- The Project Gutenberg EBook of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, by Lord Byron
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- Title: Childe Harold's Pilgrimage
- Author: Lord Byron
- Release Date: February, 2004 [EBook #5131]
- Last Updated: August 11, 2012
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHILDE HAROLD'S PILGRIMAGE ***
- Produced by Les Bowler
- CHILDE HAROLD'S PILGRIMAGE
- By Lord Byron
- List of Contents
- To Ianthe
- Canto the First
- Canto the Second
- Canto the Third
- Canto the Fourth
- TO IANTHE. {1}
- Not in those climes where I have late been straying,
- Though Beauty long hath there been matchless deemed,
- Not in those visions to the heart displaying
- Forms which it sighs but to have only dreamed,
- Hath aught like thee in truth or fancy seemed:
- Nor, having seen thee, shall I vainly seek
- To paint those charms which varied as they beamed--
- To such as see thee not my words were weak;
- To those who gaze on thee, what language could they speak?
- Ah! mayst thou ever be what now thou art,
- Nor unbeseem the promise of thy spring,
- As fair in form, as warm yet pure in heart,
- Love's image upon earth without his wing,
- And guileless beyond Hope's imagining!
- And surely she who now so fondly rears
- Thy youth, in thee, thus hourly brightening,
- Beholds the rainbow of her future years,
- Before whose heavenly hues all sorrow disappears.
- Young Peri of the West!--'tis well for me
- My years already doubly number thine;
- My loveless eye unmoved may gaze on thee,
- And safely view thy ripening beauties shine:
- Happy, I ne'er shall see them in decline;
- Happier, that while all younger hearts shall bleed
- Mine shall escape the doom thine eyes assign
- To those whose admiration shall succeed,
- But mixed with pangs to Love's even loveliest hours decreed.
- Oh! let that eye, which, wild as the gazelle's,
- Now brightly bold or beautifully shy,
- Wins as it wanders, dazzles where it dwells,
- Glance o'er this page, nor to my verse deny
- That smile for which my breast might vainly sigh,
- Could I to thee be ever more than friend:
- This much, dear maid, accord; nor question why
- To one so young my strain I would commend,
- But bid me with my wreath one matchless lily blend.
- Such is thy name with this my verse entwined;
- And long as kinder eyes a look shall cast
- On Harold's page, Ianthe's here enshrined
- Shall thus be first beheld, forgotten last:
- My days once numbered, should this homage past
- Attract thy fairy fingers near the lyre
- Of him who hailed thee, loveliest as thou wast,
- Such is the most my memory may desire;
- Though more than Hope can claim, could Friendship less require?
- CANTO THE FIRST.
- I.
- Oh, thou, in Hellas deemed of heavenly birth,
- Muse, formed or fabled at the minstrel's will!
- Since shamed full oft by later lyres on earth,
- Mine dares not call thee from thy sacred hill:
- Yet there I've wandered by thy vaunted rill;
- Yes! sighed o'er Delphi's long-deserted shrine
- Where, save that feeble fountain, all is still;
- Nor mote my shell awake the weary Nine
- To grace so plain a tale--this lowly lay of mine.
- II.
- Whilome in Albion's isle there dwelt a youth,
- Who ne in virtue's ways did take delight;
- But spent his days in riot most uncouth,
- And vexed with mirth the drowsy ear of Night.
- Ah, me! in sooth he was a shameless wight,
- Sore given to revel and ungodly glee;
- Few earthly things found favour in his sight
- Save concubines and carnal companie,
- And flaunting wassailers of high and low degree.
- III.
- Childe Harold was he hight:--but whence his name
- And lineage long, it suits me not to say;
- Suffice it, that perchance they were of fame,
- And had been glorious in another day:
- But one sad losel soils a name for aye,
- However mighty in the olden time;
- Nor all that heralds rake from coffined clay,
- Nor florid prose, nor honeyed lines of rhyme,
- Can blazon evil deeds, or consecrate a crime.
- IV.
- Childe Harold basked him in the noontide sun,
- Disporting there like any other fly,
- Nor deemed before his little day was done
- One blast might chill him into misery.
- But long ere scarce a third of his passed by,
- Worse than adversity the Childe befell;
- He felt the fulness of satiety:
- Then loathed he in his native land to dwell,
- Which seemed to him more lone than eremite's sad cell.
- V.
- For he through Sin's long labyrinth had run,
- Nor made atonement when he did amiss,
- Had sighed to many, though he loved but one,
- And that loved one, alas, could ne'er be his.
- Ah, happy she! to 'scape from him whose kiss
- Had been pollution unto aught so chaste;
- Who soon had left her charms for vulgar bliss,
- And spoiled her goodly lands to gild his waste,
- Nor calm domestic peace had ever deigned to taste.
- VI.
- And now Childe Harold was sore sick at heart,
- And from his fellow bacchanals would flee;
- 'Tis said, at times the sullen tear would start,
- But pride congealed the drop within his e'e:
- Apart he stalked in joyless reverie,
- And from his native land resolved to go,
- And visit scorching climes beyond the sea;
- With pleasure drugged, he almost longed for woe,
- And e'en for change of scene would seek the shades below.
- VII.
- The Childe departed from his father's hall;
- It was a vast and venerable pile;
- So old, it seemed only not to fall,
- Yet strength was pillared in each massy aisle.
- Monastic dome! condemned to uses vile!
- Where superstition once had made her den,
- Now Paphian girls were known to sing and smile;
- And monks might deem their time was come agen,
- If ancient tales say true, nor wrong these holy men.
- VIII.
- Yet ofttimes in his maddest mirthful mood,
- Strange pangs would flash along Childe Harold's brow,
- As if the memory of some deadly feud
- Or disappointed passion lurked below:
- But this none knew, nor haply cared to know;
- For his was not that open, artless soul
- That feels relief by bidding sorrow flow;
- Nor sought he friend to counsel or condole,
- Whate'er this grief mote be, which he could not control.
- IX.
- And none did love him: though to hall and bower
- He gathered revellers from far and near,
- He knew them flatterers of the festal hour;
- The heartless parasites of present cheer.
- Yea, none did love him--not his lemans dear--
- But pomp and power alone are woman's care,
- And where these are light Eros finds a feere;
- Maidens, like moths, are ever caught by glare,
- And Mammon wins his way where seraphs might despair.
- X.
- Childe Harold had a mother--not forgot,
- Though parting from that mother he did shun;
- A sister whom he loved, but saw her not
- Before his weary pilgrimage begun:
- If friends he had, he bade adieu to none.
- Yet deem not thence his breast a breast of steel;
- Ye, who have known what 'tis to dote upon
- A few dear objects, will in sadness feel
- Such partings break the heart they fondly hope to heal.
- XI.
- His house, his home, his heritage, his lands,
- The laughing dames in whom he did delight,
- Whose large blue eyes, fair locks, and snowy hands,
- Might shake the saintship of an anchorite,
- And long had fed his youthful appetite;
- His goblets brimmed with every costly wine,
- And all that mote to luxury invite,
- Without a sigh he left to cross the brine,
- And traverse Paynim shores, and pass earth's central line.
- XII.
- The sails were filled, and fair the light winds blew
- As glad to waft him from his native home;
- And fast the white rocks faded from his view,
- And soon were lost in circumambient foam;
- And then, it may be, of his wish to roam
- Repented he, but in his bosom slept
- The silent thought, nor from his lips did come
- One word of wail, whilst others sate and wept,
- And to the reckless gales unmanly moaning kept.
- XIII.
- But when the sun was sinking in the sea,
- He seized his harp, which he at times could string,
- And strike, albeit with untaught melody,
- When deemed he no strange ear was listening:
- And now his fingers o'er it he did fling,
- And tuned his farewell in the dim twilight,
- While flew the vessel on her snowy wing,
- And fleeting shores receded from his sight,
- Thus to the elements he poured his last 'Good Night.'
- Adieu, adieu! my native shore
- Fades o'er the waters blue;
- The night-winds sigh, the breakers roar,
- And shrieks the wild sea-mew.
- Yon sun that sets upon the sea
- We follow in his flight;
- Farewell awhile to him and thee,
- My Native Land--Good Night!
- A few short hours, and he will rise
- To give the morrow birth;
- And I shall hail the main and skies,
- But not my mother earth.
- Deserted is my own good hall,
- Its hearth is desolate;
- Wild weeds are gathering on the wall,
- My dog howls at the gate.
- 'Come hither, hither, my little page:
- Why dost thou weep and wail?
- Or dost thou dread the billow's rage,
- Or tremble at the gale?
- But dash the tear-drop from thine eye,
- Our ship is swift and strong;
- Our fleetest falcon scarce can fly
- More merrily along.'
- 'Let winds be shrill, let waves roll high,
- I fear not wave nor wind;
- Yet marvel not, Sir Childe, that I
- Am sorrowful in mind;
- For I have from my father gone,
- A mother whom I love,
- And have no friend, save these alone,
- But thee--and One above.
- 'My father blessed me fervently,
- Yet did not much complain;
- But sorely will my mother sigh
- Till I come back again.'--
- 'Enough, enough, my little lad!
- Such tears become thine eye;
- If I thy guileless bosom had,
- Mine own would not be dry.
- 'Come hither, hither, my staunch yeoman,
- Why dost thou look so pale?
- Or dost thou dread a French foeman,
- Or shiver at the gale?'--
- 'Deem'st thou I tremble for my life?
- Sir Childe, I'm not so weak;
- But thinking on an absent wife
- Will blanch a faithful cheek.
- 'My spouse and boys dwell near thy hall,
- Along the bordering lake;
- And when they on their father call,
- What answer shall she make?'--
- 'Enough, enough, my yeoman good,
- Thy grief let none gainsay;
- But I, who am of lighter mood,
- Will laugh to flee away.'
- For who would trust the seeming sighs
- Of wife or paramour?
- Fresh feeres will dry the bright blue eyes
- We late saw streaming o'er.
- For pleasures past I do not grieve,
- Nor perils gathering near;
- My greatest grief is that I leave
- No thing that claims a tear.
- And now I'm in the world alone,
- Upon the wide, wide sea;
- But why should I for others groan,
- When none will sigh for me?
- Perchance my dog will whine in vain
- Till fed by stranger hands;
- But long ere I come back again
- He'd tear me where he stands.
- With thee, my bark, I'll swiftly go
- Athwart the foaming brine;
- Nor care what land thou bear'st me to,
- So not again to mine.
- Welcome, welcome, ye dark blue waves!
- And when you fail my sight,
- Welcome, ye deserts, and ye caves!
- My Native Land--Good Night!
- XIV.
- On, on the vessel flies, the land is gone,
- And winds are rude in Biscay's sleepless bay.
- Four days are sped, but with the fifth, anon,
- New shores descried make every bosom gay;
- And Cintra's mountain greets them on their way,
- And Tagus dashing onward to the deep,
- His fabled golden tribute bent to pay;
- And soon on board the Lusian pilots leap,
- And steer 'twixt fertile shores where yet few rustics reap.
- XV.
- Oh, Christ! it is a goodly sight to see
- What Heaven hath done for this delicious land!
- What fruits of fragrance blush on every tree!
- What goodly prospects o'er the hills expand!
- But man would mar them with an impious hand:
- And when the Almighty lifts his fiercest scourge
- 'Gainst those who most transgress his high command,
- With treble vengeance will his hot shafts urge
- Gaul's locust host, and earth from fellest foemen purge.
- XVI.
- What beauties doth Lisboa first unfold!
- Her image floating on that noble tide,
- Which poets vainly pave with sands of gold,
- But now whereon a thousand keels did ride
- Of mighty strength, since Albion was allied,
- And to the Lusians did her aid afford
- A nation swoll'n with ignorance and pride,
- Who lick, yet loathe, the hand that waves the sword.
- To save them from the wrath of Gaul's unsparing lord.
- XVII.
- But whoso entereth within this town,
- That, sheening far, celestial seems to be,
- Disconsolate will wander up and down,
- Mid many things unsightly to strange e'e;
- For hut and palace show like filthily;
- The dingy denizens are reared in dirt;
- No personage of high or mean degree
- Doth care for cleanness of surtout or shirt,
- Though shent with Egypt's plague, unkempt, unwashed, unhurt.
- XVIII.
- Poor, paltry slaves! yet born midst noblest scenes--
- Why, Nature, waste thy wonders on such men?
- Lo! Cintra's glorious Eden intervenes
- In variegated maze of mount and glen.
- Ah me! what hand can pencil guide, or pen,
- To follow half on which the eye dilates
- Through views more dazzling unto mortal ken
- Than those whereof such things the bard relates,
- Who to the awe-struck world unlocked Elysium's gates?
- XIX.
- The horrid crags, by toppling convent crowned,
- The cork-trees hoar that clothe the shaggy steep,
- The mountain moss by scorching skies imbrowned,
- The sunken glen, whose sunless shrubs must weep,
- The tender azure of the unruffled deep,
- The orange tints that gild the greenest bough,
- The torrents that from cliff to valley leap,
- The vine on high, the willow branch below,
- Mixed in one mighty scene, with varied beauty glow.
- XX.
- Then slowly climb the many-winding way,
- And frequent turn to linger as you go,
- From loftier rocks new loveliness survey,
- And rest ye at 'Our Lady's House of Woe;'
- Where frugal monks their little relics show,
- And sundry legends to the stranger tell:
- Here impious men have punished been; and lo,
- Deep in yon cave Honorius long did dwell,
- In hope to merit Heaven by making earth a Hell.
- XXI.
- And here and there, as up the crags you spring,
- Mark many rude-carved crosses near the path;
- Yet deem not these devotion's offering--
- These are memorials frail of murderous wrath;
- For wheresoe'er the shrieking victim hath
- Poured forth his blood beneath the assassin's knife,
- Some hand erects a cross of mouldering lath;
- And grove and glen with thousand such are rife
- Throughout this purple land, where law secures not life!
- XXII.
- On sloping mounds, or in the vale beneath,
- Are domes where whilom kings did make repair;
- But now the wild flowers round them only breathe:
- Yet ruined splendour still is lingering there.
- And yonder towers the prince's palace fair:
- There thou, too, Vathek! England's wealthiest son,
- Once formed thy Paradise, as not aware
- When wanton Wealth her mightiest deeds hath done,
- Meek Peace voluptuous lures was ever wont to shun.
- XXIII.
- Here didst thou dwell, here schemes of pleasure plan.
- Beneath yon mountain's ever beauteous brow;
- But now, as if a thing unblest by man,
- Thy fairy dwelling is as lone as thou!
- Here giant weeds a passage scarce allow
- To halls deserted, portals gaping wide;
- Fresh lessons to the thinking bosom, how
- Vain are the pleasaunces on earth supplied;
- Swept into wrecks anon by Time's ungentle tide.
- XXIV.
- Behold the hall where chiefs were late convened!
- Oh! dome displeasing unto British eye!
- With diadem hight foolscap, lo! a fiend,
- A little fiend that scoffs incessantly,
- There sits in parchment robe arrayed, and by
- His side is hung a seal and sable scroll,
- Where blazoned glare names known to chivalry,
- And sundry signatures adorn the roll,
- Whereat the urchin points, and laughs with all his soul.
- XXV.
- Convention is the dwarfish demon styled
- That foiled the knights in Marialva's dome:
- Of brains (if brains they had) he them beguiled,
- And turned a nation's shallow joy to gloom.
- Here Folly dashed to earth the victor's plume,
- And Policy regained what Arms had lost:
- For chiefs like ours in vain may laurels bloom!
- Woe to the conquering, not the conquered host,
- Since baffled Triumph droops on Lusitania's coast.
- XXVI.
- And ever since that martial synod met,
- Britannia sickens, Cintra, at thy name;
- And folks in office at the mention fret,
- And fain would blush, if blush they could, for shame.
- How will posterity the deed proclaim!
- Will not our own and fellow-nations sneer,
- To view these champions cheated of their fame,
- By foes in fight o'erthrown, yet victors here,
- Where Scorn her finger points through many a coming year?
- XXVII.
- So deemed the Childe, as o'er the mountains he
- Did take his way in solitary guise:
- Sweet was the scene, yet soon he thought to flee,
- More restless than the swallow in the skies:
- Though here awhile he learned to moralise,
- For Meditation fixed at times on him,
- And conscious Reason whispered to despise
- His early youth misspent in maddest whim;
- But as he gazed on Truth, his aching eyes grew dim.
- XXVIII.
- To horse! to horse! he quits, for ever quits
- A scene of peace, though soothing to his soul:
- Again he rouses from his moping fits,
- But seeks not now the harlot and the bowl.
- Onward he flies, nor fixed as yet the goal
- Where he shall rest him on his pilgrimage;
- And o'er him many changing scenes must roll,
- Ere toil his thirst for travel can assuage,
- Or he shall calm his breast, or learn experience sage.
- XXIX.
- Yet Mafra shall one moment claim delay,
- Where dwelt of yore the Lusians' luckless queen;
- And church and court did mingle their array,
- And mass and revel were alternate seen;
- Lordlings and freres--ill-sorted fry, I ween!
- But here the Babylonian whore had built
- A dome, where flaunts she in such glorious sheen,
- That men forget the blood which she hath spilt,
- And bow the knee to Pomp that loves to garnish guilt.
- XXX.
- O'er vales that teem with fruits, romantic hills,
- (Oh that such hills upheld a free-born race!)
- Whereon to gaze the eye with joyaunce fills,
- Childe Harold wends through many a pleasant place.
- Though sluggards deem it but a foolish chase,
- And marvel men should quit their easy chair,
- The toilsome way, and long, long league to trace.
- Oh, there is sweetness in the mountain air
- And life, that bloated Ease can never hope to share.
- XXXI.
- More bleak to view the hills at length recede,
- And, less luxuriant, smoother vales extend:
- Immense horizon-bounded plains succeed!
- Far as the eye discerns, withouten end,
- Spain's realms appear, whereon her shepherds tend
- Flocks, whose rich fleece right well the trader knows--
- Now must the pastor's arm his lambs defend:
- For Spain is compassed by unyielding foes,
- And all must shield their all, or share Subjection's woes.
- XXXII.
- Where Lusitania and her Sister meet,
- Deem ye what bounds the rival realms divide?
- Or e'er the jealous queens of nations greet,
- Doth Tayo interpose his mighty tide?
- Or dark sierras rise in craggy pride?
- Or fence of art, like China's vasty wall?--
- Ne barrier wall, ne river deep and wide,
- Ne horrid crags, nor mountains dark and tall
- Rise like the rocks that part Hispania's land from Gaul
- XXXIII.
- But these between a silver streamlet glides,
- And scarce a name distinguisheth the brook,
- Though rival kingdoms press its verdant sides.
- Here leans the idle shepherd on his crook,
- And vacant on the rippling waves doth look,
- That peaceful still 'twixt bitterest foemen flow:
- For proud each peasant as the noblest duke:
- Well doth the Spanish hind the difference know
- 'Twixt him and Lusian slave, the lowest of the low.
- XXXIV.
- But ere the mingling bounds have far been passed,
- Dark Guadiana rolls his power along
- In sullen billows, murmuring and vast,
- So noted ancient roundelays among.
- Whilome upon his banks did legions throng
- Of Moor and Knight, in mailed splendour drest;
- Here ceased the swift their race, here sunk the strong;
- The Paynim turban and the Christian crest
- Mixed on the bleeding stream, by floating hosts oppressed.
- XXXV.
- Oh, lovely Spain! renowned, romantic land!
- Where is that standard which Pelagio bore,
- When Cava's traitor-sire first called the band
- That dyed thy mountain-streams with Gothic gore?
- Where are those bloody banners which of yore
- Waved o'er thy sons, victorious to the gale,
- And drove at last the spoilers to their shore?
- Red gleamed the cross, and waned the crescent pale,
- While Afric's echoes thrilled with Moorish matrons' wail.
- XXXVI.
- Teems not each ditty with the glorious tale?
- Ah! such, alas, the hero's amplest fate!
- When granite moulders and when records fail,
- A peasant's plaint prolongs his dubious date.
- Pride! bend thine eye from heaven to thine estate,
- See how the mighty shrink into a song!
- Can volume, pillar, pile, preserve thee great?
- Or must thou trust Tradition's simple tongue,
- When Flattery sleeps with thee, and History does thee wrong?
- XXXVII.
- Awake, ye sons of Spain! awake! advance
- Lo! Chivalry, your ancient goddess, cries,
- But wields not, as of old, her thirsty lance,
- Nor shakes her crimson plumage in the skies:
- Now on the smoke of blazing bolts she flies,
- And speaks in thunder through yon engine's roar!
- In every peal she calls--'Awake! arise!'
- Say, is her voice more feeble than of yore,
- When her war-song was heard on Andalusia's shore?
- XXXVIII.
- Hark! heard you not those hoofs of dreadful note?
- Sounds not the clang of conflict on the heath?
- Saw ye not whom the reeking sabre smote;
- Nor saved your brethren ere they sank beneath
- Tyrants and tyrants' slaves?--the fires of death,
- The bale-fires flash on high:--from rock to rock
- Each volley tells that thousands cease to breathe:
- Death rides upon the sulphury Siroc,
- Red Battle stamps his foot, and nations feel the shock.
- XXXIX.
- Lo! where the Giant on the mountain stands,
- His blood-red tresses deepening in the sun,
- With death-shot glowing in his fiery hands,
- And eye that scorcheth all it glares upon;
- Restless it rolls, now fixed, and now anon
- Flashing afar,--and at his iron feet
- Destruction cowers, to mark what deeds are done;
- For on this morn three potent nations meet,
- To shed before his shrine the blood he deems most sweet.
- XL.
- By Heaven! it is a splendid sight to see
- (For one who hath no friend, no brother there)
- Their rival scarfs of mixed embroidery,
- Their various arms that glitter in the air!
- What gallant war-hounds rouse them from their lair,
- And gnash their fangs, loud yelling for the prey!
- All join the chase, but few the triumph share:
- The Grave shall bear the chiefest prize away,
- And Havoc scarce for joy can cumber their array.
- XLI.
- Three hosts combine to offer sacrifice;
- Three tongues prefer strange orisons on high;
- Three gaudy standards flout the pale blue skies.
- The shouts are France, Spain, Albion, Victory!
- The foe, the victim, and the fond ally
- That fights for all, but ever fights in vain,
- Are met--as if at home they could not die--
- To feed the crow on Talavera's plain,
- And fertilise the field that each pretends to gain.
- XLII.
- There shall they rot--Ambition's honoured fools!
- Yes, Honour decks the turf that wraps their clay!
- Vain Sophistry! in these behold the tools,
- The broken tools, that tyrants cast away
- By myriads, when they dare to pave their way
- With human hearts--to what?--a dream alone.
- Can despots compass aught that hails their sway?
- Or call with truth one span of earth their own,
- Save that wherein at last they crumble bone by bone?
- XLIII.
- O Albuera, glorious field of grief!
- As o'er thy plain the Pilgrim pricked his steed,
- Who could foresee thee, in a space so brief,
- A scene where mingling foes should boast and bleed.
- Peace to the perished! may the warrior's meed
- And tears of triumph their reward prolong!
- Till others fall where other chieftains lead,
- Thy name shall circle round the gaping throng,
- And shine in worthless lays, the theme of transient song.
- XLIV.
- Enough of Battle's minions! let them play
- Their game of lives, and barter breath for fame:
- Fame that will scarce reanimate their clay,
- Though thousands fall to deck some single name.
- In sooth, 'twere sad to thwart their noble aim
- Who strike, blest hirelings! for their country's good,
- And die, that living might have proved her shame;
- Perished, perchance, in some domestic feud,
- Or in a narrower sphere wild Rapine's path pursued.
- XLV.
- Full swiftly Harold wends his lonely way
- Where proud Sevilla triumphs unsubdued:
- Yet is she free--the spoiler's wished-for prey!
- Soon, soon shall Conquest's fiery foot intrude,
- Blackening her lovely domes with traces rude.
- Inevitable hour! 'Gainst fate to strive
- Where Desolation plants her famished brood
- Is vain, or Ilion, Tyre, might yet survive,
- And Virtue vanquish all, and Murder cease to thrive.
- XLVI.
- But all unconscious of the coming doom,
- The feast, the song, the revel here abounds;
- Strange modes of merriment the hours consume,
- Nor bleed these patriots with their country's wounds;
- Nor here War's clarion, but Love's rebeck sounds;
- Here Folly still his votaries enthralls,
- And young-eyed Lewdness walks her midnight rounds:
- Girt with the silent crimes of capitals,
- Still to the last kind Vice clings to the tottering walls.
- XLVII.
- Not so the rustic: with his trembling mate
- He lurks, nor casts his heavy eye afar,
- Lest he should view his vineyard desolate,
- Blasted below the dun hot breath of war.
- No more beneath soft Eve's consenting star
- Fandango twirls his jocund castanet:
- Ah, monarchs! could ye taste the mirth ye mar,
- Not in the toils of Glory would ye fret;
- The hoarse dull drum would sleep, and Man be happy yet.
- XLVIII.
- How carols now the lusty muleteer?
- Of love, romance, devotion is his lay,
- As whilome he was wont the leagues to cheer,
- His quick bells wildly jingling on the way?
- No! as he speeds, he chants 'Viva el Rey!'
- And checks his song to execrate Godoy,
- The royal wittol Charles, and curse the day
- When first Spain's queen beheld the black-eyed boy,
- And gore-faced Treason sprung from her adulterate joy.
- XLIX.
- On yon long level plain, at distance crowned
- With crags, whereon those Moorish turrets rest,
- Wide scattered hoof-marks dint the wounded ground;
- And, scathed by fire, the greensward's darkened vest
- Tells that the foe was Andalusia's guest:
- Here was the camp, the watch-flame, and the host,
- Here the brave peasant stormed the dragon's nest;
- Still does he mark it with triumphant boast,
- And points to yonder cliffs, which oft were won and lost.
- L.
- And whomsoe'er along the path you meet
- Bears in his cap the badge of crimson hue,
- Which tells you whom to shun and whom to greet:
- Woe to the man that walks in public view
- Without of loyalty this token true:
- Sharp is the knife, and sudden is the stroke;
- And sorely would the Gallic foemen rue,
- If subtle poniards, wrapt beneath the cloak,
- Could blunt the sabre's edge, or clear the cannon's smoke.
- LI.
- At every turn Morena's dusky height
- Sustains aloft the battery's iron load;
- And, far as mortal eye can compass sight,
- The mountain-howitzer, the broken road,
- The bristling palisade, the fosse o'erflowed,
- The stationed bands, the never-vacant watch,
- The magazine in rocky durance stowed,
- The holstered steed beneath the shed of thatch,
- The ball-piled pyramid, the ever-blazing match,
- LII.
- Portend the deeds to come:--but he whose nod
- Has tumbled feebler despots from their sway,
- A moment pauseth ere he lifts the rod;
- A little moment deigneth to delay:
- Soon will his legions sweep through these the way;
- The West must own the Scourger of the world.
- Ah, Spain! how sad will be thy reckoning day,
- When soars Gaul's Vulture, with his wings unfurled,
- And thou shalt view thy sons in crowds to Hades hurled.
- LIII.
- And must they fall--the young, the proud, the brave--
- To swell one bloated chief's unwholesome reign?
- No step between submission and a grave?
- The rise of rapine and the fall of Spain?
- And doth the Power that man adores ordain
- Their doom, nor heed the suppliant's appeal?
- Is all that desperate Valour acts in vain?
- And Counsel sage, and patriotic Zeal,
- The veteran's skill, youth's fire, and manhood's heart of steel?
- LIV.
- Is it for this the Spanish maid, aroused,
- Hangs on the willow her unstrung guitar,
- And, all unsexed, the anlace hath espoused,
- Sung the loud song, and dared the deed of war?
- And she, whom once the semblance of a scar
- Appalled, an owlet's larum chilled with dread,
- Now views the column-scattering bayonet jar,
- The falchion flash, and o'er the yet warm dead
- Stalks with Minerva's step where Mars might quake to tread.
- LV.
- Ye who shall marvel when you hear her tale,
- Oh! had you known her in her softer hour,
- Marked her black eye that mocks her coal-black veil,
- Heard her light, lively tones in lady's bower,
- Seen her long locks that foil the painter's power,
- Her fairy form, with more than female grace,
- Scarce would you deem that Saragoza's tower
- Beheld her smile in Danger's Gorgon face,
- Thin the closed ranks, and lead in Glory's fearful chase.
- LVI.
- Her lover sinks--she sheds no ill-timed tear;
- Her chief is slain--she fills his fatal post;
- Her fellows flee--she checks their base career;
- The foe retires--she heads the sallying host:
- Who can appease like her a lover's ghost?
- Who can avenge so well a leader's fall?
- What maid retrieve when man's flushed hope is lost?
- Who hang so fiercely on the flying Gaul,
- Foiled by a woman's hand, before a battered wall?
- LVII.
- Yet are Spain's maids no race of Amazons,
- But formed for all the witching arts of love:
- Though thus in arms they emulate her sons,
- And in the horrid phalanx dare to move,
- 'Tis but the tender fierceness of the dove,
- Pecking the hand that hovers o'er her mate:
- In softness as in firmness far above
- Remoter females, famed for sickening prate;
- Her mind is nobler sure, her charms perchance as great.
- LVIII.
- The seal Love's dimpling finger hath impressed
- Denotes how soft that chin which bears his touch:
- Her lips, whose kisses pout to leave their nest,
- Bid man be valiant ere he merit such:
- Her glance, how wildly beautiful! how much
- Hath Phoebus wooed in vain to spoil her cheek
- Which glows yet smoother from his amorous clutch!
- Who round the North for paler dames would seek?
- How poor their forms appear? how languid, wan, and weak!
- LIX.
- Match me, ye climes! which poets love to laud;
- Match me, ye harems! of the land where now
- I strike my strain, far distant, to applaud
- Beauties that even a cynic must avow!
- Match me those houris, whom ye scarce allow
- To taste the gale lest Love should ride the wind,
- With Spain's dark-glancing daughters--deign to know,
- There your wise Prophet's paradise we find,
- His black-eyed maids of Heaven, angelically kind.
- LX.
- O thou, Parnassus! whom I now survey,
- Not in the frenzy of a dreamer's eye,
- Not in the fabled landscape of a lay,
- But soaring snow-clad through thy native sky,
- In the wild pomp of mountain majesty!
- What marvel if I thus essay to sing?
- The humblest of thy pilgrims passing by
- Would gladly woo thine echoes with his string,
- Though from thy heights no more one muse will wave her wing.
- LXI.
- Oft have I dreamed of thee! whose glorious name
- Who knows not, knows not man's divinest lore:
- And now I view thee, 'tis, alas, with shame
- That I in feeblest accents must adore.
- When I recount thy worshippers of yore
- I tremble, and can only bend the knee;
- Nor raise my voice, nor vainly dare to soar,
- But gaze beneath thy cloudy canopy
- In silent joy to think at last I look on thee!
- LXII.
- Happier in this than mightiest bards have been,
- Whose fate to distant homes confined their lot,
- Shall I unmoved behold the hallowed scene,
- Which others rave of, though they know it not?
- Though here no more Apollo haunts his grot,
- And thou, the Muses' seat, art now their grave,
- Some gentle spirit still pervades the spot,
- Sighs in the gale, keeps silence in the cave,
- And glides with glassy foot o'er yon melodious wave.
- LXIII.
- Of thee hereafter.--Even amidst my strain
- I turned aside to pay my homage here;
- Forgot the land, the sons, the maids of Spain;
- Her fate, to every free-born bosom dear;
- And hailed thee, not perchance without a tear.
- Now to my theme--but from thy holy haunt
- Let me some remnant, some memorial bear;
- Yield me one leaf of Daphne's deathless plant,
- Nor let thy votary's hope be deemed an idle vaunt.
- LXIV.
- But ne'er didst thou, fair mount, when Greece was young,
- See round thy giant base a brighter choir;
- Nor e'er did Delphi, when her priestess sung
- The Pythian hymn with more than mortal fire,
- Behold a train more fitting to inspire
- The song of love than Andalusia's maids,
- Nurst in the glowing lap of soft desire:
- Ah! that to these were given such peaceful shades
- As Greece can still bestow, though Glory fly her glades.
- LXV.
- Fair is proud Seville; let her country boast
- Her strength, her wealth, her site of ancient days,
- But Cadiz, rising on the distant coast,
- Calls forth a sweeter, though ignoble praise.
- Ah, Vice! how soft are thy voluptuous ways!
- While boyish blood is mantling, who can 'scape
- The fascination of thy magic gaze?
- A cherub-hydra round us dost thou gape,
- And mould to every taste thy dear delusive shape.
- LXVI.
- When Paphos fell by Time--accursed Time!
- The Queen who conquers all must yield to thee--
- The Pleasures fled, but sought as warm a clime;
- And Venus, constant to her native sea,
- To nought else constant, hither deigned to flee,
- And fixed her shrine within these walls of white;
- Though not to one dome circumscribeth she
- Her worship, but, devoted to her rite,
- A thousand altars rise, for ever blazing bright.
- LXVII.
- From morn till night, from night till startled morn
- Peeps blushing on the revel's laughing crew,
- The song is heard, the rosy garland worn;
- Devices quaint, and frolics ever new,
- Tread on each other's kibes. A long adieu
- He bids to sober joy that here sojourns:
- Nought interrupts the riot, though in lieu
- Of true devotion monkish incense burns,
- And love and prayer unite, or rule the hour by turns.
- LXVIII.
- The sabbath comes, a day of blessed rest;
- What hallows it upon this Christian shore?
- Lo! it is sacred to a solemn feast:
- Hark! heard you not the forest monarch's roar?
- Crashing the lance, he snuffs the spouting gore
- Of man and steed, o'erthrown beneath his horn:
- The thronged arena shakes with shouts for more;
- Yells the mad crowd o'er entrails freshly torn,
- Nor shrinks the female eye, nor e'en affects to mourn.
- LXIX.
- The seventh day this; the jubilee of man.
- London! right well thou know'st the day of prayer:
- Then thy spruce citizen, washed artizan,
- And smug apprentice gulp their weekly air:
- Thy coach of hackney, whiskey, one-horse chair,
- And humblest gig, through sundry suburbs whirl;
- To Hampstead, Brentford, Harrow, make repair;
- Till the tired jade the wheel forgets to hurl,
- Provoking envious gibe from each pedestrian churl.
- LXX.
- Some o'er thy Thamis row the ribboned fair,
- Others along the safer turnpike fly;
- Some Richmond Hill ascend, some scud to Ware,
- And many to the steep of Highgate hie.
- Ask ye, Boeotian shades, the reason why?
- 'Tis to the worship of the solemn Horn,
- Grasped in the holy hand of Mystery,
- In whose dread name both men and maids are sworn,
- And consecrate the oath with draught and dance till morn.
- LXXI.
- All have their fooleries; not alike are thine,
- Fair Cadiz, rising o'er the dark blue sea!
- Soon as the matin bell proclaimeth nine,
- Thy saint adorers count the rosary:
- Much is the Virgin teased to shrive them free
- (Well do I ween the only virgin there)
- From crimes as numerous as her beadsmen be;
- Then to the crowded circus forth they fare:
- Young, old, high, low, at once the same diversion share.
- LXXII.
- The lists are oped, the spacious area cleared,
- Thousands on thousands piled are seated round;
- Long ere the first loud trumpet's note is heard,
- No vacant space for lated wight is found:
- Here dons, grandees, but chiefly dames abound,
- Skilled in the ogle of a roguish eye,
- Yet ever well inclined to heal the wound;
- None through their cold disdain are doomed to die,
- As moon-struck bards complain, by Love's sad archery.
- LXXIII.
- Hushed is the din of tongues--on gallant steeds,
- With milk-white crest, gold spur, and light-poised lance,
- Four cavaliers prepare for venturous deeds,
- And lowly bending to the lists advance;
- Rich are their scarfs, their chargers featly prance:
- If in the dangerous game they shine to-day,
- The crowd's loud shout, and ladies' lovely glance,
- Best prize of better acts, they bear away,
- And all that kings or chiefs e'er gain their toils repay.
- LXXIV.
- In costly sheen and gaudy cloak arrayed,
- But all afoot, the light-limbed matadore
- Stands in the centre, eager to invade
- The lord of lowing herds; but not before
- The ground, with cautious tread, is traversed o'er,
- Lest aught unseen should lurk to thwart his speed:
- His arms a dart, he fights aloof, nor more
- Can man achieve without the friendly steed--
- Alas! too oft condemned for him to bear and bleed.
- LXXV.
- Thrice sounds the clarion; lo! the signal falls,
- The den expands, and expectation mute
- Gapes round the silent circle's peopled walls.
- Bounds with one lashing spring the mighty brute,
- And wildly staring, spurns, with sounding foot,
- The sand, nor blindly rushes on his foe:
- Here, there, he points his threatening front, to suit
- His first attack, wide waving to and fro
- His angry tail; red rolls his eye's dilated glow.
- LXXVI.
- Sudden he stops; his eye is fixed: away,
- Away, thou heedless boy! prepare the spear;
- Now is thy time to perish, or display
- The skill that yet may check his mad career.
- With well-timed croupe the nimble coursers veer;
- On foams the bull, but not unscathed he goes;
- Streams from his flank the crimson torrent clear:
- He flies, he wheels, distracted with his throes:
- Dart follows dart; lance, lance; loud bellowings speak his woes.
- LXXVII.
- Again he comes; nor dart nor lance avail,
- Nor the wild plunging of the tortured horse;
- Though man and man's avenging arms assail,
- Vain are his weapons, vainer is his force.
- One gallant steed is stretched a mangled corse;
- Another, hideous sight! unseamed appears,
- His gory chest unveils life's panting source;
- Though death-struck, still his feeble frame he rears;
- Staggering, but stemming all, his lord unharmed he bears.
- LXXVIII.
- Foiled, bleeding, breathless, furious to the last,
- Full in the centre stands the bull at bay,
- Mid wounds, and clinging darts, and lances brast,
- And foes disabled in the brutal fray:
- And now the matadores around him play,
- Shake the red cloak, and poise the ready brand:
- Once more through all he bursts his thundering way--
- Vain rage! the mantle quits the conynge hand,
- Wraps his fierce eye--'tis past--he sinks upon the sand.
- LXXIX.
- Where his vast neck just mingles with the spine,
- Sheathed in his form the deadly weapon lies.
- He stops--he starts--disdaining to decline:
- Slowly he falls, amidst triumphant cries,
- Without a groan, without a struggle dies.
- The decorated car appears on high:
- The corse is piled--sweet sight for vulgar eyes;
- Four steeds that spurn the rein, as swift as shy,
- Hurl the dark bull along, scarce seen in dashing by.
- LXXX.
- Such the ungentle sport that oft invites
- The Spanish maid, and cheers the Spanish swain:
- Nurtured in blood betimes, his heart delights
- In vengeance, gloating on another's pain.
- What private feuds the troubled village stain!
- Though now one phalanxed host should meet the foe,
- Enough, alas, in humble homes remain,
- To meditate 'gainst friends the secret blow,
- For some slight cause of wrath, whence life's warm stream must flow.
- LXXXI.
- But Jealousy has fled: his bars, his bolts,
- His withered sentinel, duenna sage!
- And all whereat the generous soul revolts,
- Which the stern dotard deemed he could encage,
- Have passed to darkness with the vanished age.
- Who late so free as Spanish girls were seen
- (Ere War uprose in his volcanic rage),
- With braided tresses bounding o'er the green,
- While on the gay dance shone Night's lover-loving Queen?
- LXXXII.
- Oh! many a time and oft had Harold loved,
- Or dreamed he loved, since rapture is a dream;
- But now his wayward bosom was unmoved,
- For not yet had he drunk of Lethe's stream:
- And lately had he learned with truth to deem
- Love has no gift so grateful as his wings:
- How fair, how young, how soft soe'er he seem,
- Full from the fount of joy's delicious springs
- Some bitter o'er the flowers its bubbling venom flings.
- LXXXIII.
- Yet to the beauteous form he was not blind,
- Though now it moved him as it moves the wise;
- Not that Philosophy on such a mind
- E'er deigned to bend her chastely-awful eyes:
- But Passion raves itself to rest, or flies;
- And Vice, that digs her own voluptuous tomb,
- Had buried long his hopes, no more to rise:
- Pleasure's palled victim! life-abhorring gloom
- Wrote on his faded brow curst Cain's unresting doom.
- LXXXIV.
- Still he beheld, nor mingled with the throng;
- But viewed them not with misanthropic hate;
- Fain would he now have joined the dance, the song,
- But who may smile that sinks beneath his fate?
- Nought that he saw his sadness could abate:
- Yet once he struggled 'gainst the demon's sway,
- And as in Beauty's bower he pensive sate,
- Poured forth this unpremeditated lay,
- To charms as fair as those that soothed his happier day.
- TO INEZ.
- Nay, smile not at my sullen brow,
- Alas! I cannot smile again:
- Yet Heaven avert that ever thou
- Shouldst weep, and haply weep in vain.
- And dost thou ask what secret woe
- I bear, corroding joy and youth?
- And wilt thou vainly seek to know
- A pang even thou must fail to soothe?
- It is not love, it is not hate,
- Nor low Ambition's honours lost,
- That bids me loathe my present state,
- And fly from all I prized the most:
- It is that weariness which springs
- From all I meet, or hear, or see:
- To me no pleasure Beauty brings;
- Thine eyes have scarce a charm for me.
- It is that settled, ceaseless gloom
- The fabled Hebrew wanderer bore,
- That will not look beyond the tomb,
- But cannot hope for rest before.
- What exile from himself can flee?
- To zones, though more and more remote,
- Still, still pursues, where'er I be,
- The blight of life--the demon Thought.
- Yet others rapt in pleasure seem,
- And taste of all that I forsake:
- Oh! may they still of transport dream,
- And ne'er, at least like me, awake!
- Through many a clime 'tis mine to go,
- With many a retrospection curst;
- And all my solace is to know,
- Whate'er betides, I've known the worst.
- What is that worst? Nay, do not ask--
- In pity from the search forbear:
- Smile on--nor venture to unmask
- Man's heart, and view the hell that's there.
- LXXXV.
- Adieu, fair Cadiz! yea, a long adieu!
- Who may forget how well thy walls have stood?
- When all were changing, thou alone wert true,
- First to be free, and last to be subdued.
- And if amidst a scene, a shock so rude,
- Some native blood was seen thy streets to dye,
- A traitor only fell beneath the feud:
- Here all were noble, save nobility;
- None hugged a conqueror's chain save fallen Chivalry!
- LXXXVI.
- Such be the sons of Spain, and strange her fate!
- They fight for freedom, who were never free;
- A kingless people for a nerveless state,
- Her vassals combat when their chieftains flee,
- True to the veriest slaves of Treachery;
- Fond of a land which gave them nought but life,
- Pride points the path that leads to liberty;
- Back to the struggle, baffled in the strife,
- War, war is still the cry, 'War even to the knife!'
- LXXXVII.
- Ye, who would more of Spain and Spaniards know,
- Go, read whate'er is writ of bloodiest strife:
- Whate'er keen Vengeance urged on foreign foe
- Can act, is acting there against man's life:
- From flashing scimitar to secret knife,
- War mouldeth there each weapon to his need--
- So may he guard the sister and the wife,
- So may he make each curst oppressor bleed,
- So may such foes deserve the most remorseless deed!
- LXXXVIII.
- Flows there a tear of pity for the dead?
- Look o'er the ravage of the reeking plain:
- Look on the hands with female slaughter red;
- Then to the dogs resign the unburied slain,
- Then to the vulture let each corse remain;
- Albeit unworthy of the prey-bird's maw,
- Let their bleached bones, and blood's unbleaching stain,
- Long mark the battle-field with hideous awe:
- Thus only may our sons conceive the scenes we saw!
- LXXXIX.
- Nor yet, alas, the dreadful work is done;
- Fresh legions pour adown the Pyrenees:
- It deepens still, the work is scarce begun,
- Nor mortal eye the distant end foresees.
- Fall'n nations gaze on Spain: if freed, she frees
- More than her fell Pizarros once enchained.
- Strange retribution! now Columbia's ease
- Repairs the wrongs that Quito's sons sustained,
- While o'er the parent clime prowls Murder unrestrained.
- XC.
- Not all the blood at Talavera shed,
- Not all the marvels of Barossa's fight,
- Not Albuera lavish of the dead,
- Have won for Spain her well-asserted right.
- When shall her Olive-Branch be free from blight?
- When shall she breathe her from the blushing toil?
- How many a doubtful day shall sink in night,
- Ere the Frank robber turn him from his spoil,
- And Freedom's stranger-tree grow native of the soil?
- XCI.
- And thou, my friend! since unavailing woe
- Bursts from my heart, and mingles with the strain--
- Had the sword laid thee with the mighty low,
- Pride might forbid e'en Friendship to complain:
- But thus unlaurelled to descend in vain,
- By all forgotten, save the lonely breast,
- And mix unbleeding with the boasted slain,
- While glory crowns so many a meaner crest!
- What hadst thou done, to sink so peacefully to rest?
- XCII.
- Oh, known the earliest, and esteemed the most!
- Dear to a heart where nought was left so dear!
- Though to my hopeless days for ever lost,
- In dreams deny me not to see thee here!
- And Morn in secret shall renew the tear
- Of Consciousness awaking to her woes,
- And Fancy hover o'er thy bloodless bier,
- Till my frail frame return to whence it rose,
- And mourned and mourner lie united in repose.
- XCIII.
- Here is one fytte of Harold's pilgrimage.
- Ye who of him may further seek to know,
- Shall find some tidings in a future page,
- If he that rhymeth now may scribble moe.
- Is this too much? Stern critic, say not so:
- Patience! and ye shall hear what he beheld
- In other lands, where he was doomed to go:
- Lands that contain the monuments of eld,
- Ere Greece and Grecian arts by barbarous hands were quelled.
- CANTO THE SECOND.
- I.
- Come, blue-eyed maid of heaven!--but thou, alas,
- Didst never yet one mortal song inspire--
- Goddess of Wisdom! here thy temple was,
- And is, despite of war and wasting fire,
- And years, that bade thy worship to expire:
- But worse than steel, and flame, and ages slow,
- Is the drear sceptre and dominion dire
- Of men who never felt the sacred glow
- That thoughts of thee and thine on polished breasts bestow.
- II.
- Ancient of days! august Athena! where,
- Where are thy men of might, thy grand in soul?
- Gone--glimmering through the dream of things that were:
- First in the race that led to Glory's goal,
- They won, and passed away--is this the whole?
- A schoolboy's tale, the wonder of an hour!
- The warrior's weapon and the sophist's stole
- Are sought in vain, and o'er each mouldering tower,
- Dim with the mist of years, grey flits the shade of power.
- III.
- Son of the morning, rise! approach you here!
- Come--but molest not yon defenceless urn!
- Look on this spot--a nation's sepulchre!
- Abode of gods, whose shrines no longer burn.
- E'en gods must yield--religions take their turn:
- 'Twas Jove's--'tis Mahomet's; and other creeds
- Will rise with other years, till man shall learn
- Vainly his incense soars, his victim bleeds;
- Poor child of Doubt and Death, whose hope is built on reeds.
- IV.
- Bound to the earth, he lifts his eyes to heaven--
- Is't not enough, unhappy thing, to know
- Thou art? Is this a boon so kindly given,
- That being, thou wouldst be again, and go,
- Thou know'st not, reck'st not to what region, so
- On earth no more, but mingled with the skies!
- Still wilt thou dream on future joy and woe?
- Regard and weigh yon dust before it flies:
- That little urn saith more than thousand homilies.
- V.
- Or burst the vanished hero's lofty mound;
- Far on the solitary shore he sleeps;
- He fell, and falling nations mourned around;
- But now not one of saddening thousands weeps,
- Nor warlike worshipper his vigil keeps
- Where demi-gods appeared, as records tell.
- Remove yon skull from out the scattered heaps:
- Is that a temple where a God may dwell?
- Why, e'en the worm at last disdains her shattered cell!
- VI.
- Look on its broken arch, its ruined wall,
- Its chambers desolate, and portals foul:
- Yes, this was once Ambition's airy hall,
- The dome of Thought, the Palace of the Soul.
- Behold through each lack-lustre, eyeless hole,
- The gay recess of Wisdom and of Wit,
- And Passion's host, that never brooked control:
- Can all saint, sage, or sophist ever writ,
- People this lonely tower, this tenement refit?
- VII.
- Well didst thou speak, Athena's wisest son!
- 'All that we know is, nothing can be known.'
- Why should we shrink from what we cannot shun?
- Each hath its pang, but feeble sufferers groan
- With brain-born dreams of evil all their own.
- Pursue what chance or fate proclaimeth best;
- Peace waits us on the shores of Acheron:
- There no forced banquet claims the sated guest,
- But Silence spreads the couch of ever welcome rest.
- VIII.
- Yet if, as holiest men have deemed, there be
- A land of souls beyond that sable shore,
- To shame the doctrine of the Sadducee
- And sophists, madly vain of dubious lore;
- How sweet it were in concert to adore
- With those who made our mortal labours light!
- To hear each voice we feared to hear no more!
- Behold each mighty shade revealed to sight,
- The Bactrian, Samian sage, and all who taught the right!
- IX.
- There, thou!--whose love and life together fled,
- Have left me here to love and live in vain--
- Twined with my heart, and can I deem thee dead,
- When busy memory flashes on my brain?
- Well--I will dream that we may meet again,
- And woo the vision to my vacant breast:
- If aught of young Remembrance then remain,
- Be as it may Futurity's behest,
- For me 'twere bliss enough to know thy spirit blest!
- X.
- Here let me sit upon this mossy stone,
- The marble column's yet unshaken base!
- Here, son of Saturn, was thy favourite throne!
- Mightiest of many such! Hence let me trace
- The latent grandeur of thy dwelling-place.
- It may not be: nor even can Fancy's eye
- Restore what time hath laboured to deface.
- Yet these proud pillars claim no passing sigh;
- Unmoved the Moslem sits, the light Greek carols by.
- XI.
- But who, of all the plunderers of yon fane
- On high, where Pallas lingered, loth to flee
- The latest relic of her ancient reign--
- The last, the worst, dull spoiler, who was he?
- Blush, Caledonia! such thy son could be!
- England! I joy no child he was of thine:
- Thy free-born men should spare what once was free;
- Yet they could violate each saddening shrine,
- And bear these altars o'er the long reluctant brine.
- XII.
- But most the modern Pict's ignoble boast,
- To rive what Goth, and Turk, and Time hath spared:
- Cold as the crags upon his native coast,
- His mind as barren and his heart as hard,
- Is he whose head conceived, whose hand prepared,
- Aught to displace Athena's poor remains:
- Her sons too weak the sacred shrine to guard,
- Yet felt some portion of their mother's pains,
- And never knew, till then, the weight of Despot's chains.
- XIII.
- What! shall it e'er be said by British tongue
- Albion was happy in Athena's tears?
- Though in thy name the slaves her bosom wrung,
- Tell not the deed to blushing Europe's ears;
- The ocean queen, the free Britannia, bears
- The last poor plunder from a bleeding land:
- Yes, she, whose generous aid her name endears,
- Tore down those remnants with a harpy's hand.
- Which envious eld forbore, and tyrants left to stand.
- XIV.
- Where was thine aegis, Pallas, that appalled
- Stern Alaric and Havoc on their way?
- Where Peleus' son? whom Hell in vain enthralled,
- His shade from Hades upon that dread day
- Bursting to light in terrible array!
- What! could not Pluto spare the chief once more,
- To scare a second robber from his prey?
- Idly he wandered on the Stygian shore,
- Nor now preserved the walls he loved to shield before.
- XV.
- Cold is the heart, fair Greece, that looks on thee,
- Nor feels as lovers o'er the dust they loved;
- Dull is the eye that will not weep to see
- Thy walls defaced, thy mouldering shrines removed
- By British hands, which it had best behoved
- To guard those relics ne'er to be restored.
- Curst be the hour when from their isle they roved,
- And once again thy hapless bosom gored,
- And snatched thy shrinking gods to northern climes abhorred!
- XVI.
- But where is Harold? shall I then forget
- To urge the gloomy wanderer o'er the wave?
- Little recked he of all that men regret;
- No loved one now in feigned lament could rave;
- No friend the parting hand extended gave,
- Ere the cold stranger passed to other climes.
- Hard is his heart whom charms may not enslave;
- But Harold felt not as in other times,
- And left without a sigh the land of war and crimes.
- XVII.
- He that has sailed upon the dark blue sea,
- Has viewed at times, I ween, a full fair sight;
- When the fresh breeze is fair as breeze may be,
- The white sails set, the gallant frigate tight,
- Masts, spires, and strand retiring to the right,
- The glorious main expanding o'er the bow,
- The convoy spread like wild swans in their flight,
- The dullest sailer wearing bravely now,
- So gaily curl the waves before each dashing prow.
- XVIII.
- And oh, the little warlike world within!
- The well-reeved guns, the netted canopy,
- The hoarse command, the busy humming din,
- When, at a word, the tops are manned on high:
- Hark to the boatswain's call, the cheering cry,
- While through the seaman's hand the tackle glides
- Or schoolboy midshipman that, standing by,
- Strains his shrill pipe, as good or ill betides,
- And well the docile crew that skilful urchin guides.
- XIX.
- White is the glassy deck, without a stain,
- Where on the watch the staid lieutenant walks:
- Look on that part which sacred doth remain
- For the lone chieftain, who majestic stalks,
- Silent and feared by all: not oft he talks
- With aught beneath him, if he would preserve
- That strict restraint, which broken, ever baulks
- Conquest and Fame: but Britons rarely swerve
- From law, however stern, which tends their strength to nerve.
- XX.
- Blow, swiftly blow, thou keel-compelling gale,
- Till the broad sun withdraws his lessening ray;
- Then must the pennant-bearer slacken sail,
- That lagging barks may make their lazy way.
- Ah! grievance sore, and listless dull delay,
- To waste on sluggish hulks the sweetest breeze!
- What leagues are lost before the dawn of day,
- Thus loitering pensive on the willing seas,
- The flapping sails hauled down to halt for logs like these!
- XXI.
- The moon is up; by Heaven, a lovely eve!
- Long streams of light o'er dancing waves expand!
- Now lads on shore may sigh, and maids believe:
- Such be our fate when we return to land!
- Meantime some rude Arion's restless hand
- Wakes the brisk harmony that sailors love:
- A circle there of merry listeners stand,
- Or to some well-known measure featly move,
- Thoughtless, as if on shore they still were free to rove.
- XXII.
- Through Calpe's straits survey the steepy shore;
- Europe and Afric, on each other gaze!
- Lands of the dark-eyed maid and dusky Moor,
- Alike beheld beneath pale Hecate's blaze:
- How softly on the Spanish shore she plays,
- Disclosing rock, and slope, and forest brown,
- Distinct, though darkening with her waning phase:
- But Mauritania's giant-shadows frown,
- From mountain-cliff to coast descending sombre down.
- XXIII.
- 'Tis night, when Meditation bids us feel
- We once have loved, though love is at an end:
- The heart, lone mourner of its baffled zeal,
- Though friendless now, will dream it had a friend.
- Who with the weight of years would wish to bend,
- When Youth itself survives young Love and Joy?
- Alas! when mingling souls forget to blend,
- Death hath but little left him to destroy!
- Ah, happy years! once more who would not be a boy?
- XXIV.
- Thus bending o'er the vessel's laving side,
- To gaze on Dian's wave-reflected sphere,
- The soul forgets her schemes of Hope and Pride,
- And flies unconscious o'er each backward year.
- None are so desolate but something dear,
- Dearer than self, possesses or possessed
- A thought, and claims the homage of a tear;
- A flashing pang! of which the weary breast
- Would still, albeit in vain, the heavy heart divest.
- XXV.
- To sit on rocks, to muse o'er flood and fell,
- To slowly trace the forest's shady scene,
- Where things that own not man's dominion dwell,
- And mortal foot hath ne'er or rarely been;
- To climb the trackless mountain all unseen,
- With the wild flock that never needs a fold;
- Alone o'er steeps and foaming falls to lean:
- This is not solitude; 'tis but to hold
- Converse with Nature's charms, and view her stores unrolled.
- XXVI.
- But midst the crowd, the hum, the shock of men,
- To hear, to see, to feel, and to possess,
- And roam along, the world's tired denizen,
- With none who bless us, none whom we can bless;
- Minions of splendour shrinking from distress!
- None that, with kindred consciousness endued,
- If we were not, would seem to smile the less
- Of all that flattered, followed, sought, and sued:
- This is to be alone; this, this is solitude!
- XXVII.
- More blest the life of godly eremite,
- Such as on lonely Athos may be seen,
- Watching at eve upon the giant height,
- Which looks o'er waves so blue, skies so serene,
- That he who there at such an hour hath been,
- Will wistful linger on that hallowed spot;
- Then slowly tear him from the witching scene,
- Sigh forth one wish that such had been his lot,
- Then turn to hate a world he had almost forgot.
- XXVIII.
- Pass we the long, unvarying course, the track
- Oft trod, that never leaves a trace behind;
- Pass we the calm, the gale, the change, the tack,
- And each well-known caprice of wave and wind;
- Pass we the joys and sorrows sailors find,
- Cooped in their winged sea-girt citadel;
- The foul, the fair, the contrary, the kind,
- As breezes rise and fall, and billows swell,
- Till on some jocund morn--lo, land! and all is well.
- XXIX.
- But not in silence pass Calypso's isles,
- The sister tenants of the middle deep;
- There for the weary still a haven smiles,
- Though the fair goddess long has ceased to weep,
- And o'er her cliffs a fruitless watch to keep
- For him who dared prefer a mortal bride:
- Here, too, his boy essayed the dreadful leap
- Stern Mentor urged from high to yonder tide;
- While thus of both bereft, the nymph-queen doubly sighed.
- XXX.
- Her reign is past, her gentle glories gone:
- But trust not this; too easy youth, beware!
- A mortal sovereign holds her dangerous throne,
- And thou mayst find a new Calypso there.
- Sweet Florence! could another ever share
- This wayward, loveless heart, it would be thine:
- But checked by every tie, I may not dare
- To cast a worthless offering at thy shrine,
- Nor ask so dear a breast to feel one pang for mine.
- XXXI.
- Thus Harold deemed, as on that lady's eye
- He looked, and met its beam without a thought,
- Save Admiration glancing harmless by:
- Love kept aloof, albeit not far remote,
- Who knew his votary often lost and caught,
- But knew him as his worshipper no more,
- And ne'er again the boy his bosom sought:
- Since now he vainly urged him to adore,
- Well deemed the little god his ancient sway was o'er.
- XXXII.
- Fair Florence found, in sooth with some amaze,
- One who, 'twas said, still sighed to all he saw,
- Withstand, unmoved, the lustre of her gaze,
- Which others hailed with real or mimic awe,
- Their hope, their doom, their punishment, their law:
- All that gay Beauty from her bondsmen claims:
- And much she marvelled that a youth so raw
- Nor felt, nor feigned at least, the oft-told flames,
- Which, though sometimes they frown, yet rarely anger dames.
- XXXIII.
- Little knew she that seeming marble heart,
- Now masked by silence or withheld by pride,
- Was not unskilful in the spoiler's art,
- And spread its snares licentious far and wide;
- Nor from the base pursuit had turned aside,
- As long as aught was worthy to pursue:
- But Harold on such arts no more relied;
- And had he doted on those eyes so blue,
- Yet never would he join the lover's whining crew.
- XXXIV.
- Not much he kens, I ween, of woman's breast,
- Who thinks that wanton thing is won by sighs;
- What careth she for hearts when once possessed?
- Do proper homage to thine idol's eyes,
- But not too humbly, or she will despise
- Thee and thy suit, though told in moving tropes;
- Disguise e'en tenderness, if thou art wise;
- Brisk Confidence still best with woman copes;
- Pique her and soothe in turn, soon Passion crowns thy hopes.
- XXXV.
- 'Tis an old lesson: Time approves it true,
- And those who know it best deplore it most;
- When all is won that all desire to woo,
- The paltry prize is hardly worth the cost:
- Youth wasted, minds degraded, honour lost,
- These are thy fruits, successful Passion! these!
- If, kindly cruel, early hope is crossed,
- Still to the last it rankles, a disease,
- Not to be cured when Love itself forgets to please.
- XXXVI.
- Away! nor let me loiter in my song,
- For we have many a mountain path to tread,
- And many a varied shore to sail along,
- By pensive Sadness, not by Fiction, led--
- Climes, fair withal as ever mortal head
- Imagined in its little schemes of thought;
- Or e'er in new Utopias were read:
- To teach man what he might be, or he ought;
- If that corrupted thing could ever such be taught.
- XXXVII.
- Dear Nature is the kindest mother still;
- Though always changing, in her aspect mild:
- From her bare bosom let me take my fill,
- Her never-weaned, though not her favoured child.
- Oh! she is fairest in her features wild,
- Where nothing polished dares pollute her path:
- To me by day or night she ever smiled,
- Though I have marked her when none other hath,
- And sought her more and more, and loved her best in wrath.
- XXXVIII.
- Land of Albania! where Iskander rose;
- Theme of the young, and beacon of the wise,
- And he his namesake, whose oft-baffled foes,
- Shrunk from his deeds of chivalrous emprise:
- Land of Albania! let me bend mine eyes
- On thee, thou rugged nurse of savage men!
- The cross descends, thy minarets arise,
- And the pale crescent sparkles in the glen,
- Through many a cypress grove within each city's ken.
- XXXIX.
- Childe Harold sailed, and passed the barren spot
- Where sad Penelope o'erlooked the wave;
- And onward viewed the mount, not yet forgot,
- The lover's refuge, and the Lesbian's grave.
- Dark Sappho! could not verse immortal save
- That breast imbued with such immortal fire?
- Could she not live who life eternal gave?
- If life eternal may await the lyre,
- That only Heaven to which Earth's children may aspire.
- XL.
- 'Twas on a Grecian autumn's gentle eve,
- Childe Harold hailed Leucadia's cape afar;
- A spot he longed to see, nor cared to leave:
- Oft did he mark the scenes of vanished war,
- Actium, Lepanto, fatal Trafalgar:
- Mark them unmoved, for he would not delight
- (Born beneath some remote inglorious star)
- In themes of bloody fray, or gallant fight,
- But loathed the bravo's trade, and laughed at martial wight.
- XLI.
- But when he saw the evening star above
- Leucadia's far-projecting rock of woe,
- And hailed the last resort of fruitless love,
- He felt, or deemed he felt, no common glow:
- And as the stately vessel glided slow
- Beneath the shadow of that ancient mount,
- He watched the billows' melancholy flow,
- And, sunk albeit in thought as he was wont,
- More placid seemed his eye, and smooth his pallid front.
- XLII.
- Morn dawns; and with it stern Albania's hills,
- Dark Suli's rocks, and Pindus' inland peak,
- Robed half in mist, bedewed with snowy rills,
- Arrayed in many a dun and purple streak,
- Arise; and, as the clouds along them break,
- Disclose the dwelling of the mountaineer;
- Here roams the wolf, the eagle whets his beak,
- Birds, beasts of prey, and wilder men appear,
- And gathering storms around convulse the closing year.
- XLIII.
- Now Harold felt himself at length alone,
- And bade to Christian tongues a long adieu:
- Now he adventured on a shore unknown,
- Which all admire, but many dread to view:
- His breast was armed 'gainst fate, his wants were few:
- Peril he sought not, but ne'er shrank to meet:
- The scene was savage, but the scene was new;
- This made the ceaseless toil of travel sweet,
- Beat back keen winter's blast; and welcomed summer's heat.
- XLIV.
- Here the red cross, for still the cross is here,
- Though sadly scoffed at by the circumcised,
- Forgets that pride to pampered priesthood dear;
- Churchman and votary alike despised.
- Foul Superstition! howsoe'er disguised,
- Idol, saint, virgin, prophet, crescent, cross,
- For whatsoever symbol thou art prized,
- Thou sacerdotal gain, but general loss!
- Who from true worship's gold can separate thy dross.
- XLV.
- Ambracia's gulf behold, where once was lost
- A world for woman, lovely, harmless thing!
- In yonder rippling bay, their naval host
- Did many a Roman chief and Asian king
- To doubtful conflict, certain slaughter, bring
- Look where the second Caesar's trophies rose,
- Now, like the hands that reared them, withering;
- Imperial anarchs, doubling human woes!
- God! was thy globe ordained for such to win and lose?
- XLVI.
- From the dark barriers of that rugged clime,
- E'en to the centre of Illyria's vales,
- Childe Harold passed o'er many a mount sublime,
- Through lands scarce noticed in historic tales:
- Yet in famed Attica such lovely dales
- Are rarely seen; nor can fair Tempe boast
- A charm they know not; loved Parnassus fails,
- Though classic ground, and consecrated most,
- To match some spots that lurk within this lowering coast.
- XLVII.
- He passed bleak Pindus, Acherusia's lake,
- And left the primal city of the land,
- And onwards did his further journey take
- To greet Albania's chief, whose dread command
- Is lawless law; for with a bloody hand
- He sways a nation, turbulent and bold:
- Yet here and there some daring mountain-band
- Disdain his power, and from their rocky hold
- Hurl their defiance far, nor yield, unless to gold.
- XLVIII.
- Monastic Zitza! from thy shady brow,
- Thou small, but favoured spot of holy ground!
- Where'er we gaze, around, above, below,
- What rainbow tints, what magic charms are found!
- Rock, river, forest, mountain all abound,
- And bluest skies that harmonise the whole:
- Beneath, the distant torrent's rushing sound
- Tells where the volumed cataract doth roll
- Between those hanging rocks, that shock yet please the soul.
- XLIX.
- Amidst the grove that crowns yon tufted hill,
- Which, were it not for many a mountain nigh
- Rising in lofty ranks, and loftier still,
- Might well itself be deemed of dignity,
- The convent's white walls glisten fair on high;
- Here dwells the caloyer, nor rude is he,
- Nor niggard of his cheer: the passer-by
- Is welcome still; nor heedless will he flee
- From hence, if he delight kind Nature's sheen to see.
- L.
- Here in the sultriest season let him rest,
- Fresh is the green beneath those aged trees;
- Here winds of gentlest wing will fan his breast,
- From heaven itself he may inhale the breeze:
- The plain is far beneath--oh! let him seize
- Pure pleasure while he can; the scorching ray
- Here pierceth not, impregnate with disease:
- Then let his length the loitering pilgrim lay,
- And gaze, untired, the morn, the noon, the eve away.
- LI.
- Dusky and huge, enlarging on the sight,
- Nature's volcanic amphitheatre,
- Chimera's alps extend from left to right:
- Beneath, a living valley seems to stir;
- Flocks play, trees wave, streams flow, the mountain fir
- Nodding above; behold black Acheron!
- Once consecrated to the sepulchre.
- Pluto! if this be hell I look upon,
- Close shamed Elysium's gates, my shade shall seek for none.
- LII.
- No city's towers pollute the lovely view;
- Unseen is Yanina, though not remote,
- Veiled by the screen of hills: here men are few,
- Scanty the hamlet, rare the lonely cot;
- But, peering down each precipice, the goat
- Browseth: and, pensive o'er his scattered flock,
- The little shepherd in his white capote
- Doth lean his boyish form along the rock,
- Or in his cave awaits the tempest's short-lived shock.
- LIII.
- Oh! where, Dodona, is thine aged grove,
- Prophetic fount, and oracle divine?
- What valley echoed the response of Jove?
- What trace remaineth of the Thunderer's shrine?
- All, all forgotten--and shall man repine
- That his frail bonds to fleeting life are broke?
- Cease, fool! the fate of gods may well be thine:
- Wouldst thou survive the marble or the oak,
- When nations, tongues, and worlds must sink beneath the stroke?
- LIV.
- Epirus' bounds recede, and mountains fail;
- Tired of up-gazing still, the wearied eye
- Reposes gladly on as smooth a vale
- As ever Spring yclad in grassy dye:
- E'en on a plain no humble beauties lie,
- Where some bold river breaks the long expanse,
- And woods along the banks are waving high,
- Whose shadows in the glassy waters dance,
- Or with the moonbeam sleep in Midnight's solemn trance.
- LV.
- The sun had sunk behind vast Tomerit,
- The Laos wide and fierce came roaring by;
- The shades of wonted night were gathering yet,
- When, down the steep banks winding wearily
- Childe Harold saw, like meteors in the sky,
- The glittering minarets of Tepalen,
- Whose walls o'erlook the stream; and drawing nigh,
- He heard the busy hum of warrior-men
- Swelling the breeze that sighed along the lengthening glen.
- LVI.
- He passed the sacred harem's silent tower,
- And underneath the wide o'erarching gate
- Surveyed the dwelling of this chief of power
- Where all around proclaimed his high estate.
- Amidst no common pomp the despot sate,
- While busy preparation shook the court;
- Slaves, eunuchs, soldiers, guests, and santons wait;
- Within, a palace, and without a fort,
- Here men of every clime appear to make resort.
- LVII.
- Richly caparisoned, a ready row
- Of armed horse, and many a warlike store,
- Circled the wide-extending court below;
- Above, strange groups adorned the corridor;
- And ofttimes through the area's echoing door,
- Some high-capped Tartar spurred his steed away;
- The Turk, the Greek, the Albanian, and the Moor,
- Here mingled in their many-hued array,
- While the deep war-drum's sound announced the close of day.
- LVIII.
- The wild Albanian kirtled to his knee,
- With shawl-girt head and ornamented gun,
- And gold-embroidered garments, fair to see:
- The crimson-scarfed men of Macedon;
- The Delhi with his cap of terror on,
- And crooked glaive; the lively, supple Greek;
- And swarthy Nubia's mutilated son;
- The bearded Turk, that rarely deigns to speak,
- Master of all around, too potent to be meek,
- LIX.
- Are mixed conspicuous: some recline in groups,
- Scanning the motley scene that varies round;
- There some grave Moslem to devotion stoops,
- And some that smoke, and some that play are found;
- Here the Albanian proudly treads the ground;
- Half-whispering there the Greek is heard to prate;
- Hark! from the mosque the nightly solemn sound,
- The muezzin's call doth shake the minaret,
- 'There is no god but God!--to prayer--lo! God is great!'
- LX.
- Just at this season Ramazani's fast
- Through the long day its penance did maintain.
- But when the lingering twilight hour was past,
- Revel and feast assumed the rule again:
- Now all was bustle, and the menial train
- Prepared and spread the plenteous board within;
- The vacant gallery now seemed made in vain,
- But from the chambers came the mingling din,
- As page and slave anon were passing out and in.
- LXI.
- Here woman's voice is never heard: apart
- And scarce permitted, guarded, veiled, to move,
- She yields to one her person and her heart,
- Tamed to her cage, nor feels a wish to rove;
- For, not unhappy in her master's love,
- And joyful in a mother's gentlest cares,
- Blest cares! all other feelings far above!
- Herself more sweetly rears the babe she bears,
- Who never quits the breast, no meaner passion shares.
- LXII.
- In marble-paved pavilion, where a spring
- Of living water from the centre rose,
- Whose bubbling did a genial freshness fling,
- And soft voluptuous couches breathed repose,
- Ali reclined, a man of war and woes:
- Yet in his lineaments ye cannot trace,
- While Gentleness her milder radiance throws
- Along that aged venerable face,
- The deeds that lurk beneath, and stain him with disgrace.
- LXIII.
- It is not that yon hoary lengthening beard
- Ill suits the passions which belong to youth:
- Love conquers age--so Hafiz hath averred,
- So sings the Teian, and he sings in sooth--
- But crimes that scorn the tender voice of ruth,
- Beseeming all men ill, but most the man
- In years, have marked him with a tiger's tooth:
- Blood follows blood, and through their mortal span,
- In bloodier acts conclude those who with blood began.
- LXIV.
- Mid many things most new to ear and eye,
- The pilgrim rested here his weary feet,
- And gazed around on Moslem luxury,
- Till quickly wearied with that spacious seat
- Of Wealth and Wantonness, the choice retreat
- Of sated Grandeur from the city's noise:
- And were it humbler, it in sooth were sweet;
- But Peace abhorreth artificial joys,
- And Pleasure, leagued with Pomp, the zest of both destroys.
- LXV.
- Fierce are Albania's children, yet they lack
- Not virtues, were those virtues more mature.
- Where is the foe that ever saw their back?
- Who can so well the toil of war endure?
- Their native fastnesses not more secure
- Than they in doubtful time of troublous need:
- Their wrath how deadly! but their friendship sure,
- When Gratitude or Valour bids them bleed,
- Unshaken rushing on where'er their chief may lead.
- LXVI.
- Childe Harold saw them in their chieftain's tower,
- Thronging to war in splendour and success;
- And after viewed them, when, within their power,
- Himself awhile the victim of distress;
- That saddening hour when bad men hotlier press:
- But these did shelter him beneath their roof,
- When less barbarians would have cheered him less,
- And fellow-countrymen have stood aloof--
- In aught that tries the heart how few withstand the proof!
- LXVII.
- It chanced that adverse winds once drove his bark
- Full on the coast of Suli's shaggy shore,
- When all around was desolate and dark;
- To land was perilous, to sojourn more;
- Yet for awhile the mariners forbore,
- Dubious to trust where treachery might lurk:
- At length they ventured forth, though doubting sore
- That those who loathe alike the Frank and Turk
- Might once again renew their ancient butcher-work.
- LXVIII.
- Vain fear! the Suliotes stretched the welcome hand,
- Led them o'er rocks and past the dangerous swamp,
- Kinder than polished slaves, though not so bland,
- And piled the hearth, and wrung their garments damp,
- And filled the bowl, and trimmed the cheerful lamp,
- And spread their fare: though homely, all they had:
- Such conduct bears Philanthropy's rare stamp--
- To rest the weary and to soothe the sad,
- Doth lesson happier men, and shames at least the bad.
- LXIX.
- It came to pass, that when he did address
- Himself to quit at length this mountain land,
- Combined marauders half-way barred egress,
- And wasted far and near with glaive and brand;
- And therefore did he take a trusty band
- To traverse Acarnania forest wide,
- In war well-seasoned, and with labours tanned,
- Till he did greet white Achelous' tide,
- And from his farther bank AEtolia's wolds espied.
- LXX.
- Where lone Utraikey forms its circling cove,
- And weary waves retire to gleam at rest,
- How brown the foliage of the green hill's grove,
- Nodding at midnight o'er the calm bay's breast,
- As winds come whispering lightly from the west,
- Kissing, not ruffling, the blue deep's serene:
- Here Harold was received a welcome guest;
- Nor did he pass unmoved the gentle scene,
- For many a joy could he from night's soft presence glean.
- LXXI.
- On the smooth shore the night-fires brightly blazed,
- The feast was done, the red wine circling fast,
- And he that unawares had there ygazed
- With gaping wonderment had stared aghast;
- For ere night's midmost, stillest hour was past,
- The native revels of the troop began;
- Each palikar his sabre from him cast,
- And bounding hand in hand, man linked to man,
- Yelling their uncouth dirge, long danced the kirtled clan.
- LXXII.
- Childe Harold at a little distance stood,
- And viewed, but not displeased, the revelrie,
- Nor hated harmless mirth, however rude:
- In sooth, it was no vulgar sight to see
- Their barbarous, yet their not indecent, glee:
- And as the flames along their faces gleamed,
- Their gestures nimble, dark eyes flashing free,
- The long wild locks that to their girdles streamed,
- While thus in concert they this lay half sang, half screamed:
- Tambourgi! Tambourgi! thy larum afar
- Gives hope to the valiant, and promise of war;
- All the sons of the mountains arise at the note,
- Chimariot, Illyrian, and dark Suliote!
- Oh! who is more brave than a dark Suliote,
- To his snowy camese and his shaggy capote?
- To the wolf and the vulture he leaves his wild flock,
- And descends to the plain like the stream from the rock.
- Shall the sons of Chimari, who never forgive
- The fault of a friend, bid an enemy live?
- Let those guns so unerring such vengeance forego?
- What mark is so fair as the breast of a foe?
- Macedonia sends forth her invincible race;
- For a time they abandon the cave and the chase:
- But those scarves of blood-red shall be redder, before
- The sabre is sheathed and the battle is o'er.
- Then the pirates of Parga that dwell by the waves,
- And teach the pale Franks what it is to be slaves,
- Shall leave on the beach the long galley and oar,
- And track to his covert the captive on shore.
- I ask not the pleasure that riches supply,
- My sabre shall win what the feeble must buy:
- Shall win the young bride with her long flowing hair,
- And many a maid from her mother shall tear.
- I love the fair face of the maid in her youth;
- Her caresses shall lull me, her music shall soothe:
- Let her bring from her chamber the many-toned lyre,
- And sing us a song on the fall of her sire.
- Remember the moment when Previsa fell,
- The shrieks of the conquered, the conqueror's yell;
- The roofs that we fired, and the plunder we shared,
- The wealthy we slaughtered, the lovely we spared.
- I talk not of mercy, I talk not of fear;
- He neither must know who would serve the Vizier;
- Since the days of our prophet, the crescent ne'er saw
- A chief ever glorious like Ali Pasha.
- Dark Muchtar his son to the Danube is sped,
- Let the yellow-haired Giaours view his horsetail with dread;
- When his Delhis come dashing in blood o'er the banks,
- How few shall escape from the Muscovite ranks!
- Selictar! unsheath then our chief's scimitar:
- Tambourgi! thy larum gives promise of war.
- Ye mountains that see us descend to the shore,
- Shall view us as victors, or view us no more!
- LXXIII.
- Fair Greece! sad relic of departed worth!
- Immortal, though no more; though fallen, great!
- Who now shall lead thy scattered children forth,
- And long accustomed bondage uncreate?
- Not such thy sons who whilome did await,
- The hopeless warriors of a willing doom,
- In bleak Thermopylae's sepulchral strait--
- Oh, who that gallant spirit shall resume,
- Leap from Eurotas' banks, and call thee from the tomb?
- LXXIV.
- Spirit of Freedom! when on Phyle's brow
- Thou sat'st with Thrasybulus and his train,
- Couldst thou forbode the dismal hour which now
- Dims the green beauties of thine Attic plain?
- Not thirty tyrants now enforce the chain,
- But every carle can lord it o'er thy land;
- Nor rise thy sons, but idly rail in vain,
- Trembling beneath the scourge of Turkish hand,
- From birth till death enslaved; in word, in deed, unmanned.
- LXXV.
- In all save form alone, how changed! and who
- That marks the fire still sparkling in each eye,
- Who would but deem their bosom burned anew
- With thy unquenched beam, lost Liberty!
- And many dream withal the hour is nigh
- That gives them back their fathers' heritage:
- For foreign arms and aid they fondly sigh,
- Nor solely dare encounter hostile rage,
- Or tear their name defiled from Slavery's mournful page.
- LXXVI.
- Hereditary bondsmen! know ye not
- Who would be free themselves must strike the blow?
- By their right arms the conquest must be wrought?
- Will Gaul or Muscovite redress ye? No!
- True, they may lay your proud despoilers low,
- But not for you will Freedom's altars flame.
- Shades of the Helots! triumph o'er your foe:
- Greece! change thy lords, thy state is still the same;
- Thy glorious day is o'er, but not thy years of shame.
- LXXVII.
- The city won for Allah from the Giaour,
- The Giaour from Othman's race again may wrest;
- And the Serai's impenetrable tower
- Receive the fiery Frank, her former guest;
- Or Wahab's rebel brood, who dared divest
- The Prophet's tomb of all its pious spoil,
- May wind their path of blood along the West;
- But ne'er will Freedom seek this fated soil,
- But slave succeed to slave through years of endless toil.
- LXXVIII.
- Yet mark their mirth--ere lenten days begin,
- That penance which their holy rites prepare
- To shrive from man his weight of mortal sin,
- By daily abstinence and nightly prayer;
- But ere his sackcloth garb Repentance wear,
- Some days of joyaunce are decreed to all,
- To take of pleasaunce each his secret share,
- In motley robe to dance at masking ball,
- And join the mimic train of merry Carnival.
- LXXIX.
- And whose more rife with merriment than thine,
- O Stamboul! once the empress of their reign?
- Though turbans now pollute Sophia's shrine
- And Greece her very altars eyes in vain:
- (Alas! her woes will still pervade my strain!)
- Gay were her minstrels once, for free her throng,
- All felt the common joy they now must feign;
- Nor oft I've seen such sight, nor heard such song,
- As wooed the eye, and thrilled the Bosphorus along.
- LXXX.
- Loud was the lightsome tumult on the shore;
- Oft Music changed, but never ceased her tone,
- And timely echoed back the measured oar,
- And rippling waters made a pleasant moan:
- The Queen of tides on high consenting shone;
- And when a transient breeze swept o'er the wave,
- 'Twas as if, darting from her heavenly throne,
- A brighter glance her form reflected gave,
- Till sparkling billows seemed to light the banks they lave.
- LXXXI.
- Glanced many a light caique along the foam,
- Danced on the shore the daughters of the land,
- No thought had man or maid of rest or home,
- While many a languid eye and thrilling hand
- Exchanged the look few bosoms may withstand,
- Or gently pressed, returned the pressure still:
- Oh Love! young Love! bound in thy rosy band,
- Let sage or cynic prattle as he will,
- These hours, and only these, redeemed Life's years of ill!
- LXXXII.
- But, midst the throng in merry masquerade,
- Lurk there no hearts that throb with secret pain,
- E'en through the closest searment half-betrayed?
- To such the gentle murmurs of the main
- Seem to re-echo all they mourn in vain;
- To such the gladness of the gamesome crowd
- Is source of wayward thought and stern disdain:
- How do they loathe the laughter idly loud,
- And long to change the robe of revel for the shroud!
- LXXXIII.
- This must he feel, the true-born son of Greece,
- If Greece one true-born patriot can boast:
- Not such as prate of war but skulk in peace,
- The bondsman's peace, who sighs for all he lost,
- Yet with smooth smile his tyrant can accost,
- And wield the slavish sickle, not the sword:
- Ah, Greece! they love thee least who owe thee most--
- Their birth, their blood, and that sublime record
- Of hero sires, who shame thy now degenerate horde!
- LXXXIV.
- When riseth Lacedaemon's hardihood,
- When Thebes Epaminondas rears again,
- When Athens' children are with hearts endued,
- When Grecian mothers shall give birth to men,
- Then mayst thou be restored; but not till then.
- A thousand years scarce serve to form a state;
- An hour may lay it in the dust: and when
- Can man its shattered splendour renovate,
- Recall its virtues back, and vanquish Time and Fate?
- LXXXV.
- And yet how lovely in thine age of woe,
- Land of lost gods and godlike men, art thou!
- Thy vales of evergreen, thy hills of snow,
- Proclaim thee Nature's varied favourite now;
- Thy fanes, thy temples to the surface bow,
- Commingling slowly with heroic earth,
- Broke by the share of every rustic plough:
- So perish monuments of mortal birth,
- So perish all in turn, save well-recorded worth;
- LXXXVI.
- Save where some solitary column mourns
- Above its prostrate brethren of the cave;
- Save where Tritonia's airy shrine adorns
- Colonna's cliff, and gleams along the wave;
- Save o'er some warrior's half-forgotten grave,
- Where the grey stones and unmolested grass
- Ages, but not oblivion, feebly brave,
- While strangers only not regardless pass,
- Lingering like me, perchance, to gaze, and sigh 'Alas!'
- LXXXVII.
- Yet are thy skies as blue, thy crags as wild:
- Sweet are thy groves, and verdant are thy fields,
- Thine olives ripe as when Minerva smiled,
- And still his honeyed wealth Hymettus yields;
- There the blithe bee his fragrant fortress builds,
- The freeborn wanderer of thy mountain air;
- Apollo still thy long, long summer gilds,
- Still in his beam Mendeli's marbles glare;
- Art, Glory, Freedom fail, but Nature still is fair.
- LXXXVIII.
- Where'er we tread, 'tis haunted, holy ground;
- No earth of thine is lost in vulgar mould,
- But one vast realm of wonder spreads around,
- And all the Muse's tales seem truly told,
- Till the sense aches with gazing to behold
- The scenes our earliest dreams have dwelt upon:
- Each hill and dale, each deepening glen and wold,
- Defies the power which crushed thy temples gone:
- Age shakes Athena's tower, but spares gray Marathon.
- LXXXIX.
- The sun, the soil, but not the slave, the same;
- Unchanged in all except its foreign lord--
- Preserves alike its bounds and boundless fame;
- The battle-field, where Persia's victim horde
- First bowed beneath the brunt of Hellas' sword,
- As on the morn to distant Glory dear,
- When Marathon became a magic word;
- Which uttered, to the hearer's eye appear
- The camp, the host, the fight, the conqueror's career.
- XC.
- The flying Mede, his shaftless broken bow;
- The fiery Greek, his red pursuing spear;
- Mountains above, Earth's, Ocean's plain below;
- Death in the front, Destruction in the rear!
- Such was the scene--what now remaineth here?
- What sacred trophy marks the hallowed ground,
- Recording Freedom's smile and Asia's tear?
- The rifled urn, the violated mound,
- The dust thy courser's hoof, rude stranger! spurns around.
- XCI.
- Yet to the remnants of thy splendour past
- Shall pilgrims, pensive, but unwearied, throng:
- Long shall the voyager, with th' Ionian blast,
- Hail the bright clime of battle and of song;
- Long shall thine annals and immortal tongue
- Fill with thy fame the youth of many a shore:
- Boast of the aged! lesson of the young!
- Which sages venerate and bards adore,
- As Pallas and the Muse unveil their awful lore.
- XCII.
- The parted bosom clings to wonted home,
- If aught that's kindred cheer the welcome hearth;
- He that is lonely, hither let him roam,
- And gaze complacent on congenial earth.
- Greece is no lightsome land of social mirth;
- But he whom Sadness sootheth may abide,
- And scarce regret the region of his birth,
- When wandering slow by Delphi's sacred side,
- Or gazing o'er the plains where Greek and Persian died.
- XCIII.
- Let such approach this consecrated land,
- And pass in peace along the magic waste:
- But spare its relics--let no busy hand
- Deface the scenes, already how defaced!
- Not for such purpose were these altars placed.
- Revere the remnants nations once revered;
- So may our country's name be undisgraced,
- So mayst thou prosper where thy youth was reared,
- By every honest joy of love and life endeared!
- XCIV.
- For thee, who thus in too protracted song
- Hath soothed thine idlesse with inglorious lays,
- Soon shall thy voice be lost amid the throng
- Of louder minstrels in these later days:
- To such resign the strife for fading bays--
- Ill may such contest now the spirit move
- Which heeds nor keen reproach nor partial praise,
- Since cold each kinder heart that might approve,
- And none are left to please where none are left to love.
- XCV.
- Thou too art gone, thou loved and lovely one!
- Whom youth and youth's affections bound to me;
- Who did for me what none beside have done,
- Nor shrank from one albeit unworthy thee.
- What is my being? thou hast ceased to be!
- Nor stayed to welcome here thy wanderer home,
- Who mourns o'er hours which we no more shall see--
- Would they had never been, or were to come!
- Would he had ne'er returned to find fresh cause to roam!
- XCVI.
- Oh! ever loving, lovely, and beloved!
- How selfish Sorrow ponders on the past,
- And clings to thoughts now better far removed!
- But Time shall tear thy shadow from me last.
- All thou couldst have of mine, stern Death, thou hast:
- The parent, friend, and now the more than friend;
- Ne'er yet for one thine arrows flew so fast,
- And grief with grief continuing still to blend,
- Hath snatched the little joy that life had yet to lend.
- XCVII.
- Then must I plunge again into the crowd,
- And follow all that Peace disdains to seek?
- Where Revel calls, and Laughter, vainly loud,
- False to the heart, distorts the hollow cheek,
- To leave the flagging spirit doubly weak!
- Still o'er the features, which perforce they cheer,
- To feign the pleasure or conceal the pique;
- Smiles form the channel of a future tear,
- Or raise the writhing lip with ill-dissembled sneer.
- XCVIII.
- What is the worst of woes that wait on age?
- What stamps the wrinkle deeper on the brow?
- To view each loved one blotted from life's page,
- And be alone on earth, as I am now.
- Before the Chastener humbly let me bow,
- O'er hearts divided and o'er hopes destroyed:
- Roll on, vain days! full reckless may ye flow,
- Since Time hath reft whate'er my soul enjoyed,
- And with the ills of eld mine earlier years alloyed.
- CANTO THE THIRD.
- I.
- Is thy face like thy mother's, my fair child!
- Ada! sole daughter of my house and heart?
- When last I saw thy young blue eyes, they smiled,
- And then we parted,--not as now we part,
- But with a hope.--
- Awaking with a start,
- The waters heave around me; and on high
- The winds lift up their voices: I depart,
- Whither I know not; but the hour's gone by,
- When Albion's lessening shores could grieve or glad mine eye.
- II.
- Once more upon the waters! yet once more!
- And the waves bound beneath me as a steed
- That knows his rider. Welcome to their roar!
- Swift be their guidance, wheresoe'er it lead!
- Though the strained mast should quiver as a reed,
- And the rent canvas fluttering strew the gale,
- Still must I on; for I am as a weed,
- Flung from the rock, on Ocean's foam, to sail
- Where'er the surge may sweep, the tempest's breath prevail.
- III.
- In my youth's summer I did sing of One,
- The wandering outlaw of his own dark mind;
- Again I seize the theme, then but begun,
- And bear it with me, as the rushing wind
- Bears the cloud onwards: in that tale I find
- The furrows of long thought, and dried-up tears,
- Which, ebbing, leave a sterile track behind,
- O'er which all heavily the journeying years
- Plod the last sands of life--where not a flower appears.
- IV.
- Since my young days of passion--joy, or pain,
- Perchance my heart and harp have lost a string,
- And both may jar: it may be, that in vain
- I would essay as I have sung to sing.
- Yet, though a dreary strain, to this I cling,
- So that it wean me from the weary dream
- Of selfish grief or gladness--so it fling
- Forgetfulness around me--it shall seem
- To me, though to none else, a not ungrateful theme.
- V.
- He who, grown aged in this world of woe,
- In deeds, not years, piercing the depths of life,
- So that no wonder waits him; nor below
- Can love or sorrow, fame, ambition, strife,
- Cut to his heart again with the keen knife
- Of silent, sharp endurance: he can tell
- Why thought seeks refuge in lone caves, yet rife
- With airy images, and shapes which dwell
- Still unimpaired, though old, in the soul's haunted cell.
- VI.
- 'Tis to create, and in creating live
- A being more intense, that we endow
- With form our fancy, gaining as we give
- The life we image, even as I do now.
- What am I? Nothing: but not so art thou,
- Soul of my thought! with whom I traverse earth,
- Invisible but gazing, as I glow
- Mixed with thy spirit, blended with thy birth,
- And feeling still with thee in my crushed feelings' dearth.
- VII.
- Yet must I think less wildly: I HAVE thought
- Too long and darkly, till my brain became,
- In its own eddy boiling and o'erwrought,
- A whirling gulf of phantasy and flame:
- And thus, untaught in youth my heart to tame,
- My springs of life were poisoned. 'Tis too late!
- Yet am I changed; though still enough the same
- In strength to bear what time cannot abate,
- And feed on bitter fruits without accusing fate.
- VIII.
- Something too much of this: but now 'tis past,
- And the spell closes with its silent seal.
- Long-absent Harold reappears at last;
- He of the breast which fain no more would feel,
- Wrung with the wounds which kill not, but ne'er heal;
- Yet Time, who changes all, had altered him
- In soul and aspect as in age: years steal
- Fire from the mind as vigour from the limb;
- And life's enchanted cup but sparkles near the brim.
- IX.
- His had been quaffed too quickly, and he found
- The dregs were wormwood; but he filled again,
- And from a purer fount, on holier ground,
- And deemed its spring perpetual; but in vain!
- Still round him clung invisibly a chain
- Which galled for ever, fettering though unseen,
- And heavy though it clanked not; worn with pain,
- Which pined although it spoke not, and grew keen,
- Entering with every step he took through many a scene.
- X.
- Secure in guarded coldness, he had mixed
- Again in fancied safety with his kind,
- And deemed his spirit now so firmly fixed
- And sheathed with an invulnerable mind,
- That, if no joy, no sorrow lurked behind;
- And he, as one, might midst the many stand
- Unheeded, searching through the crowd to find
- Fit speculation; such as in strange land
- He found in wonder-works of God and Nature's hand.
- XI.
- But who can view the ripened rose, nor seek
- To wear it? who can curiously behold
- The smoothness and the sheen of beauty's cheek,
- Nor feel the heart can never all grow old?
- Who can contemplate fame through clouds unfold
- The star which rises o'er her steep, nor climb?
- Harold, once more within the vortex rolled
- On with the giddy circle, chasing Time,
- Yet with a nobler aim than in his youth's fond prime.
- XII.
- But soon he knew himself the most unfit
- Of men to herd with Man; with whom he held
- Little in common; untaught to submit
- His thoughts to others, though his soul was quelled,
- In youth by his own thoughts; still uncompelled,
- He would not yield dominion of his mind
- To spirits against whom his own rebelled;
- Proud though in desolation; which could find
- A life within itself, to breathe without mankind.
- XIII.
- Where rose the mountains, there to him were friends;
- Where rolled the ocean, thereon was his home;
- Where a blue sky, and glowing clime, extends,
- He had the passion and the power to roam;
- The desert, forest, cavern, breaker's foam,
- Were unto him companionship; they spake
- A mutual language, clearer than the tome
- Of his land's tongue, which he would oft forsake
- For nature's pages glassed by sunbeams on the lake.
- XIV.
- Like the Chaldean, he could watch the stars,
- Till he had peopled them with beings bright
- As their own beams; and earth, and earth-born jars,
- And human frailties, were forgotten quite:
- Could he have kept his spirit to that flight,
- He had been happy; but this clay will sink
- Its spark immortal, envying it the light
- To which it mounts, as if to break the link
- That keeps us from yon heaven which woos us to its brink.
- XV.
- But in Man's dwellings he became a thing
- Restless and worn, and stern and wearisome,
- Drooped as a wild-born falcon with clipt wing,
- To whom the boundless air alone were home:
- Then came his fit again, which to o'ercome,
- As eagerly the barred-up bird will beat
- His breast and beak against his wiry dome
- Till the blood tinge his plumage, so the heat
- Of his impeded soul would through his bosom eat.
- XVI.
- Self-exiled Harold wanders forth again,
- With naught of hope left, but with less of gloom;
- The very knowledge that he lived in vain,
- That all was over on this side the tomb,
- Had made Despair a smilingness assume,
- Which, though 'twere wild--as on the plundered wreck
- When mariners would madly meet their doom
- With draughts intemperate on the sinking deck--
- Did yet inspire a cheer, which he forbore to check.
- XVII.
- Stop! for thy tread is on an empire's dust!
- An earthquake's spoil is sepulchred below!
- Is the spot marked with no colossal bust?
- Nor column trophied for triumphal show?
- None; but the moral's truth tells simpler so,
- As the ground was before, thus let it be;--
- How that red rain hath made the harvest grow!
- And is this all the world has gained by thee,
- Thou first and last of fields! king-making Victory?
- XVIII.
- And Harold stands upon this place of skulls,
- The grave of France, the deadly Waterloo!
- How in an hour the power which gave annuls
- Its gifts, transferring fame as fleeting too!
- In 'pride of place' here last the eagle flew,
- Then tore with bloody talon the rent plain,
- Pierced by the shaft of banded nations through:
- Ambition's life and labours all were vain;
- He wears the shattered links of the world's broken chain.
- XIX.
- Fit retribution! Gaul may champ the bit,
- And foam in fetters, but is Earth more free?
- Did nations combat to make ONE submit;
- Or league to teach all kings true sovereignty?
- What! shall reviving thraldom again be
- The patched-up idol of enlightened days?
- Shall we, who struck the Lion down, shall we
- Pay the Wolf homage? proffering lowly gaze
- And servile knees to thrones? No; PROVE before ye praise!
- XX.
- If not, o'er one fall'n despot boast no more!
- In vain fair cheeks were furrowed with hot tears
- For Europe's flowers long rooted up before
- The trampler of her vineyards; in vain years
- Of death, depopulation, bondage, fears,
- Have all been borne, and broken by the accord
- Of roused-up millions: all that most endears
- Glory, is when the myrtle wreathes a sword
- Such as Harmodius drew on Athens' tyrant lord.
- XXI.
- There was a sound of revelry by night,
- And Belgium's capital had gathered then
- Her Beauty and her Chivalry, and bright
- The lamps shone o'er fair women and brave men;
- A thousand hearts beat happily; and when
- Music arose with its voluptuous swell,
- Soft eyes looked love to eyes which spake again,
- And all went merry as a marriage bell;
- But hush! hark! a deep sound strikes like a rising knell!
- XXII.
- Did ye not hear it?--No; 'twas but the wind,
- Or the car rattling o'er the stony street;
- On with the dance! let joy be unconfined;
- No sleep till morn, when Youth and Pleasure meet
- To chase the glowing Hours with flying feet.
- But hark!--that heavy sound breaks in once more,
- As if the clouds its echo would repeat;
- And nearer, clearer, deadlier than before!
- Arm! arm! it is--it is--the cannon's opening roar!
- XXIII.
- Within a windowed niche of that high hall
- Sate Brunswick's fated chieftain; he did hear
- That sound, the first amidst the festival,
- And caught its tone with Death's prophetic ear;
- And when they smiled because he deemed it near,
- His heart more truly knew that peal too well
- Which stretched his father on a bloody bier,
- And roused the vengeance blood alone could quell:
- He rushed into the field, and, foremost fighting, fell.
- XXIV.
- Ah! then and there was hurrying to and fro,
- And gathering tears, and tremblings of distress,
- And cheeks all pale, which but an hour ago
- Blushed at the praise of their own loveliness;
- And there were sudden partings, such as press
- The life from out young hearts, and choking sighs
- Which ne'er might be repeated: who would guess
- If ever more should meet those mutual eyes,
- Since upon night so sweet such awful morn could rise!
- XXV.
- And there was mounting in hot haste: the steed,
- The mustering squadron, and the clattering car,
- Went pouring forward with impetuous speed,
- And swiftly forming in the ranks of war;
- And the deep thunder peal on peal afar;
- And near, the beat of the alarming drum
- Roused up the soldier ere the morning star;
- While thronged the citizens with terror dumb,
- Or whispering, with white lips--'The foe! They come! they come!'
- XXVI.
- And wild and high the 'Cameron's gathering' rose,
- The war-note of Lochiel, which Albyn's hills
- Have heard, and heard, too, have her Saxon foes:
- How in the noon of night that pibroch thrills
- Savage and shrill! But with the breath which fills
- Their mountain-pipe, so fill the mountaineers
- With the fierce native daring which instils
- The stirring memory of a thousand years,
- And Evan's, Donald's fame rings in each clansman's ears.
- XXVII.
- And Ardennes waves above them her green leaves,
- Dewy with Nature's tear-drops, as they pass,
- Grieving, if aught inanimate e'er grieves,
- Over the unreturniug brave,--alas!
- Ere evening to be trodden like the grass
- Which now beneath them, but above shall grow
- In its next verdure, when this fiery mass
- Of living valour, rolling on the foe,
- And burning with high hope, shall moulder cold and low.
- XXVIII.
- Last noon beheld them full of lusty life,
- Last eve in Beauty's circle proudly gay,
- The midnight brought the signal-sound of strife,
- The morn the marshalling in arms,--the day
- Battle's magnificently stern array!
- The thunder-clouds close o'er it, which when rent
- The earth is covered thick with other clay,
- Which her own clay shall cover, heaped and pent,
- Rider and horse,--friend, foe,--in one red burial blent!
- XXIX.
- Their praise is hymned by loftier harps than mine;
- Yet one I would select from that proud throng,
- Partly because they blend me with his line,
- And partly that I did his sire some wrong,
- And partly that bright names will hallow song;
- And his was of the bravest, and when showered
- The death-bolts deadliest the thinned files along,
- Even where the thickest of war's tempest lowered,
- They reached no nobler breast than thine, young, gallant Howard!
- XXX.
- There have been tears and breaking hearts for thee,
- And mine were nothing, had I such to give;
- But when I stood beneath the fresh green tree,
- Which living waves where thou didst cease to live,
- And saw around me the wild field revive
- With fruits and fertile promise, and the Spring
- Come forth her work of gladness to contrive,
- With all her reckless birds upon the wing,
- I turned from all she brought to those she could not bring.
- XXXI.
- I turned to thee, to thousands, of whom each
- And one as all a ghastly gap did make
- In his own kind and kindred, whom to teach
- Forgetfulness were mercy for their sake;
- The Archangel's trump, not Glory's, must awake
- Those whom they thirst for; though the sound of Fame
- May for a moment soothe, it cannot slake
- The fever of vain longing, and the name
- So honoured, but assumes a stronger, bitterer claim.
- XXXII.
- They mourn, but smile at length; and, smiling, mourn:
- The tree will wither long before it fall:
- The hull drives on, though mast and sail be torn;
- The roof-tree sinks, but moulders on the hall
- In massy hoariness; the ruined wall
- Stands when its wind-worn battlements are gone;
- The bars survive the captive they enthral;
- The day drags through though storms keep out the sun;
- And thus the heart will break, yet brokenly live on:
- XXXIII.
- E'en as a broken mirror, which the glass
- In every fragment multiplies; and makes
- A thousand images of one that was,
- The same, and still the more, the more it breaks;
- And thus the heart will do which not forsakes,
- Living in shattered guise, and still, and cold,
- And bloodless, with its sleepless sorrow aches,
- Yet withers on till all without is old,
- Showing no visible sign, for such things are untold.
- XXXIV.
- There is a very life in our despair,
- Vitality of poison,--a quick root
- Which feeds these deadly branches; for it were
- As nothing did we die; but life will suit
- Itself to Sorrow's most detested fruit,
- Like to the apples on the Dead Sea shore,
- All ashes to the taste: Did man compute
- Existence by enjoyment, and count o'er
- Such hours 'gainst years of life,--say, would he name threescore?
- XXXV.
- The Psalmist numbered out the years of man:
- They are enough: and if thy tale be TRUE,
- Thou, who didst grudge him e'en that fleeting span,
- More than enough, thou fatal Waterloo!
- Millions of tongues record thee, and anew
- Their children's lips shall echo them, and say,
- 'Here, where the sword united nations drew,
- Our countrymen were warring on that day!'
- And this is much, and all which will not pass away.
- XXXVI.
- There sunk the greatest, nor the worst of men,
- Whose spirit anithetically mixed
- One moment of the mightiest, and again
- On little objects with like firmness fixed;
- Extreme in all things! hadst thou been betwixt,
- Thy throne had still been thine, or never been;
- For daring made thy rise as fall: thou seek'st
- Even now to reassume the imperial mien,
- And shake again the world, the Thunderer of the scene!
- XXXVII.
- Conqueror and captive of the earth art thou!
- She trembles at thee still, and thy wild name
- Was ne'er more bruited in men's minds than now
- That thou art nothing, save the jest of Fame,
- Who wooed thee once, thy vassal, and became
- The flatterer of thy fierceness, till thou wert
- A god unto thyself; nor less the same
- To the astounded kingdoms all inert,
- Who deemed thee for a time whate'er thou didst assert.
- XXXVIII.
- Oh, more or less than man--in high or low,
- Battling with nations, flying from the field;
- Now making monarchs' necks thy footstool, now
- More than thy meanest soldier taught to yield:
- An empire thou couldst crush, command, rebuild,
- But govern not thy pettiest passion, nor,
- However deeply in men's spirits skilled,
- Look through thine own, nor curb the lust of war,
- Nor learn that tempted Fate will leave the loftiest star.
- XXXIX.
- Yet well thy soul hath brooked the turning tide
- With that untaught innate philosophy,
- Which, be it wisdom, coldness, or deep pride,
- Is gall and wormwood to an enemy.
- When the whole host of hatred stood hard by,
- To watch and mock thee shrinking, thou hast smiled
- With a sedate and all-enduring eye;
- When Fortune fled her spoiled and favourite child,
- He stood unbowed beneath the ills upon him piled.
- XL.
- Sager than in thy fortunes; for in them
- Ambition steeled thee on to far too show
- That just habitual scorn, which could contemn
- Men and their thoughts; 'twas wise to feel, not so
- To wear it ever on thy lip and brow,
- And spurn the instruments thou wert to use
- Till they were turned unto thine overthrow:
- 'Tis but a worthless world to win or lose;
- So hath it proved to thee, and all such lot who choose.
- XLI.
- If, like a tower upon a headland rock,
- Thou hadst been made to stand or fall alone,
- Such scorn of man had helped to brave the shock;
- But men's thoughts were the steps which paved thy throne,
- THEIR admiration thy best weapon shone;
- The part of Philip's son was thine, not then
- (Unless aside thy purple had been thrown)
- Like stern Diogenes to mock at men;
- For sceptred cynics earth were far too wide a den.
- XLII.
- But quiet to quick bosoms is a hell,
- And THERE hath been thy bane; there is a fire
- And motion of the soul, which will not dwell
- In its own narrow being, but aspire
- Beyond the fitting medium of desire;
- And, but once kindled, quenchless evermore,
- Preys upon high adventure, nor can tire
- Of aught but rest; a fever at the core,
- Fatal to him who bears, to all who ever bore.
- XLIII.
- This makes the madmen who have made men mad
- By their contagion! Conquerors and Kings,
- Founders of sects and systems, to whom add
- Sophists, Bards, Statesmen, all unquiet things
- Which stir too strongly the soul's secret springs,
- And are themselves the fools to those they fool;
- Envied, yet how unenviable! what stings
- Are theirs! One breast laid open were a school
- Which would unteach mankind the lust to shine or rule:
- XLIV.
- Their breath is agitation, and their life
- A storm whereon they ride, to sink at last,
- And yet so nursed and bigoted to strife,
- That should their days, surviving perils past,
- Melt to calm twilight, they feel overcast
- With sorrow and supineness, and so die;
- Even as a flame unfed, which runs to waste
- With its own flickering, or a sword laid by,
- Which eats into itself, and rusts ingloriously.
- XLV.
- He who ascends to mountain-tops, shall find
- The loftiest peaks most wrapt in clouds and snow;
- He who surpasses or subdues mankind,
- Must look down on the hate of those below.
- Though high ABOVE the sun of glory glow,
- And far BENEATH the earth and ocean spread,
- ROUND him are icy rocks, and loudly blow
- Contending tempests on his naked head,
- And thus reward the toils which to those summits led.
- XLVI.
- Away with these; true Wisdom's world will be
- Within its own creation, or in thine,
- Maternal Nature! for who teems like thee,
- Thus on the banks of thy majestic Rhine?
- There Harold gazes on a work divine,
- A blending of all beauties; streams and dells,
- Fruit, foliage, crag, wood, corn-field, mountain, vine,
- And chiefless castles breathing stern farewells
- From grey but leafy walls, where Ruin greenly dwells.
- XLVII.
- And there they stand, as stands a lofty mind,
- Worn, but unstooping to the baser crowd,
- All tenantless, save to the crannying wind,
- Or holding dark communion with the cloud.
- There was a day when they were young and proud,
- Banners on high, and battles passed below;
- But they who fought are in a bloody shroud,
- And those which waved are shredless dust ere now,
- And the bleak battlements shall bear no future blow.
- XLVIII.
- Beneath these battlements, within those walls,
- Power dwelt amidst her passions; in proud state
- Each robber chief upheld his armed halls,
- Doing his evil will, nor less elate
- Than mightier heroes of a longer date.
- What want these outlaws conquerors should have
- But History's purchased page to call them great?
- A wider space, an ornamented grave?
- Their hopes were not less warm, their souls were full as brave.
- XLIX.
- In their baronial feuds and single fields,
- What deeds of prowess unrecorded died!
- And Love, which lent a blazon to their shields,
- With emblems well devised by amorous pride,
- Through all the mail of iron hearts would glide;
- But still their flame was fierceness, and drew on
- Keen contest and destruction near allied,
- And many a tower for some fair mischief won,
- Saw the discoloured Rhine beneath its ruin run.
- L.
- But thou, exulting and abounding river!
- Making thy waves a blessing as they flow
- Through banks whose beauty would endure for ever,
- Could man but leave thy bright creation so,
- Nor its fair promise from the surface mow
- With the sharp scythe of conflict,--then to see
- Thy valley of sweet waters, were to know
- Earth paved like Heaven; and to seem such to me
- Even now what wants thy stream?--that it should Lethe be.
- LI.
- A thousand battles have assailed thy banks,
- But these and half their fame have passed away,
- And Slaughter heaped on high his weltering ranks:
- Their very graves are gone, and what are they?
- Thy tide washed down the blood of yesterday,
- And all was stainless, and on thy clear stream
- Glassed with its dancing light the sunny ray;
- But o'er the blackened memory's blighting dream
- Thy waves would vainly roll, all sweeping as they seem.
- LII.
- Thus Harold inly said, and passed along,
- Yet not insensible to all which here
- Awoke the jocund birds to early song
- In glens which might have made e'en exile dear:
- Though on his brow were graven lines austere,
- And tranquil sternness which had ta'en the place
- Of feelings fierier far but less severe,
- Joy was not always absent from his face,
- But o'er it in such scenes would steal with transient trace.
- LIII.
- Nor was all love shut from him, though his days
- Of passion had consumed themselves to dust.
- It is in vain that we would coldly gaze
- On such as smile upon us; the heart must
- Leap kindly back to kindness, though disgust
- Hath weaned it from all worldlings: thus he felt,
- For there was soft remembrance, and sweet trust
- In one fond breast, to which his own would melt,
- And in its tenderer hour on that his bosom dwelt.
- LIV.
- And he had learned to love,--I know not why,
- For this in such as him seems strange of mood,--
- The helpless looks of blooming infancy,
- Even in its earliest nurture; what subdued,
- To change like this, a mind so far imbued
- With scorn of man, it little boots to know;
- But thus it was; and though in solitude
- Small power the nipped affections have to grow,
- In him this glowed when all beside had ceased to glow.
- LV.
- And there was one soft breast, as hath been said,
- Which unto his was bound by stronger ties
- Than the church links withal; and, though unwed,
- THAT love was pure, and, far above disguise,
- Had stood the test of mortal enmities
- Still undivided, and cemented more
- By peril, dreaded most in female eyes;
- But this was firm, and from a foreign shore
- Well to that heart might his these absent greetings pour!
- The castled crag of Drachenfels
- Frowns o'er the wide and winding Rhine.
- Whose breast of waters broadly swells
- Between the banks which bear the vine,
- And hills all rich with blossomed trees,
- And fields which promise corn and wine,
- And scattered cities crowning these,
- Whose far white walls along them shine,
- Have strewed a scene, which I should see
- With double joy wert THOU with me!
- And peasant girls, with deep blue eyes,
- And hands which offer early flowers,
- Walk smiling o'er this paradise;
- Above, the frequent feudal towers
- Through green leaves lift their walls of grey,
- And many a rock which steeply lours,
- And noble arch in proud decay,
- Look o'er this vale of vintage bowers:
- But one thing want these banks of Rhine,--
- Thy gentle hand to clasp in mine!
- I send the lilies given to me;
- Though long before thy hand they touch,
- I know that they must withered be,
- But yet reject them not as such;
- For I have cherished them as dear,
- Because they yet may meet thine eye,
- And guide thy soul to mine e'en here,
- When thou behold'st them drooping nigh,
- And know'st them gathered by the Rhine,
- And offered from my heart to thine!
- The river nobly foams and flows,
- The charm of this enchanted ground,
- And all its thousand turns disclose
- Some fresher beauty varying round;
- The haughtiest breast its wish might bound
- Through life to dwell delighted here;
- Nor could on earth a spot be found
- To Nature and to me so dear,
- Could thy dear eyes in following mine
- Still sweeten more these banks of Rhine!
- LVI.
- By Coblentz, on a rise of gentle ground,
- There is a small and simple pyramid,
- Crowning the summit of the verdant mound;
- Beneath its base are heroes' ashes hid,
- Our enemy's,--but let not that forbid
- Honour to Marceau! o'er whose early tomb
- Tears, big tears, gushed from the rough soldier's lid,
- Lamenting and yet envying such a doom,
- Falling for France, whose rights he battled to resume.
- LVI.
- Brief, brave, and glorious was his young career,--
- His mourners were two hosts, his friends and foes;
- And fitly may the stranger lingering here
- Pray for his gallant spirit's bright repose;
- For he was Freedom's champion, one of those,
- The few in number, who had not o'erstept
- The charter to chastise which she bestows
- On such as wield her weapons; he had kept
- The whiteness of his soul, and thus men o'er him wept.
- LVIII.
- Here Ehrenbreitstein, with her shattered wall
- Black with the miner's blast, upon her height
- Yet shows of what she was, when shell and ball
- Rebounding idly on her strength did light;
- A tower of victory! from whence the flight
- Of baffled foes was watched along the plain;
- But Peace destroyed what War could never blight,
- And laid those proud roofs bare to Summer's rain--
- On which the iron shower for years had poured in vain.
- LIX.
- Adieu to thee, fair Rhine! How long, delighted,
- The stranger fain would linger on his way;
- Thine is a scene alike where souls united
- Or lonely Contemplation thus might stray;
- And could the ceaseless vultures cease to prey
- On self-condemning bosoms, it were here,
- Where Nature, not too sombre nor too gay,
- Wild but not rude, awful yet not austere,
- Is to the mellow earth as autumn to the year.
- LX.
- Adieu to thee again! a vain adieu!
- There can be no farewell to scene like thine;
- The mind is coloured by thy every hue;
- And if reluctantly the eyes resign
- Their cherished gaze upon thee, lovely Rhine!
- 'Tis with the thankful glance of parting praise;
- More mighty spots may rise--more glaring shine,
- But none unite in one attaching maze
- The brilliant, fair, and soft;--the glories of old days.
- LXI.
- The negligently grand, the fruitful bloom
- Of coming ripeness, the white city's sheen,
- The rolling stream, the precipice's gloom,
- The forest's growth, and Gothic walls between,
- The wild rocks shaped as they had turrets been
- In mockery of man's art; and these withal
- A race of faces happy as the scene,
- Whose fertile bounties here extend to all,
- Still springing o'er thy banks, though empires near them fall.
- LXII.
- But these recede. Above me are the Alps,
- The palaces of Nature, whose vast walls
- Have pinnacled in clouds their snowy scalps,
- And throned Eternity in icy halls
- Of cold sublimity, where forms and falls
- The avalanche--the thunderbolt of snow!
- All that expands the spirit, yet appals,
- Gathers around these summits, as to show
- How Earth may pierce to Heaven, yet leave vain man below.
- LXIII.
- But ere these matchless heights I dare to scan,
- There is a spot should not be passed in vain,--
- Morat! the proud, the patriot field! where man
- May gaze on ghastly trophies of the slain,
- Nor blush for those who conquered on that plain;
- Here Burgundy bequeathed his tombless host,
- A bony heap, through ages to remain,
- Themselves their monument;--the Stygian coast
- Unsepulchred they roamed, and shrieked each wandering ghost.
- LXIV.
- While Waterloo with Cannae's carnage vies,
- Morat and Marathon twin names shall stand;
- They were true Glory's stainless victories,
- Won by the unambitious heart and hand
- Of a proud, brotherly, and civic band,
- All unbought champions in no princely cause
- Of vice-entailed Corruption; they no land
- Doomed to bewail the blasphemy of laws
- Making king's rights divine, by some Draconic clause.
- LXV.
- By a lone wall a lonelier column rears
- A grey and grief-worn aspect of old days
- 'Tis the last remnant of the wreck of years,
- And looks as with the wild bewildered gaze
- Of one to stone converted by amaze,
- Yet still with consciousness; and there it stands,
- Making a marvel that it not decays,
- When the coeval pride of human hands,
- Levelled Aventicum, hath strewed her subject lands.
- LXVI.
- And there--oh! sweet and sacred be the name!--
- Julia--the daughter, the devoted--gave
- Her youth to Heaven; her heart, beneath a claim
- Nearest to Heaven's, broke o'er a father's grave.
- Justice is sworn 'gainst tears, and hers would crave
- The life she lived in; but the judge was just,
- And then she died on him she could not save.
- Their tomb was simple, and without a bust,
- And held within their urn one mind, one heart, one dust.
- LXVII.
- But these are deeds which should not pass away,
- And names that must not wither, though the earth
- Forgets her empires with a just decay,
- The enslavers and the enslaved, their death and birth;
- The high, the mountain-majesty of worth,
- Should be, and shall, survivor of its woe,
- And from its immortality look forth
- In the sun's face, like yonder Alpine snow,
- Imperishably pure beyond all things below.
- LXVIII.
- Lake Leman woos me with its crystal face,
- The mirror where the stars and mountains view
- The stillness of their aspect in each trace
- Its clear depth yields of their far height and hue:
- There is too much of man here, to look through
- With a fit mind the might which I behold;
- But soon in me shall Loneliness renew
- Thoughts hid, but not less cherished than of old,
- Ere mingling with the herd had penned me in their fold.
- LXIX.
- To fly from, need not be to hate, mankind;
- All are not fit with them to stir and toil,
- Nor is it discontent to keep the mind
- Deep in its fountain, lest it overboil
- In one hot throng, where we become the spoil
- Of our infection, till too late and long
- We may deplore and struggle with the coil,
- In wretched interchange of wrong for wrong
- Midst a contentious world, striving where none are strong.
- LXX.
- There, in a moment, we may plunge our years
- In fatal penitence, and in the blight
- Of our own soul, turn all our blood to tears,
- And colour things to come with hues of Night;
- The race of life becomes a hopeless flight
- To those that walk in darkness: on the sea,
- The boldest steer but where their ports invite,
- But there are wanderers o'er Eternity
- Whose bark drives on and on, and anchored ne'er shall be.
- LXXI.
- Is it not better, then, to be alone,
- And love Earth only for its earthly sake?
- By the blue rushing of the arrowy Rhone,
- Or the pure bosom of its nursing lake,
- Which feeds it as a mother who doth make
- A fair but froward infant her own care,
- Kissing its cries away as these awake;--
- Is it not better thus our lives to wear,
- Than join the crushing crowd, doomed to inflict or bear?
- LXXII.
- I live not in myself, but I become
- Portion of that around me; and to me,
- High mountains are a feeling, but the hum
- Of human cities torture: I can see
- Nothing to loathe in Nature, save to be
- A link reluctant in a fleshly chain,
- Classed among creatures, when the soul can flee,
- And with the sky, the peak, the heaving plain
- Of ocean, or the stars, mingle, and not in vain.
- LXXIII.
- And thus I am absorbed, and this is life:
- I look upon the peopled desert Past,
- As on a place of agony and strife,
- Where, for some sin, to Sorrow I was cast,
- To act and suffer, but remount at last
- With a fresh pinion; which I felt to spring,
- Though young, yet waxing vigorous as the blast
- Which it would cope with, on delighted wing,
- Spurning the clay-cold bonds which round our being cling.
- LXXIV.
- And when, at length, the mind shall be all free
- From what it hates in this degraded form,
- Reft of its carnal life, save what shall be
- Existent happier in the fly and worm,--
- When elements to elements conform,
- And dust is as it should be, shall I not
- Feel all I see, less dazzling, but more warm?
- The bodiless thought? the Spirit of each spot?
- Of which, even now, I share at times the immortal lot?
- LXXV.
- Are not the mountains, waves, and skies a part
- Of me and of my soul, as I of them?
- Is not the love of these deep in my heart
- With a pure passion? should I not contemn
- All objects, if compared with these? and stem
- A tide of suffering, rather than forego
- Such feelings for the hard and worldly phlegm
- Of those whose eyes are only turned below,
- Gazing upon the ground, with thoughts which dare not glow?
- LXXVI.
- But this is not my theme; and I return
- To that which is immediate, and require
- Those who find contemplation in the urn,
- To look on One whose dust was once all fire,
- A native of the land where I respire
- The clear air for awhile--a passing guest,
- Where he became a being,--whose desire
- Was to be glorious; 'twas a foolish quest,
- The which to gain and keep he sacrificed all rest.
- LXXVII.
- Here the self-torturing sophist, wild Rousseau,
- The apostle of affliction, he who threw
- Enchantment over passion, and from woe
- Wrung overwhelming eloquence, first drew
- The breath which made him wretched; yet he knew
- How to make madness beautiful, and cast
- O'er erring deeds and thoughts a heavenly hue
- Of words, like sunbeams, dazzling as they past
- The eyes, which o'er them shed tears feelingly and fast.
- LXXVIII.
- His love was passion's essence--as a tree
- On fire by lightning; with ethereal flame
- Kindled he was, and blasted; for to be
- Thus, and enamoured, were in him the same.
- But his was not the love of living dame,
- Nor of the dead who rise upon our dreams,
- But of Ideal beauty, which became
- In him existence, and o'erflowing teems
- Along his burning page, distempered though it seems.
- LXXIX.
- THIS breathed itself to life in Julie, THIS
- Invested her with all that's wild and sweet;
- This hallowed, too, the memorable kiss
- Which every morn his fevered lip would greet,
- From hers, who but with friendship his would meet:
- But to that gentle touch, through brain and breast
- Flashed the thrilled spirit's love-devouring heat;
- In that absorbing sigh perchance more blest,
- Than vulgar minds may be with all they seek possest.
- LXXX.
- His life was one long war with self-sought foes,
- Or friends by him self-banished; for his mind
- Had grown Suspicion's sanctuary, and chose
- For its own cruel sacrifice, the kind,
- 'Gainst whom he raged with fury strange and blind.
- But he was frenzied,--wherefore, who may know?
- Since cause might be which skill could never find;
- But he was frenzied by disease or woe
- To that worst pitch of all, which wears a reasoning show.
- LXXXI.
- For then he was inspired, and from him came,
- As from the Pythian's mystic cave of yore,
- Those oracles which set the world in flame,
- Nor ceased to burn till kingdoms were no more:
- Did he not this for France, which lay before
- Bowed to the inborn tyranny of years?
- Broken and trembling to the yoke she bore,
- Till by the voice of him and his compeers
- Roused up to too much wrath, which follows o'ergrown fears?
- LXXXII.
- They made themselves a fearful monument!
- The wreck of old opinions--things which grew,
- Breathed from the birth of time: the veil they rent,
- And what behind it lay, all earth shall view.
- But good with ill they also overthrew,
- Leaving but ruins, wherewith to rebuild
- Upon the same foundation, and renew
- Dungeons and thrones, which the same hour refilled,
- As heretofore, because ambition was self-willed.
- LXXXIII.
- But this will not endure, nor be endured!
- Mankind have felt their strength, and made it felt.
- They might have used it better, but, allured
- By their new vigour, sternly have they dealt
- On one another; Pity ceased to melt
- With her once natural charities. But they,
- Who in Oppression's darkness caved had dwelt,
- They were not eagles, nourished with the day;
- What marvel then, at times, if they mistook their prey?
- LXXXIV.
- What deep wounds ever closed without a scar?
- The heart's bleed longest, and but heal to wear
- That which disfigures it; and they who war
- With their own hopes, and have been vanquished, bear
- Silence, but not submission: in his lair
- Fixed Passion holds his breath, until the hour
- Which shall atone for years; none need despair:
- It came, it cometh, and will come,--the power
- To punish or forgive--in ONE we shall be slower.
- LXXXV.
- Clear, placid Leman! thy contrasted lake,
- With the wild world I dwelt in, is a thing
- Which warns me, with its stillness, to forsake
- Earth's troubled waters for a purer spring.
- This quiet sail is as a noiseless wing
- To waft me from distraction; once I loved
- Torn ocean's roar, but thy soft murmuring
- Sounds sweet as if a sister's voice reproved,
- That I with stern delights should e'er have been so moved.
- LXXXVI.
- It is the hush of night, and all between
- Thy margin and the mountains, dusk, yet clear,
- Mellowed and mingling, yet distinctly seen.
- Save darkened Jura, whose capt heights appear
- Precipitously steep; and drawing near,
- There breathes a living fragrance from the shore,
- Of flowers yet fresh with childhood; on the ear
- Drops the light drip of the suspended oar,
- Or chirps the grasshopper one good-night carol more;
- LXXXVII.
- He is an evening reveller, who makes
- His life an infancy, and sings his fill;
- At intervals, some bird from out the brakes
- Starts into voice a moment, then is still.
- There seems a floating whisper on the hill,
- But that is fancy, for the starlight dews
- All silently their tears of love instil,
- Weeping themselves away, till they infuse
- Deep into Nature's breast the spirit of her hues.
- LXXXVIII.
- Ye stars! which are the poetry of heaven,
- If in your bright leaves we would read the fate
- Of men and empires,--'tis to be forgiven,
- That in our aspirations to be great,
- Our destinies o'erleap their mortal state,
- And claim a kindred with you; for ye are
- A beauty and a mystery, and create
- In us such love and reverence from afar,
- That fortune, fame, power, life, have named themselves a star.
- LXXXIX.
- All heaven and earth are still--though not in sleep,
- But breathless, as we grow when feeling most;
- And silent, as we stand in thoughts too deep: --
- All heaven and earth are still: from the high host
- Of stars, to the lulled lake and mountain-coast,
- All is concentered in a life intense,
- Where not a beam, nor air, nor leaf is lost,
- But hath a part of being, and a sense
- Of that which is of all Creator and defence.
- XC.
- Then stirs the feeling infinite, so felt
- In solitude, where we are LEAST alone;
- A truth, which through our being then doth melt,
- And purifies from self: it is a tone,
- The soul and source of music, which makes known
- Eternal harmony, and sheds a charm,
- Like to the fabled Cytherea's zone,
- Binding all things with beauty;--'twould disarm
- The spectre Death, had he substantial power to harm.
- XCI.
- Nor vainly did the early Persian make
- His altar the high places and the peak
- Of earth-o'ergazing mountains, and thus take
- A fit and unwalled temple, there to seek
- The Spirit, in whose honour shrines are weak,
- Upreared of human hands. Come, and compare
- Columns and idol-dwellings, Goth or Greek,
- With Nature's realms of worship, earth and air,
- Nor fix on fond abodes to circumscribe thy prayer!
- XCII.
- The sky is changed!--and such a change! O night,
- And storm, and darkness, ye are wondrous strong,
- Yet lovely in your strength, as is the light
- Of a dark eye in woman! Far along,
- From peak to peak, the rattling crags among,
- Leaps the live thunder! Not from one lone cloud,
- But every mountain now hath found a tongue;
- And Jura answers, through her misty shroud,
- Back to the joyous Alps, who call to her aloud!
- XCIII.
- And this is in the night:--Most glorious night!
- Thou wert not sent for slumber! let me be
- A sharer in thy fierce and far delight--
- A portion of the tempest and of thee!
- How the lit lake shines, a phosphoric sea,
- And the big rain comes dancing to the earth!
- And now again 'tis black,--and now, the glee
- Of the loud hills shakes with its mountain-mirth,
- As if they did rejoice o'er a young earthquake's birth.
- XCIV.
- Now, where the swift Rhone cleaves his way between
- Heights which appear as lovers who have parted
- In hate, whose mining depths so intervene,
- That they can meet no more, though broken-hearted;
- Though in their souls, which thus each other thwarted,
- Love was the very root of the fond rage
- Which blighted their life's bloom, and then departed:
- Itself expired, but leaving them an age
- Of years all winters--war within themselves to wage.
- XCV.
- Now, where the quick Rhone thus hath cleft his way,
- The mightiest of the storms hath ta'en his stand;
- For here, not one, but many, make their play,
- And fling their thunderbolts from hand to hand,
- Flashing and cast around: of all the band,
- The brightest through these parted hills hath forked
- His lightnings, as if he did understand
- That in such gaps as desolation worked,
- There the hot shaft should blast whatever therein lurked.
- XCVI.
- Sky, mountains, river, winds, lake, lightnings! ye,
- With night, and clouds, and thunder, and a soul
- To make these felt and feeling, well may be
- Things that have made me watchful; the far roll
- Of your departing voices, is the knoll
- Of what in me is sleepless,--if I rest.
- But where of ye, O tempests! is the goal?
- Are ye like those within the human breast?
- Or do ye find at length, like eagles, some high nest?
- XCVII.
- Could I embody and unbosom now
- That which is most within me,--could I wreak
- My thoughts upon expression, and thus throw
- Soul, heart, mind, passions, feelings, strong or weak,
- All that I would have sought, and all I seek,
- Bear, know, feel, and yet breathe--into one word,
- And that one word were lightning, I would speak;
- But as it is, I live and die unheard,
- With a most voiceless thought, sheathing it as a sword.
- XCVIII.
- The morn is up again, the dewy morn,
- With breath all incense, and with cheek all bloom,
- Laughing the clouds away with playful scorn,
- And living as if earth contained no tomb,--
- And glowing into day: we may resume
- The march of our existence: and thus I,
- Still on thy shores, fair Leman! may find room
- And food for meditation, nor pass by
- Much, that may give us pause, if pondered fittingly.
- XCIX.
- Clarens! sweet Clarens! birthplace of deep Love!
- Thine air is the young breath of passionate thought;
- Thy trees take root in love; the snows above
- The very glaciers have his colours caught,
- And sunset into rose-hues sees them wrought
- By rays which sleep there lovingly: the rocks,
- The permanent crags, tell here of Love, who sought
- In them a refuge from the worldly shocks,
- Which stir and sting the soul with hope that woos, then mocks.
- C.
- Clarens! by heavenly feet thy paths are trod,--
- Undying Love's, who here ascends a throne
- To which the steps are mountains; where the god
- Is a pervading life and light,--so shown
- Not on those summits solely, nor alone
- In the still cave and forest; o'er the flower
- His eye is sparkling, and his breath hath blown,
- His soft and summer breath, whose tender power
- Passes the strength of storms in their most desolate hour.
- CI.
- All things are here of HIM; from the black pines,
- Which are his shade on high, and the loud roar
- Of torrents, where he listeneth, to the vines
- Which slope his green path downward to the shore,
- Where the bowed waters meet him, and adore,
- Kissing his feet with murmurs; and the wood,
- The covert of old trees, with trunks all hoar,
- But light leaves, young as joy, stands where it stood,
- Offering to him, and his, a populous solitude.
- CII.
- A populous solitude of bees and birds,
- And fairy-formed and many coloured things,
- Who worship him with notes more sweet than words,
- And innocently open their glad wings,
- Fearless and full of life: the gush of springs,
- And fall of lofty fountains, and the bend
- Of stirring branches, and the bud which brings
- The swiftest thought of beauty, here extend,
- Mingling, and made by Love, unto one mighty end.
- CIII.
- He who hath loved not, here would learn that lore,
- And make his heart a spirit: he who knows
- That tender mystery, will love the more,
- For this is Love's recess, where vain men's woes,
- And the world's waste, have driven him far from those,
- For 'tis his nature to advance or die;
- He stands not still, but or decays, or grows
- Into a boundless blessing, which may vie
- With the immortal lights, in its eternity!
- CIV.
- 'Twas not for fiction chose Rousseau this spot,
- Peopling it with affections; but he found
- It was the scene which passion must allot
- To the mind's purified beings; 'twas the ground
- Where early Love his Psyche's zone unbound,
- And hallowed it with loveliness: 'tis lone,
- And wonderful, and deep, and hath a sound,
- And sense, and sight of sweetness; here the Rhone
- Hath spread himself a couch, the Alps have reared a throne.
- CV.
- Lausanne! and Ferney! ye have been the abodes
- Of names which unto you bequeathed a name;
- Mortals, who sought and found, by dangerous roads,
- A path to perpetuity of fame:
- They were gigantic minds, and their steep aim
- Was, Titan-like, on daring doubts to pile
- Thoughts which should call down thunder, and the flame
- Of Heaven, again assailed, if Heaven the while
- On man and man's research could deign do more than smile.
- CVI.
- The one was fire and fickleness, a child
- Most mutable in wishes, but in mind
- A wit as various,--gay, grave, sage, or wild,--
- Historian, bard, philosopher combined:
- He multiplied himself among mankind,
- The Proteus of their talents: But his own
- Breathed most in ridicule,--which, as the wind,
- Blew where it listed, laying all things prone,--
- Now to o'erthrow a fool, and now to shake a throne.
- CVII.
- The other, deep and slow, exhausting thought,
- And hiving wisdom with each studious year,
- In meditation dwelt, with learning wrought,
- And shaped his weapon with an edge severe,
- Sapping a solemn creed with solemn sneer;
- The lord of irony,--that master spell,
- Which stung his foes to wrath, which grew from fear,
- And doomed him to the zealot's ready hell,
- Which answers to all doubts so eloquently well.
- CVIII.
- Yet, peace be with their ashes,--for by them,
- If merited, the penalty is paid;
- It is not ours to judge, far less condemn;
- The hour must come when such things shall be made
- Known unto all,--or hope and dread allayed
- By slumber on one pillow, in the dust,
- Which, thus much we are sure, must lie decayed;
- And when it shall revive, as is our trust,
- 'Twill be to be forgiven, or suffer what is just.
- CIX.
- But let me quit man's works, again to read
- His Maker's spread around me, and suspend
- This page, which from my reveries I feed,
- Until it seems prolonging without end.
- The clouds above me to the white Alps tend,
- And I must pierce them, and survey whate'er
- May be permitted, as my steps I bend
- To their most great and growing region, where
- The earth to her embrace compels the powers of air.
- CX.
- Italia! too, Italia! looking on thee
- Full flashes on the soul the light of ages,
- Since the fierce Carthaginian almost won thee,
- To the last halo of the chiefs and sages
- Who glorify thy consecrated pages;
- Thou wert the throne and grave of empires; still,
- The fount at which the panting mind assuages
- Her thirst of knowledge, quaffing there her fill,
- Flows from the eternal source of Rome's imperial hill.
- CXI.
- Thus far have I proceeded in a theme
- Renewed with no kind auspices:--to feel
- We are not what we have been, and to deem
- We are not what we should be, and to steel
- The heart against itself; and to conceal,
- With a proud caution, love or hate, or aught,--
- Passion or feeling, purpose, grief, or zeal,--
- Which is the tyrant spirit of our thought,
- Is a stern task of soul:--No matter,--it is taught.
- CXII.
- And for these words, thus woven into song,
- It may be that they are a harmless wile,--
- The colouring of the scenes which fleet along,
- Which I would seize, in passing, to beguile
- My breast, or that of others, for a while.
- Fame is the thirst of youth,--but I am not
- So young as to regard men's frown or smile
- As loss or guerdon of a glorious lot;
- I stood and stand alone,--remembered or forgot.
- CXIII.
- I have not loved the world, nor the world me;
- I have not flattered its rank breath, nor bowed
- To its idolatries a patient knee,--
- Nor coined my cheek to smiles, nor cried aloud
- In worship of an echo; in the crowd
- They could not deem me one of such; I stood
- Among them, but not of them; in a shroud
- Of thoughts which were not their thoughts, and still could,
- Had I not filed my mind, which thus itself subdued.
- CXIV.
- I have not loved the world, nor the world me,--
- But let us part fair foes; I do believe,
- Though I have found them not, that there may be
- Words which are things,--hopes which will not deceive,
- And virtues which are merciful, nor weave
- Snares for the falling: I would also deem
- O'er others' griefs that some sincerely grieve;
- That two, or one, are almost what they seem,--
- That goodness is no name, and happiness no dream.
- CXV.
- My daughter! with thy name this song begun--
- My daughter! with thy name this much shall end--
- I see thee not, I hear thee not,--but none
- Can be so wrapt in thee; thou art the friend
- To whom the shadows of far years extend:
- Albeit my brow thou never shouldst behold,
- My voice shall with thy future visions blend,
- And reach into thy heart, when mine is cold,--
- A token and a tone, even from thy father's mould.
- CXVI.
- To aid thy mind's development,--to watch
- Thy dawn of little joys,--to sit and see
- Almost thy very growth,--to view thee catch
- Knowledge of objects, wonders yet to thee!
- To hold thee lightly on a gentle knee,
- And print on thy soft cheek a parent's kiss,--
- This, it should seem, was not reserved for me
- Yet this was in my nature:--As it is,
- I know not what is there, yet something like to this.
- CXVII.
- Yet, though dull Hate as duty should be taught,
- I know that thou wilt love me; though my name
- Should be shut from thee, as a spell still fraught
- With desolation, and a broken claim:
- Though the grave closed between us,--'twere the same,
- I know that thou wilt love me: though to drain
- MY blood from out thy being were an aim,
- And an attainment,--all would be in vain,--
- Still thou wouldst love me, still that more than life retain.
- CXVIII.
- The child of love,--though born in bitterness,
- And nurtured in convulsion. Of thy sire
- These were the elements, and thine no less.
- As yet such are around thee; but thy fire
- Shall be more tempered, and thy hope far higher.
- Sweet be thy cradled slumbers! O'er the sea,
- And from the mountains where I now respire,
- Fain would I waft such blessing upon thee,
- As, with a sigh, I deem thou mightst have been to me!
- CANTO THE FOURTH.
- I.
- I stood in Venice, on the Bridge of Sighs;
- A palace and a prison on each hand:
- I saw from out the wave her structures rise
- As from the stroke of the enchanter's wand:
- A thousand years their cloudy wings expand
- Around me, and a dying glory smiles
- O'er the far times when many a subject land
- Looked to the winged Lion's marble piles,
- Where Venice sate in state, throned on her hundred isles!
- II.
- She looks a sea Cybele, fresh from ocean,
- Rising with her tiara of proud towers
- At airy distance, with majestic motion,
- A ruler of the waters and their powers:
- And such she was; her daughters had their dowers
- From spoils of nations, and the exhaustless East
- Poured in her lap all gems in sparkling showers.
- In purple was she robed, and of her feast
- Monarchs partook, and deemed their dignity increased.
- III.
- In Venice, Tasso's echoes are no more,
- And silent rows the songless gondolier;
- Her palaces are crumbling to the shore,
- And music meets not always now the ear:
- Those days are gone--but beauty still is here.
- States fall, arts fade--but Nature doth not die,
- Nor yet forget how Venice once was dear,
- The pleasant place of all festivity,
- The revel of the earth, the masque of Italy!
- IV.
- But unto us she hath a spell beyond
- Her name in story, and her long array
- Of mighty shadows, whose dim forms despond
- Above the dogeless city's vanished sway;
- Ours is a trophy which will not decay
- With the Rialto; Shylock and the Moor,
- And Pierre, cannot be swept or worn away--
- The keystones of the arch! though all were o'er,
- For us repeopled were the solitary shore.
- V.
- The beings of the mind are not of clay;
- Essentially immortal, they create
- And multiply in us a brighter ray
- And more beloved existence: that which Fate
- Prohibits to dull life, in this our state
- Of mortal bondage, by these spirits supplied,
- First exiles, then replaces what we hate;
- Watering the heart whose early flowers have died,
- And with a fresher growth replenishing the void.
- VI.
- Such is the refuge of our youth and age,
- The first from Hope, the last from Vacancy;
- And this worn feeling peoples many a page,
- And, may be, that which grows beneath mine eye:
- Yet there are things whose strong reality
- Outshines our fairy-land; in shape and hues
- More beautiful than our fantastic sky,
- And the strange constellations which the Muse
- O'er her wild universe is skilful to diffuse:
- VII.
- I saw or dreamed of such,--but let them go--
- They came like truth, and disappeared like dreams;
- And whatsoe'er they were--are now but so;
- I could replace them if I would: still teems
- My mind with many a form which aptly seems
- Such as I sought for, and at moments found;
- Let these too go--for waking reason deems
- Such overweening phantasies unsound,
- And other voices speak, and other sights surround.
- VIII.
- I've taught me other tongues, and in strange eyes
- Have made me not a stranger; to the mind
- Which is itself, no changes bring surprise;
- Nor is it harsh to make, nor hard to find
- A country with--ay, or without mankind;
- Yet was I born where men are proud to be,
- Not without cause; and should I leave behind
- The inviolate island of the sage and free,
- And seek me out a home by a remoter sea,
- IX.
- Perhaps I loved it well: and should I lay
- My ashes in a soil which is not mine,
- My spirit shall resume it--if we may
- Unbodied choose a sanctuary. I twine
- My hopes of being remembered in my line
- With my land's language: if too fond and far
- These aspirations in their scope incline,--
- If my fame should be, as my fortunes are,
- Of hasty growth and blight, and dull Oblivion bar.
- X.
- My name from out the temple where the dead
- Are honoured by the nations--let it be--
- And light the laurels on a loftier head!
- And be the Spartan's epitaph on me--
- 'Sparta hath many a worthier son than he.'
- Meantime I seek no sympathies, nor need;
- The thorns which I have reaped are of the tree
- I planted,--they have torn me, and I bleed:
- I should have known what fruit would spring from such a seed.
- XI.
- The spouseless Adriatic mourns her lord;
- And, annual marriage now no more renewed,
- The Bucentaur lies rotting unrestored,
- Neglected garment of her widowhood!
- St. Mark yet sees his lion where he stood
- Stand, but in mockery of his withered power,
- Over the proud place where an Emperor sued,
- And monarchs gazed and envied in the hour
- When Venice was a queen with an unequalled dower.
- XII.
- The Suabian sued, and now the Austrian reigns--
- An Emperor tramples where an Emperor knelt;
- Kingdoms are shrunk to provinces, and chains
- Clank over sceptred cities; nations melt
- From power's high pinnacle, when they have felt
- The sunshine for a while, and downward go
- Like lauwine loosened from the mountain's belt:
- Oh for one hour of blind old Dandolo!
- The octogenarian chief, Byzantium's conquering foe.
- XIII.
- Before St. Mark still glow his steeds of brass,
- Their gilded collars glittering in the sun;
- But is not Doria's menace come to pass?
- Are they not BRIDLED?--Venice, lost and won,
- Her thirteen hundred years of freedom done,
- Sinks, like a seaweed, into whence she rose!
- Better be whelmed beneath the waves, and shun,
- Even in Destruction's depth, her foreign foes,
- From whom submission wrings an infamous repose.
- XIV.
- In youth she was all glory,--a new Tyre,--
- Her very byword sprung from victory,
- The 'Planter of the Lion,' which through fire
- And blood she bore o'er subject earth and sea;
- Though making many slaves, herself still free
- And Europe's bulwark 'gainst the Ottomite:
- Witness Troy's rival, Candia! Vouch it, ye
- Immortal waves that saw Lepanto's fight!
- For ye are names no time nor tyranny can blight.
- XV.
- Statues of glass--all shivered--the long file
- Of her dead doges are declined to dust;
- But where they dwelt, the vast and sumptuous pile
- Bespeaks the pageant of their splendid trust;
- Their sceptre broken, and their sword in rust,
- Have yielded to the stranger: empty halls,
- Thin streets, and foreign aspects, such as must
- Too oft remind her who and what enthrals,
- Have flung a desolate cloud o'er Venice' lovely walls.
- XVI.
- When Athens' armies fell at Syracuse,
- And fettered thousands bore the yoke of war,
- Redemption rose up in the Attic Muse,
- Her voice their only ransom from afar:
- See! as they chant the tragic hymn, the car
- Of the o'ermastered victor stops, the reins
- Fall from his hands--his idle scimitar
- Starts from its belt--he rends his captive's chains,
- And bids him thank the bard for freedom and his strains.
- XVII.
- Thus, Venice, if no stronger claim were thine,
- Were all thy proud historic deeds forgot,
- Thy choral memory of the bard divine,
- Thy love of Tasso, should have cut the knot
- Which ties thee to thy tyrants; and thy lot
- Is shameful to the nations,--most of all,
- Albion! to thee: the Ocean Queen should not
- Abandon Ocean's children; in the fall
- Of Venice think of thine, despite thy watery wall.
- XVIII.
- I loved her from my boyhood: she to me
- Was as a fairy city of the heart,
- Rising like water-columns from the sea,
- Of joy the sojourn, and of wealth the mart
- And Otway, Radcliffe, Schiller, Shakspeare's art,
- Had stamped her image in me, and e'en so,
- Although I found her thus, we did not part,
- Perchance e'en dearer in her day of woe,
- Than when she was a boast, a marvel, and a show.
- XIX.
- I can repeople with the past--and of
- The present there is still for eye and thought,
- And meditation chastened down, enough;
- And more, it may be, than I hoped or sought;
- And of the happiest moments which were wrought
- Within the web of my existence, some
- From thee, fair Venice! have their colours caught:
- There are some feelings Time cannot benumb,
- Nor torture shake, or mine would now be cold and dumb.
- XX.
- But from their nature will the tannen grow
- Loftiest on loftiest and least sheltered rocks,
- Rooted in barrenness, where nought below
- Of soil supports them 'gainst the Alpine shocks
- Of eddying storms; yet springs the trunk, and mocks
- The howling tempest, till its height and frame
- Are worthy of the mountains from whose blocks
- Of bleak, grey granite, into life it came,
- And grew a giant tree;--the mind may grow the same.
- XXI.
- Existence may be borne, and the deep root
- Of life and sufferance make its firm abode
- In bare and desolate bosoms: mute
- The camel labours with the heaviest load,
- And the wolf dies in silence. Not bestowed
- In vain should such examples be; if they,
- Things of ignoble or of savage mood,
- Endure and shrink not, we of nobler clay
- May temper it to bear,--it is but for a day.
- XXII.
- All suffering doth destroy, or is destroyed,
- Even by the sufferer; and, in each event,
- Ends:--Some, with hope replenished and rebuoyed,
- Return to whence they came--with like intent,
- And weave their web again; some, bowed and bent,
- Wax grey and ghastly, withering ere their time,
- And perish with the reed on which they leant;
- Some seek devotion, toil, war, good or crime,
- According as their souls were formed to sink or climb.
- XXIII.
- But ever and anon of griefs subdued
- There comes a token like a scorpion's sting,
- Scarce seen, but with fresh bitterness imbued;
- And slight withal may be the things which bring
- Back on the heart the weight which it would fling
- Aside for ever: it may be a sound--
- A tone of music--summer's eve--or spring--
- A flower--the wind--the ocean--which shall wound,
- Striking the electric chain wherewith we are darkly bound.
- XXIV.
- And how and why we know not, nor can trace
- Home to its cloud this lightning of the mind,
- But feel the shock renewed, nor can efface
- The blight and blackening which it leaves behind,
- Which out of things familiar, undesigned,
- When least we deem of such, calls up to view
- The spectres whom no exorcism can bind,--
- The cold--the changed--perchance the dead--anew,
- The mourned, the loved, the lost--too many!--yet how few!
- XXV.
- But my soul wanders; I demand it back
- To meditate amongst decay, and stand
- A ruin amidst ruins; there to track
- Fall'n states and buried greatness, o'er a land
- Which WAS the mightiest in its old command,
- And IS the loveliest, and must ever be
- The master-mould of Nature's heavenly hand,
- Wherein were cast the heroic and the free,
- The beautiful, the brave--the lords of earth and sea.
- XXVI.
- The commonwealth of kings, the men of Rome!
- And even since, and now, fair Italy!
- Thou art the garden of the world, the home
- Of all Art yields, and Nature can decree;
- Even in thy desert, what is like to thee?
- Thy very weeds are beautiful, thy waste
- More rich than other climes' fertility;
- Thy wreck a glory, and thy ruin graced
- With an immaculate charm which cannot be defaced.
- XXVII.
- The moon is up, and yet it is not night--
- Sunset divides the sky with her--a sea
- Of glory streams along the Alpine height
- Of blue Friuli's mountains; Heaven is free
- From clouds, but of all colours seems to be--
- Melted to one vast Iris of the West,
- Where the day joins the past eternity;
- While, on the other hand, meek Dian's crest
- Floats through the azure air--an island of the blest!
- XXVIII.
- A single star is at her side, and reigns
- With her o'er half the lovely heaven; but still
- Yon sunny sea heaves brightly, and remains
- Rolled o'er the peak of the far Rhaetian hill,
- As Day and Night contending were, until
- Nature reclaimed her order:--gently flows
- The deep-dyed Brenta, where their hues instil
- The odorous purple of a new-born rose,
- Which streams upon her stream, and glassed within it glows,
- XXIX.
- Filled with the face of heaven, which, from afar,
- Comes down upon the waters; all its hues,
- From the rich sunset to the rising star,
- Their magical variety diffuse:
- And now they change; a paler shadow strews
- Its mantle o'er the mountains; parting day
- Dies like the dolphin, whom each pang imbues
- With a new colour as it gasps away,
- The last still loveliest, till--'tis gone--and all is grey.
- XXX.
- There is a tomb in Arqua;--reared in air,
- Pillared in their sarcophagus, repose
- The bones of Laura's lover: here repair
- Many familiar with his well-sung woes,
- The pilgrims of his genius. He arose
- To raise a language, and his land reclaim
- From the dull yoke of her barbaric foes:
- Watering the tree which bears his lady's name
- With his melodious tears, he gave himself to fame.
- XXXI.
- They keep his dust in Arqua, where he died;
- The mountain-village where his latter days
- Went down the vale of years; and 'tis their pride--
- An honest pride--and let it be their praise,
- To offer to the passing stranger's gaze
- His mansion and his sepulchre; both plain
- And venerably simple, such as raise
- A feeling more accordant with his strain,
- Than if a pyramid formed his monumental fane.
- XXXII.
- And the soft quiet hamlet where he dwelt
- Is one of that complexion which seems made
- For those who their mortality have felt,
- And sought a refuge from their hopes decayed
- In the deep umbrage of a green hill's shade,
- Which shows a distant prospect far away
- Of busy cities, now in vain displayed,
- For they can lure no further; and the ray
- Of a bright sun can make sufficient holiday.
- XXXIII.
- Developing the mountains, leaves, and flowers
- And shining in the brawling brook, where-by,
- Clear as its current, glide the sauntering hours
- With a calm languor, which, though to the eye
- Idlesse it seem, hath its morality,
- If from society we learn to live,
- 'Tis solitude should teach us how to die;
- It hath no flatterers; vanity can give
- No hollow aid; alone--man with his God must strive:
- XXXIV.
- Or, it may be, with demons, who impair
- The strength of better thoughts, and seek their prey
- In melancholy bosoms, such as were
- Of moody texture from their earliest day,
- And loved to dwell in darkness and dismay,
- Deeming themselves predestined to a doom
- Which is not of the pangs that pass away;
- Making the sun like blood, the earth a tomb,
- The tomb a hell, and hell itself a murkier gloom.
- XXXV.
- Ferrara! in thy wide and grass-grown streets,
- Whose symmetry was not for solitude,
- There seems as 'twere a curse upon the seat's
- Of former sovereigns, and the antique brood
- Of Este, which for many an age made good
- Its strength within thy walls, and was of yore
- Patron or tyrant, as the changing mood
- Of petty power impelled, of those who wore
- The wreath which Dante's brow alone had worn before.
- XXXVI.
- And Tasso is their glory and their shame.
- Hark to his strain! and then survey his cell!
- And see how dearly earned Torquato's fame,
- And where Alfonso bade his poet dwell.
- The miserable despot could not quell
- The insulted mind he sought to quench, and blend
- With the surrounding maniacs, in the hell
- Where he had plunged it. Glory without end
- Scattered the clouds away--and on that name attend
- XXXVII.
- The tears and praises of all time, while thine
- Would rot in its oblivion--in the sink
- Of worthless dust, which from thy boasted line
- Is shaken into nothing; but the link
- Thou formest in his fortunes bids us think
- Of thy poor malice, naming thee with scorn--
- Alfonso! how thy ducal pageants shrink
- From thee! if in another station born,
- Scarce fit to be the slave of him thou mad'st to mourn:
- XXXVIII.
- THOU! formed to eat, and be despised, and die,
- Even as the beasts that perish, save that thou
- Hadst a more splendid trough, and wider sty:
- HE! with a glory round his furrowed brow,
- Which emanated then, and dazzles now
- In face of all his foes, the Cruscan quire,
- And Boileau, whose rash envy could allow
- No strain which shamed his country's creaking lyre,
- That whetstone of the teeth--monotony in wire!
- XXXIX.
- Peace to Torquato's injured shade! 'twas his
- In life and death to be the mark where Wrong
- Aimed with their poisoned arrows--but to miss.
- Oh, victor unsurpassed in modern song!
- Each year brings forth its millions; but how long
- The tide of generations shall roll on,
- And not the whole combined and countless throng
- Compose a mind like thine? Though all in one
- Condensed their scattered rays, they would not form a sun.
- XL.
- Great as thou art, yet paralleled by those
- Thy countrymen, before thee born to shine,
- The bards of Hell and Chivalry: first rose
- The Tuscan father's comedy divine;
- Then, not unequal to the Florentine,
- The Southern Scott, the minstrel who called forth
- A new creation with his magic line,
- And, like the Ariosto of the North,
- Sang ladye-love and war, romance and knightly worth.
- XLI.
- The lightning rent from Ariosto's bust
- The iron crown of laurel's mimicked leaves;
- Nor was the ominous element unjust,
- For the true laurel-wreath which Glory weaves
- Is of the tree no bolt of thunder cleaves,
- And the false semblance but disgraced his brow;
- Yet still, if fondly Superstition grieves,
- Know that the lightning sanctifies below
- Whate'er it strikes;--yon head is doubly sacred now.
- XLII.
- Italia! O Italia! thou who hast
- The fatal gift of beauty, which became
- A funeral dower of present woes and past,
- On thy sweet brow is sorrow ploughed by shame,
- And annals graved in characters of flame.
- Oh God! that thou wert in thy nakedness
- Less lovely or more powerful, and couldst claim
- Thy right, and awe the robbers back, who press
- To shed thy blood, and drink the tears of thy distress;
- XLIII.
- Then mightst thou more appal; or, less desired,
- Be homely and be peaceful, undeplored
- For thy destructive charms; then, still untired,
- Would not be seen the armed torrents poured
- Down the deep Alps; nor would the hostile horde
- Of many-nationed spoilers from the Po
- Quaff blood and water; nor the stranger's sword
- Be thy sad weapon of defence, and so,
- Victor or vanquished, thou the slave of friend or foe.
- XLIV.
- Wandering in youth, I traced the path of him,
- The Roman friend of Rome's least mortal mind,
- The friend of Tully: as my bark did skim
- The bright blue waters with a fanning wind,
- Came Megara before me, and behind
- AEgina lay, Piraeus on the right,
- And Corinth on the left; I lay reclined
- Along the prow, and saw all these unite
- In ruin, even as he had seen the desolate sight;
- XLV.
- For time hath not rebuilt them, but upreared
- Barbaric dwellings on their shattered site,
- Which only make more mourned and more endeared
- The few last rays of their far-scattered light,
- And the crushed relics of their vanished might.
- The Roman saw these tombs in his own age,
- These sepulchres of cities, which excite
- Sad wonder, and his yet surviving page
- The moral lesson bears, drawn from such pilgrimage.
- XLVI.
- That page is now before me, and on mine
- HIS country's ruin added to the mass
- Of perished states he mourned in their decline,
- And I in desolation: all that WAS
- Of then destruction IS; and now, alas!
- Rome--Rome imperial, bows her to the storm,
- In the same dust and blackness, and we pass
- The skeleton of her Titanic form,
- Wrecks of another world, whose ashes still are warm.
- XLVII.
- Yet, Italy! through every other land
- Thy wrongs should ring, and shall, from side to side;
- Mother of Arts! as once of Arms; thy hand
- Was then our Guardian, and is still our guide;
- Parent of our religion! whom the wide
- Nations have knelt to for the keys of heaven!
- Europe, repentant of her parricide,
- Shall yet redeem thee, and, all backward driven,
- Roll the barbarian tide, and sue to be forgiven.
- XLVIII.
- But Arno wins us to the fair white walls,
- Where the Etrurian Athens claims and keeps
- A softer feeling for her fairy halls.
- Girt by her theatre of hills, she reaps
- Her corn, and wine, and oil, and Plenty leaps
- To laughing life, with her redundant horn.
- Along the banks where smiling Arno sweeps,
- Was modern Luxury of Commerce born,
- And buried Learning rose, redeemed to a new morn.
- XLIX.
- There, too, the goddess loves in stone, and fills
- The air around with beauty; we inhale
- The ambrosial aspect, which, beheld, instils
- Part of its immortality; the veil
- Of heaven is half undrawn; within the pale
- We stand, and in that form and face behold
- What Mind can make, when Nature's self would fail;
- And to the fond idolaters of old
- Envy the innate flash which such a soul could mould:
- L.
- We gaze and turn away, and know not where,
- Dazzled and drunk with beauty, till the heart
- Reels with its fulness; there--for ever there--
- Chained to the chariot of triumphal Art,
- We stand as captives, and would not depart.
- Away!--there need no words, nor terms precise,
- The paltry jargon of the marble mart,
- Where Pedantry gulls Folly--we have eyes:
- Blood, pulse, and breast, confirm the Dardan Shepherd's prize.
- LI.
- Appearedst thou not to Paris in this guise?
- Or to more deeply blest Anchises? or,
- In all thy perfect goddess-ship, when lies
- Before thee thy own vanquished Lord of War?
- And gazing in thy face as toward a star,
- Laid on thy lap, his eyes to thee upturn,
- Feeding on thy sweet cheek! while thy lips are
- With lava kisses melting while they burn,
- Showered on his eyelids, brow, and mouth, as from an urn!
- LII.
- Glowing, and circumfused in speechless love,
- Their full divinity inadequate
- That feeling to express, or to improve,
- The gods become as mortals, and man's fate
- Has moments like their brightest! but the weight
- Of earth recoils upon us;--let it go!
- We can recall such visions, and create
- From what has been, or might be, things which grow,
- Into thy statue's form, and look like gods below.
- LIII.
- I leave to learned fingers, and wise hands,
- The artist and his ape, to teach and tell
- How well his connoisseurship understands
- The graceful bend, and the voluptuous swell:
- Let these describe the undescribable:
- I would not their vile breath should crisp the stream
- Wherein that image shall for ever dwell;
- The unruffled mirror of the loveliest dream
- That ever left the sky on the deep soul to beam.
- LIV.
- In Santa Croce's holy precincts lie
- Ashes which make it holier, dust which is
- E'en in itself an immortality,
- Though there were nothing save the past, and this
- The particle of those sublimities
- Which have relapsed to chaos:--here repose
- Angelo's, Alfieri's bones, and his,
- The starry Galileo, with his woes;
- Here Machiavelli's earth returned to whence it rose.
- LV.
- These are four minds, which, like the elements,
- Might furnish forth creation:--Italy!
- Time, which hath wronged thee with ten thousand rents
- Of thine imperial garment, shall deny,
- And hath denied, to every other sky,
- Spirits which soar from ruin:--thy decay
- Is still impregnate with divinity,
- Which gilds it with revivifying ray;
- Such as the great of yore, Canova is to-day.
- LVI.
- But where repose the all Etruscan three--
- Dante, and Petrarch, and, scarce less than they,
- The Bard of Prose, creative spirit! he
- Of the Hundred Tales of love--where did they lay
- Their bones, distinguished from our common clay
- In death as life? Are they resolved to dust,
- And have their country's marbles nought to say?
- Could not her quarries furnish forth one bust?
- Did they not to her breast their filial earth entrust?
- LVII.
- Ungrateful Florence! Dante sleeps afar,
- Like Scipio, buried by the upbraiding shore;
- Thy factions, in their worse than civil war,
- Proscribed the bard whose name for evermore
- Their children's children would in vain adore
- With the remorse of ages; and the crown
- Which Petrarch's laureate brow supremely wore,
- Upon a far and foreign soil had grown,
- His life, his fame, his grave, though rifled--not thine own.
- LVIII.
- Boccaccio to his parent earth bequeathed
- His dust,--and lies it not her great among,
- With many a sweet and solemn requiem breathed
- O'er him who formed the Tuscan's siren tongue?
- That music in itself, whose sounds are song,
- The poetry of speech? No;--even his tomb
- Uptorn, must bear the hyaena bigots' wrong,
- No more amidst the meaner dead find room,
- Nor claim a passing sigh, because it told for WHOM?
- LIX.
- And Santa Croce wants their mighty dust;
- Yet for this want more noted, as of yore
- The Caesar's pageant, shorn of Brutus' bust,
- Did but of Rome's best son remind her more:
- Happier Ravenna! on thy hoary shore,
- Fortress of falling empire! honoured sleeps
- The immortal exile;--Arqua, too, her store
- Of tuneful relics proudly claims and keeps,
- While Florence vainly begs her banished dead, and weeps.
- LX.
- What is her pyramid of precious stones?
- Of porphyry, jasper, agate, and all hues
- Of gem and marble, to encrust the bones
- Of merchant-dukes? the momentary dews
- Which, sparkling to the twilight stars, infuse
- Freshness in the green turf that wraps the dead,
- Whose names are mausoleums of the Muse,
- Are gently prest with far more reverent tread
- Than ever paced the slab which paves the princely head.
- LXI.
- There be more things to greet the heart and eyes
- In Arno's dome of Art's most princely shrine,
- Where Sculpture with her rainbow sister vies;
- There be more marvels yet--but not for mine;
- For I have been accustomed to entwine
- My thoughts with Nature rather in the fields
- Than Art in galleries: though a work divine
- Calls for my spirit's homage, yet it yields
- Less than it feels, because the weapon which it wields
- LXII.
- Is of another temper, and I roam
- By Thrasimene's lake, in the defiles
- Fatal to Roman rashness, more at home;
- For there the Carthaginian's warlike wiles
- Come back before me, as his skill beguiles
- The host between the mountains and the shore,
- Where Courage falls in her despairing files,
- And torrents, swoll'n to rivers with their gore,
- Reek through the sultry plain, with legions scattered o'er,
- LXIII.
- Like to a forest felled by mountain winds;
- And such the storm of battle on this day,
- And such the frenzy, whose convulsion blinds
- To all save carnage, that, beneath the fray,
- An earthquake reeled unheededly away!
- None felt stern Nature rocking at his feet,
- And yawning forth a grave for those who lay
- Upon their bucklers for a winding-sheet;
- Such is the absorbing hate when warring nations meet.
- LXIV.
- The Earth to them was as a rolling bark
- Which bore them to Eternity; they saw
- The Ocean round, but had no time to mark
- The motions of their vessel: Nature's law,
- In them suspended, recked not of the awe
- Which reigns when mountains tremble, and the birds
- Plunge in the clouds for refuge, and withdraw
- From their down-toppling nests; and bellowing herds
- Stumble o'er heaving plains, and man's dread hath no words.
- LXV.
- Far other scene is Thrasimene now;
- Her lake a sheet of silver, and her plain
- Rent by no ravage save the gentle plough;
- Her aged trees rise thick as once the slain
- Lay where their roots are; but a brook hath ta'en--
- A little rill of scanty stream and bed--
- A name of blood from that day's sanguine rain;
- And Sanguinetto tells ye where the dead
- Made the earth wet, and turned the unwilling waters red.
- LXVI.
- But thou, Clitumnus! in thy sweetest wave
- Of the most living crystal that was e'er
- The haunt of river nymph, to gaze and lave
- Her limbs where nothing hid them, thou dost rear
- Thy grassy banks whereon the milk-white steer
- Grazes; the purest god of gentle waters!
- And most serene of aspect, and most clear:
- Surely that stream was unprofaned by slaughters,
- A mirror and a bath for Beauty's youngest daughters!
- LXVII.
- And on thy happy shore a temple still,
- Of small and delicate proportion, keeps,
- Upon a mild declivity of hill,
- Its memory of thee; beneath it sweeps
- Thy current's calmness; oft from out it leaps
- The finny darter with the glittering scales,
- Who dwells and revels in thy glassy deeps;
- While, chance, some scattered water-lily sails
- Down where the shallower wave still tells its bubbling tales.
- LXVIII.
- Pass not unblest the genius of the place!
- If through the air a zephyr more serene
- Win to the brow, 'tis his; and if ye trace
- Along his margin a more eloquent green,
- If on the heart the freshness of the scene
- Sprinkle its coolness, and from the dry dust
- Of weary life a moment lave it clean
- With Nature's baptism,--'tis to him ye must
- Pay orisons for this suspension of disgust.
- LXIX.
- The roar of waters!--from the headlong height
- Velino cleaves the wave-worn precipice;
- The fall of waters! rapid as the light
- The flashing mass foams shaking the abyss;
- The hell of waters! where they howl and hiss,
- And boil in endless torture; while the sweat
- Of their great agony, wrung out from this
- Their Phlegethon, curls round the rocks of jet
- That gird the gulf around, in pitiless horror set,
- LXX.
- And mounts in spray the skies, and thence again
- Returns in an unceasing shower, which round,
- With its unemptied cloud of gentle rain,
- Is an eternal April to the ground,
- Making it all one emerald. How profound
- The gulf! and how the giant element
- From rock to rock leaps with delirious bound,
- Crushing the cliffs, which, downward worn and rent
- With his fierce footsteps, yield in chasms a fearful vent
- LXXI.
- To the broad column which rolls on, and shows
- More like the fountain of an infant sea
- Torn from the womb of mountains by the throes
- Of a new world, than only thus to be
- Parent of rivers, which flow gushingly,
- With many windings through the vale:--Look back!
- Lo! where it comes like an eternity,
- As if to sweep down all things in its track,
- Charming the eye with dread,--a matchless cataract,
- LXXII.
- Horribly beautiful! but on the verge,
- From side to side, beneath the glittering morn,
- An Iris sits, amidst the infernal surge,
- Like Hope upon a deathbed, and, unworn
- Its steady dyes, while all around is torn
- By the distracted waters, bears serene
- Its brilliant hues with all their beams unshorn:
- Resembling, mid the torture of the scene,
- Love watching Madness with unalterable mien.
- LXXIII.
- Once more upon the woody Apennine,
- The infant Alps, which--had I not before
- Gazed on their mightier parents, where the pine
- Sits on more shaggy summits, and where roar
- The thundering lauwine--might be worshipped more;
- But I have seen the soaring Jungfrau rear
- Her never-trodden snow, and seen the hoar
- Glaciers of bleak Mont Blanc both far and near,
- And in Chimari heard the thunder-hills of fear,
- LXXIV.
- The Acroceraunian mountains of old name;
- And on Parnassus seen the eagles fly
- Like spirits of the spot, as 'twere for fame,
- For still they soared unutterably high:
- I've looked on Ida with a Trojan's eye;
- Athos, Olympus, AEtna, Atlas, made
- These hills seem things of lesser dignity,
- All, save the lone Soracte's height displayed,
- Not NOW in snow, which asks the lyric Roman's aid
- LXXV.
- For our remembrance, and from out the plain
- Heaves like a long-swept wave about to break,
- And on the curl hangs pausing: not in vain
- May he who will his recollections rake,
- And quote in classic raptures, and awake
- The hills with Latian echoes; I abhorred
- Too much, to conquer for the poet's sake,
- The drilled dull lesson, forced down word by word
- In my repugnant youth, with pleasure to record
- LXXVI.
- Aught that recalls the daily drug which turned
- My sickening memory; and, though Time hath taught
- My mind to meditate what then it learned,
- Yet such the fixed inveteracy wrought
- By the impatience of my early thought,
- That, with the freshness wearing out before
- My mind could relish what it might have sought,
- If free to choose, I cannot now restore
- Its health; but what it then detested, still abhor.
- LXXVII.
- Then farewell, Horace; whom I hated so,
- Not for thy faults, but mine; it is a curse
- To understand, not feel, thy lyric flow,
- To comprehend, but never love thy verse,
- Although no deeper moralist rehearse
- Our little life, nor bard prescribe his art,
- Nor livelier satirist the conscience pierce,
- Awakening without wounding the touched heart,
- Yet fare thee well--upon Soracte's ridge we part.
- LXXVIII.
- O Rome! my country! city of the soul!
- The orphans of the heart must turn to thee,
- Lone mother of dead empires! and control
- In their shut breasts their petty misery.
- What are our woes and sufferance? Come and see
- The cypress, hear the owl, and plod your way
- O'er steps of broken thrones and temples, Ye!
- Whose agonies are evils of a day--
- A world is at our feet as fragile as our clay.
- LXXIX.
- The Niobe of nations! there she stands,
- Childless and crownless, in her voiceless woe;
- An empty urn within her withered hands,
- Whose holy dust was scattered long ago;
- The Scipios' tomb contains no ashes now;
- The very sepulchres lie tenantless
- Of their heroic dwellers: dost thou flow,
- Old Tiber! through a marble wilderness?
- Rise, with thy yellow waves, and mantle her distress!
- LXXX.
- The Goth, the Christian, Time, War, Flood, and Fire,
- Have dwelt upon the seven-hilled city's pride:
- She saw her glories star by star expire,
- And up the steep barbarian monarchs ride,
- Where the car climbed the Capitol; far and wide
- Temple and tower went down, nor left a site;--
- Chaos of ruins! who shall trace the void,
- O'er the dim fragments cast a lunar light,
- And say, 'Here was, or is,' where all is doubly night?
- LXXXI.
- The double night of ages, and of her,
- Night's daughter, Ignorance, hath wrapt, and wrap
- All round us; we but feel our way to err:
- The ocean hath its chart, the stars their map;
- And knowledge spreads them on her ample lap;
- But Rome is as the desert, where we steer
- Stumbling o'er recollections: now we clap
- Our hands, and cry, 'Eureka!' it is clear--
- When but some false mirage of ruin rises near.
- LXXXII.
- Alas, the lofty city! and alas
- The trebly hundred triumphs! and the day
- When Brutus made the dagger's edge surpass
- The conqueror's sword in bearing fame away!
- Alas for Tully's voice, and Virgil's lay,
- And Livy's pictured page! But these shall be
- Her resurrection; all beside--decay.
- Alas for Earth, for never shall we see
- That brightness in her eye she bore when Rome was free!
- LXXXIII.
- O thou, whose chariot rolled on Fortune's wheel,
- Triumphant Sylla! Thou, who didst subdue
- Thy country's foes ere thou wouldst pause to feel
- The wrath of thy own wrongs, or reap the due
- Of hoarded vengeance till thine eagles flew
- O'er prostrate Asia;--thou, who with thy frown
- Annihilated senates--Roman, too,
- With all thy vices, for thou didst lay down
- With an atoning smile a more than earthly crown--
- LXXXIV.
- The dictatorial wreath,--couldst thou divine
- To what would one day dwindle that which made
- Thee more than mortal? and that so supine
- By aught than Romans Rome should thus be laid?
- She who was named eternal, and arrayed
- Her warriors but to conquer--she who veiled
- Earth with her haughty shadow, and displayed
- Until the o'er-canopied horizon failed,
- Her rushing wings--Oh! she who was almighty hailed!
- LXXXV.
- Sylla was first of victors; but our own,
- The sagest of usurpers, Cromwell!--he
- Too swept off senates while he hewed the throne
- Down to a block--immortal rebel! See
- What crimes it costs to be a moment free
- And famous through all ages! But beneath
- His fate the moral lurks of destiny;
- His day of double victory and death
- Beheld him win two realms, and, happier, yield his breath.
- LXXXVI.
- The third of the same moon whose former course
- Had all but crowned him, on the self-same day
- Deposed him gently from his throne of force,
- And laid him with the earth's preceding clay.
- And showed not Fortune thus how fame and sway,
- And all we deem delightful, and consume
- Our souls to compass through each arduous way,
- Are in her eyes less happy than the tomb?
- Were they but so in man's, how different were his doom!
- LXXXVII.
- And thou, dread statue! yet existent in
- The austerest form of naked majesty,
- Thou who beheldest, mid the assassins' din,
- At thy bathed base the bloody Caesar lie,
- Folding his robe in dying dignity,
- An offering to thine altar from the queen
- Of gods and men, great Nemesis! did he die,
- And thou, too, perish, Pompey? have ye been
- Victors of countless kings, or puppets of a scene?
- LXXXVIII.
- And thou, the thunder-stricken nurse of Rome!
- She-wolf! whose brazen-imaged dugs impart
- The milk of conquest yet within the dome
- Where, as a monument of antique art,
- Thou standest:--Mother of the mighty heart,
- Which the great founder sucked from thy wild teat,
- Scorched by the Roman Jove's ethereal dart,
- And thy limbs blacked with lightning--dost thou yet
- Guard thine immortal cubs, nor thy fond charge forget?
- LXXXIX.
- Thou dost;--but all thy foster-babes are dead--
- The men of iron; and the world hath reared
- Cities from out their sepulchres: men bled
- In imitation of the things they feared,
- And fought and conquered, and the same course steered,
- At apish distance; but as yet none have,
- Nor could, the same supremacy have neared,
- Save one vain man, who is not in the grave,
- But, vanquished by himself, to his own slaves a slave,
- XC.
- The fool of false dominion--and a kind
- Of bastard Caesar, following him of old
- With steps unequal; for the Roman's mind
- Was modelled in a less terrestrial mould,
- With passions fiercer, yet a judgment cold,
- And an immortal instinct which redeemed
- The frailties of a heart so soft, yet bold.
- Alcides with the distaff now he seemed
- At Cleopatra's feet, and now himself he beamed.
- XCI.
- And came, and saw, and conquered. But the man
- Who would have tamed his eagles down to flee,
- Like a trained falcon, in the Gallic van,
- Which he, in sooth, long led to victory,
- With a deaf heart which never seemed to be
- A listener to itself, was strangely framed;
- With but one weakest weakness--vanity:
- Coquettish in ambition, still he aimed
- At what? Can he avouch, or answer what he claimed?
- XCII.
- And would be all or nothing--nor could wait
- For the sure grave to level him; few years
- Had fixed him with the Caesars in his fate,
- On whom we tread: For THIS the conqueror rears
- The arch of triumph! and for this the tears
- And blood of earth flow on as they have flowed,
- An universal deluge, which appears
- Without an ark for wretched man's abode,
- And ebbs but to reflow!--Renew thy rainbow, God!
- XCIII.
- What from this barren being do we reap?
- Our senses narrow, and our reason frail,
- Life short, and truth a gem which loves the deep,
- And all things weighed in custom's falsest scale;
- Opinion an omnipotence, whose veil
- Mantles the earth with darkness, until right
- And wrong are accidents, and men grow pale
- Lest their own judgments should become too bright,
- And their free thoughts be crimes, and earth have too much light.
- XCIV.
- And thus they plod in sluggish misery,
- Rotting from sire to son, and age to age,
- Proud of their trampled nature, and so die,
- Bequeathing their hereditary rage
- To the new race of inborn slaves, who wage
- War for their chains, and rather than be free,
- Bleed gladiator-like, and still engage
- Within the same arena where they see
- Their fellows fall before, like leaves of the same tree.
- XCV.
- I speak not of men's creeds--they rest between
- Man and his Maker--but of things allowed,
- Averred, and known,--and daily, hourly seen--
- The yoke that is upon us doubly bowed,
- And the intent of tyranny avowed,
- The edict of Earth's rulers, who are grown
- The apes of him who humbled once the proud,
- And shook them from their slumbers on the throne;
- Too glorious, were this all his mighty arm had done.
- XCVI.
- Can tyrants but by tyrants conquered be,
- And Freedom find no champion and no child
- Such as Columbia saw arise when she
- Sprung forth a Pallas, armed and undefiled?
- Or must such minds be nourished in the wild,
- Deep in the unpruned forest, midst the roar
- Of cataracts, where nursing nature smiled
- On infant Washington? Has Earth no more
- Such seeds within her breast, or Europe no such shore?
- XCVII.
- But France got drunk with blood to vomit crime,
- And fatal have her Saturnalia been
- To Freedom's cause, in every age and clime;
- Because the deadly days which we have seen,
- And vile Ambition, that built up between
- Man and his hopes an adamantine wall,
- And the base pageant last upon the scene,
- Are grown the pretext for the eternal thrall
- Which nips Life's tree, and dooms man's worst--his second fall.
- XCVIII.
- Yet, Freedom! yet thy banner, torn, but flying,
- Streams like the thunder-storm AGAINST the wind;
- Thy trumpet-voice, though broken now and dying,
- The loudest still the tempest leaves behind;
- Thy tree hath lost its blossoms, and the rind,
- Chopped by the axe, looks rough and little worth,
- But the sap lasts,--and still the seed we find
- Sown deep, even in the bosom of the North;
- So shall a better spring less bitter fruit bring forth.
- XCIX.
- There is a stern round tower of other days,
- Firm as a fortress, with its fence of stone,
- Such as an army's baffled strength delays,
- Standing with half its battlements alone,
- And with two thousand years of ivy grown,
- The garland of eternity, where wave
- The green leaves over all by time o'erthrown:
- What was this tower of strength? within its cave
- What treasure lay so locked, so hid?--A woman's grave.
- C.
- But who was she, the lady of the dead,
- Tombed in a palace? Was she chaste and fair?
- Worthy a king's--or more--a Roman's bed?
- What race of chiefs and heroes did she bear?
- What daughter of her beauties was the heir?
- How lived--how loved--how died she? Was she not
- So honoured--and conspicuously there,
- Where meaner relics must not dare to rot,
- Placed to commemorate a more than mortal lot?
- CI.
- Was she as those who love their lords, or they
- Who love the lords of others? such have been
- Even in the olden time, Rome's annals say.
- Was she a matron of Cornelia's mien,
- Or the light air of Egypt's graceful queen,
- Profuse of joy; or 'gainst it did she war,
- Inveterate in virtue? Did she lean
- To the soft side of the heart, or wisely bar
- Love from amongst her griefs?--for such the affections are.
- CII.
- Perchance she died in youth: it may be, bowed
- With woes far heavier than the ponderous tomb
- That weighed upon her gentle dust, a cloud
- Might gather o'er her beauty, and a gloom
- In her dark eye, prophetic of the doom
- Heaven gives its favourites--early death; yet shed
- A sunset charm around her, and illume
- With hectic light, the Hesperus of the dead,
- Of her consuming cheek the autumnal leaf-like red.
- CIII.
- Perchance she died in age--surviving all,
- Charms, kindred, children--with the silver grey
- On her long tresses, which might yet recall,
- It may be, still a something of the day
- When they were braided, and her proud array
- And lovely form were envied, praised, and eyed
- By Rome--But whither would Conjecture stray?
- Thus much alone we know--Metella died,
- The wealthiest Roman's wife: Behold his love or pride!
- CIV.
- I know not why--but standing thus by thee
- It seems as if I had thine inmate known,
- Thou Tomb! and other days come back on me
- With recollected music, though the tone
- Is changed and solemn, like the cloudy groan
- Of dying thunder on the distant wind;
- Yet could I seat me by this ivied stone
- Till I had bodied forth the heated mind,
- Forms from the floating wreck which ruin leaves behind;
- CV.
- And from the planks, far shattered o'er the rocks,
- Built me a little bark of hope, once more
- To battle with the ocean and the shocks
- Of the loud breakers, and the ceaseless roar
- Which rushes on the solitary shore
- Where all lies foundered that was ever dear:
- But could I gather from the wave-worn store
- Enough for my rude boat, where should I steer?
- There woos no home, nor hope, nor life, save what is here.
- CVI.
- Then let the winds howl on! their harmony
- Shall henceforth be my music, and the night
- The sound shall temper with the owlet's cry,
- As I now hear them, in the fading light
- Dim o'er the bird of darkness' native site,
- Answer each other on the Palatine,
- With their large eyes, all glistening grey and bright,
- And sailing pinions.--Upon such a shrine
- What are our petty griefs?--let me not number mine.
- CVII.
- Cypress and ivy, weed and wallflower grown
- Matted and massed together, hillocks heaped
- On what were chambers, arch crushed, column strown
- In fragments, choked-up vaults, and frescoes steeped
- In subterranean damps, where the owl peeped,
- Deeming it midnight:--Temples, baths, or halls?
- Pronounce who can; for all that Learning reaped
- From her research hath been, that these are walls--
- Behold the Imperial Mount! 'tis thus the mighty falls.
- CVIII.
- There is the moral of all human tales:
- 'Tis but the same rehearsal of the past,
- First Freedom, and then Glory--when that fails,
- Wealth, vice, corruption--barbarism at last.
- And History, with all her volumes vast,
- Hath but ONE page,--'tis better written here,
- Where gorgeous Tyranny hath thus amassed
- All treasures, all delights, that eye or ear,
- Heart, soul could seek, tongue ask--Away with words! draw near,
- CIX.
- Admire, exult--despise--laugh, weep--for here
- There is such matter for all feeling:--Man!
- Thou pendulum betwixt a smile and tear,
- Ages and realms are crowded in this span,
- This mountain, whose obliterated plan
- The pyramid of empires pinnacled,
- Of Glory's gewgaws shining in the van
- Till the sun's rays with added flame were filled!
- Where are its golden roofs? where those who dared to build?
- CX.
- Tully was not so eloquent as thou,
- Thou nameless column with the buried base!
- What are the laurels of the Caesar's brow?
- Crown me with ivy from his dwelling-place.
- Whose arch or pillar meets me in the face,
- Titus or Trajan's? No; 'tis that of Time:
- Triumph, arch, pillar, all he doth displace,
- Scoffing; and apostolic statues climb
- To crush the imperial urn, whose ashes slept sublime,
- CXI.
- Buried in air, the deep blue sky of Rome,
- And looking to the stars; they had contained
- A spirit which with these would find a home,
- The last of those who o'er the whole earth reigned,
- The Roman globe, for after none sustained
- But yielded back his conquests:--he was more
- Than a mere Alexander, and unstained
- With household blood and wine, serenely wore
- His sovereign virtues--still we Trajan's name adore.
- CXII.
- Where is the rock of Triumph, the high place
- Where Rome embraced her heroes? where the steep
- Tarpeian--fittest goal of Treason's race,
- The promontory whence the traitor's leap
- Cured all ambition? Did the Conquerors heap
- Their spoils here? Yes; and in yon field below,
- A thousand years of silenced factions sleep--
- The Forum, where the immortal accents glow,
- And still the eloquent air breathes--burns with Cicero!
- CXIII.
- The field of freedom, faction, fame, and blood:
- Here a proud people's passions were exhaled,
- From the first hour of empire in the bud
- To that when further worlds to conquer failed;
- But long before had Freedom's face been veiled,
- And Anarchy assumed her attributes:
- Till every lawless soldier who assailed
- Trod on the trembling Senate's slavish mutes,
- Or raised the venal voice of baser prostitutes.
- CXIV.
- Then turn we to our latest tribune's name,
- From her ten thousand tyrants turn to thee,
- Redeemer of dark centuries of shame--
- The friend of Petrarch--hope of Italy--
- Rienzi! last of Romans! While the tree
- Of freedom's withered trunk puts forth a leaf,
- Even for thy tomb a garland let it be--
- The forum's champion, and the people's chief--
- Her new-born Numa thou, with reign, alas! too brief.
- CXV.
- Egeria! sweet creation of some heart
- Which found no mortal resting-place so fair
- As thine ideal breast; whate'er thou art
- Or wert,--a young Aurora of the air,
- The nympholepsy of some fond despair;
- Or, it might be, a beauty of the earth,
- Who found a more than common votary there
- Too much adoring; whatsoe'er thy birth,
- Thou wert a beautiful thought, and softly bodied forth.
- CXVI.
- The mosses of thy fountain still are sprinkled
- With thine Elysian water-drops; the face
- Of thy cave-guarded spring, with years unwrinkled,
- Reflects the meek-eyed genius of the place,
- Whose green wild margin now no more erase
- Art's works; nor must the delicate waters sleep,
- Prisoned in marble, bubbling from the base
- Of the cleft statue, with a gentle leap
- The rill runs o'er, and round, fern, flowers, and ivy creep,
- CXVII.
- Fantastically tangled; the green hills
- Are clothed with early blossoms, through the grass
- The quick-eyed lizard rustles, and the bills
- Of summer birds sing welcome as ye pass;
- Flowers fresh in hue, and many in their class,
- Implore the pausing step, and with their dyes
- Dance in the soft breeze in a fairy mass;
- The sweetness of the violet's deep blue eyes,
- Kissed by the breath of heaven, seems coloured by its skies.
- CXVIII.
- Here didst thou dwell, in this enchanted cover,
- Egeria! thy all heavenly bosom beating
- For the far footsteps of thy mortal lover;
- The purple Midnight veiled that mystic meeting
- With her most starry canopy, and seating
- Thyself by thine adorer, what befell?
- This cave was surely shaped out for the greeting
- Of an enamoured Goddess, and the cell
- Haunted by holy Love--the earliest oracle!
- CXIX.
- And didst thou not, thy breast to his replying,
- Blend a celestial with a human heart;
- And Love, which dies as it was born, in sighing,
- Share with immortal transports? could thine art
- Make them indeed immortal, and impart
- The purity of heaven to earthly joys,
- Expel the venom and not blunt the dart--
- The dull satiety which all destroys--
- And root from out the soul the deadly weed which cloys?
- CXX.
- Alas! our young affections run to waste,
- Or water but the desert: whence arise
- But weeds of dark luxuriance, tares of haste,
- Rank at the core, though tempting to the eyes,
- Flowers whose wild odours breathe but agonies,
- And trees whose gums are poison; such the plants
- Which spring beneath her steps as Passion flies
- O'er the world's wilderness, and vainly pants
- For some celestial fruit forbidden to our wants.
- CXXI.
- O Love! no habitant of earth thou art--
- An unseen seraph, we believe in thee,--
- A faith whose martyrs are the broken heart,
- But never yet hath seen, nor e'er shall see,
- The naked eye, thy form, as it should be;
- The mind hath made thee, as it peopled heaven,
- Even with its own desiring phantasy,
- And to a thought such shape and image given,
- As haunts the unquenched soul--parched--wearied--wrung--and riven.
- CXXII.
- Of its own beauty is the mind diseased,
- And fevers into false creation;--where,
- Where are the forms the sculptor's soul hath seized?
- In him alone. Can Nature show so fair?
- Where are the charms and virtues which we dare
- Conceive in boyhood and pursue as men,
- The unreached Paradise of our despair,
- Which o'er-informs the pencil and the pen,
- And overpowers the page where it would bloom again.
- CXXIII.
- Who loves, raves--'tis youth's frenzy--but the cure
- Is bitterer still; as charm by charm unwinds
- Which robed our idols, and we see too sure
- Nor worth nor beauty dwells from out the mind's
- Ideal shape of such; yet still it binds
- The fatal spell, and still it draws us on,
- Reaping the whirlwind from the oft-sown winds;
- The stubborn heart, its alchemy begun,
- Seems ever near the prize--wealthiest when most undone.
- CXXIV.
- We wither from our youth, we gasp away--
- Sick--sick; unfound the boon, unslaked the thirst,
- Though to the last, in verge of our decay,
- Some phantom lures, such as we sought at first--
- But all too late,--so are we doubly curst.
- Love, fame, ambition, avarice--'tis the same--
- Each idle, and all ill, and none the worst--
- For all are meteors with a different name,
- And death the sable smoke where vanishes the flame.
- CXXV.
- Few--none--find what they love or could have loved:
- Though accident, blind contact, and the strong
- Necessity of loving, have removed
- Antipathies--but to recur, ere long,
- Envenomed with irrevocable wrong;
- And Circumstance, that unspiritual god
- And miscreator, makes and helps along
- Our coming evils with a crutch-like rod,
- Whose touch turns hope to dust--the dust we all have trod.
- CXXVI.
- Our life is a false nature--'tis not in
- The harmony of things,--this hard decree,
- This uneradicable taint of sin,
- This boundless upas, this all-blasting tree,
- Whose root is earth, whose leaves and branches be
- The skies which rain their plagues on men like dew--
- Disease, death, bondage, all the woes we see--
- And worse, the woes we see not--which throb through
- The immedicable soul, with heart-aches ever new.
- CXXVII.
- Yet let us ponder boldly--'tis a base
- Abandonment of reason to resign
- Our right of thought--our last and only place
- Of refuge; this, at least, shall still be mine:
- Though from our birth the faculty divine
- Is chained and tortured--cabined, cribbed, confined,
- And bred in darkness, lest the truth should shine
- Too brightly on the unprepared mind,
- The beam pours in, for time and skill will couch the blind.
- CXXVIII.
- Arches on arches! as it were that Rome,
- Collecting the chief trophies of her line,
- Would build up all her triumphs in one dome,
- Her Coliseum stands; the moonbeams shine
- As 'twere its natural torches, for divine
- Should be the light which streams here, to illume
- This long explored but still exhaustless mine
- Of contemplation; and the azure gloom
- Of an Italian night, where the deep skies assume
- CXXIX.
- Hues which have words, and speak to ye of heaven,
- Floats o'er this vast and wondrous monument,
- And shadows forth its glory. There is given
- Unto the things of earth, which Time hath bent,
- A spirit's feeling, and where he hath leant
- His hand, but broke his scythe, there is a power
- And magic in the ruined battlement,
- For which the palace of the present hour
- Must yield its pomp, and wait till ages are its dower.
- CXXX.
- O Time! the beautifier of the dead,
- Adorner of the ruin, comforter
- And only healer when the heart hath bled--
- Time! the corrector where our judgments err,
- The test of truth, love,--sole philosopher,
- For all beside are sophists, from thy thrift,
- Which never loses though it doth defer--
- Time, the avenger! unto thee I lift
- My hands, and eyes, and heart, and crave of thee a gift:
- CXXXI.
- Amidst this wreck, where thou hast made a shrine
- And temple more divinely desolate,
- Among thy mightier offerings here are mine,
- Ruins of years--though few, yet full of fate:
- If thou hast ever seen me too elate,
- Hear me not; but if calmly I have borne
- Good, and reserved my pride against the hate
- Which shall not whelm me, let me not have worn
- This iron in my soul in vain--shall THEY not mourn?
- CXXXII.
- And thou, who never yet of human wrong
- Left the unbalanced scale, great Nemesis!
- Here, where the ancients paid thee homage long--
- Thou, who didst call the Furies from the abyss,
- And round Orestes bade them howl and hiss
- For that unnatural retribution--just,
- Had it but been from hands less near--in this
- Thy former realm, I call thee from the dust!
- Dost thou not hear my heart?--Awake! thou shalt, and must.
- CXXXIII.
- It is not that I may not have incurred
- For my ancestral faults or mine the wound
- I bleed withal, and had it been conferred
- With a just weapon, it had flowed unbound.
- But now my blood shall not sink in the ground;
- To thee I do devote it--THOU shalt take
- The vengeance, which shall yet be sought and found,
- Which if _I_ have not taken for the sake--
- But let that pass--I sleep, but thou shalt yet awake.
- CXXXIV.
- And if my voice break forth, 'tis not that now
- I shrink from what is suffered: let him speak
- Who hath beheld decline upon my brow,
- Or seen my mind's convulsion leave it weak;
- But in this page a record will I seek.
- Not in the air shall these my words disperse,
- Though I be ashes; a far hour shall wreak
- The deep prophetic fulness of this verse,
- And pile on human heads the mountain of my curse!
- CXXXV.
- That curse shall be forgiveness.--Have I not--
- Hear me, my mother Earth! behold it, Heaven!--
- Have I not had to wrestle with my lot?
- Have I not suffered things to be forgiven?
- Have I not had my brain seared, my heart riven,
- Hopes sapped, name blighted, Life's life lied away?
- And only not to desperation driven,
- Because not altogether of such clay
- As rots into the souls of those whom I survey.
- CXXXVI.
- From mighty wrongs to petty perfidy
- Have I not seen what human things could do?
- From the loud roar of foaming calumny
- To the small whisper of the as paltry few
- And subtler venom of the reptile crew,
- The Janus glance of whose significant eye,
- Learning to lie with silence, would SEEM true,
- And without utterance, save the shrug or sigh,
- Deal round to happy fools its speechless obloquy.
- CXXXVII.
- But I have lived, and have not lived in vain:
- My mind may lose its force, my blood its fire,
- And my frame perish even in conquering pain,
- But there is that within me which shall tire
- Torture and Time, and breathe when I expire:
- Something unearthly, which they deem not of,
- Like the remembered tone of a mute lyre,
- Shall on their softened spirits sink, and move
- In hearts all rocky now the late remorse of love.
- CXXXVIII.
- The seal is set.--Now welcome, thou dread Power
- Nameless, yet thus omnipotent, which here
- Walk'st in the shadow of the midnight hour
- With a deep awe, yet all distinct from fear:
- Thy haunts are ever where the dead walls rear
- Their ivy mantles, and the solemn scene
- Derives from thee a sense so deep and clear
- That we become a part of what has been,
- And grow unto the spot, all-seeing but unseen.
- CXXXIX.
- And here the buzz of eager nations ran,
- In murmured pity, or loud-roared applause,
- As man was slaughtered by his fellow-man.
- And wherefore slaughtered? wherefore, but because
- Such were the bloody circus' genial laws,
- And the imperial pleasure.--Wherefore not?
- What matters where we fall to fill the maws
- Of worms--on battle-plains or listed spot?
- Both are but theatres where the chief actors rot.
- CXL.
- I see before me the Gladiator lie:
- He leans upon his hand--his manly brow
- Consents to death, but conquers agony,
- And his drooped head sinks gradually low--
- And through his side the last drops, ebbing slow
- From the red gash, fall heavy, one by one,
- Like the first of a thunder-shower; and now
- The arena swims around him: he is gone,
- Ere ceased the inhuman shout which hailed the wretch who won.
- CXLI.
- He heard it, but he heeded not--his eyes
- Were with his heart, and that was far away;
- He recked not of the life he lost nor prize,
- But where his rude hut by the Danube lay,
- THERE were his young barbarians all at play,
- THERE was their Dacian mother--he, their sire,
- Butchered to make a Roman holiday--
- All this rushed with his blood--Shall he expire,
- And unavenged?--Arise! ye Goths, and glut your ire!
- CXLII.
- But here, where murder breathed her bloody steam;
- And here, where buzzing nations choked the ways,
- And roared or murmured like a mountain-stream
- Dashing or winding as its torrent strays;
- Here, where the Roman million's blame or praise
- Was death or life, the playthings of a crowd,
- My voice sounds much--and fall the stars' faint rays
- On the arena void--seats crushed, walls bowed,
- And galleries, where my steps seem echoes strangely loud.
- CXLIII.
- A ruin--yet what ruin! from its mass
- Walls, palaces, half-cities, have been reared;
- Yet oft the enormous skeleton ye pass,
- And marvel where the spoil could have appeared.
- Hath it indeed been plundered, or but cleared?
- Alas! developed, opens the decay,
- When the colossal fabric's form is neared:
- It will not bear the brightness of the day,
- Which streams too much on all, years, man, have reft away.
- CXLIV.
- But when the rising moon begins to climb
- Its topmost arch, and gently pauses there;
- When the stars twinkle through the loops of time,
- And the low night-breeze waves along the air,
- The garland-forest, which the grey walls wear,
- Like laurels on the bald first Caesar's head;
- When the light shines serene, but doth not glare,
- Then in this magic circle raise the dead:
- Heroes have trod this spot--'tis on their dust ye tread.
- CXLV.
- 'While stands the Coliseum, Rome shall stand;
- When falls the Coliseum, Rome shall fall;
- And when Rome falls--the World.' From our own land
- Thus spake the pilgrims o'er this mighty wall
- In Saxon times, which we are wont to call
- Ancient; and these three mortal things are still
- On their foundations, and unaltered all;
- Rome and her Ruin past Redemption's skill,
- The World, the same wide den--of thieves, or what ye will.
- CXLVI.
- Simple, erect, severe, austere, sublime--
- Shrine of all saints and temple of all gods,
- From Jove to Jesus--spared and blest by time;
- Looking tranquillity, while falls or nods
- Arch, empire, each thing round thee, and man plods
- His way through thorns to ashes--glorious dome!
- Shalt thou not last?--Time's scythe and tyrants' rods
- Shiver upon thee--sanctuary and home
- Of art and piety--Pantheon!--pride of Rome!
- CXLVII.
- Relic of nobler days, and noblest arts!
- Despoiled yet perfect, with thy circle spreads
- A holiness appealing to all hearts--
- To art a model; and to him who treads
- Rome for the sake of ages, Glory sheds
- Her light through thy sole aperture; to those
- Who worship, here are altars for their beads;
- And they who feel for genius may repose
- Their eyes on honoured forms, whose busts around them close.
- CXLVIII.
- There is a dungeon, in whose dim drear light
- What do I gaze on? Nothing: Look again!
- Two forms are slowly shadowed on my sight--
- Two insulated phantoms of the brain:
- It is not so: I see them full and plain--
- An old man, and a female young and fair,
- Fresh as a nursing mother, in whose vein
- The blood is nectar:--but what doth she there,
- With her unmantled neck, and bosom white and bare?
- CXLIX.
- Full swells the deep pure fountain of young life,
- Where ON the heart and FROM the heart we took
- Our first and sweetest nurture, when the wife,
- Blest into mother, in the innocent look,
- Or even the piping cry of lips that brook
- No pain and small suspense, a joy perceives
- Man knows not, when from out its cradled nook
- She sees her little bud put forth its leaves--
- What may the fruit be yet?--I know not--Cain was Eve's.
- CL.
- But here youth offers to old age the food,
- The milk of his own gift:--it is her sire
- To whom she renders back the debt of blood
- Born with her birth. No; he shall not expire
- While in those warm and lovely veins the fire
- Of health and holy feeling can provide
- Great Nature's Nile, whose deep stream rises higher
- Than Egypt's river:--from that gentle side
- Drink, drink and live, old man! heaven's realm holds no such tide.
- CLI.
- The starry fable of the milky way
- Has not thy story's purity; it is
- A constellation of a sweeter ray,
- And sacred Nature triumphs more in this
- Reverse of her decree, than in the abyss
- Where sparkle distant worlds:--Oh, holiest nurse!
- No drop of that clear stream its way shall miss
- To thy sire's heart, replenishing its source
- With life, as our freed souls rejoin the universe.
- CLII.
- Turn to the mole which Hadrian reared on high,
- Imperial mimic of old Egypt's piles,
- Colossal copyist of deformity,
- Whose travelled phantasy from the far Nile's
- Enormous model, doomed the artist's toils
- To build for giants, and for his vain earth,
- His shrunken ashes, raise this dome: How smiles
- The gazer's eye with philosophic mirth,
- To view the huge design which sprung from such a birth!
- CLIII.
- But lo! the dome--the vast and wondrous dome,
- To which Diana's marvel was a cell--
- Christ's mighty shrine above his martyr's tomb!
- I have beheld the Ephesian's miracle--
- Its columns strew the wilderness, and dwell
- The hyaena and the jackal in their shade;
- I have beheld Sophia's bright roofs swell
- Their glittering mass i' the sun, and have surveyed
- Its sanctuary the while the usurping Moslem prayed;
- CLIV.
- But thou, of temples old, or altars new,
- Standest alone--with nothing like to thee--
- Worthiest of God, the holy and the true,
- Since Zion's desolation, when that he
- Forsook his former city, what could be,
- Of earthly structures, in his honour piled,
- Of a sublimer aspect? Majesty,
- Power, Glory, Strength, and Beauty, all are aisled
- In this eternal ark of worship undefiled.
- CLV.
- Enter: its grandeur overwhelms thee not;
- And why? it is not lessened; but thy mind,
- Expanded by the genius of the spot,
- Has grown colossal, and can only find
- A fit abode wherein appear enshrined
- Thy hopes of immortality; and thou
- Shalt one day, if found worthy, so defined,
- See thy God face to face, as thou dost now
- His Holy of Holies, nor be blasted by his brow.
- CLVI.
- Thou movest--but increasing with th' advance,
- Like climbing some great Alp, which still doth rise,
- Deceived by its gigantic elegance;
- Vastness which grows--but grows to harmonise--
- All musical in its immensities;
- Rich marbles--richer painting--shrines where flame
- The lamps of gold--and haughty dome which vies
- In air with Earth's chief structures, though their frame
- Sits on the firm-set ground--and this the clouds must claim.
- CLVII.
- Thou seest not all; but piecemeal thou must break
- To separate contemplation, the great whole;
- And as the ocean many bays will make,
- That ask the eye--so here condense thy soul
- To more immediate objects, and control
- Thy thoughts until thy mind hath got by heart
- Its eloquent proportions, and unroll
- In mighty graduations, part by part,
- The glory which at once upon thee did not dart.
- CLVIII.
- Not by its fault--but thine: Our outward sense
- Is but of gradual grasp--and as it is
- That what we have of feeling most intense
- Outstrips our faint expression; e'en so this
- Outshining and o'erwhelming edifice
- Fools our fond gaze, and greatest of the great
- Defies at first our nature's littleness,
- Till, growing with its growth, we thus dilate
- Our spirits to the size of that they contemplate.
- CLIX.
- Then pause and be enlightened; there is more
- In such a survey than the sating gaze
- Of wonder pleased, or awe which would adore
- The worship of the place, or the mere praise
- Of art and its great masters, who could raise
- What former time, nor skill, nor thought could plan;
- The fountain of sublimity displays
- Its depth, and thence may draw the mind of man
- Its golden sands, and learn what great conceptions can.
- CLX.
- Or, turning to the Vatican, go see
- Laocoon's torture dignifying pain--
- A father's love and mortal's agony
- With an immortal's patience blending:--Vain
- The struggle; vain, against the coiling strain
- And gripe, and deepening of the dragon's grasp,
- The old man's clench; the long envenomed chain
- Rivets the living links,--the enormous asp
- Enforces pang on pang, and stifles gasp on gasp.
- CLXI.
- Or view the Lord of the unerring bow,
- The God of life, and poesy, and light--
- The Sun in human limbs arrayed, and brow
- All radiant from his triumph in the fight;
- The shaft hath just been shot--the arrow bright
- With an immortal's vengeance; in his eye
- And nostril beautiful disdain, and might
- And majesty, flash their full lightnings by,
- Developing in that one glance the Deity.
- CLXII.
- But in his delicate form--a dream of Love,
- Shaped by some solitary nymph, whose breast
- Longed for a deathless lover from above,
- And maddened in that vision--are expressed
- All that ideal beauty ever blessed
- The mind within its most unearthly mood,
- When each conception was a heavenly guest--
- A ray of immortality--and stood
- Starlike, around, until they gathered to a god?
- CLXIII.
- And if it be Prometheus stole from heaven
- The fire which we endure, it was repaid
- By him to whom the energy was given
- Which this poetic marble hath arrayed
- With an eternal glory--which, if made
- By human hands, is not of human thought
- And Time himself hath hallowed it, nor laid
- One ringlet in the dust--nor hath it caught
- A tinge of years, but breathes the flame with which 'twas wrought.
- CLXIV.
- But where is he, the pilgrim of my song,
- The being who upheld it through the past?
- Methinks he cometh late and tarries long.
- He is no more--these breathings are his last;
- His wanderings done, his visions ebbing fast,
- And he himself as nothing:--if he was
- Aught but a phantasy, and could be classed
- With forms which live and suffer--let that pass--
- His shadow fades away into Destruction's mass,
- CLXV.
- Which gathers shadow, substance, life, and all
- That we inherit in its mortal shroud,
- And spreads the dim and universal pall
- Thro' which all things grow phantoms; and the cloud
- Between us sinks and all which ever glowed,
- Till Glory's self is twilight, and displays
- A melancholy halo scarce allowed
- To hover on the verge of darkness; rays
- Sadder than saddest night, for they distract the gaze,
- CLXVI.
- And send us prying into the abyss,
- To gather what we shall be when the frame
- Shall be resolved to something less than this
- Its wretched essence; and to dream of fame,
- And wipe the dust from off the idle name
- We never more shall hear,--but never more,
- Oh, happier thought! can we be made the same:
- It is enough, in sooth, that ONCE we bore
- These fardels of the heart--the heart whose sweat was gore.
- CLXVII.
- Hark! forth from the abyss a voice proceeds,
- A long, low distant murmur of dread sound,
- Such as arises when a nation bleeds
- With some deep and immedicable wound;
- Through storm and darkness yawns the rending ground.
- The gulf is thick with phantoms, but the chief
- Seems royal still, though with her head discrowned,
- And pale, but lovely, with maternal grief
- She clasps a babe, to whom her breast yields no relief.
- CLXVIII.
- Scion of chiefs and monarchs, where art thou?
- Fond hope of many nations, art thou dead?
- Could not the grave forget thee, and lay low
- Some less majestic, less beloved head?
- In the sad midnight, while thy heart still bled,
- The mother of a moment, o'er thy boy,
- Death hushed that pang for ever: with thee fled
- The present happiness and promised joy
- Which filled the imperial isles so full it seemed to cloy.
- CLXIX.
- Peasants bring forth in safety.--Can it be,
- O thou that wert so happy, so adored!
- Those who weep not for kings shall weep for thee,
- And Freedom's heart, grown heavy, cease to hoard
- Her many griefs for One; for she had poured
- Her orisons for thee, and o'er thy head
- Beheld her Iris.--Thou, too, lonely lord,
- And desolate consort--vainly wert thou wed!
- The husband of a year! the father of the dead!
- CLXX.
- Of sackcloth was thy wedding garment made:
- Thy bridal's fruit is ashes; in the dust
- The fair-haired Daughter of the Isles is laid,
- The love of millions! How we did entrust
- Futurity to her! and, though it must
- Darken above our bones, yet fondly deemed
- Our children should obey her child, and blessed
- Her and her hoped-for seed, whose promise seemed
- Like star to shepherd's eyes; 'twas but a meteor beamed.
- CLXXI.
- Woe unto us, not her; for she sleeps well:
- The fickle reek of popular breath, the tongue
- Of hollow counsel, the false oracle,
- Which from the birth of monarchy hath rung
- Its knell in princely ears, till the o'erstrung
- Nations have armed in madness, the strange fate
- Which tumbles mightiest sovereigns, and hath flung
- Against their blind omnipotence a weight
- Within the opposing scale, which crushes soon or late,--
- CLXXII.
- These might have been her destiny; but no,
- Our hearts deny it: and so young, so fair,
- Good without effort, great without a foe;
- But now a bride and mother--and now THERE!
- How many ties did that stern moment tear!
- From thy Sire's to his humblest subject's breast
- Is linked the electric chain of that despair,
- Whose shock was as an earthquake's, and oppressed
- The land which loved thee so, that none could love thee best.
- CLXXIII.
- Lo, Nemi! navelled in the woody hills
- So far, that the uprooting wind which tears
- The oak from his foundation, and which spills
- The ocean o'er its boundary, and bears
- Its foam against the skies, reluctant spares
- The oval mirror of thy glassy lake;
- And, calm as cherished hate, its surface wears
- A deep cold settled aspect nought can shake,
- All coiled into itself and round, as sleeps the snake.
- CLXXIV.
- And near Albano's scarce divided waves
- Shine from a sister valley;--and afar
- The Tiber winds, and the broad ocean laves
- The Latian coast where sprung the Epic war,
- 'Arms and the Man,' whose reascending star
- Rose o'er an empire,--but beneath thy right
- Tully reposed from Rome;--and where yon bar
- Of girdling mountains intercepts the sight,
- The Sabine farm was tilled, the weary bard's delight.
- CLXXV.
- But I forget.--My pilgrim's shrine is won,
- And he and I must part,--so let it be,--
- His task and mine alike are nearly done;
- Yet once more let us look upon the sea:
- The midland ocean breaks on him and me,
- And from the Alban mount we now behold
- Our friend of youth, that ocean, which when we
- Beheld it last by Calpe's rock unfold
- Those waves, we followed on till the dark Euxine rolled
- CLXXVI.
- Upon the blue Symplegades: long years--
- Long, though not very many--since have done
- Their work on both; some suffering and some tears
- Have left us nearly where we had begun:
- Yet not in vain our mortal race hath run,
- We have had our reward--and it is here;
- That we can yet feel gladdened by the sun,
- And reap from earth, sea, joy almost as dear
- As if there were no man to trouble what is clear.
- CLXXVII.
- Oh! that the Desert were my dwelling-place,
- With one fair Spirit for my minister,
- That I might all forget the human race,
- And, hating no one, love but only her!
- Ye Elements!--in whose ennobling stir
- I feel myself exalted--can ye not
- Accord me such a being? Do I err
- In deeming such inhabit many a spot?
- Though with them to converse can rarely be our lot.
- CLXXVIII.
- There is a pleasure in the pathless woods,
- There is a rapture on the lonely shore,
- There is society where none intrudes,
- By the deep Sea, and music in its roar:
- I love not Man the less, but Nature more,
- From these our interviews, in which I steal
- From all I may be, or have been before,
- To mingle with the Universe, and feel
- What I can ne'er express, yet cannot all conceal.
- CLXXIX.
- Roll on, thou deep and dark blue Ocean--roll!
- Ten thousand fleets sweep over thee in vain;
- Man marks the earth with ruin--his control
- Stops with the shore;--upon the watery plain
- The wrecks are all thy deed, nor doth remain
- A shadow of man's ravage, save his own,
- When for a moment, like a drop of rain,
- He sinks into thy depths with bubbling groan,
- Without a grave, unknelled, uncoffined, and unknown.
- CLXXX.
- His steps are not upon thy paths,--thy fields
- Are not a spoil for him,--thou dost arise
- And shake him from thee; the vile strength he wields
- For earth's destruction thou dost all despise,
- Spurning him from thy bosom to the skies,
- And send'st him, shivering in thy playful spray
- And howling, to his gods, where haply lies
- His petty hope in some near port or bay,
- And dashest him again to earth:--there let him lay.
- CLXXXI.
- The armaments which thunderstrike the walls
- Of rock-built cities, bidding nations quake,
- And monarchs tremble in their capitals.
- The oak leviathans, whose huge ribs make
- Their clay creator the vain title take
- Of lord of thee, and arbiter of war;
- These are thy toys, and, as the snowy flake,
- They melt into thy yeast of waves, which mar
- Alike the Armada's pride, or spoils of Trafalgar.
- CLXXXII.
- Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee--
- Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, what are they?
- Thy waters washed them power while they were free
- And many a tyrant since: their shores obey
- The stranger, slave, or savage; their decay
- Has dried up realms to deserts: not so thou,
- Unchangeable save to thy wild waves' play--
- Time writes no wrinkle on thine azure brow--
- Such as creation's dawn beheld, thou rollest now.
- CLXXXIII.
- Thou glorious mirror, where the Almighty's form
- Glasses itself in tempests; in all time,
- Calm or convulsed--in breeze, or gale, or storm,
- Icing the pole, or in the torrid clime
- Dark-heaving;--boundless, endless, and sublime--
- The image of Eternity--the throne
- Of the Invisible; even from out thy slime
- The monsters of the deep are made; each zone
- Obeys thee: thou goest forth, dread, fathomless, alone.
- CLXXXIV.
- And I have loved thee, Ocean! and my joy
- Of youthful sports was on thy breast to be
- Borne like thy bubbles, onward: from a boy
- I wantoned with thy breakers--they to me
- Were a delight; and if the freshening sea
- Made them a terror--'twas a pleasing fear,
- For I was as it were a child of thee,
- And trusted to thy billows far and near,
- And laid my hand upon thy mane--as I do here.
- CLXXXV.
- My task is done--my song hath ceased--my theme
- Has died into an echo; it is fit
- The spell should break of this protracted dream.
- The torch shall be extinguished which hath lit
- My midnight lamp--and what is writ, is writ--
- Would it were worthier! but I am not now
- That which I have been--and my visions flit
- Less palpably before me--and the glow
- Which in my spirit dwelt is fluttering, faint, and low.
- CLXXXVI.
- Farewell! a word that must be, and hath been--
- A sound which makes us linger; yet, farewell!
- Ye, who have traced the Pilgrim to the scene
- Which is his last, if in your memories dwell
- A thought which once was his, if on ye swell
- A single recollection, not in vain
- He wore his sandal-shoon and scallop shell;
- Farewell! with HIM alone may rest the pain,
- If such there were--with YOU, the moral of his strain.
- Footnotes:
- {1} Lady Charlotte Harley, daughter of the Earl of Oxford.
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