last  ? — 
These  subterranean  strong-holds  of  the  Tomb, 
The   barriered   haunts,   where    Death    no   more    can 

come? 


22  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Shall  not  the  dust  beneath  thy  feet  that  lies — 
To  put  on  splendour,  and  great  strength  arise  ? 
Yea  !  a  compelling  and  victorious  strain 
Send  forth — send  fearless  forth  !  a  solemn  vein 
Shall  run  through  that  proud  Harmony ;  rejoice — 
And  lift  in  triumph  up  thy  potent  voice  ! 
Breathings  of  Immortality  shall  burn 
Through  every  hymn-note  !  showered  as  from  an  urn 
Clear  waters  might  be  showered— fast,  fresh,  and  bright, 
From  thy  rich  lyre-strings  —  strains   of  the    Living 

Light, 
Quick  dreams  of  Fire,  winged  words  of  the  arrowy 

Wind— 

The  arrowy  Wind — that  leaves  e'en  Thought  behind ; 
Tones  of  the  surging  Tide — the  dark  and  strong, 
Out-swelling,  loud,  reverberating,  long— 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  23 

Shall  stream — till  Nature's  self  shall  mix  her  voice 
With  thine!  Pour  forth  thy  strain!  be  strong  !  rejoice! 
A  strain,  such  as  the  morning  stars — the  sons 
Of  power  and  glory,  sang  with  their  full  tones, 
(Till  all  the  heights  and  depths  gave  forth  reply- 
Earth,  Ocean,  Air,  and  all  the  listening  Sky,) 
With  their  fresh,  mighty  voices — deep  and  pure, 
O'er  a  Creation  that  doth  still  endure, 
In  all  its  pristine  pride  of  strength,  light,  bloom- 
As  it  contained  no  ashes — bore  no  tomb ; 
As  though  no  marks  were  scored  upon  its  breast, 
Where  battling  elements  in  fierce  unrest 
Careered  of  old — and  in  their  savage  wrath, 
Too  oft  left  nought  but  deserts  in  their  path ; 
Where  fulminating  forth  its  fiats  dread, 
The  horrent  Tempest,  mad  and  ravening,  spread; 


A*  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Where  subterranean  fires — fires,  deep  enshrined 

In  the  Earth's  own  heart  of  hearts,  slow  undermined, 

Foundations  of  her  capital  cities,  strewed 

In  riddled  ashes  o'er  th'  awed  solitude, 

Those  dire  memorials  on  her  surface  traced 

Themselves  are  in  their  turn  destroyed,  effaced- 

By  after-growths  exuberant — thus  behold, 

How  oft  while  Ages  their  vast  wings  unfold, 

Are  brightly  blotted  out,  those  blots  of  old ! 

Are  not  these  things  enough  to  awake,  to  inspire  ? 

To  bid  high  Poet  themes  swell  ampler,  higher  ? 

To  make  the  mind  that  hath  their  truth  avowed, 

Transcendent! y  more  lofty  and  more  proud ; 

And  with  rich  kindlings  of  amazement  fraught — 

To  bid  outleap  the  young  Bard's  glowing  thought, 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  25 

Until  that  thought  streams  like  some  beamy  zone, 
Round  the  sun's  self !  and  glory  not  its  own 
Lends  it  even  in  the  pride  of  purple  noon — 
When  changeless  it  appears, — to  set  how  soon  ! 
Though  Death  hath  battled  with  this  world  so  long ; 
Still,  oh  !  how  fresh,  how  vivid,  and  how  strong 
Its  store  of  boundless  charms  it  doth  display, 
And  spread  exulting  to  the  light  of  day. 
Elastic  from  his  touch  it  springs, — behold  ! 
His  very  haunts  steeped  in  the  burning  gold 
Of  flowery  bloom — his  footsteps  bathed  in  light ; 
As  though  Earth  laughed  in  mockery,  and  despite 
Of  all  the  accumulated  ills  she  had  borne 
From  his  strong  hand,  since  her  creation  morn. 
Lo  !  she  receives  him  as  an  honoured  guest, 
Decked  in  a  shining  and  resplendent  vest — 


26  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Nor  doth  remit  one  glory,  nor  one  charm. 

While  thick  around,  her  glowing  wild-flowers  swarm ; 

And  his  approach  with  fearless  smiles  she  greets, 

All  rife  and  redolent  of  breathing  sweets. 

These  living,  breathing  sweets,  that  never  cloy  ! 

For  Dust  and  Ashes — Beauty,  Splendour,  Joy  ; 

For  aching  Emptiness — Luxuriance  wild ; 

For  noxious  Vapours — Freshness  undefiled  ; 

For  loathsome,  black  Corruption's  treacherous  stealth, 

Fragrance,  and  Purity,  and  radiant  Wealth 

She  brightly  gives  — nor  in  this  quiet  spot, 

Is  that  calm  glory  or  that  grace  forgot ! 

Ay,  Poet !  hither  come  !    a  freshness  laves 
These  unpretending,  humble  Churchyard  graves, — 
A  freshness  found  not,  where  refulgent  shrines 
Tower  'midst  the  Tomb's  veiled  tenants — and  where 
shines 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  27 

The  pomp  of  funeral  splendours — by  the  light 

Of  ever-burning  lamps,  that  make  the  night 

Of  Shadows  and  of  Death  more  fearful  still  ; 

And  teach  the  gazer's  pulse  more  painfully  to  thrill ! 

Here,  fair  is  noon  in  sunshine  or  in  showers, 

Lovely  is  evening  here  at  shut  of  flowers — 

Lovely  the  lull  of  night  in  star-light  hours. 

(Oh,  fairest  hours  !  when  those  deep  stars  appear, 

Eternity  outshining  from  each  sphere — 

The  orb'd  crowns  and  palms,  the  arch-roses  and  the 

flowers, 

/ 

The  golden  trophies  and  the  eternal  towers 

Of  no  frail  earth-born  Sovereigns  !     Not  to  fade — 

And  not  to  be  cast  down  nor  reft — were  made 

Those  glories  of  the  everlasting  skies ; 

But  still  to  shine,  in  mortals',  angels'  eyes — 


28  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

— By  no  o'er  whelming  bolt  nor  lightnings  ri\ 

The  burning,  golden  Heraldry  of  Heaven  !) 

And  the  red  kindling  of  bright  Morning's  smiles — 

( Repulsed  from  shadowy  old  cathedral-aisles, 

And  damp  chill  vaults,  and  charnel-galleries  dark — 

Where    they   that   once   were    mighty,    cold   and 

stark 

Repose ;  with  crests  and  banners,  o'er  their  tombs 
Mournfully    glimmering,     through    the     impending 

glooms,) — 

Glows  here,  as  shot  from  cloudless  worlds  above 
Whose  circumambient  air 's  the  breath  of  Love  ! 
And  every  season  here  hath  its  own  charm 
To  soothe  the  mind,  to  win,  and  to  disarm. 
Even  Winter,  harsh,  and  boisterous,  and  severe, 
Appears  to  doff  his  sternest  terrors  here ; 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

And  softly,  softly  o'er  these  grass-graves  fall 

His  noiseless  snows — a  pure  and  dazzling  pall 

For    those   who    sleep    beneath  —  more    fair,    more 

bright, 

That  glittering  sheet  of  clear  and  cloudless  white, 
Than  thick  embroidered  massive  pall  of  state, 
Whose  gorgeous  crimson  gloom,  hangs  like  a  weight 
On  dim,  rich  antique  pavements ; — and  the  Spring  ! 
The   sweet,    sweet    Spring !    her   days   of  flowering 

bring: 

o 

The  hues  of  Hope  to  this  spot's  green  repose — 
Death's  desert  laughs,  and  blossoms  like  the  rose, 
When  she  in  Heaven  and  Earth — smiles,    breathes, 

and  glows ! 

Red  Summer,  too,  her  festal  skies  divine, 
Like  a  magnific  roof,  hung  o'er  it  shine — 


30  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

And  Autumn  casts  a  golden,  golden  gleam 
Athwart  the  scene,  then  melts  off  like  a  dream ! 

Dim  Churchyard  Graves !    a  thousand   thoughts   ye 

bring, 

And  o'er  them  all  a  misty  lustre  fling — 
And  round  them  all,  a  dubious  charm  ye  cast, 
Whether  of  present,  future,  or  the  past. 
The  present !  what  hath  that  to  do  beside 
These  sad  and  solemn  mounds,  wherein  abide 
The  Beings  of  lost  years  ?  and  yet,  is  't  not 
The  key-stone  and  the  main- spring  of  our  lot? 
The  hinge,  the  link,  the  bridge  ?  hath  time  not  shewn 
'T  is  all  in  truth,  that  we  can  call  OUR  OWN? 
And  on  that  mighty  Present,  must  depend 
The  everlasting  Future ;    the  great  end 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  31 

Of  all  our  hopes,  our  dreams,  and  our  desires — 
Snatch  it,  embrace  it  now,  ere  it  expires — 
Embrace  it — ah  !  it  vanishes,  it  dies  ! 
Not  so  !  with  its  dread  burthen  fast  it  flies, 
And  with  its  mighty  message  to  the  skies  ! 
'T  is  of  more  value  than  the  Orient's  mines 
Wherein    the    red    gold     flames,     the    diamond 

shines — 

Of  more  transcendent  worth,  and  precious  more, 
Than  fruitful  lands,  or  riches'  boundless  store ; 
Than  wealth  of  kingdoms,  or  than  spoils  of  war. 
And  oh  !  how  melts  it  from  our  hold,  how  fast 
It  sinks  away,  and  mingles  with  the  Past. 
Seize  it,  and  strain  it  with  a  giant's  grasp  ! 
Still    't  will,    receding,    'scape    from    that    strong 

clasp — 


32  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

But  so  shalt  thou  triumphantly  extort 

Its  preciousness  and  value,  in  such  sort 

That  thine  shall  be  its  highest,  holiest  worth, 

By  those  keen  efforts  joyfully  drawn  forth. 

Mystery  !  that  dost  thy  shadowy  threads  entwine, 

With  Life's  vast  woof,  in  many  a  mazy  line. 

Oh,  Mystery,  Mystery  !  thou  art  all  we  see ; 

All  that  we  ARE,  or  HAVE  BEEN,  or  SHALL  BE  ! 

Thy  veil,  thy  cloud,  dost  thou  for  ever  cast, 

O'er  Future,  Present,  and  the  silent  Past ! 

Yet  man  still  labours  to  extend  thy  reign ; 

And   cloud   with    thee    what    shines    most    brightly 

plain. 

So  will  not  I ;  but  with  meek,  teachable  eyes, 
Read    the    unclasp'd    volume    of    the    Earth    and 

Skies. 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  33 

Oh,    Heaven ! — the    things    most    hidden   from    our 

sight, 

Hast  thou  displayed,  in  characters  of  light ! 
The    astounding    truths    the    unaided    thought    had 

failed 

To  scale,  or  ev'n  to  touch,  hast  thou  unveiled  ! 
Oh,  Heaven  !— the  things  we  see  not,  thou  hast  made 
To  be  in  more  than  sunshine's  blaze  arrayed : 
Those  things,  which  are  from  mortal  ken  concealed, 
Hast    thou,    through    lips    inspired,     declared  —  re- 
vealed ; 

Revealed  to  all,  if,  with  Faith's  steadfast  eye, 
They  gaze  ! — then  Doubt,  and  darkling  Mystery, 
Yield  up  the  cloudy  terrors  of  their  reign ; 
And    all    that   MOST    imports   shines   forth    MOST 

BRIGHTLY  PLAIN  ! 


34  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

And  YE  !  pale,  sheeted  tenants  of  these  tombs — 
Arisen  from  Life's  dull  yoke,  and  various  dooms ; 
Could  YE,  for  one  deep  moment,  but  return 
To    this    fair    Earth,    how    much    might    we    not 

learn 

From  the  unsealing  of  those  long-locked  lips  ! — 
Much    that     should     melt     chill     Mystery's    dense 

eclipse ! 
Much   that  should  pierce   the   soul,    and  wake   and 

rouse 

Ev'n  from  the  dwellers  in  this  lowly  house 
Of  death,  where  silent  generations  meet, 
Nor  break  the  silence,  each  new  guest  to  greet ! 
Here  sleeps,  perchance,    the   infant,    whose  warm 

breath 
A  lightning-moment  played — then  sank  in  death : 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  35 

That  lived;  but  of  deep  human  life  knew  nought; 
Unconscious  all  of  feeling,  or  of  thought: 
Whose  ray  of  being,  trembling  into  dawn, 
Was  seen  one  instant,  and  the  next  withdrawn. 
Oh  !  surely,  surely  blessed,  to  depart 
Ere  one  sharp  pang  had  wrung  the  awakening  heart ! 
Surely,  most  favoured,  to  be  brightly  spared 
The  troubled    fates   such  countless    throngs  have 

shared ! 

To  be  thus  wafted, — thus  dissolved  away, 
Ere  stained  by  contact  with  this  human  clay : 
By  conscious  contact ;  for  that  unmatured, 
That  dawning  soul  knew  not  't  was  thus  immured. 
And  now,  that  youthful  spirit  may  have  soared 
Where  Angels  have  stood  still ;  and  saints,  adored, 
Writh  breathlessness  of  adoration — (poured 

D  -2 


36  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

In  fervent  silence,  arid  with  thrilling  awe)  — 
And  gazed  on  more  than  Prophet- Elders  saw, 
In  times  of  old; — whether  in  visions  deep, 
Vouchsafed  unto  their  richly-broken  sleep; 
Or  in  the  passion  of  some  raptured  trance — 
When  Mystery's  depths  lay  bared  before  their  glance 
Some  dread  Apocalypse — some  waking  dream, 
Ethereal,  and  refulgent,  and  supreme; 
Hurling  its  dazzling  glories  on  their  sight, 
Sublime  :  at  once,  a  Darkness  and  a  Light ! 
Yea  !  that  young,  sinless  spirit  may  have  flown, 
Where    spread    the     blazing    shadows    round    The 
Throne ! 

Here,  Woman — woman  the  devoted,  lies. — 
Love,  and  her  fervent  spirit,  to  yon  rich  skies 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  37 

Together  took  their  high,  their  joyful  way, 

To  hail,  at  last,  the  pure  and  perfect  day  ! 

Here,  Woman — woman  the  devoted,  sleeps. — 

No    more    Love's    vigil,    Care's    keen    watch    she 

keeps : 

No  more  shall  fear  on  her  heart's  pulses  press ; 
Nor  her  unconquerable  tenderness 
Weigh  down  her  head  of  beauty,  nor  enchain 
Her  life  with  feelings  too  akin  to  pain : 
No  more  Dissimulation  shall  beguile ; 
Nor  Treachery  smile,  and  murder  with  a  smile  ; 
Nor  base  Ingratitude  contemn  and  spurn  ; 
Nor  Faithlessness  consign  her  soul  to  mourn  ! 
But  that  bright,  winged,  and  starry  nature,  blest 
At  once  with  freedom,  triumph,  and  with  rest, 


38  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Rejoins  its  kindred  spirits  ;  and  resigns 

Each  care,  that  with  humanity  entwines. 

Oh,  Woman  ! — hast  thou  not  for  ever  been 

Pilgrim  and  Martyr  of  Earth's  troublous  scene  ? 

The  wandering  Dove,  expelled  from  its  high  home ; 

Condemned,  how  oft !  o'er  wilds  and  wastes  to  roam  ! 

The  sorrows  of  the  affections — deep  and  true, 

Have  scathed  thee  still,  with  heart-wounds  ever  new. 

The  sorrows  of  the  affections — warm  and  wild, 

And  mightiest  in  a  bosom  undefiled, 

Which  beats  with  lofty  and  with  lovely  zeal — 

But  for  ANOTHER'S  nearer,  dearer  weal — 

Its  whole  existence  but  to  ENDURE  ;  to  FEEL — 

Its  ALL  of  FEELING — ONE  bright  torrent — poured 

In  ONE  pure  channel,  ruled  by  powers  adored. 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  39 

In  luxury  of  devotedness,  sublime, 

Thou  'st  moved,  sweet  Exile !   thus,  through  stormy 

time, 

Sweet  Exile  ! — bright  Exotic  !—  tasked  to  bear 
This  hollow  life's  too  barren,  bitter  air. 
Do  not  all  pure  enchantments  meet  in  thee. 
That  frame  a  Universe  of  Majesty  ? 
Are  not  the  Orient's  sun-bursts  full  enshrined 
In  thy  deep  glance  ?     Dost  thou  not  brightly  bind 
Thy  brow  with  starry  glories  ?     Dost  thou  not  seem 
Complexioned  with  the  morning,  when  her  beam 
Is  cloudless ;  and  the  clear,  transparent  air, 
Doth  only  sunshine,  rosy  sunshine,  wear  ? 
And  doth  not  thy  most  richly  precious  hair, 
Bear,  upon  every  bright  and  burnished  fold, 
The  dazzling  lustres  of  the  shining  gold  ? 


40  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Doth  not  the  festal,  beatific  rose, 

Along  thy  cheek  its  tenderest  tints  disclose  ? 

And  all  this  for  the  cold  world — colder  dust  ? 

Oh !     Woman  makes   not    this    bleak    earth    her 

trust ! 

I  n  life,  to  deathless  Love  her  faith  is  given ; 
And,  to  the  unfailing  guardianship  of  Heaven, 
Each  narrower  hope  (if  aught  of  narrow  dwells 
In  that  devoted  bosom's  secret  cells), 
Each  more  self-centred  trust,  each  closer  view, 
Is  tranquilly  resigned :  the  fond,  the  true, 
The  meekly  brave,  the  unalterably  kind — 
So  moves  o'er  earth ;  and  doth  serenely  bind 
A  holy  armour  round  her  fragile  frame : 
And  though,  alas!  through  wrong,  through  scorn, 
through  blame, 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  41 

Haply,  her  pathway  may  be  found  to  lead ; 
That  holy  armour  proves  defence  indeed  ! 

And  not  because  of  meek  extraction,  these, 

Whose  grass-graves  murmur  to  the  tuneful  breeze, 

Did  they,  in  their  calm  sphere,  less  brightly  move ; 

Less  blessed  by  nature,  or  less  true  to  love. 

The  Peasant's  ancestorial  threshold-stone, 

His  hearth,  his  board, — had  all  around  them  thrown 

A  light,  from  that  pure  presence :  the  soft  smile 

Of  loving  woman  meekly  did  beguile 

The  languid  weariness  of  the  evening  hour, 

When  sought  the  o'er-laboured  Hind  the  household 

bower. 

The  fascinations  of  her  radiant  glance — 
The  affectionate  sweetness  of  her  countenance — 


42  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

The  angelic  modulations  of  her  voice — 

Bade  weariness,  and  care  itself,  rejoice  ; 

And  gently  lulled  the  harassing  train  of  woes 

That  wait  upon  the  poor,  to  calm  repose  : 

So  like  some  violet,  whose  rich,  dreamy  scent 

Emparadises  all  the  element ; 

(The  embracing  element  of  silvery  air, 

So  fraught  and  laden  with  those  odours  rare ;) 

Hidden  in  leafy  nook,  unseen — remote — 

While   round   its   haunts  those    blessed   breathings 

float! 

Might  woman — humble,  holy  woman — seem, 
The    Grace,    the   Charm,    the    Gladness,  and   the 

Dream 

In  the  still  homesteads,  where  the  Peasant  dwells ; 
'Midst  the  dim  woods,  or  in  the  sheltered  dells  ! 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  43 

Old,    green    Churchyard !     what    mournful    stillness 

sleeps 

Upon  you,  and  aroundl — those  mouldering  heaps, 
Those  silent  mounds,  with  wordless  eloquence 
They  preach  unto  the  heart,  and  chase  vain  dreams 

from  thence. 

Humble  indeed  is  this  sequestered  spot ; 
But  shared  they  not  Humanity's  dim  lot, 
Who  dwell  therein  ?     Yea  !  closely  do  they  bear 
Relationship  to  all  the  Sons  of  Care  ! 
The  tenants  of  these  lowly  tombs  have  ties 
Of  brotherhood  with  every  corse — that  lies 
Awaiting  that  tremendous  judgment-call 
Addressed  to  each — and  understood  by  all 
Beneath  Earth's  surface,  in  the  silent  dust, 
Where  sunbeam  pierces  not,  nor  sweeping  gust : 


44  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Whether  it  be  in  churchyards  green  and  lone — 
Like  this,  beneath  the  grey  and  mouldering  stone ; 
Or  where  up -soar  the  heaven  directed  spires, 
From  proud  Cathedrals,  like  Man's  high  desires — 
(Meeting  half-way  the  lightning's  arrowy  fires; 
As  though  to  deprecate  the  Almighty  Wrath 
Of  Heaven — to  stay  them  on  their  ruthless  path — 
Those  fearful  messengers  of  Fate  and  Death, 
And  sheathe  them,  as  a  reeking  sword  ye  sheathe,) 
—From     proud     Cathedrals,      midst     great     cities' 

Towers — 

Where  ceaseless  tumult  fills  the  busy  hours, — 
Whether  where  Europe's  fertile  landscapes  spread, 
Or  Afric's  skies  display  their  sultry  red — 
Or  green  Columbia's  world  of  shade  expands  — 
Or  brightly  shine  the  old,  Royal  glorious  lands 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  45 

Of  golden  Asia!  (once  how  proud,  how  great, 
How  beautiful  ev'n  in  her  fallen  estate — 
Yea  !  beautiful  as  when  enthroned  she  sate. 
Though  all  her  constellated  Glories  proud, 
Are  shrunk,  and  folded  in  a  covering  cloud — 
And  reft  are  all  the  triumphs  of  her  reign ; 
Alas,  that  Empire's  proudest  beams  should  wane  ! 
And  mortals,  mortals  dare  impeach  their  lot, 
And  marvel  they  should  be,  and  straight  are  not ! 
Loved  to  be  lost,  and  known  to  be  forgot !) 
Or,  'mongst  th'  old,  stern,  high  mountain-solitudes — 
Amidst  the  straights,  or  by  the  swelling  floods — 
Or  in  the  glooms  of  dark  resounding  woods, 
Finding  that  deep,  unbroken,  full  repose, 
Pause  of  all  pain,  and  end  of  all  their  woes  ; 


46 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 


Or  where  the  desert's  sterile  breadths  outstretch, 
And  sandy  columns  'whelm  the  prostrate  wretch ; 
Or  in  bright  spice-isles,  'midst  the  ocean  set, 
Round  which  the  blue  waves  creep  with  murmurous 

fret, 

Whose  fresh  scents  bid  the  sailor  not  forget 
His  native  mother-earth's  own  fragrant  breast ; 
But  woo  him,  hail  him,  like  a  welcome  guest — 
And  softly  speed  on  willing  winds  a  charm, 
To  glad  the  gentle,  and  the  stern  disarm ; 
Or  from  their  native  air,  their  native  earth — 
Afar — and  from  those  scenes  they  loved  from  birth- 
Shroudless  and  tombless,  the  loud  waves  beneath, 
Of  that  dread  Sea — stern  element  of  wrath  ! 
That  mighty  Ocean — where  the  tribes  of  death 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  47 

Lie,  hid  from  every  eye — from  dream  and  thought ; 
Yes  !  where  lost  thousands  unrestored,  unsought, 
Lie  hid  from  the  rejoicing,  golden  skies, 
And  all  their  rich  and  dazzling  mysteries — 
The  Sun's  great  countenance,  in  strength  arrayed, 
The  beatific  brightness  there  displayed  ! 
But  there  shall  surely  come  that  awful  day, 
Which  shall  dissolve  the  watery  worlds  away — 
And  Time's  impetuous  flight  at  once  suspend ; 
And  in  one  dire  confusion  sternly  blend 
The  affrighted  elements,  till  Chaos  spread 
Afresh  her  boundless  horrors,  doubly  dread — 
And  make  the  great  Stars  lour  forth  dim  and  dun, 
Like  fragment-reliques  of  a  ruined  Sun — 
A  day,  which  shall  convene  those  myriads  all 
Beneath  a  sky— great  Nature's  funeral-pall ; 


48  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Or  from  the  sounding  Ocean's  dismal  caves, 

Or  from  the  wide  Earth's  multitudinous  graves — 

By  rock,  by  cave,  by  torrent,  or  by  tree, 

Or  where  the  cities'  sea-like  murmurs  be — 

In  waste  or  wilderness,  or  mount,  or  plain, 

Where'er  the  spectre  holds  his  silent  reign, 

And  rest  the  members  of  the  mighty  clan, 

The  countless,  boundless  family  of  Man. 

Yes,  mossy  graves  !    the  embers  you  enfold, 

Have  fellowship  with  all,  Earth's  still  depths  hold — 

All  that  in  death's  vast  mansions  do  abide, 

All  that  are  rocked  by  the  Eternal  tide— 

All  that  are  laid  beneath  the  covering  turf; 

Slave,  Schoolsman,  Savage,  Sovereign,  Chief,  or  Serf! 

Life's  Circumnavigators,  who  have  been, 

And  ranged  and  rounded  her  revolving  scene — 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.^  49 

Absolved  their  destinies — resigned  their  place 

To  never-failing  myriads  of  their  race, 

Who  but  re-act  their  parts,  their  steps  retread* 

Till  joined  to  them — the  Dead  unto  the  Dead; 

Till  mingled  with  the  dust  of  ages  past, 

With  black  Oblivion's  shadows  round  them  cast. 

Oh,  what  a  world  of  ashes  lies  beneath 

Earth's  surface  ; — what  a  Vasty  World  of  Death  ! 

Oh,  what  a  mixed  and  marvellous  Company 

Thronged  in  the  Under  earth,  where  none  can  see  ! 

Oh,  what  a  strange  Assembly  ! — what  a  court 

Of  kingliest  Death,  whereunto  all  resort ! 

The  Just,  the  Good,  the  Mighty,  and  the  Mean — 

All  the  mixed  actors  in  this  motley  scene  ! 

And  what  a  Treasury  ! — what  a  crowded  hold 

Of  things  gone  by  !  not  of  the  burning  gold, 


50  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

Nor  the  most  lustrous  diamond ;  not  the  hoards 
Earth — Ocean — yield  to  Earth's  and  Ocean's  lords  ; 
But  of  the  boundless  mysteries  of  the  Past ; — 
In  these  sepulchral  mansions  throng'd,  amassed  ! 
Suspended  there,  great  energies  might  seem 
To  freeze  and  stagnate  in  a  tideless  stream ; 
And  motives — mighty  motives,  to  remain 
Constrained,  emprisoned,  bound  in  Magic  chain : 
And  their  results,  their  strange  fruition,  too — 
Tradition's  heir-looms,  or  Oblivion's  due  ! 
Stern  wars,  fierce  agonies,  dread  exultations, 
Despondencies,  and  passionate  tribulations — 
Victories,  and  gloryings  in  those  Victories  proud — 
Buried  and  shrouded,  with  that  buried  crowd 
To  fancy  seem  !     Oh,  what  a  vasty  field 
Of  Terrors,  Glooms,  and  Mysteries  unrevealed, 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  51 

Must  be  that  home  of  Universal  Man  — 
No  dream  may  image,  and  no  eye  may  scan  ! 
Oh,  what  a  wondrous  Theatre  !  whose  huge  stage 
Is  filled  by  shadows  still,  from  age  to  age  ! 
And  what  a  mighty  stronghold,  that  vast  vault, 
Death's  Citadel !  that  none  essay  to  assault. 
There,  there  couched,  peacefully,  together  rest 
The  Aggressor  and  the  Avenger ;  all  the  Oppressed, 
And  all  the  Oppressors  too  ;  all,  all  the  Undone, 
And  each  Undoer ;    chill,  and  stark,  and  prone : 
Together  all ;  yet  each  one  still  alone  ! 
There  rest  high  Sages,  whose  majestic  lore 
Little  availed  them  when  life's  dream  was  o'er. 
And  mighty  Seers,    whose   glance   of  power  was 

sent 
Through  the  dim  Future's  shadowy  firmament ; 

£2 


52  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD, 

Who  sphered  their  great  thoughts  gloryingly  around 
The    Immense;     and     their    proud    path    unerring 

found, 

Without  a  beacon, — but  without  a  bound  ! 
Yet,  in  one  short,  swift  moment  went  astray, 
Resigned  their  clue,  and  strangely  lost  their  way ! 
And  laurelled  Conquerors :  those  who  harshly  blew 
Discord's  shrill  trumpet;  whose  fierce  Eagles  flew, 
With  ravening  beaks  of  fury,  far  and  wide, 
Scattering  Contention's  plagues  on  every  side ; 
Whose  coming,  was  the  signal  of  dismay — 
Wrath,  dread,  distraction,  whose  unwelcome  stay ! 
Whose  track,  was  smouldering  dwellings,  slaughtered 

swains, 

Defeatured  landscapes,  and  polluted  fanes — 
Blackness  and  ashes — bare  and  blasted  plains  ! 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  53 

Whose    annals   were    of   blood,    and   wrath,    and 

crime ; 

Ploughed  on  the  face  of  earth — the  front  of  time — 
In  chasmy  furrows,  never  quite  to  close ; 
Still  threatening  new  and  farther-spreading  woes ! 
Alas  !  the  stern  reign  of  the  spear  and  shield  ! 
Alas  !  the  horrors  of  the  martial  field  ! 
Alas  !  the  Orphan's  and  the  Widow's  grief; 
Bereft  of  consolation  or  relief ! 
Alas  !  the  Conqueror's  revels  !  when  they  spread 
The  board,  and,  from  a  thousand  beakers,  shed 
The  bright,  clear  wine ;  and  think  not  of  the  Dead ! 
Harvests  sprung  up,  black — black  as  if  with  blood, 
From  those  dire  fields  they  covered  many  a  rood 
With  human  clay  (as  Nature,  shocked,  dismayed, 
Loathed  the  foul  burthen  on  her  bosom  laid ; 


54  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD. 

And  sickened  at  the  hideous  ruin  piled 
Upon  the  groaning  earth,  bedimm'd,  defiled.)— 
The  Apostles  of  dread  Agitation,  they 
Loud  fulminated  her  fierce  Precepts  ! — Yea, 
And  spread  abroad  her  doctrines  of  Dismay  ! 
The  Dragon-seed,  with  strenuous  hand,  they  sowed- 
(As,  bent  on  their  dire  Mission,  forth  they  strode, 
Like  the  Tornado  on  its  deadly  path) — 
The  fatal  Dragon-seed  of  Woe  and  Wrath : 
Too,  too  prolific  on  this  troublous  Earth ; 
Too  rapid  in  its  growth,  as  in  its  birth  ! 
Themselves  unto  themselves,  the  deadliest  foes 
Were  they,  'midst  all  these  terrors  and  these  woes; 
Self-barred  from  hope  of  respite  and  repose  ! 
But  they  are  now,  where  Combat's  furies  cease ; 
Where  stern  Contention  yields  to  sterner  Peace ! 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  55 

Victor  and  Vanquished,  there  rest  reconciled 
At  last !  nor  threats,  nor  vain  reproaches  wild, 
Disturb  that  stillness ;  Spoiler  and  Despoiled, 
Haply,  rest  side  by  side  !     Success  no  more 
Shall  tempt  the  one  to  spill  fresh  seas  of  gore ; 
And  no  reversion  of  dark  Vengeance  stern, 
Awaits  the  other  in  the  burial-urn ! 
No  sound,  no  dream,  no  movement,  and  no  breath, 
Is  in  the  Under  earth's  deep  World  of  Death ! 
Hate,  Love,  Vice,  Virtue,  Wisdom,  Folly,  Pride — 
There  make  no  sign — there  give  no  hint :  allied, 
In  dark,  unconscious  Union-— close,  but  cold — 
There    Myriads   wait;    nor  burst   the   enwrapping 

mould  ! 

Old,  green  Churchyard !  no  Sages,  no  proud  Seers, 
No  Conquerors  borne  upon  their  laurelled  biers, 


56  THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD, 

Were  ever  gathered  to  thy  peaceful  sod ; — - 

Yet  here — in  this  most  calm  and  still  abode. 

Humanity  reposes,  with  the  Whole 

Of  thoughts   and   Feelings,   which   the   unbounded 

Soul— 

The  Universal  Soul — well,  well  doth  know — 
(Shared  by  the   Strong,    the  Weak,    the  High,    the 

Low  !)- 

In  dim  Abeyance,  till  the  great  Hour  come, 
Doom'd  to  unlock  the  vast  Gates  of  the  Tomb  ! 
Old,  dim  Churchyard  !  deep  lessons,  hallowed  lore, 
From  thee  I  learn ;  and,  in  my  heart's  full  core, 
Shall  treasure  up  and  garner  :  not  in  vain, 
Meekly  I  hope ;   for  many  a  solemn  train 
Of  thought  should  thence  upspring,  to  bless  that  heart — 
To  fit  it  to  fulfil  its  destined  part ! 


THE  VILLAGE  CHURCHYARD.  57 

Knowledge — the  diligent  searcher  here  might  find- 
Knowledge  to  exalt  the  Universal  Mind  ! 
Faith,  Meekness,  Charity,  submissive  Trust, 
Should  lift  their  Angel-voices  from  the  dust. 
Ay  !  if  the  Soul  be  bent  for  Truth  to  seek, 
Silence  itself  shall  to  its  Silence  speak ; 
The  Dust  shall  talk  with   tongues  of    Flame;    the 

Clay 

Of  Ages  tell,  what  ne'er  fresh  Ages  shall  unsay ! 
Long  may  my  heart  on  those  deep  whispers  dwell, 
Long  in  responsive  strain  accordant  swell ! 
Churchyard  of  tranquil  Woolsthorpe — fare  thee  well ! 
Farewell !      May    breeze    and    sunshine,     dew   and 

shower, 
Gild  your  low  graves  with  many  a  trophy-flower  ! 


AN    EVENING    BY    THE    SEA. 


AN  Evening  of  Enchantment ! — all  is  laid 

In  magical  quiescence :  half  afraid 

To  breathe,  I  stand ;  lest  all  away  should  pass. 

Like  winged  shadows  from  a  fair,  smooth  glass ; 

Or,  like  the  very  Fairy-land  it  seems, 

Of  Visions,  and  of  Witcheries,  and  of  Dreams ; 

Lit  by  the  soft  Moon's  pale,  but  lovely  beams. 

Fair  salutations  to  thee,  skyey  Queen  ! 

Thou  chiefest  charm  and  glory  of  the  scene — 


60  AN  EVENING  BY  THE  SEA. 

Be  salutations  poured  to  thee  !  whose  brow 

Is  faintly,  fancifully  shadowed  now, 

By  a  perplexity  of  fairy-clouds, 

Fine  as  the  gossamer's  leaf-folding  shrouds : 

So  soft,  so  clear,  they  almost  make  the  light 

About  thee  look  more  spiritually  bright ! 

Sultana  of  the  Night !  this  lovely  hour 

Confesses  rapturously  thy  queenly  power  ! 

Thy  mighty  vassal — the  unbounded  Sea — 

Is  worshipping  and  celebrating  thee, 

With  a  most  multitudinous  melody; 

Sustaining,  on  his  splendour-ruffled  breast 

Thine  aspect,  imaged  in  majestic  rest ! 

O'er    those    hushed    waters    floats    no    troubling 

breath : 
Life's  radiance  there  meets  the  repose  of  death. 


AN  EVENING  BY  THE  SEA.  61 

A  rapture  of  sublimest  quietude 

Doth  o'er  the  mighty  Main  serenely  brood. 

Breathless,  with  some  sweet  consciousness,  appears 

That  awful  Main :  a  look  of  peace  it  wears, 

So  perfect,  that  the  soul  seems  lulled  to  sleep — 

Slave  of  that  rich  contagion,  pure  and  deep  ! 

But  oh,  thou  Moon  ! — thou  gentlest,  loveliest  One  ! 

Trust  not  the  Sea  !     Soon,  soon  as  thou  art  gone, 

All  bright  reflections  of  thy  vestal  grace — 

All  meek  unveilings  of  thy  matchless  face — 

Thy  soft,  calm  smiles — thy  radiant  looks  serene— 

Thy  beatific  aspect — gracious  mien — 

The  sweet  inscriptions  of  thy  pencilling  ray — • 

And  every  soft  memorial  of  thy  sway — 

He  '11  banish  from  his  bosom ;  and,  when  Morn, 

Midst  blooms  and  splendours,  lights  and  dews,  is  born; 


62  AN  EVENING  BY  THE  SEA. 

And  from  the  shaken  strongholds  of  the  Night, 
Out  leaps  the  winged  Angel  of  the  Light — 
He  will  forget  those  witching  charms  of  thine ; 
Apostate  from  thy  service  and  thy  shrine  ! 
His  tremulously^glistering,  wandering  waves — 
Clear  as  the  crystals  of  their  central  caves — 
Shall  but  reflect,  empurpled,  in  the  waters, 
The     blushing     clouds  —  Morn's     golden- winged 

Daughters. 

No  trace  of  thee,  or  thine,  shall  there  remain  ! 
Trust  not  the   Sea — such  trust  were  worse  than 

vain! 

Though  now,  the  mighty  Hypocrite  may  seem 
To  make  thee  the  Idol  of  his  rapturous  dream ; 
Trust  not  the  false,  false  Sea— thou  gentle  Moon  ! 
He  will  forget  thee,  and  deny  thee,  soon  1 


AN  EVENING  BY  THE  SEA.  63 

The  young  Aurora,  with  the  roseate  brow, 

Shall  claim  his  homage,  and  receive  his  vow  : 

Her  orient  colours,  he  shall  win  and  wear, 

Nor  one  fond  tribute  to  thy  memory  spare. 

In  changeful  splendours — gem-like  sparkles,  drest ; 

And  tremulous  lightnings — shall  his  mighty  breast 

Outshine  :  Lo  !  he  shall  wear  a  Kingly  Vest ! 

Luxuriant  coruscations,  rainbow-hues, 

His  glittering,  quivering  surface  shall  suffuse ; 

Till  in  one  golden  conflagration  blent, 

Shall  seem  that  pure  and  liquid  element ; 

And,    in    those     laughing     hours    of    flush    and 

bloom, 

Red — rosy  red,  his  waters  shall  become  ! 
Till  on  his  bosom,  every  foam-spun  wreath 
Rival  the  blushing  coral-stems  beneath  5 


64 


AN  EVENING  BY  THE  SEA, 


And  even  the  aery,  misty  spray  shall  gain 
A  gem-like  brilliance,  variable  as  vain  ! 
Nought  but  the  white  pearls,  in  his  deepest  deep— ^ 
On  which  thou  never  shonest — shall  calmly  keep 
A  colourless  lustre,  pale  and  pure  as  thine : 
Yet,  oh !  how  dreamy,  spiritual,  divine, 
How  tender,  and  how  touching  was  thy  Light) 
What  time  the  thrilling  stars  inflamed  the  night ; 
And  unto  Adoration's  lifted  eye 
The  mirrors  of  their  Maker's  majesty — - 
The  mirrors  of  his  Awful  Shadow,  even — 
Seemed  gloriously,  enkindling  all  the  Heaven  ! 
Fair  Angel  of  the  Night !  the  Sea  shall  cease 
To  proffer  homage  to  thy  shrine  of  peace  ! 
Another  Sun,  with  added  fire,  that  glows, 
Shall  he  appear,  in  his  illumed  repose ; 


AN  EVENING  BY  THE  SEA.  65 

With  multiplied,  redoubled  rays,  that  dart 
From  every  wave,  from  every  ripple  start, 
When  the  refulgent  and  triumphal  Morn — 
Child  of  that  Sun — midst  dazzling  pomps,  is  born  ! 
Yet,  such  inconstancies  shall  he  regret, 
When  yet,  once  more,  that  parting  Sun  is  set ; 
And  thou  comest  forth,  all  beautiful  and  bright — 
Even  like  the  shadow  of  Essential  Light ! 
Then,  once  again,  shall  he  return  to  thee, 
Murmuring  a  multitudinous  Harmony — 
A  sound  of  many  sounds — a  full,  and  deep, 
And  passionate  strain ;  as  in  a  charmed  sleep. 
Yea !  then,  once  more,  shall  he  to  thee  return ; 
And  thou  shalt  dip  thy  sheeny  diamond-urn 
In  his  broad  waters,  till  they  trembling  catch 
Transparent  lustres, — not  the  pearls  could  match, 


66  AN  EVENING  BY  THE  SEA. 

Hidden  and  cloistered  in  their  shadowy  hold — 

Midst  buried  gems,  and  heaps  of  massy  gold, 

And  wrecks,  and  long-lost  treasures,  and  rich  ore : 

A  strange  and  unimaginable  store  ! 

Then  shall  he  proudly  thine  allegiance  own ; 

And  grow,  while  thy  sweet  splendours  burst,  full- 
blown— 

One  laughing  Paradise  of  silvery  lights  ! 

Or  where  outshine  the  Orient's  lustrous  nights  ; 

Or  where  the  Northern  Lights  swift  lances  shoot, 

With  arrowy  brilliance,  radiant  and  acute ; 

Or  where  the  Western  skies  their  glories  shed  ; 

Or  the  deep  South's  rich,  fervid  Heavens  out- 
spread. 

And  thou — thou  too,  shall  thus  fresh  charms  obtain  ; 

And  yet  more  soft,  ambrosial  beauty  gain. 


AN  EVENING  BY  THE  SEA.  67 

And  ev'n  thy  pure  rays  shall  seem  purified 
By  that  commingling  with  the  stainless  Tide : 
A  tenderer  Loveliness  shall  thee  invest — 
Mirrored  upon  the  smoothness  of  his  breast — 
As  thou  in  sweet  Ascendancy  art  now, 
With  spirit-radiance  on  thy  orbed  brow. 
While  each  wave  wins  from  thee,  a  luminous  boon, 
Till  the  Ocean  shines  another,  vaster  Moon ! 


F-2 


OH  !    THOU    SWEET    ROYALTY    OF 
NIGHT  ! 


OH  !  thou  sweet  Royalty  of  Night ! 
Girt  with  cymar  of  woven  beams — 
Thou  Star-surrounded  !  whose  clear  light 
All  spiritually  radiant  streams, 

How  gloriously  thou  walk'st  the  Skies  ! 
How  graciously  thou  rul'st  the  hour  ! 
Thou  that  swayest  Ocean's  mysteries — 
Whose  Gentleness  o'erpowereth  Power ! 

Thou  'rt  like  Religion  in  the  soul ; 
With  precious  thoughts  around,  beneath- 
That,  as  they  rise,  and  as  they  roll, 
O'ercome  the  Giant  gloom  of  Death  ! 


NO,  NO!   THE  GAYEST  FESTIVAL! 


No,  no !  the  gayest  Festival  can  charm,  can  please  no  more- 
Weighed   down    by   breathless   gloom  's   the   heart   winged 

buoyantly  before. 

Even  Music,  though  triumphantly  it  pierces  earth  and  sky, 
But  brings   fresh   trouble  to  my  heart — fresh   tear-drops  to 

mine  eye. 

Bright  shapes,  with  flowery  Coronals,  that  move  to  gladdening 

sounds, 
All  graceful  through  the  mazy  dance,  with  joyous,  fawn-like 

bounds : 

They  but  remind  me  that  the  Youth  hath  melted  from  my  heart ; 
That,  'midst  Life's  scenes  of  revelry,  the  Mourner  hath  no  part ! 


70  NO,  NO!   THE  GAYEST  FESTIVAL. 

Oh  !  how  sickening  unto  me — the  light  of  pearls,  the 

sweep  of  plumes ! 
What  a  burthening  weight  upon  the  air,  the  breath  of 

burnt-perfumes  ! 
And  the  artificial  glance  and  speech — the  exaggerated 

smile — • 
When  with  a  haughty  mournfulness,  my  deep  heart 

swells  the  while  ! 

And   pictures'   gorgeous   sunshine,    kindling   sudden 

splendours  round ; 
And  high  triumphant  harpings,  thrilling  with  sea-like 

sound ; — 
Whilst  thou — oh,  darkly-sweeping  Night !  art  exiled 

then  and  thence ; 
In  thy  dusky  and  thy  cloudy  pomp,   too  searchingly 

intense ! 


NO,  NO !  THE  GAYEST  FESTIVAL.  7  I 

But    Night !     Imperial    Night !     thou  'rt    lovelier 

unto  me, 
With    those    clouds,     like    hyacinth-wreaths,    o'er 

Heaven  showered  beauteously; 
In  thy  silence — in  thy  grandeur — in  thy  boundlessness 

of  gloom ; 
Than  the  Dancers'  sounding  hall,    or  the  draperied 

Palace-room ! 

Through  the  forest-arches  would  I  stray,  in  thy  proud 

ark  enshrined ; 
Where  every  leaf  thrills  harp -like,  to  the  rushing  of 

the  wind: 
Or  by  the  deep  sea  wander,  with  a  strange  and  strong 

delight ; 
Where  the  Majesty  of  Waters,  meets  the  Majesty  of 

Night ! 


72  NO,  NO!  THE  GAYEST  FESTIVAL. 

I  love   thee,    in  my  deepest  heart — thou  all-defying 
Main  ! 

I  love  each  reeking  weed,  that  'midst  thy  treasure- 
cells  hath  lain ! 

The  storm-crash,  or  the  breathlessness  of  thy  moon- 
lighted shore — 

When  not  a  breeze  doth  float,  would  pierce  a  musk- 
flower's  scented  core. 

When  the  dim  and  slumberous  billows,  all  tremulously 

glistening — 
Come    noiselessly    along — as    if    to    holiest    music 

listening; — 
Oh,  joy  of  joys !  to  leave  the  World,  its  Vanities, 

and  its  Woes ! 
And  dwell  with    Liberty  of  Soul,    in   Nature's  rich 


repose ! 


LINES   SUGGESTED    BY    THE 
DEATH  OF  THE  DUKE  OF  RE1CHSTADT. 


A  festal  Morn  !     The  sunshine-heavens  burn  bright 
And  fair,  as  though  there  could  be  no  more  night ! 
Thousands  of  thousands,  throngs  on  throngs  await, 
Breathless  with  eagerness,  with  hope  elate — 
With  throbbing  hearts,  and  keenly-straining  ear — 
Trusting  to  catch  the  tale  of  rapturous  cheer, 
The  tidings  of  their  prayers  fulfilled  to  hear  ! — 
As,  when  some  Prophetess  arose,  to  unfold 
A  nation's  destinies, — men  stood,  of  old, 
Hushing  their  very  breath — their  pulses'  play 


74  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

Checking — to  greet  those  sounds  of  silvery  sway, 
Fraught  or  with  Exultation  or  Dismay, 
So  stand  those  thick-wedged  Thousands ;  so  they  wait- 
As  't  were  to  learn  their  future,  and  their  fate  : 
A  weight  of  such  stern  stillness  seems  to  brood 
O'er  all  that  mixed  and  mingling  multitude ! 
A  passionate,  voiceless  rapture  of  suspense 
Controls  them  with  a  burning  might  intense. 
(While  one  strong  feeling,  deepening  as  it  ran, 
Made  all  that  vasty  concourse  as  one,  Man  !) 
A  tension  of  most  anxious  vigilance 
Binds  each  existence  in  a  feverish  trance. 
A  passion  of  Expectancy  chains  down 
All  those  quick  human  hearts ;  and,  heavily  thrown 
Around  the  multitude,  a  mantle  deep 
Of  Silence  clings — like  that  of  Death  or  Sleep. 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  75 

With  adamantine  strain,  and  leaden  stress — 
Too  deep  the  Emotion  is,  for  words  to  express. 
Thickens  the  crowd ;  they  speed,  they  throng,  they 

press ; 
And   still  that  silence  spreads  ! — throughout    that 

Host 

No  breath,  no  pulse,  no  movement  might  be  lost. 
All  thoughts,  all  energies  should  seem  constrained 
To  one  keen  vigil;  or  forborne -—  refrained. 
All  hopes,  all  interests  merged  in  one  desire  ; 
Taught  to  one  mark,  and  for  one  meed  to  aspire. 
All  Powers,  all  Passions  gathered  to  one  hush 
Of  mighty  Feeling ;  which,  ere  long,  shall  rush 
In  one  astounding  burst — one  cataract  gush — 
One  all  o'er-sweeping,  hurrying,  mastering  tide 
Of  joy  and  confidence,  and  zeal  and  pride; 


76  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

Seeking,  as  for  relief,  their  force  to  shew, 

Till  foiled  expression  can  no  farther  go, 

And  haply,   Silence — peaceful  and  profound — 

Once  more  prevails ;  once  more  succeeds  to  Sound. 

Hark  !  hark  !  the  peal — the  rolling,  throbbing  gun  ! 

It  bursts  upon  that  silence,  as  the  Sun 

Bursts  from  the  eclipse  of  hurricanes,  i'  the  hour 

Of  its  resumption  and  retort  of  power  ! 

Peal  after  peal,  in  quick  succession  pours, 

As  wave  on  wave  crowd  thick  on  Ocean's  shores. 

One  more*  -and  France  is  ecstasy  !  it  comes, 

It  thunders  o'er  her  capital's  fair  domes— 

'T  is  echoed  by  a  tempest-shout !  a  sound 

That  makes  a  billowy  surge  of  the  air  around, 

*  In  the  event  of  a  Princess  being  bora,  twenty  guns  were  to 
be  fired;  if  a  Prince,  a  hundred. 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  77 

Rocking  the  haughty  sunshine  on  its  swell, 

Till  on  the  sense  it  seems  to  grow  and  dwell. 

Hark  —  hark  —  that  shout !    that  startling,  staggering 
shout, 

Bringing  ten  thousand,  thousand  echoes  out ! 

A  nation's  soul  is  on  that  whirlwind-cry ; 

A  nation's  zeal,  a  nation's  ecstasy. 

Well  may  it  shake  and  pierce  the  astonished  sky — 

And  plough  the  Element,  and  wildly  spread 
Unto  the  horizon's  ends — full,  deep,  and  dread  ! 
Surely  't  were  almost  strong  to  awake,  to  arouse, 
The  very  Dead  from  their  sepulchral  house ; 
To  make  those  reliques  breathe,  those  embers  burn — 
And  start  and  tremble  in  their  funeral  urn  ; 
And  with  its  clamorous  stun,  its  deafening  roar, 
To  pierce  their  deafness — bid  their  trance  give  o'er  ! 


78  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

'T  was  one  grand  Unison  ;  as  though  the  whole 
Of  that  dense  multitude — one  Voice,  one  Soul, 
One  Hope,  one  Doom,  and  one  Emotion  shared ; 
Nor  masked  their  feelings,  nor  the  Expression  spared; 
But  glorying,  wreaked  their  turbulent  joy's  excess — 
Their  full,  intoxicating  happiness, 
On  passionate  Demonstration  !     Far  and  near, 
Peals  that  wild  sound  of  mad  and  maddening  cheer — 
That  Psean-shout ! — it  strikes  with  haughty  aim 
The  Firmaments,  which  fulmine  back  the  Acclaim  ! 
What  were  the  clarion's  blasts,  the  cannon's  roar, 
To  that  deep  Voice  !  more  startling — glorious  more — 
Far  more  imposing,  lofty,  and  sublime, 
Than  music's  crash,  or  proud  Cathedral-chime  ! 
To  welcome  thee,  beloved  and  blessed  Boy, 
An  Empire  rises  in  majestic  joy  ! 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  79 

A  festal  morn  !  a  jubilee  of  earth — 
To  hail  the  eventful,  the  auspicious  birth ; 
A  festal  morn !  all  sights  and  sounds  conspire 
To  raise  the  popular  joy  yet  high  and  higher, — 
Stately  Processions  pass  in  long  array, 
With  torch  and  taper  glimmering  faint  by  day; 
And  lifted  cross,  and  solemn-breathing  strain, 
Pouring  thanksgivings,  many  a  pompous  Train  ! 
Full  many  a  royal  blazon  flouts  the  wind, 
With  broidered  tapestries  every  street  is  lined — 
Flowers  o'er  the  pavements  strewn,  a  vernal  glow 
Shed  round  them,  and  the  very  face  of  Woe 
Cheerily  now  a  look  of  gladness  wears — 
Where  but  too  lately  trespassed  blistering  tears ; 
Pain  starts  up  from  its  fevered  couch,  and  owns 
A  joy  that  bids  it  change  its  hollow  groans, 


80 


ON  THE  DEATH  OF 


For  cries  and  shouts  of  cheer  ;  now  for  awhile 
Its  pallid  countenance  assumes  the  smile — 
Its  tortured  frame,  the  weariness,  the  fret, 
The  writhings,  and  the  tossirigs,  doth  forget ; 
Age,  hurrying  to  the  festive  scene  apace, 
Smoothes    down    the    tell-tale    furrows    from    its 

face — 

No  more  the  misty  film  its  lit  eye  dims, 
No  more  it  drags  a  weight  of  nerveless  limbs  ; 
But  braced  and  buoyed  with  vigorous  airs  of  hope, 
Joins  the  unmarshalled  multitudinous  Troop — 
And  in  the  last  days  of  its  scant  grey  hair, 
Exults  and  triumphs  with  the  youngest  there  ! 
And    Childhood,    gladsome    Childhood    mad    with 

glee, 
Bright  as  a  foam- wreath  on  the  tossing  sea  ; 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  81 

Takes  part  in  all  the  uproarious  revelry, 
(While  haply,  for  the  cause  it  little  cares, 
Of  that  loud  joy  it  so  intensely  shares). 
Mothers,  upon  this  proud,  propitious  morn, 
Turn  from  their  own  dear  babes,  their  own  first-born, 
And  clasp  their  hands  and  breathe  their  heart-felt  prayer 
For  him — the  Hope,  the  Promise,  and  the  Heir ! 
Then  to  their  arms,  those  treasures  newly  given, 
Snatch    with    redoubled   joy,    redoubled    trust    in 
heaven. 

A  festal  morn  !  a  holiday  to  all ! 

A  boundless,  universal  Carnival ! 

From  lowliest  hearth,  to  loftiest,  lordliest  hall, 

From  end  to  end  of  the  triumphant  land, 

Her  sons  now  form  one  close,  fraternal  band ; 


82  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

One  mighty  sympathy  at  once  prevades 
Her  palaced  cities  and  her  cottaged  glades ; 
One  gracious  unity  of  Feeling  binds 
All  ranks  and  orders,  as  all  hearts  and  minds — 
Such  sacred  fellowship,  such  concord  pure, 
Why  may  it  not  unchangeably  endure, 
So  rendering  human  happiness  secure  ? 
Hark — hark  ! — that  loud,  and  long,  and  wild  acclaim, 
Which  heaves  ten  thousand  bosoms  and  the  same  ! 
Oh,  how  the  Imperial  and  Maternal  heart 
Must  in  that  scene  have  borne  transcendant  part ! 
And  yet  not  so  !  the  stormy  triumph  there, 
Wrapped  in  a  heavenly  calm  it  might  not  share, 
What  were  those  haughty  revelries  and  wild 
To    her,  —  who    hails    and    clasps    her    first-born 
child? 


THE  DUKE  OF   REICHSTADT. 

An  Empire's  joy  is  nothing  unto  hers, 
Whose  inmost  soul  the  speechless  prayer  prefers  ; 
Whose  heart  with  every  loftiest  feeling  stirs, 
(In  the  white  hour  of  this  auspicious  date, 
When  fortune  smiles,  and  smiles  consenting  fate.) 
Loftiest  and  loveliest  too,  but  silent  all, 
Words  may  not  bind  such  feelings  in  their  thrall — 
Language     hath    ne'er     their    precious    worth    con- 
fessed, 

'T  is  in  the  bosom's  depths  they  lie  compressed, — 
'T  is  in  the  silence  of  adoring  tears, 
Surely  she  lays  aside  the  burthening  fears 
That  late  o'ercame  her;  and  the  mother's  heart 
In  that  proud  scene — takes  but  the  Mother's  part ! 
She  nothing  hears  of  that  rejoicing  din, 
Her  world  of  feeling  now  lies  all  within— 


•2  G 


84  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

She  nothing  recks  of  that  Triumphal  show ; 

One  object  only,  wins  her  gaze  below 

With  magnet-like  attraction  that  enchains 

Her    every  thought,    while    throbbing    through    her 

veins, 

Solemn,  yet  sweet  emotions,  kindling  pass 
Like  chequering  lights  and  shades  o'er  some  smooth 

glass — 

She  starts  not  at  the  thunderous-volumed  stun 
Of  loud  artillery — not  the  signal  gun 
Can  rouse  her  from  her  high  and  hallowed  trance, 
Nor  shake  her  glad  dream's  calm  predominance ; 
Nor  break  those  threads  of  musings,  pure  and  fine, 
Which  in  Imagination's  web  entwine 
Their  aery  gossamery — No ! — she  lies  bound 
In  spells  that  yield  not  to  that  haughty  sound ; 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  85 

No,  no ; — her  tender  infant's  feeble  wail 

Alone  can  her  maternal  ear  assail — 

Alone  o'er  her  maternal  sense  prevail ! 

That  Infant,  dearer  to  her  soul  and  sight, 

Than  all  Earth's  pomps — pure  Fountain  of  Delight ! 

Which  shall  not  poisoned  be,  nor  poured  to  waste ; 

Nor,  when  the  thirsting  lip  would  bend  to  taste — 

Shivered  to  foam,  nor  shrunk,  nor  chilled,  nor  dimmed; 

But  more  and  more  with  blessedness  be  brimmed  ! 

Pure  Fountain !  whence  no  brackish  spray-drops  cast, 

Shall  taint  the  present,  nor  make  dark  the  past — 

Whose  only  bitter  draught  shall  be  the  last, 

(That  draught  of  bitterness  which  she  shall  ^drain, 

Ev'n  to  its  dregs,  of  anguish  and  of  pain  !) 

Oh,  Rainbow !  fairest  Rainbow  !  where  combined 

Past,  Present,  Future  seem,  in  bright  tints  joined ; 


86 


ON  THE  DEATH  OF 


Blest  Rainbow  !  whose  most  soft  and  eloquent  dyes 
Calmly  illustrate  all  the  gladdened  skies — 
Dear  harbinger  of  deep  and  halcyon  peace. 
At  whose  approach  all  storms  and  tempests  cease  ; 
Bright  morning  star  of  Hope  !   (Hope,  whose  sweet  ray 
Each  cloud  disparts,  each  dull  mist  warms  away — 
And  through  each  sunbeam  doth  fresh  light  infuse. 
Lending  to  day  more  clear,  more  vivid  hues ; 
That  Ray,  which  round,  above,  beyond  us,  glows — 
Till  Earth  and  Air,  and  Skies  and  Stars  compose 
— By  no  dissevering  bars  asunder  riven, — 
One  universal  Sun  !  one  boundless  Heaven  !) 
Anchor, — on  which  her  very  heart  may  lean, 
With  all  its  freight  of  deep  affections  keen  ; 
Nor  fear  't  will  fail  it,  in  the  hour  of  need 
Frail  as  a  splintered  staff,  a  broken  reed ; 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT. 

Scion  of  Promise — freshly  planted  here, 

Who — who  shall  say  if  not  from  some  far  sphere, 

Gently  transplanted  by  the  Omnific  hand— 

Who — who  shall  say,  for  who  can  understand  ? 

Oh,  perfect  flower  !  the  very  Flower  of  Flowers, 

Just  budded,  and  to  bloom  through  boundless  hours, 

Through  everlasting  seasons,  'midst  the  bowers, 

The  amaranth  bowers  of  Eden — as  fond  hope 

Fain,    fain  would  dream,    where  fair  things  do  not 

droop ; 
Where   blossoms   are   not  shed,   nor   smooth   leaves 

strown ; 

Nor  buds  are  cankered ;  haply  ere  they  're  blown ! — 
Where  never  bleak  Frost  chains,  nor  Tempest  smites  ; 
Nor  Death's   black  wind,    comes    down  with    all  its 

blights. 


ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

Sweet  Flower  of  Flowers  !  is  not  thy  native  clime 

Beyond  Earth's  chills,  above  the  clouds  of  Time  ? 

Mother  and  Child  !  whose  union  close  and  true, 

No  after-times  of  change  shall  all  undo  ; 

How  exquisite  an  influence  o'er  the  heart, 

In  such  an  hour  ye  conqueringly  assert ! 

The  Parent  and  the  Infant  both  exert 

Such  gentle  influence,  and  deep  interest  claim, 

While    every    lip    for    them    doth    fond    prayers 

frame  ! 

His  ancestorial  heritage  of  pride — 
And  thine,  sweet  Mother  !   now  seems  laid  aside, 
Forgotten,  in  the  intense,  religious  joy 
Which  brightly  doth  these  blessed  hours  employ; 
And  dost  thou  one  awakening  feeling  own 
That  is  not  ruled  by  sacred  Love  alone  ? 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  89 

No  peasant-mother  in  an  Alpine  home, 

Could  with  more  breathless  watchfulness  become 

The  guardian  angel  of  her  Child,  than  thou, 

With  empire's  wreaths,  ablaze  along  thy  brow, 

Its  jewelled  purple  round  thy  fair  form  thrown, 

And  all  its  glories  o'er  thy  path-way  strown ! 

Yea,    thine   is    Empire.     Thou !    thou   art   nature's 

own; — 

No  peasant-mother  could  more  meekly  raise 
The  deep  thanksgivings,  and  glad  prayers  of  praise ; 
Nor  with  more  fond  and  true  emotions  glow — 
The  holiest,  best  emotions  felt  below; — 
No  peasant-mother  with  more  gentle  joy, 
Bend  o'er  the  first  bright  slumber  of  her  boy, 
Than  thou  in  thy  young  lofty  motherhood, 
Imperial  being  of  Imperial  blood  ! 


90  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

Thou  whom  high  Duty  with  an  Angel's  voice, 

Calls  to  fulfil  her  dictates  and  rejoice ; 

Thou  whom  Affection's  fine  and  fervent  power 

Overshadows  in  this  deep,  this  full-blown  hour! 

While  love,  meek  love,  its  hallowing  mantle  flings 

O'er  thee,  the  Daughter  of  an  hundred  Kings ! 

Is  this  a  dream  ?  a  fiction  ? — let  them  tell 

Who  ever  bowed  to  the  enchanting  spell 

Of  such  an  hour — yea,  let  them  speak  and  say 

Who  ever  yielded  to  its  rapturous  sway. 

Is  it  a  Fable  ?  Is  't  a  Fiction  ?    No  ! 

Truth,    Nature,    make   reply,    and   say,    "it  is   not 

so!" 

Since  those  mysterious,  mighty  days  of  yore — 
When  the  great  mother  of  Mankind  first  bore 
A  living  infant, — ever  o'er  and  o'er 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  91 

This  beautiful  History  hath  enacted  been, 

The  loveliest  spectacle  of  Life's  wide  scene  ! 

And  thou,    thrice  welcomed,    worshipped,    treasured 

Child ! 

How  proud  a  star  above  thy  birth  hath  smiled  ! 
A  wreath — a  galaxy  of  stars  !  ne'er  yet 
Above  one  head  such  clustering  glories  met ; 
Such  pomp  of  earthly  grandeurs  surely  ne'er 
Before  was  meted  to  one  mortal's  share. 
Lo  !  on  that  childish  Front  the  Regal  band, 
The  Imperial  fasces  in  that  infant  hand ; 
The    sovran    Purple    swathed    round    that    slight 

frame — 

And  oh  !  the  mighty  magic  of  thy  name,* 
Focus  to  every  ray  of  glory  or  of  fame  ! 
*  King  of  Rome. 


92  ON   THE   DEATH   OF 

How  is  thy  cradle  by  wild  shouts  assailed ; 

Thou  welcomed,  worshipped  One;  the  invoked,   the 

hailed — 

And  hailed  thou  art,  by  myriads  and  by  One, 
That  chief  of  Monarchs,  on  his  throne-piled  Throne  ; 
He  who  with  voice  subdued,  now  calls  thee  Son ! 
He  of  an  hundred  Battles,  bends  above 
His  slumbering  Babe,  and  softens  into  love  : 
He  of  an  hundred  Victories,  vanquished  now — 
Seals  with  a  father's  kiss,  the  cherub  brow 
Of  his  young  cradled  Son,  and  fondly  stoops 
O'er  the  sweet  star  of  all  his  dearest  hopes. 
The  ambitions  chief — the  autocratic  lord — 
He  who  cut  through  with  his  resistless  sword, 
Earth's  Gordian  knot  of  Powers  established ;  mild — 
He  yields  deep  Nature's  homage  to  his  Child  ! 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  93 

Gazes  upon  the  meekness  of  its  face, 
And  folds  his  Infant  in  a  Sire's  embrace. 

A  festal  Eve  ! — the  illuminated  Spires 
And  Domes,  seem  bursting  with  a  thousand  fires. 
Night  comes  !  and  comes  but  to  be  chased  away 
By   that   wild   glare,    that    ev'n    might   challenge 

Day, 

Turning  the  midnight- Heavens  to  burning  gold  ; 
Like  some  proud  Regal  Banner  wide-unrolled, 
With  stars  encrusted  thick  on  every  fold. 
A  festal  Eve  ! — where'er  the  eye  can  turn, 
A  myriad  lights  with  boundless  lustre  burn  : 
Streets,    Temples,    Theatres,    Columns,    Bridges, 

Towers, 
Minsters,  and  Palaces  and  Palace- Bowers, 


94 


ON  THE  DEATH  OF 


Commingle  in  the  illuminated  blaze ; 

And  nought  of  gloom  relieves  the  aching  gaze  ! 

A  Magical  Volcano,  wide  it  spreads ; 

And,  'stead  of  Ruin,  festal  radiance  sheds  ! 

The  Royal  City  doth  indeed  rejoice, 

Her  joy  hath  found  a  symbol  and  a  voice. 

The  Mistress  of  the  Nations,  she  appears, 

While  high  her  bannered,  turreted  head  she  rears  ! 

And  thou  'rt  the  awakener  of  these  transports,  Child; 

Thou  gentle,  lowly  thing,  and  undefiled ! 

The  Astyanax  of  this  proud  Ilium — thou, 

That  cradled  in  unconscious  rest  liest  now  j 

The  living,  bright  Palladium  of  the  land, 

That  trebly  armed  the  Foeman  to  withstand — 

Should  now  Exultant  and  inspired  arise  ! 

With  that  sweet  rainbow  smiling  in  her  Skies — 


THE  DUKE  OF   REICHSTADT.  »« 

That  Dove  of  Peace,  to  hallow  her  proud  ark — 

That  youthful  Caesar's  fortunes  in  her  bark  ! 

A  very  Talisman  of  strength  and  power 

Thou  'It  surely  prove — Star  of  this  Star-bright  hour ! 

The  City  shines,  arrayed  in  dazzling  pomp  ; 

The  Air  is  ringing  with  the  piercing  tromp. 

The  heavy  beat  of  Drums  rolls  loud  and  long, 

Mixed  with  the  echoes  of  the  chorussed  Song. 

The  Banquet  is  prepared — the  feast  is  spread ; 

Odours  are  scattered,  and  fresh  wreaths  are  shed. 

And  Syren  voices  warble  Paean-lays 

Of  Loyal  joy,  of  triumph,  and  of  praise. 

The   Dancers'   steps   bound   through   the   arched 

saloon, 
Where  lamp,  and  harp,  and  beaker,  and  festoon 


96  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

Make  glad  the  hours.    And  hark !  where,  bursting  high, 

The  crackling  Fireworks  leap  along  the  sky. 

The  Seine  rolls  down,  a  wave  of  golden  flame; 

A  sheet  of  bickering  splendours  spreads  its  stream  ! 

While  on  its  sparkling  and  effulgent  breast 

The  Stars  no  longer  shine  in  placid  rest — 

Lost  in  that  lustrous  glow  ! — the  Seine  doth  bear 

Th'  imaged  illuminations  on  its  fair 

And  lovely  surface — ruddily  doth  it  glare. 

And  where  the  night-breeze  on  the  stream  grows 

strong, 

In  billowy  lightnings  seems  to  flash  along  ; 
The  waters  are  a  conflagration  !  wide, 
Fire's  broad  reflection  spreads  on  every  side. 
Hush !  hark !  what  sounds  are  borne  upon  the  Night — 
The  deep,  resounding  Night !     Shouts  of  delight 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  97 

And  stormy  triumph;  for  they  hail  thy  Son— 

Oh,  thou  Armi-potent  Napoleon  ! 

The  birth  of  thy  first-born — the  auspicious  birth — 

They  hail  with  the  uproar  of  that  glorying  mirth: 

And  still  their  lo-cry  is  thy  proud  Name  ! 

And  say — shall  he,  whose  birth  they  thus  proclaim, 

Be  heir  to  all  thy  fortunes,  and  thy  fame  ? 

A  quiet  Morn  ! — a  morn  of  Summer  too ; 
And  blue  the  fair  sky  is — serenely  blue. 
Yet,  'midst  this  bright  and  tender  quietude, 
A  mystic  sadness  dimly  seems  to  brood. 
And  round  a  Palace-dwelling,  high  and  proud, 
A  gloom  seems  clinging,  like  a  mantling  cloud. 
Oh,  what  a  deeply  different  scene  is  this  ! 
Here  are  no  signs  of  triumph,  nor  of  bliss. 

H 


98  ON  THE  DEATH   OF 

No  festal  sounds,  no  festal  sights  are  here ; 

But  all  is  still ;  and,  in  that  stillness  drear, 

No  thronging  myriads,  trembling  with  suspense, 

Wait  round  in  speechless  watchfulness  intense : 

No  loud  artillery's  long-resounding  roll, 

Startles  and  stuns  the  senses  and  the  soul : 

No  broidered  tapestries,  hung  from  house  to  house, 

Spread   their   rich  breadths;    nor  shouts    the  echoes 

rouse ; 

Nor  clarion  blast  swells  gloryingly  along 
The  answering  air — clear,  jubilant,  and  strong  ! 
No  stormy  drums  disturb  that  mournful  air ; 
No  blazoned  banners,  wildly  fluttering  there, 
Deepen  the  sunshine  to  a  ruddy  glare. 
No  flowery  wreaths  lie  scattered  o'er  the  ground, 
Shedding  a  glow  of  Midsummer  around  : 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  99 

No  incense-clouds  float  up,  whose  fragrant  steam 
Makes  every  breeze  with  odorous  treasures  teem : 
No  laurelled  arches  raise  their  fronts  of  pride, 
No  stately  trophies  gleam  on  every  side  ; 
Nor  high  processions  pass,  with  chanted  hymn, 
With  lifted  cross,  and  torches  wavering  dim — 
In  the  clear  daylight — borne  by  white-rob'd  Priest : 
All  sounds,  all  sights  of  joy  are  gone — have  ceased; 
There  is  no  Pomp,  no  Revelry,  no  Feast ! 
All,  all  is  changed — a  fearful,  startling  change ; 
Dull,  heavy,  melancholy,  sadly  strange. 
The  Imperial  and  Maternal  heart  must  feel 
The  pang,  that  words  were  formed  not  to  reveal. 
The  Imperial  and  Maternal  heart  must  bear 
The  last,  worst  anguish  few  but  faintly  share ; — 
The  impending,  imminent  death-stroke  of  despair ! 

H2 


100 


ON  THE  DEATH  OF 


That  wounded  heart  must  struggle  to  endure 
The  immedicable  ill  that  loathes  a  cure ; 
The  uttermost,  innermost  distress  and  grief, 
That  shrinks  from  solace,  and  that  shuns  relief. 
Yea !  such  must  be  its  portion ;  haply,  yet 
Heroic  lessons  doth  it  not  forget. 
Haply,  a  holy  valour  nerves  and  fires — 
And  brightly  aids — religiously  inspires. 

Alas  !  where  stretched  in  helplessness  and  pain, 
The  Royal  Sufferer  doth  unsoothed  remain. 
Unsoothed — though  Love,  unwearied  Love  keeps 

watch, 

His  faintest  accent — lightest  breath  to  catch. 
That  deepest,  truest  Love — first,  fondest,  best ; 
The  Love  that  glows  in  the  Maternal  breast. 


THE  DUKE  OF  RE^CHSTADT.  ,  ,  ,    ,    ,101 

Alas  !  where  stretched  in  helplessness  and  pain, 
On  the  sad  couch  he  ne'er  shall  quit  again, 
The  heir,  the  hope,  the  Star  of  promise  lies, 
With  life's  last  rays  receding  from  his  eyes — 
And  misty  dreams  the  pitying  fates  dispense, 
To  o'ercloud  the  aching  avenues  of  sense 
Veiling  his  soul,  with  shadows  dim  and  drear, 
And  mystic  sounds  no  ear  but  his  can  hear — 
Bringing  strange  messages  of  hope  and  fear. 
Are  there  indeed  so  few  to  watch,  to  wait 
At  this  dark  hour  of  dire  and  mournful  date, 
So  few  to  shew  compassion  or  regret — 
When  that  fair  sun  is  hastening  on  to  set ; 
So  few  to  feel  or  feign  congenial  woes, 
With  her  who,  wrung  and  tortured,  from  repose 
Awaits  till  every  hope  at  length  shall  close. 


ON   THE  DEATH  OF 


Are  there  indeed  so  few  ?  yet  who  can  tell 
What  myriads,  countless  though  invisible — 
May  around  Innocency's  death-bed  wait, 
To  soothe  or  watch  the  fiat  of  its  fate — 
Who,  who  can  tell  what  missioned  hosts  attend, 
When  a  so  blameless  life  draws  near  its  end? 
What  angel  guests  may  still  and  silent  stand 
Around,  a  ministrant  and  guardian  band ; 
And  as  the  spirit  sinks  and  ebbs  away, 
Yield  it  a  bright  support,  a  heavenly  stay, 
While  slow  and  faint  the  numbered  pulses  play — 
And  if  Life's  parting-brightness  yet  enchains 
That  lingering  spirit,  breathe  consoling  strains ; 
And  pour  sweet  balms  o'er  every  wound,  and  shed 
Slumber's  own  twilight-languors  round  the  head 
That  long  hath  ached  upon  a  sleepless  bed  ? 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  103 

Oh  !  little  now  could  man's  vain  help  avail — 
In  this  stern  hour,  when  even  the  strongest  fail, 
The  proudest  tremble,  and  the  bravest  shrink, 
The  firmest  totter  on  the  dizzying  brink ; 
(The  dizzying  brink  of  that  dread  precipice, 
Which  mortal  traveller  shall  ne'er  tread  twice  ; 
Which  darkness  clasps  around,  above,  beneath, 
The  blackness  of  thy  darkness,  fearful  Death  !) 
And  what  could  man  do  for  thee  now,  thou  pale, 
Thou  gentle  sufferer — reed  on  fate's  strong  gale ! 
Man's  agency  and  aid  were  mockery  all, 
When  the  pale  angel's  still  small  voice  doth  call — 
Then  what  could  thronging  crowds  do  for  thee  now, 
While  his  damp  dews  are  gathering  to  thy  brow  ? 
And  thou,  poor  Mother  !  could  the  assembled  world 
Ward  off  the  stroke  which  at  thy  heart  is  hurled  ? 


104  ON  THE  DEATH   (>1- 

That  young  majestic  flower  thou'dst  reared  and  blessed, 

(The  loveliest  gift  of  heaven — the  dearest,  best;) 

And  in  those  widowed  arms  ecstatic  pressed — 

Bowed,  ruined,  broken,  smitten  in  thy  sight, 

By  the  unpitying  blast,  the  unsparing  blight ; 

Oh,  what  a  dreadful  blow  !     Grief  hast  thou  known, 

And  many  a  loss ;  but  what  were  throne  and  crown, 

The  Pomp,  the  Pride,  the  Triumph,  and  the  Sway  — 

The  Honours,  and  the  Advantage,  reft  away ; 

Oh  !  what  were  they, — what  any  loss  to  this? 

In  this  fair  casket — all  thy  hopes  of  bliss 

Lay  hoarded ;  in  this  fragile  tenement, 

Thy  heart-dear  treasures  were  close  locked  and  pent ! 

And  now  how  fast  his  sinking  strength  declines — 
How  faint  the  lamp  of  life,  low-flickering  shines, — 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  105 

Now,  now,  outbursts  a  spring  of  stauncliless  tears, 

That  must  o'erflow  a  waste  of  desolate  years ; 

Now,  now,  a  heavy  darkness  doth  descend 

O'er  present,  future,  past — and  seems  to  blend 

In  one  inextricable  gloom  the  whole. 

At  least  unto  that  bowed  arid  stricken  soul,— 

Unsolaced  Mourner  !  thou  indeed  hast  known 

Calamity,  that  ev'ri  a  heart  of  stone 

Might  bruise,  might  melt, — so  fraught  hath  it  been  still 

With  harrowing  circumstance  of  deadliest  ill ; 

Now  shalt  thou  back  to  thy  sad  home  return, 

Clasping  in  thought  the  shadowy  funeral  urn 

To  thy  lorn  heart  —nor  shall  the  fervid  skies 

Of  Italy,  be  lovely  in  thine  eyes ; 

Nor  all  the  glories  of  that  purple  land, 

Where  warbling  streams — by  scented  breezes  fanned, 


106  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

And  myrtle-bowers  and  orange  thickets  shine— 
And  Ruin's  self  appears  a  thing  divine, 
Win  thee  from  one  sad  vision  — one  dark  dream, 
Nor  gild  thy  path  with  even  Delusion's  gleam ; 
While    still    one    voice    shall   whisper    in    thine 


ear, 


Midst  all  the  melodies  serene  and  clear, 

That  wander  through  that  blue  transparent  air, 

Low  cadences  of  sorrow — and  shall  bear 

Far    through    thy    bosom's    depths    a    quivering 

thrill, 

A  restless  tremor  :    so  the  song-birds'  trill, 
The  fountain's  fall,  the  scented  breeze's  tone, 
Shall  gain  a  thoughtful  sadness  not  their  own ; 
And  every  close  of  every  melody 
Shall  be,  or  seem  to  be,  a  lingering  sigh. 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  107 

A  mournful  Eve  !  the  sultry  time  is  still — 
Or  almost  so,  by  wood  and  plain  and  hill ; 
And  low  faint  sounds,  as  of  some  hidden  rill, 
Or  moaning  breeze — or  stir  of  living  things, 
Winnowing    the    air    with    their    soft    sheeny 

wings — 

Seeking  the  tranquil  refuge  of  their  nest, 
And  panting  for  the  honey-dews  of  rest, 
Come  fitfully  along  the  listening  ear ; 
Those  sweet  faint  sounds    now  distant  float  —  now 

near, 

By  fancy  magnified,  and  wrought  by  fear — 
A  dim  and  dreamy  fear,  to  something  strange, 
And  vague  and  dubious,  till  in  ceaseless  change 
They  wander  by,  and  hardly  they  retain 
A  likeness  of  themselves,  while  the  imder-strain 


108 


ON  THE  DEATH  OF 


Imagination  breathes,  doth  more  and  more 
Confuse  them  and  distort — perplexing  sore ; 
Now  they  might  seem  like  some  unearthly  wail. 
Vexing  the  air  and  loading  the  faint  gale — 
Poured  by  the  viewless  Spirits  of  the  spot, 
As  if  they  sorrowed  o'er  a  hopeless  lot, — 
And  now  they  shift  to  dull  and  hollow  sounds, 
Like  low  groans  on  deserted  battle-grounds — 
(When  come    the  high  stars  forth,  with   their   pure 

light 

So  calmly,  beatifically  bright, 
So  exquisitely,  spiritually  clear — 
A    separate    Heaven,    might    seem    each    separate 

sphere ! 

And  ill,  but  ill,  their  solemn  smiles  accord 
With  the  fierce  crimson  ruin  of  the  sword)  ; 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  109 

And  now  like  dreamy  cadences  that  dwell 

'  Midst  the  wreathed  windings  of  the  ocean-shell, 

They    linger    on    the    enchained,    and    watchful 

sense, 

And  tristful  feelings  to  the  soul  dispense ; 
A  whisper  of  dark  omens, — dark  and  deep, 
Seems  faintly  on  the  conscious  air  to  creep ; — 
A  broken  murmur,— a  most  plaintive  tone, 
So  mournful,  that  't  is  Melancholy's  own, 
Assails  the  ear  on  this  sweet  pensive  eve, 
When  nature  seems  with  wild  caprice  to  grieve ; 
But  is  it  Nature's  voice,  that  voice  of  woe  ? 
Doth  it  from  her  eternal  bosom  flow  ? 
No  !  't  is  the  heart's  prophetic  Lyre-strings  soft, 
That  now  those  sorrowing  modulations  waft. 


HO  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

A  sad,  sweet  Eve ! — the  sultry  time  is  still, 

(Save  where  those  gentle  whispers  float  and  thrill,) 

And  the  pure  dews  all  tremulously  spill 

Their  priceless  treasures  'midst  the  quivering  leaves ; 

Till  every  vein  new  freshness  so  receives — 

And  softly,  slowly  sink  their  silvery  showers 

On  the  overblown  and  dimmed  dejected  flowers, — 

Which  the  impetuous  glance  of  haughty  noon 

Had  scorched  in  their  mid-beauty,  many  a  tune 

Of  homeward-wheeling  birds,  and  laden  bees, 

{Soft  as  the  murmurs  of  the  gentle  breeze,) 

Is  heard  beneath  the  massy,  clustering  trees— 

Now  while  the  encroaching  darkness  steals  along, 

And  shadows  spread  the  leafy  haunts  among, 

Silence  contending  seems,  with  fairy  sound, 

And  tender  gloom,  with  faint  light — whilst  around, 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  11  1 

A  deep  mysterious  presence  seems  to  dwell, 
Mighty  the  soul's  vain  earthward  dreams  to  quell ; 
The  twilight  dimness  thickly  gathering  grows. 
Yet  something  there  disturbs  the  calm  repose — 
And  while  those  shadow-breadths  stretch  fast  and  far. 
Still  something  seems  the  tranquil  scene  to  mar — 
Now  deep  and  deeper  grows  the  thrilling  hush, 
Pale  Fancy's  phantoms  from  the  stillness  rush ; 
Till  sinks  that  weight  of  stillness  on  the  soul, 
And  even  Fancy  owns  its  stern  control ! 
And  Night  and  Silence  solemnly  conspire, 
While  Summer's  midnight-heavens  lie  bathed  in  firev 

And  now  again  'tis  morn — the  last  his  eyes 
Who  on  the  bed  of  mortal  suffering  lies, 
Shall  ever  see  outburst  from  yon  fair  skies. 


ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

A  glorious  Morn  ! — a  mom  of  Summer,  rife 
Of  beauty,  hope,  enjoyment,  freshness,  life. 
The  Stars  have  faded,  melted  out  of  sight ; 
Splendour   in    Splendour   merged,     Light   lost   in 

Light! 

Of  them  remains  not  now  the  slightest  trace ; 
But  boundless  glory  springs  up  in  their  place. 
And  lo  !  ' t  is  daybreak  on  the  awakening  world ; 
The  many-coloured  mists  have  shrunk  and  curled. 
Now  from  the  heights,  by  viewless  hand  withdrawn, 
( Raised  curtains  for  thy  victor-march — Proud  Dawn ! ) 
And  vanished  from  the  brows  of  grove-clad  hills, 
And  woods,  plains,  valleys,  flowered  knolls,  and  blue 

rills, 

The  Horizon  far,  the  scene  of  beauty  near — 
City  and  hamlet-fold,  outshining  clear 


THE  DUKE  OF   REICHSTADT.  113 

The  Morning  and  the  morning's  beauty,  wear 
Even  as  a  Royal  raiment — glorious  more 
Than  ever  yet  monarchic  shoulders  bore  j 
Wrought,  jewelled,  burnished  each  transparent  fold, 
It  spreads  and  shines  in  sheets  of  wavy  gold, 
From   earth's   green   depths,    to   heaven's   refulgent 

roof, 

Framed  in  the  same  pure  everlasting  woof— 
And  thus  apparelled,  all  things  lovelier  look, 
As  each  some  separate  charm  from  morning  took ; 
Morning  !  most  conquering,  most  transcendant  time, 
Be  blessings  on  thy  hours  of  lustrous  prime  — 
To  meet  thy  breath,  thy  smile,  thy  blushful  glow, 
Is  almost  to  forget  all  ills  below. 
Nature  and  thee,  like  fond  twin  sisters  greet, 
And  rush  into  embraces  long  and  sweet — 


114  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

At  such  an  hour — Care,  anxious  care  doth  seem 
A  dull  mistake,  and  even  stern  Death  a  dream ; 
Pain  half  a  cheat,  and  Sorrow  half  a  crime — 
And  all  but  Joy,  a  treason  to  the  time  ! 
And  wheresoever  we  wander  or  delay, 
Something  of  lovely  soothes,  or  cheers  our  way — 
Birds  spread  their  various  plumage  in  the  ray 
Of  sunshine,  borrowing  thence  (but  lending  too), 
Warm  radiance — many  a  swiftly-glancing  hue. 
The  Rose  in  purple  Royalty  shines  bright, 
And  round  her  sheds  a  dreamy  flush  of  light, 
And  a  most  fragrant,  rapturous  atmosphere — 
The    Rose    shines    forth,    and    shines    without    a 

peer; 

Save  't  is  the  stainless  Lily  at  her  side, 
That  looks  a  vestal,  or  a  white-robed  bride — 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  1  1 -5 

A  thousand,  thousand  fair  things,  seem  new-born 

To  greet  and  grace  bright  Midsummer  and  Morn  ! 

A  glorious  glowing  Morn  it  is  in  truth — 

All  redolent  of  Delight,  and  Hope,  and  Youth ; 

But  't  is  the  night  of  Death  to  him  f    The  last 

Dread  act  of  Life's  perplexing  drama's  past— 

And  't  is  the  night  of  Death  to  him — the  Young, 

The  Proud,  the  Beautiful ! — a  veil  is  flung, 

A  deep  dense  veil — his  darkened  sight  between, 

And  all  the  glory  of  Earth's  varied  scene — 

And    even    from    thought's    impassioned    reach, 

removed 

Is  he,  the  watched,  the  treasured,  and  the  loved  ! — 
Pale  is  that  once  fair  form — pale,  rigid,  chill, 
The  latest  gasp  is  hushed,  and  all  is  still — 
Life's  quivering  chords,  at  last  have  ceased  to  thrill ! 

i  2 


ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

And  't  is  the  night  of  Death,  deep  Death  to  thee, 

In  the  prostration  of  thine  agony, 

(The  night  of  deadliest  Death  it  is,  must  be) 

Throneless  and  childless  queen  and  mother. — Thou, 

From  whose  augustly  sad  and  mournful  brow 

So  many  of  Earth's  rich,  richest  garlands  proud 

Have  fallen  and  faded,  as  cloud  after  cloud 

Broke  o'er  thy  Regal  head,  while  far  and  wide 

Stern  Ruin  followed,  till  on  every  side 

Black  Desolation  frowned,  o'erwhelming  all 

With  leaden  crush  and  adamantine  thrall. 

Hark  !    hush !    what  muffled  sounds,    dull,    ominous, 

low, 

Invade  the  ear  ?  dire  sounds  of  deepest  woe, 
Which  the  thrilled  sense  can  recognize  too  well — 
The  alarum  of  despair,  the  funeral-knell ! 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT. 


117 


Oh  sad,  sad  morn — a  heavy  morn  indeed, 

That  sees  youth  die,  and  Love's  true  bosom  bleed ; 

The  Imperial  hearths  look  desolate  !  the  walls 

Of    Schoenbrunn,    and  its   arched   and   'scutcheoned 

halls 

Wear  a  dimmed  aspect,  and  a  mournful  air ; 
And  it  may  well  be  so,  for  Death  is  there, 
He  whose  strong  hand  in  one  short  moment  tears 
Up  by  the  roots,  the  cherished  Hope  of  years, — 
He  whose  stern  presence  clouds  the  loveliest  bowers, 
The  Peasants'  homesteads,  and  the  Kaiser's  towers ; 
He,  through  the  arched  halls  and  sculptured  galleries 

strode, 

A  Chief  midst  Chiefs,  to  fix  his  proud  abode, 
While  that  fair  morning  lit  the  festive  skies, 
To  gladden  all  but  filmed  and  dying  eyes ! 


118 


ON  THE  DEATH  OF 


The  palace  chambers  have  an  altered  look, 

'Twas     not    long     since     an     arrowy    lightning 

stroke 

Shattered  a  sculptured  eagle,  that  adorned 
That  Royal  Dwelling — ah,  it  dimly  warned, 
It  darkly  prophesied, — too  soon  behold 
Empire's  bright  Sunbird  of  Imperial  mould, 
Sunk  in  its  springtime — stricken  to  the  heart 
By  Death's  black  lightnings  and  envenomed  dart ; 
Leaving  the  purple  realms  of  joyous  day, 
For  those  of  darkness,  silence,  and  decay  ; 
Yet,  did  not  the  olden  superstition  tell, 
That  where  Heaven's  lightnings,   scorching,  scathing 

fell, 

They  sanctified  ?  oh  !  let  us  dream  so  now — 
And  while  we  see  thee,  to  the  fiat  bow— 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  119 

Thus  in  the  glory  of  thy  blooming  years, 
Still  woo  that  thought  to  while  away  our  fears, 
To  check,  to  charm,  or  consecrate  our  tears  ; 
And  surely  hallowed  thou  dost  seem,  and  blest, 
In  that  most  sweet  serenity  of  rest — 
And  freed  from  every  earthly  taint  and  stain, 
Heaven's,  Heaven's,  and  thy  Creator's  all  again  ! 

Place  ye  round  that  bright  brow  no  Regal  band, 

It  needs  it  not  to  impress  and  to  command ; 

Though   by   the  frost-like  crush  of  Death  weighed 

down, 

That  pure  bright  brow  is  in  itself  a  crown  ! 
And  be  no  costly  mantle  vainly  thrown 
About  those  youthful  limbs — whose  sculptured  grace, 
Not  Death  itself  hath  wholly  power  to  efface  ! 


120  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

The  whitest,  the  most  soft,  and  simple  shroud 
Should  round  them  hang,  like  twilight's  pearly  cloud, 
And  nought  of  pomp,  and  nought  of  funeral  gloom, 
Remind  us  there.,  or  of  the  Throne  or  Tomb  ! 
Gently  hath  Death  dealt  on  that  lovely  form ; 
No  stately  Lily  by  a  summer  storm 
O'erborne,  e'er  lovelier  in  its  ruin  lay, 
Than  that  fair  fragile  fabric  of  bright  clay. 

He  lived,  and  he  was  loved !  he  smiled,  and  died ! 
And  there — all  the  Earth's  vain  grandeurs  laid  aside, 
And  there — lies  he,  once  a  proud  Nation's  pride  ! 
The  Kingly,  though  the  Unkinged,  whose  infant  brow 
Was  cinctured  by  the  crown — reft  from  it  now, 
And  o'er  whose  cradle  played  supremely  bright 
Hope's  glowing  sunbursts  of  Etherial  light. 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  121 

Ah  !  those  wild  glories  that  illumed  thy  dawn, 
Perchance,     in    Love    and    Mercy    were    with- 
drawn. 

Thee  never  harassed  public  cares ;  nor  worse, 
The  Ingratitude,  that  like  a  withering  curse 
Too  oft  awaits  Earth's  Rulers,  thou  wert  spared, 
Those  treacherous  Counsels,  that  have  oft  ensnarec 
The  Great;  the  contumely,  the  bitter  wrong, 
That  oft  abase  the  high,  and  crush  the  strong : 
The  assaults  of  Faction,  with  its  ambushed  sting — 
That  Hydra-headed  and  mysterious  thing ; 
And  all  the  dire  Variety  of  Ills, 
Which  still  the  Historic  page  with  darkness  fills  ! 
These  thou  wert  spared !  who  once  't  was  hoped 

should  be 
The  Founder  of  a  Mighty  Dynasty ! 


122  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

The  Heir  of  Victory's  vast  Inheritance ; 

The  Sovereign  of  the  unconquerable  France ; 

The  Guardian  of  her  honour  and  her  laws ; 

The  unmoved,  devoted  Champion  of  her  Cause ; 

The  Leader  of  her  Legioned  Hosts ;  the  Lord 

Of  her  thronged  Millions,   all ! — the   obeyed,   the 

adored ! 

( Poor  young  probationer  of  a  various  lot — 
What  matters  now,  if  cherished  or  forgot ! 
But  if  remembered,  let  forbearance  veil 
Thy     natural,      human     faults,  —  since     all    are 

frail. 

A  little  Charity,  to  embalm  thy  name, 
Is  all  thou  need'st  of  Flattery,  or  of  Fame.) 
Six  feet  of  earth  can  circumscribe  the  scope 
Of  all  that  proud  and  most  Majestic  Hope  ! 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  123 

Scion  of  Caesars  !  sleep — sleep  well,  and  long  ! 
Thee  never  more  shall  fickle  Fortune  wrong. 
The  veil  of  Purity,  the  f  obe  of  Peace 
Wrapt  round  thee, — thou  art  gone,  where  conflicts 

cease ; 

Where  griefs,  and  pains,  and  trials  are  no  more ; 
Even  to  yon  starry-paven,  pensive  shore  ! 
Scion  of  Caesars — sleep  !  thine  early  tomb 
Shall  prove  a  happier,  a  more  hallowed  doom 
Than  thy  dread  Sire's !  who  deeply,  sternly  drew 
His  dark  delights  from  Tumult,  and  ne'er  knew 
The    Enchantments    of    Repose ;     who    proudly 

wreathed 

His  brows  with  dazzling  Terrors ;  and  but  breathed 
War's  Hurricane-breath  of  fierce  Convulsion  :  so, 
His  life  was  Agitation's  prey  below; 


124  ON  THE   DEATH  OF 

Who  thundering  drove  his  adamantine  car — 
The  throned  and  sceptred  Jaggernaut  of  War  ! 
Who  wreaked  his  wild  and  turbulent  soul  of  Fire 
On  steep  adventure,  difficult  and  dire  ; 
On  perilous  enterprise,  and  Titan  aim  : 
He  who  achieved  a  more  than  mortal  Name ; 
And  tired  the  unequal  feet  of  panting  Fame  : 
He,  of  the  Nations  and  their  Lords,  the  Lord, 
Whose  haughty  purpose  lightened  from  his  sword ! 
Who,  an  incarnate  Whirlwind,  stirred  to  strife 
All  the  energies  and  impulses  of  Life  : 
Whose  name  was  an  Eclipse !  whose  earthquake^ 

word 

A  Fiat  and  a  Fate  to  whoso  heard ! 
Yea  !  he  who  soared  to  a  meridian  height, 
But  to  emit  chill  rays  of  blackest  night ; 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  125 

To  cloak  the  reeking  and  defeatured  globe 

With  an  ensanguined  and  funereal  robe  : 

He  whose  avatar  was  all  Ruin  !  yet, 

Whose  iron  laughter  mocked  the  suns  that  set. 

Quenched  in  that  ruin, — scorning  to  regret  ! 

And  with  Success  for  his  proud  handmaid,  moved 

As  one  commissioned,  hurtless,  unreproved, 

Along  his  fearful  course  the  wide  and  wild  ! — 

He  who  sprang  forth,  mailed,  girt,  and  armed ;  the 

Child 

Of  a  tumultuous  and  chaotic  time — 
A  fatal  season  of  triumphant  crime  ! 
Discord's  Apostle — wide  he  preached,  and  well, 
Her  heinous  precepts  ;  sounding  the  echoing  knell 
Of  golden  Peace,  that,  drowned  in  tears  and  gore, 
Trembled,  and  shuddering  sank,  and  was  no  more ! 


126 


ON  THE  DEATH  OF 


While  heavenly  Concord  and  sweet  Mercy  spread 
Their  angel-plumes,  and  from  the  pale  Earth  fled ! 

The  Tyrant's  Tyrant,  he ! — the  Monarch's  scourge ! 

How  could  those  hands  victorious,  deign  to  forge 

Chains  for  the  free — fresh  yokes  for  the  oppressed — 

Till  Earth  hugged  Slavery  to  her  bleeding  breast ; 

And  Liberty — wronged  Liberty  became 

The  echo  of  the  whisper  of  a  Name  ! 

And  yet  he  laboured  out — that  Man  of  Blood — 

The  ends  of  Mercy,  and  the  intents  of  Good  : 

And  that  apparently  erratic  course 

Was   planned   by  Wisdom,    and   constrained    by 

Force — 

By  Force  Almighty — viewlessly  constrained — 
And  in  dread  yoke  and  strong,  was  he  enchained  ! 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  127 

And  every  step  of  that  mysterious  way, 

Bared  to  the  Eye  of  Heaven,  from  the  commencement 

lay! 

While  still  he  left  in  his  terrific  path 
An  atvful  Anarchy  of  gloom  and  wrath  ! 
(Red  Battle  knew  his  mighty  Master  well — 
Ev'n  as  a  steed  his  rider  !     Fierce  and  fell 
He  grew  in  that  great  presence  :  yet,  that  burst — 
That  storm  of  fury,  at  its  wildest,  worst  — 
That  shadowing  gloom,  that  made  the  Sun  grow 

dim; 

That  fierceness,  still  proved  fealty  to  him* 
The  ruthless  Giant  ramped,  and  tossed,  and  roared— 
'T  was  still  Submission's  homage  to  his  Lord — 
While  in  his  savage  deadliness  of  mirth, 
"  Aha  !"  he  cried,  and  smote  the  shuddering  Earth  ! 


128  ON  THE  DEATH  OF 

"  Aha  !"  he  cried ;  and  from  her  cloudy  seat 
Annihilation    came,     and    crouched    her    at    his 

feet! 

And  yet  he  proved  a  traitor  foul,  at  last, 
And  all  forswore  the  allegiance  of  the  past — 
When    the    still    Mightier    Master    came,     and 

saw, 

And  conquered — him  he  served  as  if  in  awe  ; 
The  Mightier  Master — Lord  of  starr'd  Renown, 
Who  hung  his  laurel-wreathed  triumphal  crown 
High  on  that  pyramid  of  Empires,  proud, 
Beneath   the   weight   of  which   the    World   seemed 

bowed ; — - 

Whose  crown  of  Victory  o'er  it  blazed  in  light, 
Nor  with  it,  sank  into  the  gulphs  of  night, 
But  beams  for  ever  from  its  solar  height !) 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  1*29 

Lo !    from    France'    blood-red    banners,    wide    un- 
furled, 
Plague,     Strife,    Oppression,    Horror,    Death,    he 

hurled — 

Defacing  Heaven's  high  image  from  the  world, 
In  slaughtered  millions,  to  the  dust  consigned. 
A  terror  to  the  Universal  Mind  ; 
An  awful  Arbiter  of  general  Doom; 
A  Presence  dread — a  most  tremendous  Gloom, 
He  moved  along ;  and  nothing  might  suffice — 
Not  homage,  praise,  submission,  sacrifice — 
To  melt  that  heart  of  Iron  and  of  Ice. 
For  such  it  was,  when  dark  Ambition  wrought 
Within  the  vast  sphere  of  his  towering  thought. 
On,  on  he  moved, — in  terrible  might  arrayed, 
O'ermantling  Earth  as  with  his  Shadow's  shade ! 


130 


ON  THE  DEATH  OF 


As  though   the   sweeping  scythe  he  wrenched   from 

Time— 

And  played,  terrifically  played  the  Mime, 
Girt  with  his  fearful  attributes — with  all 
His  savage  prowess  fired,  until  his  thrall — 
His  rule,  was  almost  as  supremely  vast, 
And  Change  came  o'er  Creation  where  he  past ! 
As  though  the  horrent  ensign  of  command, 
The  giant-sceptre,  from  the  clay-cold  hand 
Of  Death  he  seized,  and  with  o'ersweeping  might 
Usurped  his  shadowy  Empire  of  the  Night ; 
And  too  unconquerably  strong  went  forth, 
From  earth  to  raze  the  loveliness  and  worth, 
The  glory,  and  the  splendour,  and  the  pride ; 
With  Strife  his  playmate — Danger  for  his  bride, 
And  Massacre  still  rampant  at  his  side. 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  1  •'*  I 

Yea!  Death,  Time's  Phantom-comrade,  Death,  seemed 

still 

To  obey  his  dictates  and  to  work  his  will; 
To  take  stern  hints  from  him,  whose  lordly  voice 
So  oft  had  bade  him  feast  him  and  rejoice — 
Who  many  a  banquet  had  before  him  spread, 
When  rash  resisting  foes  bowed,  sunk,  and  bled  ! 
— As  though  ev'n  at  the  Fates  themselves  he  mocked, 
And  at  their  cloud-capped  gates  triumphant  knocked, 
And  bade  them  mark  his  fiat  and  behest, 
And  homage  do  to  their  victorious  guest — 
And  on  their  awful  necks,  would  have  them  take 
His  yoke,  and  meekly  follow  in  his  wake, 
And  shield,  and  raise,  and  spare,  or  crush  and  smite, 
Ev'n  as  he  listed — as  in  proud  despite 
Of  Circumstance,  Expedience,  or  of  Right — 

K2 


132 


ON  THE  DEATH  OF 


A  shadowing  doubt  his  dread  achievements  cast 

O'er  the  Heroic  and  Chivalrous  Past ! 

And  many  a  blazing  deed  of  glorious  war 

Grows  pale  before  his  sun -surpassing  star  ; 

Hath  not  his  name,  his  high  and  haughty  name. 

Made  the  unborn  Future's  sealed  and  shrouded  Fame* 

All — all  but  hopeless  ?  since  what  acts  shall  bear 

With  his  astounding  triumphs  to  compare  ? — - 

All,  all  but  hopeless,  a  precipitous  aim, 

An  almost  desperate  quest  and  rash  presumptuous  claim? 

His  mighty  influence  still  unchecked,  extends 

O'er  the  aroused  Earth,  even  to  its  farthest  ends. 

Hath  not  his  dust  cried  "  havoc,"  from  its  cell  ? 

His  memory  proved  a  dire  and  fearful  spell  ? 

His  name,  alas  !  a  factious  watchword  been, 

To  pave  once  more  with  wrecks,  earth's  darkened  scene? 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  133 

But  should  this  be  ?  no  !  let  his  memory  float, 
Ev'n  as  a  flag  of  truce, — and  as  a  note 
Proclaiming  peace,  let  that  wild  name  become ; 
And  Concord,  heavenly  Concord  from  his  tomb, 
Spring  like  the  rainbow  from  the  storm's  black  gloom, 
And  so  let  the'  Earth,  the  wronged  unhappy  Earth, 
Be  through  his  death  consoled  for  his  dark  birth. 

Droop  lower  still,  ye  mournful-drooping  willows, 
That  crest  Helena's  hollow-sounding  billows ; 
Droop  lower  still,  above  that  awful  dust, 
Consigned  to  ye  in  melancholy  trust, 
Ye  pensive  sentinels  !  ye  guardians  meek  ! 
That  shade  that  burial-isle,  the  wild  and  bleak — 
Whose  cold,  unsympathizing  comrades  are, 
The  Winds,  the  Rock,  the  Billow,  and  the  Star ; 


134 


ON  THE  DEATH   OF 


Sweet  willows  !  lone 's  that  dread  tomb  by  the  deep, 

Your  long,  caressing,  weeping  boughs  o'ersweep; 

Sweet  willows !  far  more  fittingly  above 

The  Son's  calm  grave,  surely  ye  'd  lean  in  love 

And  drooping  lowliness,  and  fragile  grace, 

Surely  that  tomb  were  more  congenial  place 

For  such  meek  mourners,  than  that  last  abode, 

Of  him,  who  the  Earth  in  wrath  and  mystery  trod— 

Like  the  dread  shadow  of  an  angry  God  ! 

Droop  lower  still !  o'er  those  proud  embers,  now 
Weep  sadder  dews  from  every  weeping  bough, 
For  him  the  hope,  the  blessing,  and  the  boast — 
The  Phoenix  of  proud  Promise,  fallen  and  lost ; 
Oh  ever-weeping  willows!  though  afar 
He  rest — inhumed  beneath  a  distant  star ! 


THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT.  135 

But  thou  shalt  sleep  while  age  succeeds  to  age, 
And  time  'gainst  Earth  his  long-drawn  war  shall  wage; 
But  thou  shalt  sleep  a  long  and  tranquil  sleep, 
Young   princely    Reichstadt !    though    no    mourners 

keep 

Perpetual  vigil  o'er  thy  place  of  rest, 
Nor  Art's,  nor  Nature's — these  divinely  drest 
In  leafy  honours,  and  soft  vernal  hues, 
Kissed  by  Heaven's  winds  and  hallowed  by  Heaven's 

dews, 

And  those  in  marble  lineaments  composed, 
Cold  as  the  forms,  the  rigid  forms  enclosed 
In  the  proud  pompous  sepulchre,  beside 
Where  by  like  breathless  watchers  they  abide ; 
Adversity  thou  'st  known,  but  even  her  yoke 
Fell  lightly  on  thy  shoulders,  as  the  stroke 


136 


DEATH  OF  THE  DUKE  OF  REICHSTADT. 


Of  Death  the  Conqueror  hath  descended  now 
To  chill  thy  heart,  and  pale  thy  princely  brow. 
Thou  'rt  fallen, — yet  no  !  not  fallen,  but  thou  'rt  flown, 
Thy  guiltless  soul  doth  Earth's  dull  thrall  disown, 
And  other  realms  than  hers,  are  all  thine  own ! 
Thou  'st  left  behind,  like  suns  that  smile  and  set, 
A  twilight-tenderness  of  soft  regret ; 
Thou  'st  melted  off,  like  music's  loveliest  breath, — 
Peace  to  thy  gentle  Soul,  even  Peace  in  Death ! 


THE    MEETING. 


OH  !  do  me  right — mine  own  beloved, 
Do  right  unto  this  heart  of  mine — 
Nor  deem  't  would  be  thus  deeply  moved, 
At  any  grief  or  pain  but  thine  ! 

'T  is  true  my  dearest  hopes  depart, 
Bowed,  blighted,  by  the  change  I  see ; 
But 't  is  more  dreadful  to  my  heart, 
Since  such  change  is  not  all  to  me. 

Alas  !  a  change, — dark  change  hath  come 
O'er  thy  smooth  cheek,  o'er  thy  clear  eye  ! 
A  shade  of  care — a  touch  of  gloom, 
How  can  I  bear  thy  misery  ? 


138  THE  MEETING. 

Would,  would  the  change  were  but  to  me, 
I  'd  then  endured  the  coldest  greeting ; 
But  thus  to  find  grief  martyring  thee, 
This  makes  the  madness  of  our  meeting  ! 

I  had  endured  a  parting  too, 

Cold  as  ev'n  thy  heart  hath  become  ; 

Alas,  it  is  so  wildly  true, 

That  Love  and  thee  contrive  my  doom  ! 

I  had  endured  all,  all  but  this 
Unmurmuringly  endured,  and  brooked; 
And  gazing  but  on  thy  dear  bliss — 
Mine  own  despair  had  overlooked. 

Now  all  is  worse  than  woe  to  me, 
Fond  martyr  of  no  selfish  feeling ; 
Ah  !  't  is  not  Happiness — 't  is  thee 
I  love  and  prize  past  all  revealing  ! 


SONG. 


I  think  of  thee,  and  only  thee  ! 
Far,  far  we  're  darkly  severed  now : 
Weighed  down  by  clouds  of  Memory, 
I  hang  my  faintly  drooping  brow. 

1  think  of  thee — thou  far  away  ; 
My  Life's  rich  Crown  of  happiness  ! 
And  meet  with  tears  Morn's  earliest  ray, 
And  wish  its  rosy  glory  less  ! 

And  yet,  not  so  !     I  little  care 
How  beautiful,  how  bright  it  be : 
I  scarce  can  see,  I  cannot  share, 
Its  gladness  and  festivity. 


140  SONG. 

Beauty  to  me  hath  now  become 
The  phantasm  of  itself;  and  so, 
All  things  consent  in  kindred  gloom, 
All  things  have  fellowship  in  Woe  ! 

Ev'n  Music's  rich  and  festal  breath 
Unheeded  falls  upon  mine  ear; 
For  deaf  it  is,  as  frozen  death, 
To  all  that  once  was — oh,  how  dear  ! 

And  Nature — Nature  !  could  I  thread 
Her  fairest  paths,  or  plunge  me  deep 
Where  her  overshadowing  forests  spread ; 
Ev'n  thence  no  pleasure  could  I  reap. 

And  oh !  't  is  well,  't  is  deeply  well ; 
If  thus  to  Sorrow's  tearful  ken 
Pleasure  be  inaccessible, 
It  cannot  smile  in  mockery  then ; 


SONG.  141 

It  cannot  bitterly  remind 
Of  joys  once  ours,  dispersed  and  flown : 
Then  let  me  still  be  deaf  and  blind 
To  all  but  Grief— but  Grief  alone  ! 

Contrast  then  heightens  not  regret, 
Nor  wounds  with  keener  heart-aches  new  : 
No  !  when  my  Sun  of  gladness  set, 
Each  Star  sunk  down  the  horizon  too ! 

I  think  of  thee — all,  only  thee, 

Loved  Cynosure  of  every  thought ; 
My  life  now  seems  but  Memory, 

And  all  that  is  not  memory — nought ! 

I  think  of  thee  from  noon  till  night, 
From  night  till  morn,  from  morn  till  noon  ; 
And  though  too  slow  the  hours'  dull  flight, 
Their  dark  successors  come  too  soon  ! 


SONG. 

I  love  thee — I  love  thee  ! — O  words  of  all  words, 
How  they  thrill  through  the  heart-strings,  the  bosom's 

quick  chords ; 

I  love  thee  !  at  last  I  may  fearlessly  own, 
That  my  heart  and  for  ever  is  thine — thine  alone, 
I  love  thee  !   how  long  that  confession  hath  hovered 
Round  these   tremulous    lips — whose   fond  tremours 

discovered, 

That  Truth  which  by  silence  was  vainly  suppressed, 
Since  that  deep  burning  silence  itself  e'en  confessed  ! 

Ere  while  the  light  breath  of  a  breeze  might  have 

stirred 
This  too  sensitive  heart,  even  the  sound  of  a  word, 


SONG.  143 

Ah  !  a  breath  that  had  moved,  not  a  roseleaf  had  shaken, 
The  spirit  too  prompt  and  too  quick  to  awaken ; 
Ay !  had  tempested  wildly  this  bosom's  deep  feelings, 
That  now  finds  repose  in  these  raptured  revealings ; 
I  love  thee — I  love  thee  !  my  Only,  my  Own, 
I  love  thee  for  ever — I  love  thee  alone  ! 

I  love  thee  !  I  love  thee  !  O  sound  of  all  sounds, 
They  make  our  frail  life  overleap  its  dull  bounds — 
There 's  a  music  in  them,  that  the  clear  cloudless  air 
Of  Paradise  only  is  worthy  to  bear ; 
Yet  a  music  that  makes  ev'n  our  atmosphere  chill, 
With  a  passion  of  ecstasy,  tremble  and  thrill ; 
I  love  thee,  I  love  thee  ! — O  words  of  all  words, 
How  they  throb  through  the  heart  strings,  the  bosom's 
quick  chords ! 


OH!    SAY   YE    NOT. 


OH  !  say  ye  not — oh  !  say  ye  not,  that  Love,  deep 

Love  is  vain ; 
Nay,  though  he  frame  the  rack,  and  forge  the  galling 

grinding  chain ; 
Though  he  draw  the  cloud  of  frowning  gloom  o'er  the 

Morning's  laughing  ray, 

And   trouble  with   wild  thunder-showers  the  golden 

noon  of  day. 
Though  from   Hope's  own  rainbow-pictures  fair,  he 

the  glittering  tints  eiface, 
And  the  saddest   shades  dim  Memory  throws,  may 

scatter  in  their  place ; 


OH!   SAY  YE  NOT.  145 

The   saddest   shades,    the   gloomiest   dyes,   for  those 

soft  and  smiling  hues  : 
Though  he  thus  may  bid  o'erclouded  life,  its  brightest 

radiance  lose ; 
Dry   up   the   fountains   of  delight,    till   not   a   drop 

remains, 
And    for   a   thousand    pleasures,     bring  a   thousand 

torturing  pains ; 
Wither   the   glorious   flowers   of  life,    yet   in   their 

opening  bloom — 
And  choke  the  very  pathways,  e'en  the  pathways  to 

the  tomb, 
With  their  scattered  leaves  of  beauty  fallen,  with  their 

buds  and  blossoms  soiled, 
Their   bloom,    their   grace   evanished,    their  roseate 

pride  despoiled  : 


164  OH!   SAY  YE  NOT. 

Though    he    beguile     the     unwatchful     heart    with 

treacherous  craft  and  stealth, 
And  take  from  the  smooth  cheek  of  youth,  the  hues  of 

hope  and  health; — 
Yet,  say  ye  not — oh  !  say  ye  not,   that  Love,   deep 

Love  is  vain, 
Though  haply  this  he  oft  hath  done,  and  oft  shall  do 

again  ! 
Though  he  split  the  heart's  light  pleasure-barks,  with 

many  a  startling  shock ; 
Founder  the  mind's  rich  argosies  on  many  a  hidden 

rock; 
And  drift  their   garnered   treasures   far,   on  a   wild 

and  wandering  wave, 
Or  bury  them  in  some  dark  hold — some  lone  and 

lampless  grave : 


OH!  SAY  YE  NOT.  147 

Though   he   pour  in    Life's   deep  chalice  oft,  black 

drops  of  venomed  woe, 
That   turn  its   draught   to   bitterness,   and  taint   its 

healthful  flow ; 
Though  he  brings,  full  oft,  a  banded  host  of  wild  and 

phantom  things, 
Fiend-like,  to  try  the  very  heart,  with  their  scourgings 

and  their  stings ; 
Fierce  jealousies,  and  maddening  doubts,  and  racking, 

withering  cares, 
That  hide  within  the  human  breast,  like  serpents  in 

their  lairs ; — 
Despite  this  shadowy  retinue — despite  this  phantom 

train — 
Oh  !  say  ye  not — oh  !  say  ye  not,  that  Love,   deep 

Love  is  vain ! 

L2 


148  OH!   SAY  YE  NOT. 

No  !  't  is  blindfolded   and  trammelled  he  so  wildly, 

darkly  works, 
And  bounds  on  many  an  ambushed  snake  that  in  his 

pathway  lurks  ; 
Whose    angry    venom    in    his   veins,    ail    fearfully 

ferments, 
And  turns  his  loveliest  thoughts  and  dreams  to  harsh 

and  dire  intents. 
Oh !  't  is   maddened   and    bewildered   so,   and   't  is 

cheated  and  misled, 
With  many  a  mesh  about  him  cast,  and  mist  around 

him  spread ; 
Oh !  't  is  harshly  thwarted  and  constrained,  and  't  is 

baffled  and  overborne, 
Haply,    by   dark,  untoward  chance,  by  change,  and 

wrong,  and  scorn : 


OH!   SAY  YE  NOT.  149 

That  thus  he  leads  a  fiery  host,  to  endanger  and  to 

alarm, 
And  wears  full  many  a  fearful  guise  of  evil  and  of 

harm; 
Till  a  cherub^- Proteus  he  should  seem,  with  a  thousand 

thousand  forms, 
Like  the  ever-changeful  rainbows  of  the   Summer's 

fitful  storms. 
But  the  likeness   of  the    Morning  Star,  on  his  fair 

front  still  he  bears, 
Glimmering   through  many   a   darkening  cloud,  and 

vapoury  mist  of  tears ; 
Betraying   his   bright   presence  so,    and    his   nature 

pure  and  high — 
His   sphery    Nature, — for,    in    sooth,    his   birthplace 

is  yon  Sky ; 


150  OH!  SAY  YE  NOT. 

His  birthplace  is  yon  Orient  Sky — and  there  too  is  his 

home, 
And   thither   shall   he   fly,    when   free  from    Earth's 

entangling  doom : 
Lo !  in  the  narrowness  and  chill  of  Mortality's  frail 

hour, 
How  glorious  is  his  living  might,  how  wondrous  is 

his  power  ! 
His  playthings  are  the  thunderbolts ;  like  the  young 

Olympian  Jove, 
He   grasps   them   in   his   rosy  hands — the  child-like, 

blooming  Love ! 

His  playthings   are   the  thunderbolts,  and   his   play-- 
fellows the  Fates — 

The  rushing  winds   of  Heaven   his  steeds,    and  the 
Stars  of  Heaven  his  mates. 


OH!  SAY  YE  NOT.  151 

Though  his  speed  may  match  the  lightning's  flash,  yet 

he  perisheth  not  so ; — 
Immortal  as  those  starry  lights,  is  his  deep,  unfading 

glow ; — 
While  midst  the  many  ills  and  griefs,  that  recklessly 

he  brings, 
He  wafts  pure,  priceless  blessings  on  his  sweeping, 

viewless  wings. 
And  he  bears  up,  with  a  mighty  strength,  the  frail 

and  fragile  frame, 
In  the  daring  of   Affection's   truth — on,    on  through 

flood  or  flame : 
Oh !  say  ye  not — then  say  ye  not,  that  Love,    deep 

Love  is  vain  ! 
Worship  and  worshippers  riot  thus  contemn  with  false 

disdain. 


152  OH  !   SAY   YE  NOT. 

Though  in  sooth,  in  this  cold  world,  this  drear,  and 

tristful  world  of  ours, 
Shorn  are   his  brightest,  loveliest  rays,  and   chained 

his  noblest  powers ; 
And  the  bosomed  secret  of  his  strength,  the  source  of 

his  great  might, 
In  Heaven  shall   be  revealed  alone,  in  characters  of 

Light. 
Yet  something  of  that  Heaven  belongs,  even  here,  to 

his  wide  reign : 
Tell  me  not,  then — oh  !  tell  me  not,  that  Love,  deep 

Love  is  vain  ! 


WOMAN'S  LOVE. 


Is  there  one  thing  on  Earth  which  may  remain 
Without  one  darkening  shade  or  sullying  stain  ? 
Is  there  one  thing  on  Earth  which  may  be  kept 
Holy  as  reliques  o'er  which  Saints  have  wept  ? 
Midst  all  its  dust  and  dross,  its  gloom  and  clouds, 
The  blight  which  taints,  the  darkness  that  enshrouds, 
Oh  !  think  of  Woman's  heart — the  pure  and  high — 
The  brightest  jewel  of  Mortality  ! 
E'en  as  the  fragile  Censer,  which  doth  hold 
The  living  flames  within  its  fair,  frail  mould— 


154  WOMAN'S   LOVE. 

Unscorched,  unscathed ;  so  doth  that  gentle  heart, 
Which  oft  on  Earth  svtetains  a  trying  part, 
So  doth  that  meek  and  gentle  heart  contain, 
Throbbing  and  thrilling  through  its  every  vein, 
The  boiling  passion-fountains  quick  and  wild ; 
And  yet,  how  oft !  undimmed  and  undefiled, 
E'en  as  that  fragile  Censer,  that  displays 
No  angry   mark,   where  glowed   the   flame's   keen 

blaze ! 

Or  as  some  Casket,  buried  in  the  Dust, 
With  store  of  costliest  gems  for  its  rich  trust, 
Which  that  fair   freight   preserves   unstained   and 

pure ; 

So  doth  that  heart  triumphantly  endure ; 
And  its  bright  wealth  of  high  affections  guard, 
By  no  defiling  touch  profaned  or  marred ; 


WOMAN'S    LOVE.  155 

Though  cabined  darkly  in  the  enshrouding  clay, 
Far  from  the  blessed  influence  of  the  day — 
The  pure  and  perfect  day — which  yet  shall  shine 
On  those  sealed  treasures,  with  a  glow  divine. 
Is  there  one  thing,  then,  that  may  brightly  last — 
Brightly,  with  all  Earth's  clouds  about  it  cast  ? 
Midst  all  the  shadowing  gloom,  the  dross,  the  dust, 
The  blight,  the  plague,  the  canker,  and  the  rust  ? 
Is  there  one  thing,  that  may  on  Earth  endure — 
Bright,  stainless,  pure — immaculately  pure? 
Think,  think  of  Woman's  heart !  that  calmly  keeps 
Its  firm,  unswerving  way  o'er  perilous  steeps, 
Through  threatening  gulphs  of  human  Doom  and  111 ; 
( Midst  all  the  dampening  mists,  the  gloom,  the  chill 
That  dwell  upon  Mortality's  dull  air; 
The  frosts,  the  blights,  the  poisonous  dews  of  Care  ;) 


156  WOMAN'S  LOVE. 

Through    the   twined   labyrinths,    o'er   the    thorny 

wastes, 

Past  the  fierce  torrents,  'gainst  the  sweeping  blasts, 
Beneath  the  varying  skies — the  uncertain  skies, 
Where  many  a  meteor  doth  in  mockery  rise — 
And  many  a  cloud  doth  dim  and  darkling  sail, 
To  make  those  pallid  meteors  yet  more  pale, 
And  shroud  their  dubious  lustre  in  a  veil : 
Think  of  the  love  of  Woman's  heart,  the  strong, 
The  true, — if  doth  to  mortal  things  belong 
Indeed  that  heart,  with  all  its  feelings  deep. 
And  warm  Emotions  high,  condemned  to  reap 
So  oft  from  sterile  Earth's  unfruitful  shore, 
Harvests  of  ashes — black  and  bitter  store  ; 
That  heart,  which  meets  each  harsh  ordeal  unmoved, 
That  since  Creation  hath  borne,  suffered,  loved — 


WOMAN'S  LOVE.  157 

Loved  with  a  love  that  makes  the  entranced  soul 
Slave  by  its  own  compulsion  and  control ; 
Oh,  loved  beyond  all  powers  of  words  to  express- 
To  torture,  and  to  phrenzy,  and  to  excess, 
E'en  unto  Death,  and  death's  worst  bitterness ; 
The  Love  of    Woman! — say,    what    thoughts    shall 

sound, 
What  terms   shall  measure,   and  what  dreams   shall 

bound 

That  depth  of  feeling  fearfully  profound  ? — 
The  matchless  love  of  woman  !    The  true  heart 
Where  that  supreme  immortal  love  hath  part, 
Clad  in  Celestial- tempered  panoply, 
Shall  all  assaults  of  changeful  fate  defy  ; 
And  surely  shall,  midst  all  earth's  glooms,  remain 
Without  a  darkening  shade  or  sullying  stain — 


158 


WOMAN'S  LOVE. 


That  heart,  which  in  its  dreamy  stillness  lies, 
Bared,  only  bared  to  the  over-shadowing  skies — 
And  that  like  some  lone  well — lone,  clear  and  deep, 
The  treasured  image  doth  unbroken  keep, 
Of  some  one  cherished  object  and  beloved, 
That  shall  not  thence  be  shaken  nor  removed — 
E'en  like  the  glassy  waters  of  that  well, 
Which  in  such  depths  of  lone  retirement  dwell, 
That  while  red  sunshine  laughs  o'er  mount  and  plain, 
One  single  star's  reflection  they  retain ; 
And  all  creation's  varied  wonders  spurn 
From  their  divinely  consecrated  urn  ! 
Dreamings  and  breathings  of  a  holier  sphere, 
Surely  uplift  ye,  tremblers  'mid  the  fear — 
And  gloom  which  round  ye  wearying,  wildering  spread, 
The  clouds  that  weigh  on  each  dejected  head ; 


WOMAN'S  LOVE.  159 

And  tenderest  influences  all  gently  blend, 

With  the  atmosphere  about  ye,  spread  and  lend 

Etherial  colouring,  soft,  and  mild,  and  faint, 

Such  as  might  gild  the  brows  of  dreaming  saint — 

Unto  the  aspect  of  all  earthly  things; 

And  Hopes,  high  hopes,  upon  their  viewless  wings 

Upbuoy  ye,  stirring,  quickening  all  the  springs 

Of  being,  freshening  all  the  changeful  airs 

Of  Life  to  vigour,  midst  the  heavy  cares 

That  hang  about  Existence,  chill  and  wan — 

And  lengthen  drearily  the  allotted  span; 

'Midst  conflicts,  tribulations,  trial,  wrong,. 

Those  Hopes  prevail,  and  make  the  fragile  strong, 

They,  like  the  heavenly  fall  of  genial  dew, 

Revive  your  hearts,  too  sorrowfully  true, 

In  their  affections,  and  their  sufferance  too ; 


160  WOMAN'S  LOVE. 

And  mingling  with  the  emotions  full  and  deep, 

That  through  your  veins  with  glowing  fervour  leap- 

They  make  them  nobler,  worthier,  and  do  wean 

From  too  unmixed  devotion  to  earth's  scene — 

For  loving  hearts  are  earthward-clinging  still, 

And  every  pulse  of  yours,  with  love  doth  thrill ! 

So  pass  ye  on — with  such  high  hopes  to  bless, 

Beautiful — beautiful  in  Holiness  — 

Mighty  in  calm  Submissiveness,  serene* 

Exalting,  solemnizing  your  bright  mien — 

Almost  imposing  in  the  purity 

That  makes  ye  seem  like  Natives  of  yon  sky ; 

So  pass  ye  on  in  lowliness  supreme, 

In  gentleness  how  potent !   by  the  gleam 

Of  an  immortal  Beacon's  pure  light  led, 

Piercing  the  darkness  round  your  pathway  spread ; 


WOMAN'S    LOVE.  161 

Girt  round  with  faith,  and  armed  with  innocence ; 

Though  sorely  tried  with  influences  intense 

Of  Feeling  and  of  Passion,  evermore 

That  brood  and  dwell  within  your  bosom's  core. 

Feeling  and  Passion  ! — ay  !  the  mighty  twain 

Prove  your  chief  blessing,  or  your  deadliest  bane  : 

Feeling  and  Passion  ! — yea  !  their  true  abode 

Is   in   that    full   heart's   depths,    whence   forth   have 

flowed 

Their  purest  currents,  and  their  deepest  streams, 
Worthy  to  glass  an  Angel's  white-robed  dreams. 
But  ah  !  too  often  dimmed  by  angry  clouds, 
The  tempest's  shadows,  and  the  midnight's  shrouds ; 
Ruffled  too  oft,  by  fitful-rising  wind, 
When     Peace     hath     vanished,    and     dear    Hope 

declined ; 

M 


162  WOMAN'S   LOVE. 

And   stained — yet  no,  not  stained,    but   darkened, 

veiled 

By  many  a  mist,  along  their  surface  trailed. 
Yet  oft,  how  oft,  that  Love  itself  inspires — 
Itself  enkindles  with  undying  fires — 
Itself  sustains — itself  preserves  from  harm, 
Fires  the  soft  heart,  and  nerves  the  fragile  arm ; 
And  with  a  power-bestowing,  blest  control, 
Reigns  o'er  the  enrapt*  and  elevated  soul ! 
Yea !  the  immortal,  the  transcendent  Love, 
Itself  the  stay,  the  guiding-star  shall  prove ; 
Brightener  and  Strengthener — gloriously  made — 
Through  gloom  and  storm,  through  desert,  waste,  and 

shade : 

And  Comforter  and  firm  Defender  too — 
Steadfast  and  potent,  tender  and  most  true  ! 


WOMAN'S    LOVE.  163 

Yea  !   Love  shall  be — as  often  it  hath  been — 

Of  Woman's  heart,  the  staff  and  shield  and  screen  : 

Proving,  midst  trial  and  vicissitude, 

The  dearest  blessing  and  the  deepest  good — 

The  Joy,  the  Life,  the  Spirit  and  the  Power — 

The  only  hope  of  many  an  anxious  hour, 

When  pleasures  fade,  and  disappointments  lower  ! 

And  in  that  heart,  another  Love  is  found 

Than  that  which  builds  its  trust  on  mortal  ground. 

Yea  !  in  that  heart  another  Love  abideth, 

Than  that  which  in  Earth's  shadow  dimly  glideth  : 

Another  tenderness,  another  trust 

Than  that  which  clings  to  perishable  dust. 

A  consecrated  Love,  a  raptured  zeal — 

'T  is  happiness,  't  is  almost  Heaven  to  feel ! 

M2 


164  WOMAN'S  LOVE. 

A  tenderness,  exalting  in  its  truth; 

A  feeling,  fresh  with  an  unfading  youth ; 

Strengthening,  ennobling,  solemnizing,  pure — 

Made  to  prevail,  and  chartered  to  endure : 

Earth's  happiest  happiness,   Heaven's  highest  height, 

A  pure  emotion,  a  sublime  delight ; 

Not  subject  unto  Disappointment's  sway — 

Not  liable  to  Change,  nor  to  Decay  ! 

The  Love,  the  dedicated  Love  of  Heaven ; 

Through  which  be  earthly  Love's  excess  forgiven  ! 


LINES  ON  THE  FORGET-ME-NOT. 


FLOWER  !  a  mighty  feeling's  linked  with  thee, 
Thou  'rt  made  a  Temple  unto  Memory ; 

All  delicate  and  fragile  as  thou  art — 
And  'midst  the  emerald  glooms  of  vernal  woods, 
And  flowering  depths  of  shadowy  solitudes, 

Thou  shin'st,  and  smil'st,  a  Trophy  of  the  Heart ! 

Thine 's  the  celestial  consecrated  hue, 
The  beautiful,  beloved,  mysterious  blue — 

Shared  in  its  exquisite   variety — 
By  ocean  in  his  dread  magnificence, 
By  the  most  ancient  heavens — profound,  intense,— 

And  thee — Ephemeral  loveliness  !  and  thee. 


166 


LINES  ON 


Thou  hast  thy  rivals,  'mid  the  clustering  shades ! 
The  thousand  flowers  that  deck  those  green  arcades  — 
Delaying  with  their  sweets,  the  woodland  bee, 

The  water-lily,  and  the  cup-moss  bright, 
The  rich  wild-hyacinth  dyed  with  rainbowed  light, 

And  the  transparent  wood-anemone  ! 

These,  to  the  butterfly  and  bee  are  dear, 

As  thou — when  gemmed  by  morning's  living  tear, 

Or  ruffled  into  sweetness  by  the  breeze ; 
But,  to  the  human  heart  thou  'rt  dearer  far — 
Thou  twilight-gilding,  westward-pointing  star, 

Dearer  than  all — than  any  one  of  these  ! 

Yet  wherefore  art  thou  here  ?  thou  should'st  be  found, 
Where  cumbering  ruins  load  the  untrodden  ground  — 
And  the  old  long-ago  doth  dimly  Jbrood  ! 


THE  FORGET-ME-NOT.  167 

Where  the  unblossomed  ivy  hangs  forlorn— 
Thick  matted  with  the  darkling  weed  and  thorn  ! 
Not  in  the  privacy  of  this  sweet  wood. 

Vain  thought !  where'er  we  turn,  where'er  we  move, 
Some  record  might  be  raised  to  human  love ; 

The  unconquerable — universal  power, 
The  mightiest  one  of  all  the  earth  ! — no  bound 
His  Reign  can  limit,  nor  his  Realm  surround, 

An  age  of  ages  were  to  him,  an  hour  ! 

Haply — the  delicate  elements  that  form 

Thy  tender  frame— once  trembled  quick  and  warm, 

Beneath  his  influence — Lord  of  the  human  Lot ! 
For  through  full  many  a  shape  man's  dust  doth  pass, 
And  lovelier  none  than  thine — star  of  thy  class ; 

Sweet,  dreamy,  spiritual  Forget-me-not ! 


SONG. 


BRING  me  my  harp — and  let  me  sing 

Thy  sorrows  all  to  sleep ; 
A  charm  from  yon  blue  heaven  I  '11  wring, 

A  spell  from  yon  blue  deep. 

To  soothe,  to  glad  thy  sinking  heart, 

My  gentle  friend  beloved, 
To  bid  the  darkness,  thence  depart, 

The  weight  be  thence  removed. 

I  '11  bid  thee  mark  the  clouds  that  fly, 
With  threatening  aspect  drear  and  dark, 

Along  the  wide  and  shadowy  sky — 
Then  bid  thce  their  dispersion  mark. 


SONG.  169 

I  '11  shew  thee  on  the  water's  breast 
A  thousand  bubbles,  white  and  wild — 

Then  bid  thee  mark  them  sink  to  rest, 
In  glassy  smoothness  reconciled. 

My  harp  is  brought — Oh,  let  it  bring 

O'er  thy  pale  cheek  a  smile  serene- 
Alas  !   I  fear  't  will  only  fling 
A  darker  shade  along  its  sheen. 

Music 's  so  close  allied  to  love — 

How  should  it  soothe  thy  love-born  woe, 

Ah  !  how  should  music's  self  remove, 
A  shade  that  music's  soul  could  throw. 

Bear  hence  my  harp — our  mutual  grief, 
(For  shadow-like,  mine  folio weth  thine;) 

Shall  in  indulgence  seek  relief, 
In  sympathy  a  cure  divine. 


THE  STAR  AND  THE  LIGHTNING. 


THE  bright  star  trembles,  that  shall  still  endure 
A  Paradise  of  radiance — deep  and  pure ; 
And  seems  to  fear  its  glory's  rich  excess. 
Tremulous  in  its  everlastingness  ! 
As  hearts  that  doubt  of  their  own  happiness  ! 
The  bright  star  trembles,  in  its  pride  of  place, 
Yet  still  unswerving  runs  its  glorious  race ; 
And  crowned  with  light  that  ages  cannot  dull, 
Streams,  unextinguishably  beautiful ! 
The  scornful  lightning  in  its  arrowy  flight, 
Speeds  straight  unto  the  abyss  of  endless  night, 
It  flames,  it  flashes,  and  its  course  is  run — 
And  never  more  shall  kindling  star  nor  sun, 


THE  STAR,  ETC.  171 

Release  it,  nor  reprieve  it,  nor  recall — 

It  flies  unheeding  to  its  perilous  fall ; 

Untremulously  hurries  to  its  doom, 

Unhesitating — leaps  into  its  tomb  ! 

So  doth  a  haughty  heart  in  its  disdain 

Rush  madly  on — defying  check  and  rein ; 

So  doth  it  urge  its  headlong  fierce  career, 

Unshaken  by  one  natural  throb  of  fear ; 

Till  wrecked  at  last  on  bleak  Destruction's  coast, 

It  sinks — it  fails — inevitably  lost ! 

And  like  that  deathless  and  enduring  star, 

Holding  its  brightly-troubled  course  afar — 

(For  such  it  seems  to  be  to  mortal  sight, 

While  ever-trembling  shines  its  gleaming  light;) 

So  doth  the  humble  spirit  bear  on  still, 

And  meekly  its  appointed  part  fulfil — 


172  THE  STAR,  ETC. 

Tremulous  in  its  everlastingness ; 

Tremulous  in  its  glorious  stedfastness — 

E'en  like  that  changeless  and  immortal  light 

(Whose  beams  inflame  the  sombre,  silent  night) 

That  still  pursues  its  bright  eternal  way, 

Shedding  around  an  atmosphere  of  day  ! 

That  presses  forward  to  its  destined  goal, 

The  noblest  Prototype  of  man's  high  soul  !  — 

So  doth  the  humble  spirit  move  on  still, 

And  meekly  its  appointed  course  fulfil ; 

With  boundless  prospects  fair,  and  guerdons  sure, 

Girt  to  sustain — unflinchingly  to  endure, 

Till  called  to  enjoy,  to  exult,  and  to  adore 

On  high — for  ever  and  for  evermore  ! 


LINES  ON    *  *  *  »    SINGING. 


THE  music  springs  from  thy  pure  breast, 

Like  Venus  from  the  Sea ; 
Her  birth  lulled  storm  and  surge  to  rest, 

So  might  thy  Minstrelsy. 

And  yet  that  minstrelsy  exerts, 
More  sweet,  more  solemn  power ; 

Hushing  the  storms  in  human  hearts, 
E'en  in  their  mightiest  hour  !* 

*  Originally  published  in  the  "  Keepsake." 


TO   OTHERS   GIVE   THY    LOVELIEST 
SMILES. 


To  others  give  thy  loveliest  smiles, 
Thy  honeyed  words  of  joy  and  cheer; 
For  others  keep  thy  winning  wiles : — 
Give  me  thine  every  tear  ! 

To  all  dispense  thy  looks  of  Light ; 
The  sunshine  of  the  lips  and  eyes — 
That  living  sunshine,  more  than  bright : 
Give  me  thy  thoughts  and  sighs  ! 

With  others  share  thy  happiest  hours, 
Thy  spirit's  light  and  brilliant  mood, 
Thy  wit's  fair  gems,  thy  fancy's  flowers 
Give  me  thy  solitude  ! 


TO  OTHERS  GIVE,  ETC.  175 

And  let  those  gay  and  summer  friends, 
Thy  notice  and  thy  favour  claim ; 
And  still,  when  day's  fleet  season  ends, 
Breathe  in  thy  prayers — my  name  ! 

Theirs  be  thy  sunny-sparkling  smiles ; 
Theirs — theirs  each  radiant  glance  of  thine  ; 
The  glance  that  binds  while  it  beguiles — 
The  smiles  that  scathing  shine  ! 

And  since  thou  lov'st  not  hallowed  sadness, 
But  shrink'st  from  sorrow's  lightest  breath ; 
With  others  live  a  life  of  gladness : — 
Give  me  thine  hour  of  Death  ! 

That  hour — the  last  of  troublous  life — 
When  destiny  and  dust  must  part ; 
And  hopes  and  fears  make  deadlier  strife 
Than  the  cold  hand  on  our  heart : 


176  TO  OTHERS  GIVE,  ETC 

When  hearts,  that  deem'd  they  loved  before, 
Such  love  forget — forego ; 
And  ( Passion's  fevered  throb  past  o'er) 
Shrink  from  their  share  of  woe  ! 

When  hearts,  whose  Love  was  false  and  light, 
Live  on — and  love  no  longer ; 
Then  my  Love,  like  the  stars  in  night, 
Shall  steadier  shine,  and  stronger  ! 

Yet,  if  this  wretched  hope — e'en  this, 
May  not  to  me  be  given : 
Oh  !  thine  be  all  Earth  hath  of  bliss ; 
And  may  we  meet  in  Heaven  ! 


FAREWELL!    AND    NOT    THE    FIRST 
FAREWELL. 


FAREWELL  !  and  not  the  first  Farewell, 
These  agonizing  lips  have  sighed  ; 
My  heart, — beneath  that  deadly  spell, 
Better  that  thou  hadst  died  ! 

We  part,  alas  !  how  differently — 
More  differently,  perchance,  to  meet. 
Absence  will  steal  thy  heart  from  me  ; 
To  me,  't  will  make  thy  faults  e'en  sweet. 

Farewell !  and  not  the  first  Farewell 
I  Ve  sighed  to  those  most  cherished : 
My  heart, — beneath  the  withering  spell, 
Better  that  thou  hadst  perished  ! 


178  FAREWELL!    AND  NOT 

Farewell !     I  dare  not  look  beyond 
This  parting-moment's  dreary  bound ; 
Nor  raise  illusions  fair  and  fond, 
On  Hope's  forbidden  ground  ! 

Yet  be  this  grief,  mine  all — mine  only ; 
I  'm  covetous  of  the  unshared  pain  : 
And  whilst  I  mourn,  apart  and  lonely, 
Each  added  grief  shall  seem  a  gain  ! 

And,  miser-like,  let  me  count  o'er 
Each  ill  that  thwarts,  each  pang  that  tries  : 
The  heavy  sum,  the  gloomy  store, 
Shall  have  its  value  in  mine  eyes. 

Suffering  for  thee,  though  keen  the  smart, 
Shall  still  be  dear,  shall  still  be  sweet ; 
Though  very  differently  we  part, 
And  very  differently  may  meet ! 


THE   FIRST  FAREWELL.  179 

And  suffering,  without  thee — whatever 
May  be  the  infliction  and  the  woe — 
Must  still  the  last,  worst  torture  spare,— 
The  thought  that  thou  art  suffering  too  ! 

Farewell !  and  not  the  first  Farewell 
These  altered  lips  have  spoken : 
My  heart, — beneath  that  deadening  spell, 
Better  hadst  thou  been  broken  ! 

Alas  !  how  differently  we  part — 
To  meet  more  differently,  I  fear  : 
Absence  will  harden  more  thy  heart — 
Make  faithlessness  to  me  e'en  dear  ! 


N  2 


IT   MAY   NOT    BE! 


IT  may  not  be — it  must  not  be ; 
Oh  !  it  must  never  be  for  me  ! 
E'en  Hope  is  now  impossible, 
And  e'en  Despair  can  deem  't  is  well ! 

Despair,  whose  ghastly  reign  must  last, 
Till  merged  and  melted  in  the  Past ! 
And  thou,  dark  Future  ! — soon  shalt  be 
That  Past,  or  the  Eternity  ! 


IT  MAY  NOT  BE!  181 

It  may  not  be — it  must  not  be : 
Oh  !  it  can  never  be  for  rne  ! 
Then  whither,  whither  shall  I  wend, 
Who  prize  of  life  alone — its  end  ? 

Indifference  !  worse  than  scorn  or  hate, 
And  must  thou  prove  my  dreary  fate  ? 
Then  let  me  turn  these  mournful  eyes 
From  Earth,  unto  the  pitying  Skies  ! 

And  if — oh  !  bitter  thought  intense — 
My  fate  must  be  Indifference ; 
Let  me — far  sweeter,  dearer  doom — 
Both  find  and  feel  it  in  the  tomb  ! 


ALONE! 


ALONE  through  this  wild  world  I  tread. 
And  weep  that  I  'm  alone ; 
The  tears  I  daily,  nightly  shed, 
Flow  for  the  bright  days  flown. 

Thou  sunshiny  and  flowery  earth,— 
Thou  would'st  unto  my  heart  atone 
For  many  a  pang,  for  much  of  dearth, 
Were  I  less  utterly  alone  ! 

Were  there  one  eye,  whose  gentle  glance 
Might  bear  deep  sympathy's  pure  light 
Far  through  my  soul, — and  break  its  trance, 
And  chase  its  gloom,  with  tenderest  might ;~ 


ALONE! 

Were  there  one  hand,  whose  eloquent  clasp, 
Could  charm  afflictions  to  repose— 
Check  Sorrow's  sigh  and  Pain's  low  gasp ; 
And  while  away  these  haunting  woes. 

Were  there  one  heart,  whose  pulse  might  thrill, 
Fountain  of  sweet  response  to  mine — 
One  heart,  that  time  might  never  chill, 
And  oh  !  if  that  one  heart  were  thine  ! 

Were  thine,  thou  false  one  !  who  could'st  fling 

Thy  once-loved,  like  a  weed  away ; 

And  clouds  of  heaviest  sorrow  bring, 

To  shade  and  shroud  her  life's  young  day. 

But  vain,  and  bitter  as  't  is  vain, 
Is  this  wild  dream — yet  must  I  moan, 
And  pine,  with  deep  heart-gnawing  pain- 
That  I  'm  thus  utterly  alone  ! 


183 


184  ALONE! 

Fain  would  I  learn  to  love  the  cold, 
That  crowd  about  my  onward  path ; — 
But  could  my  woman's  heart  withhold 
The  fervent  passionateness  it  hath  ? 

And  if  I  learned  to  love  again, 
As  I  have  vainly  loved  before — 
This  Heart,  now  half-resigned  to  pain, 
Must  con  the  bitter  task  once  more. 

Ah  !  not  the  coldness  of  the  loved, 
Can  damp  the  faithful  bosom's  truth  ; 
A  thousand  hearts  such  fate  have  proved, 
And  mourned  their  desolated  youth  ! 

Then  hopeless,  silent,  still  alone — 
Heart  of  my  blighted  youth — remain  ! 
Since  I  have  found  in  wild  days  flown, 
Love's  latest,  lasting  gift  is  Pain. 


THE  REMONSTRANCE. 


AND  say'st  thou  that  I  should  not  weep, 
But  haughtily  my  griefs  control  ? 
Little  thou  know'st  how  dark,  how  deep 
Are  sorrow,  and  my  secret  soul ! 

I  have  but  few  dim  hopes  here  now  ; 
The  few  I  have,  seem  plumed  for  flight: 
With  unshed  tears  aches  this  pale  brow ; 
My  future  's  nothing,  or— 't  is  night ! 

Mine  only  hate,  is  to  be  here ; 
Mine  only  wish,  must  be  to  die  : 
Oh !  could  my  life  melt  in  a  tear, 
My  soul  pass  on  a  sigh  ! 


186  THE  REMONSTRANCE. 

And  thou  would'st  have  me  smile  !     Not  so ; 
'T  would  agonise  this  frozen  heart : 
'T  is  deadened  now  by  crushing  woe ; 
Ah  !  unawakened  let  it  part ! 

Love's  loveliest  guerdons  1  have  won  ! 
Leave,  leave  me  to  my  blackened  doom — 
A  hope  destroyed — a  heart  undone  : 
His  costliest  gift  shall  be — the  tomb  ! 

When  thou  dost  dream  't  is  sunlight  all, 
I  see  the  encroaching  shadows  steal, 
And  hear  a  faint,  unearthly  call, 
Through  festal  music's  loudest  peal ! 

And  oh  !  in  smiles,  to  thee  so  dear, 
I  mark  the  mock  of  destiny  ; — 
They  but  embitter  more  the  tear, 
That  still  shall  follow  as  they  fly  ! 


THE  REMONSTRANCE.  187 

Yet  think  not — ah  !  beware  of  thinking 
That  I  would  exile  smiles  from  thee ; 
Nor  deem  my  spirit's  love  is  shrinking 
From  thy  heart's  joyauncy. 

I  would  not,  could  not,  e'en  in  love, 
One  dimple  from  that  cheek  displace — 
Wish  thee  one  warning  pang  to  prove — 
One  light  hope  from  thy  bosom  chase  ! 

If  in  my  heart  self-love  remains, 
'T  is  a  harsh  love — unpitying,  stern ; 
Covetous  of  soul- chastening  pains — 
Studious  life's  deadliest  truths  to  learn. 

But  oh  !  the  love  I  feel  for  thee 
Is  weak,  as  womanhood  is  weak  ; 
Tender,  as  tenderest  infancy  ; 
All  humbly  mild — all  gently  meek  ! 


THE  REMONSTRANCE. 

But  few  have  been  the  visitings 
Of  young  Joy  to  my  heavy  heart ; 
But  when  I  wish  thy  pleasures  wings, 
May  my  last  hope  depart ! 

My  bosom-knowledge  is  but  slight 
Of  Happiness,  and  her  glad  train ; 
But  would  I  damp  thy  soul's  delight, 
Or  make  thee  partner  of  my  pain  ? 

Each  tear  I  'd  draw  from  those  dear  eyes, 
May  it  be  mine,  e'en  mine  to  shed ; 
Each  cloud  I  'd  weave  o'er  thy  life's  skies, 
Burst  o'er  my  long-devoted  head. 

Ere  I  can  wish  thee  cause  for  care, 
Redoubled  be  mine  every  sigh ; 
Be  it  mine  each  threatened  ill  to  bear — 
Destined  for  either  fate — and  die  ! 


THE  REPROACH. 


THE  tear  is  long  dried  from  thy  cheek. 

Since  last  we  met — and  met  to  part; 

And  thou  could'st  dream,  such  doom  would  break 

Thy  young  and  bounding  heart. 

I  told  thee— did  I  tell  thee  true  ?— 

Thou  strangely  wert  mistaken  • 

That  ere  Spring's  firstling  flowers  burst  through, 

Thy  faith  might  be  forsaken  ! 

And  then,  upon  the  wild  bough  near, 
Hung  Winter's  last  and  frailest  gems ; 
And  a  faint  flush  began  to  appear 
Beneath  his  crystal  diadems  ! 


190  THE  REPROACH. 

And  Winter  then  went  hastening  by — 
His  thin  robes  eddying  in  the  blasts 
Of  haughty  March,  whose  whirlwind-cry 
Pealed  through  the  long-deserted  wastes. 

I  told  thee  how  the  world  would  win 
Each  purpose  of  thy  soul  away  ; 
And  tame  the  fiery  heart  within, 
And  mould  thy  spirit  to  its  sway. 

I  told  thee  how  the  world  would  claim 
Thy  worship  for  its  thousand  shrines ; 
Power,  Honour,  Pleasure,  Wealth,  and  Fame- 
Its  zodiac  of  conflicting  signs  ! 

I  told  thee  Woman's  heart  was  proved 
An  unchanged,  unforgetting  thing  ; 
I  That  Man's— if  Man's  hath  ever  loved— 
Loves  while  't  is  on  the  wandering  wing.^) 


THE  REPROACH. 

But  fervently  didst  thou  deny 
Such  bitter,  bitter  truths  could  be ; 
And  with  the  unanswerable  sigh, 
Forced  my  heart's  lingering  doubts  to  flee. 

The  tear  is  long  dried  from  thy  cheek, 
Since  last  we  met — and  met  to  part ! 
If  any  heart  is  doomed  to  break, 
I  fear  't  will  be  this  wretched  heart ! 

As,  fascinated  by  the  snake, 
The  bird  all  moveless,  helpless  stays  ; 
So,  till  my  heavy  heart  shall  break, 
My  memory  on  that  hour  must  gaze  ! 


191 


THE   CONTRAST. 


No  !  it  was  not  the  diamonds  that  blazed  round  her 

arms, 

Nor  the  pearls  that  exalted  her  forehead's  fair  charms, 
Nor  the  circlet  of  brilliants  that  gleamed  mid  her  hair, 
That  arrested  my  footsteps,  to  gaze  on  her  there. 
'T  was  the  misery  throned  on  her  deathly  pale  brow  ; 
'T  was  the  coldness  and  dampness  that  sate  on  its 

snow ; 
'T  was  the  wide-wandering  glance  of  her  dark,  rolling 

eye; 
'T  was  the  half-smothered  tone  of  her  tremulous  sigh  ! 


THE  CONTRAST.  193 

O,  sorrow  of  sorrows  !  to  stand  in  the  crowd, 
Where    no    tear    must   be   shed — and   no   pang  be 

avowed ; 

O,  sorrow  of  sorrows  !  to  dwell  'mid  the  gay — 
When  the  heart  with  its. anguish  is  withering  away  ; 
When  with  agonized  eyes  we  must  view  the  bright 

throng, 

And  with  agonized  ears,  hear  the  loud  festal  song — 
And  with  agonized  heart,  coin  smiles  hollow  and  vain, 
A  mask — but  a  poor  fragile  mask  for  its  pain ! 
When  that  heart  gathers  back  to  its  centre  and  core, 
The  long  troubled  waves  that  o'erflowed  it  before — 
And  the  pressure  of  grief,  and  the  weight  of  dismay, 
Is  too  much  for  the  spirit — too  much  for  the  clay ! 
O,  sorrow  of  sorrows  !  to  mix  with  the  many, 
When  the  soul  is  too  sick  to  share  converse  with  any ; 


194  THE  CONTRAST. 

While  the  brilliant  procession  of  gladness  doth  pass. 
Like  the  shapes  of  a  dream  on  some  wizard's  charmed 

glass ; 
While  a  thousand  bright  pleasures  seem  beckoning 

us  on. 

And  our  hearts  are  by  one  sore  affliction  undone — 
While  a  thousand  light  subjects  we  hear  gay  discussed, 
While  one  torturing  reflection  grinds  us  to  the  dust- 
No,  it  was  not  the  diamonds  that  blazed  round  her 

arms, 

Not  her  queen-like  array,  nor  her  exquisite  charms— 
'T  was  the  look  that  she  bore  of  eternal  Despair, 
That  arrested  my  footsteps  to  gaze  on  her  there ! 


LINES  ON  A  BOWER. 


MY  bower  !  in  earlier,  dearer,  happier  years, 

When  hopes  like  sunbeams  glanced — like  dew-drops, 

fears — 

I  wove  for  thee  a  wild  and  artless  strain  ; 
My  childhood's  bower  !  to  thee  I  come  again : 
But  come,  how  changed  !  no  more,  alas  !   no  more, 
Wearing  the  fearless  smiles  that  then  I  wore ; 
A  change,  and  many  a  change  alas, 
A  few  short  years  have  brought  to  pass ! 


196 


LINES  ON  A  BOWER. 


Delightedly  I  sang,  thy  opening  flowers 
By  sunshine  nursed,  and  sunny-glancing  showers; 
A  wild  of  flowers  my  childish  heart  was  then — 
Such  flowers  as  shun  the  beaten  paths  of  men, 
And  perish  long  ere  life's  proud  perilous  noon, 
Ah  !  blown  too  early,  or  struck  down  too  soon. 
A  change,  and  many  a  change  alas, 
A  few  short  years  have  brought  to  pass ! 

The  summer  and  the  summer's  royal  rose — 
The  glorious  woods  in  their  serene  repose, 
The  sweet  clear  voice  of  birds — the  bees'  low  hum, 
The  thousand  scents,  that  on  the  fresh  breeze  come, 
Do  these  beguile  not  as  they  once  beguiled ; 
Ah,  then  I  smiled  and  recked  not  that  I  smiled : 
A  change,  and  many  a  change  alas, 
A  few  short  years  have  brought  to  pass  ! 


LINES  ON  A  BOWER.  197 

I  come  not  now  as  I  was  wont  before, 
With  Joy's  rich  tumults  in  my  quick  heart's  core, 
And  Hope's  wild  fervours  brightening  ev'ry  thought ; 
I  bring  not  back  the  unclouded  mind  I  brought 
In  those  dear  days, — whose  haunting  memory  now 
Can  but  more  pain  my  heart,  and  chill  my  brow ; 
A  change,  and  many  a  change  alas, 
A  few  short  years  have  brought  to  pass ! 

And  now  to  me  the  birds'  triumphant  strain, 
The  flowers,  the  streams,  but  bring  a  sense  of  pain, 
'T  is  vain,  't  is  bitter,  't  is  importunate, 
The  attested  joy  of  Nature — while  stern  fate 
Lowers  with  inveterate  shadows  dim  and  cold — 
Lengthening  o'er  all,  my  wearied  eyes  behold. 
A  change,  and  many  a  change  alas, 
A  few  short  years  have  brought  to  pass  ! 


198 


LINES  ON  A  BOWER. 


Still,  I  feel  Summer  must  be  beautiful, 
('Tis  but  my  senses  that  are  chilled  and  dull;) 
With  all  her  living  lights,  her  flushing  hues, 
Her  glistening  smiles  and  rainbow-glancing  dews  ! 
And  thou  art  beautiful — in  leaf  and  flower, 
Thou  whom  my  mournful  heart  hath  wrong'd,  old  bower! 
A  change,  and  many  a  change  alas, 
A  few  short  years  have  brought  to  pass  ! 

It  hath  wronged  thee,  wronged  all,  itself  hath  wronged, 
With  strains  that  nor  befitted,  nor  belonged 
Unto  the  season  and  the  scene ;  for  still 
It  cannot  choose  but  feel  an  answering  thrill — 
While  these  rich  melodies  are  pouring  round, 
And  these  bright  hues  are  kindling  up  the  ground ; 
A  change,  and  many  a  change  alas, 
A  few  short  years  have  brought  to  pass  ! 


LINES  ON  A  BOWER.  199 

Some  cause  there  is  indeed  for  thoughtful  care, 
For  spirit-breathings  deep  of  inward  prayer — 
Voices  are  hushed,  whose  precious  tones  of  cheer, 
Could  even  those  festal  melodies  endear ; 
Footsteps  are  missing,  whose  loved  echoes  yet, 
My  heart  would  find  it  hopeless  to  forget ! 
A  change,  and  many  a  change  alas, 
A  few  short  years  can  bring  to  pass  ! 

Ay  !  they  are  gone — the  lovely,  the  unforgot — 
Whose  radiant  forms,  once  lit  this  blossomy  spot, 
More  beautiful  than  summer  and  its  rose  ; 
Ay,  they  are  gathered  to  a  long  repose — 
The  splendour  of  the  season  cannot  come, 
To  cheer  them,  nor  to  light  them  in  their  tomb  : 
A  change,  and  many  a  change  alas, 
A  few  short  years  have  brought  to  pass  ! 


200 


LINES  ON  A  BOWER. 


And  never  more  their  shrouded  eyes  shall  see 
The  exultant  glory  of  the  flower  and  tree  ; 
And  never  more  their  fettered  sense  rejoice, 
In  the  dear  blessing  of  a  well-known  voice — 
They  have  found  the  gloomy  goal  they  little  sought, 
Oh,  what  a  heavy  change  for  them  is  wrought — 
A  change,  and  many  a  change  alas, 
A  few  short  years  have  brought  to  pass  ! 

And  yet,  not  so  !  away,  dark  thought  away, — 
They  are  where  change  shall  never  more  have  sway, 
E'en  in  a  land  of  deathless  sunshine  bright — 
Invulnerable  unto  storm  or  blight ; 
They  are,  where  I  may  meet  them  heart  to  heart, 
Where  no  dark  hour  shall  bid  the  loved  ones  part; 
There  change,  like  breath-stain  from  a  glass, 
Shall  melt  from  Life's  calm  scene,  and  pass. 


THE  PIRATE'S  TOMB. 


WILD  was  the  spot,  and  rude  the  Pirate's  tomb  ; 
The  mountain-torrents  thundered  at  its  side ; 
And  there,  amidst  the  bleak  and  stormy  gloom, 
Knelt,  in  her  loneliness,  the  pirate's  Bride. 

Her  hair,  dishevelled,  swept  the  unsculptured  stone, 
Like  some  dark  banner,  to  the  winds  unbound ; 
Her  eye  with  ghastly  lustre  sadly  shone, 
Riveted  on  that  spot  of  funeral-ground  ! 

There  oft  she  lingered,  when  the  morning's  ray 
Showered    crimsoning   sun-gifts  o'er  the   awakening 

world ; 

There  oft  remained,  when  midnight's  murkiest  sway 
In  angry  darkness  all  the  scenery  furled. 


202  THE  PIRATE'S  TOMB. 

That  tomb  was  reared  o'er  one,  whose  mortal  time 

Had  been  o'ershadowed  by  unrighteous  deeds ; 

His   name   and   fame  were  linked  with    blood    and 

crime : 
Dark  renegade  from  all  ennobling  creeds ! 

And  yet  that  gentle — that  devoted  heart, 
Poured  all  its  passionate  anguish  o'er  his  dust, 
As  o'er  his  stormy  life  't  was  once  its  part, 
To  shed  its  brightening  love — its  hallowing  trust ! 

Woman ! — oh,  Woman  !  where  art  tliou  not  found  ? 
Thou    with    the    heart   of    might,    and    reed-like 

frame — 

Unto  what  fearful  dooms  art  thou  not  bound  ; 
And  still  and  ever,  changelessly  the  same  ! 


THE  PIRATE'S  TOMB.  203 

Or  in  the  convict's  cell,  or  wanderer's  tent ; 
Beneath  the  peasant's  roof,  or  monarch's  dome ; 
Or  in  the  maniac's  dreariest  dungeon  pent ; 
Or  in  the  precincts  of  the  loneliest  tomb  ; — 

Thou,    still   unchanged,   'midst   every   change,  art 

seen: 

A  Star — the  varying,  vanishing  clouds  above  — 
Of  human  destiny  ;  from  thy  sweet  mien 
Pouring  the  beatific  light  of  Love  ! 

And   thou  'rt   thus  changeless — thou,    poor    child   of 

Grief! 

That  mourn'st  in  silence,  and  that  mourn'st  alone ; 
Thy  pale  cheek,  like  a  winter-stricken  leaf, 
Pillowed  upon  that  cold,  inveterate  stone  ! 


SONG. 


UNFOLD,  living  blossoms  of  beauty  !  unfold — 
The  sky  is  one  banner  of  crimson  and  gold, 
The  night-bird  hath  finished  his  exquisite  lay — 
And  the  lark,  the  loud  lark  pours  his  hymn  to  the  day; 
The  green   earth  is  kissed  by  the   dew's   gleaming 

shower, 
Whose  warm  sun  drops  are  drank  by  each  bank  and 

each  bower ; 

Arise,  laughing  blossoms  of  beauty,  arise  ! 
For  the  sun  brightly  mounts  in  the  wide  gleaming 

skies, 


SONG.  205 

And  the  fresh  breeze  blows  soft  from  the  mountains 

afar. 
And  no  gloom  and  no  chill  comes  the  sweet  time  to 

mar: 

Awake,  beamy  blossoms  of  beauty,  awake  ! 
The  gold  sun  hath  lit  up  the  blue  glistening  lake, 
Awake,  and  this  lovely  time,  lovelier  ye  '11  make  ! 

They  awake — they  upspring — they  outshine  without 

number ; 
But  the   violet's  blue    eyes   still  seem   shrouded   in 

slumber ; 
Oh,   violet !    wake  !    the   wild   cherry   trees    round 

thee, 
With  treasures  of  silver  have  covered  and  crowned 

thee — 


206  SONG. 

And  the  rich  primrose-tufts,   sparkle  bright  through 

the  grass — 
Where  the  stream  doth  meandering  and  murmuring 


While  the  wild  flowers  are  set,  like  small  gems  in  its 


And  the  lily  amid  the  dark  mosses,  outshines, 
More  dazzling  than  snowdrifts  or  cleft  silver  mines. 
Oh,    Morning !  how   dost   thou  pour   down   on   our 

sight 

Profusion  and  fulness,  of  costly  delight ! 
How  dost  thou  for  ever  fresh  glories  disclose, 
To  win  our  worn  hearts  from  their  cares  and  our 

woes ! 

As  the  earth  by  thy  exquisite  breath  was  renewed, 
And  e'en  with  its  own  primal  radiance  endued — 


SONG.  207 

For  so  brightly  by  thee,  is  it  coloured  and  drest, 
That  it  smiles  like  a  Paradise  once  more  possessed — 
And  so  sweetly  thou  clearest  it  from  soil  and  from 

stain, 

That  it  blooms  like  a  youthful  creation  again. 
Oh  Morning — thou  com'st  ever  joyous  and  young, 
As  when  first  from  the  East,  thy  glad  infancy  sprung; 
Ever  joyous  and  young,    shalt  still  burst   from  the 

sky,— 
Till  thy  dawn,  oh  Eternity — thy  dawn  is  nigh  ! 


THE  FIRST  SIGHT  OF  DEATH. 

THE  first  time  I  e'er  looked  on  thee,  Oh  Death  ! 
Thou  hadst  marbled  an  infant's  tender  frame — 
The  face  was  wan  as  a  pale  snow-wreath, 
And  shadowy  as  a  vanishing  dream. 

And  my  heart,  my  heart  drank  strange  draughts  of 

woe, 

Sweet  slumberer  !  from  that  vision  then — 
Beholding  that  cherub-head  laid  low, 
Which  might  never,  never  be  raised  again. 

And  yet  though  I  wept — wept  many  tears 
O'er  thee,  in  thy  placid  stillness — there, 
There  was  little  of  pain  in  my  griefs  and  fears, — 
Thou  wert  too  calm,  too  stilly  and  too  fair. 


THE  FIRST  SIGHT  OF  DEATH.  209 

Still  I  felt  a  religious,  o'er-shadowing  awe, 
That  crept  o'er  my  pulses,  and  chilled  my  breath — 
Yet  I  turned  not — yet  shrank  not  from  what  I  saw, 
Though  't  was  then  I  first  beheld  thee,  Oh  Death ! 

And  I  felt — to  my  inmost  soul,  I  felt 

The  burdening  weight  of  thy  mystery  ; 

And  thy  beauty,  that  froze  my  heart  as  I  knelt— 

A  dreadful  beauty  it  seemed  to  me  ! 

The  kings  of  the  earth  in  their  sceptred  state, 
Might  not  fill  the  mind  with  an  awe  so  deep — 
Nor  around  them  bid  such  hushed  reverence  wait, 
As  that  frail,  that  frailest  Dust  asleep  ! 

Nor  the  leaders  of  hosts,  in  their  triumph's  hour, 
In  the  pomp  and  the  pride  of  their  warrior  might, 
Chain  down  the  soul  with  so  strong  a  power, 
As  that  simple,  alas  !  that  common  sight ; 

p 


210  THE  FIRST  SIGHT  OF  DEATH, 

And  this  I  felt,  while  I  turned  away, 
To  where  the  sunshine  was  glittering  bright  ; 
And  met  the  flush  and  the  gladness  of  day, 
With  a  shuddering  sense  of  undelight. 

And  I  looked  on  the  blue,  exulting  skies, 
With  a  sorrowing  thoughtfulness,  deep  and  still 
While  the  haunting  gloom  of  those  mysteries, 
Lay  on  rny  soul  with  a  hush  and  a  chill. 


Death  !   Death  then  became  of  the  world  a 
To  my  altered  feeling  for  evermore  — 
And  schooled  was  my  youthful  mind  and  heart 
In  his  ghastly  knowledge,  his  shadowy  lore* 

And  I  bore  away  from  that  infant  bier, 
A  memory  to  last  through  my  after  days  — 
To  cloud  my  vision  with  many  a  tear, 
With  many  a  mist  to  distract  my  gaze  ! 


THE  FIRST  SIGHT  OF  DEATH.  211 

And  yet  such  memory  I  know  to  prize, 
If  it  shadows  this  Life — oh,  it  hallows  it  too — 
And  it  closelier  rivets  affection's  ties, 
Which    I    feel    that    the   pale    hand    alone    shall 
undo  ! 


THE    FAREWELL    TO    ZEINEB, 


FOR  Zeineb's  smile,  and  for  Zeineb's  song$ 
I  rush  to  the  gonfalon  and  gong : 
'Stead  of  sweet  Music's  dying  fall — 
Lo  !  the  crash  of  armour  and  atabal ! 

'Stead  of  dark  Zeineb's  musky  sighs — 
'Stead  of  the  starlight  of  her  eyes — 
The  cymbal,  the  shawm,  the  war-conch's  peal? 
And  the  crimsoned  flash  of  sweeping  steel. 

I  have  languished  upon  the  bulbul's  strain  ; 
I  must  hear  the  thunders  of  War's  wild  plain : 
I  have  lingered  where  th'  orange  scents  float  past ; 
1  must  breathe  red  Battle's  sulphureous  blast. 


THE  FAREWELL  TO  ZEINEB.  213 

Yet  I  rush,  like  the  wind,  to  the  stormy  field, 
For  I  love  the  spear,  and  I  love  the  shield, 
The  warrior's  hardships,  and  warrior's  zest, 
More  than  a  monarch's  luxurious  rest. 

Lo  !  the  war-blast  drowns  the  farewell-song : 
Forth  to  the  battle,  ye  proud  and  strong ! 
Let  our  country's  claim,  and  our  country's  call, 
Be  the  dearest  sound  and  spell  of  all ! 

Soon,  soon  shall  th'  enslaved  and  th'  enslavers  meet, 
And  our  chains  shall  be  trod  by  our  trampling  feet : 
Loud  is  the  voice  of  thy  gathering,  Oh  War  ! 
Zeineb,  I  leave  thee,  my  heart's  young  star ! 

Yet,  I  leave  thee  with  scarce  a  reluctant  sigh, 
For  I  '11  nobly  conquer,  or  nobly  die ; 
And  oh !  let  no  tears  insult  my  grave, 
If  I  perish ;  but  bless  the  true  and  brave  ! 


214  THE  FAREWELL  TO  ZEINEB. 

And  now  for  the  fierce  and  the  heady  fight; 
Farewell  to  the  scenes  of  repose  and  delight ! 
For  my  tender  Zeineb's  soft,  dove-like  tones. 
Must  I  go  to  hear  Death's  harrowing  groans  ? 

For  the  liquid  smiles  of  my  Zeineb's  eye, 
Must  I  view  the  fierce  writhings  of  agony ; 
And  the  gushing  forth  of  the  purple  flood, 
When  that  agony  lessens  with  loss  of  blood  ? 

Oh  !  thou  fairest  of  Earth's  fair,  living  planets  ! 
Shall  thy  cheeks — bright,  crimson-flowered  pomegranates- 
Grow  pale  and  dim,  at  this  parting  hour  ? 
No,  no  !  let  them  shame  each  sister-flower  ! 

No  !  let  not  one  rose-hue  that  cheek  desert ; 
Let  it  rather  win  from  thy  glowing  heart 
More  burning  tints,  and  more  flushing  dyes — 
Like  a  flame,  that  from  some  proud  pyre  doth  rise. 


THE  FAREWELL  TO  ZE1NEB.  215 

Go — Daughter  of  our  own  glorious  land — 
Go,  bring  me  my  spear  with  thine  own  soft  hand ; 
Give  me  the  faulchion,  and  bear  me  the  shield : 
Array  thou  thy  bridegroom  for  Glory's  field  ! 

And  weep  not !  but  rather  in  pride  rejoice, 

If,  with  Victory  pealed  from  his  dying  voice, 

Afar  from  the  bowers  of  the  blessed  Cashmeer 

That  warrior  must  die,  who  so  worshipped  you  there  ! 


LINES  ON  A  LOVELY  CHILD. 


THOSE  young  glad  eyes,  that  laugh  beneath  a  brow 
Calmer  than  breezeless  waters — (whose  soft  flow 
Is  over  gem-like  pebbles,  smooth  and  fair ;) 
A  brow  unwithered — nay,  untouched  by  care — 
How  radiantly  they  tell  their  laughing  tale 
Of  glowing  hope — hope  never  known  to  fail ! 
Those  young  glad  eyes,  how  beautiful,  how  bright, 
Like  azured  incarnations  of  the  light — 
Like  bedded  violets,  stained  with  colourings  deep, 
(Won  from  the  warm  rich  dews  that  softly  steep 
Each  folded  leaf  in  hours  of  fragrant  sleep  !) 
Yet  e'en  more  exquisite  their  sunny  hue, 
Aerially  —  etherially   blue ; 


LINES  ON  A  LOVELY  CHILD. 

While  thine  unclouded  forehead,  calm  and  clear, 
The  impress  of  that  fearless  joy  doth  bear, 
Monopolized  by  childhood — and  denied 
To  those  who  battle  with  life's  deeper  tide, 
Its  stronger  currents,  and  its  stormier  course, 
Where     the     conflicting    waves    roll,     clamouring, 

hoarse — 

Ah,  stream  of  life  !  thou  'rt  fairest  near  the  source— 
And  fearless  joy  can  never  more  be  theirs, 
Who  once  have  borne,  or  battled  with  thy  cares : 
Childhood,  blest  childhood! — high  and  holy  time — 
How  beautiful  thou  art,  and  how  sublime ! 
And  thou,  sweet  beauteous  being  !    thou  that  now 
Art  near  me,  with  thy  laughing  eye  and  brow, 
O'er  whose  pure  mind,  as  o'er  a  sheeny  glass, 
The  shadow  of  the  universe  shall  pass  ! 


218  LINES  ON  A  LOVELY  CHILD. 

How  like  a  rainbow,  seems  thy  lovely  life, 
Far  lifted  o'er  the  surge,  the  storm,  the  strife  ! 
Thou  'rt  like  a  thrice-blessed  bird  of  Paradise, 

Borne  on  the  breath  of  mighty  harmonies — 

9 
A  native  of  the  sunshine  and  the  skies ; 

Thou  art  a  spring,  whose  after  course  shall  be 
'Midst  streams  that  shall  make  glad  the  eternity  ! 
A  scion  thou — whose  branches  yet  shall  shoot 
From    Earth    to    Heaven  —  and    bear    immortal 

fruit. 

A  link  in  the  immense  and  wondrous  chain, 
Where  frailest  link  was  never  hung  in  vain ; 
A  star — whose  sweet  reflections  cast  a  glow 
O'er  earth,  even  this  dark,  troubled  earth  below  ; 
Unstained,  unshadowed  by  its  frowning  gloom, 
Smiling  to  cheer,  to  adorn  it,  and  to  illume. 


LINES  ON  A  LOVELY  CHILD.  219 

Sweet  star  !  O  glorious  scion  !  loveliest  spring — 
Most  radiant  bird,  that  never  needs  a  wing : 
Bright    rainbow  —  like    that    gracious    thing    too, 

made 

Of  tears,  and  splendours,  colour,  light  and  shade  ! 
Pure  living  link,  that  never  shall  be  lost — 
More  precious  than  fine  gold  of  heaviest  cost. 
Child,  blessed  care  of  heaven's  own  angel  host ! 
Bright,  beauteous  innocent !  ah,  who  can  tell 
What  characters  shall  stamp  the  chronicle 
Of  thy  veiled  future — what  the  times  unborn 
Shall  shew  thee  when  that  covering  veil  is  torn ; 
What  hidden  fortunes  are  reserved  for  thee — 
What  after-paths  of  gloom  and  mystery 
Thy  feet  may  have  in  faltering  trust  to  tread — 
What  crushing  tempests  may  assail  that  head. 


220  LINES  ON  A  LOVELY  CHILD. 

What  pangs  may  agonize  that  guileless  heart, 

(That  now  but  recks  of  life  its  brighter  part) 

Ah  !  wring  that  soul,  that  scarce  hath  learned  to  feel, 

With  inward  throes — no  outward  arts  can  heal ! 

And  yet,  what  gladness  beams  along  thy  brow— 

What  kindlings  of  delight  illume  it  now  ! 

Would,  would  with  fond  belief  that  I  might  dwell, 

On  the  sweet  prophet-tales  it  seems  to  tell. 

Alas  !  too  much  of  human  life  I  know, 

Too  much  of  all  the  mysteries  of  its  woe — 

E'en  childhood's  laughter-loving  joys  too  view, 

As  real,  and  dare  to  deem  them  lasting  too ! 

No,  no — the  change,  the  storm,  the  blight  must  come, 

Guests  of  the  soul,  and  guides  to  the  opening  tomb. 

Those  lightning-laughters,  beauty-breathing  smiles, 

The  young  enchantments  of  thy  artless  wiles-— 


LINES  ON  A  LOVELY  CHILD. 


221 


Thy  angel-mien,  that  but  of  hope  doth  speak, 

The  rose  of  beauty  opening  on  thy  cheek, — 

All  shall  become  the  sports,  all,  all  the  spoil 

Of  ambushed  foes  that  none  may  'scape  nor  foil ! 

Fear,  Doubt,  Pain,  Disappointment,  Sickness,  Care; 

These  things  know  not  to  pity  nor  to  spare — 

And  yet  we  weep,  how  bitterly  we  weep 

O'er  those,  who  in  life's  dayspring  fall  asleep  ; 

The  early  called — the  unutterably  blest — 

The  spared — the  chosen — the  consigned  to  rest ; 

How  painfully  we  weep  o'er  each  sweet  flower, 

Culled  in  the  pride  of  its  unfolding  hour — 

Ere  changeful  gusts,  ere  harsh  and  blighting  airs 

Of  life  assailed  it — life,  whose  cankering  cares 

Too  oft  attack  the  loveliest  and  the  best, 

And  plant  the  venom  in  the  tenderest  breast ; 


222 


LINES  ON  A  LOVELY  CHILD. 


But  thou,  sweet  child  !  I  will  hope  better  things 
For  thee — and  e'en  if  the  veiled  Future  brings 
Trials  and  sorrows  on  its  gliding  wings. 
Let  Faith  be  still  the  gracious  covering  cloud, 
Thy  shrinking  form  to  o'ermantle  and  enshroud ; 
Then,  then  shall  influences  benign  prevail — 
Smoothed  be  thy  passage  through  this  shadowy  vale, 
Sanctified  be  thy  sorrows  and  thy  fears, 
Glorified  all  thy  trials  and  thy  tears  ! 
Thine  shall  be  consolations  pure  and  high, 
Dropped  like  the  sacred  manna  from  the  sky — 
Thine  shall  be  hopes  with  precious  mysteries  fraught, 
And  thine  the  unearthly  sovereignties  of  thought. 


THE   SULTANA'S   LAMENTATION. 


WHERE  falling  orange-blossoms  load  the  ground ; 
Where  jasmines  wreathe  their  silvery  crests  around 
The  lightly-clustered  pillars,  smooth  and  white, 
That  gleaming,  prop  a  fairy-fabric  slight — 
(A  bowered  kiosk;  such  as  a  Sorceress-Queen, 
Who  midst  the  old  Genii-gardens  oft  had  been, 
Might  covet,  placed  in  such  enchanted  scene  !) 
Where  fountains,  fed  with  scented  waters,  play; 
And  trellised  roses,  shut  out  half  the  day, 
And  make  a  crimson  twilight  of  the  rest — 

Even  of  the  glowing  sunshine  of  the  East ! 

i 

On  golden  cushions  (wrought  with  broideries  rare, 

And  stained  with  thousand  rainbow-colours  fair) 


224  THE  SULTANA'S  LAMENTATION. 

The  young  Sultana  mournfully  reclines. 

Nor  heeds  the  scene,  tliat  round  her  smiles  and  shines, 

Some  dear  delusion,  surely  doth  enchain 

Her  thoughts — some  vision  flits  across  her  brain  ! 

Of  aery  images,  some  dreamy  train 

Wins  her  to  disregard  all  things  beside ; 

She,  the  great  Sultan's  crowned  and  honoured  Bride  ! 

She  sweeps  her  pale  hand  o'er  her  jewelled  lute ; 

Why  are  the  unthrobbing   chords  still  hushed  and 

mute, 

As  loth  to  awaken  in  the  stranger's  land  ? 
Alas  !  so  tremulously  falls  that  hand, 
The  slumbering  strings  scarce  murmur,  in  reply, 
Tones  like  the  echo  of  her  own  faint  sigh ! 
Till  wildly  bending  o'er  those  rebel  chords, 
Her  bosomed  grief  found  way,  in  rushing  words. 


THE  SULTANA'S  LAMENTATION.  225 

My  lute — my  own  loved  lute  !  dost  thou  my  soul's 
despondence  share  ? 

Hast  thou,  indeed,  no  gladdening  sounds  for  this 
unkindly  air? 

Oh  !  breathe  one  last  and  passionate  strain,  of 
blessings  and  farewells  ; 

While  in  responses  faint,  but  deep,  my  heart  ac- 
cordant swells ! 

And  a  thousand   thousand   dreams   and  thoughts,    at 

thine  every  tone  shall  rise, 
Of  mine  own  dear  country's  flowery  plains,    and  its 

blue,  rejoicing  skies: 
Oh  !  may  Happiness  for  ever  dwell,  with  its  tenderest 

transports,  there! 
Though,  alas  for  me  !  that  happiness  I  may  not  see 

nor  share  ! 


226  THE  SULTANA'S  LAMENTATION. 

Let   me   sing   to   thee,   my  own  loved   lute,    of  the 

bright  and  joyous  Past ; 
Of  those  hopes,  like  birds  of  Paradise,  whose  flight 

was  all  too  fast ; 
Of  my  childhood's  old,  familiar  haunts ;  of  all  vanished 

things,  and  dear ; 
And  of  all   my   wild   enjoyments   there,  and  all   my 

sorrows  here! 

Let  me  sing  to  thee !  but  changed  and  sad,  my  lute, 

thy  tones  seem  now ; 
Burdened  with  dreamy  mournfulness ;  and  dull,  and 

faint,  and  slow. 
Hath  thy  soul  of  Music  died  away,  'neath  a  weight  of 

breathless  gloom ; 
As  the  music  of  my   soul  hath  died,    far   from  my 

happy  home? 


THE  SULTANA'S  LAMENTATION.  '227 

And   yet    these   broken,    murmuring  sounds, — these 

whisperings,  faint  and  low, 
Better    beseem    the    outpourings   of   my   wild   and 

wayward  woe ; 
And  yet  these  fitful-moaning  strains,  these  lingering 

melodies, 
Seem  more  the  echoes  of  my  thoughts,  the  language 

of  my  sighs. 

And  in  the  shadow  of  the  Past,  let  me  fondly  sit,  and 
dream, 

Till  1  hear  the  very  warble  sweet,  of  my  own  blue, 
wandering  stream ; 

The  low  shiver  of  my  casement-leaves,  and  the  tink- 
ling of  the  bells, 

That  I  hung  around  your  graceful  necks,  my  beautiful 
gazelles  ! 


THE  SULTANA'S  LAMENTATION. 

All !  how  could  I  keep  ye  prisoners,  then — ye  gentle, 

gladsome  things; 
Whose  joy  was  still  to  shoot  along,  as  on  the  wind's 

swift  wings  ! 
But  I  little  knew,  then,  that  which  now  I  too  well  and 

wildly  know — 
The   dreariment  of  a  trammelled  life — the   captive's 

feverish  woe  ! 

Now,  I  could  not  even  a  wandering  bird,  to  soothe  my 
griefs,  detain ; 

Nor  any  breathing  thing  of  life,  unpityingly  en- 
chain : 

Too  much  I  've  learned  in  thee — oh,  my  Palace- 
prison — my  proud  Tomb — 

The  misery,  the  monotony,  the  horrors  of  such 
doom  ! 


THE  SULTANA'S  LAMENTATION.  229 

Hark !  what  sounds  of  silvery  laughter  come,  light- 
floating  on  the  breeze, 

From  where  my  Odalisque-companions  stray,  'midst 
the  flowering  orange-trees  ! 

Ah  !  how  few,  like  me,  thus  bitterly,  thus  languish- 
ingly  mourn, 

For  that  severed  Land  of  Love  to  which  they  never 
can  return ! 

No !  they  lightly  raise  the  choral  song,  and  weave  the 

festal  dance, 
With   the   summer's   rose  upon  their  cheek,  and  its 

day-spring  in  their  glance  ; 
And  they  bend,  in  beauty  and  in  joy,  o'er  the  labours 

of  the  loom, 
As  though  't  were  nought  to  pine  and  wail  for  the 

parted  world  of  Home  ! 


230  THE  SULTANA'S  LAMENTATION. 

And  they  tell  the  thousand  Genii-tales,  of  Magic 
and  of  Love ; 

And  stories  frame,  of  the  olden  time,  in  the  many- 
whispering  grove ; 

And  wreathe  the  jewelled  coronet  around  their  queen- 
like  foreheads  fair ; 

And  laugh  and  play,  as  't  were  a  jest  to  droop 
for  Home's  blest  air  ! 

And  yet   some   have   come   from   far-off  lands,   and 

sweet,  sweet  friends,  and  dear  ; 
How  is   it,    that   so   soon    have  dried   the   fountains 

of  Love's  tear? 
Would  they  could  teach  me  how  to   smile,  to  sing, 

and  to  forget ! 
Yet,  heart  of  mine  !  wouldst  cancel  thus  Affection's 

hallowed  debt  ? 


THE  SULTANA'S  LAMENTATION.  231 

Alas!  until   the   grave   is   shut,   o'er   the  passion  of 

my  grief, 

I  feel — I  know  't  is  vain  to  hope  for  solace  or  relief: 
A  load  is  ever  on  my  soul,  and  a  mist  before  my  sight ; 
I  am  a   weeper  now,   by  day,  and  a  watcher   still, 

by  night  ! 

And   ev'n    when    Slumber's   clouds   of  dewy   gloom 

have  gathered  round  my  head, 
Swift-rushing  visions   of  the   Past,  around  me  float 

and  spread  ; 
And    in   my   thoughtful-dreaming   ear,    a   voice   for 

ever  swells, 
Breathing  caressing  tones  of  Love,  and  everlasting, 

wild  Farewells ! 

Farewells ! — and  Echo  that  soft  cadence  caught, 
Doubling  the  dying  sweetness  which  it  brought ! 


A  NIGHT  MEDITATION. 


NIGHT  !  the  old,  solemn,  consecrated  Night 
Is  round  me  now,  in  all  her  conquering  might 
And  sweepy  pride  of  sway ;  all  the  glad  dyes 
Of  day,  have  melted  from  the  mantled  skies — 
And  the  flower-scented,  soft,  caressing  breeze 
Hath  fallen  asleep  amidst  the  cradling  trees — 
And  all  this  work-day  world's  hack  sounds  are  o'er, 
And  all  its  waves  lie  smoothed  upon  the  shore : 
What  touching  holiness  is  in  this  hour ! 
In  its  adoring  stillness,  what  deep  power — 


A  NIGHT  MEDITATION.  233 

• 

And  in  its  thrilling  silence  !     It  is  now, 

That  most  we  meditation's  reign  avow — 

And  own  a  bosomed  Paradise  within  • 

Unwatched  by  dread-armed  powers — and  yet  by  sin 

Undesecrated ;  for  we  surely  wear 

A  robe  of  purity  while  lingering  there  : 

My  soul  confesses  this  imposing  thrall, 

While  like  a  sea  of  frozen  billows  all — 

Seems  life,  frail  life  to  lie,  with  its  brief  ties, 

Its  passions,  sorrows,  powers,  and  energies ; 

My  soul  consents  unto  this  charmed  sway, 

That  wins  the  trouble  from  its  dreams  away, 

And  in  adoring  quietude  remains 

A  captive,  fettered  by  most  glorious  chains — 

Chains,  that  so  tenderly  are  round  it  twined, 

That  it  were  grief  to  unlink  them,  and  unwind. 


234  A  NIGHT  MEDITATION. 

Oh,  Night !  oh,  sphery  season  of  the  soul — 
When  deeper  consciousness  pervades  its  whole 
Of  deep  existence — when  more  liberal  scope 
Seems  granted  to  the  glad  flight  of  its  hope ; 
When  it  casts  down  awhile  its  slough  of  cares, 
To  breathe  more  vigorous,  more  inspiring  airs : 
Night !    thou   bring'st  star-tiared  thoughts,    bring'st 

white-robed  dreams 

Unto  our  spirits  ! — with  their  angel  gleams 
They  clear  off  the  earthly  mists  thick  gathered  there, 
And  make  them  wise,  and  pure,  and  calm,  and  fair : 
Yea !    and  e'en  now  through  my  lulled  mind  doth 


Like  shapes  that  overthwart  some  wizard's  glass- 
A  mute  procession  of  mysterious  things, 
Moving  serene  upon  their  viewless  wings  ; 


A  NIGHT  MEDITATION.  235 

High  phantasies,  bright  visions,  kindling  hopes, 
Silent  as  clouds  that  down  the  western  slopes 
Glide  calm ; — o'er  the  aery  platforms  of  my  thought 
Pass  dreamily,  as  some  dim  goal  they  sought, — 
To  life-like  hues  of  tenderest  beauty  wrought ; 
How  wonderful !  how  beautiful  is  all ! — 
My    soul,    well    may'st    thou    bless    so    bright    it 

thrall. 

Oh  skies  !  inscribed  with  argent  charactery  ; 
Oh  !  holiest  meanings  in  their  depths  that  lie ; 
Oh !  wordless  eloquence  of  all  around ; 
Oh  !  most  consummate  harmony  without  sound ; 
Oh  victory !  without  wrath,  or  wrong,  or  strife — 
Deep  universe  of  feeling,  and  of  life  ; 
Oh  !  mystery  of  all  mysteries — widely  spread 
About  us,  while  these  full,  strong  hours  are  sped ! 


236 


A  NIGHT  MEDITATION. 


Mystery  ? — not  so  !  we  know  what  we  survey. 

E'en  in  this  dungeon -tenement  of  clay, 

We  know  how  to  translate  this  wondrous  whole, 

And  lay  its  thrice-blessed  meanings  to  our  soul. 

Yea !  all  we  trembling,  yet  rejoicing,  view, 

From   yon   dread   midnight-heaven's   deep   shadowy 

blue; 
(With  stars  of  trembling  light  pierced   through  and 

through) 

To  the  dim  earth,  with  its  wide  stretching  plains, 
Where    now    such     exquisite     stillness     brooding 

reigns — 

All  lights,  all  shades,  all  substances,  all  forms, 
All  hues,  all  aspects  from  the  heaven  that  storms 
The  sense  with  splendour  of  sublimities ; 
To  that  sweet  gloom,  that  softly  on  it  lies — 


A  NIGHT  MEDITATION. 


237 


E'en  as  a  weight  of  rest :  yea  !  earth  and  sky, 
Light,    darkness,    form, — the    wide,    the   deep,    the 

high— 

The  near,  the  distant,  the  minute,  the  vast ; 
The  gale's  low  whisper  or  the  storm's  loud  blast — 
All,  all  around,  beneath,  beyond,  above, 
Can  we  translate  into  that  one  word,  Love ! 


LINES    ON    AN    ENGRAVING, 

REPRESENTING 

GIPSY    CHILDREN    IN    A    STORM, 


MEEK,  gentle  things  !  though  joyous,  meek  ; 

With  radiant  eye  and  downy  cheek — 

(Cheek  without  a  trace  of  tears, 

In  the  beauty  of  their  blooming  years ; 

In  the  sweet  season  of  the  rose, 

When  things  unknown,  are  cares  and  woes ; 

In  the  bright  days  of  the  sunny  glance, 

When  Life  is  but  a  dazzling  trance;)  — 

How  soft  your  pictured  semblance  seems 

To  win  us  to  a  World  of  Dreams  ! 

Lo  !  each  frail  and  childish  form, 

Cowering  down  before  the  storm, 


GIPSY  CHILDREN  IN  A  STORM.  239 

Whose  dark  grandeurs  oversweep 
Earth  and  air,  and  sky,  and  deep  ; 
The  hamlet's  roofs,  the  city's  towers, 
Bastioned  walls,  and  trellised  bowers ; 
The  peasant's  hut,  the  chieftain's  hall ; 
Ever  the  same,  to  each  and  all  : 
All  alike  your  wrath  must  share, 
Storm,  that  know'st  not  how  to  spare  ! 


Lo  !  each  soft  and  childish  face, 
Winning  yet  more  touching  grace 
From  the  contrast,  deep  and  dread, 
Of  the  scene  around  them  spread. 
The  Spirits  of  the  Storm  might  seem 
To  wail,  in  some  wild  tempest-dream, 


240  GIPSY  CHILDREN 

But  ye,  bright  Innocents  !  that  there 
Await  returning  sunshine  fair  ; 
Surely  no  sounds  of  dread  and  wrath 
Overwhelm  ye,  from  the  thunder's  path  ? 
Surely  ye  do  not,  shuddering,  hear 
Dark  messages  of  gloom  and  fear  ? 
Though  a  thousand  mighty  harmonies 
Go,  sweeping  through  the  tossing  trees  ; 
Though  rushing  wind  and  clashing  cloud 
Make  fierce,  victorious  music  loud ; 
Though  all  the  echoes  of  the  wood 
Make  answer,  with  harsh  voices  rude  ; 
All  the  echoes  of  the  wood  and  glen 
Join  in  the  sounding  chorus  then. 
If  raging  lions  turned  away, 
Awed  by  bright  Purity's  calm  sway, 


IN  A  STORM.  241 

Of  old ;  well  may  the  storms  withdraw 
From  you  their  terrors ;  and  the  awe 
Wherewith,  perchance,  the  human  breast 
Ever  must  meet  the  wild  unrest 
Of  Nature,  so  be  softened  down 
For  you,  that  scarce  your  meek  hearts  own, 
E'en  in  this  bleak  and  troublous  hour, 
Aught  of  dim  Fear's  prevailing  power. 
Yet,  terrible  and  strong  they  are — 
Those  sounds  of  the  elemental  war  ! 


Chariot- wheels  of  charging  host ; 
Wild  waves  dashed  on  rock-bound  coast ; 
Multitudinous  din  of  voices, 
When  some  City's  soul  rejoices  ; 
R 


242  GIPSY  CHILDREN 

Distant  roar  of  lions,  deep, 
In  woods,  where  midnight-shadows  sleep ; 
Roll  of  doubling  drums,  or  peal 
Of  clarions,  or  fierce  clash  of  steel : 
These  things  scarce  may  likened  be, 
Regal  Tempests,  unto  ye  ! 
When,  with  clamour  of  stern  noise, 
Ye  revel  in  your  whirlwind  joys. 

How  lovely  is  a  little  child  ! 

How  lovely  these  wood-children  wild  ! 

Around  them  seems  to  breathe  and  move 

The  very  loveliness  of  Love. 

Things  cast  in  an  angelic  mould  ! 

Lambs  of  an  everlasting  fold  ! 


IN  A  STORM.  243 

Gems  of  Humanity's  deep  mine  ! 
Stars  of  the  Heaven  of  Heavens  divine  ! 
Flowers  of  a  bright  Land,  far  away, 
Where  Summer  holds  untroubled  sway  ! 
The  severed  Eden's  passage-birds — 
Those  younglings  of  Life's  crowded  herds  ! 
Oh !  know  ye,  know  ye  all  your  worth, 
Ye  living  treasures  of  the  earth  ? 
Dear  little  ones  !  Oh  !  know  ye  all 
That  doth  exalt  you,  and  enthral  ? 
The  duties  on  your  state  imposed, 
The  glories  to  your  ken  disclosed  ? 
Have  ever  sacred  truths  informed, 
Have  ever  solemn  precepts  warmed  ? 
Or  heart  and  voice  been  taught  to  raise 
The  breath  of  prayer,  the  strain  of  praise  ? 

R2 


244 


GIPSY  CHILDREN 

Poor  waifs  and  foundlings  of  Life's  wild  ! 
Yet  all  unstained  and  undefiled, — 
I  fear  such  blessedness  is  not 
Reserved  unto  your  wayward  lot ; 
I  fear  such  priceless  store  of  bliss 
It  hath  been  yours,  to  lack  and  miss. 
Yet,  citizens  of  the  open  air, 
Many  high  lessons  wait  you  there. 
Oh  !  might  some  deeply  gifted  seer 
Survey  you,  Nature's  nurselings  here ; 
And,  in  his  Victory's  hour,  unfold 
Your  history,  ever  new  and  old  ; 
(For  still  Man's  wondrous  story  runs 
The  same,  beneath  revolving  suns ; 
Yet,  still  each  separate  tale  contains 
Mysteriously  varying  veins). 


IN  A  STORM.  245 

How  must  he  thread  perplexing  ways, 
And  fall  on  strange  and  startling  days — 
How  must  he  sound  the  mighty  tide 
Of  human  nature,  deep  and  wide ; 
And  we — although  no  seers,  alas  ! 
Perchance  too  well  can  guess  and  glass 
Your  future  and  your  fate  by  ours ; 
Ruled  by  like  passions  and  like  powers. 


The  history  of  humanity, 

Must  be  exemplified  in  ye  ; 

For  all  its  seeds  and  all  its  springs 

Lie  deep  in  you — young  radiant  things  ! 

And  stems  shall  shoot,  and  streams  shall  flow, 

Of  Hope,  Fear,  Joy,  Remorse,  and  Woe ; 


246  GIPSY  CHILDREN 

Through  Fancy's  orbits  wild  and  strange, 
Her  labyrinths  of  ceaseless  change  ; 
Through  all  she  hath  of  dark  and  bright, 
Must  we  press  on,  if  we  aright 
Would  read  this  page  of  beauty,  spread 
Before  us, — and  who  would  not  read  ? 


In  elder  times  such  woods  as  these, 
Thrilled  by  the  many-scented  breeze — 
Were  haunted  by  unearthly  forms, 
Alike  in  sunshine  and  in  storms — 
The  leafy  solitudes  were  all 
Laid  soft  beneath  a  bright  spell's  thrall ; 
Naiad  and  Wood-nymph,  Dryad,  Faun, 
Gladdened  each  golden  eve  and  dawn ; 


IN  A  STORM.  247 

But  never  yet  on  poet-dreams, 
Beneath  the  leaves — beside  the  streams, 
Hath  lovelier,  tenderer  vision  shone, 
Than  this,  this  most  transcendant  one : 
Even  these  simple  children  meek. 
With  cloudless  eye,  and  blooming  cheek —  . 
May  we  not  think,  while  thus  we  gaze 
On  them  in  this  deep  verdurous  maze — 
That  guardian-angels  round  them  stand, 
Shielding  and  sheltering  on  each  hand  ? 
Yet  guardian-angel  need  they  none, 
Save  their  own  purity  alone — 
And  I  have  often  felt,  and  feel 
This  gentle  fancy  o'er  me  steal — 
That  little  children  thus  appear, 
Themselves  like  guardian  angels  near ; 


248  GIPSY  CHILDREN 

Their  innocence  a  spell,  to  arm 
'Gainst  every  ill,  'gainst  every  harm. 

Bright  little  band  !    farewell  to  ye, 
In  your  verdant  temple  sanctuary, 
Beneath  the  o'erarched,  o'er  shadowing  tree 
Soon  may  this  storm  be  cleared  away — 
And  treble  splendours  gild  the  day, 
And  midst  life's  wilderness  of  storms, 
Arid  dread  array  of  threatening  forms ; 
When  gloom  and  wrath  around  ye  spread, 
May  still  a  shade  hang  overhead — 
A  shelter  rise  on  either  hand, 
To  guard  you,  shield  you,  infant  band ! 
Oh  !  may  you  never  be  without 
A  refuge  from  its  tempest-rout — 


IN  A  STORM.  249 

A  refuge  and  a  hallowed  ark. 

From  pelting  rains  and  shadowings  dark ; 

From  clashing  clouds  and  howling  winds— 

Which,  as  the  web  of  life  unwinds, 

Too  oft  shall  quench  the  quivering  ray 

Of  hope,  that  lights  your  onward  way — 

One  shelter,  and  one  shield  be  still 

Yours,  through  each  threatening  harm  and  ill — 

That  heavenly  shelter  from  above, 

The  safeguard  of  a  Father's  love  ! 


THE   STORY  OF   SADHU   SING. 


[The  subject  is  taken  from  Sir  Walter  Scott's  Tale  of  "  The 
Surgeon's  Daughter."] 


WHO  sits  on  the  earth,  all  unfriended  and  lone, 
And  yet   breathing   no   plaint,  and  yet  making   no 

moan? 

Who  dwells  there  in  silence,  and  statue-like  calm, 
While  the  Indian  heavens  blaze,  and  the  air  breathes 

of  balm  ? 

Behold  ye  the  Man — the  lost  Man  of  Despair  ! 
On  a  huge  tiger's  hide,  crouching  motionless  there ; 
Grim,  silent,  and  hopeless — lone,  savage,  and  wild, 
Behold  him  by  dust  and  by  ashes  defiled ! 


THE  STORY  OF  SADHU  SING.  251 

His  forehead  is  wrinkled,  his  eye  it  is  dim, 

And  his  loose,  tattered  vestments  scarce  cling  unto  him ; 

Behold  ye — behold  the  lost  Man  of  Despair, 

On  the  feast  of  his  agony,  revelling  there  ! 

Scattered  round,  stand  a  few  overshadowing  trees ; 
But 't  is  little  he  recks  of  the  sun  or  the  breeze ; 
The  very  wild  beasts  shrink  back,  awed,  to  their  lair, 
When  they  pass  near  the  haunt  of  the  Man  of  Despair ! 

There  he  crouches  and  cowers  in  the  hot,  hot  dust, 
And  his  sabre's  blade  is  consumed  with  the  rust : 
'T  is  a  tiger's  bleach'd  skull  that  lies  mouldering  near; 
Fit  trophy  it  is  for  that  wild  place  of  fear  ! 

There  he  crouches  and  cowers,  on  the  desolate  ground, 
And  no  wandering,  no  questioning  glance  casts  around  : 
'T  is  not  life—  't  is  not  death,  in  his  fix'd  fetter'd  eye; 
But  Despair's  hopeless,  torpid  monotony  ! 


252 


THE  STORY  OF 


Though  the  earth  round  him  echo — the  branches  be 

stirred, 

He  upraiseth  not  eye,  and  he  uttereth  not  word — 
No  quickening  of  pulse,  and  no  quivering  of  limb, 
Proclaim  that  life  still  hath  a  hold  on  him  ! 

He  hath  lost  his  beloved  one — his  first  love  and  last, 
And  each  dark  day  he  lives  through  the  whole  buried 

past; 

In  the  present,  the  future,  his  heart  hath  no  share — 
Oh !     when    will    Death    bless    thee,    lost  Man   of 

Despair? 

His  eyes  shrunk  and  shrouded  in  terrible  gloom, 

Are  rivetted  still  on  a  low  humble  tomb ; 

Doth    he    wait    for    its   once-worshipped   tenant   to 

arise, 
And  pass  with  himself  to  the  far  Paradise  ? 


SADHU  SING.  253 

Beside,  are  a  lamp,  and  a  few  scattered  flowers, 

By   gentle  hands   brought   form   the   spice-dropping 

bowers ; 

And  rice,  and  a  full  water-vessel  are  there, 
To  cherish  the  life  in  the  Man  of  Despair ! 

Would'st   thou  hear  how  'midst  gladness   and   loud 

festal  glee, 

He  espoused  the  child  of  a  dark  Sipahee  ? 
And  joyously  brought  home  his  long-cherished  bride, 
Who   sate    veiled   on   a   gay-harnessed  horse  by  his 

side! 

Be  ye  sure  there  was  joy — be  ye  sure  there  was  song, 
While   the   bridegroom   and   beautiful   bride   passed 

along ; 

And  bursts  of  delight  rising  frequent  and  free, 
Although  they — they  were  speechless  with  ecstasy  ! 


THE  STORY  OF 

There  were  music-strains  breathing  of  hope  and  of 

pride — 

While  blushes  on  blushes  adorned  the  dark  bride ; 
WThile  her  eyes   shone   like    India's   deep    exquisite 

night — 
Where  the  sun  still  seems  burning,  though  no  longer 

bright ! 

Above  them  the  blue  sultry  heavens  were  outspread, 
Until  langour  and  weariness  weighed  down  each  head ; 
But  a  water-spring's  soft  silvery  murmurs  rose  clear, 
Like  the  whispers  of  hope  to  the  faint-dreaming  ear. 

Sadhu  Sing  hastened  on  to  that  bright-glancing  spring, 
The  first  pure  freshening  draught   for  his  Mora  to 

bring — 

Joy — joy  riots  wild  in  his  full  bounding  heart, 
r — ioy  ! — yet  't  was  pain  for  that 


SADHU  SING.  255 

Quick,    quick  the  draught's   drawn  from   the   clear 

-* 

diamond  wave. 

Her  soft  lip  to  cool — and  her  sweet  brow  to  lave ; 
And,  turning  aside  from  the  smooth  glistening  spring, 
Bounds  back  the  young  bridegroom — the  blest  Sadhu 

Sing! 

Joy,  joy!  hark!  what  sound,  ah!  what  sound  strikes 

his  ear  ? 

Where  is  Mora,  his  bride  ?  she  awaited  him  here ; 
Now  naught   meets   his  eye   but   her  gay-harnessed 

horse, 
Rushing  riderless  past,  in  a  terrified  course. 

On  the  one  side,  that  riderless  horse  scours  along, 
As  by  terror  impelled — swift,  swift,  fierce  and  strong ! 

Q 

On  the  other — oh,  what  on  the  other  doth  pass  ? 
What  ripple  is  raised  on  the  long  reeds  and  grass  ? 


256  THE  STORY  OF 

Hark,  what  roar  of  dread  triumph,  is  that  which  they 

hear  ? 

What  death-shriek  of  anguish,  of  phrenzy,  of  fear  ? 
What  cry  of  distraction  goes  thrillingly  by  ? 
'Tis  her  voice  !  't  is  herself!  must,  must  she  then  die? 

Sadhu  Sing  hath  rushed  on  with  his  sabre  upraised, 
But  his   faultering    friends    stagger,    confused    and 

amazed ; 

Till  aroused  by  a  short  roar  of  savage  distress, 
Through  the  entangled  thick  jungle  they  hurryingly 

press ! 

What  a  sight  of  affliction  then  bursts  on  their  eyes ; 
What   a  dread   scene   of  misery   before    them   doth 

rise; 

What  a  pageant  of  horrors  unthought-of,  appears  ; 
Too  darkly  confirming  their  worst,  wildest  fears ! 


SADHU  SING. 

The  spouse  of  the  morning,  in  agonized  trance, 
Glares    round   with   a    maniac's    fierce    meaningless 

glance : 

In  his  arms — in  his  arms — lies  his  ill-fated  Bride, 
Dead — dead ! — and  no  farewell  was  breathed  ere  she 

died ! 

A  tiger  lies  wounded  and  motionless  there, 
FelPd  down  by  the  dread  strength  of  human  despair, 
The  death-darkened  eyeballs  look  threateningly  still; 
But  his  life-blood  streams  round,  in  a  deep  crimson 
rill! 

The   Bride-bereaved  Bridegroom  turned  coldly  from 

all; 

From  his  dull,  stony  eyelid  no  softening  drops  fall : 
Ah  !  his  grief  is  a  grief,  from  condolence  apart ; 
Torrid,  tearless,  and  barren  's  that  desert — his  heart ! 


258 


THE  STORY  OF 


He  dug  his  Bride's  grave,  he  put  up  his  Bride's  stone, 
And  he  sate  himself  down — there  to  live,  mute  and  lone; 
And  he  covered  her  corse  with  the  flowers  that  grew  by ; 
And  he  sate  himself  down, — there  to  live,  and  to  die  ! 

Yea !  he  laid  her  in  earth,  and  he  lifted  her  tomb  ; 
And  never  stirred  more,  from  that  dwelling  of  gloom ; 
And  never  even  moved  he,  his  fixed,  gaze  away 
From  the  stone  which  protected  that  idolized  clay ! 

Never  more  did  a  smile  cross  his  dusk,  haggard  cheek; 
Never  more  did  a  sound  from  his  pallid  lip  break; 
Never  murmur,  nor  movement,  revealed  he  had  life  ; 
Never  symbol,  nor  sign,  shew'd  his  Spirit's  dark  strife ! 

No  low-faltered  accent,  no  half-smothered  sigh, 
No  convulsion  of  limb,  no  expression  of  eye, 
Ere  betrayed  to  the  stranger,  the  deep,  rankling  care 
That  dwelt  in  the  breast  of  the  Man  of  Despair  ! 


SADHU  SING.  "259 

Or  only  when,  chance,  from  the  spice-shedding  bowers, 
They  brought  him  fresh  wreaths  of  the  summer's  rich 

flowers, 

To  spread  o'er  that  cherished,  that  Love-hallowed  spot, 
Where  his  Mora  reposed — ah  !  where  he  reposed  not ! 

Fare  thee  well,  thou  young  Bride  !    for   no  more — 

Oh !  no  more, 

At  the  lamp-lighted  festival — bright,  as  of  yore — 
Shalt  thou  shine,  in  thy  charms,  and  thy  gladness,  and 

smile, — 
All  eyes  to  enchant,  and  all  hearts  to'  beguile  ! 

No  more  shall  the  flowery-wreathed  coronal  glow 
Round  that  beautiful  head,  round  that  innocent  brow ; 
Nor  the  gorgeous  and  shell-embossed  carkanet  shine, 
Like   a  collar  of  gems,    round  that  proud  throat  of 
thine : 


260  THE  STORY  OF  SADHU  SING. 

Nor  the  bright  golden-coloured  champaka-flowers. 
Light   thy   dark  glossy  hair  with  their  starry-bright 

showers ; 

Nor  the  armlets  and  anklets,  of  red  burnished  gold, 
Clasp  thy  delicate  limbs  in  their  glittering  fold  ! 

Fare  thee  well,  thou  young  Bride  ! — thou'st  left  one 

upon  earth, 

E'en  as  deaf  as  thyself  to  its  music  and  mirth ; 
He    who    sits    thus     unconscious,    and    motionless, 

there — 
The  Man  of  the  Desert — the  Man  of  Despair ! 


SONG. 


I  court  gay  scenes  of  pleasure  now ; 
I  chase  the  shadows  from  my  brow; 
I  strive  the  careless  tone  to  catch ; 
The  smile  of  thoughtless  glee  to  snatch  ! 

With  jealous  skill  and  anxious  care, 
I  seek  the  covering  mask  to  wear ; 
And  fain  would  veil,  with  subtle  art, 
Each  rebel-movement  of  my  heart ! 

And  not  alone  when  'mongst  the  crowd, 
Thus  do  I  strive  my  griefs  to  enshroud ; 
But  still  disown  them,  still  elude, 
In  mine  unbroken  solitude  ! 

Not  for  the  crowd  such  mask  I  wear; 
Nor  for  their  vain  opinions  care : 
They  may,  or  they  may  not,  believe 
It  is  myself  I  would  deceive  ! 


SONNET. 


.MORNING  !  bright,  blessed  Morning  !  thou  dost  wear 

A  heart-revivifying-  smile — a  glow. 

That  momently  beguiles  consuming  Woe, 

And  backwards-glancing  Memory,  and  cold  Care  ! 

Thou  comest  like  a  Vision,  deeply  fair ; 

A  Poursuivant  of  thronging  Joys  !     Below, 

Nothing  so  glorious  as  thy  face  can  show : 

The  colours  of  a  Paradise  are  there, 

E'en  on  thy  front,  exultant !     What  shall  match 

Thy  loveliness,  Aurora  ! — true  Heaven-born  ? 

'T  is  well,  thy  likeness  to  the  heart  to  snatch  : 

Peace,  Promise,  Hope,  Expectancy,  adorn 

Thine  aspect ! — thence,  Oh  let  us  strive  to  catch 

Bright,  heaveiiward  promptings — Beatific  Morn  ! 


LINES. 


THOU  tell'st  me,  I  have  rigidly  concealed 

All,  that  for  worlds  I  would  not  have  revealed ; 

That  none  might  scan,  that  none  might  dream,  nor  guess 

My  secret,  silent,  passionate  distress ; 

That  none  might  draw  the  folding  veil  aside, 

Wherewith  my  voiceless  griefs  I  seek  to  hide : — 

Thou  tell'st  me,  that  no  token  and  no  tone 

Hath  ere  my  spirit's  inward  workings,  shown 

That  never  sign  nor  symbol  hath  betrayed 

The  burthen  on  my  heart,  so  deeply  laid : — 

Thou  tell'st  me  this,  and  I  believe  it  well  ; 

And  wherefore,  Gentlest  Friend,  to  thee  will  tell ; 

And  thou,  too,  may'st  undoubtingly  believe — 

For  thee,  at  least,  I  wish  not  to  deceive — 

Concealment  is  but  little  pain  to  me ; 

Since,  to  reveal  's  the  impossibility  ! 


SONNET. 


IT  was  a  quiet  hour ! — the  last,  sweet  song 

Of  birds  had  died  away,  upon  the  air ; 

The  scene,  a  shadowy  hue  began  to  wear ; — 

Then  Memory's  moonlight-beauty  showered  along 

My  Spirit ;  then  brought  she  back  a  gentle  throng 

Of  things  lamented  ;  dreams,  once  bright  and  fair, 

Long  dimmed  and  clouded ;  treasures,  pure  and  rare, 

Long  lost,  long  buried ! — much,  much  that  the  strong 

And  pitiless  hand  of  Time  reft,  in  his  hour 

Of  spoliation,  and  of  stern  decay ; 

Things  that,  ev'n  with  the  perfumes  of  a  flower — 

The  echoes  of  a  song — had  pass'd  away ; 

That  dark  Oblivion  press'd  on,  to  o'erpower ; — 

Then  rose  they,  to  dispute  awhile  her  sway  ! 


THE  KING  OF  TERRORS. 


IT  was  a  low,  a  rustic  grass-grown  tomb, 

A  very  altar  in  the  solitude — 

Bidding  calm  dreams  around  our  stilled  hearts  brood, 

All  unaccompanied  by  haunting  gloom 

Death  !  they  do  surely  much  mistake  their  doom 

Who  call  thee  King  of  Terrors !  What  though  strewed 

Round  thee  be  wrecks  of  empires — though  thy  rude 

And  ruthless  hand,  too  oft  the  lustrous  bloom 

Of  youth  despoileth — yet  great  Death,  thou  *rt  not 

What  they  proclaim  thee — it  is  Life,  e'en  Life, 

That  is  the  King  of  Terrors  !  our  dark  lot — 

Let  them  review  who  doubt !  its  wrongs,  its  strife, 

The  miseries,  the  inflictions,  that  do  blot 

Our  Fate — our  wretched  fate,  of  every  darkness  rife  ! 


SONNET. 


SLEEP  !  come,  with  all  thy  honey-dews,  oh  come  ! 

Weigh  down  with  rest,  these  wearied  lids  at  last, 

And  thy  sweet  clouds  about  my  temples  cast ; 

Breathe  round  me  all  the  luxury  of  thy  gloom, — 

Oh  !  let  me  know  the  quiet  of  the  tomb, 

Without  its  chill — and  bring  me  bright  and  fast, 

Dear  visions,  happy  visions  of  the  Past ! 

Hope — a  night-blowing  flower  for  me  doth  bloom — 

Bring  visions  of  the  Future  too  !  employ 

In  dreams  of  innocent  beatitude 

My  drooping  soul,  and  themes  of  tenderest  joy  ! 

Nor  shall  it  idly  o'er  such  fancies  brood  ; 

They  shall  not  fail  me,  and  they  shall  not  cloy  ; 

But  leave  for  waking  hours,  perchance  a  calmer  mood 


THE   END. 


YB  13604 


M114550 


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