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  • (AKA Charlotte, Emily and Anne Bronte) Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell
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  • Title: Poems
  • Author: (AKA Charlotte, Emily and Anne Bronte) Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell
  • Posting Date: July 23, 2008 [EBook #1019]
  • Release Date: August, 1997
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS ***
  • An Anonymous Volunteer
  • POEMS
  • by Currer, Ellis, And Acton Bell
  • (Charlotte, Emily and Anne Bronte)
  • POEMS BY CURRER BELL
  • PILATE'S WIFE'S DREAM.
  • I've quench'd my lamp, I struck it in that start
  • Which every limb convulsed, I heard it fall--
  • The crash blent with my sleep, I saw depart
  • Its light, even as I woke, on yonder wall;
  • Over against my bed, there shone a gleam
  • Strange, faint, and mingling also with my dream.
  • It sank, and I am wrapt in utter gloom;
  • How far is night advanced, and when will day
  • Retinge the dusk and livid air with bloom,
  • And fill this void with warm, creative ray?
  • Would I could sleep again till, clear and red,
  • Morning shall on the mountain-tops be spread!
  • I'd call my women, but to break their sleep,
  • Because my own is broken, were unjust;
  • They've wrought all day, and well-earn'd slumbers steep
  • Their labours in forgetfulness, I trust;
  • Let me my feverish watch with patience bear,
  • Thankful that none with me its sufferings share.
  • Yet, oh, for light! one ray would tranquillize
  • My nerves, my pulses, more than effort can;
  • I'll draw my curtain and consult the skies:
  • These trembling stars at dead of night look wan,
  • Wild, restless, strange, yet cannot be more drear
  • Than this my couch, shared by a nameless fear.
  • All black--one great cloud, drawn from east to west,
  • Conceals the heavens, but there are lights below;
  • Torches burn in Jerusalem, and cast
  • On yonder stony mount a lurid glow.
  • I see men station'd there, and gleaming spears;
  • A sound, too, from afar, invades my ears.
  • Dull, measured strokes of axe and hammer ring
  • From street to street, not loud, but through the night
  • Distinctly heard--and some strange spectral thing
  • Is now uprear'd--and, fix'd against the light
  • Of the pale lamps, defined upon that sky,
  • It stands up like a column, straight and high.
  • I see it all--I know the dusky sign--
  • A cross on Calvary, which Jews uprear
  • While Romans watch; and when the dawn shall shine
  • Pilate, to judge the victim, will appear--
  • Pass sentence-yield Him up to crucify;
  • And on that cross the spotless Christ must die.
  • Dreams, then, are true--for thus my vision ran;
  • Surely some oracle has been with me,
  • The gods have chosen me to reveal their plan,
  • To warn an unjust judge of destiny:
  • I, slumbering, heard and saw; awake I know,
  • Christ's coming death, and Pilate's life of woe.
  • I do not weep for Pilate--who could prove
  • Regret for him whose cold and crushing sway
  • No prayer can soften, no appeal can move:
  • Who tramples hearts as others trample clay,
  • Yet with a faltering, an uncertain tread,
  • That might stir up reprisal in the dead.
  • Forced to sit by his side and see his deeds;
  • Forced to behold that visage, hour by hour,
  • In whose gaunt lines the abhorrent gazer reads
  • A triple lust of gold, and blood, and power;
  • A soul whom motives fierce, yet abject, urge--
  • Rome's servile slave, and Judah's tyrant scourge.
  • How can I love, or mourn, or pity him?
  • I, who so long my fetter'd hands have wrung;
  • I, who for grief have wept my eyesight dim;
  • Because, while life for me was bright and young,
  • He robb'd my youth--he quench'd my life's fair ray--
  • He crush'd my mind, and did my freedom slay.
  • And at this hour-although I be his wife--
  • He has no more of tenderness from me
  • Than any other wretch of guilty life;
  • Less, for I know his household privacy--
  • I see him as he is--without a screen;
  • And, by the gods, my soul abhors his mien!
  • Has he not sought my presence, dyed in blood--
  • Innocent, righteous blood, shed shamelessly?
  • And have I not his red salute withstood?
  • Ay, when, as erst, he plunged all Galilee
  • In dark bereavement--in affliction sore,
  • Mingling their very offerings with their gore.
  • Then came he--in his eyes a serpent-smile,
  • Upon his lips some false, endearing word,
  • And through the streets of Salem clang'd the while
  • His slaughtering, hacking, sacrilegious sword--
  • And I, to see a man cause men such woe,
  • Trembled with ire--I did not fear to show.
  • And now, the envious Jewish priests have brought
  • Jesus--whom they in mock'ry call their king--
  • To have, by this grim power, their vengeance wrought;
  • By this mean reptile, innocence to sting.
  • Oh! could I but the purposed doom avert,
  • And shield the blameless head from cruel hurt!
  • Accessible is Pilate's heart to fear,
  • Omens will shake his soul, like autumn leaf;
  • Could he this night's appalling vision hear,
  • This just man's bonds were loosed, his life were safe,
  • Unless that bitter priesthood should prevail,
  • And make even terror to their malice quail.
  • Yet if I tell the dream--but let me pause.
  • What dream? Erewhile the characters were clear,
  • Graved on my brain--at once some unknown cause
  • Has dimm'd and razed the thoughts, which now appear,
  • Like a vague remnant of some by-past scene;--
  • Not what will be, but what, long since, has been.
  • I suffer'd many things--I heard foretold
  • A dreadful doom for Pilate,--lingering woes,
  • In far, barbarian climes, where mountains cold
  • Built up a solitude of trackless snows,
  • There he and grisly wolves prowl'd side by side,
  • There he lived famish'd--there, methought, he died;
  • But not of hunger, nor by malady;
  • I saw the snow around him, stain'd with gore;
  • I said I had no tears for such as he,
  • And, lo! my cheek is wet--mine eyes run o'er;
  • I weep for mortal suffering, mortal guilt,
  • I weep the impious deed, the blood self-spilt.
  • More I recall not, yet the vision spread
  • Into a world remote, an age to come--
  • And still the illumined name of Jesus shed
  • A light, a clearness, through the unfolding gloom--
  • And still I saw that sign, which now I see,
  • That cross on yonder brow of Calvary.
  • What is this Hebrew Christ?-to me unknown
  • His lineage--doctrine--mission; yet how clear
  • Is God-like goodness in his actions shown,
  • How straight and stainless is his life's career!
  • The ray of Deity that rests on him,
  • In my eyes makes Olympian glory dim.
  • The world advances; Greek or Roman rite
  • Suffices not the inquiring mind to stay;
  • The searching soul demands a purer light
  • To guide it on its upward, onward way;
  • Ashamed of sculptured gods, Religion turns
  • To where the unseen Jehovah's altar burns.
  • Our faith is rotten, all our rites defiled,
  • Our temples sullied, and, methinks, this man,
  • With his new ordinance, so wise and mild,
  • Is come, even as He says, the chaff to fan
  • And sever from the wheat; but will his faith
  • Survive the terrors of to-morrow's death?
  • * * * * * * *
  • I feel a firmer trust--a higher hope
  • Rise in my soul--it dawns with dawning day;
  • Lo! on the Temple's roof--on Moriah's slope
  • Appears at length that clear and crimson ray
  • Which I so wished for when shut in by night;
  • Oh, opening skies, I hail, I bless pour light!
  • Part, clouds and shadows! Glorious Sun appear!
  • Part, mental gloom! Come insight from on high!
  • Dusk dawn in heaven still strives with daylight clear
  • The longing soul doth still uncertain sigh.
  • Oh! to behold the truth--that sun divine,
  • How doth my bosom pant, my spirit pine!
  • This day, Time travails with a mighty birth;
  • This day, Truth stoops from heaven and visits earth;
  • Ere night descends I shall more surely know
  • What guide to follow, in what path to go;
  • I wait in hope--I wait in solemn fear,
  • The oracle of God--the sole--true God--to hear.
  • MEMENTOS.
  • Arranging long-locked drawers and shelves
  • Of cabinets, shut up for years,
  • What a strange task we've set ourselves!
  • How still the lonely room appears!
  • How strange this mass of ancient treasures,
  • Mementos of past pains and pleasures;
  • These volumes, clasped with costly stone,
  • With print all faded, gilding gone;
  • These fans of leaves from Indian trees--
  • These crimson shells, from Indian seas--
  • These tiny portraits, set in rings--
  • Once, doubtless, deemed such precious things;
  • Keepsakes bestowed by Love on Faith,
  • And worn till the receiver's death,
  • Now stored with cameos, china, shells,
  • In this old closet's dusty cells.
  • I scarcely think, for ten long years,
  • A hand has touched these relics old;
  • And, coating each, slow-formed, appears
  • The growth of green and antique mould.
  • All in this house is mossing over;
  • All is unused, and dim, and damp;
  • Nor light, nor warmth, the rooms discover--
  • Bereft for years of fire and lamp.
  • The sun, sometimes in summer, enters
  • The casements, with reviving ray;
  • But the long rains of many winters
  • Moulder the very walls away.
  • And outside all is ivy, clinging
  • To chimney, lattice, gable grey;
  • Scarcely one little red rose springing
  • Through the green moss can force its way.
  • Unscared, the daw and starling nestle,
  • Where the tall turret rises high,
  • And winds alone come near to rustle
  • The thick leaves where their cradles lie,
  • I sometimes think, when late at even
  • I climb the stair reluctantly,
  • Some shape that should be well in heaven,
  • Or ill elsewhere, will pass by me.
  • I fear to see the very faces,
  • Familiar thirty years ago,
  • Even in the old accustomed places
  • Which look so cold and gloomy now,
  • I've come, to close the window, hither,
  • At twilight, when the sun was down,
  • And Fear my very soul would wither,
  • Lest something should be dimly shown,
  • Too much the buried form resembling,
  • Of her who once was mistress here;
  • Lest doubtful shade, or moonbeam trembling,
  • Might take her aspect, once so dear.
  • Hers was this chamber; in her time
  • It seemed to me a pleasant room,
  • For then no cloud of grief or crime
  • Had cursed it with a settled gloom;
  • I had not seen death's image laid
  • In shroud and sheet, on yonder bed.
  • Before she married, she was blest--
  • Blest in her youth, blest in her worth;
  • Her mind was calm, its sunny rest
  • Shone in her eyes more clear than mirth.
  • And when attired in rich array,
  • Light, lustrous hair about her brow,
  • She yonder sat, a kind of day
  • Lit up what seems so gloomy now.
  • These grim oak walls even then were grim;
  • That old carved chair was then antique;
  • But what around looked dusk and dim
  • Served as a foil to her fresh cheek;
  • Her neck and arms, of hue so fair,
  • Eyes of unclouded, smiling light;
  • Her soft, and curled, and floating hair,
  • Gems and attire, as rainbow bright.
  • Reclined in yonder deep recess,
  • Ofttimes she would, at evening, lie
  • Watching the sun; she seemed to bless
  • With happy glance the glorious sky.
  • She loved such scenes, and as she gazed,
  • Her face evinced her spirit's mood;
  • Beauty or grandeur ever raised
  • In her, a deep-felt gratitude.
  • But of all lovely things, she loved
  • A cloudless moon, on summer night,
  • Full oft have I impatience proved
  • To see how long her still delight
  • Would find a theme in reverie,
  • Out on the lawn, or where the trees
  • Let in the lustre fitfully,
  • As their boughs parted momently,
  • To the soft, languid, summer breeze.
  • Alas! that she should e'er have flung
  • Those pure, though lonely joys away--
  • Deceived by false and guileful tongue,
  • She gave her hand, then suffered wrong;
  • Oppressed, ill-used, she faded young,
  • And died of grief by slow decay.
  • Open that casket-look how bright
  • Those jewels flash upon the sight;
  • The brilliants have not lost a ray
  • Of lustre, since her wedding day.
  • But see--upon that pearly chain--
  • How dim lies Time's discolouring stain!
  • I've seen that by her daughter worn:
  • For, ere she died, a child was born;--
  • A child that ne'er its mother knew,
  • That lone, and almost friendless grew;
  • For, ever, when its step drew nigh,
  • Averted was the father's eye;
  • And then, a life impure and wild
  • Made him a stranger to his child:
  • Absorbed in vice, he little cared
  • On what she did, or how she fared.
  • The love withheld she never sought,
  • She grew uncherished--learnt untaught;
  • To her the inward life of thought
  • Full soon was open laid.
  • I know not if her friendlessness
  • Did sometimes on her spirit press,
  • But plaint she never made.
  • The book-shelves were her darling treasure,
  • She rarely seemed the time to measure
  • While she could read alone.
  • And she too loved the twilight wood
  • And often, in her mother's mood,
  • Away to yonder hill would hie,
  • Like her, to watch the setting sun,
  • Or see the stars born, one by one,
  • Out of the darkening sky.
  • Nor would she leave that hill till night
  • Trembled from pole to pole with light;
  • Even then, upon her homeward way,
  • Long--long her wandering steps delayed
  • To quit the sombre forest shade,
  • Through which her eerie pathway lay.
  • You ask if she had beauty's grace?
  • I know not--but a nobler face
  • My eyes have seldom seen;
  • A keen and fine intelligence,
  • And, better still, the truest sense
  • Were in her speaking mien.
  • But bloom or lustre was there none,
  • Only at moments, fitful shone
  • An ardour in her eye,
  • That kindled on her cheek a flush,
  • Warm as a red sky's passing blush
  • And quick with energy.
  • Her speech, too, was not common speech,
  • No wish to shine, or aim to teach,
  • Was in her words displayed:
  • She still began with quiet sense,
  • But oft the force of eloquence
  • Came to her lips in aid;
  • Language and voice unconscious changed,
  • And thoughts, in other words arranged,
  • Her fervid soul transfused
  • Into the hearts of those who heard,
  • And transient strength and ardour stirred,
  • In minds to strength unused,
  • Yet in gay crowd or festal glare,
  • Grave and retiring was her air;
  • 'Twas seldom, save with me alone,
  • That fire of feeling freely shone;
  • She loved not awe's nor wonder's gaze,
  • Nor even exaggerated praise,
  • Nor even notice, if too keen
  • The curious gazer searched her mien.
  • Nature's own green expanse revealed
  • The world, the pleasures, she could prize;
  • On free hill-side, in sunny field,
  • In quiet spots by woods concealed,
  • Grew wild and fresh her chosen joys,
  • Yet Nature's feelings deeply lay
  • In that endowed and youthful frame;
  • Shrined in her heart and hid from day,
  • They burned unseen with silent flame.
  • In youth's first search for mental light,
  • She lived but to reflect and learn,
  • But soon her mind's maturer might
  • For stronger task did pant and yearn;
  • And stronger task did fate assign,
  • Task that a giant's strength might strain;
  • To suffer long and ne'er repine,
  • Be calm in frenzy, smile at pain.
  • Pale with the secret war of feeling,
  • Sustained with courage, mute, yet high;
  • The wounds at which she bled, revealing
  • Only by altered cheek and eye;
  • She bore in silence--but when passion
  • Surged in her soul with ceaseless foam,
  • The storm at last brought desolation,
  • And drove her exiled from her home.
  • And silent still, she straight assembled
  • The wrecks of strength her soul retained;
  • For though the wasted body trembled,
  • The unconquered mind, to quail, disdained.
  • She crossed the sea--now lone she wanders
  • By Seine's, or Rhine's, or Arno's flow;
  • Fain would I know if distance renders
  • Relief or comfort to her woe.
  • Fain would I know if, henceforth, ever,
  • These eyes shall read in hers again,
  • That light of love which faded never,
  • Though dimmed so long with secret pain.
  • She will return, but cold and altered,
  • Like all whose hopes too soon depart;
  • Like all on whom have beat, unsheltered,
  • The bitter blasts that blight the heart.
  • No more shall I behold her lying
  • Calm on a pillow, smoothed by me;
  • No more that spirit, worn with sighing,
  • Will know the rest of infancy.
  • If still the paths of lore she follow,
  • 'Twill be with tired and goaded will;
  • She'll only toil, the aching hollow,
  • The joyless blank of life to fill.
  • And oh! full oft, quite spent and weary,
  • Her hand will pause, her head decline;
  • That labour seems so hard and dreary,
  • On which no ray of hope may shine.
  • Thus the pale blight of time and sorrow
  • Will shade with grey her soft, dark hair;
  • Then comes the day that knows no morrow,
  • And death succeeds to long despair.
  • So speaks experience, sage and hoary;
  • I see it plainly, know it well,
  • Like one who, having read a story,
  • Each incident therein can tell.
  • Touch not that ring; 'twas his, the sire
  • Of that forsaken child;
  • And nought his relics can inspire
  • Save memories, sin-defiled.
  • I, who sat by his wife's death-bed,
  • I, who his daughter loved,
  • Could almost curse the guilty dead,
  • For woes the guiltless proved.
  • And heaven did curse--they found him laid,
  • When crime for wrath was rife,
  • Cold--with the suicidal blade
  • Clutched in his desperate gripe.
  • 'Twas near that long deserted hut,
  • Which in the wood decays,
  • Death's axe, self-wielded, struck his root,
  • And lopped his desperate days.
  • You know the spot, where three black trees,
  • Lift up their branches fell,
  • And moaning, ceaseless as the seas,
  • Still seem, in every passing breeze,
  • The deed of blood to tell.
  • They named him mad, and laid his bones
  • Where holier ashes lie;
  • Yet doubt not that his spirit groans
  • In hell's eternity.
  • But, lo! night, closing o'er the earth,
  • Infects our thoughts with gloom;
  • Come, let us strive to rally mirth
  • Where glows a clear and tranquil hearth
  • In some more cheerful room.
  • THE WIFE'S WILL.
  • Sit still--a word--a breath may break
  • (As light airs stir a sleeping lake)
  • The glassy calm that soothes my woes--
  • The sweet, the deep, the full repose.
  • O leave me not! for ever be
  • Thus, more than life itself to me!
  • Yes, close beside thee let me kneel--
  • Give me thy hand, that I may feel
  • The friend so true--so tried--so dear,
  • My heart's own chosen--indeed is near;
  • And check me not--this hour divine
  • Belongs to me--is fully mine.
  • 'Tis thy own hearth thou sitt'st beside,
  • After long absence--wandering wide;
  • 'Tis thy own wife reads in thine eyes
  • A promise clear of stormless skies;
  • For faith and true love light the rays
  • Which shine responsive to her gaze.
  • Ay,--well that single tear may fall;
  • Ten thousand might mine eyes recall,
  • Which from their lids ran blinding fast,
  • In hours of grief, yet scarcely past;
  • Well mayst thou speak of love to me,
  • For, oh! most truly--I love thee!
  • Yet smile--for we are happy now.
  • Whence, then, that sadness on thy brow?
  • What sayst thou?" We muse once again,
  • Ere long, be severed by the main!"
  • I knew not this--I deemed no more
  • Thy step would err from Britain's shore.
  • "Duty commands!" 'Tis true--'tis just;
  • Thy slightest word I wholly trust,
  • Nor by request, nor faintest sigh,
  • Would I to turn thy purpose try;
  • But, William, hear my solemn vow--
  • Hear and confirm!--with thee I go.
  • "Distance and suffering," didst thou say?
  • "Danger by night, and toil by day?"
  • Oh, idle words and vain are these;
  • Hear me! I cross with thee the seas.
  • Such risk as thou must meet and dare,
  • I--thy true wife--will duly share.
  • Passive, at home, I will not pine;
  • Thy toils, thy perils shall be mine;
  • Grant this--and be hereafter paid
  • By a warm heart's devoted aid:
  • 'Tis granted--with that yielding kiss,
  • Entered my soul unmingled bliss.
  • Thanks, William, thanks! thy love has joy,
  • Pure, undefiled with base alloy;
  • 'Tis not a passion, false and blind,
  • Inspires, enchains, absorbs my mind;
  • Worthy, I feel, art thou to be
  • Loved with my perfect energy.
  • This evening now shall sweetly flow,
  • Lit by our clear fire's happy glow;
  • And parting's peace-embittering fear,
  • Is warned our hearts to come not near;
  • For fate admits my soul's decree,
  • In bliss or bale--to go with thee!
  • THE WOOD.
  • But two miles more, and then we rest!
  • Well, there is still an hour of day,
  • And long the brightness of the West
  • Will light us on our devious way;
  • Sit then, awhile, here in this wood--
  • So total is the solitude,
  • We safely may delay.
  • These massive roots afford a seat,
  • Which seems for weary travellers made.
  • There rest. The air is soft and sweet
  • In this sequestered forest glade,
  • And there are scents of flowers around,
  • The evening dew draws from the ground;
  • How soothingly they spread!
  • Yes; I was tired, but not at heart;
  • No--that beats full of sweet content,
  • For now I have my natural part
  • Of action with adventure blent;
  • Cast forth on the wide world with thee,
  • And all my once waste energy
  • To weighty purpose bent.
  • Yet--sayst thou, spies around us roam,
  • Our aims are termed conspiracy?
  • Haply, no more our English home
  • An anchorage for us may be?
  • That there is risk our mutual blood
  • May redden in some lonely wood
  • The knife of treachery?
  • Sayst thou, that where we lodge each night,
  • In each lone farm, or lonelier hall
  • Of Norman Peer--ere morning light
  • Suspicion must as duly fall,
  • As day returns--such vigilance
  • Presides and watches over France,
  • Such rigour governs all?
  • I fear not, William; dost thou fear?
  • So that the knife does not divide,
  • It may be ever hovering near:
  • I could not tremble at thy side,
  • And strenuous love--like mine for thee--
  • Is buckler strong 'gainst treachery,
  • And turns its stab aside.
  • I am resolved that thou shalt learn
  • To trust my strength as I trust thine;
  • I am resolved our souls shall burn
  • With equal, steady, mingling shine;
  • Part of the field is conquered now,
  • Our lives in the same channel flow,
  • Along the self-same line;
  • And while no groaning storm is heard,
  • Thou seem'st content it should be so,
  • But soon as comes a warning word
  • Of danger--straight thine anxious brow
  • Bends over me a mournful shade,
  • As doubting if my powers are made
  • To ford the floods of woe.
  • Know, then it is my spirit swells,
  • And drinks, with eager joy, the air
  • Of freedom--where at last it dwells,
  • Chartered, a common task to share
  • With thee, and then it stirs alert,
  • And pants to learn what menaced hurt
  • Demands for thee its care.
  • Remember, I have crossed the deep,
  • And stood with thee on deck, to gaze
  • On waves that rose in threatening heap,
  • While stagnant lay a heavy haze,
  • Dimly confusing sea with sky,
  • And baffling, even, the pilot's eye,
  • Intent to thread the maze--
  • Of rocks, on Bretagne's dangerous coast,
  • And find a way to steer our band
  • To the one point obscure, which lost,
  • Flung us, as victims, on the strand;--
  • All, elsewhere, gleamed the Gallic sword,
  • And not a wherry could be moored
  • Along the guarded land.
  • I feared not then--I fear not now;
  • The interest of each stirring scene
  • Wakes a new sense, a welcome glow,
  • In every nerve and bounding vein;
  • Alike on turbid Channel sea,
  • Or in still wood of Normandy,
  • I feel as born again.
  • The rain descended that wild morn
  • When, anchoring in the cove at last,
  • Our band, all weary and forlorn
  • Ashore, like wave-worn sailors, cast--
  • Sought for a sheltering roof in vain,
  • And scarce could scanty food obtain
  • To break their morning fast.
  • Thou didst thy crust with me divide,
  • Thou didst thy cloak around me fold;
  • And, sitting silent by thy side,
  • I ate the bread in peace untold:
  • Given kindly from thy hand, 'twas sweet
  • As costly fare or princely treat
  • On royal plate of gold.
  • Sharp blew the sleet upon my face,
  • And, rising wild, the gusty wind
  • Drove on those thundering waves apace,
  • Our crew so late had left behind;
  • But, spite of frozen shower and storm,
  • So close to thee, my heart beat warm,
  • And tranquil slept my mind.
  • So now--nor foot-sore nor opprest
  • With walking all this August day,
  • I taste a heaven in this brief rest,
  • This gipsy-halt beside the way.
  • England's wild flowers are fair to view,
  • Like balm is England's summer dew
  • Like gold her sunset ray.
  • But the white violets, growing here,
  • Are sweeter than I yet have seen,
  • And ne'er did dew so pure and clear
  • Distil on forest mosses green,
  • As now, called forth by summer heat,
  • Perfumes our cool and fresh retreat--
  • These fragrant limes between.
  • That sunset! Look beneath the boughs,
  • Over the copse--beyond the hills;
  • How soft, yet deep and warm it glows,
  • And heaven with rich suffusion fills;
  • With hues where still the opal's tint,
  • Its gleam of prisoned fire is blent,
  • Where flame through azure thrills!
  • Depart we now--for fast will fade
  • That solemn splendour of decline,
  • And deep must be the after-shade
  • As stars alone to-night will shine;
  • No moon is destined--pale--to gaze
  • On such a day's vast Phoenix blaze,
  • A day in fires decayed!
  • There--hand-in-hand we tread again
  • The mazes of this varying wood,
  • And soon, amid a cultured plain,
  • Girt in with fertile solitude,
  • We shall our resting-place descry,
  • Marked by one roof-tree, towering high
  • Above a farmstead rude.
  • Refreshed, erelong, with rustic fare,
  • We'll seek a couch of dreamless ease;
  • Courage will guard thy heart from fear,
  • And Love give mine divinest peace:
  • To-morrow brings more dangerous toil,
  • And through its conflict and turmoil
  • We'll pass, as God shall please.
  • [The preceding composition refers, doubtless, to the scenes
  • acted in France during the last year of the Consulate.]
  • FRANCES.
  • She will not sleep, for fear of dreams,
  • But, rising, quits her restless bed,
  • And walks where some beclouded beams
  • Of moonlight through the hall are shed.
  • Obedient to the goad of grief,
  • Her steps, now fast, now lingering slow,
  • In varying motion seek relief
  • From the Eumenides of woe.
  • Wringing her hands, at intervals--
  • But long as mute as phantom dim--
  • She glides along the dusky walls,
  • Under the black oak rafters grim.
  • The close air of the grated tower
  • Stifles a heart that scarce can beat,
  • And, though so late and lone the hour,
  • Forth pass her wandering, faltering feet;
  • And on the pavement spread before
  • The long front of the mansion grey,
  • Her steps imprint the night-frost hoar,
  • Which pale on grass and granite lay.
  • Not long she stayed where misty moon
  • And shimmering stars could on her look,
  • But through the garden archway soon
  • Her strange and gloomy path she took.
  • Some firs, coeval with the tower,
  • Their straight black boughs stretched o'er her head;
  • Unseen, beneath this sable bower,
  • Rustled her dress and rapid tread.
  • There was an alcove in that shade,
  • Screening a rustic seat and stand;
  • Weary she sat her down, and laid
  • Her hot brow on her burning hand.
  • To solitude and to the night,
  • Some words she now, in murmurs, said;
  • And trickling through her fingers white,
  • Some tears of misery she shed.
  • "God help me in my grievous need,
  • God help me in my inward pain;
  • Which cannot ask for pity's meed,
  • Which has no licence to complain,
  • "Which must be borne; yet who can bear,
  • Hours long, days long, a constant weight--
  • The yoke of absolute despair,
  • A suffering wholly desolate?
  • "Who can for ever crush the heart,
  • Restrain its throbbing, curb its life?
  • Dissemble truth with ceaseless art,
  • With outward calm mask inward strife?"
  • She waited--as for some reply;
  • The still and cloudy night gave none;
  • Ere long, with deep-drawn, trembling sigh,
  • Her heavy plaint again begun.
  • "Unloved--I love; unwept--I weep;
  • Grief I restrain--hope I repress:
  • Vain is this anguish--fixed and deep;
  • Vainer, desires and dreams of bliss.
  • "My love awakes no love again,
  • My tears collect, and fall unfelt;
  • My sorrow touches none with pain,
  • My humble hopes to nothing melt.
  • "For me the universe is dumb,
  • Stone-deaf, and blank, and wholly blind;
  • Life I must bound, existence sum
  • In the strait limits of one mind;
  • "That mind my own. Oh! narrow cell;
  • Dark--imageless--a living tomb!
  • There must I sleep, there wake and dwell
  • Content, with palsy, pain, and gloom."
  • Again she paused; a moan of pain,
  • A stifled sob, alone was heard;
  • Long silence followed--then again
  • Her voice the stagnant midnight stirred.
  • "Must it be so? Is this my fate?
  • Can I nor struggle, nor contend?
  • And am I doomed for years to wait,
  • Watching death's lingering axe descend?
  • "And when it falls, and when I die,
  • What follows? Vacant nothingness?
  • The blank of lost identity?
  • Erasure both of pain and bliss?
  • "I've heard of heaven--I would believe;
  • For if this earth indeed be all,
  • Who longest lives may deepest grieve;
  • Most blest, whom sorrows soonest call.
  • "Oh! leaving disappointment here,
  • Will man find hope on yonder coast?
  • Hope, which, on earth, shines never clear,
  • And oft in clouds is wholly lost.
  • "Will he hope's source of light behold,
  • Fruition's spring, where doubts expire,
  • And drink, in waves of living gold,
  • Contentment, full, for long desire?
  • "Will he find bliss, which here he dreamed?
  • Rest, which was weariness on earth?
  • Knowledge, which, if o'er life it beamed,
  • Served but to prove it void of worth?
  • "Will he find love without lust's leaven,
  • Love fearless, tearless, perfect, pure,
  • To all with equal bounty given;
  • In all, unfeigned, unfailing, sure?
  • "Will he, from penal sufferings free,
  • Released from shroud and wormy clod,
  • All calm and glorious, rise and see
  • Creation's Sire--Existence' God?
  • "Then, glancing back on Time's brief woes,
  • Will he behold them, fading, fly;
  • Swept from Eternity's repose,
  • Like sullying cloud from pure blue sky?
  • "If so, endure, my weary frame;
  • And when thy anguish strikes too deep,
  • And when all troubled burns life's flame,
  • Think of the quiet, final sleep;
  • "Think of the glorious waking-hour,
  • Which will not dawn on grief and tears,
  • But on a ransomed spirit's power,
  • Certain, and free from mortal fears.
  • "Seek now thy couch, and lie till morn,
  • Then from thy chamber, calm, descend,
  • With mind nor tossed, nor anguish-torn,
  • But tranquil, fixed, to wait the end.
  • "And when thy opening eyes shall see
  • Mementos, on the chamber wall,
  • Of one who has forgotten thee,
  • Shed not the tear of acrid gall.
  • "The tear which, welling from the heart,
  • Burns where its drop corrosive falls,
  • And makes each nerve, in torture, start,
  • At feelings it too well recalls:
  • "When the sweet hope of being loved
  • Threw Eden sunshine on life's way:
  • When every sense and feeling proved
  • Expectancy of brightest day.
  • "When the hand trembled to receive
  • A thrilling clasp, which seemed so near,
  • And the heart ventured to believe
  • Another heart esteemed it dear.
  • "When words, half love, all tenderness,
  • Were hourly heard, as hourly spoken,
  • When the long, sunny days of bliss
  • Only by moonlight nights were broken.
  • "Till, drop by drop, the cup of joy
  • Filled full, with purple light was glowing,
  • And Faith, which watched it, sparkling high
  • Still never dreamt the overflowing.
  • "It fell not with a sudden crashing,
  • It poured not out like open sluice;
  • No, sparkling still, and redly flashing,
  • Drained, drop by drop, the generous juice.
  • "I saw it sink, and strove to taste it,
  • My eager lips approached the brim;
  • The movement only seemed to waste it;
  • It sank to dregs, all harsh and dim.
  • "These I have drunk, and they for ever
  • Have poisoned life and love for me;
  • A draught from Sodom's lake could never
  • More fiery, salt, and bitter, be.
  • "Oh! Love was all a thin illusion
  • Joy, but the desert's flying stream;
  • And glancing back on long delusion,
  • My memory grasps a hollow dream.
  • "Yet whence that wondrous change of feeling,
  • I never knew, and cannot learn;
  • Nor why my lover's eye, congealing,
  • Grew cold and clouded, proud and stern.
  • "Nor wherefore, friendship's forms forgetting,
  • He careless left, and cool withdrew;
  • Nor spoke of grief, nor fond regretting,
  • Nor ev'n one glance of comfort threw.
  • "And neither word nor token sending,
  • Of kindness, since the parting day,
  • His course, for distant regions bending,
  • Went, self-contained and calm, away.
  • "Oh, bitter, blighting, keen sensation,
  • Which will not weaken, cannot die,
  • Hasten thy work of desolation,
  • And let my tortured spirit fly!
  • "Vain as the passing gale, my crying;
  • Though lightning-struck, I must live on;
  • I know, at heart, there is no dying
  • Of love, and ruined hope, alone.
  • "Still strong and young, and warm with vigour,
  • Though scathed, I long shall greenly grow;
  • And many a storm of wildest rigour
  • Shall yet break o'er my shivered bough.
  • "Rebellious now to blank inertion,
  • My unused strength demands a task;
  • Travel, and toil, and full exertion,
  • Are the last, only boon I ask.
  • "Whence, then, this vain and barren dreaming
  • Of death, and dubious life to come?
  • I see a nearer beacon gleaming
  • Over dejection's sea of gloom.
  • "The very wildness of my sorrow
  • Tells me I yet have innate force;
  • My track of life has been too narrow,
  • Effort shall trace a broader course.
  • "The world is not in yonder tower,
  • Earth is not prisoned in that room,
  • 'Mid whose dark panels, hour by hour,
  • I've sat, the slave and prey of gloom.
  • "One feeling--turned to utter anguish,
  • Is not my being's only aim;
  • When, lorn and loveless, life will languish,
  • But courage can revive the flame.
  • "He, when he left me, went a roving
  • To sunny climes, beyond the sea;
  • And I, the weight of woe removing,
  • Am free and fetterless as he.
  • "New scenes, new language, skies less clouded,
  • May once more wake the wish to live;
  • Strange, foreign towns, astir, and crowded,
  • New pictures to the mind may give.
  • "New forms and faces, passing ever,
  • May hide the one I still retain,
  • Defined, and fixed, and fading never,
  • Stamped deep on vision, heart, and brain.
  • "And we might meet--time may have changed him;
  • Chance may reveal the mystery,
  • The secret influence which estranged him;
  • Love may restore him yet to me.
  • "False thought--false hope--in scorn be banished!
  • I am not loved--nor loved have been;
  • Recall not, then, the dreams scarce vanished;
  • Traitors! mislead me not again!
  • "To words like yours I bid defiance,
  • 'Tis such my mental wreck have made;
  • Of God alone, and self-reliance,
  • I ask for solace--hope for aid.
  • "Morn comes--and ere meridian glory
  • O'er these, my natal woods, shall smile,
  • Both lonely wood and mansion hoary
  • I'll leave behind, full many a mile."
  • GILBERT.
  • I. THE GARDEN.
  • Above the city hung the moon,
  • Right o'er a plot of ground
  • Where flowers and orchard-trees were fenced
  • With lofty walls around:
  • 'Twas Gilbert's garden--there to-night
  • Awhile he walked alone;
  • And, tired with sedentary toil,
  • Mused where the moonlight shone.
  • This garden, in a city-heart,
  • Lay still as houseless wild,
  • Though many-windowed mansion fronts
  • Were round it; closely piled;
  • But thick their walls, and those within
  • Lived lives by noise unstirred;
  • Like wafting of an angel's wing,
  • Time's flight by them was heard.
  • Some soft piano-notes alone
  • Were sweet as faintly given,
  • Where ladies, doubtless, cheered the hearth
  • With song that winter-even.
  • The city's many-mingled sounds
  • Rose like the hum of ocean;
  • They rather lulled the heart than roused
  • Its pulse to faster motion.
  • Gilbert has paced the single walk
  • An hour, yet is not weary;
  • And, though it be a winter night
  • He feels nor cold nor dreary.
  • The prime of life is in his veins,
  • And sends his blood fast flowing,
  • And Fancy's fervour warms the thoughts
  • Now in his bosom glowing.
  • Those thoughts recur to early love,
  • Or what he love would name,
  • Though haply Gilbert's secret deeds
  • Might other title claim.
  • Such theme not oft his mind absorbs,
  • He to the world clings fast,
  • And too much for the present lives,
  • To linger o'er the past.
  • But now the evening's deep repose
  • Has glided to his soul;
  • That moonlight falls on Memory,
  • And shows her fading scroll.
  • One name appears in every line
  • The gentle rays shine o'er,
  • And still he smiles and still repeats
  • That one name--Elinor.
  • There is no sorrow in his smile,
  • No kindness in his tone;
  • The triumph of a selfish heart
  • Speaks coldly there alone;
  • He says: "She loved me more than life;
  • And truly it was sweet
  • To see so fair a woman kneel,
  • In bondage, at my feet.
  • "There was a sort of quiet bliss
  • To be so deeply loved,
  • To gaze on trembling eagerness
  • And sit myself unmoved.
  • And when it pleased my pride to grant
  • At last some rare caress,
  • To feel the fever of that hand
  • My fingers deigned to press.
  • "'Twas sweet to see her strive to hide
  • What every glance revealed;
  • Endowed, the while, with despot-might
  • Her destiny to wield.
  • I knew myself no perfect man,
  • Nor, as she deemed, divine;
  • I knew that I was glorious--but
  • By her reflected shine;
  • "Her youth, her native energy,
  • Her powers new-born and fresh,
  • 'Twas these with Godhead sanctified
  • My sensual frame of flesh.
  • Yet, like a god did I descend
  • At last, to meet her love;
  • And, like a god, I then withdrew
  • To my own heaven above.
  • "And never more could she invoke
  • My presence to her sphere;
  • No prayer, no plaint, no cry of hers
  • Could win my awful ear.
  • I knew her blinded constancy
  • Would ne'er my deeds betray,
  • And, calm in conscience, whole in heart.
  • I went my tranquil way.
  • "Yet, sometimes, I still feel a wish,
  • The fond and flattering pain
  • Of passion's anguish to create
  • In her young breast again.
  • Bright was the lustre of her eyes,
  • When they caught fire from mine;
  • If I had power--this very hour,
  • Again I'd light their shine.
  • "But where she is, or how she lives,
  • I have no clue to know;
  • I've heard she long my absence pined,
  • And left her home in woe.
  • But busied, then, in gathering gold,
  • As I am busied now,
  • I could not turn from such pursuit,
  • To weep a broken vow.
  • "Nor could I give to fatal risk
  • The fame I ever prized;
  • Even now, I fear, that precious fame
  • Is too much compromised."
  • An inward trouble dims his eye,
  • Some riddle he would solve;
  • Some method to unloose a knot,
  • His anxious thoughts revolve.
  • He, pensive, leans against a tree,
  • A leafy evergreen,
  • The boughs, the moonlight, intercept,
  • And hide him like a screen
  • He starts--the tree shakes with his tremor,
  • Yet nothing near him pass'd;
  • He hurries up the garden alley,
  • In strangely sudden haste.
  • With shaking hand, he lifts the latchet,
  • Steps o'er the threshold stone;
  • The heavy door slips from his fingers--
  • It shuts, and he is gone.
  • What touched, transfixed, appalled, his soul?--
  • A nervous thought, no more;
  • 'Twill sink like stone in placid pool,
  • And calm close smoothly o'er.
  • II. THE PARLOUR.
  • Warm is the parlour atmosphere,
  • Serene the lamp's soft light;
  • The vivid embers, red and clear,
  • Proclaim a frosty night.
  • Books, varied, on the table lie,
  • Three children o'er them bend,
  • And all, with curious, eager eye,
  • The turning leaf attend.
  • Picture and tale alternately
  • Their simple hearts delight,
  • And interest deep, and tempered glee,
  • Illume their aspects bright.
  • The parents, from their fireside place,
  • Behold that pleasant scene,
  • And joy is on the mother's face,
  • Pride in the father's mien.
  • As Gilbert sees his blooming wife,
  • Beholds his children fair,
  • No thought has he of transient strife,
  • Or past, though piercing fear.
  • The voice of happy infancy
  • Lisps sweetly in his ear,
  • His wife, with pleased and peaceful eye,
  • Sits, kindly smiling, near.
  • The fire glows on her silken dress,
  • And shows its ample grace,
  • And warmly tints each hazel tress,
  • Curled soft around her face.
  • The beauty that in youth he wooed,
  • Is beauty still, unfaded;
  • The brow of ever placid mood
  • No churlish grief has shaded.
  • Prosperity, in Gilbert's home,
  • Abides the guest of years;
  • There Want or Discord never come,
  • And seldom Toil or Tears.
  • The carpets bear the peaceful print
  • Of comfort's velvet tread,
  • And golden gleams, from plenty sent,
  • In every nook are shed.
  • The very silken spaniel seems
  • Of quiet ease to tell,
  • As near its mistress' feet it dreams,
  • Sunk in a cushion's swell
  • And smiles seem native to the eyes
  • Of those sweet children, three;
  • They have but looked on tranquil skies,
  • And know not misery.
  • Alas! that Misery should come
  • In such an hour as this;
  • Why could she not so calm a home
  • A little longer miss?
  • But she is now within the door,
  • Her steps advancing glide;
  • Her sullen shade has crossed the floor,
  • She stands at Gilbert's side.
  • She lays her hand upon his heart,
  • It bounds with agony;
  • His fireside chair shakes with the start
  • That shook the garden tree.
  • His wife towards the children looks,
  • She does not mark his mien;
  • The children, bending o'er their books,
  • His terror have not seen.
  • In his own home, by his own hearth,
  • He sits in solitude,
  • And circled round with light and mirth,
  • Cold horror chills his blood.
  • His mind would hold with desperate clutch
  • The scene that round him lies;
  • No--changed, as by some wizard's touch,
  • The present prospect flies.
  • A tumult vague--a viewless strife
  • His futile struggles crush;
  • 'Twixt him and his an unknown life
  • And unknown feelings rush.
  • He sees--but scarce can language paint
  • The tissue fancy weaves;
  • For words oft give but echo faint
  • Of thoughts the mind conceives.
  • Noise, tumult strange, and darkness dim,
  • Efface both light and quiet;
  • No shape is in those shadows grim,
  • No voice in that wild riot.
  • Sustain'd and strong, a wondrous blast
  • Above and round him blows;
  • A greenish gloom, dense overcast,
  • Each moment denser grows.
  • He nothing knows--nor clearly sees,
  • Resistance checks his breath,
  • The high, impetuous, ceaseless breeze
  • Blows on him cold as death.
  • And still the undulating gloom
  • Mocks sight with formless motion:
  • Was such sensation Jonah's doom,
  • Gulphed in the depths of ocean?
  • Streaking the air, the nameless vision,
  • Fast-driven, deep-sounding, flows;
  • Oh! whence its source, and what its mission?
  • How will its terrors close?
  • Long-sweeping, rushing, vast and void,
  • The universe it swallows;
  • And still the dark, devouring tide
  • A typhoon tempest follows.
  • More slow it rolls; its furious race
  • Sinks to its solemn gliding;
  • The stunning roar, the wind's wild chase,
  • To stillness are subsiding.
  • And, slowly borne along, a form
  • The shapeless chaos varies;
  • Poised in the eddy to the storm,
  • Before the eye it tarries.
  • A woman drowned--sunk in the deep,
  • On a long wave reclining;
  • The circling waters' crystal sweep,
  • Like glass, her shape enshrining.
  • Her pale dead face, to Gilbert turned,
  • Seems as in sleep reposing;
  • A feeble light, now first discerned,
  • The features well disclosing.
  • No effort from the haunted air
  • The ghastly scene could banish,
  • That hovering wave, arrested there,
  • Rolled--throbbed--but did not vanish.
  • If Gilbert upward turned his gaze,
  • He saw the ocean-shadow;
  • If he looked down, the endless seas
  • Lay green as summer meadow.
  • And straight before, the pale corpse lay,
  • Upborne by air or billow,
  • So near, he could have touched the spray
  • That churned around its pillow.
  • The hollow anguish of the face
  • Had moved a fiend to sorrow;
  • Not death's fixed calm could rase the trace
  • Of suffering's deep-worn furrow.
  • All moved; a strong returning blast,
  • The mass of waters raising,
  • Bore wave and passive carcase past,
  • While Gilbert yet was gazing.
  • Deep in her isle-conceiving womb,
  • It seemed the ocean thundered,
  • And soon, by realms of rushing gloom,
  • Were seer and phantom sundered.
  • Then swept some timbers from a wreck.
  • On following surges riding;
  • Then sea-weed, in the turbid rack
  • Uptorn, went slowly gliding.
  • The horrid shade, by slow degrees,
  • A beam of light defeated,
  • And then the roar of raving seas,
  • Fast, far, and faint, retreated.
  • And all was gone--gone like a mist,
  • Corse, billows, tempest, wreck;
  • Three children close to Gilbert prest
  • And clung around his neck.
  • Good night! good night! the prattlers said,
  • And kissed their father's cheek;
  • 'Twas now the hour their quiet bed
  • And placid rest to seek.
  • The mother with her offspring goes
  • To hear their evening prayer;
  • She nought of Gilbert's vision knows,
  • And nought of his despair.
  • Yet, pitying God, abridge the time
  • Of anguish, now his fate!
  • Though, haply, great has been his crime:
  • Thy mercy, too, is great.
  • Gilbert, at length, uplifts his head,
  • Bent for some moments low,
  • And there is neither grief nor dread
  • Upon his subtle brow.
  • For well can he his feelings task,
  • And well his looks command;
  • His features well his heart can mask,
  • With smiles and smoothness bland.
  • Gilbert has reasoned with his mind--
  • He says 'twas all a dream;
  • He strives his inward sight to blind
  • Against truth's inward beam.
  • He pitied not that shadowy thing,
  • When it was flesh and blood;
  • Nor now can pity's balmy spring
  • Refresh his arid mood.
  • "And if that dream has spoken truth,"
  • Thus musingly he says;
  • "If Elinor be dead, in sooth,
  • Such chance the shock repays:
  • A net was woven round my feet,
  • I scarce could further go;
  • Ere shame had forced a fast retreat,
  • Dishonour brought me low.
  • "Conceal her, then, deep, silent sea,
  • Give her a secret grave!
  • She sleeps in peace, and I am free,
  • No longer terror's slave:
  • And homage still, from all the world,
  • Shall greet my spotless name,
  • Since surges break and waves are curled
  • Above its threatened shame."
  • III. THE WELCOME HOME.
  • Above the city hangs the moon,
  • Some clouds are boding rain;
  • Gilbert, erewhile on journey gone,
  • To-night comes home again.
  • Ten years have passed above his head,
  • Each year has brought him gain;
  • His prosperous life has smoothly sped,
  • Without or tear or stain.
  • 'Tis somewhat late--the city clocks
  • Twelve deep vibrations toll,
  • As Gilbert at the portal knocks,
  • Which is his journey's goal.
  • The street is still and desolate,
  • The moon hid by a cloud;
  • Gilbert, impatient, will not wait,--
  • His second knock peals loud.
  • The clocks are hushed--there's not a light
  • In any window nigh,
  • And not a single planet bright
  • Looks from the clouded sky;
  • The air is raw, the rain descends,
  • A bitter north-wind blows;
  • His cloak the traveller scarce defends--
  • Will not the door unclose?
  • He knocks the third time, and the last
  • His summons now they hear,
  • Within, a footstep, hurrying fast,
  • Is heard approaching near.
  • The bolt is drawn, the clanking chain
  • Falls to the floor of stone;
  • And Gilbert to his heart will strain
  • His wife and children soon.
  • The hand that lifts the latchet, holds
  • A candle to his sight,
  • And Gilbert, on the step, beholds
  • A woman, clad in white.
  • Lo! water from her dripping dress
  • Runs on the streaming floor;
  • From every dark and clinging tress
  • The drops incessant pour.
  • There's none but her to welcome him;
  • She holds the candle high,
  • And, motionless in form and limb,
  • Stands cold and silent nigh;
  • There's sand and sea-weed on her robe,
  • Her hollow eyes are blind;
  • No pulse in such a frame can throb,
  • No life is there defined.
  • Gilbert turned ashy-white, but still
  • His lips vouchsafed no cry;
  • He spurred his strength and master-will
  • To pass the figure by,--
  • But, moving slow, it faced him straight,
  • It would not flinch nor quail:
  • Then first did Gilbert's strength abate,
  • His stony firmness quail.
  • He sank upon his knees and prayed
  • The shape stood rigid there;
  • He called aloud for human aid,
  • No human aid was near.
  • An accent strange did thus repeat
  • Heaven's stern but just decree:
  • "The measure thou to her didst mete,
  • To thee shall measured be!"
  • Gilbert sprang from his bended knees,
  • By the pale spectre pushed,
  • And, wild as one whom demons seize,
  • Up the hall-staircase rushed;
  • Entered his chamber--near the bed
  • Sheathed steel and fire-arms hung--
  • Impelled by maniac purpose dread
  • He chose those stores among.
  • Across his throat a keen-edged knife
  • With vigorous hand he drew;
  • The wound was wide--his outraged life
  • Rushed rash and redly through.
  • And thus died, by a shameful death,
  • A wise and worldly man,
  • Who never drew but selfish breath
  • Since first his life began.
  • LIFE.
  • Life, believe, is not a dream
  • So dark as sages say;
  • Oft a little morning rain
  • Foretells a pleasant day.
  • Sometimes there are clouds of gloom,
  • But these are transient all;
  • If the shower will make the roses bloom,
  • O why lament its fall?
  • Rapidly, merrily,
  • Life's sunny hours flit by,
  • Gratefully, cheerily
  • Enjoy them as they fly!
  • What though Death at times steps in,
  • And calls our Best away?
  • What though sorrow seems to win,
  • O'er hope, a heavy sway?
  • Yet Hope again elastic springs,
  • Unconquered, though she fell;
  • Still buoyant are her golden wings,
  • Still strong to bear us well.
  • Manfully, fearlessly,
  • The day of trial bear,
  • For gloriously, victoriously,
  • Can courage quell despair!
  • THE LETTER.
  • What is she writing? Watch her now,
  • How fast her fingers move!
  • How eagerly her youthful brow
  • Is bent in thought above!
  • Her long curls, drooping, shade the light,
  • She puts them quick aside,
  • Nor knows that band of crystals bright,
  • Her hasty touch untied.
  • It slips adown her silken dress,
  • Falls glittering at her feet;
  • Unmarked it falls, for she no less
  • Pursues her labour sweet.
  • The very loveliest hour that shines,
  • Is in that deep blue sky;
  • The golden sun of June declines,
  • It has not caught her eye.
  • The cheerful lawn, and unclosed gate,
  • The white road, far away,
  • In vain for her light footsteps wait,
  • She comes not forth to-day.
  • There is an open door of glass
  • Close by that lady's chair,
  • From thence, to slopes of messy grass,
  • Descends a marble stair.
  • Tall plants of bright and spicy bloom
  • Around the threshold grow;
  • Their leaves and blossoms shade the room
  • From that sun's deepening glow.
  • Why does she not a moment glance
  • Between the clustering flowers,
  • And mark in heaven the radiant dance
  • Of evening's rosy hours?
  • O look again! Still fixed her eye,
  • Unsmiling, earnest, still,
  • And fast her pen and fingers fly,
  • Urged by her eager will.
  • Her soul is in th'absorbing task;
  • To whom, then, doth she write?
  • Nay, watch her still more closely, ask
  • Her own eyes' serious light;
  • Where do they turn, as now her pen
  • Hangs o'er th'unfinished line?
  • Whence fell the tearful gleam that then
  • Did in their dark spheres shine?
  • The summer-parlour looks so dark,
  • When from that sky you turn,
  • And from th'expanse of that green park,
  • You scarce may aught discern.
  • Yet, o'er the piles of porcelain rare,
  • O'er flower-stand, couch, and vase,
  • Sloped, as if leaning on the air,
  • One picture meets the gaze.
  • 'Tis there she turns; you may not see
  • Distinct, what form defines
  • The clouded mass of mystery
  • Yon broad gold frame confines.
  • But look again; inured to shade
  • Your eyes now faintly trace
  • A stalwart form, a massive head,
  • A firm, determined face.
  • Black Spanish locks, a sunburnt cheek
  • A brow high, broad, and white,
  • Where every furrow seems to speak
  • Of mind and moral might.
  • Is that her god? I cannot tell;
  • Her eye a moment met
  • Th'impending picture, then it fell
  • Darkened and dimmed and wet.
  • A moment more, her task is done,
  • And sealed the letter lies;
  • And now, towards the setting sun
  • She turns her tearful eyes.
  • Those tears flow over, wonder not,
  • For by the inscription see
  • In what a strange and distant spot
  • Her heart of hearts must be!
  • Three seas and many a league of land
  • That letter must pass o'er,
  • Ere read by him to whose loved hand
  • 'Tis sent from England's shore.
  • Remote colonial wilds detain
  • Her husband, loved though stern;
  • She, 'mid that smiling English scene,
  • Weeps for his wished return.
  • REGRET.
  • Long ago I wished to leave
  • "The house where I was born;"
  • Long ago I used to grieve,
  • My home seemed so forlorn.
  • In other years, its silent rooms
  • Were filled with haunting fears;
  • Now, their very memory comes
  • O'ercharged with tender tears.
  • Life and marriage I have known.
  • Things once deemed so bright;
  • Now, how utterly is flown
  • Every ray of light!
  • 'Mid the unknown sea, of life
  • I no blest isle have found;
  • At last, through all its wild wave's strife,
  • My bark is homeward bound.
  • Farewell, dark and rolling deep!
  • Farewell, foreign shore!
  • Open, in unclouded sweep,
  • Thou glorious realm before!
  • Yet, though I had safely pass'd
  • That weary, vexed main,
  • One loved voice, through surge and blast
  • Could call me back again.
  • Though the soul's bright morning rose
  • O'er Paradise for me,
  • William! even from Heaven's repose
  • I'd turn, invoked by thee!
  • Storm nor surge should e'er arrest
  • My soul, exalting then:
  • All my heaven was once thy breast,
  • Would it were mine again!
  • PRESENTIMENT.
  • "Sister, you've sat there all the day,
  • Come to the hearth awhile;
  • The wind so wildly sweeps away,
  • The clouds so darkly pile.
  • That open book has lain, unread,
  • For hours upon your knee;
  • You've never smiled nor turned your head;
  • What can you, sister, see?"
  • "Come hither, Jane, look down the field;
  • How dense a mist creeps on!
  • The path, the hedge, are both concealed,
  • Ev'n the white gate is gone
  • No landscape through the fog I trace,
  • No hill with pastures green;
  • All featureless is Nature's face.
  • All masked in clouds her mien.
  • "Scarce is the rustle of a leaf
  • Heard in our garden now;
  • The year grows old, its days wax brief,
  • The tresses leave its brow.
  • The rain drives fast before the wind,
  • The sky is blank and grey;
  • O Jane, what sadness fills the mind
  • On such a dreary day!"
  • "You think too much, my sister dear;
  • You sit too long alone;
  • What though November days be drear?
  • Full soon will they be gone.
  • I've swept the hearth, and placed your chair.
  • Come, Emma, sit by me;
  • Our own fireside is never drear,
  • Though late and wintry wane the year,
  • Though rough the night may be."
  • "The peaceful glow of our fireside
  • Imparts no peace to me:
  • My thoughts would rather wander wide
  • Than rest, dear Jane, with thee.
  • I'm on a distant journey bound,
  • And if, about my heart,
  • Too closely kindred ties were bound,
  • 'Twould break when forced to part.
  • "'Soon will November days be o'er:'
  • Well have you spoken, Jane:
  • My own forebodings tell me more--
  • For me, I know by presage sure,
  • They'll ne'er return again.
  • Ere long, nor sun nor storm to me
  • Will bring or joy or gloom;
  • They reach not that Eternity
  • Which soon will be my home."
  • Eight months are gone, the summer sun
  • Sets in a glorious sky;
  • A quiet field, all green and lone,
  • Receives its rosy dye.
  • Jane sits upon a shaded stile,
  • Alone she sits there now;
  • Her head rests on her hand the while,
  • And thought o'ercasts her brow.
  • She's thinking of one winter's day,
  • A few short months ago,
  • Then Emma's bier was borne away
  • O'er wastes of frozen snow.
  • She's thinking how that drifted snow
  • Dissolved in spring's first gleam,
  • And how her sister's memory now
  • Fades, even as fades a dream.
  • The snow will whiten earth again,
  • But Emma comes no more;
  • She left, 'mid winter's sleet and rain,
  • This world for Heaven's far shore.
  • On Beulah's hills she wanders now,
  • On Eden's tranquil plain;
  • To her shall Jane hereafter go,
  • She ne'er shall come to Jane!
  • THE TEACHER'S MONOLOGUE.
  • The room is quiet, thoughts alone
  • People its mute tranquillity;
  • The yoke put off, the long task done,--
  • I am, as it is bliss to be,
  • Still and untroubled. Now, I see,
  • For the first time, how soft the day
  • O'er waveless water, stirless tree,
  • Silent and sunny, wings its way.
  • Now, as I watch that distant hill,
  • So faint, so blue, so far removed,
  • Sweet dreams of home my heart may fill,
  • That home where I am known and loved:
  • It lies beyond; yon azure brow
  • Parts me from all Earth holds for me;
  • And, morn and eve, my yearnings flow
  • Thitherward tending, changelessly.
  • My happiest hours, aye! all the time,
  • I love to keep in memory,
  • Lapsed among moors, ere life's first prime
  • Decayed to dark anxiety.
  • Sometimes, I think a narrow heart
  • Makes me thus mourn those far away,
  • And keeps my love so far apart
  • From friends and friendships of to-day;
  • Sometimes, I think 'tis but a dream
  • I treasure up so jealously,
  • All the sweet thoughts I live on seem
  • To vanish into vacancy:
  • And then, this strange, coarse world around
  • Seems all that's palpable and true;
  • And every sight, and every sound,
  • Combines my spirit to subdue
  • To aching grief, so void and lone
  • Is Life and Earth--so worse than vain,
  • The hopes that, in my own heart sown,
  • And cherished by such sun and rain
  • As Joy and transient Sorrow shed,
  • Have ripened to a harvest there:
  • Alas! methinks I hear it said,
  • "Thy golden sheaves are empty air."
  • All fades away; my very home
  • I think will soon be desolate;
  • I hear, at times, a warning come
  • Of bitter partings at its gate;
  • And, if I should return and see
  • The hearth-fire quenched, the vacant chair;
  • And hear it whispered mournfully,
  • That farewells have been spoken there,
  • What shall I do, and whither turn?
  • Where look for peace? When cease to mourn?
  • 'Tis not the air I wished to play,
  • The strain I wished to sing;
  • My wilful spirit slipped away
  • And struck another string.
  • I neither wanted smile nor tear,
  • Bright joy nor bitter woe,
  • But just a song that sweet and clear,
  • Though haply sad, might flow.
  • A quiet song, to solace me
  • When sleep refused to come;
  • A strain to chase despondency,
  • When sorrowful for home.
  • In vain I try; I cannot sing;
  • All feels so cold and dead;
  • No wild distress, no gushing spring
  • Of tears in anguish shed;
  • But all the impatient gloom of one
  • Who waits a distant day,
  • When, some great task of suffering done,
  • Repose shall toil repay.
  • For youth departs, and pleasure flies,
  • And life consumes away,
  • And youth's rejoicing ardour dies
  • Beneath this drear delay;
  • And Patience, weary with her yoke,
  • Is yielding to despair,
  • And Health's elastic spring is broke
  • Beneath the strain of care.
  • Life will be gone ere I have lived;
  • Where now is Life's first prime?
  • I've worked and studied, longed and grieved,
  • Through all that rosy time.
  • To toil, to think, to long, to grieve,--
  • Is such my future fate?
  • The morn was dreary, must the eve
  • Be also desolate?
  • Well, such a life at least makes Death
  • A welcome, wished-for friend;
  • Then, aid me, Reason, Patience, Faith,
  • To suffer to the end!
  • PASSION.
  • Some have won a wild delight,
  • By daring wilder sorrow;
  • Could I gain thy love to-night,
  • I'd hazard death to-morrow.
  • Could the battle-struggle earn
  • One kind glance from thine eye,
  • How this withering heart would burn,
  • The heady fight to try!
  • Welcome nights of broken sleep,
  • And days of carnage cold,
  • Could I deem that thou wouldst weep
  • To hear my perils told.
  • Tell me, if with wandering bands
  • I roam full far away,
  • Wilt thou to those distant lands
  • In spirit ever stray?
  • Wild, long, a trumpet sounds afar;
  • Bid me--bid me go
  • Where Seik and Briton meet in war,
  • On Indian Sutlej's flow.
  • Blood has dyed the Sutlej's waves
  • With scarlet stain, I know;
  • Indus' borders yawn with graves,
  • Yet, command me go!
  • Though rank and high the holocaust
  • Of nations steams to heaven,
  • Glad I'd join the death-doomed host,
  • Were but the mandate given.
  • Passion's strength should nerve my arm,
  • Its ardour stir my life,
  • Till human force to that dread charm
  • Should yield and sink in wild alarm,
  • Like trees to tempest-strife.
  • If, hot from war, I seek thy love,
  • Darest thou turn aside?
  • Darest thou then my fire reprove,
  • By scorn, and maddening pride?
  • No--my will shall yet control
  • Thy will, so high and free,
  • And love shall tame that haughty soul--
  • Yes--tenderest love for me.
  • I'll read my triumph in thine eyes,
  • Behold, and prove the change;
  • Then leave, perchance, my noble prize,
  • Once more in arms to range.
  • I'd die when all the foam is up,
  • The bright wine sparkling high;
  • Nor wait till in the exhausted cup
  • Life's dull dregs only lie.
  • Then Love thus crowned with sweet reward,
  • Hope blest with fulness large,
  • I'd mount the saddle, draw the sword,
  • And perish in the charge!
  • PREFERENCE.
  • Not in scorn do I reprove thee,
  • Not in pride thy vows I waive,
  • But, believe, I could not love thee,
  • Wert thou prince, and I a slave.
  • These, then, are thine oaths of passion?
  • This, thy tenderness for me?
  • Judged, even, by thine own confession,
  • Thou art steeped in perfidy.
  • Having vanquished, thou wouldst leave me!
  • Thus I read thee long ago;
  • Therefore, dared I not deceive thee,
  • Even with friendship's gentle show.
  • Therefore, with impassive coldness
  • Have I ever met thy gaze;
  • Though, full oft, with daring boldness,
  • Thou thine eyes to mine didst raise.
  • Why that smile? Thou now art deeming
  • This my coldness all untrue,--
  • But a mask of frozen seeming,
  • Hiding secret fires from view.
  • Touch my hand, thou self-deceiver;
  • Nay-be calm, for I am so:
  • Does it burn? Does my lip quiver?
  • Has mine eye a troubled glow?
  • Canst thou call a moment's colour
  • To my forehead--to my cheek?
  • Canst thou tinge their tranquil pallor
  • With one flattering, feverish streak?
  • Am I marble? What! no woman
  • Could so calm before thee stand?
  • Nothing living, sentient, human,
  • Could so coldly take thy hand?
  • Yes--a sister might, a mother:
  • My good-will is sisterly:
  • Dream not, then, I strive to smother
  • Fires that inly burn for thee.
  • Rave not, rage not, wrath is fruitless,
  • Fury cannot change my mind;
  • I but deem the feeling rootless
  • Which so whirls in passion's wind.
  • Can I love? Oh, deeply--truly--
  • Warmly--fondly--but not thee;
  • And my love is answered duly,
  • With an equal energy.
  • Wouldst thou see thy rival? Hasten,
  • Draw that curtain soft aside,
  • Look where yon thick branches chasten
  • Noon, with shades of eventide.
  • In that glade, where foliage blending
  • Forms a green arch overhead,
  • Sits thy rival, thoughtful bending
  • O'er a stand with papers spread--
  • Motionless, his fingers plying
  • That untired, unresting pen;
  • Time and tide unnoticed flying,
  • There he sits--the first of men!
  • Man of conscience--man of reason;
  • Stern, perchance, but ever just;
  • Foe to falsehood, wrong, and treason,
  • Honour's shield, and virtue's trust!
  • Worker, thinker, firm defender
  • Of Heaven's truth--man's liberty;
  • Soul of iron--proof to slander,
  • Rock where founders tyranny.
  • Fame he seeks not--but full surely
  • She will seek him, in his home;
  • This I know, and wait securely
  • For the atoning hour to come.
  • To that man my faith is given,
  • Therefore, soldier, cease to sue;
  • While God reigns in earth and heaven,
  • I to him will still be true!
  • EVENING SOLACE.
  • The human heart has hidden treasures,
  • In secret kept, in silence sealed;--
  • The thoughts, the hopes, the dreams, the pleasures,
  • Whose charms were broken if revealed.
  • And days may pass in gay confusion,
  • And nights in rosy riot fly,
  • While, lost in Fame's or Wealth's illusion,
  • The memory of the Past may die.
  • But there are hours of lonely musing,
  • Such as in evening silence come,
  • When, soft as birds their pinions closing,
  • The heart's best feelings gather home.
  • Then in our souls there seems to languish
  • A tender grief that is not woe;
  • And thoughts that once wrung groans of anguish
  • Now cause but some mild tears to flow.
  • And feelings, once as strong as passions,
  • Float softly back--a faded dream;
  • Our own sharp griefs and wild sensations,
  • The tale of others' sufferings seem.
  • Oh! when the heart is freshly bleeding,
  • How longs it for that time to be,
  • When, through the mist of years receding,
  • Its woes but live in reverie!
  • And it can dwell on moonlight glimmer,
  • On evening shade and loneliness;
  • And, while the sky grows dim and dimmer,
  • Feel no untold and strange distress--
  • Only a deeper impulse given
  • By lonely hour and darkened room,
  • To solemn thoughts that soar to heaven
  • Seeking a life and world to come.
  • STANZAS.
  • If thou be in a lonely place,
  • If one hour's calm be thine,
  • As Evening bends her placid face
  • O'er this sweet day's decline;
  • If all the earth and all the heaven
  • Now look serene to thee,
  • As o'er them shuts the summer even,
  • One moment--think of me!
  • Pause, in the lane, returning home;
  • 'Tis dusk, it will be still:
  • Pause near the elm, a sacred gloom
  • Its breezeless boughs will fill.
  • Look at that soft and golden light,
  • High in the unclouded sky;
  • Watch the last bird's belated flight,
  • As it flits silent by.
  • Hark! for a sound upon the wind,
  • A step, a voice, a sigh;
  • If all be still, then yield thy mind,
  • Unchecked, to memory.
  • If thy love were like mine, how blest
  • That twilight hour would seem,
  • When, back from the regretted Past,
  • Returned our early dream!
  • If thy love were like mine, how wild
  • Thy longings, even to pain,
  • For sunset soft, and moonlight mild,
  • To bring that hour again!
  • But oft, when in thine arms I lay,
  • I've seen thy dark eyes shine,
  • And deeply felt their changeful ray
  • Spoke other love than mine.
  • My love is almost anguish now,
  • It beats so strong and true;
  • 'Twere rapture, could I deem that thou
  • Such anguish ever knew.
  • I have been but thy transient flower,
  • Thou wert my god divine;
  • Till checked by death's congealing power,
  • This heart must throb for thine.
  • And well my dying hour were blest,
  • If life's expiring breath
  • Should pass, as thy lips gently prest
  • My forehead cold in death;
  • And sound my sleep would be, and sweet,
  • Beneath the churchyard tree,
  • If sometimes in thy heart should beat
  • One pulse, still true to me.
  • PARTING.
  • There's no use in weeping,
  • Though we are condemned to part:
  • There's such a thing as keeping
  • A remembrance in one's heart:
  • There's such a thing as dwelling
  • On the thought ourselves have nursed,
  • And with scorn and courage telling
  • The world to do its worst.
  • We'll not let its follies grieve us,
  • We'll just take them as they come;
  • And then every day will leave us
  • A merry laugh for home.
  • When we've left each friend and brother,
  • When we're parted wide and far,
  • We will think of one another,
  • As even better than we are.
  • Every glorious sight above us,
  • Every pleasant sight beneath,
  • We'll connect with those that love us,
  • Whom we truly love till death!
  • In the evening, when we're sitting
  • By the fire, perchance alone,
  • Then shall heart with warm heart meeting,
  • Give responsive tone for tone.
  • We can burst the bonds which chain us,
  • Which cold human hands have wrought,
  • And where none shall dare restrain us
  • We can meet again, in thought.
  • So there's no use in weeping,
  • Bear a cheerful spirit still;
  • Never doubt that Fate is keeping
  • Future good for present ill!
  • APOSTASY.
  • This last denial of my faith,
  • Thou, solemn Priest, hast heard;
  • And, though upon my bed of death,
  • I call not back a word.
  • Point not to thy Madonna, Priest,--
  • Thy sightless saint of stone;
  • She cannot, from this burning breast,
  • Wring one repentant moan.
  • Thou say'st, that when a sinless child,
  • I duly bent the knee,
  • And prayed to what in marble smiled
  • Cold, lifeless, mute, on me.
  • I did. But listen! Children spring
  • Full soon to riper youth;
  • And, for Love's vow and Wedlock's ring,
  • I sold my early truth.
  • 'Twas not a grey, bare head, like thine,
  • Bent o'er me, when I said,
  • "That land and God and Faith are mine,
  • For which thy fathers bled."
  • I see thee not, my eyes are dim;
  • But well I hear thee say,
  • "O daughter cease to think of him
  • Who led thy soul astray.
  • "Between you lies both space and time;
  • Let leagues and years prevail
  • To turn thee from the path of crime,
  • Back to the Church's pale."
  • And, did I need that, thou shouldst tell
  • What mighty barriers rise
  • To part me from that dungeon-cell,
  • Where my loved Walter lies?
  • And, did I need that thou shouldst taunt
  • My dying hour at last,
  • By bidding this worn spirit pant
  • No more for what is past?
  • Priest--MUST I cease to think of him?
  • How hollow rings that word!
  • Can time, can tears, can distance dim
  • The memory of my lord?
  • I said before, I saw not thee,
  • Because, an hour agone,
  • Over my eyeballs, heavily,
  • The lids fell down like stone.
  • But still my spirit's inward sight
  • Beholds his image beam
  • As fixed, as clear, as burning bright,
  • As some red planet's gleam.
  • Talk not of thy Last Sacrament,
  • Tell not thy beads for me;
  • Both rite and prayer are vainly spent,
  • As dews upon the sea.
  • Speak not one word of Heaven above,
  • Rave not of Hell's alarms;
  • Give me but back my Walter's love,
  • Restore me to his arms!
  • Then will the bliss of Heaven be won;
  • Then will Hell shrink away,
  • As I have seen night's terrors shun
  • The conquering steps of day.
  • 'Tis my religion thus to love,
  • My creed thus fixed to be;
  • Not Death shall shake, nor Priestcraft break
  • My rock-like constancy!
  • Now go; for at the door there waits
  • Another stranger guest;
  • He calls--I come--my pulse scarce beats,
  • My heart fails in my breast.
  • Again that voice--how far away,
  • How dreary sounds that tone!
  • And I, methinks, am gone astray
  • In trackless wastes and lone.
  • I fain would rest a little while:
  • Where can I find a stay,
  • Till dawn upon the hills shall smile,
  • And show some trodden way?
  • "I come! I come!" in haste she said,
  • "'Twas Walter's voice I heard!"
  • Then up she sprang--but fell back, dead,
  • His name her latest word.
  • WINTER STORES.
  • We take from life one little share,
  • And say that this shall be
  • A space, redeemed from toil and care,
  • From tears and sadness free.
  • And, haply, Death unstrings his bow,
  • And Sorrow stands apart,
  • And, for a little while, we know
  • The sunshine of the heart.
  • Existence seems a summer eve,
  • Warm, soft, and full of peace,
  • Our free, unfettered feelings give
  • The soul its full release.
  • A moment, then, it takes the power
  • To call up thoughts that throw
  • Around that charmed and hallowed hour,
  • This life's divinest glow.
  • But Time, though viewlessly it flies,
  • And slowly, will not stay;
  • Alike, through clear and clouded skies,
  • It cleaves its silent way.
  • Alike the bitter cup of grief,
  • Alike the draught of bliss,
  • Its progress leaves but moment brief
  • For baffled lips to kiss
  • The sparkling draught is dried away,
  • The hour of rest is gone,
  • And urgent voices, round us, say,
  • "Ho, lingerer, hasten on!"
  • And has the soul, then, only gained,
  • From this brief time of ease,
  • A moment's rest, when overstrained,
  • One hurried glimpse of peace?
  • No; while the sun shone kindly o'er us,
  • And flowers bloomed round our feet,--
  • While many a bud of joy before us
  • Unclosed its petals sweet,--
  • An unseen work within was plying;
  • Like honey-seeking bee,
  • From flower to flower, unwearied, flying,
  • Laboured one faculty,--
  • Thoughtful for Winter's future sorrow,
  • Its gloom and scarcity;
  • Prescient to-day, of want to-morrow,
  • Toiled quiet Memory.
  • 'Tis she that from each transient pleasure
  • Extracts a lasting good;
  • 'Tis she that finds, in summer, treasure
  • To serve for winter's food.
  • And when Youth's summer day is vanished,
  • And Age brings Winter's stress,
  • Her stores, with hoarded sweets replenished,
  • Life's evening hours will bless.
  • THE MISSIONARY.
  • Plough, vessel, plough the British main,
  • Seek the free ocean's wider plain;
  • Leave English scenes and English skies,
  • Unbind, dissever English ties;
  • Bear me to climes remote and strange,
  • Where altered life, fast-following change,
  • Hot action, never-ceasing toil,
  • Shall stir, turn, dig, the spirit's soil;
  • Fresh roots shall plant, fresh seed shall sow,
  • Till a new garden there shall grow,
  • Cleared of the weeds that fill it now,--
  • Mere human love, mere selfish yearning,
  • Which, cherished, would arrest me yet.
  • I grasp the plough, there's no returning,
  • Let me, then, struggle to forget.
  • But England's shores are yet in view,
  • And England's skies of tender blue
  • Are arched above her guardian sea.
  • I cannot yet Remembrance flee;
  • I must again, then, firmly face
  • That task of anguish, to retrace.
  • Wedded to home--I home forsake;
  • Fearful of change--I changes make;
  • Too fond of ease--I plunge in toil;
  • Lover of calm--I seek turmoil:
  • Nature and hostile Destiny
  • Stir in my heart a conflict wild;
  • And long and fierce the war will be
  • Ere duty both has reconciled.
  • What other tie yet holds me fast
  • To the divorced, abandoned past?
  • Smouldering, on my heart's altar lies
  • The fire of some great sacrifice,
  • Not yet half quenched. The sacred steel
  • But lately struck my carnal will,
  • My life-long hope, first joy and last,
  • What I loved well, and clung to fast;
  • What I wished wildly to retain,
  • What I renounced with soul-felt pain;
  • What--when I saw it, axe-struck, perish--
  • Left me no joy on earth to cherish;
  • A man bereft--yet sternly now
  • I do confirm that Jephtha vow:
  • Shall I retract, or fear, or flee?
  • Did Christ, when rose the fatal tree
  • Before him, on Mount Calvary?
  • 'Twas a long fight, hard fought, but won,
  • And what I did was justly done.
  • Yet, Helen! from thy love I turned,
  • When my heart most for thy heart burned;
  • I dared thy tears, I dared thy scorn--
  • Easier the death-pang had been borne.
  • Helen, thou mightst not go with me,
  • I could not--dared not stay for thee!
  • I heard, afar, in bonds complain
  • The savage from beyond the main;
  • And that wild sound rose o'er the cry
  • Wrung out by passion's agony;
  • And even when, with the bitterest tear
  • I ever shed, mine eyes were dim,
  • Still, with the spirit's vision clear,
  • I saw Hell's empire, vast and grim,
  • Spread on each Indian river's shore,
  • Each realm of Asia covering o'er.
  • There, the weak, trampled by the strong,
  • Live but to suffer--hopeless die;
  • There pagan-priests, whose creed is Wrong,
  • Extortion, Lust, and Cruelty,
  • Crush our lost race--and brimming fill
  • The bitter cup of human ill;
  • And I--who have the healing creed,
  • The faith benign of Mary's Son,
  • Shall I behold my brother's need,
  • And, selfishly, to aid him shun?
  • I--who upon my mother's knees,
  • In childhood, read Christ's written word,
  • Received his legacy of peace,
  • His holy rule of action heard;
  • I--in whose heart the sacred sense
  • Of Jesus' love was early felt;
  • Of his pure, full benevolence,
  • His pitying tenderness for guilt;
  • His shepherd-care for wandering sheep,
  • For all weak, sorrowing, trembling things,
  • His mercy vast, his passion deep
  • Of anguish for man's sufferings;
  • I--schooled from childhood in such lore--
  • Dared I draw back or hesitate,
  • When called to heal the sickness sore
  • Of those far off and desolate?
  • Dark, in the realm and shades of Death,
  • Nations, and tribes, and empires lie,
  • But even to them the light of Faith
  • Is breaking on their sombre sky:
  • And be it mine to bid them raise
  • Their drooped heads to the kindling scene,
  • And know and hail the sunrise blaze
  • Which heralds Christ the Nazarene.
  • I know how Hell the veil will spread
  • Over their brows and filmy eyes,
  • And earthward crush the lifted head
  • That would look up and seek the skies;
  • I know what war the fiend will wage
  • Against that soldier of the Cross,
  • Who comes to dare his demon rage,
  • And work his kingdom shame and loss.
  • Yes, hard and terrible the toil
  • Of him who steps on foreign soil,
  • Resolved to plant the gospel vine,
  • Where tyrants rule and slaves repine;
  • Eager to lift Religion's light
  • Where thickest shades of mental night
  • Screen the false god and fiendish rite;
  • Reckless that missionary blood,
  • Shed in wild wilderness and wood,
  • Has left, upon the unblest air,
  • The man's deep moan--the martyr's prayer.
  • I know my lot--I only ask
  • Power to fulfil the glorious task;
  • Willing the spirit, may the flesh
  • Strength for the day receive afresh.
  • May burning sun or deadly wind
  • Prevail not o'er an earnest mind;
  • May torments strange or direst death
  • Nor trample truth, nor baffle faith.
  • Though such blood-drops should fall from me
  • As fell in old Gethsemane,
  • Welcome the anguish, so it gave
  • More strength to work--more skill to save.
  • And, oh! if brief must be my time,
  • If hostile hand or fatal clime
  • Cut short my course--still o'er my grave,
  • Lord, may thy harvest whitening wave.
  • So I the culture may begin,
  • Let others thrust the sickle in;
  • If but the seed will faster grow,
  • May my blood water what I sow!
  • What! have I ever trembling stood,
  • And feared to give to God that blood?
  • What! has the coward love of life
  • Made me shrink from the righteous strife?
  • Have human passions, human fears
  • Severed me from those Pioneers
  • Whose task is to march first, and trace
  • Paths for the progress of our race?
  • It has been so; but grant me, Lord,
  • Now to stand steadfast by Thy word!
  • Protected by salvation's helm,
  • Shielded by faith, with truth begirt,
  • To smile when trials seek to whelm
  • And stand mid testing fires unhurt!
  • Hurling hell's strongest bulwarks down,
  • Even when the last pang thrills my breast,
  • When death bestows the martyr's crown,
  • And calls me into Jesus' rest.
  • Then for my ultimate reward--
  • Then for the world-rejoicing word--
  • The voice from Father--Spirit--Son:
  • "Servant of God, well hast thou done!"
  • *****
  • POEMS BY ELLIS BELL
  • FAITH AND DESPONDENCY.
  • "The winter wind is loud and wild,
  • Come close to me, my darling child;
  • Forsake thy books, and mateless play;
  • And, while the night is gathering gray,
  • We'll talk its pensive hours away;--
  • "Ierne, round our sheltered hall
  • November's gusts unheeded call;
  • Not one faint breath can enter here
  • Enough to wave my daughter's hair,
  • And I am glad to watch the blaze
  • Glance from her eyes, with mimic rays;
  • To feel her cheek, so softly pressed,
  • In happy quiet on my breast,
  • "But, yet, even this tranquillity
  • Brings bitter, restless thoughts to me;
  • And, in the red fire's cheerful glow,
  • I think of deep glens, blocked with snow;
  • I dream of moor, and misty hill,
  • Where evening closes dark and chill;
  • For, lone, among the mountains cold,
  • Lie those that I have loved of old.
  • And my heart aches, in hopeless pain,
  • Exhausted with repinings vain,
  • That I shall greet them ne'er again!"
  • "Father, in early infancy,
  • When you were far beyond the sea,
  • Such thoughts were tyrants over me!
  • I often sat, for hours together,
  • Through the long nights of angry weather,
  • Raised on my pillow, to descry
  • The dim moon struggling in the sky;
  • Or, with strained ear, to catch the shock,
  • Of rock with wave, and wave with rock;
  • So would I fearful vigil keep,
  • And, all for listening, never sleep.
  • But this world's life has much to dread,
  • Not so, my Father, with the dead.
  • "Oh! not for them, should we despair,
  • The grave is drear, but they are not there;
  • Their dust is mingled with the sod,
  • Their happy souls are gone to God!
  • You told me this, and yet you sigh,
  • And murmur that your friends must die.
  • Ah! my dear father, tell me why?
  • For, if your former words were true,
  • How useless would such sorrow be;
  • As wise, to mourn the seed which grew
  • Unnoticed on its parent tree,
  • Because it fell in fertile earth,
  • And sprang up to a glorious birth--
  • Struck deep its root, and lifted high
  • Its green boughs in the breezy sky.
  • "But, I'll not fear, I will not weep
  • For those whose bodies rest in sleep,--
  • I know there is a blessed shore,
  • Opening its ports for me and mine;
  • And, gazing Time's wide waters o'er,
  • I weary for that land divine,
  • Where we were born, where you and I
  • Shall meet our dearest, when we die;
  • From suffering and corruption free,
  • Restored into the Deity."
  • "Well hast thou spoken, sweet, trustful child!
  • And wiser than thy sire;
  • And worldly tempests, raging wild,
  • Shall strengthen thy desire--
  • Thy fervent hope, through storm and foam,
  • Through wind and ocean's roar,
  • To reach, at last, the eternal home,
  • The steadfast, changeless shore!"
  • STARS.
  • Ah! why, because the dazzling sun
  • Restored our Earth to joy,
  • Have you departed, every one,
  • And left a desert sky?
  • All through the night, your glorious eyes
  • Were gazing down in mine,
  • And, with a full heart's thankful sighs,
  • I blessed that watch divine.
  • I was at peace, and drank your beams
  • As they were life to me;
  • And revelled in my changeful dreams,
  • Like petrel on the sea.
  • Thought followed thought, star followed star,
  • Through boundless regions, on;
  • While one sweet influence, near and far,
  • Thrilled through, and proved us one!
  • Why did the morning dawn to break
  • So great, so pure, a spell;
  • And scorch with fire the tranquil cheek,
  • Where your cool radiance fell?
  • Blood-red, he rose, and, arrow-straight,
  • His fierce beams struck my brow;
  • The soul of nature sprang, elate,
  • But mine sank sad and low!
  • My lids closed down, yet through their veil
  • I saw him, blazing, still,
  • And steep in gold the misty dale,
  • And flash upon the hill.
  • I turned me to the pillow, then,
  • To call back night, and see
  • Your worlds of solemn light, again,
  • Throb with my heart, and me!
  • It would not do--the pillow glowed,
  • And glowed both roof and floor;
  • And birds sang loudly in the wood,
  • And fresh winds shook the door;
  • The curtains waved, the wakened flies
  • Were murmuring round my room,
  • Imprisoned there, till I should rise,
  • And give them leave to roam.
  • Oh, stars, and dreams, and gentle night;
  • Oh, night and stars, return!
  • And hide me from the hostile light
  • That does not warm, but burn;
  • That drains the blood of suffering men;
  • Drinks tears, instead of dew;
  • Let me sleep through his blinding reign,
  • And only wake with you!
  • THE PHILOSOPHER.
  • Enough of thought, philosopher!
  • Too long hast thou been dreaming
  • Unlightened, in this chamber drear,
  • While summer's sun is beaming!
  • Space-sweeping soul, what sad refrain
  • Concludes thy musings once again?
  • "Oh, for the time when I shall sleep
  • Without identity.
  • And never care how rain may steep,
  • Or snow may cover me!
  • No promised heaven, these wild desires
  • Could all, or half fulfil;
  • No threatened hell, with quenchless fires,
  • Subdue this quenchless will!"
  • "So said I, and still say the same;
  • Still, to my death, will say--
  • Three gods, within this little frame,
  • Are warring night; and day;
  • Heaven could not hold them all, and yet
  • They all are held in me;
  • And must be mine till I forget
  • My present entity!
  • Oh, for the time, when in my breast
  • Their struggles will be o'er!
  • Oh, for the day, when I shall rest,
  • And never suffer more!"
  • "I saw a spirit, standing, man,
  • Where thou dost stand--an hour ago,
  • And round his feet three rivers ran,
  • Of equal depth, and equal flow--
  • A golden stream--and one like blood;
  • And one like sapphire seemed to be;
  • But, where they joined their triple flood
  • It tumbled in an inky sea
  • The spirit sent his dazzling gaze
  • Down through that ocean's gloomy night;
  • Then, kindling all, with sudden blaze,
  • The glad deep sparkled wide and bright--
  • White as the sun, far, far more fair
  • Than its divided sources were!"
  • "And even for that spirit, seer,
  • I've watched and sought my life-time long;
  • Sought him in heaven, hell, earth, and air,
  • An endless search, and always wrong.
  • Had I but seen his glorious eye
  • ONCE light the clouds that wilder me;
  • I ne'er had raised this coward cry
  • To cease to think, and cease to be;
  • I ne'er had called oblivion blest,
  • Nor stretching eager hands to death,
  • Implored to change for senseless rest
  • This sentient soul, this living breath--
  • Oh, let me die--that power and will
  • Their cruel strife may close;
  • And conquered good, and conquering ill
  • Be lost in one repose!"
  • REMEMBRANCE.
  • Cold in the earth--and the deep snow piled above thee,
  • Far, far, removed, cold in the dreary grave!
  • Have I forgot, my only Love, to love thee,
  • Severed at last by Time's all-severing wave?
  • Now, when alone, do my thoughts no longer hover
  • Over the mountains, on that northern shore,
  • Resting their wings where heath and fern-leaves cover
  • Thy noble heart for ever, ever more?
  • Cold in the earth--and fifteen wild Decembers,
  • From those brown hills, have melted into spring:
  • Faithful, indeed, is the spirit that remembers
  • After such years of change and suffering!
  • Sweet Love of youth, forgive, if I forget thee,
  • While the world's tide is bearing me along;
  • Other desires and other hopes beset me,
  • Hopes which obscure, but cannot do thee wrong!
  • No later light has lightened up my heaven,
  • No second morn has ever shone for me;
  • All my life's bliss from thy dear life was given,
  • All my life's bliss is in the grave with thee.
  • But, when the days of golden dreams had perished,
  • And even Despair was powerless to destroy;
  • Then did I learn how existence could be cherished,
  • Strengthened, and fed without the aid of joy.
  • Then did I check the tears of useless passion--
  • Weaned my young soul from yearning after thine;
  • Sternly denied its burning wish to hasten
  • Down to that tomb already more than mine.
  • And, even yet, I dare not let it languish,
  • Dare not indulge in memory's rapturous pain;
  • Once drinking deep of that divinest anguish,
  • How could I seek the empty world again?
  • A DEATH-SCENE.
  • "O day! he cannot die
  • When thou so fair art shining!
  • O Sun, in such a glorious sky,
  • So tranquilly declining;
  • He cannot leave thee now,
  • While fresh west winds are blowing,
  • And all around his youthful brow
  • Thy cheerful light is glowing!
  • Edward, awake, awake--
  • The golden evening gleams
  • Warm and bright on Arden's lake--
  • Arouse thee from thy dreams!
  • Beside thee, on my knee,
  • My dearest friend, I pray
  • That thou, to cross the eternal sea,
  • Wouldst yet one hour delay:
  • I hear its billows roar--
  • I see them foaming high;
  • But no glimpse of a further shore
  • Has blest my straining eye.
  • Believe not what they urge
  • Of Eden isles beyond;
  • Turn back, from that tempestuous surge,
  • To thy own native land.
  • It is not death, but pain
  • That struggles in thy breast--
  • Nay, rally, Edward, rouse again;
  • I cannot let thee rest!"
  • One long look, that sore reproved me
  • For the woe I could not bear--
  • One mute look of suffering moved me
  • To repent my useless prayer:
  • And, with sudden check, the heaving
  • Of distraction passed away;
  • Not a sign of further grieving
  • Stirred my soul that awful day.
  • Paled, at length, the sweet sun setting;
  • Sunk to peace the twilight breeze:
  • Summer dews fell softly, wetting
  • Glen, and glade, and silent trees.
  • Then his eyes began to weary,
  • Weighed beneath a mortal sleep;
  • And their orbs grew strangely dreary,
  • Clouded, even as they would weep.
  • But they wept not, but they changed not,
  • Never moved, and never closed;
  • Troubled still, and still they ranged not--
  • Wandered not, nor yet reposed!
  • So I knew that he was dying--
  • Stooped, and raised his languid head;
  • Felt no breath, and heard no sighing,
  • So I knew that he was dead.
  • SONG.
  • The linnet in the rocky dells,
  • The moor-lark in the air,
  • The bee among the heather bells
  • That hide my lady fair:
  • The wild deer browse above her breast;
  • The wild birds raise their brood;
  • And they, her smiles of love caressed,
  • Have left her solitude!
  • I ween, that when the grave's dark wall
  • Did first her form retain,
  • They thought their hearts could ne'er recall
  • The light of joy again.
  • They thought the tide of grief would flow
  • Unchecked through future years;
  • But where is all their anguish now,
  • And where are all their tears?
  • Well, let them fight for honour's breath,
  • Or pleasure's shade pursue--
  • The dweller in the land of death
  • Is changed and careless too.
  • And, if their eyes should watch and weep
  • Till sorrow's source were dry,
  • She would not, in her tranquil sleep,
  • Return a single sigh!
  • Blow, west-wind, by the lonely mound,
  • And murmur, summer-streams--
  • There is no need of other sound
  • To soothe my lady's dreams.
  • ANTICIPATION.
  • How beautiful the earth is still,
  • To thee--how full of happiness?
  • How little fraught with real ill,
  • Or unreal phantoms of distress!
  • How spring can bring thee glory, yet,
  • And summer win thee to forget
  • December's sullen time!
  • Why dost thou hold the treasure fast,
  • Of youth's delight, when youth is past,
  • And thou art near thy prime?
  • When those who were thy own compeers,
  • Equals in fortune and in years,
  • Have seen their morning melt in tears,
  • To clouded, smileless day;
  • Blest, had they died untried and young,
  • Before their hearts went wandering wrong,--
  • Poor slaves, subdued by passions strong,
  • A weak and helpless prey!
  • 'Because, I hoped while they enjoyed,
  • And by fulfilment, hope destroyed;
  • As children hope, with trustful breast,
  • I waited bliss--and cherished rest.
  • A thoughtful spirit taught me soon,
  • That we must long till life be done;
  • That every phase of earthly joy
  • Must always fade, and always cloy:
  • 'This I foresaw--and would not chase
  • The fleeting treacheries;
  • But, with firm foot and tranquil face,
  • Held backward from that tempting race,
  • Gazed o'er the sands the waves efface,
  • To the enduring seas--
  • There cast my anchor of desire
  • Deep in unknown eternity;
  • Nor ever let my spirit tire,
  • With looking for WHAT IS TO BE!
  • "It is hope's spell that glorifies,
  • Like youth, to my maturer eyes,
  • All Nature's million mysteries,
  • The fearful and the fair--
  • Hope soothes me in the griefs I know;
  • She lulls my pain for others' woe,
  • And makes me strong to undergo
  • What I am born to bear.
  • Glad comforter! will I not brave,
  • Unawed, the darkness of the grave?
  • Nay, smile to hear Death's billows rave--
  • Sustained, my guide, by thee?
  • The more unjust seems present fate,
  • The more my spirit swells elate,
  • Strong, in thy strength, to anticipate
  • Rewarding destiny!
  • THE PRISONER.
  • A FRAGMENT.
  • In the dungeon-crypts idly did I stray,
  • Reckless of the lives wasting there away;
  • "Draw the ponderous bars! open, Warder stern!"
  • He dared not say me nay--the hinges harshly turn.
  • "Our guests are darkly lodged," I whisper'd, gazing through
  • The vault, whose grated eye showed heaven more gray than blue;
  • (This was when glad Spring laughed in awaking pride;)
  • "Ay, darkly lodged enough!" returned my sullen guide.
  • Then, God forgive my youth; forgive my careless tongue;
  • I scoffed, as the chill chains on the damp flagstones rung:
  • "Confined in triple walls, art thou so much to fear,
  • That we must bind thee down and clench thy fetters here?"
  • The captive raised her face; it was as soft and mild
  • As sculptured marble saint, or slumbering unwean'd child;
  • It was so soft and mild, it was so sweet and fair,
  • Pain could not trace a line, nor grief a shadow there!
  • The captive raised her hand and pressed it to her brow;
  • "I have been struck," she said, "and I am suffering now;
  • Yet these are little worth, your bolts and irons strong;
  • And, were they forged in steel, they could not hold me long."
  • Hoarse laughed the jailor grim: "Shall I be won to hear;
  • Dost think, fond, dreaming wretch, that I shall grant thy prayer?
  • Or, better still, wilt melt my master's heart with groans?
  • Ah! sooner might the sun thaw down these granite stones.
  • "My master's voice is low, his aspect bland and kind,
  • But hard as hardest flint the soul that lurks behind;
  • And I am rough and rude, yet not more rough to see
  • Than is the hidden ghost that has its home in me."
  • About her lips there played a smile of almost scorn,
  • "My friend," she gently said, "you have not heard me mourn;
  • When you my kindred's lives, MY lost life, can restore,
  • Then may I weep and sue,--but never, friend, before!
  • "Still, let my tyrants know, I am not doomed to wear
  • Year after year in gloom, and desolate despair;
  • A messenger of Hope comes every night to me,
  • And offers for short life, eternal liberty.
  • "He comes with western winds, with evening's wandering airs,
  • With that clear dusk of heaven that brings the thickest stars.
  • Winds take a pensive tone, and stars a tender fire,
  • And visions rise, and change, that kill me with desire.
  • "Desire for nothing known in my maturer years,
  • When Joy grew mad with awe, at counting future tears.
  • When, if my spirit's sky was full of flashes warm,
  • I knew not whence they came, from sun or thunder-storm.
  • "But, first, a hush of peace--a soundless calm descends;
  • The struggle of distress, and fierce impatience ends;
  • Mute music soothes my breast--unuttered harmony,
  • That I could never dream, till Earth was lost to me.
  • "Then dawns the Invisible; the Unseen its truth reveals;
  • My outward sense is gone, my inward essence feels:
  • Its wings are almost free--its home, its harbour found,
  • Measuring the gulph, it stoops and dares the final bound,
  • "Oh I dreadful is the check--intense the agony--
  • When the ear begins to hear, and the eye begins to see;
  • When the pulse begins to throb, the brain to think again;
  • The soul to feel the flesh, and the flesh to feel the chain.
  • "Yet I would lose no sting, would wish no torture less;
  • The more that anguish racks, the earlier it will bless;
  • And robed in fires of hell, or bright with heavenly shine,
  • If it but herald death, the vision is divine!"
  • She ceased to speak, and we, unanswering, turned to go--
  • We had no further power to work the captive woe:
  • Her cheek, her gleaming eye, declared that man had given
  • A sentence, unapproved, and overruled by Heaven.
  • HOPE.
  • Hope Was but a timid friend;
  • She sat without the grated den,
  • Watching how my fate would tend,
  • Even as selfish-hearted men.
  • She was cruel in her fear;
  • Through the bars one dreary day,
  • I looked out to see her there,
  • And she turned her face away!
  • Like a false guard, false watch keeping,
  • Still, in strife, she whispered peace;
  • She would sing while I was weeping;
  • If I listened, she would cease.
  • False she was, and unrelenting;
  • When my last joys strewed the ground,
  • Even Sorrow saw, repenting,
  • Those sad relics scattered round;
  • Hope, whose whisper would have given
  • Balm to all my frenzied pain,
  • Stretched her wings, and soared to heaven,
  • Went, and ne'er returned again!
  • A DAY DREAM.
  • On a sunny brae alone I lay
  • One summer afternoon;
  • It was the marriage-time of May,
  • With her young lover, June.
  • From her mother's heart seemed loath to part
  • That queen of bridal charms,
  • But her father smiled on the fairest child
  • He ever held in his arms.
  • The trees did wave their plumy crests,
  • The glad birds carolled clear;
  • And I, of all the wedding guests,
  • Was only sullen there!
  • There was not one, but wished to shun
  • My aspect void of cheer;
  • The very gray rocks, looking on,
  • Asked, "What do you here?"
  • And I could utter no reply;
  • In sooth, I did not know
  • Why I had brought a clouded eye
  • To greet the general glow.
  • So, resting on a heathy bank,
  • I took my heart to me;
  • And we together sadly sank
  • Into a reverie.
  • We thought, "When winter comes again,
  • Where will these bright things be?
  • All vanished, like a vision vain,
  • An unreal mockery!
  • "The birds that now so blithely sing,
  • Through deserts, frozen dry,
  • Poor spectres of the perished spring,
  • In famished troops will fly.
  • "And why should we be glad at all?
  • The leaf is hardly green,
  • Before a token of its fall
  • Is on the surface seen!"
  • Now, whether it were really so,
  • I never could be sure;
  • But as in fit of peevish woe,
  • I stretched me on the moor,
  • A thousand thousand gleaming fires
  • Seemed kindling in the air;
  • A thousand thousand silvery lyres
  • Resounded far and near:
  • Methought, the very breath I breathed
  • Was full of sparks divine,
  • And all my heather-couch was wreathed
  • By that celestial shine!
  • And, while the wide earth echoing rung
  • To that strange minstrelsy
  • The little glittering spirits sung,
  • Or seemed to sing, to me:
  • "O mortal! mortal! let them die;
  • Let time and tears destroy,
  • That we may overflow the sky
  • With universal joy!
  • "Let grief distract the sufferer's breast,
  • And night obscure his way;
  • They hasten him to endless rest,
  • And everlasting day.
  • "To thee the world is like a tomb,
  • A desert's naked shore;
  • To us, in unimagined bloom,
  • It brightens more and more!
  • "And, could we lift the veil, and give
  • One brief glimpse to thine eye,
  • Thou wouldst rejoice for those that live,
  • BECAUSE they live to die."
  • The music ceased; the noonday dream,
  • Like dream of night, withdrew;
  • But Fancy, still, will sometimes deem
  • Her fond creation true.
  • TO IMAGINATION.
  • When weary with the long day's care,
  • And earthly change from pain to pain,
  • And lost, and ready to despair,
  • Thy kind voice calls me back again:
  • Oh, my true friend! I am not lone,
  • While then canst speak with such a tone!
  • So hopeless is the world without;
  • The world within I doubly prize;
  • Thy world, where guile, and hate, and doubt,
  • And cold suspicion never rise;
  • Where thou, and I, and Liberty,
  • Have undisputed sovereignty.
  • What matters it, that all around
  • Danger, and guilt, and darkness lie,
  • If but within our bosom's bound
  • We hold a bright, untroubled sky,
  • Warm with ten thousand mingled rays
  • Of suns that know no winter days?
  • Reason, indeed, may oft complain
  • For Nature's sad reality,
  • And tell the suffering heart how vain
  • Its cherished dreams must always be;
  • And Truth may rudely trample down
  • The flowers of Fancy, newly-blown:
  • But thou art ever there, to bring
  • The hovering vision back, and breathe
  • New glories o'er the blighted spring,
  • And call a lovelier Life from Death.
  • And whisper, with a voice divine,
  • Of real worlds, as bright as thine.
  • I trust not to thy phantom bliss,
  • Yet, still, in evening's quiet hour,
  • With never-failing thankfulness,
  • I welcome thee, Benignant Power;
  • Sure solacer of human cares,
  • And sweeter hope, when hope despairs!
  • HOW CLEAR SHE SHINES.
  • How clear she shines! How quietly
  • I lie beneath her guardian light;
  • While heaven and earth are whispering me,
  • "To morrow, wake, but dream to-night."
  • Yes, Fancy, come, my Fairy love!
  • These throbbing temples softly kiss;
  • And bend my lonely couch above,
  • And bring me rest, and bring me bliss.
  • The world is going; dark world, adieu!
  • Grim world, conceal thee till the day;
  • The heart thou canst not all subdue
  • Must still resist, if thou delay!
  • Thy love I will not, will not share;
  • Thy hatred only wakes a smile;
  • Thy griefs may wound--thy wrongs may tear,
  • But, oh, thy lies shall ne'er beguile!
  • While gazing on the stars that glow
  • Above me, in that stormless sea,
  • I long to hope that all the woe
  • Creation knows, is held in thee!
  • And this shall be my dream to-night;
  • I'll think the heaven of glorious spheres
  • Is rolling on its course of light
  • In endless bliss, through endless years;
  • I'll think, there's not one world above,
  • Far as these straining eyes can see,
  • Where Wisdom ever laughed at Love,
  • Or Virtue crouched to Infamy;
  • Where, writhing 'neath the strokes of Fate,
  • The mangled wretch was forced to smile;
  • To match his patience 'gainst her hate,
  • His heart rebellious all the while.
  • Where Pleasure still will lead to wrong,
  • And helpless Reason warn in vain;
  • And Truth is weak, and Treachery strong;
  • And Joy the surest path to Pain;
  • And Peace, the lethargy of Grief;
  • And Hope, a phantom of the soul;
  • And life, a labour, void and brief;
  • And Death, the despot of the whole!
  • SYMPATHY.
  • There should be no despair for you
  • While nightly stars are burning;
  • While evening pours its silent dew,
  • And sunshine gilds the morning.
  • There should be no despair--though tears
  • May flow down like a river:
  • Are not the best beloved of years
  • Around your heart for ever?
  • They weep, you weep, it must be so;
  • Winds sigh as you are sighing,
  • And winter sheds its grief in snow
  • Where Autumn's leaves are lying:
  • Yet, these revive, and from their fate
  • Your fate cannot be parted:
  • Then, journey on, if not elate,
  • Still, NEVER broken-hearted!
  • PLEAD FOR ME.
  • Oh, thy bright eyes must answer now,
  • When Reason, with a scornful brow,
  • Is mocking at my overthrow!
  • Oh, thy sweet tongue must plead for me
  • And tell why I have chosen thee!
  • Stern Reason is to judgment come,
  • Arrayed in all her forms of gloom:
  • Wilt thou, my advocate, be dumb?
  • No, radiant angel, speak and say,
  • Why I did cast the world away.
  • Why I have persevered to shun
  • The common paths that others run;
  • And on a strange road journeyed on,
  • Heedless, alike of wealth and power--
  • Of glory's wreath and pleasure's flower.
  • These, once, indeed, seemed Beings Divine;
  • And they, perchance, heard vows of mine,
  • And saw my offerings on their shrine;
  • But careless gifts are seldom prized,
  • And MINE were worthily despised.
  • So, with a ready heart, I swore
  • To seek their altar-stone no more;
  • And gave my spirit to adore
  • Thee, ever-present, phantom thing--
  • My slave, my comrade, and my king.
  • A slave, because I rule thee still;
  • Incline thee to my changeful will,
  • And make thy influence good or ill:
  • A comrade, for by day and night
  • Thou art my intimate delight,--
  • My darling pain that wounds and sears,
  • And wrings a blessing out from tears
  • By deadening me to earthly cares;
  • And yet, a king, though Prudence well
  • Have taught thy subject to rebel
  • And am I wrong to worship where
  • Faith cannot doubt, nor hope despair,
  • Since my own soul can grant my prayer?
  • Speak, God of visions, plead for me,
  • And tell why I have chosen thee!
  • SELF-INTEROGATION,
  • "The evening passes fast away.
  • 'Tis almost time to rest;
  • What thoughts has left the vanished day,
  • What feelings in thy breast?
  • "The vanished day? It leaves a sense
  • Of labour hardly done;
  • Of little gained with vast expense--
  • A sense of grief alone?
  • "Time stands before the door of Death,
  • Upbraiding bitterly
  • And Conscience, with exhaustless breath,
  • Pours black reproach on me:
  • "And though I've said that Conscience lies
  • And Time should Fate condemn;
  • Still, sad Repentance clouds my eyes,
  • And makes me yield to them!
  • "Then art thou glad to seek repose?
  • Art glad to leave the sea,
  • And anchor all thy weary woes
  • In calm Eternity?
  • "Nothing regrets to see thee go--
  • Not one voice sobs' farewell;'
  • And where thy heart has suffered so,
  • Canst thou desire to dwell?"
  • "Alas! the countless links are strong
  • That bind us to our clay;
  • The loving spirit lingers long,
  • And would not pass away!
  • "And rest is sweet, when laurelled fame
  • Will crown the soldier's crest;
  • But a brave heart, with a tarnished name,
  • Would rather fight than rest.
  • "Well, thou hast fought for many a year,
  • Hast fought thy whole life through,
  • Hast humbled Falsehood, trampled Fear;
  • What is there left to do?
  • "'Tis true, this arm has hotly striven,
  • Has dared what few would dare;
  • Much have I done, and freely given,
  • But little learnt to bear!
  • "Look on the grave where thou must sleep
  • Thy last, and strongest foe;
  • It is endurance not to weep,
  • If that repose seem woe.
  • "The long war closing in defeat--
  • Defeat serenely borne,--
  • Thy midnight rest may still be sweet,
  • And break in glorious morn!"
  • DEATH.
  • Death! that struck when I was most confiding.
  • In my certain faith of joy to be--
  • Strike again, Time's withered branch dividing
  • From the fresh root of Eternity!
  • Leaves, upon Time's branch, were growing brightly,
  • Full of sap, and full of silver dew;
  • Birds beneath its shelter gathered nightly;
  • Daily round its flowers the wild bees flew.
  • Sorrow passed, and plucked the golden blossom;
  • Guilt stripped off the foliage in its pride
  • But, within its parent's kindly bosom,
  • Flowed for ever Life's restoring tide.
  • Little mourned I for the parted gladness,
  • For the vacant nest and silent song--
  • Hope was there, and laughed me out of sadness;
  • Whispering, "Winter will not linger long!"
  • And, behold! with tenfold increase blessing,
  • Spring adorned the beauty-burdened spray;
  • Wind and rain and fervent heat, caressing,
  • Lavished glory on that second May!
  • High it rose--no winged grief could sweep it;
  • Sin was scared to distance with its shine;
  • Love, and its own life, had power to keep it
  • From all wrong--from every blight but thine!
  • Cruel Death! The young leaves droop and languish;
  • Evening's gentle air may still restore--
  • No! the morning sunshine mocks my anguish-
  • Time, for me, must never blossom more!
  • Strike it down, that other boughs may flourish
  • Where that perished sapling used to be;
  • Thus, at least, its mouldering corpse will nourish
  • That from which it sprung--Eternity.
  • STANZAS TO ----
  • Well, some may hate, and some may scorn,
  • And some may quite forget thy name;
  • But my sad heart must ever mourn
  • Thy ruined hopes, thy blighted fame!
  • 'Twas thus I thought, an hour ago,
  • Even weeping o'er that wretch's woe;
  • One word turned back my gushing tears,
  • And lit my altered eye with sneers.
  • Then "Bless the friendly dust," I said,
  • "That hides thy unlamented head!
  • Vain as thou wert, and weak as vain,
  • The slave of Falsehood, Pride, and Pain--
  • My heart has nought akin to thine;
  • Thy soul is powerless over mine."
  • But these were thoughts that vanished too;
  • Unwise, unholy, and untrue:
  • Do I despise the timid deer,
  • Because his limbs are fleet with fear?
  • Or, would I mock the wolf's death-howl,
  • Because his form is gaunt and foul?
  • Or, hear with joy the leveret's cry,
  • Because it cannot bravely die?
  • No! Then above his memory
  • Let Pity's heart as tender be;
  • Say, "Earth, lie lightly on that breast,
  • And, kind Heaven, grant that spirit rest!"
  • HONOUR'S MARTYR.
  • The moon is full this winter night;
  • The stars are clear, though few;
  • And every window glistens bright
  • With leaves of frozen dew.
  • The sweet moon through your lattice gleams,
  • And lights your room like day;
  • And there you pass, in happy dreams,
  • The peaceful hours away!
  • While I, with effort hardly quelling
  • The anguish in my breast,
  • Wander about the silent dwelling,
  • And cannot think of rest.
  • The old clock in the gloomy hall
  • Ticks on, from hour to hour;
  • And every time its measured call
  • Seems lingering slow and slower:
  • And, oh, how slow that keen-eyed star
  • Has tracked the chilly gray!
  • What, watching yet! how very far
  • The morning lies away!
  • Without your chamber door I stand;
  • Love, are you slumbering still?
  • My cold heart, underneath my hand,
  • Has almost ceased to thrill.
  • Bleak, bleak the east wind sobs and sighs,
  • And drowns the turret bell,
  • Whose sad note, undistinguished, dies
  • Unheard, like my farewell!
  • To-morrow, Scorn will blight my name,
  • And Hate will trample me,
  • Will load me with a coward's shame--
  • A traitor's perjury.
  • False friends will launch their covert sneers;
  • True friends will wish me dead;
  • And I shall cause the bitterest tears
  • That you have ever shed.
  • The dark deeds of my outlawed race
  • Will then like virtues shine;
  • And men will pardon their disgrace,
  • Beside the guilt of mine.
  • For, who forgives the accursed crime
  • Of dastard treachery?
  • Rebellion, in its chosen time,
  • May Freedom's champion be;
  • Revenge may stain a righteous sword,
  • It may be just to slay;
  • But, traitor, traitor,--from THAT word
  • All true breasts shrink away!
  • Oh, I would give my heart to death,
  • To keep my honour fair;
  • Yet, I'll not give my inward faith
  • My honour's NAME to spare!
  • Not even to keep your priceless love,
  • Dare I, Beloved, deceive;
  • This treason should the future prove,
  • Then, only then, believe!
  • I know the path I ought to go
  • I follow fearlessly,
  • Inquiring not what deeper woe
  • Stern duty stores for me.
  • So foes pursue, and cold allies
  • Mistrust me, every one:
  • Let me be false in others' eyes,
  • If faithful in my own.
  • STANZAS.
  • I'll not weep that thou art going to leave me,
  • There's nothing lovely here;
  • And doubly will the dark world grieve me,
  • While thy heart suffers there.
  • I'll not weep, because the summer's glory
  • Must always end in gloom;
  • And, follow out the happiest story--
  • It closes with a tomb!
  • And I am weary of the anguish
  • Increasing winters bear;
  • Weary to watch the spirit languish
  • Through years of dead despair.
  • So, if a tear, when thou art dying,
  • Should haply fall from me,
  • It is but that my soul is sighing,
  • To go and rest with thee.
  • MY COMFORTER.
  • Well hast thou spoken, and yet not taught
  • A feeling strange or new;
  • Thou hast but roused a latent thought,
  • A cloud-closed beam of sunshine brought
  • To gleam in open view.
  • Deep down, concealed within my soul,
  • That light lies hid from men;
  • Yet glows unquenched--though shadows roll,
  • Its gentle ray cannot control--
  • About the sullen den.
  • Was I not vexed, in these gloomy ways
  • To walk alone so long?
  • Around me, wretches uttering praise,
  • Or howling o'er their hopeless days,
  • And each with Frenzy's tongue;--
  • A brotherhood of misery,
  • Their smiles as sad as sighs;
  • Whose madness daily maddened me,
  • Distorting into agony
  • The bliss before my eyes!
  • So stood I, in Heaven's glorious sun,
  • And in the glare of Hell;
  • My spirit drank a mingled tone,
  • Of seraph's song, and demon's moan;
  • What my soul bore, my soul alone
  • Within itself may tell!
  • Like a soft, air above a sea,
  • Tossed by the tempest's stir;
  • A thaw-wind, melting quietly
  • The snow-drift on some wintry lea;
  • No: what sweet thing resembles thee,
  • My thoughtful Comforter?
  • And yet a little longer speak,
  • Calm this resentful mood;
  • And while the savage heart grows meek,
  • For other token do not seek,
  • But let the tear upon my cheek
  • Evince my gratitude!
  • THE OLD STOIC.
  • Riches I hold in light esteem,
  • And Love I laugh to scorn;
  • And lust of fame was but a dream,
  • That vanished with the morn:
  • And if I pray, the only prayer
  • That moves my lips for me
  • Is, "Leave the heart that now I bear,
  • And give me liberty!"
  • Yes, as my swift days near their goal:
  • 'Tis all that I implore;
  • In life and death a chainless soul,
  • With courage to endure.
  • *****
  • POEMS BY ACTON BELL,
  • A REMINISCENCE.
  • Yes, thou art gone! and never more
  • Thy sunny smile shall gladden me;
  • But I may pass the old church door,
  • And pace the floor that covers thee,
  • May stand upon the cold, damp stone,
  • And think that, frozen, lies below
  • The lightest heart that I have known,
  • The kindest I shall ever know.
  • Yet, though I cannot see thee more,
  • 'Tis still a comfort to have seen;
  • And though thy transient life is o'er,
  • 'Tis sweet to think that thou hast been;
  • To think a soul so near divine,
  • Within a form so angel fair,
  • United to a heart like thine,
  • Has gladdened once our humble sphere.
  • THE ARBOUR.
  • I'll rest me in this sheltered bower,
  • And look upon the clear blue sky
  • That smiles upon me through the trees,
  • Which stand so thick clustering by;
  • And view their green and glossy leaves,
  • All glistening in the sunshine fair;
  • And list the rustling of their boughs,
  • So softly whispering through the air.
  • And while my ear drinks in the sound,
  • My winged soul shall fly away;
  • Reviewing lone departed years
  • As one mild, beaming, autumn day;
  • And soaring on to future scenes,
  • Like hills and woods, and valleys green,
  • All basking in the summer's sun,
  • But distant still, and dimly seen.
  • Oh, list! 'tis summer's very breath
  • That gently shakes the rustling trees--
  • But look! the snow is on the ground--
  • How can I think of scenes like these?
  • 'Tis but the FROST that clears the air,
  • And gives the sky that lovely blue;
  • They're smiling in a WINTER'S sun,
  • Those evergreens of sombre hue.
  • And winter's chill is on my heart--
  • How can I dream of future bliss?
  • How can my spirit soar away,
  • Confined by such a chain as this?
  • HOME.
  • How brightly glistening in the sun
  • The woodland ivy plays!
  • While yonder beeches from their barks
  • Reflect his silver rays.
  • That sun surveys a lovely scene
  • From softly smiling skies;
  • And wildly through unnumbered trees
  • The wind of winter sighs:
  • Now loud, it thunders o'er my head,
  • And now in distance dies.
  • But give me back my barren hills
  • Where colder breezes rise;
  • Where scarce the scattered, stunted trees
  • Can yield an answering swell,
  • But where a wilderness of heath
  • Returns the sound as well.
  • For yonder garden, fair and wide,
  • With groves of evergreen,
  • Long winding walks, and borders trim,
  • And velvet lawns between;
  • Restore to me that little spot,
  • With gray walls compassed round,
  • Where knotted grass neglected lies,
  • And weeds usurp the ground.
  • Though all around this mansion high
  • Invites the foot to roam,
  • And though its halls are fair within--
  • Oh, give me back my HOME!
  • VANITAS VANITATUM, OMNIA VANITAS.
  • In all we do, and hear, and see,
  • Is restless Toil and Vanity.
  • While yet the rolling earth abides,
  • Men come and go like ocean tides;
  • And ere one generation dies,
  • Another in its place shall rise;
  • THAT, sinking soon into the grave,
  • Others succeed, like wave on wave;
  • And as they rise, they pass away.
  • The sun arises every day,
  • And hastening onward to the West,
  • He nightly sinks, but not to rest:
  • Returning to the eastern skies,
  • Again to light us, he must rise.
  • And still the restless wind comes forth,
  • Now blowing keenly from the North;
  • Now from the South, the East, the West,
  • For ever changing, ne'er at rest.
  • The fountains, gushing from the hills,
  • Supply the ever-running rills;
  • The thirsty rivers drink their store,
  • And bear it rolling to the shore,
  • But still the ocean craves for more.
  • 'Tis endless labour everywhere!
  • Sound cannot satisfy the ear,
  • Light cannot fill the craving eye,
  • Nor riches half our wants supply,
  • Pleasure but doubles future pain,
  • And joy brings sorrow in her train;
  • Laughter is mad, and reckless mirth--
  • What does she in this weary earth?
  • Should Wealth, or Fame, our Life employ,
  • Death comes, our labour to destroy;
  • To snatch the untasted cup away,
  • For which we toiled so many a day.
  • What, then, remains for wretched man?
  • To use life's comforts while he can,
  • Enjoy the blessings Heaven bestows,
  • Assist his friends, forgive his foes;
  • Trust God, and keep His statutes still,
  • Upright and firm, through good and ill;
  • Thankful for all that God has given,
  • Fixing his firmest hopes on Heaven;
  • Knowing that earthly joys decay,
  • But hoping through the darkest day.
  • THE PENITENT.
  • I mourn with thee, and yet rejoice
  • That thou shouldst sorrow so;
  • With angel choirs I join my voice
  • To bless the sinner's woe.
  • Though friends and kindred turn away,
  • And laugh thy grief to scorn;
  • I hear the great Redeemer say,
  • "Blessed are ye that mourn."
  • Hold on thy course, nor deem it strange
  • That earthly cords are riven:
  • Man may lament the wondrous change,
  • But "there is joy in heaven!"
  • MUSIC ON CHRISTMAS MORNING.
  • Music I love--but never strain
  • Could kindle raptures so divine,
  • So grief assuage, so conquer pain,
  • And rouse this pensive heart of mine--
  • As that we hear on Christmas morn,
  • Upon the wintry breezes borne.
  • Though Darkness still her empire keep,
  • And hours must pass, ere morning break;
  • From troubled dreams, or slumbers deep,
  • That music KINDLY bids us wake:
  • It calls us, with an angel's voice,
  • To wake, and worship, and rejoice;
  • To greet with joy the glorious morn,
  • Which angels welcomed long ago,
  • When our redeeming Lord was born,
  • To bring the light of Heaven below;
  • The Powers of Darkness to dispel,
  • And rescue Earth from Death and Hell.
  • While listening to that sacred strain,
  • My raptured spirit soars on high;
  • I seem to hear those songs again
  • Resounding through the open sky,
  • That kindled such divine delight,
  • In those who watched their flocks by night.
  • With them I celebrate His birth--
  • Glory to God, in highest Heaven,
  • Good-will to men, and peace on earth,
  • To us a Saviour-king is given;
  • Our God is come to claim His own,
  • And Satan's power is overthrown!
  • A sinless God, for sinful men,
  • Descends to suffer and to bleed;
  • Hell MUST renounce its empire then;
  • The price is paid, the world is freed,
  • And Satan's self must now confess
  • That Christ has earned a RIGHT to bless:
  • Now holy Peace may smile from heaven,
  • And heavenly Truth from earth shall spring:
  • The captive's galling bonds are riven,
  • For our Redeemer is our king;
  • And He that gave his blood for men
  • Will lead us home to God again.
  • STANZAS.
  • Oh, weep not, love! each tear that springs
  • In those dear eyes of thine,
  • To me a keener suffering brings
  • Than if they flowed from mine.
  • And do not droop! however drear
  • The fate awaiting thee;
  • For MY sake combat pain and care,
  • And cherish life for me!
  • I do not fear thy love will fail;
  • Thy faith is true, I know;
  • But, oh, my love! thy strength is frail
  • For such a life of woe.
  • Were 't not for this, I well could trace
  • (Though banished long from thee)
  • Life's rugged path, and boldly face
  • The storms that threaten me.
  • Fear not for me--I've steeled my mind
  • Sorrow and strife to greet;
  • Joy with my love I leave behind,
  • Care with my friends I meet.
  • A mother's sad reproachful eye,
  • A father's scowling brow--
  • But he may frown and she may sigh:
  • I will not break my vow!
  • I love my mother, I revere
  • My sire, but fear not me--
  • Believe that Death alone can tear
  • This faithful heart from thee.
  • IF THIS BE ALL.
  • O God! if this indeed be all
  • That Life can show to me;
  • If on my aching brow may fall
  • No freshening dew from Thee;
  • If with no brighter light than this
  • The lamp of hope may glow,
  • And I may only dream of bliss,
  • And wake to weary woe;
  • If friendship's solace must decay,
  • When other joys are gone,
  • And love must keep so far away,
  • While I go wandering on,--
  • Wandering and toiling without gain,
  • The slave of others' will,
  • With constant care, and frequent pain,
  • Despised, forgotten still;
  • Grieving to look on vice and sin,
  • Yet powerless to quell
  • The silent current from within,
  • The outward torrent's swell
  • While all the good I would impart,
  • The feelings I would share,
  • Are driven backward to my heart,
  • And turned to wormwood there;
  • If clouds must EVER keep from sight
  • The glories of the Sun,
  • And I must suffer Winter's blight,
  • Ere Summer is begun;
  • If Life must be so full of care,
  • Then call me soon to thee;
  • Or give me strength enough to bear
  • My load of misery.
  • MEMORY.
  • Brightly the sun of summer shone
  • Green fields and waving woods upon,
  • And soft winds wandered by;
  • Above, a sky of purest blue,
  • Around, bright flowers of loveliest hue,
  • Allured the gazer's eye.
  • But what were all these charms to me,
  • When one sweet breath of memory
  • Came gently wafting by?
  • I closed my eyes against the day,
  • And called my willing soul away,
  • From earth, and air, and sky;
  • That I might simply fancy there
  • One little flower--a primrose fair,
  • Just opening into sight;
  • As in the days of infancy,
  • An opening primrose seemed to me
  • A source of strange delight.
  • Sweet Memory! ever smile on me;
  • Nature's chief beauties spring from thee;
  • Oh, still thy tribute bring
  • Still make the golden crocus shine
  • Among the flowers the most divine,
  • The glory of the spring.
  • Still in the wallflower's fragrance dwell;
  • And hover round the slight bluebell,
  • My childhood's darling flower.
  • Smile on the little daisy still,
  • The buttercup's bright goblet fill
  • With all thy former power.
  • For ever hang thy dreamy spell
  • Round mountain star and heather bell,
  • And do not pass away
  • From sparkling frost, or wreathed snow,
  • And whisper when the wild winds blow,
  • Or rippling waters play.
  • Is childhood, then, so all divine?
  • Or Memory, is the glory thine,
  • That haloes thus the past?
  • Not ALL divine; its pangs of grief
  • (Although, perchance, their stay be brief)
  • Are bitter while they last.
  • Nor is the glory all thine own,
  • For on our earliest joys alone
  • That holy light is cast.
  • With such a ray, no spell of thine
  • Can make our later pleasures shine,
  • Though long ago they passed.
  • TO COWPER.
  • Sweet are thy strains, celestial Bard;
  • And oft, in childhood's years,
  • I've read them o'er and o'er again,
  • With floods of silent tears.
  • The language of my inmost heart
  • I traced in every line;
  • MY sins, MY sorrows, hopes, and fears,
  • Were there-and only mine.
  • All for myself the sigh would swell,
  • The tear of anguish start;
  • I little knew what wilder woe
  • Had filled the Poet's heart.
  • I did not know the nights of gloom,
  • The days of misery;
  • The long, long years of dark despair,
  • That crushed and tortured thee.
  • But they are gone; from earth at length
  • Thy gentle soul is pass'd,
  • And in the bosom of its God
  • Has found its home at last.
  • It must be so, if God is love,
  • And answers fervent prayer;
  • Then surely thou shalt dwell on high,
  • And I may meet thee there.
  • Is He the source of every good,
  • The spring of purity?
  • Then in thine hours of deepest woe,
  • Thy God was still with thee.
  • How else, when every hope was fled,
  • Couldst thou so fondly cling
  • To holy things and help men?
  • And how so sweetly sing,
  • Of things that God alone could teach?
  • And whence that purity,
  • That hatred of all sinful ways--
  • That gentle charity?
  • Are THESE the symptoms of a heart
  • Of heavenly grace bereft--
  • For ever banished from its God,
  • To Satan's fury left?
  • Yet, should thy darkest fears be true,
  • If Heaven be so severe,
  • That such a soul as thine is lost,--
  • Oh! how shall I appear?
  • THE DOUBTER'S PRAYER.
  • Eternal Power, of earth and air!
  • Unseen, yet seen in all around,
  • Remote, but dwelling everywhere,
  • Though silent, heard in every sound;
  • If e'er thine ear in mercy bent,
  • When wretched mortals cried to Thee,
  • And if, indeed, Thy Son was sent,
  • To save lost sinners such as me:
  • Then hear me now, while kneeling here,
  • I lift to thee my heart and eye,
  • And all my soul ascends in prayer,
  • OH, GIVE ME--GIVE ME FAITH! I cry.
  • Without some glimmering in my heart,
  • I could not raise this fervent prayer;
  • But, oh! a stronger light impart,
  • And in Thy mercy fix it there.
  • While Faith is with me, I am blest;
  • It turns my darkest night to day;
  • But while I clasp it to my breast,
  • I often feel it slide away.
  • Then, cold and dark, my spirit sinks,
  • To see my light of life depart;
  • And every fiend of Hell, methinks,
  • Enjoys the anguish of my heart.
  • What shall I do, if all my love,
  • My hopes, my toil, are cast away,
  • And if there be no God above,
  • To hear and bless me when I pray?
  • If this be vain delusion all,
  • If death be an eternal sleep,
  • And none can hear my secret call,
  • Or see the silent tears I weep!
  • Oh, help me, God! For thou alone
  • Canst my distracted soul relieve;
  • Forsake it not: it is thine own,
  • Though weak, yet longing to believe.
  • Oh, drive these cruel doubts away;
  • And make me know, that Thou art God!
  • A faith, that shines by night and day,
  • Will lighten every earthly load.
  • If I believe that Jesus died,
  • And waking, rose to reign above;
  • Then surely Sorrow, Sin, and Pride,
  • Must yield to Peace, and Hope, and Love.
  • And all the blessed words He said
  • Will strength and holy joy impart:
  • A shield of safety o'er my head,
  • A spring of comfort in my heart.
  • A WORD TO THE "ELECT."
  • You may rejoice to think YOURSELVES secure;
  • You may be grateful for the gift divine--
  • That grace unsought, which made your black hearts pure,
  • And fits your earth-born souls in Heaven to shine.
  • But, is it sweet to look around, and view
  • Thousands excluded from that happiness
  • Which they deserved, at least, as much as you.--
  • Their faults not greater, nor their virtues less?
  • And wherefore should you love your God the more,
  • Because to you alone his smiles are given;
  • Because He chose to pass the MANY o'er,
  • And only bring the favoured FEW to Heaven?
  • And, wherefore should your hearts more grateful prove,
  • Because for ALL the Saviour did not die?
  • Is yours the God of justice and of love?
  • And are your bosoms warm with charity?
  • Say, does your heart expand to all mankind?
  • And, would you ever to your neighbour do--
  • The weak, the strong, the enlightened, and the blind--
  • As you would have your neighbour do to you?
  • And when you, looking on your fellow-men,
  • Behold them doomed to endless misery,
  • How can you talk of joy and rapture then?--
  • May God withhold such cruel joy from me!
  • That none deserve eternal bliss I know;
  • Unmerited the grace in mercy given:
  • But, none shall sink to everlasting woe,
  • That have not well deserved the wrath of Heaven.
  • And, oh! there lives within my heart
  • A hope, long nursed by me;
  • (And should its cheering ray depart,
  • How dark my soul would be!)
  • That as in Adam all have died,
  • In Christ shall all men live;
  • And ever round his throne abide,
  • Eternal praise to give.
  • That even the wicked shall at last
  • Be fitted for the skies;
  • And when their dreadful doom is past,
  • To life and light arise.
  • I ask not, how remote the day,
  • Nor what the sinners' woe,
  • Before their dross is purged away;
  • Enough for me to know--
  • That when the cup of wrath is drained,
  • The metal purified,
  • They'll cling to what they once disdained,
  • And live by Him that died.
  • PAST DAYS.
  • 'Tis strange to think there WAS a time
  • When mirth was not an empty name,
  • When laughter really cheered the heart,
  • And frequent smiles unbidden came,
  • And tears of grief would only flow
  • In sympathy for others' woe;
  • When speech expressed the inward thought,
  • And heart to kindred heart was bare,
  • And summer days were far too short
  • For all the pleasures crowded there;
  • And silence, solitude, and rest,
  • Now welcome to the weary breast--
  • Were all unprized, uncourted then--
  • And all the joy one spirit showed,
  • The other deeply felt again;
  • And friendship like a river flowed,
  • Constant and strong its silent course,
  • For nought withstood its gentle force:
  • When night, the holy time of peace,
  • Was dreaded as the parting hour;
  • When speech and mirth at once must cease,
  • And silence must resume her power;
  • Though ever free from pains and woes,
  • She only brought us calm repose.
  • And when the blessed dawn again
  • Brought daylight to the blushing skies,
  • We woke, and not RELUCTANT then,
  • To joyless LABOUR did we rise;
  • But full of hope, and glad and gay,
  • We welcomed the returning day.
  • THE CONSOLATION.
  • Though bleak these woods, and damp the ground
  • With fallen leaves so thickly strown,
  • And cold the wind that wanders round
  • With wild and melancholy moan;
  • There IS a friendly roof, I know,
  • Might shield me from the wintry blast;
  • There is a fire, whose ruddy glow
  • Will cheer me for my wanderings past.
  • And so, though still, where'er I go,
  • Cold stranger-glances meet my eye;
  • Though, when my spirit sinks in woe,
  • Unheeded swells the unbidden sigh;
  • Though solitude, endured too long,
  • Bids youthful joys too soon decay,
  • Makes mirth a stranger to my tongue,
  • And overclouds my noon of day;
  • When kindly thoughts that would have way,
  • Flow back discouraged to my breast;
  • I know there is, though far away,
  • A home where heart and soul may rest.
  • Warm hands are there, that, clasped in mine,
  • The warmer heart will not belie;
  • While mirth, and truth, and friendship shine
  • In smiling lip and earnest eye.
  • The ice that gathers round my heart
  • May there be thawed; and sweetly, then,
  • The joys of youth, that now depart,
  • Will come to cheer my soul again.
  • Though far I roam, that thought shall be
  • My hope, my comfort, everywhere;
  • While such a home remains to me,
  • My heart shall never know despair!
  • LINES COMPOSED IN A WOOD ON A WINDY DAY.
  • My soul is awakened, my spirit is soaring
  • And carried aloft on the wings of the breeze;
  • For above and around me the wild wind is roaring,
  • Arousing to rapture the earth and the seas.
  • The long withered grass in the sunshine is glancing,
  • The bare trees are tossing their branches on high;
  • The dead leaves beneath them are merrily dancing,
  • The white clouds are scudding across the blue sky
  • I wish I could see how the ocean is lashing
  • The foam of its billows to whirlwinds of spray;
  • I wish I could see how its proud waves are dashing,
  • And hear the wild roar of their thunder to-day!
  • VIEWS OF LIFE.
  • When sinks my heart in hopeless gloom,
  • And life can show no joy for me;
  • And I behold a yawning tomb,
  • Where bowers and palaces should be;
  • In vain you talk of morbid dreams;
  • In vain you gaily smiling say,
  • That what to me so dreary seems,
  • The healthy mind deems bright and gay.
  • I too have smiled, and thought like you,
  • But madly smiled, and falsely deemed:
  • TRUTH led me to the present view,--
  • I'm waking now--'twas THEN I dreamed.
  • I lately saw a sunset sky,
  • And stood enraptured to behold
  • Its varied hues of glorious dye:
  • First, fleecy clouds of shining gold;
  • These blushing took a rosy hue;
  • Beneath them shone a flood of green;
  • Nor less divine, the glorious blue
  • That smiled above them and between.
  • I cannot name each lovely shade;
  • I cannot say how bright they shone;
  • But one by one, I saw them fade;
  • And what remained when they were gone?
  • Dull clouds remained, of sombre hue,
  • And when their borrowed charm was o'er,
  • The azure sky had faded too,
  • That smiled so softly bright before.
  • So, gilded by the glow of youth,
  • Our varied life looks fair and gay;
  • And so remains the naked truth,
  • When that false light is past away.
  • Why blame ye, then, my keener sight,
  • That clearly sees a world of woes
  • Through all the haze of golden light
  • That flattering Falsehood round it throws?
  • When the young mother smiles above
  • The first-born darling of her heart,
  • Her bosom glows with earnest love,
  • While tears of silent transport start.
  • Fond dreamer! little does she know
  • The anxious toil, the suffering,
  • The blasted hopes, the burning woe,
  • The object of her joy will bring.
  • Her blinded eyes behold not now
  • What, soon or late, must be his doom;
  • The anguish that will cloud his brow,
  • The bed of death, the dreary tomb.
  • As little know the youthful pair,
  • In mutual love supremely blest,
  • What weariness, and cold despair,
  • Ere long, will seize the aching breast.
  • And even should Love and Faith remain,
  • (The greatest blessings life can show,)
  • Amid adversity and pain,
  • To shine throughout with cheering glow;
  • They do not see how cruel Death
  • Comes on, their loving hearts to part:
  • One feels not now the gasping breath,
  • The rending of the earth-bound heart,--
  • The soul's and body's agony,
  • Ere she may sink to her repose.
  • The sad survivor cannot see
  • The grave above his darling close;
  • Nor how, despairing and alone,
  • He then must wear his life away;
  • And linger, feebly toiling on,
  • And fainting, sink into decay.
  • * * * *
  • Oh, Youth may listen patiently,
  • While sad Experience tells her tale,
  • But Doubt sits smiling in his eye,
  • For ardent Hope will still prevail!
  • He hears how feeble Pleasure dies,
  • By guilt destroyed, and pain and woe;
  • He turns to Hope--and she replies,
  • "Believe it not-it is not so!"
  • "Oh, heed her not!" Experience says;
  • "For thus she whispered once to me;
  • She told me, in my youthful days,
  • How glorious manhood's prime would be.
  • "When, in the time of early Spring,
  • Too chill the winds that o'er me pass'd,
  • She said, each coming day would bring
  • a fairer heaven, a gentler blast.
  • "And when the sun too seldom beamed,
  • The sky, o'ercast, too darkly frowned,
  • The soaking rain too constant streamed,
  • And mists too dreary gathered round;
  • "She told me, Summer's glorious ray
  • Would chase those vapours all away,
  • And scatter glories round;
  • With sweetest music fill the trees,
  • Load with rich scent the gentle breeze,
  • And strew with flowers the ground
  • "But when, beneath that scorching ray,
  • I languished, weary through the day,
  • While birds refused to sing,
  • Verdure decayed from field and tree,
  • And panting Nature mourned with me
  • The freshness of the Spring.
  • "'Wait but a little while,' she said,
  • 'Till Summer's burning days are fled;
  • And Autumn shall restore,
  • With golden riches of her own,
  • And Summer's glories mellowed down,
  • The freshness you deplore.'
  • And long I waited, but in vain:
  • That freshness never came again,
  • Though Summer passed away,
  • Though Autumn's mists hung cold and chill.
  • And drooping nature languished still,
  • And sank into decay.
  • "Till wintry blasts foreboding blew
  • Through leafless trees--and then I knew
  • That Hope was all a dream.
  • But thus, fond youth, she cheated me;
  • And she will prove as false to thee,
  • Though sweet her words may seem.
  • Stern prophet! Cease thy bodings dire--
  • Thou canst not quench the ardent fire
  • That warms the breast of youth.
  • Oh, let it cheer him while it may,
  • And gently, gently die away--
  • Chilled by the damps of truth!
  • Tell him, that earth is not our rest;
  • Its joys are empty--frail at best;
  • And point beyond the sky.
  • But gleams of light may reach us here;
  • And hope the ROUGHEST path can cheer:
  • Then do not bid it fly!
  • Though hope may promise joys, that still
  • Unkindly time will ne'er fulfil;
  • Or, if they come at all,
  • We never find them unalloyed,--
  • Hurtful perchance, or soon destroyed,
  • They vanish or they pall;
  • Yet hope ITSELF a brightness throws
  • O'er all our labours and our woes;
  • While dark foreboding Care
  • A thousand ills will oft portend,
  • That Providence may ne'er intend
  • The trembling heart to bear.
  • Or if they come, it oft appears,
  • Our woes are lighter than our fears,
  • And far more bravely borne.
  • Then let us not enhance our doom
  • But e'en in midnight's blackest gloom
  • Expect the rising morn.
  • Because the road is rough and long,
  • Shall we despise the skylark's song,
  • That cheers the wanderer's way?
  • Or trample down, with reckless feet,
  • The smiling flowerets, bright and sweet,
  • Because they soon decay?
  • Pass pleasant scenes unnoticed by,
  • Because the next is bleak and drear;
  • Or not enjoy a smiling sky,
  • Because a tempest may be near?
  • No! while we journey on our way,
  • We'll smile on every lovely thing;
  • And ever, as they pass away,
  • To memory and hope we'll cling.
  • And though that awful river flows
  • Before us, when the journey's past,
  • Perchance of all the pilgrim's woes
  • Most dreadful--shrink not--'tis the last!
  • Though icy cold, and dark, and deep;
  • Beyond it smiles that blessed shore,
  • Where none shall suffer, none shall weep,
  • And bliss shall reign for evermore!
  • APPEAL.
  • Oh, I am very weary,
  • Though tears no longer flow;
  • My eyes are tired of weeping,
  • My heart is sick of woe;
  • My life is very lonely
  • My days pass heavily,
  • I'm weary of repining;
  • Wilt thou not come to me?
  • Oh, didst thou know my longings
  • For thee, from day to day,
  • My hopes, so often blighted,
  • Thou wouldst not thus delay!
  • THE STUDENT'S SERENADE.
  • I have slept upon my couch,
  • But my spirit did not rest,
  • For the labours of the day
  • Yet my weary soul opprest;
  • And before my dreaming eyes
  • Still the learned volumes lay,
  • And I could not close their leaves,
  • And I could not turn away.
  • But I oped my eyes at last,
  • And I heard a muffled sound;
  • 'Twas the night-breeze, come to say
  • That the snow was on the ground.
  • Then I knew that there was rest
  • On the mountain's bosom free;
  • So I left my fevered couch,
  • And I flew to waken thee!
  • I have flown to waken thee--
  • For, if thou wilt not arise,
  • Then my soul can drink no peace
  • From these holy moonlight skies.
  • And this waste of virgin snow
  • To my sight will not be fair,
  • Unless thou wilt smiling come,
  • Love, to wander with me there.
  • Then, awake! Maria, wake!
  • For, if thou couldst only know
  • How the quiet moonlight sleeps
  • On this wilderness of snow,
  • And the groves of ancient trees,
  • In their snowy garb arrayed,
  • Till they stretch into the gloom
  • Of the distant valley's shade;
  • I know thou wouldst rejoice
  • To inhale this bracing air;
  • Thou wouldst break thy sweetest sleep
  • To behold a scene so fair.
  • O'er these wintry wilds, ALONE,
  • Thou wouldst joy to wander free;
  • And it will not please thee less,
  • Though that bliss be shared with me.
  • THE CAPTIVE DOVE.
  • Poor restless dove, I pity thee;
  • And when I hear thy plaintive moan,
  • I mourn for thy captivity,
  • And in thy woes forget mine own.
  • To see thee stand prepared to fly,
  • And flap those useless wings of thine,
  • And gaze into the distant sky,
  • Would melt a harder heart than mine.
  • In vain--in vain! Thou canst not rise:
  • Thy prison roof confines thee there;
  • Its slender wires delude thine eyes,
  • And quench thy longings with despair.
  • Oh, thou wert made to wander free
  • In sunny mead and shady grove,
  • And far beyond the rolling sea,
  • In distant climes, at will to rove!
  • Yet, hadst thou but one gentle mate
  • Thy little drooping heart to cheer,
  • And share with thee thy captive state,
  • Thou couldst be happy even there.
  • Yes, even there, if, listening by,
  • One faithful dear companion stood,
  • While gazing on her full bright eye,
  • Thou mightst forget thy native wood
  • But thou, poor solitary dove,
  • Must make, unheard, thy joyless moan;
  • The heart that Nature formed to love
  • Must pine, neglected, and alone.
  • SELF-CONGRATULATION.
  • Ellen, you were thoughtless once
  • Of beauty or of grace,
  • Simple and homely in attire,
  • Careless of form and face;
  • Then whence this change? and wherefore now
  • So often smoothe your hair?
  • And wherefore deck your youthful form
  • With such unwearied care?
  • Tell us, and cease to tire our ears
  • With that familiar strain;
  • Why will you play those simple tunes
  • So often o'er again?
  • "Indeed, dear friends, I can but say
  • That childhood's thoughts are gone;
  • Each year its own new feelings brings,
  • And years move swiftly on:
  • "And for these little simple airs--
  • I love to play them o'er
  • So much--I dare not promise, now,
  • To play them never more."
  • I answered--and it was enough;
  • They turned them to depart;
  • They could not read my secret thoughts,
  • Nor see my throbbing heart.
  • I've noticed many a youthful form,
  • Upon whose changeful face
  • The inmost workings of the soul
  • The gazer well might trace;
  • The speaking eye, the changing lip,
  • The ready blushing cheek,
  • The smiling, or beclouded brow,
  • Their different feelings speak.
  • But, thank God! you might gaze on mine
  • For hours, and never know
  • The secret changes of my soul
  • From joy to keenest woe.
  • Last night, as we sat round the fire
  • Conversing merrily,
  • We heard, without, approaching steps
  • Of one well known to me!
  • There was no trembling in my voice,
  • No blush upon my cheek,
  • No lustrous sparkle in my eyes,
  • Of hope, or joy, to speak;
  • But, oh! my spirit burned within,
  • My heart beat full and fast!
  • He came not nigh--he went away--
  • And then my joy was past.
  • And yet my comrades marked it not:
  • My voice was still the same;
  • They saw me smile, and o'er my face
  • No signs of sadness came.
  • They little knew my hidden thoughts;
  • And they will NEVER know
  • The aching anguish of my heart,
  • The bitter burning woe!
  • FLUCTUATIONS,
  • What though the Sun had left my sky;
  • To save me from despair
  • The blessed Moon arose on high,
  • And shone serenely there.
  • I watched her, with a tearful gaze,
  • Rise slowly o'er the hill,
  • While through the dim horizon's haze
  • Her light gleamed faint and chill.
  • I thought such wan and lifeless beams
  • Could ne'er my heart repay
  • For the bright sun's most transient gleams
  • That cheered me through the day:
  • But, as above that mist's control
  • She rose, and brighter shone,
  • I felt her light upon my soul;
  • But now--that light is gone!
  • Thick vapours snatched her from my sight,
  • And I was darkling left,
  • All in the cold and gloomy night,
  • Of light and hope bereft:
  • Until, methought, a little star
  • Shone forth with trembling ray,
  • To cheer me with its light afar--
  • But that, too, passed away.
  • Anon, an earthly meteor blazed
  • The gloomy darkness through;
  • I smiled, yet trembled while I gazed--
  • But that soon vanished too!
  • And darker, drearier fell the night
  • Upon my spirit then;--
  • But what is that faint struggling light?
  • Is it the Moon again?
  • Kind Heaven! increase that silvery gleam
  • And bid these clouds depart,
  • And let her soft celestial beam
  • Restore my fainting heart!
  • SELECTIONS FROM THE LITERARY REMAINS OF ELLIS AND ACTON BELL.
  • By Currer Bell
  • SELECTIONS FROM POEMS BY ELLIS BELL.
  • It would not have been difficult to compile a volume out of the papers
  • left by my sisters, had I, in making the selection, dismissed from my
  • consideration the scruples and the wishes of those whose written
  • thoughts these papers held. But this was impossible: an influence,
  • stronger than could be exercised by any motive of expediency,
  • necessarily regulated the selection. I have, then, culled from the mass
  • only a little poem here and there. The whole makes but a tiny nosegay,
  • and the colour and perfume of the flowers are not such as fit them for
  • festal uses.
  • It has been already said that my sisters wrote much in childhood and
  • girlhood. Usually, it seems a sort of injustice to expose in print the
  • crude thoughts of the unripe mind, the rude efforts of the unpractised
  • hand; yet I venture to give three little poems of my sister Emily's,
  • written in her sixteenth year, because they illustrate a point in her
  • character.
  • At that period she was sent to school. Her previous life, with the
  • exception of a single half-year, had been passed in the absolute
  • retirement of a village parsonage, amongst the hills bordering Yorkshire
  • and Lancashire. The scenery of these hills is not grand--it is not
  • romantic it is scarcely striking. Long low moors, dark with heath, shut
  • in little valleys, where a stream waters, here and there, a fringe of
  • stunted copse. Mills and scattered cottages chase romance from these
  • valleys; it is only higher up, deep in amongst the ridges of the moors,
  • that Imagination can find rest for the sole of her foot: and even if she
  • finds it there, she must be a solitude-loving raven--no gentle dove. If
  • she demand beauty to inspire her, she must bring it inborn: these moors
  • are too stern to yield any product so delicate. The eye of the gazer
  • must ITSELF brim with a "purple light," intense enough to perpetuate the
  • brief flower-flush of August on the heather, or the rare sunset-smile of
  • June; out of his heart must well the freshness, that in latter spring
  • and early summer brightens the bracken, nurtures the moss, and cherishes
  • the starry flowers that spangle for a few weeks the pasture of the
  • moor-sheep. Unless that light and freshness are innate and self-sustained,
  • the drear prospect of a Yorkshire moor will be found as barren of poetic
  • as of agricultural interest: where the love of wild nature is strong,
  • the locality will perhaps be clung to with the more passionate
  • constancy, because from the hill-lover's self comes half its charm.
  • My sister Emily loved the moors. Flowers brighter than the rose bloomed
  • in the blackest of the heath for her; out of a sullen hollow in a livid
  • hill-side her mind could make an Eden. She found in the bleak solitude
  • many and dear delights; and not the least and best loved was--liberty.
  • Liberty was the breath of Emily's nostrils; without it, she perished.
  • The change from her own home to a school, and from her own very
  • noiseless, very secluded, but unrestricted and inartificial mode of
  • life, to one of disciplined routine (though under the kindliest
  • auspices), was what she failed in enduring. Her nature proved here too
  • strong for her fortitude. Every morning when she woke, the vision of
  • home and the moors rushed on her, and darkened and saddened the day that
  • lay before her. Nobody knew what ailed her but me--I knew only too well.
  • In this struggle her health was quickly broken: her white face,
  • attenuated form, and failing strength, threatened rapid decline. I felt
  • in my heart she would die, if she did not go home, and with this
  • conviction obtained her recall. She had only been three months at
  • school; and it was some years before the experiment of sending her from
  • home was again ventured on. After the age of twenty, having meantime
  • studied alone with diligence and perseverance, she went with me to an
  • establishment on the Continent: the same suffering and conflict ensued,
  • heightened by the strong recoil of her upright, heretic and English
  • spirit from the gentle Jesuitry of the foreign and Romish system. Once
  • more she seemed sinking, but this time she rallied through the mere
  • force of resolution: with inward remorse and shame she looked back on
  • her former failure, and resolved to conquer in this second ordeal. She
  • did conquer: but the victory cost her dear. She was never happy till she
  • carried her hard-won knowledge back to the remote English village, the
  • old parsonage-house, and desolate Yorkshire hills. A very few years
  • more, and she looked her last on those hills, and breathed her last in
  • that house, and under the aisle of that obscure village church found her
  • last lowly resting-place. Merciful was the decree that spared her when
  • she was a stranger in a strange land, and guarded her dying bed with
  • kindred love and congenial constancy.
  • The following pieces were composed at twilight, in the school-room, when
  • the leisure of the evening play-hour brought back in full tide the
  • thoughts of home.
  • I.
  • A LITTLE while, a little while,
  • The weary task is put away,
  • And I can sing and I can smile,
  • Alike, while I have holiday.
  • Where wilt thou go, my harassed heart--
  • What thought, what scene invites thee now
  • What spot, or near or far apart,
  • Has rest for thee, my weary brow?
  • There is a spot, 'mid barren hills,
  • Where winter howls, and driving rain;
  • But, if the dreary tempest chills,
  • There is a light that warms again.
  • The house is old, the trees are bare,
  • Moonless above bends twilight's dome;
  • But what on earth is half so dear--
  • So longed for--as the hearth of home?
  • The mute bird sitting on the stone,
  • The dank moss dripping from the wall,
  • The thorn-trees gaunt, the walks o'ergrown,
  • I love them--how I love them all!
  • Still, as I mused, the naked room,
  • The alien firelight died away;
  • And from the midst of cheerless gloom,
  • I passed to bright, unclouded day.
  • A little and a lone green lane
  • That opened on a common wide;
  • A distant, dreamy, dim blue chain
  • Of mountains circling every side.
  • A heaven so clear, an earth so calm,
  • So sweet, so soft, so hushed an air;
  • And, deepening still the dream-like charm,
  • Wild moor-sheep feeding everywhere.
  • THAT was the scene, I knew it well;
  • I knew the turfy pathway's sweep,
  • That, winding o'er each billowy swell,
  • Marked out the tracks of wandering sheep.
  • Could I have lingered but an hour,
  • It well had paid a week of toil;
  • But Truth has banished Fancy's power:
  • Restraint and heavy task recoil.
  • Even as I stood with raptured eye,
  • Absorbed in bliss so deep and dear,
  • My hour of rest had fleeted by,
  • And back came labour, bondage, care.
  • II. THE BLUEBELL.
  • The Bluebell is the sweetest flower
  • That waves in summer air:
  • Its blossoms have the mightiest power
  • To soothe my spirit's care.
  • There is a spell in purple heath
  • Too wildly, sadly dear;
  • The violet has a fragrant breath,
  • But fragrance will not cheer,
  • The trees are bare, the sun is cold,
  • And seldom, seldom seen;
  • The heavens have lost their zone of gold,
  • And earth her robe of green.
  • And ice upon the glancing stream
  • Has cast its sombre shade;
  • And distant hills and valleys seem
  • In frozen mist arrayed.
  • The Bluebell cannot charm me now,
  • The heath has lost its bloom;
  • The violets in the glen below,
  • They yield no sweet perfume.
  • But, though I mourn the sweet Bluebell,
  • 'Tis better far away;
  • I know how fast my tears would swell
  • To see it smile to-day.
  • For, oh! when chill the sunbeams fall
  • Adown that dreary sky,
  • And gild yon dank and darkened wall
  • With transient brilliancy;
  • How do I weep, how do I pine
  • For the time of flowers to come,
  • And turn me from that fading shine,
  • To mourn the fields of home!
  • III.
  • Loud without the wind was roaring
  • Through th'autumnal sky;
  • Drenching wet, the cold rain pouring,
  • Spoke of winter nigh.
  • All too like that dreary eve,
  • Did my exiled spirit grieve.
  • Grieved at first, but grieved not long,
  • Sweet--how softly sweet!--it came;
  • Wild words of an ancient song,
  • Undefined, without a name.
  • "It was spring, and the skylark was singing:"
  • Those words they awakened a spell;
  • They unlocked a deep fountain, whose springing,
  • Nor absence, nor distance can quell.
  • In the gloom of a cloudy November
  • They uttered the music of May;
  • They kindled the perishing ember
  • Into fervour that could not decay.
  • Awaken, o'er all my dear moorland,
  • West-wind, in thy glory and pride!
  • Oh! call me from valley and lowland,
  • To walk by the hill-torrent's side!
  • It is swelled with the first snowy weather;
  • The rocks they are icy and hoar,
  • And sullenly waves the long heather,
  • And the fern leaves are sunny no more.
  • There are no yellow stars on the mountain
  • The bluebells have long died away
  • From the brink of the moss-bedded fountain--
  • From the side of the wintry brae.
  • But lovelier than corn-fields all waving
  • In emerald, and vermeil, and gold,
  • Are the heights where the north-wind is raving,
  • And the crags where I wandered of old.
  • It was morning: the bright sun was beaming;
  • How sweetly it brought back to me
  • The time when nor labour nor dreaming
  • Broke the sleep of the happy and free!
  • But blithely we rose as the dawn-heaven
  • Was melting to amber and blue,
  • And swift were the wings to our feet given,
  • As we traversed the meadows of dew.
  • For the moors! For the moors, where the short grass
  • Like velvet beneath us should lie!
  • For the moors! For the moors, where each high pass
  • Rose sunny against the clear sky!
  • For the moors, where the linnet was trilling
  • Its song on the old granite stone;
  • Where the lark, the wild sky-lark, was filling
  • Every breast with delight like its own!
  • What language can utter the feeling
  • Which rose, when in exile afar,
  • On the brow of a lonely hill kneeling,
  • I saw the brown heath growing there?
  • It was scattered and stunted, and told me
  • That soon even that would be gone:
  • It whispered, "The grim walls enfold me,
  • I have bloomed in my last summer's sun."
  • But not the loved music, whose waking
  • Makes the soul of the Swiss die away,
  • Has a spell more adored and heartbreaking
  • Than, for me, in that blighted heath lay.
  • The spirit which bent 'neath its power,
  • How it longed--how it burned to be free!
  • If I could have wept in that hour,
  • Those tears had been heaven to me.
  • Well--well; the sad minutes are moving,
  • Though loaded with trouble and pain;
  • And some time the loved and the loving
  • Shall meet on the mountains again!
  • The following little piece has no title; but in it the Genius of a
  • solitary region seems to address his wandering and wayward votary, and
  • to recall within his influence the proud mind which rebelled at times
  • even against what it most loved.
  • Shall earth no more inspire thee,
  • Thou lonely dreamer now?
  • Since passion may not fire thee,
  • Shall nature cease to bow?
  • Thy mind is ever moving,
  • In regions dark to thee;
  • Recall its useless roving,
  • Come back, and dwell with me.
  • I know my mountain breezes
  • Enchant and soothe thee still,
  • I know my sunshine pleases,
  • Despite thy wayward will.
  • When day with evening blending,
  • Sinks from the summer sky,
  • I've seen thy spirit bending
  • In fond idolatry.
  • I've watched thee every hour;
  • I know my mighty sway:
  • I know my magic power
  • To drive thy griefs away.
  • Few hearts to mortals given,
  • On earth so wildly pine;
  • Yet few would ask a heaven
  • More like this earth than thine.
  • Then let my winds caress thee
  • Thy comrade let me be:
  • Since nought beside can bless thee,
  • Return--and dwell with me.
  • Here again is the same mind in converse with a like abstraction. "The
  • Night-Wind," breathing through an open window, has visited an ear which
  • discerned language in its whispers.
  • THE NIGHT-WIND.
  • In summer's mellow midnight,
  • A cloudless moon shone through
  • Our open parlour window,
  • And rose-trees wet with dew.
  • I sat in silent musing;
  • The soft wind waved my hair;
  • It told me heaven was glorious,
  • And sleeping earth was fair.
  • I needed not its breathing
  • To bring such thoughts to me;
  • But still it whispered lowly,
  • How dark the woods will be!
  • "The thick leaves in my murmur
  • Are rustling like a dream,
  • And all their myriad voices
  • Instinct with spirit seem."
  • I said, "Go, gentle singer,
  • Thy wooing voice is kind:
  • But do not think its music
  • Has power to reach my mind.
  • "Play with the scented flower,
  • The young tree's supple bough,
  • And leave my human feelings
  • In their own course to flow."
  • The wanderer would not heed me;
  • Its kiss grew warmer still.
  • "O come!" it sighed so sweetly;
  • "I'll win thee 'gainst thy will.
  • "Were we not friends from childhood?
  • Have I not loved thee long?
  • As long as thou, the solemn night,
  • Whose silence wakes my song.
  • "And when thy heart is resting
  • Beneath the church-aisle stone,
  • I shall have time for mourning,
  • And THOU for being alone."
  • In these stanzas a louder gale has roused the sleeper on her pillow: the
  • wakened soul struggles to blend with the storm by which it is swayed:--
  • Ay--there it is! it wakes to-night
  • Deep feelings I thought dead;
  • Strong in the blast--quick gathering light--
  • The heart's flame kindles red.
  • "Now I can tell by thine altered cheek,
  • And by thine eyes' full gaze,
  • And by the words thou scarce dost speak,
  • How wildly fancy plays.
  • "Yes--I could swear that glorious wind
  • Has swept the world aside,
  • Has dashed its memory from thy mind
  • Like foam-bells from the tide:
  • "And thou art now a spirit pouring
  • Thy presence into all:
  • The thunder of the tempest's roaring,
  • The whisper of its fall:
  • "An universal influence,
  • From thine own influence free;
  • A principle of life--intense--
  • Lost to mortality.
  • "Thus truly, when that breast is cold,
  • Thy prisoned soul shall rise;
  • The dungeon mingle with the mould--
  • The captive with the skies.
  • Nature's deep being, thine shall hold,
  • Her spirit all thy spirit fold,
  • Her breath absorb thy sighs.
  • Mortal! though soon life's tale is told;
  • Who once lives, never dies!"
  • LOVE AND FRIENDSHIP.
  • Love is like the wild rose-briar;
  • Friendship like the holly-tree.
  • The holly is dark when the rose-briar blooms,
  • But which will bloom most constantly?
  • The wild rose-briar is sweet in spring,
  • Its summer blossoms scent the air;
  • Yet wait till winter comes again,
  • And who will call the wild-briar fair?
  • Then, scorn the silly rose-wreath now,
  • And deck thee with the holly's sheen,
  • That, when December blights thy brow,
  • He still may leave thy garland green.
  • THE ELDER'S REBUKE.
  • "Listen! When your hair, like mine,
  • Takes a tint of silver gray;
  • When your eyes, with dimmer shine,
  • Watch life's bubbles float away:
  • When you, young man, have borne like me
  • The weary weight of sixty-three,
  • Then shall penance sore be paid
  • For those hours so wildly squandered;
  • And the words that now fall dead
  • On your ear, be deeply pondered--
  • Pondered and approved at last:
  • But their virtue will be past!
  • "Glorious is the prize of Duty,
  • Though she be 'a serious power';
  • Treacherous all the lures of Beauty,
  • Thorny bud and poisonous flower!
  • "Mirth is but a mad beguiling
  • Of the golden-gifted time;
  • Love--a demon-meteor, wiling
  • Heedless feet to gulfs of crime.
  • "Those who follow earthly pleasure,
  • Heavenly knowledge will not lead;
  • Wisdom hides from them her treasure,
  • Virtue bids them evil-speed!
  • "Vainly may their hearts repenting.
  • Seek for aid in future years;
  • Wisdom, scorned, knows no relenting;
  • Virtue is not won by fears."
  • Thus spake the ice-blooded elder gray;
  • The young man scoffed as he turned away,
  • Turned to the call of a sweet lute's measure,
  • Waked by the lightsome touch of pleasure:
  • Had he ne'er met a gentler teacher,
  • Woe had been wrought by that pitiless preacher.
  • THE WANDERER FROM THE FOLD.
  • How few, of all the hearts that loved,
  • Are grieving for thee now;
  • And why should mine to-night be moved
  • With such a sense of woe?
  • Too often thus, when left alone,
  • Where none my thoughts can see,
  • Comes back a word, a passing tone
  • From thy strange history.
  • Sometimes I seem to see thee rise,
  • A glorious child again;
  • All virtues beaming from thine eyes
  • That ever honoured men:
  • Courage and truth, a generous breast
  • Where sinless sunshine lay:
  • A being whose very presence blest
  • Like gladsome summer-day.
  • O, fairly spread thy early sail,
  • And fresh, and pure, and free,
  • Was the first impulse of the gale
  • Which urged life's wave for thee!
  • Why did the pilot, too confiding,
  • Dream o'er that ocean's foam,
  • And trust in Pleasure's careless guiding
  • To bring his vessel home?
  • For well he knew what dangers frowned,
  • What mists would gather, dim;
  • What rocks and shelves, and sands lay round
  • Between his port and him.
  • The very brightness of the sun
  • The splendour of the main,
  • The wind which bore him wildly on
  • Should not have warned in vain.
  • An anxious gazer from the shore--
  • I marked the whitening wave,
  • And wept above thy fate the more
  • Because--I could not save.
  • It recks not now, when all is over:
  • But yet my heart will be
  • A mourner still, though friend and lover
  • Have both forgotten thee!
  • WARNING AND REPLY.
  • In the earth--the earth--thou shalt be laid,
  • A grey stone standing over thee;
  • Black mould beneath thee spread,
  • And black mould to cover thee.
  • "Well--there is rest there,
  • So fast come thy prophecy;
  • The time when my sunny hair
  • Shall with grass roots entwined be."
  • But cold--cold is that resting-place,
  • Shut out from joy and liberty,
  • And all who loved thy living face
  • Will shrink from it shudderingly,
  • "Not so. HERE the world is chill,
  • And sworn friends fall from me:
  • But THERE--they will own me still,
  • And prize my memory."
  • Farewell, then, all that love,
  • All that deep sympathy:
  • Sleep on: Heaven laughs above,
  • Earth never misses thee.
  • Turf-sod and tombstone drear
  • Part human company;
  • One heart breaks only--here,
  • But that heart was worthy thee!
  • LAST WORDS.
  • I knew not 'twas so dire a crime
  • To say the word, "Adieu;"
  • But this shall be the only time
  • My lips or heart shall sue.
  • That wild hill-side, the winter morn,
  • The gnarled and ancient tree,
  • If in your breast they waken scorn,
  • Shall wake the same in me.
  • I can forget black eyes and brows,
  • And lips of falsest charm,
  • If you forget the sacred vows
  • Those faithless lips could form.
  • If hard commands can tame your love,
  • Or strongest walls can hold,
  • I would not wish to grieve above
  • A thing so false and cold.
  • And there are bosoms bound to mine
  • With links both tried and strong:
  • And there are eyes whose lightning shine
  • Has warmed and blest me long:
  • Those eyes shall make my only day,
  • Shall set my spirit free,
  • And chase the foolish thoughts away
  • That mourn your memory.
  • THE LADY TO HER GUITAR.
  • For him who struck thy foreign string,
  • I ween this heart has ceased to care;
  • Then why dost thou such feelings bring
  • To my sad spirit--old Guitar?
  • It is as if the warm sunlight
  • In some deep glen should lingering stay,
  • When clouds of storm, or shades of night,
  • Have wrapt the parent orb away.
  • It is as if the glassy brook
  • Should image still its willows fair,
  • Though years ago the woodman's stroke
  • Laid low in dust their Dryad-hair.
  • Even so, Guitar, thy magic tone
  • Hath moved the tear and waked the sigh:
  • Hath bid the ancient torrent moan,
  • Although its very source is dry.
  • THE TWO CHILDREN.
  • Heavy hangs the rain-drop
  • From the burdened spray;
  • Heavy broods the damp mist
  • On uplands far away.
  • Heavy looms the dull sky,
  • Heavy rolls the sea;
  • And heavy throbs the young heart
  • Beneath that lonely tree.
  • Never has a blue streak
  • Cleft the clouds since morn;
  • Never has his grim fate
  • Smiled since he was born.
  • Frowning on the infant,
  • Shadowing childhood's joy
  • Guardian-angel knows not
  • That melancholy boy.
  • Day is passing swiftly
  • Its sad and sombre prime;
  • Boyhood sad is merging
  • In sadder manhood's time:
  • All the flowers are praying
  • For sun, before they close,
  • And he prays too--unconscious--
  • That sunless human rose.
  • Blossom--that the west-wind
  • Has never wooed to blow,
  • Scentless are thy petals,
  • Thy dew is cold as snow!
  • Soul--where kindred kindness,
  • No early promise woke,
  • Barren is thy beauty,
  • As weed upon a rock.
  • Wither--soul and blossom!
  • You both were vainly given;
  • Earth reserves no blessing
  • For the unblest of heaven!
  • Child of delight, with sun-bright hair,
  • And sea-blue, sea-deep eyes!
  • Spirit of bliss! What brings thee here
  • Beneath these sullen skies?
  • Thou shouldst live in eternal spring,
  • Where endless day is never dim;
  • Why, Seraph, has thine erring wing
  • Wafted thee down to weep with him?
  • "Ah! not from heaven am I descended,
  • Nor do I come to mingle tears;
  • But sweet is day, though with shadows blended;
  • And, though clouded, sweet are youthful years.
  • "I--the image of light and gladness--
  • Saw and pitied that mournful boy,
  • And I vowed--if need were--to share his sadness,
  • And give to him my sunny joy.
  • "Heavy and dark the night is closing;
  • Heavy and dark may its biding be:
  • Better for all from grief reposing,
  • And better for all who watch like me--
  • "Watch in love by a fevered pillow,
  • Cooling the fever with pity's balm
  • Safe as the petrel on tossing billow,
  • Safe in mine own soul's golden calm!
  • "Guardian-angel he lacks no longer;
  • Evil fortune he need not fear:
  • Fate is strong, but love is stronger;
  • And MY love is truer than angel-care."
  • THE VISIONARY.
  • Silent is the house: all are laid asleep:
  • One alone looks out o'er the snow-wreaths deep,
  • Watching every cloud, dreading every breeze
  • That whirls the wildering drift, and bends the groaning trees.
  • Cheerful is the hearth, soft the matted floor;
  • Not one shivering gust creeps through pane or door;
  • The little lamp burns straight, its rays shoot strong and far:
  • I trim it well, to be the wanderer's guiding-star.
  • Frown, my haughty sire! chide, my angry dame!
  • Set your slaves to spy; threaten me with shame:
  • But neither sire nor dame, nor prying serf shall know,
  • What angel nightly tracks that waste of frozen snow.
  • What I love shall come like visitant of air,
  • Safe in secret power from lurking human snare;
  • What loves me, no word of mine shall e'er betray,
  • Though for faith unstained my life must forfeit pay
  • Burn, then, little lamp; glimmer straight and clear--
  • Hush! a rustling wing stirs, methinks, the air:
  • He for whom I wait, thus ever comes to me;
  • Strange Power! I trust thy might; trust thou my constancy.
  • ENCOURAGEMENT.
  • I do not weep; I would not weep;
  • Our mother needs no tears:
  • Dry thine eyes, too; 'tis vain to keep
  • This causeless grief for years.
  • What though her brow be changed and cold,
  • Her sweet eyes closed for ever?
  • What though the stone--the darksome mould
  • Our mortal bodies sever?
  • What though her hand smooth ne'er again
  • Those silken locks of thine?
  • Nor, through long hours of future pain,
  • Her kind face o'er thee shine?
  • Remember still, she is not dead;
  • She sees us, sister, now;
  • Laid, where her angel spirit fled,
  • 'Mid heath and frozen snow.
  • And from that world of heavenly light
  • Will she not always bend
  • To guide us in our lifetime's night,
  • And guard us to the end?
  • Thou knowest she will; and thou mayst mourn
  • That WE are left below:
  • But not that she can ne'er return
  • To share our earthly woe.
  • STANZAS.
  • Often rebuked, yet always back returning
  • To those first feelings that were born with me,
  • And leaving busy chase of wealth and learning
  • For idle dreams of things which cannot be:
  • To-day, I will seek not the shadowy region;
  • Its unsustaining vastness waxes drear;
  • And visions rising, legion after legion,
  • Bring the unreal world too strangely near.
  • I'll walk, but not in old heroic traces,
  • And not in paths of high morality,
  • And not among the half-distinguished faces,
  • The clouded forms of long-past history.
  • I'll walk where my own nature would be leading:
  • It vexes me to choose another guide:
  • Where the grey flocks in ferny glens are feeding;
  • Where the wild wind blows on the mountain side.
  • What have those lonely mountains worth revealing?
  • More glory and more grief than I can tell:
  • The earth that wakes one human heart to feeling
  • Can centre both the worlds of Heaven and Hell.
  • The following are the last lines my sister Emily ever wrote:--
  • No coward soul is mine,
  • No trembler in the world's storm-troubled sphere:
  • I see Heaven's glories shine,
  • And faith shines equal, arming me from fear.
  • O God within my breast,
  • Almighty, ever-present Deity!
  • Life--that in me has rest,
  • As I--undying Life--have power in thee!
  • Vain are the thousand creeds
  • That move men's hearts: unutterably vain;
  • Worthless as withered weeds,
  • Or idlest froth amid the boundless main,
  • To waken doubt in one
  • Holding so fast by thine infinity;
  • So surely anchored on
  • The stedfast rock of immortality.
  • With wide-embracing love
  • Thy spirit animates eternal years,
  • Pervades and broods above,
  • Changes, sustains, dissolves, creates, and rears.
  • Though earth and man were gone,
  • And suns and universes ceased to be,
  • And Thou were left alone,
  • Every existence would exist in Thee.
  • There is not room for Death,
  • Nor atom that his might could render void:
  • Thou--THOU art Being and Breath,
  • And what THOU art may never be destroyed.
  • *****
  • SELECTIONS FROM POEMS BY ACTON BELL.
  • In looking over my sister Anne's papers, I find mournful evidence that
  • religious feeling had been to her but too much like what it was to
  • Cowper; I mean, of course, in a far milder form. Without rendering her a
  • prey to those horrors that defy concealment, it subdued her mood and
  • bearing to a perpetual pensiveness; the pillar of a cloud glided
  • constantly before her eyes; she ever waited at the foot of a secret
  • Sinai, listening in her heart to the voice of a trumpet sounding long
  • and waxing louder. Some, perhaps, would rejoice over these tokens of
  • sincere though sorrowing piety in a deceased relative: I own, to me they
  • seem sad, as if her whole innocent life had been passed under the
  • martyrdom of an unconfessed physical pain: their effect, indeed, would
  • be too distressing, were it not combated by the certain knowledge that
  • in her last moments this tyranny of a too tender conscience was
  • overcome; this pomp of terrors broke up, and passing away, left her
  • dying hour unclouded. Her belief in God did not then bring to her dread,
  • as of a stern Judge,--but hope, as in a Creator and Saviour: and no
  • faltering hope was it, but a sure and stedfast conviction, on which, in
  • the rude passage from Time to Eternity, she threw the weight of her
  • human weakness, and by which she was enabled to bear what was to be
  • borne, patiently--serenely--victoriously.
  • DESPONDENCY.
  • I have gone backward in the work;
  • The labour has not sped;
  • Drowsy and dark my spirit lies,
  • Heavy and dull as lead.
  • How can I rouse my sinking soul
  • From such a lethargy?
  • How can I break these iron chains
  • And set my spirit free?
  • There have been times when I have mourned!
  • In anguish o'er the past,
  • And raised my suppliant hands on high,
  • While tears fell thick and fast;
  • And prayed to have my sins forgiven,
  • With such a fervent zeal,
  • An earnest grief, a strong desire
  • As now I cannot feel.
  • And I have felt so full of love,
  • So strong in spirit then,
  • As if my heart would never cool,
  • Or wander back again.
  • And yet, alas! how many times
  • My feet have gone astray!
  • How oft have I forgot my God!
  • How greatly fallen away!
  • My sins increase--my love grows cold,
  • And Hope within me dies:
  • Even Faith itself is wavering now;
  • Oh, how shall I arise?
  • I cannot weep, but I can pray,
  • Then let me not despair:
  • Lord Jesus, save me, lest I die!
  • Christ, hear my humble prayer!
  • A PRAYER.
  • My God (oh, let me call Thee mine,
  • Weak, wretched sinner though I be),
  • My trembling soul would fain be Thine;
  • My feeble faith still clings to Thee.
  • Not only for the Past I grieve,
  • The Future fills me with dismay;
  • Unless Thou hasten to relieve,
  • Thy suppliant is a castaway.
  • I cannot say my faith is strong,
  • I dare not hope my love is great;
  • But strength and love to Thee belong;
  • Oh, do not leave me desolate!
  • I know I owe my all to Thee;
  • Oh, TAKE the heart I cannot give!
  • Do Thou my strength--my Saviour be,
  • And MAKE me to Thy glory live.
  • IN MEMORY OF A HAPPY DAY IN FEBRUARY.
  • Blessed be Thou for all the joy
  • My soul has felt to-day!
  • Oh, let its memory stay with me,
  • And never pass away!
  • I was alone, for those I loved
  • Were far away from me;
  • The sun shone on the withered grass,
  • The wind blew fresh and free.
  • Was it the smile of early spring
  • That made my bosom glow?
  • 'Twas sweet; but neither sun nor wind
  • Could cheer my spirit so.
  • Was it some feeling of delight
  • All vague and undefined?
  • No; 'twas a rapture deep and strong,
  • Expanding in the mind.
  • Was it a sanguine view of life,
  • And all its transient bliss,
  • A hope of bright prosperity?
  • Oh, no! it was not this.
  • It was a glimpse of truth divine
  • Unto my spirit given,
  • Illumined by a ray of light
  • That shone direct from heaven.
  • I felt there was a God on high,
  • By whom all things were made;
  • I saw His wisdom and His power
  • In all his works displayed.
  • But most throughout the moral world,
  • I saw his glory shine;
  • I saw His wisdom infinite,
  • His mercy all divine.
  • Deep secrets of His providence,
  • In darkness long concealed,
  • Unto the vision of my soul
  • Were graciously revealed.
  • But while I wondered and adored
  • His Majesty divine,
  • I did not tremble at His power:
  • I felt that God was mine;
  • I knew that my Redeemer lived;
  • I did not fear to die;
  • Full sure that I should rise again
  • To immortality.
  • I longed to view that bliss divine,
  • Which eye hath never seen;
  • Like Moses, I would see His face
  • Without the veil between.
  • CONFIDENCE.
  • Oppressed with sin and woe,
  • A burdened heart I bear,
  • Opposed by many a mighty foe;
  • But I will not despair.
  • With this polluted heart,
  • I dare to come to Thee,
  • Holy and mighty as Thou art,
  • For Thou wilt pardon me.
  • I feel that I am weak,
  • And prone to every sin;
  • But Thou who giv'st to those who seek,
  • Wilt give me strength within.
  • Far as this earth may be
  • From yonder starry skies;
  • Remoter still am I from Thee:
  • Yet Thou wilt not despise.
  • I need not fear my foes,
  • I deed not yield to care;
  • I need not sink beneath my woes,
  • For Thou wilt answer prayer.
  • In my Redeemer's name,
  • I give myself to Thee;
  • And, all unworthy as I am,
  • My God will cherish me.
  • My sister Anne had to taste the cup of life as it is mixed for the class
  • termed "Governesses."
  • The following are some of the thoughts that now and then solace a
  • governess:--
  • LINES WRITTEN FROM HOME.
  • Though bleak these woods, and damp the ground,
  • With fallen leaves so thickly strewn,
  • And cold the wind that wanders round
  • With wild and melancholy moan;
  • There is a friendly roof I know,
  • Might shield me from the wintry blast;
  • There is a fire whose ruddy glow
  • Will cheer me for my wanderings past.
  • And so, though still where'er I go
  • Cold stranger glances meet my eye;
  • Though, when my spirit sinks in woe,
  • Unheeded swells the unbidden sigh;
  • Though solitude, endured too long,
  • Bids youthful joys too soon decay,
  • Makes mirth a stranger to my tongue,
  • And overclouds my noon of day;
  • When kindly thoughts that would have way
  • Flow back, discouraged, to my breast,
  • I know there is, though far away,
  • A home where heart and soul may rest.
  • Warm hands are there, that, clasped in mine,
  • The warmer heart will not belie;
  • While mirth and truth, and friendship shine
  • In smiling lip and earnest eye.
  • The ice that gathers round my heart
  • May there be thawed; and sweetly, then,
  • The joys of youth, that now depart,
  • Will come to cheer my soul again.
  • Though far I roam, that thought shall be
  • My hope, my comfort everywhere;
  • While such a home remains to me,
  • My heart shall never know despair.
  • THE NARROW WAY.
  • Believe not those who say
  • The upward path is smooth,
  • Lest thou shouldst stumble in the way,
  • And faint before the truth.
  • It is the only road
  • Unto the realms of joy;
  • But he who seeks that blest abode
  • Must all his powers employ.
  • Bright hopes and pure delight
  • Upon his course may beam,
  • And there, amid the sternest heights,
  • The sweetest flowerets gleam.
  • On all her breezes borne,
  • Earth yields no scents like those;
  • But he that dares not gasp the thorn
  • Should never crave the rose.
  • Arm--arm thee for the fight!
  • Cast useless loads away;
  • Watch through the darkest hours of night;
  • Toil through the hottest day.
  • Crush pride into the dust,
  • Or thou must needs be slack;
  • And trample down rebellious lust,
  • Or it will hold thee back.
  • Seek not thy honour here;
  • Waive pleasure and renown;
  • The world's dread scoff undaunted bear,
  • And face its deadliest frown.
  • To labour and to love,
  • To pardon and endure,
  • To lift thy heart to God above,
  • And keep thy conscience pure;
  • Be this thy constant aim,
  • Thy hope, thy chief delight;
  • What matter who should whisper blame
  • Or who should scorn or slight?
  • What matter, if thy God approve,
  • And if, within thy breast,
  • Thou feel the comfort of His love,
  • The earnest of His rest?
  • DOMESTIC PEACE.
  • Why should such gloomy silence reign,
  • And why is all the house so drear,
  • When neither danger, sickness, pain,
  • Nor death, nor want, have entered here?
  • We are as many as we were
  • That other night, when all were gay
  • And full of hope, and free from care;
  • Yet is there something gone away.
  • The moon without, as pure and calm,
  • Is shining as that night she shone;
  • But now, to us, she brings no balm,
  • For something from our hearts is gone.
  • Something whose absence leaves a void--
  • A cheerless want in every heart;
  • Each feels the bliss of all destroyed,
  • And mourns the change--but each apart.
  • The fire is burning in the grate
  • As redly as it used to burn;
  • But still the hearth is desolate,
  • Till mirth, and love, and PEACE return.
  • 'Twas PEACE that flowed from heart to heart,
  • With looks and smiles that spoke of heaven,
  • And gave us language to impart
  • The blissful thoughts itself had given.
  • Domestic peace! best joy of earth,
  • When shall we all thy value learn?
  • White angel, to our sorrowing hearth,
  • Return--oh, graciously return!
  • THE THREE GUIDES. [First published in FRASER'S MAGAZINE.]
  • Spirit of Earth! thy hand is chill:
  • I've felt its icy clasp;
  • And, shuddering, I remember still
  • That stony-hearted grasp.
  • Thine eye bids love and joy depart:
  • Oh, turn its gaze from me!
  • It presses down my shrinking heart;
  • I will not walk with thee!
  • "Wisdom is mine," I've heard thee say:
  • "Beneath my searching eye
  • All mist and darkness melt away,
  • Phantoms and fables fly.
  • Before me truth can stand alone,
  • The naked, solid truth;
  • And man matured by worth will own,
  • If I am shunned by youth.
  • "Firm is my tread, and sure though slow;
  • My footsteps never slide;
  • And he that follows me shall know
  • I am the surest guide."
  • Thy boast is vain; but were it true
  • That thou couldst safely steer
  • Life's rough and devious pathway through,
  • Such guidance I should fear.
  • How could I bear to walk for aye,
  • With eyes to earthward prone,
  • O'er trampled weeds and miry clay,
  • And sand and flinty stone;
  • Never the glorious view to greet
  • Of hill and dale, and sky;
  • To see that Nature's charms are sweet,
  • Or feel that Heaven is nigh?
  • If in my heart arose a spring,
  • A gush of thought divine,
  • At once stagnation thou wouldst bring
  • With that cold touch of thine.
  • If, glancing up, I sought to snatch
  • But one glimpse of the sky,
  • My baffled gaze would only catch
  • Thy heartless, cold grey eye.
  • If to the breezes wandering near,
  • I listened eagerly,
  • And deemed an angel's tongue to hear
  • That whispered hope to me,
  • That heavenly music would be drowned
  • In thy harsh, droning voice;
  • Nor inward thought, nor sight, nor sound,
  • Might my sad soul rejoice.
  • Dull is thine ear, unheard by thee
  • The still, small voice of Heaven;
  • Thine eyes are dim and cannot see
  • The helps that God has given.
  • There is a bridge o'er every flood
  • Which thou canst not perceive;
  • A path through every tangled wood,
  • But thou wilt not believe.
  • Striving to make thy way by force,
  • Toil-spent and bramble-torn,
  • Thou'lt fell the tree that checks thy course,
  • And burst through brier and thorn:
  • And, pausing by the river's side,
  • Poor reasoner! thou wilt deem,
  • By casting pebbles in its tide,
  • To cross the swelling stream.
  • Right through the flinty rock thou'lt try
  • Thy toilsome way to bore,
  • Regardless of the pathway nigh
  • That would conduct thee o'er
  • Not only art thou, then, unkind,
  • And freezing cold to me,
  • But unbelieving, deaf, and blind:
  • I will not walk with thee!
  • Spirit of Pride! thy wings are strong,
  • Thine eyes like lightning shine;
  • Ecstatic joys to thee belong,
  • And powers almost divine.
  • But 'tis a false, destructive blaze
  • Within those eyes I see;
  • Turn hence their fascinating gaze;
  • I will not follow thee.
  • "Coward and fool!" thou mayst reply,
  • Walk on the common sod;
  • Go, trace with timid foot and eye
  • The steps by others trod.
  • 'Tis best the beaten path to keep,
  • The ancient faith to hold;
  • To pasture with thy fellow-sheep,
  • And lie within the fold.
  • "Cling to the earth, poor grovelling worm;
  • 'Tis not for thee to soar
  • Against the fury of the storm,
  • Amid the thunder's roar!
  • There's glory in that daring strife
  • Unknown, undreamt by thee;
  • There's speechless rapture in the life
  • Of those who follow me.
  • Yes, I have seen thy votaries oft,
  • Upheld by thee their guide,
  • In strength and courage mount aloft
  • The steepy mountain-side;
  • I've seen them stand against the sky,
  • And gazing from below,
  • Beheld thy lightning in their eye
  • Thy triumph on their brow.
  • Oh, I have felt what glory then,
  • What transport must be theirs!
  • So far above their fellow-men,
  • Above their toils and cares;
  • Inhaling Nature's purest breath,
  • Her riches round them spread,
  • The wide expanse of earth beneath,
  • Heaven's glories overhead!
  • But I have seen them helpless, dash'd
  • Down to a bloody grave,
  • And still thy ruthless eye has flash'd,
  • Thy strong hand did not save;
  • I've seen some o'er the mountain's brow
  • Sustain'd awhile by thee,
  • O'er rocks of ice and hills of snow
  • Bound fearless, wild, and free.
  • Bold and exultant was their mien,
  • While thou didst cheer them on;
  • But evening fell,--and then, I ween,
  • Their faithless guide was gone.
  • Alas! how fared thy favourites then,--
  • Lone, helpless, weary, cold?
  • Did ever wanderer find again
  • The path he left of old?
  • Where is their glory, where the pride
  • That swelled their hearts before?
  • Where now the courage that defied
  • The mightiest tempest's roar?
  • What shall they do when night grows black,
  • When angry storms arise?
  • Who now will lead them to the track
  • Thou taught'st them to despise?
  • Spirit of Pride, it needs not this
  • To make me shun thy wiles,
  • Renounce thy triumph and thy bliss,
  • Thy honours and thy smiles!
  • Bright as thou art, and bold, and strong,
  • That fierce glance wins not me,
  • And I abhor thy scoffing tongue--
  • I will not follow thee!
  • Spirit of Faith! be thou my guide,
  • O clasp my hand in thine,
  • And let me never quit thy side;
  • Thy comforts are divine!
  • Earth calls thee blind, misguided one,--
  • But who can shew like thee
  • Forgotten things that have been done,
  • And things that are to be?
  • Secrets conceal'd from Nature's ken,
  • Who like thee can declare?
  • Or who like thee to erring men
  • God's holy will can bear?
  • Pride scorns thee for thy lowly mien,--
  • But who like thee can rise
  • Above this toilsome, sordid scene,
  • Beyond the holy skies?
  • Meek is thine eye and soft thy voice,
  • But wondrous is thy might,
  • To make the wretched soul rejoice,
  • To give the simple light!
  • And still to all that seek thy way
  • This magic power is given,--
  • E'en while their footsteps press the clay,
  • Their souls ascend to heaven.
  • Danger surrounds them,--pain and woe
  • Their portion here must be,
  • But only they that trust thee know
  • What comfort dwells with thee;
  • Strength to sustain their drooping pow'rs,
  • And vigour to defend,--
  • Thou pole-star of my darkest hours
  • Affliction's firmest friend!
  • Day does not always mark our way,
  • Night's shadows oft appal,
  • But lead me, and I cannot stray,--
  • Hold me, I shall not fall;
  • Sustain me, I shall never faint,
  • How rough soe'er may be
  • My upward road,--nor moan, nor plaint
  • Shall mar my trust in thee.
  • Narrow the path by which we go,
  • And oft it turns aside
  • From pleasant meads where roses blow,
  • And peaceful waters glide;
  • Where flowery turf lies green and soft,
  • And gentle gales are sweet,
  • To where dark mountains frown aloft,
  • Hard rocks distress the feet,--
  • Deserts beyond lie bleak and bare,
  • And keen winds round us blow;
  • But if thy hand conducts me there,
  • The way is right, I know.
  • I have no wish to turn away;
  • My spirit does not quail,--
  • How can it while I hear thee say,
  • "Press forward and prevail!"
  • Even above the tempest's swell
  • I hear thy voice of love,--
  • Of hope and peace, I hear thee tell,
  • And that blest home above;
  • Through pain and death I can rejoice.
  • If but thy strength be mine,--
  • Earth hath no music like thy voice,
  • Life owns no joy like thine!
  • Spirit of Faith, I'll go with thee!
  • Thou, if I hold thee fast,
  • Wilt guide, defend, and strengthen me,
  • And bear me home at last;
  • By thy help all things I can do,
  • In thy strength all things bear,--
  • Teach me, for thou art just and true,
  • Smile on me, thou art fair!
  • I have given the last memento of my sister Emily; this is the last of my
  • sister Anne:--
  • I hoped, that with the brave and strong,
  • My portioned task might lie;
  • To toil amid the busy throng,
  • With purpose pure and high.
  • But God has fixed another part,
  • And He has fixed it well;
  • I said so with my bleeding heart,
  • When first the anguish fell.
  • Thou, God, hast taken our delight,
  • Our treasured hope away:
  • Thou bid'st us now weep through the night
  • And sorrow through the day.
  • These weary hours will not be lost,
  • These days of misery,
  • These nights of darkness, anguish-tost,
  • Can I but turn to Thee.
  • With secret labour to sustain
  • In humble patience every blow;
  • To gather fortitude from pain,
  • And hope and holiness from woe.
  • Thus let me serve Thee from my heart,
  • Whate'er may be my written fate:
  • Whether thus early to depart,
  • Or yet a while to wait.
  • If Thou shouldst bring me back to life,
  • More humbled I should be;
  • More wise--more strengthened for the strife--
  • More apt to lean on Thee.
  • Should death be standing at the gate,
  • Thus should I keep my vow:
  • But, Lord! whatever be my fate,
  • Oh, let me serve Thee now!
  • These lines written, the desk was closed, the pen laid aside--for ever.
  • End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Poems, by
  • (AKA Charlotte, Emily and Anne Bronte) Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell
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