- The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe
- Shelley Volume II, by Percy Bysshe Shelley
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- Title: The Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley Volume II
- Author: Percy Bysshe Shelley
- Edited by Thomas Hutchinson, M. A.
- Release Date: December, 2003 [EBook #4798]
- [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
- [This file was first posted on March 25, 2002]
- Edition: 10
- Language: English
- *** START OF PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SHELLEY'S COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS ***
- Produced by Sue Asscher
- THE COMPLETE
- POETICAL WORKS
- OF
- PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY
- VOLUME 2
- OXFORD EDITION.
- INCLUDING MATERIALS NEVER BEFORE
- PRINTED IN ANY EDITION OF THE POEMS.
- EDITED WITH TEXTUAL NOTES
- BY
- THOMAS HUTCHINSON, M. A.
- EDITOR OF THE OXFORD WORDSWORTH.
- 1914.
- CONTENTS.
- EARLY POEMS [1814, 1815]:
- STANZA, WRITTEN AT BRACKNELL.
- STANZAS.--APRIL, 1814.
- TO HARRIET.
- TO MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT GODWIN.
- TO --. 'YET LOOK ON ME'.
- MUTABILITY.
- ON DEATH.
- A SUMMER EVENING CHURCHYARD.
- TO --. 'OH! THERE ARE SPIRITS OF THE AIR'.
- TO WORDSWORTH.
- FEELINGS OF A REPUBLICAN ON THE FALL OF BONAPARTE
- LINES: 'THE COLD EARTH SLEPT BELOW'
- NOTE ON THE EARLY POEMS, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1816:
- THE SUNSET.
- HYMN TO INTELLECTUAL BEAUTY.
- MONT BLANC.
- CANCELLED PASSAGE OF MONT BLANC.
- FRAGMENT: HOME.
- FRAGMENT OF A GHOST STORY.
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1816, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1817:
- MARIANNE'S DREAM.
- TO CONSTANTIA, SINGING.
- THE SAME: STANZAS 1 AND 2.
- TO CONSTANTIA.
- FRAGMENT: TO ONE SINGING.
- A FRAGMENT: TO MUSIC.
- ANOTHER FRAGMENT TO MUSIC.
- 'MIGHTY EAGLE'.
- TO THE LORD CHANCELLOR.
- TO WILLIAM SHELLEY.
- FROM THE ORIGINAL DRAFT OF THE POEM TO WILLIAM SHELLEY.
- ON FANNY GODWIN.
- LINES: 'THAT TIME IS DEAD FOR EVER'.
- DEATH.
- OTHO.
- FRAGMENTS SUPPOSED TO BE PARTS OF OTHO.
- 'O THAT A CHARIOT OF CLOUD WERE MINE'.
- FRAGMENTS:
- TO A FRIEND RELEASED FROM PRISON.
- SATAN BROKEN LOOSE.
- IGNICULUS DESIDERII.
- AMOR AETERNUS.
- THOUGHTS COME AND GO IN SOLITUDE.
- A HATE-SONG.
- LINES TO A CRITIC.
- OZYMANDIAS.
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1817, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1818.
- TO THE NILE.
- PASSAGE OF THE APENNINES.
- THE PAST.
- TO MARY --.
- ON A FADED VIOLET.
- LINES WRITTEN AMONG THE EUGANEAN HILLS.
- SCENE FROM "TASSO".
- SONG FOR "TASSO".
- INVOCATION TO MISERY.
- STANZAS WRITTEN IN DEJECTION, NEAR NAPLES.
- THE WOODMAN AND THE NIGHTINGALE.
- MARENGHI.
- SONNET: 'LIFT NOT THE PAINTED VEIL'.
- FRAGMENTS:
- TO BYRON.
- APOSTROPHE TO SILENCE.
- THE LAKE'S MARGIN.
- 'MY HEAD IS WILD WITH WEEPING'.
- THE VINE-SHROUD.
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1818, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1819:
- LINES WRITTEN DURING THE CASTLEREAGH ADMINISTRATION.
- SONG TO THE MEN OF ENGLAND.
- SIMILES FOR TWO POLITICAL CHARACTERS OF 1819.
- FRAGMENT: TO THE PEOPLE OF ENGLAND.
- FRAGMENT: 'WHAT MEN GAIN FAIRLY'.
- A NEW NATIONAL ANTHEM.
- SONNET: ENGLAND IN 1819.
- AN ODE WRITTEN OCTOBER, 1819.
- CANCELLED STANZA.
- ODE TO HEAVEN.
- ODE TO THE WEST WIND.
- AN EXHORTATION.
- THE INDIAN SERENADE.
- CANCELLED PASSAGE.
- TO SOPHIA [MISS STACEY].
- TO WILLIAM SHELLEY, 1.
- TO WILLIAM SHELLEY, 2.
- TO MARY SHELLEY, 1.
- TO MARY SHELLEY, 2.
- ON THE MEDUSA OF LEONARDO DA VINCI.
- LOVE'S PHILOSOPHY.
- FRAGMENT: 'FOLLOW TO THE DEEP WOOD'S WEEDS'.
- THE BIRTH OF PLEASURE.
- FRAGMENTS:
- LOVE THE UNIVERSE TO-DAY.
- 'A GENTLE STORY OF TWO LOVERS YOUNG'.
- LOVE'S TENDER ATMOSPHERE.
- WEDDED SOULS.
- 'IS IT THAT IN SOME BRIGHTER SPHERE'.
- SUFFICIENT UNTO THE DAY.
- 'YE GENTLE VISITATIONS OF CALM THOUGHT'.
- MUSIC AND SWEET POETRY.
- THE SEPULCHRE OF MEMORY.
- 'WHEN A LOVER CLASPS HIS FAIREST'.
- 'WAKE THE SERPENT NOT'.
- RAIN.
- A TALE UNTOLD.
- TO ITALY.
- WINE OF THE FAIRIES.
- A ROMAN'S CHAMBER.
- ROME AND NATURE.
- VARIATION OF THE SONG OF THE MOON.
- CANCELLED STANZA OF THE MASK OF ANARCHY.
- NOTE BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1820:
- THE SENSITIVE PLANT.
- CANCELLED PASSAGE.
- A VISION OF THE SEA.
- THE CLOUD.
- TO A SKYLARK.
- ODE TO LIBERTY.
- CANCELLED PASSAGE.
- TO --. 'I FEAR THY KISSES, GENTLE MAIDEN'.
- ARETHUSA.
- SONG OF PROSERPINE.
- HYMN OF APOLLO.
- HYMN OF PAN.
- THE QUESTION.
- THE TWO SPIRITS. AN ALLEGORY.
- ODE TO NAPLES.
- AUTUMN: A DIRGE.
- THE WANING MOON.
- TO THE MOON.
- DEATH.
- LIBERTY.
- SUMMER AND WINTER.
- THE TOWER OF FAMINE.
- AN ALLEGORY.
- THE WORLD'S WANDERERS.
- SONNET: 'YE HASTEN TO THE GRAVE!'.
- LINES TO A REVIEWER.
- FRAGMENT OF A SATIRE ON SATIRE.
- GOOD-NIGHT.
- BUONA NOTTE.
- ORPHEUS.
- FIORDISPINA.
- TIME LONG PAST.
- FRAGMENTS:
- THE DESERTS OF DIM SLEEP.
- 'THE VIEWLESS AND INVISIBLE CONSEQUENCE'.
- A SERPENT-FACE.
- DEATH IN LIFE.
- 'SUCH HOPE, AS IS THE SICK DESPAIR OF GOOD'.
- 'ALAS THIS IS NOT WHAT I THOUGHT LIFE WAS'.
- MILTON'S SPIRIT.
- 'UNRISEN SPLENDOUR OF THE BRIGHTEST SUN'.
- PATER OMNIPOTENS.
- TO THE MIND OF MAN.
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1820, BY MRS SHELLEY.
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1821:
- DIRGE FOR THE YEAR.
- TO NIGHT.
- TIME.
- LINES: 'FAR, FAR AWAY'.
- FROM THE ARABIC: AN IMITATION.
- TO EMILIA VIVIANI.
- THE FUGITIVES.
- TO --. 'MUSIC, WHEN SOFT VOICES DIE'.
- SONG: 'RARELY, RARELY, COMEST THOU'.
- MUTABILITY.
- LINES WRITTEN ON HEARING THE NEWS OF THE DEATH OF NAPOLEON.
- SONNET: POLITICAL GREATNESS.
- THE AZIOLA.
- A LAMENT.
- REMEMBRANCE.
- TO EDWARD WILLIAMS.
- TO --. 'ONE WORD IS TOO OFTEN PROFANED'.
- TO --. 'WHEN PASSION'S TRANCE IS OVERPAST'.
- A BRIDAL SONG.
- EPITHALAMIUM.
- ANOTHER VERSION OF THE SAME.
- LOVE, HOPE, DESIRE, AND FEAR.
- FRAGMENTS WRITTEN FOR "HELLAS".
- FRAGMENT: 'I WOULD NOT BE A KING'.
- GINEVRA.
- EVENING: PONTE AL MARE, PISA.
- THE BOAT ON THE SERCHIO.
- MUSIC.
- SONNET TO BYRON.
- FRAGMENT ON KEATS.
- FRAGMENT: 'METHOUGHT I WAS A BILLOW IN THE CROWD'.
- TO-MORROW.
- STANZA: 'IF I WALK IN AUTUMN'S EVEN'.
- FRAGMENTS:
- A WANDERER.
- LIFE ROUNDED WITH SLEEP.
- 'I FAINT, I PERISH WITH MY LOVE'.
- THE LADY OF THE SOUTH.
- ZEPHYRUS THE AWAKENER.
- RAIN.
- 'WHEN SOFT WINDS AND SUNNY SKIES'.
- 'AND THAT I WALK THUS PROUDLY CROWNED'.
- 'THE RUDE WIND IS SINGING'.
- 'GREAT SPIRIT'.
- 'O THOU IMMORTAL DEITY'.
- THE FALSE LAUREL AND THE TRUE.
- MAY THE LIMNER.
- BEAUTY'S HALO.
- 'THE DEATH KNELL IS RINGING'.
- 'I STOOD UPON A HEAVEN-CLEAVING TURRET'.
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1821, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1822:
- THE ZUCCA.
- THE MAGNETIC LADY TO HER PATIENT.
- LINES: 'WHEN THE LAMP IS SHATTERED'.
- TO JANE: THE INVITATION.
- TO JANE: THE RECOLLECTION.
- THE PINE FOREST OF THE CASCINE NEAR PISA.
- WITH A GUITAR, TO JANE.
- TO JANE: 'THE KEEN STARS WERE TWINKLING'.
- A DIRGE.
- LINES WRITTEN IN THE BAY OF LERICI.
- LINES: 'WE MEET NOT AS WE PARTED'.
- THE ISLE.
- FRAGMENT: TO THE MOON.
- EPITAPH.
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1822, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- ***
- EARLY POEMS [1814, 1815].
- [The poems which follow appeared, with a few exceptions, either in the
- volumes published from time to time by Shelley himself, or in the
- "Posthumous Poems" of 1824, or in the "Poetical Works" of 1839, of
- which a second and enlarged edition was published by Mrs. Shelley in
- the same year. A few made their first appearance in some fugitive
- publication--such as Leigh Hunt's "Literary Pocket-Book"--and were
- subsequently incorporated in the collective editions. In every case the
- editio princeps and (where this is possible) the exact date of
- composition are indicated below the title.]
- ***
- STANZA, WRITTEN AT BRACKNELL.
- [Composed March, 1814. Published in Hogg's "Life of Shelley", 1858.]
- Thy dewy looks sink in my breast;
- Thy gentle words stir poison there;
- Thou hast disturbed the only rest
- That was the portion of despair!
- Subdued to Duty's hard control, _5
- I could have borne my wayward lot:
- The chains that bind this ruined soul
- Had cankered then--but crushed it not.
- ***
- STANZAS.--APRIL, 1814.
- [Composed at Bracknell, April, 1814. Published with "Alastor", 1816.]
- Away! the moor is dark beneath the moon,
- Rapid clouds have drank the last pale beam of even:
- Away! the gathering winds will call the darkness soon,
- And profoundest midnight shroud the serene lights of heaven.
- Pause not! The time is past! Every voice cries, Away! _5
- Tempt not with one last tear thy friend's ungentle mood:
- Thy lover's eye, so glazed and cold, dares not entreat thy stay:
- Duty and dereliction guide thee back to solitude.
- Away, away! to thy sad and silent home;
- Pour bitter tears on its desolated hearth; _10
- Watch the dim shades as like ghosts they go and come,
- And complicate strange webs of melancholy mirth.
- The leaves of wasted autumn woods shall float around thine head:
- The blooms of dewy spring shall gleam beneath thy feet:
- But thy soul or this world must fade in the frost that binds the dead, _15
- Ere midnight's frown and morning's smile, ere thou and peace may meet.
- The cloud shadows of midnight possess their own repose,
- For the weary winds are silent, or the moon is in the deep:
- Some respite to its turbulence unresting ocean knows;
- Whatever moves, or toils, or grieves, hath its appointed sleep. _20
- Thou in the grave shalt rest--yet till the phantoms flee
- Which that house and heath and garden made dear to thee erewhile,
- Thy remembrance, and repentance, and deep musings are not free
- From the music of two voices and the light of one sweet smile.
- NOTE:
- _6 tear 1816; glance 1839.
- ***
- TO HARRIET.
- [Composed May, 1814. Published (from the Esdaile manuscript) by Dowden,
- "Life of Shelley", 1887.]
- Thy look of love has power to calm
- The stormiest passion of my soul;
- Thy gentle words are drops of balm
- In life's too bitter bowl;
- No grief is mine, but that alone _5
- These choicest blessings I have known.
- Harriet! if all who long to live
- In the warm sunshine of thine eye,
- That price beyond all pain must give,--
- Beneath thy scorn to die; _10
- Then hear thy chosen own too late
- His heart most worthy of thy hate.
- Be thou, then, one among mankind
- Whose heart is harder not for state,
- Thou only virtuous, gentle, kind, _15
- Amid a world of hate;
- And by a slight endurance seal
- A fellow-being's lasting weal.
- For pale with anguish is his cheek,
- His breath comes fast, his eyes are dim, _20
- Thy name is struggling ere he speak,
- Weak is each trembling limb;
- In mercy let him not endure
- The misery of a fatal cure.
- Oh, trust for once no erring guide! _25
- Bid the remorseless feeling flee;
- 'Tis malice, 'tis revenge, 'tis pride,
- 'Tis anything but thee;
- Oh, deign a nobler pride to prove,
- And pity if thou canst not love. _30
- ***
- TO MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT GODWIN.
- [Composed June, 1814. Published in "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- Mine eyes were dim with tears unshed;
- Yes, I was firm--thus wert not thou;--
- My baffled looks did fear yet dread
- To meet thy looks--I could not know
- How anxiously they sought to shine _5
- With soothing pity upon mine.
- 2.
- To sit and curb the soul's mute rage
- Which preys upon itself alone;
- To curse the life which is the cage
- Of fettered grief that dares not groan, _10
- Hiding from many a careless eye
- The scorned load of agony.
- 3.
- Whilst thou alone, then not regarded,
- The ... thou alone should be,
- To spend years thus, and be rewarded, _15
- As thou, sweet love, requited me
- When none were near--Oh! I did wake
- From torture for that moment's sake.
- 4.
- Upon my heart thy accents sweet
- Of peace and pity fell like dew _20
- On flowers half dead;--thy lips did meet
- Mine tremblingly; thy dark eyes threw
- Their soft persuasion on my brain,
- Charming away its dream of pain.
- 5.
- We are not happy, sweet! our state _25
- Is strange and full of doubt and fear;
- More need of words that ills abate;--
- Reserve or censure come not near
- Our sacred friendship, lest there be
- No solace left for thee and me. _30
- 6.
- Gentle and good and mild thou art,
- Nor can I live if thou appear
- Aught but thyself, or turn thine heart
- Away from me, or stoop to wear
- The mask of scorn, although it be _35
- To hide the love thou feel'st for me.
- NOTES:
- _2 wert 1839; did 1824.
- _3 fear 1824, 1839; yearn cj. Rossetti.
- _23 Their 1839; thy 1824.
- _30 thee]thou 1824, 1839.
- _32 can I 1839; I can 1824.
- _36 feel'st 1839; feel 1824.
- ***
- TO --.
- [Published in "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition. See Editor's Note.]
- Yet look on me--take not thine eyes away,
- Which feed upon the love within mine own,
- Which is indeed but the reflected ray
- Of thine own beauty from my spirit thrown.
- Yet speak to me--thy voice is as the tone _5
- Of my heart's echo, and I think I hear
- That thou yet lovest me; yet thou alone
- Like one before a mirror, without care
- Of aught but thine own features, imaged there;
- And yet I wear out life in watching thee; _10
- A toil so sweet at times, and thou indeed
- Art kind when I am sick, and pity me...
- ***
- MUTABILITY.
- [Published with "Alastor", 1816.]
- We are as clouds that veil the midnight moon;
- How restlessly they speed, and gleam, and quiver,
- Streaking the darkness radiantly!--yet soon
- Night closes round, and they are lost for ever:
- Or like forgotten lyres, whose dissonant strings _5
- Give various response to each varying blast,
- To whose frail frame no second motion brings
- One mood or modulation like the last.
- We rest.--A dream has power to poison sleep;
- We rise.--One wandering thought pollutes the day; _10
- We feel, conceive or reason, laugh or weep;
- Embrace fond woe, or cast our cares away:
- It is the same!--For, be it joy or sorrow,
- The path of its departure still is free:
- Man's yesterday may ne'er be like his morrow; _15
- Nought may endure but Mutability.
- NOTES:
- _15 may 1816; can Lodore, chapter 49, 1835 (Mrs. Shelley).
- _16 Nought may endure but 1816;
- Nor aught endure save Lodore, chapter 49, 1835 (Mrs. Shelley).
- ***
- ON DEATH.
- [For the date of composition see Editor's Note.
- Published with "Alastor", 1816.]
- THERE IS NO WORK, NOR DEVICE, NOR KNOWLEDGE, NOR WISDOM,
- IN THE GRAVE, WHITHER THOU GOEST.--Ecclesiastes.
- The pale, the cold, and the moony smile
- Which the meteor beam of a starless night
- Sheds on a lonely and sea-girt isle,
- Ere the dawning of morn's undoubted light,
- Is the flame of life so fickle and wan
- That flits round our steps till their strength is gone. _5
- O man! hold thee on in courage of soul
- Through the stormy shades of thy worldly way,
- And the billows of cloud that around thee roll
- Shall sleep in the light of a wondrous day, _10
- Where Hell and Heaven shall leave thee free
- To the universe of destiny.
- This world is the nurse of all we know,
- This world is the mother of all we feel,
- And the coming of death is a fearful blow _15
- To a brain unencompassed with nerves of steel;
- When all that we know, or feel, or see,
- Shall pass like an unreal mystery.
- The secret things of the grave are there,
- Where all but this frame must surely be, _20
- Though the fine-wrought eye and the wondrous ear
- No longer will live to hear or to see
- All that is great and all that is strange
- In the boundless realm of unending change.
- Who telleth a tale of unspeaking death? _25
- Who lifteth the veil of what is to come?
- Who painteth the shadows that are beneath
- The wide-winding caves of the peopled tomb?
- Or uniteth the hopes of what shall be
- With the fears and the love for that which we see? _30
- ***
- A SUMMER EVENING CHURCHYARD.
- LECHLADE, GLOUCESTERSHIRE.
- [Composed September, 1815. Published with "Alastor", 1816.]
- The wind has swept from the wide atmosphere
- Each vapour that obscured the sunset's ray;
- And pallid Evening twines its beaming hair
- In duskier braids around the languid eyes of Day:
- Silence and Twilight, unbeloved of men, _5
- Creep hand in hand from yon obscurest glen.
- They breathe their spells towards the departing day,
- Encompassing the earth, air, stars, and sea;
- Light, sound, and motion own the potent sway,
- Responding to the charm with its own mystery. _10
- The winds are still, or the dry church-tower grass
- Knows not their gentle motions as they pass.
- Thou too, aereal Pile! whose pinnacles
- Point from one shrine like pyramids of fire,
- Obeyest in silence their sweet solemn spells, _15
- Clothing in hues of heaven thy dim and distant spire,
- Around whose lessening and invisible height
- Gather among the stars the clouds of night.
- The dead are sleeping in their sepulchres:
- And, mouldering as they sleep, a thrilling sound, _20
- Half sense, half thought, among the darkness stirs,
- Breathed from their wormy beds all living things around,
- And mingling with the still night and mute sky
- Its awful hush is felt inaudibly.
- Thus solemnized and softened, death is mild _25
- And terrorless as this serenest night:
- Here could I hope, like some inquiring child
- Sporting on graves, that death did hide from human sight
- Sweet secrets, or beside its breathless sleep
- That loveliest dreams perpetual watch did keep. _30
- ***
- TO --.
- [Published with "Alastor", 1816. See Editor's Note.]
- DAKRTSI DIOISO POTMON 'APOTMON.
- Oh! there are spirits of the air,
- And genii of the evening breeze,
- And gentle ghosts, with eyes as fair
- As star-beams among twilight trees:--
- Such lovely ministers to meet _5
- Oft hast thou turned from men thy lonely feet.
- With mountain winds, and babbling springs,
- And moonlight seas, that are the voice
- Of these inexplicable things,
- Thou didst hold commune, and rejoice _10
- When they did answer thee; but they
- Cast, like a worthless boon, thy love away.
- And thou hast sought in starry eyes
- Beams that were never meant for thine,
- Another's wealth:--tame sacrifice
- To a fond faith! still dost thou pine? _15
- Still dost thou hope that greeting hands,
- Voice, looks, or lips, may answer thy demands?
- Ah! wherefore didst thou build thine hope
- On the false earth's inconstancy? _20
- Did thine own mind afford no scope
- Of love, or moving thoughts to thee?
- That natural scenes or human smiles
- Could steal the power to wind thee in their wiles?
- Yes, all the faithless smiles are fled _25
- Whose falsehood left thee broken-hearted;
- The glory of the moon is dead;
- Night's ghosts and dreams have now departed;
- Thine own soul still is true to thee,
- But changed to a foul fiend through misery. _30
- This fiend, whose ghastly presence ever
- Beside thee like thy shadow hangs,
- Dream not to chase;--the mad endeavour
- Would scourge thee to severer pangs.
- Be as thou art. Thy settled fate,
- Dark as it is, all change would aggravate. _35
- NOTES:
- _1 of 1816; in 1839.
- _8 moonlight 1816; mountain 1839.
- ***
- TO WORDSWORTH.
- [Published with "Alastor", 1816.]
- Poet of Nature, thou hast wept to know
- That things depart which never may return:
- Childhood and youth, friendship and love's first glow,
- Have fled like sweet dreams, leaving thee to mourn.
- These common woes I feel. One loss is mine _5
- Which thou too feel'st, yet I alone deplore.
- Thou wert as a lone star, whose light did shine
- On some frail bark in winter's midnight roar:
- Thou hast like to a rock-built refuge stood
- Above the blind and battling multitude: _10
- In honoured poverty thy voice did weave
- Songs consecrate to truth and liberty,--
- Deserting these, thou leavest me to grieve,
- Thus having been, that thou shouldst cease to be.
- ***
- FEELINGS OF A REPUBLICAN ON THE FALL OF BONAPARTE.
- [Published with "Alastor", 1816.]
- I hated thee, fallen tyrant! I did groan
- To think that a most unambitious slave,
- Like thou, shouldst dance and revel on the grave
- Of Liberty. Thou mightst have built thy throne
- Where it had stood even now: thou didst prefer _5
- A frail and bloody pomp which Time has swept
- In fragments towards Oblivion. Massacre,
- For this I prayed, would on thy sleep have crept,
- Treason and Slavery, Rapine, Fear, and Lust,
- And stifled thee, their minister. I know _10
- Too late, since thou and France are in the dust,
- That Virtue owns a more eternal foe
- Than Force or Fraud: old Custom, legal Crime,
- And bloody Faith the foulest birth of Time.
- ***
- LINES.
- [Published in Hunt's "Literary Pocket-Book", 1823, where it is headed
- "November, 1815". Reprinted in the "Posthumous Poems", 1824. See
- Editor's Note.]
- 1.
- The cold earth slept below,
- Above the cold sky shone;
- And all around, with a chilling sound,
- From caves of ice and fields of snow,
- The breath of night like death did flow _5
- Beneath the sinking moon.
- 2.
- The wintry hedge was black,
- The green grass was not seen,
- The birds did rest on the bare thorn's breast,
- Whose roots, beside the pathway track, _10
- Had bound their folds o'er many a crack
- Which the frost had made between.
- 3.
- Thine eyes glowed in the glare
- Of the moon's dying light;
- As a fen-fire's beam on a sluggish stream _15
- Gleams dimly, so the moon shone there,
- And it yellowed the strings of thy raven hair,
- That shook in the wind of night.
- 4.
- The moon made thy lips pale, beloved--
- The wind made thy bosom chill-- _20
- The night did shed on thy dear head
- Its frozen dew, and thou didst lie
- Where the bitter breath of the naked sky
- Might visit thee at will.
- NOTE:
- _17 raven 1823; tangled 1824.
- ***
- NOTE ON THE EARLY POEMS, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- The remainder of Shelley's Poems will be arranged in the order in which
- they were written. Of course, mistakes will occur in placing some of
- the shorter ones; for, as I have said, many of these were thrown aside,
- and I never saw them till I had the misery of looking over his writings
- after the hand that traced them was dust; and some were in the hands of
- others, and I never saw them till now. The subjects of the poems are
- often to me an unerring guide; but on other occasions I can only guess,
- by finding them in the pages of the same manuscript book that contains
- poems with the date of whose composition I am fully conversant. In the
- present arrangement all his poetical translations will be placed
- together at the end.
- The loss of his early papers prevents my being able to give any of the
- poetry of his boyhood. Of the few I give as "Early Poems", the greater
- part were published with "Alastor"; some of them were written
- previously, some at the same period. The poem beginning 'Oh, there are
- spirits in the air' was addressed in idea to Coleridge, whom he never
- knew; and at whose character he could only guess imperfectly, through
- his writings, and accounts he heard of him from some who knew him well.
- He regarded his change of opinions as rather an act of will than
- conviction, and believed that in his inner heart he would be haunted by
- what Shelley considered the better and holier aspirations of his youth.
- The summer evening that suggested to him the poem written in the
- churchyard of Lechlade occurred during his voyage up the Thames in
- 1815. He had been advised by a physician to live as much as possible in
- the open air; and a fortnight of a bright warm July was spent in
- tracing the Thames to its source. He never spent a season more
- tranquilly than the summer of 1815. He had just recovered from a severe
- pulmonary attack; the weather was warm and pleasant. He lived near
- Windsor Forest; and his life was spent under its shades or on the
- water, meditating subjects for verse. Hitherto, he had chiefly aimed at
- extending his political doctrines, and attempted so to do by appeals in
- prose essays to the people, exhorting them to claim their rights; but
- he had now begun to feel that the time for action was not ripe in
- England, and that the pen was the only instrument wherewith to prepare
- the way for better things.
- In the scanty journals kept during those years I find a record of the
- books that Shelley read during several years. During the years of 1814
- and 1815 the list is extensive. It includes, in Greek, Homer, Hesiod,
- Theocritus, the histories of Thucydides and Herodotus, and Diogenes
- Laertius. In Latin, Petronius, Suetonius, some of the works of Cicero,
- a large proportion of those of Seneca and Livy. In English, Milton's
- poems, Wordsworth's "Excursion", Southey's "Madoc" and "Thalaba", Locke
- "On the Human Understanding", Bacon's "Novum Organum". In Italian,
- Ariosto, Tasso, and Alfieri. In French, the "Reveries d'un Solitaire"
- of Rousseau. To these may be added several modern books of travel. He
- read few novels.
- ***
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1816.
- THE SUNSET.
- [Written at Bishopsgate, 1816 (spring). Published in full in the
- "Posthumous Poems", 1824. Lines 9-20, and 28-42, appeared in Hunt's
- "Literary Pocket-Book", 1823, under the titles, respectively, of
- "Sunset. From an Unpublished Poem", And "Grief. A Fragment".]
- There late was One within whose subtle being,
- As light and wind within some delicate cloud
- That fades amid the blue noon's burning sky,
- Genius and death contended. None may know
- The sweetness of the joy which made his breath _5
- Fail, like the trances of the summer air,
- When, with the Lady of his love, who then
- First knew the unreserve of mingled being,
- He walked along the pathway of a field
- Which to the east a hoar wood shadowed o'er, _10
- But to the west was open to the sky.
- There now the sun had sunk, but lines of gold
- Hung on the ashen clouds, and on the points
- Of the far level grass and nodding flowers
- And the old dandelion's hoary beard, _15
- And, mingled with the shades of twilight, lay
- On the brown massy woods--and in the east
- The broad and burning moon lingeringly rose
- Between the black trunks of the crowded trees,
- While the faint stars were gathering overhead.-- _20
- 'Is it not strange, Isabel,' said the youth,
- 'I never saw the sun? We will walk here
- To-morrow; thou shalt look on it with me.'
- That night the youth and lady mingled lay
- In love and sleep--but when the morning came _25
- The lady found her lover dead and cold.
- Let none believe that God in mercy gave
- That stroke. The lady died not, nor grew wild,
- But year by year lived on--in truth I think
- Her gentleness and patience and sad smiles, _30
- And that she did not die, but lived to tend
- Her aged father, were a kind of madness,
- If madness 'tis to be unlike the world.
- For but to see her were to read the tale
- Woven by some subtlest bard, to make hard hearts _35
- Dissolve away in wisdom-working grief;--
- Her eyes were black and lustreless and wan:
- Her eyelashes were worn away with tears,
- Her lips and cheeks were like things dead--so pale;
- Her hands were thin, and through their wandering veins _40
- And weak articulations might be seen
- Day's ruddy light. The tomb of thy dead self
- Which one vexed ghost inhabits, night and day,
- Is all, lost child, that now remains of thee!
- 'Inheritor of more than earth can give, _45
- Passionless calm and silence unreproved,
- Whether the dead find, oh, not sleep! but rest,
- And are the uncomplaining things they seem,
- Or live, or drop in the deep sea of Love;
- Oh, that like thine, mine epitaph were--Peace!' _50
- This was the only moan she ever made.
- NOTES:
- _4 death 1839; youth 1824.
- _22 sun? We will walk 1824; sunrise? We will wake cj. Forman.
- _37 Her eyes...wan Hunt, 1823; omitted 1824, 1839.
- _38 worn 1824; torn 1839.
- ***
- HYMN TO INTELLECTUAL BEAUTY.
- [Composed, probably, in Switzerland, in the summer of 1816. Published
- in Hunt's "Examiner", January 19, 1817, and with "Rosalind and Helen",
- 1819.]
- 1.
- The awful shadow of some unseen Power
- Floats though unseen among us,--visiting
- This various world with as inconstant wing
- As summer winds that creep from flower to flower,--
- Like moonbeams that behind some piny mountain shower, _5
- It visits with inconstant glance
- Each human heart and countenance;
- Like hues and harmonies of evening,--
- Like clouds in starlight widely spread,--
- Like memory of music fled,-- _10
- Like aught that for its grace may be
- Dear, and yet dearer for its mystery.
- 2.
- Spirit of BEAUTY, that dost consecrate
- With thine own hues all thou dost shine upon
- Of human thought or form,--where art thou gone? _15
- Why dost thou pass away and leave our state,
- This dim vast vale of tears, vacant and desolate?
- Ask why the sunlight not for ever
- Weaves rainbows o'er yon mountain-river,
- Why aught should fail and fade that once is shown, _20
- Why fear and dream and death and birth
- Cast on the daylight of this earth
- Such gloom,--why man has such a scope
- For love and hate, despondency and hope?
- 3.
- No voice from some sublimer world hath ever _25
- To sage or poet these responses given--
- Therefore the names of Demon, Ghost, and Heaven.
- Remain the records of their vain endeavour,
- Frail spells--whose uttered charm might not avail to sever,
- From all we hear and all we see, _30
- Doubt, chance, and mutability.
- Thy light alone--like mist o'er mountains driven,
- Or music by the night-wind sent
- Through strings of some still instrument,
- Or moonlight on a midnight stream, _35
- Gives grace and truth to life's unquiet dream.
- 4.
- Love, Hope, and Self-esteem, like clouds depart
- And come, for some uncertain moments lent.
- Man were immortal, and omnipotent,
- Didst thou, unknown and awful as thou art, _40
- Keep with thy glorious train firm state within his heart.
- Thou messenger of sympathies,
- That wax and wane in lovers' eyes--
- Thou--that to human thought art nourishment,
- Like darkness to a dying flame! _45
- Depart not as thy shadow came
- Depart not--lest the grave should be,
- Like life and fear, a dark reality.
- 5.
- While yet a boy I sought for ghosts, and sped
- Through many a listening chamber, cave and ruin, _50
- And starlight wood, with fearful steps pursuing
- Hopes of high talk with the departed dead.
- I called on poisonous names with which our youth is fed;
- I was not heard--I saw them not--
- When musing deeply on the lot _55
- Of life, at that sweet time when winds are wooing
- All vital things that wake to bring
- News of birds and blossoming,--
- Sudden, thy shadow fell on me;
- I shrieked, and clasped my hands in ecstasy! _60
- 6.
- I vowed that I would dedicate my powers
- To thee and thine--have I not kept the vow?
- With beating heart and streaming eyes, even now
- I call the phantoms of a thousand hours
- Each from his voiceless grave: they have in visioned bowers _65
- Of studious zeal or love's delight
- Outwatched with me the envious night--
- They know that never joy illumed my brow
- Unlinked with hope that thou wouldst free
- This world from its dark slavery, _70
- That thou--O awful LOVELINESS,
- Wouldst give whate'er these words cannot express.
- 7.
- The day becomes more solemn and serene
- When noon is past--there is a harmony
- In autumn, and a lustre in its sky, _75
- Which through the summer is not heard or seen,
- As if it could not be, as if it had not been!
- Thus let thy power, which like the truth
- Of nature on my passive youth
- Descended, to my onward life supply _80
- Its calm--to one who worships thee,
- And every form containing thee,
- Whom, SPIRIT fair, thy spells did bind
- To fear himself, and love all human kind.
- NOTES:
- _2 among 1819; amongst 1817.
- _14 dost 1819; doth 1817.
- _21 fear and dream 1819; care and pain Boscombe manuscript.
- _37-_48 omitted Boscombe manuscript.
- _44 art 1817; are 1819.
- _76 or 1819; nor 1839.
- ***
- MONT BLANC.
- LINES WRITTEN IN THE VALE OF CHAMOUNI.
- [Composed in Switzerland, July, 1816 (see date below). Printed at the
- end of the "History of a Six Weeks' Tour" published by Shelley in 1817,
- and reprinted with "Posthumous Poems", 1824. Amongst the Boscombe
- manuscripts is a draft of this Ode, mainly in pencil, which has been
- collated by Dr. Garnett.]
- 1.
- The everlasting universe of things
- Flows through the mind, and rolls its rapid waves,
- Now dark--now glittering--now reflecting gloom--
- Now lending splendour, where from secret springs
- The source of human thought its tribute brings _5
- Of waters,--with a sound but half its own,
- Such as a feeble brook will oft assume
- In the wild woods, among the mountains lone,
- Where waterfalls around it leap for ever,
- Where woods and winds contend, and a vast river _10
- Over its rocks ceaselessly bursts and raves.
- 2.
- Thus thou, Ravine of Arve--dark, deep Ravine--
- Thou many-coloured, many-voiced vale,
- Over whose pines, and crags, and caverns sail
- Fast cloud-shadows and sunbeams: awful scene, _15
- Where Power in likeness of the Arve comes down
- From the ice-gulfs that gird his secret throne,
- Bursting through these dark mountains like the flame
- Of lightning through the tempest;--thou dost lie,
- Thy giant brood of pines around thee clinging, _20
- Children of elder time, in whose devotion
- The chainless winds still come and ever came
- To drink their odours, and their mighty swinging
- To hear--an old and solemn harmony;
- Thine earthly rainbows stretched across the sweep _25
- Of the ethereal waterfall, whose veil
- Robes some unsculptured image; the strange sleep
- Which when the voices of the desert fail
- Wraps all in its own deep eternity;--
- Thy caverns echoing to the Arve's commotion, _30
- A loud, lone sound no other sound can tame;
- Thou art pervaded with that ceaseless motion,
- Thou art the path of that unresting sound--
- Dizzy Ravine! and when I gaze on thee
- I seem as in a trance sublime and strange _35
- To muse on my own separate fantasy,
- My own, my human mind, which passively
- Now renders and receives fast influencings,
- Holding an unremitting interchange
- With the clear universe of things around; _40
- One legion of wild thoughts, whose wandering wings
- Now float above thy darkness, and now rest
- Where that or thou art no unbidden guest,
- In the still cave of the witch Poesy,
- Seeking among the shadows that pass by _45
- Ghosts of all things that are, some shade of thee,
- Some phantom, some faint image; till the breast
- From which they fled recalls them, thou art there!
- 3.
- Some say that gleams of a remoter world
- Visit the soul in sleep,--that death is slumber, _50
- And that its shapes the busy thoughts outnumber
- Of those who wake and live.--I look on high;
- Has some unknown omnipotence unfurled
- The veil of life and death? or do I lie
- In dream, and does the mightier world of sleep _55
- Spread far around and inaccessibly
- Its circles? For the very spirit fails,
- Driven like a homeless cloud from steep to steep
- That vanishes among the viewless gales!
- Far, far above, piercing the infinite sky, _60
- Mont Blanc appears,--still, snowy, and serene--
- Its subject mountains their unearthly forms
- Pile around it, ice and rock; broad vales between
- Of frozen floods, unfathomable deeps,
- Blue as the overhanging heaven, that spread _65
- And wind among the accumulated steeps;
- A desert peopled by the storms alone,
- Save when the eagle brings some hunter's bone,
- And the wolf tracts her there--how hideously
- Its shapes are heaped around! rude, bare, and high, _70
- Ghastly, and scarred, and riven.--Is this the scene
- Where the old Earthquake-daemon taught her young
- Ruin? Were these their toys? or did a sea
- Of fire envelope once this silent snow?
- None can reply--all seems eternal now. _75
- The wilderness has a mysterious tongue
- Which teaches awful doubt, or faith so mild,
- So solemn, so serene, that man may be,
- But for such faith, with nature reconciled;
- Thou hast a voice, great Mountain, to repeal _80
- Large codes of fraud and woe; not understood
- By all, but which the wise, and great, and good
- Interpret, or make felt, or deeply feel.
- 4.
- The fields, the lakes, the forests, and the streams,
- Ocean, and all the living things that dwell _85
- Within the daedal earth; lightning, and rain,
- Earthquake, and fiery flood, and hurricane,
- The torpor of the year when feeble dreams
- Visit the hidden buds, or dreamless sleep
- Holds every future leaf and flower;--the bound _90
- With which from that detested trance they leap;
- The works and ways of man, their death and birth,
- And that of him and all that his may be;
- All things that move and breathe with toil and sound
- Are born and die; revolve, subside, and swell. _95
- Power dwells apart in its tranquillity,
- Remote, serene, and inaccessible:
- And THIS, the naked countenance of earth,
- On which I gaze, even these primaeval mountains
- Teach the adverting mind. The glaciers creep _100
- Like snakes that watch their prey, from their far fountains,
- Slow rolling on; there, many a precipice,
- Frost and the Sun in scorn of mortal power
- Have piled: dome, pyramid, and pinnacle,
- A city of death, distinct with many a tower _105
- And wall impregnable of beaming ice.
- Yet not a city, but a flood of ruin
- Is there, that from the boundaries of the sky
- Rolls its perpetual stream; vast pines are strewing
- Its destined path, or in the mangled soil _110
- Branchless and shattered stand; the rocks, drawn down
- From yon remotest waste, have overthrown
- The limits of the dead and living world,
- Never to be reclaimed. The dwelling-place
- Of insects, beasts, and birds, becomes its spoil; _115
- Their food and their retreat for ever gone,
- So much of life and joy is lost. The race
- Of man flies far in dread; his work and dwelling
- Vanish, like smoke before the tempest's stream,
- And their place is not known. Below, vast caves _120
- Shine in the rushing torrents' restless gleam,
- Which from those secret chasms in tumult welling
- Meet in the vale, and one majestic River,
- The breath and blood of distant lands, for ever
- Rolls its loud waters to the ocean waves, _125
- Breathes its swift vapours to the circling air.
- 5.
- Mont Blanc yet gleams on high--the power is there,
- The still and solemn power of many sights,
- And many sounds, and much of life and death.
- In the calm darkness of the moonless nights, _130
- In the lone glare of day, the snows descend
- Upon that Mountain; none beholds them there,
- Nor when the flakes burn in the sinking sun,
- Or the star-beams dart through them:--Winds contend
- Silently there, and heap the snow with breath _135
- Rapid and strong, but silently! Its home
- The voiceless lightning in these solitudes
- Keeps innocently, and like vapour broods
- Over the snow. The secret strength of things
- Which governs thought, and to the infinite dome _140
- Of heaven is as a law, inhabits thee!
- And what were thou, and earth, and stars, and sea,
- If to the human mind's imaginings
- Silence and solitude were vacancy?
- July 23, 1816.
- NOTES:
- _15 cloud-shadows]cloud shadows 1817;
- cloud, shadows 1824; clouds, shadows 1839.
- _20 Thy 1824; The 1839.
- _53 unfurled]upfurled cj. James Thomson ('B.V.').
- _56 Spread 1824; Speed 1839.
- _69 tracks her there 1824; watches her Boscombe manuscript.
- _79 But for such 1824; In such a Boscombe manuscript.
- _108 boundaries of the sky]boundary of the skies cj. Rossetti
- (cf. lines 102, 106).
- _121 torrents']torrent's 1817, 1824, 1839.
- ***
- CANCELLED PASSAGE OF MONT BLANC.
- [Published by Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- There is a voice, not understood by all,
- Sent from these desert-caves. It is the roar
- Of the rent ice-cliff which the sunbeams call,
- Plunging into the vale--it is the blast
- Descending on the pines--the torrents pour... _5
- ***
- FRAGMENT: HOME.
- [Published by Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- Dear home, thou scene of earliest hopes and joys,
- The least of which wronged Memory ever makes
- Bitterer than all thine unremembered tears.
- ***
- FRAGMENT OF A GHOST STORY.
- [Published by Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- A shovel of his ashes took
- From the hearth's obscurest nook,
- Muttering mysteries as she went.
- Helen and Henry knew that Granny
- Was as much afraid of Ghosts as any, _5
- And so they followed hard--
- But Helen clung to her brother's arm,
- And her own spasm made her shake.
- ***
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1816, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- Shelley wrote little during this year. The poem entitled "The Sunset"
- was written in the spring of the year, while still residing at
- Bishopsgate. He spent the summer on the shores of the Lake of Geneva.
- The "Hymn to Intellectual Beauty" was conceived during his voyage round
- the lake with Lord Byron. He occupied himself during this voyage by
- reading the "Nouvelle Heloise" for the first time. The reading it on
- the very spot where the scenes are laid added to the interest; and he
- was at once surprised and charmed by the passionate eloquence and
- earnest enthralling interest that pervade this work. There was
- something in the character of Saint-Preux, in his abnegation of self,
- and in the worship he paid to Love, that coincided with Shelley's own
- disposition; and, though differing in many of the views and shocked by
- others, yet the effect of the whole was fascinating and delightful.
- "Mont Blanc" was inspired by a view of that mountain and its
- surrounding peaks and valleys, as he lingered on the Bridge of Arve on
- his way through the Valley of Chamouni. Shelley makes the following
- mention of this poem in his publication of the "History of a Six Weeks'
- Tour, and Letters from Switzerland": 'The poem entitled "Mont Blanc" is
- written by the author of the two letters from Chamouni and Vevai. It
- was composed under the immediate impression of the deep and powerful
- feelings excited by the objects which it attempts to describe; and, as
- an undisciplined overflowing of the soul, rests its claim to
- approbation on an attempt to imitate the untamable wildness and
- inaccessible solemnity from which those feelings sprang.'
- This was an eventful year, and less time was given to study than usual.
- In the list of his reading I find, in Greek, Theocritus, the
- "Prometheus" of Aeschylus, several of Plutarch's "Lives", and the works
- of Lucian. In Latin, Lucretius, Pliny's "Letters", the "Annals" and
- "Germany" of Tacitus. In French, the "History of the French Revolution"
- by Lacretelle. He read for the first time, this year, Montaigne's
- "Essays", and regarded them ever after as one of the most delightful
- and instructive books in the world. The list is scanty in English
- works: Locke's "Essay", "Political Justice", and Coleridge's "Lay
- Sermon", form nearly the whole. It was his frequent habit to read aloud
- to me in the evening; in this way we read, this year, the New
- Testament, "Paradise Lost", Spenser's "Faery Queen", and "Don Quixote".
- ***
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1817.
- MARIANNE'S DREAM.
- [Composed at Marlow, 1817. Published in Hunt's "Literary Pocket-Book",
- 1819, and reprinted in "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- A pale Dream came to a Lady fair,
- And said, A boon, a boon, I pray!
- I know the secrets of the air,
- And things are lost in the glare of day,
- Which I can make the sleeping see, _5
- If they will put their trust in me.
- 2.
- And thou shalt know of things unknown,
- If thou wilt let me rest between
- The veiny lids, whose fringe is thrown
- Over thine eyes so dark and sheen: _10
- And half in hope, and half in fright,
- The Lady closed her eyes so bright.
- 3.
- At first all deadly shapes were driven
- Tumultuously across her sleep,
- And o'er the vast cope of bending heaven _15
- All ghastly-visaged clouds did sweep;
- And the Lady ever looked to spy
- If the golden sun shone forth on high.
- 4.
- And as towards the east she turned,
- She saw aloft in the morning air, _20
- Which now with hues of sunrise burned,
- A great black Anchor rising there;
- And wherever the Lady turned her eyes,
- It hung before her in the skies.
- 5.
- The sky was blue as the summer sea, _25
- The depths were cloudless overhead,
- The air was calm as it could be,
- There was no sight or sound of dread,
- But that black Anchor floating still
- Over the piny eastern hill. _30
- 6.
- The Lady grew sick with a weight of fear
- To see that Anchor ever hanging,
- And veiled her eyes; she then did hear
- The sound as of a dim low clanging,
- And looked abroad if she might know _35
- Was it aught else, or but the flow
- Of the blood in her own veins, to and fro.
- 7.
- There was a mist in the sunless air,
- Which shook as it were with an earthquake's shock,
- But the very weeds that blossomed there _40
- Were moveless, and each mighty rock
- Stood on its basis steadfastly;
- The Anchor was seen no more on high.
- 8.
- But piled around, with summits hid
- In lines of cloud at intervals, _45
- Stood many a mountain pyramid
- Among whose everlasting walls
- Two mighty cities shone, and ever
- Through the red mist their domes did quiver.
- 9.
- On two dread mountains, from whose crest, _50
- Might seem, the eagle, for her brood,
- Would ne'er have hung her dizzy nest,
- Those tower-encircled cities stood.
- A vision strange such towers to see,
- Sculptured and wrought so gorgeously, _55
- Where human art could never be.
- 10.
- And columns framed of marble white,
- And giant fanes, dome over dome
- Piled, and triumphant gates, all bright
- With workmanship, which could not come _60
- From touch of mortal instrument,
- Shot o'er the vales, or lustre lent
- From its own shapes magnificent.
- 11.
- But still the Lady heard that clang
- Filling the wide air far away; _65
- And still the mist whose light did hang
- Among the mountains shook alway,
- So that the Lady's heart beat fast,
- As half in joy, and half aghast,
- On those high domes her look she cast. _70
- 12.
- Sudden, from out that city sprung
- A light that made the earth grow red;
- Two flames that each with quivering tongue
- Licked its high domes, and overhead
- Among those mighty towers and fanes _75
- Dropped fire, as a volcano rains
- Its sulphurous ruin on the plains.
- 13.
- And hark! a rush as if the deep
- Had burst its bonds; she looked behind
- And saw over the western steep _80
- A raging flood descend, and wind
- Through that wide vale; she felt no fear,
- But said within herself, 'Tis clear
- These towers are Nature's own, and she
- To save them has sent forth the sea. _85
- 14.
- And now those raging billows came
- Where that fair Lady sate, and she
- Was borne towards the showering flame
- By the wild waves heaped tumultuously.
- And, on a little plank, the flow _90
- Of the whirlpool bore her to and fro.
- 15.
- The flames were fiercely vomited
- From every tower and every dome,
- And dreary light did widely shed
- O'er that vast flood's suspended foam, _95
- Beneath the smoke which hung its night
- On the stained cope of heaven's light.
- 16.
- The plank whereon that Lady sate
- Was driven through the chasms, about and about,
- Between the peaks so desolate _100
- Of the drowning mountains, in and out,
- As the thistle-beard on a whirlwind sails--
- While the flood was filling those hollow vales.
- 17.
- At last her plank an eddy crossed,
- And bore her to the city's wall, _105
- Which now the flood had reached almost;
- It might the stoutest heart appal
- To hear the fire roar and hiss
- Through the domes of those mighty palaces.
- 18.
- The eddy whirled her round and round _110
- Before a gorgeous gate, which stood
- Piercing the clouds of smoke which bound
- Its aery arch with light like blood;
- She looked on that gate of marble clear,
- With wonder that extinguished fear. _115
- 19.
- For it was filled with sculptures rarest,
- Of forms most beautiful and strange,
- Like nothing human, but the fairest
- Of winged shapes, whose legions range
- Throughout the sleep of those that are, _120
- Like this same Lady, good and fair.
- 20.
- And as she looked, still lovelier grew
- Those marble forms;--the sculptor sure
- Was a strong spirit, and the hue
- Of his own mind did there endure _125
- After the touch, whose power had braided
- Such grace, was in some sad change faded.
- 21.
- She looked, the flames were dim, the flood
- Grew tranquil as a woodland river
- Winding through hills in solitude; _130
- Those marble shapes then seemed to quiver,
- And their fair limbs to float in motion,
- Like weeds unfolding in the ocean.
- 22.
- And their lips moved; one seemed to speak,
- When suddenly the mountains cracked, _135
- And through the chasm the flood did break
- With an earth-uplifting cataract:
- The statues gave a joyous scream,
- And on its wings the pale thin Dream
- Lifted the Lady from the stream. _140
- 23.
- The dizzy flight of that phantom pale
- Waked the fair Lady from her sleep,
- And she arose, while from the veil
- Of her dark eyes the Dream did creep,
- And she walked about as one who knew _145
- That sleep has sights as clear and true
- As any waking eyes can view.
- NOTES:
- _18 golden 1819; gold 1824, 1839.
- _28 or 1824; nor 1839.
- _62 or]a cj. Rossetti.
- _63 its]their cj. Rossetti.
- _92 flames cj. Rossetti; waves 1819, 1824, 1839.
- _101 mountains 1819; mountain 1824, 1839.
- _106 flood]flames cj. James Thomson ('B.V.').
- _120 that 1819, 1824; who 1839.
- _135 mountains 1819; mountain 1824, 1839.
- ***
- TO CONSTANTIA, SINGING.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley in "Posthumous Poems", 1824. Amongst the
- Shelley manuscripts at the Bodleian is a chaotic first draft, from
- which Mr. Locock ["Examination", etc., 1903, pages 60-62] has, with
- patient ingenuity, disengaged a first and a second stanza consistent
- with the metrical scheme of stanzas 3 and 4. The two stanzas thus
- recovered are printed here immediately below the poem as edited by Mrs.
- Shelley. It need hardly be added that Mr. Locock's restored version
- cannot, any more than Mrs. Shelley's obviously imperfect one, be
- regarded in the light of a final recension.]
- 1.
- Thus to be lost and thus to sink and die,
- Perchance were death indeed!--Constantia, turn!
- In thy dark eyes a power like light doth lie,
- Even though the sounds which were thy voice, which burn
- Between thy lips, are laid to sleep; _5
- Within thy breath, and on thy hair, like odour, it is yet,
- And from thy touch like fire doth leap.
- Even while I write, my burning cheeks are wet.
- Alas, that the torn heart can bleed, but not forget!
- 2.
- A breathless awe, like the swift change _10
- Unseen, but felt in youthful slumbers,
- Wild, sweet, but uncommunicably strange,
- Thou breathest now in fast ascending numbers.
- The cope of heaven seems rent and cloven
- By the enchantment of thy strain, _15
- And on my shoulders wings are woven,
- To follow its sublime career
- Beyond the mighty moons that wane
- Upon the verge of Nature's utmost sphere,
- Till the world's shadowy walls are past and disappear. _20
- 3.
- Her voice is hovering o'er my soul--it lingers
- O'ershadowing it with soft and lulling wings,
- The blood and life within those snowy fingers
- Teach witchcraft to the instrumental strings.
- My brain is wild, my breath comes quick-- _25
- The blood is listening in my frame,
- And thronging shadows, fast and thick,
- Fall on my overflowing eyes;
- My heart is quivering like a flame;
- As morning dew, that in the sunbeam dies, _30
- I am dissolved in these consuming ecstasies.
- 4.
- I have no life, Constantia, now, but thee,
- Whilst, like the world-surrounding air, thy song
- Flows on, and fills all things with melody.--
- Now is thy voice a tempest swift and strong, _35
- On which, like one in trance upborne,
- Secure o'er rocks and waves I sweep,
- Rejoicing like a cloud of morn.
- Now 'tis the breath of summer night,
- Which when the starry waters sleep,
- Round western isles, with incense-blossoms bright, _40
- Lingering, suspends my soul in its voluptuous flight.
- STANZAS 1 AND 2.
- As restored by Mr. C.D. Locock.
- 1.
- Cease, cease--for such wild lessons madmen learn
- Thus to be lost, and thus to sink and die
- Perchance were death indeed!--Constantia turn
- In thy dark eyes a power like light doth lie
- Even though the sounds its voice that were _5
- Between [thy] lips are laid to sleep:
- Within thy breath, and on thy hair
- Like odour, it is [lingering] yet
- And from thy touch like fire doth leap--
- Even while I write, my burning cheeks are wet-- _10
- Alas, that the torn heart can bleed but not forget.
- 2.
- [A deep and] breathless awe like the swift change
- Of dreams unseen but felt in youthful slumbers
- Wild sweet yet incommunicably strange
- Thou breathest now in fast ascending numbers... _15
- ***
- TO CONSTANTIA.
- [Dated 1817 by Mrs. Shelley, and printed by her in the "Poetical
- Works", 1839, 1st edition. A copy exists amongst the Shelley
- manuscripts at the Bodleian. See Mr. C.D. Locock's "Examination", etc.,
- 1903, page 46.]
- 1.
- The rose that drinks the fountain dew
- In the pleasant air of noon,
- Grows pale and blue with altered hue--
- In the gaze of the nightly moon;
- For the planet of frost, so cold and bright, _5
- Makes it wan with her borrowed light.
- 2.
- Such is my heart--roses are fair,
- And that at best a withered blossom;
- But thy false care did idly wear
- Its withered leaves in a faithless bosom; _10
- And fed with love, like air and dew,
- Its growth--
- NOTES:
- _1 The rose]The red Rose B.
- _2 pleasant]fragrant B.
- _6 her omitted B.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: TO ONE SINGING.
- [Dated 1817 by Mrs. Shelley, and published in the "Poetical Works",
- 1839, 1st edition. The manuscript original, by which Mr. Locock has
- revised and (by one line) enlarged the text, is amongst the Shelley
- manuscripts at the Bodleian. The metre, as Mr. Locock ("Examination",
- etc., 1903, page 63) points out, is terza rima.]
- My spirit like a charmed bark doth swim
- Upon the liquid waves of thy sweet singing,
- Far far away into the regions dim
- Of rapture--as a boat, with swift sails winging
- Its way adown some many-winding river, _5
- Speeds through dark forests o'er the waters swinging...
- NOTES:
- _3 Far far away B.; Far away 1839.
- _6 Speeds...swinging B.; omitted 1839.
- ***
- A FRAGMENT: TO MUSIC.
- [Published in "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.
- Dated 1817 (Mrs. Shelley).]
- Silver key of the fountain of tears,
- Where the spirit drinks till the brain is wild;
- Softest grave of a thousand fears,
- Where their mother, Care, like a drowsy child,
- Is laid asleep in flowers. _5
- ***
- ANOTHER FRAGMENT: TO MUSIC.
- [Published in "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.
- Dated 1817 (Mrs. Shelley).]
- No, Music, thou art not the 'food of Love.'
- Unless Love feeds upon its own sweet self,
- Till it becomes all Music murmurs of.
- ***
- 'MIGHTY EAGLE'.
- SUPPOSED TO BE ADDRESSED TO WILLIAM GODWIN.
- [Published in 1882 ("Poetical Works of P. B. S.") by Mr. H. Buxton
- Forman, C.B., by whom it is dated 1817.]
- Mighty eagle! thou that soarest
- O'er the misty mountain forest,
- And amid the light of morning
- Like a cloud of glory hiest,
- And when night descends defiest _5
- The embattled tempests' warning!
- ***
- TO THE LORD CHANCELLOR.
- [Published in part (5-9, 14) by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839,
- 1st edition (without title); in full 2nd edition (with title). Four
- transcripts in Mrs. Shelley's hand are extant: two--Leigh Hunt's and
- Ch. Cowden Clarke's--described by Forman, and two belonging to Mr. C.W.
- Frederickson of Brooklyn, described by Woodberry ["Poetical Works",
- Centenary Edition, 3 193-6]. One of the latter (here referred to as Fa)
- is corrected in Shelley's autograph. A much-corrected draft in
- Shelley's hand is in the Harvard manuscript book.]
- 1.
- Thy country's curse is on thee, darkest crest
- Of that foul, knotted, many-headed worm
- Which rends our Mother's bosom--Priestly Pest!
- Masked Resurrection of a buried Form!
- 2.
- Thy country's curse is on thee! Justice sold, _5
- Truth trampled, Nature's landmarks overthrown,
- And heaps of fraud-accumulated gold,
- Plead, loud as thunder, at Destruction's throne.
- 3.
- And whilst that sure slow Angel which aye stands
- Watching the beck of Mutability _10
- Delays to execute her high commands,
- And, though a nation weeps, spares thine and thee,
- 4.
- Oh, let a father's curse be on thy soul,
- And let a daughter's hope be on thy tomb;
- Be both, on thy gray head, a leaden cowl _15
- To weigh thee down to thine approaching doom.
- 5.
- I curse thee by a parent's outraged love,
- By hopes long cherished and too lately lost,
- By gentle feelings thou couldst never prove,
- By griefs which thy stern nature never crossed; _20
- 6.
- By those infantine smiles of happy light,
- Which were a fire within a stranger's hearth,
- Quenched even when kindled, in untimely night
- Hiding the promise of a lovely birth:
- 7.
- By those unpractised accents of young speech, _25
- Which he who is a father thought to frame
- To gentlest lore, such as the wisest teach--
- THOU strike the lyre of mind!--oh, grief and shame!
- 8.
- By all the happy see in children's growth--
- That undeveloped flower of budding years-- _30
- Sweetness and sadness interwoven both,
- Source of the sweetest hopes and saddest fears-
- 9.
- By all the days, under an hireling's care,
- Of dull constraint and bitter heaviness,--
- O wretched ye if ever any were,-- _35
- Sadder than orphans, yet not fatherless!
- 10.
- By the false cant which on their innocent lips
- Must hang like poison on an opening bloom,
- By the dark creeds which cover with eclipse
- Their pathway from the cradle to the tomb-- _40
- 11.
- By thy most impious Hell, and all its terror;
- By all the grief, the madness, and the guilt
- Of thine impostures, which must be their error--
- That sand on which thy crumbling power is built--
- 12.
- By thy complicity with lust and hate-- _45
- Thy thirst for tears--thy hunger after gold--
- The ready frauds which ever on thee wait--
- The servile arts in which thou hast grown old--
- 13.
- By thy most killing sneer, and by thy smile--
- By all the arts and snares of thy black den, _50
- And--for thou canst outweep the crocodile--
- By thy false tears--those millstones braining men--
- 14.
- By all the hate which checks a father's love--
- By all the scorn which kills a father's care--
- By those most impious hands which dared remove _55
- Nature's high bounds--by thee--and by despair--
- 15.
- Yes, the despair which bids a father groan,
- And cry, 'My children are no longer mine--
- The blood within those veins may be mine own,
- But--Tyrant--their polluted souls are thine;-- _60
- 16.
- I curse thee--though I hate thee not.--O slave!
- If thou couldst quench the earth-consuming Hell
- Of which thou art a daemon, on thy grave
- This curse should be a blessing. Fare thee well!
- NOTES:
- _9 Angel which aye cancelled by Shelley for Fate which ever Fa.
- _24 promise of a 1839, 2nd edition; promises of 1839, 1st edition.
- _27 lore]love Fa.
- _32 and saddest]the saddest Fa.
- _36 yet not fatherless! cancelled by Shelley for why not fatherless? Fa.
- _41-_44 By...built 'crossed by Shelley and marked dele by Mrs. Shelley'
- (Woodberry) Fa.
- _50 arts and snares 1839, 1st edition;
- snares and arts Harvard Coll. manuscript;
- snares and nets Fa.;
- acts and snares 1839, 2nd edition.
- _59 those]their Fa.
- ***
- TO WILLIAM SHELLEY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley (1, 5, 6), "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st
- edition; in full, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition. A transcript is
- extant in Mrs. Shelley's hand.]
- 1.
- The billows on the beach are leaping around it,
- The bark is weak and frail,
- The sea looks black, and the clouds that bound it
- Darkly strew the gale.
- Come with me, thou delightful child,
- Come with me, though the wave is wild, _5
- And the winds are loose, we must not stay,
- Or the slaves of the law may rend thee away.
- 2.
- They have taken thy brother and sister dear,
- They have made them unfit for thee; _10
- They have withered the smile and dried the tear
- Which should have been sacred to me.
- To a blighting faith and a cause of crime
- They have bound them slaves in youthly prime,
- And they will curse my name and thee _15
- Because we fearless are and free.
- 3.
- Come thou, beloved as thou art;
- Another sleepeth still
- Near thy sweet mother's anxious heart,
- Which thou with joy shalt fill, _20
- With fairest smiles of wonder thrown
- On that which is indeed our own,
- And which in distant lands will be
- The dearest playmate unto thee.
- 4.
- Fear not the tyrants will rule for ever, _25
- Or the priests of the evil faith;
- They stand on the brink of that raging river,
- Whose waves they have tainted with death.
- It is fed from the depth of a thousand dells,
- Around them it foams and rages and swells; _30
- And their swords and their sceptres I floating see,
- Like wrecks on the surge of eternity.
- 5.
- Rest, rest, and shriek not, thou gentle child!
- The rocking of the boat thou fearest,
- And the cold spray and the clamour wild?-- _35
- There, sit between us two, thou dearest--
- Me and thy mother--well we know
- The storm at which thou tremblest so,
- With all its dark and hungry graves,
- Less cruel than the savage slaves _40
- Who hunt us o'er these sheltering waves.
- 6.
- This hour will in thy memory
- Be a dream of days forgotten long.
- We soon shall dwell by the azure sea
- Of serene and golden Italy,
- Or Greece, the Mother of the free; _45
- And I will teach thine infant tongue
- To call upon those heroes old
- In their own language, and will mould
- Thy growing spirit in the flame
- Of Grecian lore, that by such name _50
- A patriot's birthright thou mayst claim!
- NOTES:
- _1 on the beach omitted 1839, 1st edition.
- _8 of the law 1839, 1st edition; of law 1839, 2nd edition.
- _14 prime transcript; time editions 1839.
- _16 fearless are editions 1839; are fearless transcript.
- _20 shalt transcript; wilt editions 1839.
- _25-_32 Fear...eternity omitted, transcript.
- See "Rosalind and Helen", lines 894-901.
- _33 and transcript; omitted editions 1839.
- _41 us transcript, 1839, 1st edition; thee 1839, 2nd edition.
- _42 will in transcript, 1839, 2nd edition;
- will sometime in 1839, 1st edition.
- _43 long transcript; omitted editions 1839.
- _48 those transcript, 1839, 1st edition; their 1839, 2nd edition.
- ***
- FROM THE ORIGINAL DRAFT OF THE POEM TO WILLIAM SHELLEY.
- [Published in Dr. Garnett's "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- 1.
- The world is now our dwelling-place;
- Where'er the earth one fading trace
- Of what was great and free does keep,
- That is our home!...
- Mild thoughts of man's ungentle race _5
- Shall our contented exile reap;
- For who that in some happy place
- His own free thoughts can freely chase
- By woods and waves can clothe his face
- In cynic smiles? Child! we shall weep. _10
- 2.
- This lament,
- The memory of thy grievous wrong
- Will fade...
- But genius is omnipotent
- To hallow... _15
- ***
- ON FANNY GODWIN.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, among the poems of 1817, in "Poetical
- Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- Her voice did quiver as we parted,
- Yet knew I not that heart was broken
- From which it came, and I departed
- Heeding not the words then spoken.
- Misery--O Misery, _5
- This world is all too wide for thee.
- ***
- LINES.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley with the date 'November 5th, 1817,' in
- "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- That time is dead for ever, child!
- Drowned, frozen, dead for ever!
- We look on the past
- And stare aghast
- At the spectres wailing, pale and ghast, _5
- Of hopes which thou and I beguiled
- To death on life's dark river.
- 2.
- The stream we gazed on then rolled by;
- Its waves are unreturning;
- But we yet stand _10
- In a lone land,
- Like tombs to mark the memory
- Of hopes and fears, which fade and flee
- In the light of life's dim morning.
- ***
- DEATH.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley in "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- They die--the dead return not--Misery
- Sits near an open grave and calls them over,
- A Youth with hoary hair and haggard eye--
- They are the names of kindred, friend and lover,
- Which he so feebly calls--they all are gone-- _5
- Fond wretch, all dead! those vacant names alone,
- This most familiar scene, my pain--
- These tombs--alone remain.
- 2.
- Misery, my sweetest friend--oh, weep no more!
- Thou wilt not be consoled--I wonder not! _10
- For I have seen thee from thy dwelling's door
- Watch the calm sunset with them, and this spot
- Was even as bright and calm, but transitory,
- And now thy hopes are gone, thy hair is hoary;
- This most familiar scene, my pain-- _15
- These tombs--alone remain.
- NOTE:
- _5 calls editions 1839; called 1824.
- ***
- OTHO.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- 1.
- Thou wert not, Cassius, and thou couldst not be,
- Last of the Romans, though thy memory claim
- From Brutus his own glory--and on thee
- Rests the full splendour of his sacred fame:
- Nor he who dared make the foul tyrant quail _5
- Amid his cowering senate with thy name,
- Though thou and he were great--it will avail
- To thine own fame that Otho's should not fail.
- 2.
- 'Twill wrong thee not--thou wouldst, if thou couldst feel,
- Abjure such envious fame--great Otho died _10
- Like thee--he sanctified his country's steel,
- At once the tyrant and tyrannicide,
- In his own blood--a deed it was to bring
- Tears from all men--though full of gentle pride,
- Such pride as from impetuous love may spring, _15
- That will not be refused its offering.
- NOTE:
- _13 bring cj. Garnett; buy 1839, 1st edition; wring cj. Rossetti.
- ***
- FRAGMENTS SUPPOSED TO BE PARTS OF OTHO.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862,--where, however,
- only the fragment numbered 2 is assigned to "Otho". Forman (1876)
- connects all three fragments with that projected poem.]
- 1.
- Those whom nor power, nor lying faith, nor toil,
- Nor custom, queen of many slaves, makes blind,
- Have ever grieved that man should be the spoil
- Of his own weakness, and with earnest mind
- Fed hopes of its redemption; these recur _5
- Chastened by deathful victory now, and find
- Foundations in this foulest age, and stir
- Me whom they cheer to be their minister.
- 2.
- Dark is the realm of grief: but human things
- Those may not know who cannot weep for them. _10
- ...
- 3.
- Once more descend
- The shadows of my soul upon mankind,
- For to those hearts with which they never blend,
- Thoughts are but shadows which the flashing mind
- From the swift clouds which track its flight of fire, _15
- Casts on the gloomy world it leaves behind.
- ...
- ***
- 'O THAT A CHARIOT OF CLOUD WERE MINE'.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- O that a chariot of cloud were mine!
- Of cloud which the wild tempest weaves in air,
- When the moon over the ocean's line
- Is spreading the locks of her bright gray hair.
- O that a chariot of cloud were mine! _5
- I would sail on the waves of the billowy wind
- To the mountain peak and the rocky lake,
- And the...
- ***
- FRAGMENT: TO A FRIEND RELEASED FROM PRISON.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- For me, my friend, if not that tears did tremble
- In my faint eyes, and that my heart beat fast
- With feelings which make rapture pain resemble,
- Yet, from thy voice that falsehood starts aghast,
- I thank thee--let the tyrant keep _5
- His chains and tears, yea, let him weep
- With rage to see thee freshly risen,
- Like strength from slumber, from the prison,
- In which he vainly hoped the soul to bind
- Which on the chains must prey that fetter humankind. _10
- NOTE:
- For the metre see Fragment: "A Gentle Story" (A.C. Bradley.)
- ***
- FRAGMENT: SATAN BROKEN LOOSE.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- A golden-winged Angel stood
- Before the Eternal Judgement-seat:
- His looks were wild, and Devils' blood
- Stained his dainty hands and feet.
- The Father and the Son _5
- Knew that strife was now begun.
- They knew that Satan had broken his chain,
- And with millions of daemons in his train,
- Was ranging over the world again.
- Before the Angel had told his tale, _10
- A sweet and a creeping sound
- Like the rushing of wings was heard around;
- And suddenly the lamps grew pale--
- The lamps, before the Archangels seven,
- That burn continually in Heaven. _15
- ***
- FRAGMENT: "IGNICULUS DESIDERII".
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition. This
- fragment is amongst the Shelley manuscripts at the Bodleian. See Mr.
- C.D. Locock's "Examination", etc., 1903, page 63.]
- To thirst and find no fill--to wail and wander
- With short unsteady steps--to pause and ponder--
- To feel the blood run through the veins and tingle
- Where busy thought and blind sensation mingle;
- To nurse the image of unfelt caresses _5
- Till dim imagination just possesses
- The half-created shadow, then all the night
- Sick...
- NOTES:
- _2 unsteady B.; uneasy 1839, 1st edition.
- _7, _8 then...Sick B.; wanting, 1839, 1st edition.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: "AMOR AETERNUS".
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- Wealth and dominion fade into the mass
- Of the great sea of human right and wrong,
- When once from our possession they must pass;
- But love, though misdirected, is among
- The things which are immortal, and surpass _5
- All that frail stuff which will be--or which was.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: THOUGHTS COME AND GO IN SOLITUDE.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- My thoughts arise and fade in solitude,
- The verse that would invest them melts away
- Like moonlight in the heaven of spreading day:
- How beautiful they were, how firm they stood,
- Flecking the starry sky like woven pearl! _5
- ***
- A HATE-SONG.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- A hater he came and sat by a ditch,
- And he took an old cracked lute;
- And he sang a song which was more of a screech
- 'Gainst a woman that was a brute.
- ***
- LINES TO A CRITIC.
- [Published by Hunt in "The Liberal", No. 3, 1823. Reprinted in
- "Posthumous Poems", 1824, where it is dated December, 1817.]
- 1.
- Honey from silkworms who can gather,
- Or silk from the yellow bee?
- The grass may grow in winter weather
- As soon as hate in me.
- 2.
- Hate men who cant, and men who pray, _5
- And men who rail like thee;
- An equal passion to repay
- They are not coy like me.
- 3.
- Or seek some slave of power and gold
- To be thy dear heart's mate; _10
- Thy love will move that bigot cold
- Sooner than me, thy hate.
- 4.
- A passion like the one I prove
- Cannot divided be;
- I hate thy want of truth and love-- _15
- How should I then hate thee?
- ***
- OZYMANDIAS.
- [Published by Hunt in "The Examiner", January, 1818. Reprinted with
- "Rosalind and Helen", 1819. There is a copy amongst the Shelley
- manuscripts at the Bodleian Library. See Mr. C.D. Locock's
- "Examination", etc., 1903, page 46.]
- I met a traveller from an antique land
- Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
- Stand in the desert...Near them, on the sand,
- Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
- And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command, _5
- Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
- Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
- The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed:
- And on the pedestal these words appear:
- 'My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: _10
- Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!'
- Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
- Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
- The lone and level sands stretch far away.
- NOTE:
- _9 these words appear]this legend clear B.
- ***
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1817, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- The very illness that oppressed, and the aspect of death which had
- approached so near Shelley, appear to have kindled to yet keener life
- the Spirit of Poetry in his heart. The restless thoughts kept awake by
- pain clothed themselves in verse. Much was composed during this year.
- The "Revolt of Islam", written and printed, was a great
- effort--"Rosalind and Helen" was begun--and the fragments and poems I
- can trace to the same period show how full of passion and reflection
- were his solitary hours.
- In addition to such poems as have an intelligible aim and shape, many a
- stray idea and transitory emotion found imperfect and abrupt
- expression, and then again lost themselves in silence. As he never
- wandered without a book and without implements of writing, I find many
- such, in his manuscript books, that scarcely bear record; while some of
- them, broken and vague as they are, will appear valuable to those who
- love Shelley's mind, and desire to trace its workings.
- He projected also translating the "Hymns" of Homer; his version of
- several of the shorter ones remains, as well as that to Mercury already
- published in the "Posthumous Poems". His readings this year were
- chiefly Greek. Besides the "Hymns" of Homer and the "Iliad", he read
- the dramas of Aeschylus and Sophocles, the "Symposium" of Plato, and
- Arrian's "Historia Indica". In Latin, Apuleius alone is named. In
- English, the Bible was his constant study; he read a great portion of
- it aloud in the evening. Among these evening readings I find also
- mentioned the "Faerie Queen"; and other modern works, the production of
- his contemporaries, Coleridge, Wordsworth, Moore and Byron.
- His life was now spent more in thought than action--he had lost the
- eager spirit which believed it could achieve what it projected for the
- benefit of mankind. And yet in the converse of daily life Shelley was
- far from being a melancholy man. He was eloquent when philosophy or
- politics or taste were the subjects of conversation. He was playful;
- and indulged in the wild spirit that mocked itself and others--not in
- bitterness, but in sport. The author of "Nightmare Abbey" seized on
- some points of his character and some habits of his life when he
- painted Scythrop. He was not addicted to 'port or madeira,' but in
- youth he had read of 'Illuminati and Eleutherarchs,' and believed that
- he possessed the power of operating an immediate change in the minds of
- men and the state of society. These wild dreams had faded; sorrow and
- adversity had struck home; but he struggled with despondency as he did
- with physical pain. There are few who remember him sailing paper boats,
- and watching the navigation of his tiny craft with eagerness--or
- repeating with wild energy "The Ancient Mariner", and Southey's "Old
- Woman of Berkeley"; but those who do will recollect that it was in
- such, and in the creations of his own fancy when that was most daring
- and ideal, that he sheltered himself from the storms and
- disappointments, the pain and sorrow, that beset his life.
- No words can express the anguish he felt when his elder children were
- torn from him. In his first resentment against the Chancellor, on the
- passing of the decree, he had written a curse, in which there breathes,
- besides haughty indignation, all the tenderness of a father's love,
- which could imagine and fondly dwell upon its loss and the
- consequences.
- At one time, while the question was still pending, the Chancellor had
- said some words that seemed to intimate that Shelley should not be
- permitted the care of any of his children, and for a moment he feared
- that our infant son would be torn from us. He did not hesitate to
- resolve, if such were menaced, to abandon country, fortune, everything,
- and to escape with his child; and I find some unfinished stanzas
- addressed to this son, whom afterwards we lost at Rome, written under
- the idea that we might suddenly be forced to cross the sea, so to
- preserve him. This poem, as well as the one previously quoted, were not
- written to exhibit the pangs of distress to the public; they were the
- spontaneous outbursts of a man who brooded over his wrongs and woes,
- and was impelled to shed the grace of his genius over the
- uncontrollable emotions of his heart. I ought to observe that the
- fourth verse of this effusion is introduced in "Rosalind and Helen".
- When afterwards this child died at Rome, he wrote, a propos of the
- English burying-ground in that city: 'This spot is the repository of a
- sacred loss, of which the yearnings of a parent's heart are now
- prophetic; he is rendered immortal by love, as his memory is by death.
- My beloved child lies buried here. I envy death the body far less than
- the oppressors the minds of those whom they have torn from me. The one
- can only kill the body, the other crushes the affections.'
- ***
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1818.
- TO THE NILE.
- ['Found by Mr. Townshend Meyer among the papers of Leigh Hunt, [and]
- published in the "St. James's Magazine" for March, 1876.' (Mr. H.
- Buxton Forman, C.B.; "Poetical Works of P. B. S.", Library Edition,
- 1876, volume 3 page 410.) First included among Shelley's poetical works
- in Mr. Forman's Library Edition, where a facsimile of the manuscript is
- given. Composed February 4, 1818. See "Complete Works of John Keats",
- edition H. Buxton Forman, Glasgow, 1901, volume 4 page 76.]
- Month after month the gathered rains descend
- Drenching yon secret Aethiopian dells,
- And from the desert's ice-girt pinnacles
- Where Frost and Heat in strange embraces blend
- On Atlas, fields of moist snow half depend. _5
- Girt there with blasts and meteors Tempest dwells
- By Nile's aereal urn, with rapid spells
- Urging those waters to their mighty end.
- O'er Egypt's land of Memory floods are level
- And they are thine, O Nile--and well thou knowest _10
- That soul-sustaining airs and blasts of evil
- And fruits and poisons spring where'er thou flowest.
- Beware, O Man--for knowledge must to thee,
- Like the great flood to Egypt, ever be.
- ***
- PASSAGE OF THE APENNINES.
- [Composed May 4, 1818. Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems",
- 1824. There is a copy amongst the Shelley manuscripts at the Bodleian
- Library, which supplies the last word of the fragment.]
- Listen, listen, Mary mine,
- To the whisper of the Apennine,
- It bursts on the roof like the thunder's roar,
- Or like the sea on a northern shore,
- Heard in its raging ebb and flow _5
- By the captives pent in the cave below.
- The Apennine in the light of day
- Is a mighty mountain dim and gray,
- Which between the earth and sky doth lay;
- But when night comes, a chaos dread _10
- On the dim starlight then is spread,
- And the Apennine walks abroad with the storm,
- Shrouding...
- ***
- THE PAST.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- Wilt thou forget the happy hours
- Which we buried in Love's sweet bowers,
- Heaping over their corpses cold
- Blossoms and leaves, instead of mould?
- Blossoms which were the joys that fell, _5
- And leaves, the hopes that yet remain.
- 2.
- Forget the dead, the past? Oh, yet
- There are ghosts that may take revenge for it,
- Memories that make the heart a tomb,
- Regrets which glide through the spirit's gloom, _10
- And with ghastly whispers tell
- That joy, once lost, is pain.
- ***
- TO MARY --.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- O Mary dear, that you were here
- With your brown eyes bright and clear.
- And your sweet voice, like a bird
- Singing love to its lone mate
- In the ivy bower disconsolate; _5
- Voice the sweetest ever heard!
- And your brow more...
- Than the ... sky
- Of this azure Italy.
- Mary dear, come to me soon, _10
- I am not well whilst thou art far;
- As sunset to the sphered moon,
- As twilight to the western star,
- Thou, beloved, art to me.
- O Mary dear, that you were here; _15
- The Castle echo whispers 'Here!'
- ***
- ON A FADED VIOLET.
- [Published by Hunt, "Literary Pocket-Book", 1821. Reprinted by Mrs.
- Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824. Again reprinted, with several
- variants, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition. Our text is that of the
- editio princeps, 1821. A transcript is extant in a letter from Shelley
- to Sophia Stacey, dated March 7, 1820.]
- 1.
- The odour from the flower is gone
- Which like thy kisses breathed on me;
- The colour from the flower is flown
- Which glowed of thee and only thee!
- 2.
- A shrivelled, lifeless, vacant form, _5
- It lies on my abandoned breast,
- And mocks the heart which yet is warm,
- With cold and silent rest.
- 3.
- I weep,--my tears revive it not!
- I sigh,--it breathes no more on me; _10
- Its mute and uncomplaining lot
- Is such as mine should be.
- NOTES:
- _1 odour]colour 1839.
- _2 kisses breathed]sweet eyes smiled 1839.
- _3 colour]odour 1839.
- _4 glowed]breathed 1839.
- _5 shrivelled]withered 1839.
- _8 cold and silent all editions; its cold, silent Stacey manuscript.
- ***
- LINES WRITTEN AMONG THE EUGANEAN HILLS.
- OCTOBER, 1818.
- [Composed at Este, October, 1818. Published with "Rosalind and Helen",
- 1819. Amongst the late Mr. Fredk. Locker-Lampson's collections at
- Rowfant there is a manuscript of the lines (167-205) on Byron,
- interpolated after the completion of the poem.]
- Many a green isle needs must be
- In the deep wide sea of Misery,
- Or the mariner, worn and wan,
- Never thus could voyage on--
- Day and night, and night and day, _5
- Drifting on his dreary way,
- With the solid darkness black
- Closing round his vessel's track:
- Whilst above the sunless sky,
- Big with clouds, hangs heavily, _10
- And behind the tempest fleet
- Hurries on with lightning feet,
- Riving sail, and cord, and plank,
- Till the ship has almost drank
- Death from the o'er-brimming deep; _15
- And sinks down, down, like that sleep
- When the dreamer seems to be
- Weltering through eternity;
- And the dim low line before
- Of a dark and distant shore _20
- Still recedes, as ever still
- Longing with divided will,
- But no power to seek or shun,
- He is ever drifted on
- O'er the unreposing wave _25
- To the haven of the grave.
- What, if there no friends will greet;
- What, if there no heart will meet
- His with love's impatient beat;
- Wander wheresoe'er he may, _30
- Can he dream before that day
- To find refuge from distress
- In friendship's smile, in love's caress?
- Then 'twill wreak him little woe
- Whether such there be or no: _35
- Senseless is the breast, and cold,
- Which relenting love would fold;
- Bloodless are the veins and chill
- Which the pulse of pain did fill;
- Every little living nerve _40
- That from bitter words did swerve
- Round the tortured lips and brow,
- Are like sapless leaflets now
- Frozen upon December's bough.
- On the beach of a northern sea _45
- Which tempests shake eternally,
- As once the wretch there lay to sleep,
- Lies a solitary heap,
- One white skull and seven dry bones,
- On the margin of the stones, _50
- Where a few gray rushes stand,
- Boundaries of the sea and land:
- Nor is heard one voice of wail
- But the sea-mews, as they sail
- O'er the billows of the gale; _55
- Or the whirlwind up and down
- Howling, like a slaughtered town,
- When a king in glory rides
- Through the pomp of fratricides:
- Those unburied bones around _60
- There is many a mournful sound;
- There is no lament for him,
- Like a sunless vapour, dim,
- Who once clothed with life and thought
- What now moves nor murmurs not. _65
- Ay, many flowering islands lie
- In the waters of wide Agony:
- To such a one this morn was led,
- My bark by soft winds piloted:
- 'Mid the mountains Euganean _70
- I stood listening to the paean
- With which the legioned rooks did hail
- The sun's uprise majestical;
- Gathering round with wings all hoar,
- Through the dewy mist they soar _75
- Like gray shades, till the eastern heaven
- Bursts, and then, as clouds of even,
- Flecked with fire and azure, lie
- In the unfathomable sky,
- So their plumes of purple grain, _80
- Starred with drops of golden rain,
- Gleam above the sunlight woods,
- As in silent multitudes
- On the morning's fitful gale
- Through the broken mist they sail, _85
- And the vapours cloven and gleaming
- Follow, down the dark steep streaming,
- Till all is bright, and clear, and still,
- Round the solitary hill.
- Beneath is spread like a green sea _90
- The waveless plain of Lombardy,
- Bounded by the vaporous air,
- Islanded by cities fair;
- Underneath Day's azure eyes
- Ocean's nursling, Venice lies, _95
- A peopled labyrinth of walls,
- Amphitrite's destined halls,
- Which her hoary sire now paves
- With his blue and beaming waves.
- Lo! the sun upsprings behind, _100
- Broad, red, radiant, half-reclined
- On the level quivering line
- Of the waters crystalline;
- And before that chasm of light,
- As within a furnace bright, _105
- Column, tower, and dome, and spire,
- Shine like obelisks of fire,
- Pointing with inconstant motion
- From the altar of dark ocean
- To the sapphire-tinted skies; _110
- As the flames of sacrifice
- From the marble shrines did rise,
- As to pierce the dome of gold
- Where Apollo spoke of old.
- Sun-girt City, thou hast been _115
- Ocean's child, and then his queen;
- Now is come a darker day,
- And thou soon must be his prey,
- If the power that raised thee here
- Hallow so thy watery bier. _120
- A less drear ruin then than now,
- With thy conquest-branded brow
- Stooping to the slave of slaves
- From thy throne, among the waves
- Wilt thou be, when the sea-mew _125
- Flies, as once before it flew,
- O'er thine isles depopulate,
- And all is in its ancient state,
- Save where many a palace gate _130
- With green sea-flowers overgrown
- Like a rock of Ocean's own,
- Topples o'er the abandoned sea
- As the tides change sullenly.
- The fisher on his watery way,
- Wandering at the close of day, _135
- Will spread his sail and seize his oar
- Till he pass the gloomy shore,
- Lest thy dead should, from their sleep
- Bursting o'er the starlight deep,
- Lead a rapid masque of death _140
- O'er the waters of his path.
- Those who alone thy towers behold
- Quivering through aereal gold,
- As I now behold them here,
- Would imagine not they were _145
- Sepulchres, where human forms,
- Like pollution-nourished worms,
- To the corpse of greatness cling,
- Murdered, and now mouldering:
- But if Freedom should awake _150
- In her omnipotence, and shake
- From the Celtic Anarch's hold
- All the keys of dungeons cold,
- Where a hundred cities lie
- Chained like thee, ingloriously, _155
- Thou and all thy sister band
- Might adorn this sunny land,
- Twining memories of old time
- With new virtues more sublime;
- If not, perish thou and they!-- _160
- Clouds which stain truth's rising day
- By her sun consumed away--
- Earth can spare ye: while like flowers,
- In the waste of years and hours,
- From your dust new nations spring _165
- With more kindly blossoming.
- Perish--let there only be
- Floating o'er thy hearthless sea
- As the garment of thy sky
- Clothes the world immortally, _170
- One remembrance, more sublime
- Than the tattered pall of time,
- Which scarce hides thy visage wan;--
- That a tempest-cleaving Swan
- Of the songs of Albion, _175
- Driven from his ancestral streams
- By the might of evil dreams,
- Found a nest in thee; and Ocean
- Welcomed him with such emotion
- That its joy grew his, and sprung _180
- From his lips like music flung
- O'er a mighty thunder-fit,
- Chastening terror:--what though yet
- Poesy's unfailing River,
- Which through Albion winds forever _185
- Lashing with melodious wave
- Many a sacred Poet's grave,
- Mourn its latest nursling fled?
- What though thou with all thy dead
- Scarce can for this fame repay _190
- Aught thine own? oh, rather say
- Though thy sins and slaveries foul
- Overcloud a sunlike soul?
- As the ghost of Homer clings
- Round Scamander's wasting springs; _195
- As divinest Shakespeare's might
- Fills Avon and the world with light
- Like omniscient power which he
- Imaged 'mid mortality;
- As the love from Petrarch's urn, _200
- Yet amid yon hills doth burn,
- A quenchless lamp by which the heart
- Sees things unearthly;--so thou art,
- Mighty spirit--so shall be
- The City that did refuge thee. _205
- Lo, the sun floats up the sky
- Like thought-winged Liberty,
- Till the universal light
- Seems to level plain and height;
- From the sea a mist has spread, _210
- And the beams of morn lie dead
- On the towers of Venice now,
- Like its glory long ago.
- By the skirts of that gray cloud
- Many-domed Padua proud _215
- Stands, a peopled solitude,
- 'Mid the harvest-shining plain,
- Where the peasant heaps his grain
- In the garner of his foe,
- And the milk-white oxen slow _220
- With the purple vintage strain,
- Heaped upon the creaking wain,
- That the brutal Celt may swill
- Drunken sleep with savage will;
- And the sickle to the sword _225
- Lies unchanged, though many a lord,
- Like a weed whose shade is poison,
- Overgrows this region's foison,
- Sheaves of whom are ripe to come
- To destruction's harvest-home: _230
- Men must reap the things they sow,
- Force from force must ever flow,
- Or worse; but 'tis a bitter woe
- That love or reason cannot change
- The despot's rage, the slave's revenge. _235
- Padua, thou within whose walls
- Those mute guests at festivals,
- Son and Mother, Death and Sin,
- Played at dice for Ezzelin,
- Till Death cried, "I win, I win!" _240
- And Sin cursed to lose the wager,
- But Death promised, to assuage her,
- That he would petition for
- Her to be made Vice-Emperor,
- When the destined years were o'er, _245
- Over all between the Po
- And the eastern Alpine snow,
- Under the mighty Austrian.
- Sin smiled so as Sin only can,
- And since that time, ay, long before, _250
- Both have ruled from shore to shore,--
- That incestuous pair, who follow
- Tyrants as the sun the swallow,
- As Repentance follows Crime,
- And as changes follow Time. _255
- In thine halls the lamp of learning,
- Padua, now no more is burning;
- Like a meteor, whose wild way
- Is lost over the grave of day,
- It gleams betrayed and to betray: _260
- Once remotest nations came
- To adore that sacred flame,
- When it lit not many a hearth
- On this cold and gloomy earth:
- Now new fires from antique light _265
- Spring beneath the wide world's might;
- But their spark lies dead in thee,
- Trampled out by Tyranny.
- As the Norway woodman quells,
- In the depth of piny dells, _270
- One light flame among the brakes,
- While the boundless forest shakes,
- And its mighty trunks are torn
- By the fire thus lowly born:
- The spark beneath his feet is dead, _275
- He starts to see the flames it fed
- Howling through the darkened sky
- With a myriad tongues victoriously,
- And sinks down in fear: so thou,
- O Tyranny, beholdest now _280
- Light around thee, and thou hearest
- The loud flames ascend, and fearest:
- Grovel on the earth; ay, hide
- In the dust thy purple pride!
- Noon descends around me now: _285
- 'Tis the noon of autumn's glow,
- When a soft and purple mist
- Like a vaporous amethyst,
- Or an air-dissolved star
- Mingling light and fragrance, far _290
- From the curved horizon's bound
- To the point of Heaven's profound,
- Fills the overflowing sky;
- And the plains that silent lie
- Underneath, the leaves unsodden _295
- Where the infant Frost has trodden
- With his morning-winged feet,
- Whose bright print is gleaming yet;
- And the red and golden vines,
- Piercing with their trellised lines _300
- The rough, dark-skirted wilderness;
- The dun and bladed grass no less,
- Pointing from this hoary tower
- In the windless air; the flower
- Glimmering at my feet; the line _305
- Of the olive-sandalled Apennine
- In the south dimly islanded;
- And the Alps, whose snows are spread
- High between the clouds and sun;
- And of living things each one; _310
- And my spirit which so long
- Darkened this swift stream of song,--
- Interpenetrated lie
- By the glory of the sky:
- Be it love, light, harmony, _315
- Odour, or the soul of all
- Which from Heaven like dew doth fall,
- Or the mind which feeds this verse
- Peopling the lone universe.
- Noon descends, and after noon _320
- Autumn's evening meets me soon,
- Leading the infantine moon,
- And that one star, which to her
- Almost seems to minister
- Half the crimson light she brings _325
- From the sunset's radiant springs:
- And the soft dreams of the morn
- (Which like winged winds had borne
- To that silent isle, which lies
- Mid remembered agonies, _330
- The frail bark of this lone being)
- Pass, to other sufferers fleeing,
- And its ancient pilot, Pain,
- Sits beside the helm again.
- Other flowering isles must be _335
- In the sea of Life and Agony:
- Other spirits float and flee
- O'er that gulf: even now, perhaps,
- On some rock the wild wave wraps,
- With folded wings they waiting sit _340
- For my bark, to pilot it
- To some calm and blooming cove,
- Where for me, and those I love,
- May a windless bower be built,
- Far from passion, pain, and guilt, _345
- In a dell mid lawny hills,
- Which the wild sea-murmur fills,
- And soft sunshine, and the sound
- Of old forests echoing round,
- And the light and smell divine _350
- Of all flowers that breathe and shine:
- We may live so happy there,
- That the Spirits of the Air,
- Envying us, may even entice
- To our healing Paradise _355
- The polluting multitude;
- But their rage would be subdued
- By that clime divine and calm,
- And the winds whose wings rain balm
- On the uplifted soul, and leaves _360
- Under which the bright sea heaves;
- While each breathless interval
- In their whisperings musical
- The inspired soul supplies
- With its own deep melodies; _365
- And the love which heals all strife
- Circling, like the breath of life,
- All things in that sweet abode
- With its own mild brotherhood,
- They, not it, would change; and soon _370
- Every sprite beneath the moon
- Would repent its envy vain,
- And the earth grow young again.
- NOTES:
- _54 seamews 1819; seamew's Rossetti.
- _115 Sun-girt]Sea-girt cj. Palgrave.
- _165 From your dust new 1819;
- From thy dust shall Rowfant manuscript (heading of lines 167-205).
- _175 songs 1819; sons cj. Forman.
- _278 a 1819; wanting, 1839.
- ***
- SCENE FROM 'TASSO'.
- [Composed, 1818. Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- MADDALO, A COURTIER.
- MALPIGLIO, A POET.
- PIGNA, A MINISTER.
- ALBANO, AN USHER.
- MADDALO:
- No access to the Duke! You have not said
- That the Count Maddalo would speak with him?
- PIGNA:
- Did you inform his Grace that Signor Pigna
- Waits with state papers for his signature?
- MALPIGLIO:
- The Lady Leonora cannot know _5
- That I have written a sonnet to her fame,
- In which I ... Venus and Adonis.
- You should not take my gold and serve me not.
- ALBANO:
- In truth I told her, and she smiled and said,
- 'If I am Venus, thou, coy Poesy, _10
- Art the Adonis whom I love, and he
- The Erymanthian boar that wounded him.'
- O trust to me, Signor Malpiglio,
- Those nods and smiles were favours worth the zechin.
- MALPIGLIO:
- The words are twisted in some double sense _15
- That I reach not: the smiles fell not on me.
- PIGNA:
- How are the Duke and Duchess occupied?
- ALBANO:
- Buried in some strange talk. The Duke was leaning,
- His finger on his brow, his lips unclosed.
- The Princess sate within the window-seat, _20
- And so her face was hid; but on her knee
- Her hands were clasped, veined, and pale as snow,
- And quivering--young Tasso, too, was there.
- MADDALO:
- Thou seest on whom from thine own worshipped heaven
- Thou drawest down smiles--they did not rain on thee. _25
- MALPIGLIO:
- Would they were parching lightnings for his sake
- On whom they fell!
- ***
- SONG FOR 'TASSO'.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- I loved--alas! our life is love;
- But when we cease to breathe and move
- I do suppose love ceases too.
- I thought, but not as now I do,
- Keen thoughts and bright of linked lore, _5
- Of all that men had thought before.
- And all that Nature shows, and more.
- 2.
- And still I love and still I think,
- But strangely, for my heart can drink
- The dregs of such despair, and live, _10
- And love;...
- And if I think, my thoughts come fast,
- I mix the present with the past,
- And each seems uglier than the last.
- 3.
- Sometimes I see before me flee _15
- A silver spirit's form, like thee,
- O Leonora, and I sit
- ...still watching it,
- Till by the grated casement's ledge
- It fades, with such a sigh, as sedge _20
- Breathes o'er the breezy streamlet's edge.
- ***
- INVOCATION TO MISERY.
- [Published by Medwin, "The Athenaeum", September 8, 1832. Reprinted (as
- "Misery, a Fragment") by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st
- edition. Our text is that of 1839. A pencil copy of this poem is
- amongst the Shelley manuscripts at the Bodleian Library. See Mr. C.D.
- Locock's "Examination", etc., 1903, page 38. The readings of this copy
- are indicated by the letter B. in the footnotes.]
- 1.
- Come, be happy!--sit near me,
- Shadow-vested Misery:
- Coy, unwilling, silent bride,
- Mourning in thy robe of pride,
- Desolation--deified! _5
- 2.
- Come, be happy!--sit near me:
- Sad as I may seem to thee,
- I am happier far than thou,
- Lady, whose imperial brow
- Is endiademed with woe. _10
- 3.
- Misery! we have known each other,
- Like a sister and a brother
- Living in the same lone home,
- Many years--we must live some
- Hours or ages yet to come. _15
- 4.
- 'Tis an evil lot, and yet
- Let us make the best of it;
- If love can live when pleasure dies,
- We two will love, till in our eyes
- This heart's Hell seem Paradise. _20
- 5.
- Come, be happy!--lie thee down
- On the fresh grass newly mown,
- Where the Grasshopper doth sing
- Merrily--one joyous thing
- In a world of sorrowing! _25
- 6.
- There our tent shall be the willow,
- And mine arm shall be thy pillow;
- Sounds and odours, sorrowful
- Because they once were sweet, shall lull
- Us to slumber, deep and dull. _30
- 7.
- Ha! thy frozen pulses flutter
- With a love thou darest not utter.
- Thou art murmuring--thou art weeping--
- Is thine icy bosom leaping
- While my burning heart lies sleeping? _35
- 8.
- Kiss me;--oh! thy lips are cold:
- Round my neck thine arms enfold--
- They are soft, but chill and dead;
- And thy tears upon my head
- Burn like points of frozen lead. _40
- 9.
- Hasten to the bridal bed--
- Underneath the grave 'tis spread:
- In darkness may our love be hid,
- Oblivion be our coverlid--
- We may rest, and none forbid. _45
- 10.
- Clasp me till our hearts be grown
- Like two shadows into one;
- Till this dreadful transport may
- Like a vapour fade away,
- In the sleep that lasts alway. _50
- 11.
- We may dream, in that long sleep,
- That we are not those who weep;
- E'en as Pleasure dreams of thee,
- Life-deserting Misery,
- Thou mayst dream of her with me. _55
- 12.
- Let us laugh, and make our mirth,
- At the shadows of the earth,
- As dogs bay the moonlight clouds,
- Which, like spectres wrapped in shrouds,
- Pass o'er night in multitudes. _60
- 13.
- All the wide world, beside us,
- Show like multitudinous
- Puppets passing from a scene;
- What but mockery can they mean,
- Where I am--where thou hast been? _65
- NOTES:
- _1 near B., 1839; by 1832.
- _8 happier far]merrier yet B.
- _15 Hours or]Years and 1832.
- _17 best]most 1832.
- _19 We two will]We will 1832.
- _27 mine arm shall be thy B., 1839; thine arm shall be my 1832.
- _33 represented by asterisks, 1832.
- _34, _35 Thou art murmuring, thou art weeping,
- Whilst my burning bosom's leaping 1832;
- Was thine icy bosom leaping
- While my burning heart was sleeping B.
- _40 frozen 1832, 1839, B.; molten cj. Forman.
- _44 be]is B.
- _47 shadows]lovers 1832, B.
- _59 which B., 1839; that 1832.
- _62 Show]Are 1832, B.
- _63 Puppets passing]Shadows shifting 1832; Shadows passing B.
- _64, _65 So B.: What but mockery may they mean?
- Where am I?--Where thou hast been 1832.
- ***
- STANZAS WRITTEN IN DEJECTION, NEAR NAPLES.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824, where it is dated
- 'December, 1818.' A draft of stanza 1 is amongst the Boscombe
- manuscripts. (Garnett).]
- 1.
- The sun is warm, the sky is clear,
- The waves are dancing fast and bright,
- Blue isles and snowy mountains wear
- The purple noon's transparent might,
- The breath of the moist earth is light, _5
- Around its unexpanded buds;
- Like many a voice of one delight,
- The winds, the birds, the ocean floods,
- The City's voice itself, is soft like Solitude's.
- 2.
- I see the Deep's untrampled floor _10
- With green and purple seaweeds strown;
- I see the waves upon the shore,
- Like light dissolved in star-showers, thrown:
- I sit upon the sands alone,--
- The lightning of the noontide ocean _15
- Is flashing round me, and a tone
- Arises from its measured motion,
- How sweet! did any heart now share in my emotion.
- 3.
- Alas! I have nor hope nor health,
- Nor peace within nor calm around, _20
- Nor that content surpassing wealth
- The sage in meditation found,
- And walked with inward glory crowned--
- Nor fame, nor power, nor love, nor leisure.
- Others I see whom these surround-- _25
- Smiling they live, and call life pleasure;--
- To me that cup has been dealt in another measure.
- 4.
- Yet now despair itself is mild,
- Even as the winds and waters are;
- I could lie down like a tired child, _30
- And weep away the life of care
- Which I have borne and yet must bear,
- Till death like sleep might steal on me,
- And I might feel in the warm air
- My cheek grow cold, and hear the sea _35
- Breathe o'er my dying brain its last monotony.
- 5.
- Some might lament that I were cold,
- As I, when this sweet day is gone,
- Which my lost heart, too soon grown old,
- Insults with this untimely moan; _40
- They might lament--for I am one
- Whom men love not,--and yet regret,
- Unlike this day, which, when the sun
- Shall on its stainless glory set,
- Will linger, though enjoyed, like joy in memory yet. _45
- NOTES:
- _4 might Boscombe manuscript, Medwin 1847; light 1824, 1839.
- _5 The...light Boscombe manuscript, 1839, Medwin 1847;
- omitted, 1824. moist earth Boscombe manuscript;
- moist air 1839; west wind Medwin 1847.
- _17 measured 1824; mingled 1847.
- _18 did any heart now 1824; if any heart could Medwin 1847.
- _31 the 1824; this Medwin 1847.
- _36 dying 1824; outworn Medwin 1847.
- ***
- THE WOODMAN AND THE NIGHTINGALE.
- [Published in part (1-67) by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824;
- the remainder (68-70) by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- A woodman whose rough heart was out of tune
- (I think such hearts yet never came to good)
- Hated to hear, under the stars or moon,
- One nightingale in an interfluous wood
- Satiate the hungry dark with melody;-- _5
- And as a vale is watered by a flood,
- Or as the moonlight fills the open sky
- Struggling with darkness--as a tuberose
- Peoples some Indian dell with scents which lie
- Like clouds above the flower from which they rose, _10
- The singing of that happy nightingale
- In this sweet forest, from the golden close
- Of evening till the star of dawn may fail,
- Was interfused upon the silentness;
- The folded roses and the violets pale _15
- Heard her within their slumbers, the abyss
- Of heaven with all its planets; the dull ear
- Of the night-cradled earth; the loneliness
- Of the circumfluous waters,--every sphere
- And every flower and beam and cloud and wave, _20
- And every wind of the mute atmosphere,
- And every beast stretched in its rugged cave,
- And every bird lulled on its mossy bough,
- And every silver moth fresh from the grave
- Which is its cradle--ever from below _25
- Aspiring like one who loves too fair, too far,
- To be consumed within the purest glow
- Of one serene and unapproached star,
- As if it were a lamp of earthly light,
- Unconscious, as some human lovers are, _30
- Itself how low, how high beyond all height
- The heaven where it would perish!--and every form
- That worshipped in the temple of the night
- Was awed into delight, and by the charm
- Girt as with an interminable zone, _35
- Whilst that sweet bird, whose music was a storm
- Of sound, shook forth the dull oblivion
- Out of their dreams; harmony became love
- In every soul but one.
- ...
- And so this man returned with axe and saw _40
- At evening close from killing the tall treen,
- The soul of whom by Nature's gentle law
- Was each a wood-nymph, and kept ever green
- The pavement and the roof of the wild copse,
- Chequering the sunlight of the blue serene _45
- With jagged leaves,--and from the forest tops
- Singing the winds to sleep--or weeping oft
- Fast showers of aereal water-drops
- Into their mother's bosom, sweet and soft,
- Nature's pure tears which have no bitterness;-- _50
- Around the cradles of the birds aloft
- They spread themselves into the loveliness
- Of fan-like leaves, and over pallid flowers
- Hang like moist clouds:--or, where high branches kiss,
- Make a green space among the silent bowers, _55
- Like a vast fane in a metropolis,
- Surrounded by the columns and the towers
- All overwrought with branch-like traceries
- In which there is religion--and the mute
- Persuasion of unkindled melodies, _60
- Odours and gleams and murmurs, which the lute
- Of the blind pilot-spirit of the blast
- Stirs as it sails, now grave and now acute,
- Wakening the leaves and waves, ere it has passed
- To such brief unison as on the brain _65
- One tone, which never can recur, has cast,
- One accent never to return again.
- ...
- The world is full of Woodmen who expel
- Love's gentle Dryads from the haunts of life,
- And vex the nightingales in every dell. _70
- NOTE:
- _8 --or as a tuberose cj. A.C. Bradley.
- ***
- MARENGHI. (This fragment refers to an event told in Sismondi's
- "Histoire des Republiques Italiennes", which occurred during the war
- when Florence finally subdued Pisa, and reduced it to a
- province.--[MRS. SHELLEY'S NOTE, 1824.])
- [Published in part (stanzas 7-15.) by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems",
- 1824; stanzas 1-28 by W.M. Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B.
- S.", 1870. The Boscombe manuscript--evidently a first draft--from which
- (through Dr. Garnett) Rossetti derived the text of 1870 is now at the
- Bodleian, and has recently been collated by Mr. C.D. Locock, to whom
- the enlarged and amended text here printed is owing. The substitution,
- in title and text, of "Marenghi" for "Mazenghi" (1824) is due to
- Rossetti. Here as elsewhere in the footnotes B. = the Bodleian
- manuscript.]
- 1.
- Let those who pine in pride or in revenge,
- Or think that ill for ill should be repaid,
- Who barter wrong for wrong, until the exchange
- Ruins the merchants of such thriftless trade,
- Visit the tower of Vado, and unlearn _5
- Such bitter faith beside Marenghi's urn.
- 2.
- A massy tower yet overhangs the town,
- A scattered group of ruined dwellings now...
- ...
- 3.
- Another scene are wise Etruria knew
- Its second ruin through internal strife _10
- And tyrants through the breach of discord threw
- The chain which binds and kills. As death to life,
- As winter to fair flowers (though some be poison)
- So Monarchy succeeds to Freedom's foison.
- 4.
- In Pisa's church a cup of sculptured gold _15
- Was brimming with the blood of feuds forsworn:
- A Sacrament more holy ne'er of old
- Etrurians mingled mid the shades forlorn
- Of moon-illumined forests, when...
- 5.
- And reconciling factions wet their lips _20
- With that dread wine, and swear to keep each spirit
- Undarkened by their country's last eclipse...
- ...
- 6.
- Was Florence the liberticide? that band
- Of free and glorious brothers who had planted,
- Like a green isle mid Aethiopian sand, _25
- A nation amid slaveries, disenchanted
- Of many impious faiths--wise, just--do they,
- Does Florence, gorge the sated tyrants' prey?
- 7.
- O foster-nurse of man's abandoned glory,
- Since Athens, its great mother, sunk in splendour; _30
- Thou shadowest forth that mighty shape in story,
- As ocean its wrecked fanes, severe yet tender:--
- The light-invested angel Poesy
- Was drawn from the dim world to welcome thee.
- 8.
- And thou in painting didst transcribe all taught _35
- By loftiest meditations; marble knew
- The sculptor's fearless soul--and as he wrought,
- The grace of his own power and freedom grew.
- And more than all, heroic, just, sublime,
- Thou wart among the false...was this thy crime? _40
- 9.
- Yes; and on Pisa's marble walls the twine
- Of direst weeds hangs garlanded--the snake
- Inhabits its wrecked palaces;--in thine
- A beast of subtler venom now doth make
- Its lair, and sits amid their glories overthrown, _45
- And thus thy victim's fate is as thine own.
- 10.
- The sweetest flowers are ever frail and rare,
- And love and freedom blossom but to wither;
- And good and ill like vines entangled are,
- So that their grapes may oft be plucked together;-- _50
- Divide the vintage ere thou drink, then make
- Thy heart rejoice for dead Marenghi's sake.
- 10a.
- [Albert] Marenghi was a Florentine;
- If he had wealth, or children, or a wife
- Or friends, [or farm] or cherished thoughts which twine _55
- The sights and sounds of home with life's own life
- Of these he was despoiled and Florence sent...
- ...
- 11.
- No record of his crime remains in story,
- But if the morning bright as evening shone, _60
- It was some high and holy deed, by glory
- Pursued into forgetfulness, which won
- From the blind crowd he made secure and free
- The patriot's meed, toil, death, and infamy.
- 12.
- For when by sound of trumpet was declared
- A price upon his life, and there was set _65
- A penalty of blood on all who shared
- So much of water with him as might wet
- His lips, which speech divided not--he went
- Alone, as you may guess, to banishment.
- 13.
- Amid the mountains, like a hunted beast,
- He hid himself, and hunger, toil, and cold, _70
- Month after month endured; it was a feast
- Whene'er he found those globes of deep-red gold
- Which in the woods the strawberry-tree doth bear,
- Suspended in their emerald atmosphere. _75
- 14.
- And in the roofless huts of vast morasses,
- Deserted by the fever-stricken serf,
- All overgrown with reeds and long rank grasses,
- And hillocks heaped of moss-inwoven turf,
- And where the huge and speckled aloe made, _80
- Rooted in stones, a broad and pointed shade,--
- 15.
- He housed himself. There is a point of strand
- Near Vado's tower and town; and on one side
- The treacherous marsh divides it from the land,
- Shadowed by pine and ilex forests wide, _85
- And on the other, creeps eternally,
- Through muddy weeds, the shallow sullen sea.
- 16.
- Here the earth's breath is pestilence, and few
- But things whose nature is at war with life--
- Snakes and ill worms--endure its mortal dew.
- The trophies of the clime's victorious strife-- _90
- And ringed horns which the buffalo did wear,
- And the wolf's dark gray scalp who tracked him there.
- 17.
- And at the utmost point...stood there
- The relics of a reed-inwoven cot, _95
- Thatched with broad flags. An outlawed murderer
- Had lived seven days there: the pursuit was hot
- When he was cold. The birds that were his grave
- Fell dead after their feast in Vado's wave.
- 18.
- There must have burned within Marenghi's breast _100
- That fire, more warm and bright than life and hope,
- (Which to the martyr makes his dungeon...
- More joyous than free heaven's majestic cope
- To his oppressor), warring with decay,--
- Or he could ne'er have lived years, day by day. _105
- 19.
- Nor was his state so lone as you might think.
- He had tamed every newt and snake and toad,
- And every seagull which sailed down to drink
- Those freshes ere the death-mist went abroad.
- And each one, with peculiar talk and play, _110
- Wiled, not untaught, his silent time away.
- 20.
- And the marsh-meteors, like tame beasts, at night
- Came licking with blue tongues his veined feet;
- And he would watch them, as, like spirits bright,
- In many entangled figures quaint and sweet _115
- To some enchanted music they would dance--
- Until they vanished at the first moon-glance.
- 21.
- He mocked the stars by grouping on each weed
- The summer dew-globes in the golden dawn;
- And, ere the hoar-frost languished, he could read _120
- Its pictured path, as on bare spots of lawn
- Its delicate brief touch in silver weaves
- The likeness of the wood's remembered leaves.
- 22.
- And many a fresh Spring morn would he awaken--
- While yet the unrisen sun made glow, like iron _125
- Quivering in crimson fire, the peaks unshaken
- Of mountains and blue isles which did environ
- With air-clad crags that plain of land and sea,--
- And feel ... liberty.
- 23.
- And in the moonless nights when the dun ocean _130
- Heaved underneath wide heaven, star-impearled,
- Starting from dreams...
- Communed with the immeasurable world;
- And felt his life beyond his limbs dilated,
- Till his mind grew like that it contemplated. _135
- 24.
- His food was the wild fig and strawberry;
- The milky pine-nuts which the autumn-blast
- Shakes into the tall grass; or such small fry
- As from the sea by winter-storms are cast;
- And the coarse bulbs of iris-flowers he found _140
- Knotted in clumps under the spongy ground.
- 25.
- And so were kindled powers and thoughts which made
- His solitude less dark. When memory came
- (For years gone by leave each a deepening shade),
- His spirit basked in its internal flame,-- _145
- As, when the black storm hurries round at night,
- The fisher basks beside his red firelight.
- 26.
- Yet human hopes and cares and faiths and errors,
- Like billows unawakened by the wind,
- Slept in Marenghi still; but that all terrors, _150
- Weakness, and doubt, had withered in his mind.
- His couch...
- ...
- 27.
- And, when he saw beneath the sunset's planet
- A black ship walk over the crimson ocean,--
- Its pennon streaming on the blasts that fan it, _155
- Its sails and ropes all tense and without motion,
- Like the dark ghost of the unburied even
- Striding athwart the orange-coloured heaven,--
- 28.
- The thought of his own kind who made the soul
- Which sped that winged shape through night and day,-- _160
- The thought of his own country...
- ...
- NOTES:
- _3 Who B.; Or 1870.
- _6 Marenghi's 1870; Mazenghi's B.
- _7 town 1870; sea B.
- _8 ruined 1870; squalid B. ('the whole line is cancelled,' Locock).
- _11 threw 1870; cancelled, B.
- _17 A Sacrament more B.; At Sacrament: more 1870.
- _18 mid B.; with 1870.
- _19 forests when... B.; forests. 1870.
- _23, _24 that band Of free and glorious brothers who had 1870; omitted, B.
- _25 a 1870; one B.
- _27 wise, just--do they 1870; omitted, B.
- _28 Does 1870; Doth B. prey 1870; spoil B.
- _33 angel 1824; Herald [?] B.
- _34 to welcome thee 1824; cancelled for... by thee B.
- _42 direst 1824; Desert B.
- _45 sits amid 1824 amid cancelled for soils (?) B.
- _53-_57 Albert...sent B.; omitted 1824, 1870. Albert cancelled B.:
- Pietro is the correct name.
- _53 Marenghi]Mazenghi B.
- _55 farm doubtful: perh. fame (Locock).
- _62 he 1824; thus B.
- _70 Amid the mountains 1824; Mid desert mountains [?] B.
- _71 toil, and cold]cold and toil editions 1824, 1839.
- _92, _93 And... there B. (see Editor's Note); White bones, and locks of
- dun and yellow hair, And ringed horns which buffaloes did wear-- 1870.
- _94 at the utmost point 1870; cancelled for when (where?) B.
- _95 reed B.; weed 1870.
- _99 after B.; upon 1870.
- _100 burned within Marenghi's breast B.;
- lived within Marenghi's heart 1870.
- _101 and B.; or 1870.
- _103 free B.; the 1870.
- _109 freshes B.; omitted, 1870.
- _118 by 1870; with B.
- _119 dew-globes B.; dewdrops 1870.
- _120 languished B.; vanished 1870.
- _121 path, as on [bare] B.; footprints, as on 1870.
- _122 silver B.; silence 1870.
- _130 And in the moonless nights 1870; cancelled, B. dun B.;
- dim 1870.
- _131 Heaved 1870; cancelled, B. wide B.;
- the 1870. star-impearled B.; omitted, 1870.
- _132 Starting from dreams 1870; cancelled for He B.
- _137 autumn B.; autumnal 1870.
- _138 or B.; and 1870.
- _155 pennon B.; pennons 1870.
- _158 athwart B.; across 1870.
- ***
- SONNET.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.
- Our text is that of the "Poetical Works", 1839.]
- Lift not the painted veil which those who live
- Call Life: though unreal shapes be pictured there,
- And it but mimic all we would believe
- With colours idly spread,--behind, lurk Fear
- And Hope, twin Destinies; who ever weave _5
- Their shadows, o'er the chasm, sightless and drear.
- I knew one who had lifted it--he sought,
- For his lost heart was tender, things to love
- But found them not, alas! nor was there aught
- The world contains, the which he could approve. _10
- Through the unheeding many he did move,
- A splendour among shadows, a bright blot
- Upon this gloomy scene, a Spirit that strove
- For truth, and like the Preacher found it not.
- NOTES:
- _6 Their...drear 1839;
- The shadows, which the world calls substance, there 1824.
- _7 who had lifted 1839; who lifted 1824.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: TO BYRON.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- O mighty mind, in whose deep stream this age
- Shakes like a reed in the unheeding storm,
- Why dost thou curb not thine own sacred rage?
- ***
- FRAGMENT: APOSTROPHE TO SILENCE.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862. A transcript by
- Mrs. Shelley, given to Charles Cowden Clarke, presents one or two
- variants.]
- Silence! Oh, well are Death and Sleep and Thou
- Three brethren named, the guardians gloomy-winged
- Of one abyss, where life, and truth, and joy
- Are swallowed up--yet spare me, Spirit, pity me,
- Until the sounds I hear become my soul, _5
- And it has left these faint and weary limbs,
- To track along the lapses of the air
- This wandering melody until it rests
- Among lone mountains in some...
- NOTES:
- _4 Spirit 1862; O Spirit C.C.C. manuscript.
- _8 This wandering melody 1862;
- These wandering melodies... C.C.C. manuscript.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: THE LAKE'S MARGIN.
- [Published by W.M. Rossetti, 1870.]
- The fierce beasts of the woods and wildernesses
- Track not the steps of him who drinks of it;
- For the light breezes, which for ever fleet
- Around its margin, heap the sand thereon.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'MY HEAD IS WILD WITH WEEPING'.
- [Published by W.M. Rossetti, 1870.]
- My head is wild with weeping for a grief
- Which is the shadow of a gentle mind.
- I walk into the air (but no relief
- To seek,--or haply, if I sought, to find;
- It came unsought);--to wonder that a chief _5
- Among men's spirits should be cold and blind.
- NOTE:
- _4 find cj. A.C. Bradley.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: THE VINE-SHROUD.
- [Published by W.M. Rossetti, 1870.]
- Flourishing vine, whose kindling clusters glow
- Beneath the autumnal sun, none taste of thee;
- For thou dost shroud a ruin, and below
- The rotting bones of dead antiquity.
- ***
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1818, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- We often hear of persons disappointed by a first visit to Italy. This
- was not Shelley's case. The aspect of its nature, its sunny sky, its
- majestic storms, of the luxuriant vegetation of the country, and the
- noble marble-built cities, enchanted him. The sight of the works of art
- was full enjoyment and wonder. He had not studied pictures or statues
- before; he now did so with the eye of taste, that referred not to the
- rules of schools, but to those of Nature and truth. The first entrance
- to Rome opened to him a scene of remains of antique grandeur that far
- surpassed his expectations; and the unspeakable beauty of Naples and
- its environs added to the impression he received of the transcendent
- and glorious beauty of Italy.
- Our winter was spent at Naples. Here he wrote the fragments of
- "Marenghi" and "The Woodman and the Nightingale", which he afterwards
- threw aside. At this time, Shelley suffered greatly in health. He put
- himself under the care of a medical man, who promised great things, and
- made him endure severe bodily pain, without any good results. Constant
- and poignant physical suffering exhausted him; and though he preserved
- the appearance of cheerfulness, and often greatly enjoyed our
- wanderings in the environs of Naples, and our excursions on its sunny
- sea, yet many hours were passed when his thoughts, shadowed by illness,
- became gloomy,--and then he escaped to solitude, and in verses, which
- he hid from fear of wounding me, poured forth morbid but too natural
- bursts of discontent and sadness. One looks back with unspeakable
- regret and gnawing remorse to such periods; fancying that, had one been
- more alive to the nature of his feelings, and more attentive to soothe
- them, such would not have existed. And yet, enjoying as he appeared to
- do every sight or influence of earth or sky, it was difficult to
- imagine that any melancholy he showed was aught but the effect of the
- constant pain to which he was a martyr.
- We lived in utter solitude. And such is often not the nurse of
- cheerfulness; for then, at least with those who have been exposed to
- adversity, the mind broods over its sorrows too intently; while the
- society of the enlightened, the witty, and the wise, enables us to
- forget ourselves by making us the sharers of the thoughts of others,
- which is a portion of the philosophy of happiness. Shelley never liked
- society in numbers,--it harassed and wearied him; but neither did he
- like loneliness, and usually, when alone, sheltered himself against
- memory and reflection in a book. But, with one or two whom he loved, he
- gave way to wild and joyous spirits, or in more serious conversation
- expounded his opinions with vivacity and eloquence. If an argument
- arose, no man ever argued better. He was clear, logical, and earnest,
- in supporting his own views; attentive, patient, and impartial, while
- listening to those on the adverse side. Had not a wall of prejudice
- been raised at this time between him and his countrymen, how many would
- have sought the acquaintance of one whom to know was to love and to
- revere! How many of the more enlightened of his contemporaries have
- since regretted that they did not seek him! how very few knew his worth
- while he lived! and, of those few, several were withheld by timidity or
- envy from declaring their sense of it. But no man was ever more
- enthusiastically loved--more looked up to, as one superior to his
- fellows in intellectual endowments and moral worth, by the few who knew
- him well, and had sufficient nobleness of soul to appreciate his
- superiority. His excellence is now acknowledged; but, even while
- admitted, not duly appreciated. For who, except those who were
- acquainted with him, can imagine his unwearied benevolence, his
- generosity, his systematic forbearance? And still less is his vast
- superiority in intellectual attainments sufficiently understood--his
- sagacity, his clear understanding, his learning, his prodigious memory.
- All these as displayed in conversation, were known to few while he
- lived, and are now silent in the tomb:
- 'Ahi orbo mondo ingrato!
- Gran cagion hai di dever pianger meco;
- Che quel ben ch' era in te, perdut' hai seco.'
- ***
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1819.
- LINES WRITTEN DURING THE CASTLEREAGH ADMINISTRATION.
- [Published by Medwin, "The Athenaeum", December 8, 1832; reprinted,
- "Poetical Works", 1839. There is a transcript amongst the Harvard
- manuscripts, and another in the possession of Mr. C.W. Frederickson of
- Brooklyn. Variants from these two sources are given by Professor
- Woodberry, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", Centenary Edition,
- 1893, volume 3 pages 225, 226. The transcripts are referred to in our
- footnotes as Harvard and Fred. respectively.]
- 1.
- Corpses are cold in the tomb;
- Stones on the pavement are dumb;
- Abortions are dead in the womb,
- And their mothers look pale--like the death-white shore
- Of Albion, free no more. _5
- 2.
- Her sons are as stones in the way--
- They are masses of senseless clay--
- They are trodden, and move not away,--
- The abortion with which SHE travaileth
- Is Liberty, smitten to death. _10
- 3.
- Then trample and dance, thou Oppressor!
- For thy victim is no redresser;
- Thou art sole lord and possessor
- Of her corpses, and clods, and abortions--they pave
- Thy path to the grave. _15
- 4.
- Hearest thou the festival din
- Of Death, and Destruction, and Sin,
- And Wealth crying "Havoc!" within?
- 'Tis the bacchanal triumph that makes Truth dumb,
- Thine Epithalamium. _20
- 5.
- Ay, marry thy ghastly wife!
- Let Fear and Disquiet and Strife
- Spread thy couch in the chamber of Life!
- Marry Ruin, thou Tyrant! and Hell be thy guide
- To the bed of the bride! _25
- NOTES:
- _4 death-white Harvard, Fred.; white 1832, 1839.
- _16 festival Harvard, Fred., 1839; festal 1832.
- _19 that Fred.; which Harvard 1832.
- _22 Disquiet Harvard, Fred., 1839; Disgust 1832.
- _24 Hell Fred.; God Harvard, 1832, 1839.
- _25 the bride Harvard, Fred., 1839; thy bride 1832.
- ***
- SONG TO THE MEN OF ENGLAND.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- 1.
- Men of England, wherefore plough
- For the lords who lay ye low?
- Wherefore weave with toil and care
- The rich robes your tyrants wear?
- 2.
- Wherefore feed, and clothe, and save, _5
- From the cradle to the grave,
- Those ungrateful drones who would
- Drain your sweat--nay, drink your blood?
- 3.
- Wherefore, Bees of England, forge
- Many a weapon, chain, and scourge, _10
- That these stingless drones may spoil
- The forced produce of your toil?
- 4.
- Have ye leisure, comfort, calm,
- Shelter, food, love's gentle balm?
- Or what is it ye buy so dear _15
- With your pain and with your fear?
- 5.
- The seed ye sow, another reaps;
- The wealth ye find, another keeps;
- The robes ye weave, another wears;
- The arms ye forge; another bears. _20
- 6.
- Sow seed,--but let no tyrant reap;
- Find wealth,--let no impostor heap;
- Weave robes,--let not the idle wear;
- Forge arms,--in your defence to bear.
- 7.
- Shrink to your cellars, holes, and cells; _25
- In halls ye deck another dwells.
- Why shake the chains ye wrought? Ye see
- The steel ye tempered glance on ye.
- 8.
- With plough and spade, and hoe and loom,
- Trace your grave, and build your tomb, _30
- And weave your winding-sheet, till fair
- England be your sepulchre.
- ***
- SIMILES FOR TWO POLITICAL CHARACTERS OF 1819.
- [Published by Medwin, "The Athenaeum", August 25, 1832; reprinted by
- Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839. Our title is that of 1839, 2nd
- edition. The poem is found amongst the Harvard manuscripts, headed "To
- S--th and O--gh".]
- 1.
- As from an ancestral oak
- Two empty ravens sound their clarion,
- Yell by yell, and croak by croak,
- When they scent the noonday smoke
- Of fresh human carrion:-- _5
- 2.
- As two gibbering night-birds flit
- From their bowers of deadly yew
- Through the night to frighten it,
- When the moon is in a fit,
- And the stars are none, or few:-- _10
- 3.
- As a shark and dog-fish wait
- Under an Atlantic isle,
- For the negro-ship, whose freight
- Is the theme of their debate,
- Wrinkling their red gills the while-- _15
- 4.
- Are ye, two vultures sick for battle,
- Two scorpions under one wet stone,
- Two bloodless wolves whose dry throats rattle,
- Two crows perched on the murrained cattle,
- Two vipers tangled into one. _20
- NOTE:
- _7 yew 1832; hue 1839.
- **
- FRAGMENT: TO THE PEOPLE OF ENGLAND.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- People of England, ye who toil and groan,
- Who reap the harvests which are not your own,
- Who weave the clothes which your oppressors wear,
- And for your own take the inclement air;
- Who build warm houses... _5
- And are like gods who give them all they have,
- And nurse them from the cradle to the grave...
- ...
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'WHAT MEN GAIN FAIRLY'.
- (Perhaps connected with that immediately preceding (Forman).--ED.)
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- What men gain fairly--that they should possess,
- And children may inherit idleness,
- From him who earns it--This is understood;
- Private injustice may be general good.
- But he who gains by base and armed wrong, _5
- Or guilty fraud, or base compliances,
- May be despoiled; even as a stolen dress
- Is stripped from a convicted thief; and he
- Left in the nakedness of infamy.
- ***
- A NEW NATIONAL ANTHEM.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- 1.
- God prosper, speed,and save,
- God raise from England's grave
- Her murdered Queen!
- Pave with swift victory
- The steps of Liberty, _5
- Whom Britons own to be
- Immortal Queen.
- 2.
- See, she comes throned on high,
- On swift Eternity!
- God save the Queen! _10
- Millions on millions wait,
- Firm, rapid, and elate,
- On her majestic state!
- God save the Queen!
- 3.
- She is Thine own pure soul _15
- Moulding the mighty whole,--
- God save the Queen!
- She is Thine own deep love
- Rained down from Heaven above,--
- Wherever she rest or move, _20
- God save our Queen!
- 4.
- 'Wilder her enemies
- In their own dark disguise,--
- God save our Queen!
- All earthly things that dare _25
- Her sacred name to bear,
- Strip them, as kings are, bare;
- God save the Queen!
- 5.
- Be her eternal throne
- Built in our hearts alone-- _30
- God save the Queen!
- Let the oppressor hold
- Canopied seats of gold;
- She sits enthroned of old
- O'er our hearts Queen. _35
- 6.
- Lips touched by seraphim
- Breathe out the choral hymn
- 'God save the Queen!'
- Sweet as if angels sang,
- Loud as that trumpet's clang _40
- Wakening the world's dead gang,--
- God save the Queen!
- ***
- SONNET: ENGLAND IN 1819.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- An old, mad, blind, despised, and dying king,--
- Princes, the dregs of their dull race, who flow
- Through public scorn,--mud from a muddy spring,--
- Rulers who neither see, nor feel, nor know,
- But leech-like to their fainting country cling, _5
- Till they drop, blind in blood, without a blow,--
- A people starved and stabbed in the untilled field,--
- An army, which liberticide and prey
- Makes as a two-edged sword to all who wield,--
- Golden and sanguine laws which tempt and slay; _10
- Religion Christless, Godless--a book sealed;
- A Senate,--Time's worst statute, unrepealed,--
- Are graves from which a glorious Phantom may
- Burst, to illumine our tempestuous day.
- ***
- AN ODE, WRITTEN OCTOBER, 1819,
- BEFORE THE SPANIARDS HAD RECOVERED THEIR LIBERTY.
- [Published with "Prometheus Unbound", 1820.]
- Arise, arise, arise!
- There is blood on the earth that denies ye bread;
- Be your wounds like eyes
- To weep for the dead, the dead, the dead.
- What other grief were it just to pay? _5
- Your sons, your wives, your brethren, were they;
- Who said they were slain on the battle day?
- Awaken, awaken, awaken!
- The slave and the tyrant are twin-born foes;
- Be the cold chains shaken _10
- To the dust where your kindred repose, repose:
- Their bones in the grave will start and move,
- When they hear the voices of those they love,
- Most loud in the holy combat above.
- Wave, wave high the banner! _15
- When Freedom is riding to conquest by:
- Though the slaves that fan her
- Be Famine and Toil, giving sigh for sigh.
- And ye who attend her imperial car,
- Lift not your hands in the banded war, _20
- But in her defence whose children ye are.
- Glory, glory, glory,
- To those who have greatly suffered and done!
- Never name in story
- Was greater than that which ye shall have won. _25
- Conquerors have conquered their foes alone,
- Whose revenge, pride, and power they have overthrown
- Ride ye, more victorious, over your own.
- Bind, bind every brow
- With crownals of violet, ivy, and pine: _30
- Hide the blood-stains now
- With hues which sweet Nature has made divine:
- Green strength, azure hope, and eternity:
- But let not the pansy among them be;
- Ye were injured, and that means memory. _35
- ***
- CANCELLED STANZA.
- [Published in "The Times" (Rossetti).]
- Gather, O gather,
- Foeman and friend in love and peace!
- Waves sleep together
- When the blasts that called them to battle, cease.
- For fangless Power grown tame and mild _5
- Is at play with Freedom's fearless child--
- The dove and the serpent reconciled!
- ***
- ODE TO HEAVEN.
- [Published with "Prometheus Unbound", 1820. Dated 'Florence, December,
- 1819' in Harvard manuscript (Woodberry). A transcript exists amongst
- the Shelley manuscripts at the Bodleian Library. See Mr. C.D. Locock's
- "Examination", etc., page 39.]
- CHORUS OF SPIRITS:
- FIRST SPIRIT:
- Palace-roof of cloudless nights!
- Paradise of golden lights!
- Deep, immeasurable, vast,
- Which art now, and which wert then
- Of the Present and the Past, _5
- Of the eternal Where and When,
- Presence-chamber, temple, home,
- Ever-canopying dome,
- Of acts and ages yet to come!
- Glorious shapes have life in thee, _10
- Earth, and all earth's company;
- Living globes which ever throng
- Thy deep chasms and wildernesses;
- And green worlds that glide along;
- And swift stars with flashing tresses; _15
- And icy moons most cold and bright,
- And mighty suns beyond the night,
- Atoms of intensest light.
- Even thy name is as a god,
- Heaven! for thou art the abode _20
- Of that Power which is the glass
- Wherein man his nature sees.
- Generations as they pass
- Worship thee with bended knees.
- Their unremaining gods and they _25
- Like a river roll away:
- Thou remainest such--alway!--
- SECOND SPIRIT:
- Thou art but the mind's first chamber,
- Round which its young fancies clamber,
- Like weak insects in a cave, _30
- Lighted up by stalactites;
- But the portal of the grave,
- Where a world of new delights
- Will make thy best glories seem
- But a dim and noonday gleam _35
- From the shadow of a dream!
- THIRD SPIRIT:
- Peace! the abyss is wreathed with scorn
- At your presumption, atom-born!
- What is Heaven? and what are ye
- Who its brief expanse inherit? _40
- What are suns and spheres which flee
- With the instinct of that Spirit
- Of which ye are but a part?
- Drops which Nature's mighty heart
- Drives through thinnest veins! Depart! _45
- What is Heaven? a globe of dew,
- Filling in the morning new
- Some eyed flower whose young leaves waken
- On an unimagined world:
- Constellated suns unshaken, _50
- Orbits measureless, are furled
- In that frail and fading sphere,
- With ten millions gathered there,
- To tremble, gleam, and disappear.
- ***
- CANCELLED FRAGMENTS OF THE ODE TO HEAVEN.
- [Published by Mr. C.D. Locock, "Examination", etc., 1903.]
- The [living frame which sustains my soul]
- Is [sinking beneath the fierce control]
- Down through the lampless deep of song
- I am drawn and driven along--
- When a Nation screams aloud _5
- Like an eagle from the cloud
- When a...
- ...
- When the night...
- ...
- Watch the look askance and old--
- See neglect, and falsehood fold... _10
- ***
- ODE TO THE WEST WIND.
- (This poem was conceived and chiefly written in a wood that skirts the
- Arno, near Florence, and on a day when that tempestuous wind, whose
- temperature is at once mild and animating, was collecting the vapours
- which pour down the autumnal rains. They began, as I foresaw, at sunset
- with a violent tempest of hail and rain, attended by that magnificent
- thunder and lightning peculiar to the Cisalpine regions.
- The phenomenon alluded to at the conclusion of the third stanza is well
- known to naturalists. The vegetation at the bottom of the sea, of
- rivers, and of lakes, sympathizes with that of the land in the change
- of seasons, and is consequently influenced by the winds which announce
- it.--[SHELLEY'S NOTE.])
- [Published with "Prometheus Unbound", 1820.]
- 1.
- O wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn's being,
- Thou, from whose unseen presence the leaves dead
- Are driven, like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing,
- Yellow, and black, and pale, and hectic red,
- Pestilence-stricken multitudes: O thou, _5
- Who chariotest to their dark wintry bed
- The winged seeds, where they lie cold and low,
- Each like a corpse within its grave, until
- Thine azure sister of the Spring shall blow
- Her clarion o'er the dreaming earth, and fill _10
- (Driving sweet buds like flocks to feed in air)
- With living hues and odours plain and hill:
- Wild Spirit, which art moving everywhere;
- Destroyer and preserver; hear, oh, hear!
- 2.
- Thou on whose stream, mid the steep sky's commotion, _15
- Loose clouds like earth's decaying leaves are shed,
- Shook from the tangled boughs of Heaven and Ocean,
- Angels of rain and lightning: there are spread
- On the blue surface of thine aery surge,
- Like the bright hair uplifted from the head _20
- Of some fierce Maenad, even from the dim verge
- Of the horizon to the zenith's height,
- The locks of the approaching storm. Thou dirge
- Of the dying year, to which this closing night
- Will be the dome of a vast sepulchre, _25
- Vaulted with all thy congregated might
- Of vapours, from whose solid atmosphere
- Black rain, and fire, and hail will burst: oh, hear!
- 3.
- Thou who didst waken from his summer dreams
- The blue Mediterranean, where he lay, _30
- Lulled by the coil of his crystalline streams,
- Beside a pumice isle in Baiae's bay,
- And saw in sleep old palaces and towers
- Quivering within the wave's intenser day,
- All overgrown with azure moss and flowers _35
- So sweet, the sense faints picturing them! Thou
- For whose path the Atlantic's level powers
- Cleave themselves into chasms, while far below
- The sea-blooms and the oozy woods which wear
- The sapless foliage of the ocean, know _40
- Thy voice, and suddenly grow gray with fear,
- And tremble and despoil themselves: oh, hear!
- 4.
- If I were a dead leaf thou mightest bear;
- If I were a swift cloud to fly with thee;
- A wave to pant beneath thy power, and share _45
- The impulse of thy strength, only less free
- Than thou, O uncontrollable! If even
- I were as in my boyhood, and could be
- The comrade of thy wanderings over Heaven,
- As then, when to outstrip thy skiey speed _50
- Scarce seemed a vision; I would ne'er have striven
- As thus with thee in prayer in my sore need.
- Oh, lift me as a wave, a leaf, a cloud!
- I fall upon the thorns of life! I bleed!
- A heavy weight of hours has chained and bowed _55
- One too like thee: tameless, and swift, and proud.
- 5.
- Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is:
- What if my leaves are falling like its own!
- The tumult of thy mighty harmonies
- Will take from both a deep, autumnal tone, _60
- Sweet though in sadness. Be thou, Spirit fierce,
- My spirit! Be thou me, impetuous one!
- Drive my dead thoughts over the universe
- Like withered leaves to quicken a new birth!
- And, by the incantation of this verse, _65
- Scatter, as from an unextinguished hearth
- Ashes and sparks, my words among mankind!
- Be through my lips to unawakened earth
- The trumpet of a prophecy! O, Wind,
- If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind? _70
- ***
- AN EXHORTATION.
- [Published with "Prometheus Unbound", 1820. Dated 'Pisa, April, 1820'
- in Harvard manuscript (Woodberry), but assigned by Mrs. Shelley to
- 1819.]
- Chameleons feed on light and air:
- Poets' food is love and fame:
- If in this wide world of care
- Poets could but find the same
- With as little toil as they, _5
- Would they ever change their hue
- As the light chameleons do,
- Suiting it to every ray
- Twenty times a day?
- Poets are on this cold earth, _10
- As chameleons might be,
- Hidden from their early birth
- in a cave beneath the sea;
- Where light is, chameleons change:
- Where love is not, poets do: _15
- Fame is love disguised: if few
- Find either, never think it strange
- That poets range.
- Yet dare not stain with wealth or power
- A poet's free and heavenly mind: _20
- If bright chameleons should devour
- Any food but beams and wind,
- They would grow as earthly soon
- As their brother lizards are.
- Children of a sunnier star, _25
- Spirits from beyond the moon,
- Oh, refuse the boon!
- ***
- THE INDIAN SERENADE.
- [Published, with the title, "Song written for an Indian Air", in "The
- Liberal", 2, 1822. Reprinted ("Lines to an Indian Air") by Mrs.
- Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824. The poem is included in the Harvard
- manuscript book, and there is a description by Robert Browning of an
- autograph copy presenting some variations from the text of 1824. See
- Leigh Hunt's "Correspondence", 2, pages 264-8.]
- 1.
- I arise from dreams of thee
- In the first sweet sleep of night,
- When the winds are breathing low,
- And the stars are shining bright:
- I arise from dreams of thee, _5
- And a spirit in my feet
- Hath led me--who knows how?
- To thy chamber window, Sweet!
- 2.
- The wandering airs they faint
- On the dark, the silent stream-- _10
- The Champak odours fail
- Like sweet thoughts in a dream;
- The nightingale's complaint,
- It dies upon her heart;--
- As I must on thine, _15
- Oh, beloved as thou art!
- 3.
- Oh lift me from the grass!
- I die! I faint! I fail!
- Let thy love in kisses rain
- On my lips and eyelids pale. _20
- My cheek is cold and white, alas!
- My heart beats loud and fast;--
- Oh! press it to thine own again,
- Where it will break at last.
- NOTES:
- _3 Harvard manuscript omits When.
- _4 shining]burning Harvard manuscript, 1822.
- _7 Hath led Browning manuscript, 1822;
- Has borne Harvard manuscript; Has led 1824.
- _11 The Champak Harvard manuscript, 1822, 1824;
- And the Champak's Browning manuscript.
- _15 As I must on 1822, 1824;
- As I must die on Harvard manuscript, 1839, 1st edition.
- _16 Oh, beloved Browning manuscript, Harvard manuscript, 1839, 1st edition;
- Beloved 1822, 1824.
- _23 press it to thine own Browning manuscript;
- press it close to thine Harvard manuscript, 1824, 1839, 1st edition;
- press me to thine own, 1822.
- ***
- CANCELLED PASSAGE.
- [Published by W.M. Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works", 1870.]
- O pillow cold and wet with tears!
- Thou breathest sleep no more!
- ***
- TO SOPHIA [MISS STACEY].
- [Published by W.M. Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works", 1870.]
- 1.
- Thou art fair, and few are fairer
- Of the Nymphs of earth or ocean;
- They are robes that fit the wearer--
- Those soft limbs of thine, whose motion
- Ever falls and shifts and glances _5
- As the life within them dances.
- 2.
- Thy deep eyes, a double Planet,
- Gaze the wisest into madness
- With soft clear fire,--the winds that fan it
- Are those thoughts of tender gladness _10
- Which, like zephyrs on the billow,
- Make thy gentle soul their pillow.
- 3.
- If, whatever face thou paintest
- In those eyes, grows pale with pleasure,
- If the fainting soul is faintest _15
- When it hears thy harp's wild measure,
- Wonder not that when thou speakest
- Of the weak my heart is weakest.
- 4.
- As dew beneath the wind of morning,
- As the sea which whirlwinds waken, _20
- As the birds at thunder's warning,
- As aught mute yet deeply shaken,
- As one who feels an unseen spirit
- Is my heart when thine is near it.
- ***
- TO WILLIAM SHELLEY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.
- The fragment included in the Harvard manuscript book.]
- (With what truth may I say--
- Roma! Roma! Roma!
- Non e piu come era prima!)
- 1.
- My lost William, thou in whom
- Some bright spirit lived, and did
- That decaying robe consume
- Which its lustre faintly hid,--
- Here its ashes find a tomb, _5
- But beneath this pyramid
- Thou art not--if a thing divine
- Like thee can die, thy funeral shrine
- Is thy mother's grief and mine.
- 2.
- Where art thou, my gentle child? _10
- Let me think thy spirit feeds,
- With its life intense and mild,
- The love of living leaves and weeds
- Among these tombs and ruins wild;--
- Let me think that through low seeds _15
- Of sweet flowers and sunny grass
- Into their hues and scents may pass
- A portion--
- NOTE:
- Motto _1 may I Harvard manuscript; I may 1824.
- _12 With Harvard manuscript, Mrs. Shelley, 1847; Within 1824, 1839.
- _16 Of sweet Harvard manuscript; Of the sweet 1824, 1839.
- ***
- TO WILLIAM SHELLEY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- Thy little footsteps on the sands
- Of a remote and lonely shore;
- The twinkling of thine infant hands,
- Where now the worm will feed no more;
- Thy mingled look of love and glee _5
- When we returned to gaze on thee--
- ***
- TO MARY SHELLEY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- My dearest Mary, wherefore hast thou gone,
- And left me in this dreary world alone?
- Thy form is here indeed--a lovely one--
- But thou art fled, gone down the dreary road,
- That leads to Sorrow's most obscure abode; _5
- Thou sittest on the hearth of pale despair,
- Where
- For thine own sake I cannot follow thee.
- ***
- TO MARY SHELLEY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- The world is dreary,
- And I am weary
- Of wandering on without thee, Mary;
- A joy was erewhile
- In thy voice and thy smile, _5
- And 'tis gone, when I should be gone too, Mary.
- ***
- ON THE MEDUSA OF LEONARDO DA VINCI IN THE FLORENTINE GALLERY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- It lieth, gazing on the midnight sky,
- Upon the cloudy mountain-peak supine;
- Below, far lands are seen tremblingly;
- Its horror and its beauty are divine.
- Upon its lips and eyelids seems to lie _5
- Loveliness like a shadow, from which shine,
- Fiery and lurid, struggling underneath,
- The agonies of anguish and of death.
- 2.
- Yet it is less the horror than the grace
- Which turns the gazer's spirit into stone, _10
- Whereon the lineaments of that dead face
- Are graven, till the characters be grown
- Into itself, and thought no more can trace;
- 'Tis the melodious hue of beauty thrown
- Athwart the darkness and the glare of pain,
- Which humanize and harmonize the strain. _15
- 3.
- And from its head as from one body grow,
- As ... grass out of a watery rock,
- Hairs which are vipers, and they curl and flow
- And their long tangles in each other lock, _20
- And with unending involutions show
- Their mailed radiance, as it were to mock
- The torture and the death within, and saw
- The solid air with many a ragged jaw.
- 4.
- And, from a stone beside, a poisonous eft _25
- Peeps idly into those Gorgonian eyes;
- Whilst in the air a ghastly bat, bereft
- Of sense, has flitted with a mad surprise
- Out of the cave this hideous light had cleft,
- And he comes hastening like a moth that hies _30
- After a taper; and the midnight sky
- Flares, a light more dread than obscurity.
- 5.
- 'Tis the tempestuous loveliness of terror;
- For from the serpents gleams a brazen glare
- Kindled by that inextricable error, _35
- Which makes a thrilling vapour of the air
- Become a ... and ever-shifting mirror
- Of all the beauty and the terror there--
- A woman's countenance, with serpent-locks,
- Gazing in death on Heaven from those wet rocks. _40
- NOTES:
- _5 seems 1839; seem 1824.
- _6 shine]shrine 1824, 1839.
- _26 those 1824; these 1839.
- ***
- LOVE'S PHILOSOPHY.
- [Published by Leigh Hunt, "The Indicator", December 22, 1819. Reprinted
- by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824. Included in the Harvard
- manuscript book, where it is headed "An Anacreontic", and dated
- 'January, 1820.' Written by Shelley in a copy of Hunt's "Literary
- Pocket-Book", 1819, and presented to Sophia Stacey, December 29, 1820.]
- 1.
- The fountains mingle with the river
- And the rivers with the Ocean,
- The winds of Heaven mix for ever
- With a sweet emotion;
- Nothing in the world is single; _5
- All things by a law divine
- In one spirit meet and mingle.
- Why not I with thine?--
- 2.
- See the mountains kiss high Heaven
- And the waves clasp one another; _10
- No sister-flower would be forgiven
- If it disdained its brother;
- And the sunlight clasps the earth
- And the moonbeams kiss the sea:
- What is all this sweet work worth _15
- If thou kiss not me?
- NOTES:
- _3 mix for ever 1819, Stacey manuscript;
- meet together, Harvard manuscript.
- _7 In one spirit meet and Stacey manuscript;
- In one another's being 1819, Harvard manuscript.
- _11 No sister 1824, Harvard and Stacey manuscripts; No leaf or 1819.
- _12 disdained its 1824, Harvard and Stacey manuscripts;
- disdained to kiss its 1819.
- _15 is all this sweet work Stacey manuscript;
- were these examples Harvard manuscript;
- are all these kissings 1819, 1824.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'FOLLOW TO THE DEEP WOOD'S WEEDS'.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- Follow to the deep wood's weeds,
- Follow to the wild-briar dingle,
- Where we seek to intermingle,
- And the violet tells her tale
- To the odour-scented gale, _5
- For they two have enough to do
- Of such work as I and you.
- ***
- THE BIRTH OF PLEASURE.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- At the creation of the Earth
- Pleasure, that divinest birth,
- From the soil of Heaven did rise,
- Wrapped in sweet wild melodies--
- Like an exhalation wreathing _5
- To the sound of air low-breathing
- Through Aeolian pines, which make
- A shade and shelter to the lake
- Whence it rises soft and slow;
- Her life-breathing [limbs] did flow _10
- In the harmony divine
- Of an ever-lengthening line
- Which enwrapped her perfect form
- With a beauty clear and warm.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: LOVE THE UNIVERSE TO-DAY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- And who feels discord now or sorrow?
- Love is the universe to-day--
- These are the slaves of dim to-morrow,
- Darkening Life's labyrinthine way.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'A GENTLE STORY OF TWO LOVERS YOUNG'.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- A gentle story of two lovers young,
- Who met in innocence and died in sorrow,
- And of one selfish heart, whose rancour clung
- Like curses on them; are ye slow to borrow
- The lore of truth from such a tale? _5
- Or in this world's deserted vale,
- Do ye not see a star of gladness
- Pierce the shadows of its sadness,--
- When ye are cold, that love is a light sent
- From Heaven, which none shall quench, to cheer the innocent? _10
- NOTE:
- _9 cold]told cj. A.C. Bradley.
- For the metre cp. Fragment: To a Friend Released from Prison.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: LOVE'S TENDER ATMOSPHERE.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- There is a warm and gentle atmosphere
- About the form of one we love, and thus
- As in a tender mist our spirits are
- Wrapped in the ... of that which is to us
- The health of life's own life-- _5
- ***
- FRAGMENT: WEDDED SOULS.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- I am as a spirit who has dwelt
- Within his heart of hearts, and I have felt
- His feelings, and have thought his thoughts, and known
- The inmost converse of his soul, the tone
- Unheard but in the silence of his blood, _5
- When all the pulses in their multitude
- Image the trembling calm of summer seas.
- I have unlocked the golden melodies
- Of his deep soul, as with a master-key,
- And loosened them and bathed myself therein-- _10
- Even as an eagle in a thunder-mist
- Clothing his wings with lightning.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'IS IT THAT IN SOME BRIGHTER SPHERE'.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- Is it that in some brighter sphere
- We part from friends we meet with here?
- Or do we see the Future pass
- Over the Present's dusky glass?
- Or what is that that makes us seem _5
- To patch up fragments of a dream,
- Part of which comes true, and part
- Beats and trembles in the heart?
- ***
- FRAGMENT: SUFFICIENT UNTO THE DAY.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- Is not to-day enough? Why do I peer
- Into the darkness of the day to come?
- Is not to-morrow even as yesterday?
- And will the day that follows change thy doom?
- Few flowers grow upon thy wintry way; _5
- And who waits for thee in that cheerless home
- Whence thou hast fled, whither thou must return
- Charged with the load that makes thee faint and mourn?
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'YE GENTLE VISITATIONS OF CALM THOUGHT'.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- Ye gentle visitations of calm thought--
- Moods like the memories of happier earth,
- Which come arrayed in thoughts of little worth,
- Like stars in clouds by the weak winds enwrought,--
- But that the clouds depart and stars remain, _5
- While they remain, and ye, alas, depart!
- ***
- FRAGMENT: MUSIC AND SWEET POETRY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- How sweet it is to sit and read the tales
- Of mighty poets and to hear the while
- Sweet music, which when the attention fails
- Fills the dim pause--
- ***
- FRAGMENT: THE SEPULCHRE OF MEMORY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- And where is truth? On tombs? for such to thee
- Has been my heart--and thy dead memory
- Has lain from childhood, many a changeful year,
- Unchangingly preserved and buried there.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'WHEN A LOVER CLASPS HIS FAIREST'.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- 1.
- When a lover clasps his fairest,
- Then be our dread sport the rarest.
- Their caresses were like the chaff
- In the tempest, and be our laugh
- His despair--her epitaph! _5
- 2.
- When a mother clasps her child,
- Watch till dusty Death has piled
- His cold ashes on the clay;
- She has loved it many a day--
- She remains,--it fades away. _10
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'WAKE THE SERPENT NOT'.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- Wake the serpent not--lest he
- Should not know the way to go,--
- Let him crawl which yet lies sleeping
- Through the deep grass of the meadow!
- Not a bee shall hear him creeping, _5
- Not a may-fly shall awaken
- From its cradling blue-bell shaken,
- Not the starlight as he's sliding
- Through the grass with silent gliding.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: RAIN.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- The fitful alternations of the rain,
- When the chill wind, languid as with pain
- Of its own heavy moisture, here and there
- Drives through the gray and beamless atmosphere.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: A TALE UNTOLD.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- One sung of thee who left the tale untold,
- Like the false dawns which perish in the bursting;
- Like empty cups of wrought and daedal gold,
- Which mock the lips with air, when they are thirsting.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: TO ITALY.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- As the sunrise to the night,
- As the north wind to the clouds,
- As the earthquake's fiery flight,
- Ruining mountain solitudes,
- Everlasting Italy, _5
- Be those hopes and fears on thee.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: WINE OF THE FAIRIES.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- I am drunk with the honey wine
- Of the moon-unfolded eglantine,
- Which fairies catch in hyacinth bowls.
- The bats, the dormice, and the moles
- Sleep in the walls or under the sward _5
- Of the desolate castle yard;
- And when 'tis spilt on the summer earth
- Or its fumes arise among the dew,
- Their jocund dreams are full of mirth,
- They gibber their joy in sleep; for few _10
- Of the fairies bear those bowls so new!
- ***
- FRAGMENT: A ROMAN'S CHAMBER.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- 1.
- In the cave which wild weeds cover
- Wait for thine aethereal lover;
- For the pallid moon is waning,
- O'er the spiral cypress hanging
- And the moon no cloud is staining. _5
- 2.
- It was once a Roman's chamber,
- Where he kept his darkest revels,
- And the wild weeds twine and clamber;
- It was then a chasm for devils.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: ROME AND NATURE.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- Rome has fallen, ye see it lying
- Heaped in undistinguished ruin:
- Nature is alone undying.
- ***
- VARIATION OF THE SONG OF THE MOON.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- ("PROMETHEUS UNBOUND", ACT 4.)
- As a violet's gentle eye
- Gazes on the azure sky
- Until its hue grows like what it beholds;
- As a gray and empty mist
- Lies like solid amethyst _5
- Over the western mountain it enfolds,
- When the sunset sleeps
- Upon its snow;
- As a strain of sweetest sound
- Wraps itself the wind around _10
- Until the voiceless wind be music too;
- As aught dark, vain, and dull,
- Basking in what is beautiful,
- Is full of light and love--
- ***
- CANCELLED STANZA OF THE MASK OF ANARCHY.
- [Published by H. Buxton Forman, "The Mask of Anarchy" ("Facsimile of
- Shelley's manuscript"), 1887.]
- (FOR WHICH STANZAS 68, 69 HAVE BEEN SUBSTITUTED.)
- From the cities where from caves,
- Like the dead from putrid graves,
- Troops of starvelings gliding come,
- Living Tenants of a tomb.
- ***
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1819, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- Shelley loved the People; and respected them as often more virtuous, as
- always more suffering, and therefore more deserving of sympathy, than
- the great. He believed that a clash between the two classes of society
- was inevitable, and he eagerly ranged himself on the people's side. He
- had an idea of publishing a series of poems adapted expressly to
- commemorate their circumstances and wrongs. He wrote a few; but, in
- those days of prosecution for libel, they could not be printed. They
- are not among the best of his productions, a writer being always
- shackled when he endeavours to write down to the comprehension of those
- who could not understand or feel a highly imaginative style; but they
- show his earnestness, and with what heart-felt compassion he went home
- to the direct point of injury--that oppression is detestable as being
- the parent of starvation, nakedness, and ignorance. Besides these
- outpourings of compassion and indignation, he had meant to adorn the
- cause he loved with loftier poetry of glory and triumph: such is the
- scope of the "Ode to the Assertors of Liberty". He sketched also a new
- version of our national anthem, as addressed to Liberty.
- ***
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1820.
- THE SENSITIVE PLANT.
- [Composed at Pisa, early in 1820 (dated 'March, 1820,' in Harvard
- manuscript), and published, with "Prometheus Unbound", the same year:
- included in the Harvard College manuscript book. Reprinted in the
- "Poetical Works", 1839, both editions.]
- PART 1.
- A Sensitive Plant in a garden grew,
- And the young winds fed it with silver dew,
- And it opened its fan-like leaves to the light.
- And closed them beneath the kisses of Night.
- And the Spring arose on the garden fair, _5
- Like the Spirit of Love felt everywhere;
- And each flower and herb on Earth's dark breast
- Rose from the dreams of its wintry rest.
- But none ever trembled and panted with bliss
- In the garden, the field, or the wilderness, _10
- Like a doe in the noontide with love's sweet want,
- As the companionless Sensitive Plant.
- The snowdrop, and then the violet,
- Arose from the ground with warm rain wet,
- And their breath was mixed with fresh odour, sent _15
- From the turf, like the voice and the instrument.
- Then the pied wind-flowers and the tulip tall,
- And narcissi, the fairest among them all,
- Who gaze on their eyes in the stream's recess,
- Till they die of their own dear loveliness; _20
- And the Naiad-like lily of the vale,
- Whom youth makes so fair and passion so pale
- That the light of its tremulous bells is seen
- Through their pavilions of tender green;
- And the hyacinth purple, and white, and blue, _25
- Which flung from its bells a sweet peal anew
- Of music so delicate, soft, and intense,
- It was felt like an odour within the sense;
- And the rose like a nymph to the bath addressed,
- Which unveiled the depth of her glowing breast, _30
- Till, fold after fold, to the fainting air
- The soul of her beauty and love lay bare:
- And the wand-like lily, which lifted up,
- As a Maenad, its moonlight-coloured cup,
- Till the fiery star, which is its eye,
- Gazed through clear dew on the tender sky; _35
- And the jessamine faint, and the sweet tuberose,
- The sweetest flower for scent that blows;
- And all rare blossoms from every clime
- Grew in that garden in perfect prime. _40
- And on the stream whose inconstant bosom
- Was pranked, under boughs of embowering blossom,
- With golden and green light, slanting through
- Their heaven of many a tangled hue,
- Broad water-lilies lay tremulously, _45
- And starry river-buds glimmered by,
- And around them the soft stream did glide and dance
- With a motion of sweet sound and radiance.
- And the sinuous paths of lawn and of moss,
- Which led through the garden along and across, _50
- Some open at once to the sun and the breeze,
- Some lost among bowers of blossoming trees,
- Were all paved with daisies and delicate bells
- As fair as the fabulous asphodels,
- And flow'rets which, drooping as day drooped too, _55
- Fell into pavilions, white, purple, and blue,
- To roof the glow-worm from the evening dew.
- And from this undefiled Paradise
- The flowers (as an infant's awakening eyes
- Smile on its mother, whose singing sweet _60
- Can first lull, and at last must awaken it),
- When Heaven's blithe winds had unfolded them,
- As mine-lamps enkindle a hidden gem,
- Shone smiling to Heaven, and every one _65
- Shared joy in the light of the gentle sun;
- For each one was interpenetrated
- With the light and the odour its neighbour shed,
- Like young lovers whom youth and love make dear
- Wrapped and filled by their mutual atmosphere.
- But the Sensitive Plant which could give small fruit _70
- Of the love which it felt from the leaf to the root,
- Received more than all, it loved more than ever,
- Where none wanted but it, could belong to the giver,--
- For the Sensitive Plant has no bright flower;
- Radiance and odour are not its dower; _75
- It loves, even like Love, its deep heart is full,
- It desires what it has not, the Beautiful!
- The light winds which from unsustaining wings
- Shed the music of many murmurings;
- The beams which dart from many a star _80
- Of the flowers whose hues they bear afar;
- The plumed insects swift and free,
- Like golden boats on a sunny sea,
- Laden with light and odour, which pass
- Over the gleam of the living grass; _85
- The unseen clouds of the dew, which lie
- Like fire in the flowers till the sun rides high,
- Then wander like spirits among the spheres,
- Each cloud faint with the fragrance it bears;
- The quivering vapours of dim noontide, _90
- Which like a sea o'er the warm earth glide,
- In which every sound, and odour, and beam,
- Move, as reeds in a single stream;
- Each and all like ministering angels were
- For the Sensitive Plant sweet joy to bear, _95
- Whilst the lagging hours of the day went by
- Like windless clouds o'er a tender sky.
- And when evening descended from Heaven above,
- And the Earth was all rest, and the air was all love,
- And delight, though less bright, was far more deep, _100
- And the day's veil fell from the world of sleep,
- And the beasts, and the birds, and the insects were drowned
- In an ocean of dreams without a sound;
- Whose waves never mark, though they ever impress
- The light sand which paves it, consciousness; _105
- (Only overhead the sweet nightingale
- Ever sang more sweet as the day might fail,
- And snatches of its Elysian chant
- Were mixed with the dreams of the Sensitive Plant);--
- The Sensitive Plant was the earliest _110
- Upgathered into the bosom of rest;
- A sweet child weary of its delight,
- The feeblest and yet the favourite,
- Cradled within the embrace of Night.
- NOTES:
- _6 Like the Spirit of Love felt 1820;
- And the Spirit of Love felt 1839, 1st edition;
- And the Spirit of Love fell 1839, 2nd edition.
- _49 and of moss]and moss Harvard manuscript.
- _82 The]And the Harvard manuscript.
- PART 2.
- There was a Power in this sweet place,
- An Eve in this Eden; a ruling Grace
- Which to the flowers, did they waken or dream,
- Was as God is to the starry scheme.
- A Lady, the wonder of her kind, _5
- Whose form was upborne by a lovely mind
- Which, dilating, had moulded her mien and motion
- Like a sea-flower unfolded beneath the ocean,
- Tended the garden from morn to even:
- And the meteors of that sublunar Heaven, _10
- Like the lamps of the air when Night walks forth,
- Laughed round her footsteps up from the Earth!
- She had no companion of mortal race,
- But her tremulous breath and her flushing face
- Told, whilst the morn kissed the sleep from her eyes, _15
- That her dreams were less slumber than Paradise:
- As if some bright Spirit for her sweet sake
- Had deserted Heaven while the stars were awake,
- As if yet around her he lingering were,
- Though the veil of daylight concealed him from her. _20
- Her step seemed to pity the grass it pressed;
- You might hear by the heaving of her breast,
- That the coming and going of the wind
- Brought pleasure there and left passion behind.
- And wherever her aery footstep trod, _25
- Her trailing hair from the grassy sod
- Erased its light vestige, with shadowy sweep,
- Like a sunny storm o'er the dark green deep.
- I doubt not the flowers of that garden sweet
- Rejoiced in the sound of her gentle feet; _30
- I doubt not they felt the spirit that came
- From her glowing fingers through all their frame.
- She sprinkled bright water from the stream
- On those that were faint with the sunny beam;
- And out of the cups of the heavy flowers _35
- She emptied the rain of the thunder-showers.
- She lifted their heads with her tender hands,
- And sustained them with rods and osier-bands;
- If the flowers had been her own infants, she
- Could never have nursed them more tenderly. _40
- And all killing insects and gnawing worms,
- And things of obscene and unlovely forms,
- She bore, in a basket of Indian woof,
- Into the rough woods far aloof,--
- In a basket, of grasses and wild-flowers full, _45
- The freshest her gentle hands could pull
- For the poor banished insects, whose intent,
- Although they did ill, was innocent.
- But the bee and the beamlike ephemeris
- Whose path is the lightning's, and soft moths that kiss _50
- The sweet lips of the flowers, and harm not, did she
- Make her attendant angels be.
- And many an antenatal tomb,
- Where butterflies dream of the life to come,
- She left clinging round the smooth and dark _55
- Edge of the odorous cedar bark.
- This fairest creature from earliest Spring
- Thus moved through the garden ministering
- Mi the sweet season of Summertide,
- And ere the first leaf looked brown--she died! _60
- NOTES:
- _15 morn Harvard manuscript, 1839; moon 1820.
- _23 and going 1820; and the going Harvard manuscript, 1839.
- _59 All 1820, 1839; Through all Harvard manuscript.
- PART 3.
- Three days the flowers of the garden fair,
- Like stars when the moon is awakened, were,
- Or the waves of Baiae, ere luminous
- She floats up through the smoke of Vesuvius.
- And on the fourth, the Sensitive Plant _5
- Felt the sound of the funeral chant,
- And the steps of the bearers, heavy and slow,
- And the sobs of the mourners, deep and low;
- The weary sound and the heavy breath,
- And the silent motions of passing death, _10
- And the smell, cold, oppressive, and dank,
- Sent through the pores of the coffin-plank;
- The dark grass, and the flowers among the grass,
- Were bright with tears as the crowd did pass;
- From their sighs the wind caught a mournful tone, _15
- And sate in the pines, and gave groan for groan.
- The garden, once fair, became cold and foul,
- Like the corpse of her who had been its soul,
- Which at first was lovely as if in sleep,
- Then slowly changed, till it grew a heap _20
- To make men tremble who never weep.
- Swift Summer into the Autumn flowed,
- And frost in the mist of the morning rode,
- Though the noonday sun looked clear and bright,
- Mocking the spoil of the secret night. _25
- The rose-leaves, like flakes of crimson snow,
- Paved the turf and the moss below.
- The lilies were drooping, and white, and wan,
- Like the head and the skin of a dying man.
- And Indian plants, of scent and hue _30
- The sweetest that ever were fed on dew,
- Leaf by leaf, day after day,
- Were massed into the common clay.
- And the leaves, brown, yellow, and gray, and red,
- And white with the whiteness of what is dead, _35
- Like troops of ghosts on the dry wind passed;
- Their whistling noise made the birds aghast.
- And the gusty winds waked the winged seeds,
- Out of their birthplace of ugly weeds,
- Till they clung round many a sweet flower's stem, _40
- Which rotted into the earth with them.
- The water-blooms under the rivulet
- Fell from the stalks on which they were set;
- And the eddies drove them here and there,
- As the winds did those of the upper air. _45
- Then the rain came down, and the broken stalks
- Were bent and tangled across the walks;
- And the leafless network of parasite bowers
- Massed into ruin; and all sweet flowers.
- Between the time of the wind and the snow _50
- All loathliest weeds began to grow,
- Whose coarse leaves were splashed with many a speck,
- Like the water-snake's belly and the toad's back.
- And thistles, and nettles, and darnels rank,
- And the dock, and henbane, and hemlock dank, _55
- Stretched out its long and hollow shank,
- And stifled the air till the dead wind stank.
- And plants, at whose names the verse feels loath,
- Filled the place with a monstrous undergrowth,
- Prickly, and pulpous, and blistering, and blue, _60
- Livid, and starred with a lurid dew.
- And agarics, and fungi, with mildew and mould
- Started like mist from the wet ground cold;
- Pale, fleshy, as if the decaying dead
- With a spirit of growth had been animated! _65
- Spawn, weeds, and filth, a leprous scum,
- Made the running rivulet thick and dumb,
- And at its outlet flags huge as stakes
- Dammed it up with roots knotted like water-snakes.
- And hour by hour, when the air was still, _70
- The vapours arose which have strength to kill;
- At morn they were seen, at noon they were felt,
- At night they were darkness no star could melt.
- And unctuous meteors from spray to spray
- Crept and flitted in broad noonday _75
- Unseen; every branch on which they alit
- By a venomous blight was burned and bit.
- The Sensitive Plant, like one forbid,
- Wept, and the tears within each lid
- Of its folded leaves, which together grew, _80
- Were changed to a blight of frozen glue.
- For the leaves soon fell, and the branches soon
- By the heavy axe of the blast were hewn;
- The sap shrank to the root through every pore
- As blood to a heart that will beat no more. _85
- For Winter came: the wind was his whip:
- One choppy finger was on his lip:
- He had torn the cataracts from the hills
- And they clanked at his girdle like manacles;
- His breath was a chain which without a sound _90
- The earth, and the air, and the water bound;
- He came, fiercely driven, in his chariot-throne
- By the tenfold blasts of the Arctic zone.
- Then the weeds which were forms of living death
- Fled from the frost to the earth beneath. _95
- Their decay and sudden flight from frost
- Was but like the vanishing of a ghost!
- And under the roots of the Sensitive Plant
- The moles and the dormice died for want:
- The birds dropped stiff from the frozen air _100
- And were caught in the branches naked and bare.
- First there came down a thawing rain
- And its dull drops froze on the boughs again;
- Then there steamed up a freezing dew
- Which to the drops of the thaw-rain grew; _105
- And a northern whirlwind, wandering about
- Like a wolf that had smelt a dead child out,
- Shook the boughs thus laden, and heavy, and stiff,
- And snapped them off with his rigid griff.
- When Winter had gone and Spring came back _110
- The Sensitive Plant was a leafless wreck;
- But the mandrakes, and toadstools, and docks, and darnels,
- Rose like the dead from their ruined charnels.
- CONCLUSION.
- Whether the Sensitive Plant, or that
- Which within its boughs like a Spirit sat, _115
- Ere its outward form had known decay,
- Now felt this change, I cannot say.
- Whether that Lady's gentle mind,
- No longer with the form combined
- Which scattered love, as stars do light, _120
- Found sadness, where it left delight,
- I dare not guess; but in this life
- Of error, ignorance, and strife,
- Where nothing is, but all things seem,
- And we the shadows of the dream, _125
- It is a modest creed, and yet
- Pleasant if one considers it,
- To own that death itself must be,
- Like all the rest, a mockery.
- That garden sweet, that lady fair, _130
- And all sweet shapes and odours there,
- In truth have never passed away:
- 'Tis we, 'tis ours, are changed; not they.
- For love, and beauty, and delight,
- There is no death nor change: their might _135
- Exceeds our organs, which endure
- No light, being themselves obscure.
- NOTES:
- _19 lovely Harvard manuscript, 1839; lively 1820.
- _23 of the morning 1820, 1839; of morning Harvard manuscript.
- _26 snow Harvard manuscript, 1839; now 1820.
- _28 And lilies were drooping, white and wan Harvard manuscript.
- _32 Leaf by leaf, day after day Harvard manuscript;
- Leaf after leaf, day after day 1820;
- Leaf after leaf, day by day 1839.
- _63 mist]mists Harvard manuscript.
- _96 and sudden flight]and their sudden flight the Harvard manuscript.
- _98 And under]Under Harvard manuscript.
- _114 Whether]And if Harvard manuscript.
- _118 Whether]Or if Harvard manuscript.
- ***
- CANCELLED PASSAGE.
- [This stanza followed 3, 62-65 in the editio princeps, 1820, but was
- omitted by Mrs. Shelley from all editions from 1839 onwards. It is
- cancelled in the Harvard manuscript.]
- Their moss rotted off them, flake by flake,
- Till the thick stalk stuck like a murderer's stake,
- Where rags of loose flesh yet tremble on high,
- Infecting the winds that wander by.
- ***
- A VISION OF THE SEA.
- [Composed at Pisa early in 1820, and published with "Prometheus
- Unbound" in the same year. A transcript in Mrs. Shelley's handwriting
- is included in the Harvard manuscript book, where it is dated 'April,
- 1820.']
- 'Tis the terror of tempest. The rags of the sail
- Are flickering in ribbons within the fierce gale:
- From the stark night of vapours the dim rain is driven,
- And when lightning is loosed, like a deluge from Heaven,
- She sees the black trunks of the waterspouts spin _5
- And bend, as if Heaven was ruining in,
- Which they seemed to sustain with their terrible mass
- As if ocean had sunk from beneath them: they pass
- To their graves in the deep with an earthquake of sound,
- And the waves and the thunders, made silent around, _10
- Leave the wind to its echo. The vessel, now tossed
- Through the low-trailing rack of the tempest, is lost
- In the skirts of the thunder-cloud: now down the sweep
- Of the wind-cloven wave to the chasm of the deep
- It sinks, and the walls of the watery vale _15
- Whose depths of dread calm are unmoved by the gale,
- Dim mirrors of ruin, hang gleaming about;
- While the surf, like a chaos of stars, like a rout
- Of death-flames, like whirlpools of fire-flowing iron,
- With splendour and terror the black ship environ, _20
- Or like sulphur-flakes hurled from a mine of pale fire
- In fountains spout o'er it. In many a spire
- The pyramid-billows with white points of brine
- In the cope of the lightning inconstantly shine,
- As piercing the sky from the floor of the sea. _25
- The great ship seems splitting! it cracks as a tree,
- While an earthquake is splintering its root, ere the blast
- Of the whirlwind that stripped it of branches has passed.
- The intense thunder-balls which are raining from Heaven
- Have shattered its mast, and it stands black and riven. _30
- The chinks suck destruction. The heavy dead hulk
- On the living sea rolls an inanimate bulk,
- Like a corpse on the clay which is hungering to fold
- Its corruption around it. Meanwhile, from the hold,
- One deck is burst up by the waters below, _35
- And it splits like the ice when the thaw-breezes blow
- O'er the lakes of the desert! Who sit on the other?
- Is that all the crew that lie burying each other,
- Like the dead in a breach, round the foremast? Are those
- Twin tigers, who burst, when the waters arose, _40
- In the agony of terror, their chains in the hold;
- (What now makes them tame, is what then made them bold;)
- Who crouch, side by side, and have driven, like a crank,
- The deep grip of their claws through the vibrating plank
- Are these all? Nine weeks the tall vessel had lain _45
- On the windless expanse of the watery plain,
- Where the death-darting sun cast no shadow at noon,
- And there seemed to be fire in the beams of the moon,
- Till a lead-coloured fog gathered up from the deep,
- Whose breath was quick pestilence; then, the cold sleep _50
- Crept, like blight through the ears of a thick field of corn,
- O'er the populous vessel. And even and morn,
- With their hammocks for coffins the seamen aghast
- Like dead men the dead limbs of their comrades cast
- Down the deep, which closed on them above and around, _55
- And the sharks and the dogfish their grave-clothes unbound,
- And were glutted like Jews with this manna rained down
- From God on their wilderness. One after one
- The mariners died; on the eve of this day,
- When the tempest was gathering in cloudy array, _60
- But seven remained. Six the thunder has smitten,
- And they lie black as mummies on which Time has written
- His scorn of the embalmer; the seventh, from the deck
- An oak-splinter pierced through his breast and his back,
- And hung out to the tempest, a wreck on the wreck. _65
- No more? At the helm sits a woman more fair
- Than Heaven, when, unbinding its star-braided hair,
- It sinks with the sun on the earth and the sea.
- She clasps a bright child on her upgathered knee;
- It laughs at the lightning, it mocks the mixed thunder _70
- Of the air and the sea, with desire and with wonder
- It is beckoning the tigers to rise and come near,
- It would play with those eyes where the radiance of fear
- Is outshining the meteors; its bosom beats high,
- The heart-fire of pleasure has kindled its eye, _75
- While its mother's is lustreless. 'Smile not, my child,
- But sleep deeply and sweetly, and so be beguiled
- Of the pang that awaits us, whatever that be,
- So dreadful since thou must divide it with me!
- Dream, sleep! This pale bosom, thy cradle and bed, _80
- Will it rock thee not, infant? 'Tis beating with dread!
- Alas! what is life, what is death, what are we,
- That when the ship sinks we no longer may be?
- What! to see thee no more, and to feel thee no more?
- To be after life what we have been before? _85
- Not to touch those sweet hands? Not to look on those eyes,
- Those lips, and that hair,--all the smiling disguise
- Thou yet wearest, sweet Spirit, which I, day by day,
- Have so long called my child, but which now fades away
- Like a rainbow, and I the fallen shower?'--Lo! the ship _90
- Is settling, it topples, the leeward ports dip;
- The tigers leap up when they feel the slow brine
- Crawling inch by inch on them; hair, ears, limbs, and eyne,
- Stand rigid with horror; a loud, long, hoarse cry
- Bursts at once from their vitals tremendously, _95
- And 'tis borne down the mountainous vale of the wave,
- Rebounding, like thunder, from crag to cave,
- Mixed with the clash of the lashing rain,
- Hurried on by the might of the hurricane:
- The hurricane came from the west, and passed on _100
- By the path of the gate of the eastern sun,
- Transversely dividing the stream of the storm;
- As an arrowy serpent, pursuing the form
- Of an elephant, bursts through the brakes of the waste.
- Black as a cormorant the screaming blast, _105
- Between Ocean and Heaven, like an ocean, passed,
- Till it came to the clouds on the verge of the world
- Which, based on the sea and to Heaven upcurled,
- Like columns and walls did surround and sustain
- The dome of the tempest; it rent them in twain, _110
- As a flood rends its barriers of mountainous crag:
- And the dense clouds in many a ruin and rag,
- Like the stones of a temple ere earthquake has passed,
- Like the dust of its fall. on the whirlwind are cast;
- They are scattered like foam on the torrent; and where _115
- The wind has burst out through the chasm, from the air
- Of clear morning the beams of the sunrise flow in,
- Unimpeded, keen, golden, and crystalline,
- Banded armies of light and of air; at one gate
- They encounter, but interpenetrate. _120
- And that breach in the tempest is widening away,
- And the caverns of cloud are torn up by the day,
- And the fierce winds are sinking with weary wings,
- Lulled by the motion and murmurings
- And the long glassy heave of the rocking sea, _125
- And overhead glorious, but dreadful to see,
- The wrecks of the tempest, like vapours of gold,
- Are consuming in sunrise. The heaped waves behold
- The deep calm of blue Heaven dilating above,
- And, like passions made still by the presence of Love, _130
- Beneath the clear surface reflecting it slide
- Tremulous with soft influence; extending its tide
- From the Andes to Atlas, round mountain and isle,
- Round sea-birds and wrecks, paved with Heaven's azure smile,
- The wide world of waters is vibrating. Where _135
- Is the ship? On the verge of the wave where it lay
- One tiger is mingled in ghastly affray
- With a sea-snake. The foam and the smoke of the battle
- Stain the clear air with sunbows; the jar, and the rattle
- Of solid bones crushed by the infinite stress _140
- Of the snake's adamantine voluminousness;
- And the hum of the hot blood that spouts and rains
- Where the gripe of the tiger has wounded the veins
- Swollen with rage, strength, and effort; the whirl and the splash
- As of some hideous engine whose brazen teeth smash _145
- The thin winds and soft waves into thunder; the screams
- And hissings crawl fast o'er the smooth ocean-streams,
- Each sound like a centipede. Near this commotion,
- A blue shark is hanging within the blue ocean,
- The fin-winged tomb of the victor. The other _150
- Is winning his way from the fate of his brother
- To his own with the speed of despair. Lo! a boat
- Advances; twelve rowers with the impulse of thought
- Urge on the keen keel,--the brine foams. At the stern
- Three marksmen stand levelling. Hot bullets burn _155
- In the breast of the tiger, which yet bears him on
- To his refuge and ruin. One fragment alone,--
- 'Tis dwindling and sinking, 'tis now almost gone,--
- Of the wreck of the vessel peers out of the sea.
- With her left hand she grasps it impetuously. _160
- With her right she sustains her fair infant. Death, Fear,
- Love, Beauty, are mixed in the atmosphere,
- Which trembles and burns with the fervour of dread
- Around her wild eyes, her bright hand, and her head,
- Like a meteor of light o'er the waters! her child _165
- Is yet smiling, and playing, and murmuring; so smiled
- The false deep ere the storm. Like a sister and brother
- The child and the ocean still smile on each other,
- Whilst--
- NOTES:
- _6 ruining Harvard manuscript, 1839; raining 1820.
- _8 sunk Harvard manuscript, 1839; sank 1820.
- _35 by Harvard manuscript; from 1820, 1839.
- _61 has 1820; had 1839.
- _87 all the Harvard manuscript; all that 1820, 1839.
- _116 through Harvard manuscript; from 1820, 1839.
- _121 away]alway cj. A.C. Bradley.
- _122 cloud Harvard manuscript, 1839; clouds 1820.
- _160 impetuously 1820, 1839; convulsively Harvard manuscript.
- ***
- THE CLOUD.
- [Published with "Prometheus Unbound", 1820.]
- I bring fresh showers for the thirsting flowers,
- From the seas and the streams;
- I bear light shade for the leaves when laid
- In their noonday dreams.
- From my wings are shaken the dews that waken _5
- The sweet buds every one,
- When rocked to rest on their mother's breast,
- As she dances about the sun.
- I wield the flail of the lashing hail,
- And whiten the green plains under, _10
- And then again I dissolve it in rain,
- And laugh as I pass in thunder.
- I sift the snow on the mountains below,
- And their great pines groan aghast;
- And all the night 'tis my pillow white, _15
- While I sleep in the arms of the blast.
- Sublime on the towers of my skiey bowers,
- Lightning my pilot sits;
- In a cavern under is fettered the thunder,
- It struggles and howls at fits; _20
- Over earth and ocean, with gentle motion,
- This pilot is guiding me,
- Lured by the love of the genii that move
- In the depths of the purple sea;
- Over the rills, and the crags, and the hills. _25
- Over the lakes and the plains,
- Wherever he dream, under mountain or stream,
- The Spirit he loves remains;
- And I all the while bask in Heaven's blue smile,
- Whilst he is dissolving in rains. _30
- The sanguine Sunrise, with his meteor eyes,
- And his burning plumes outspread,
- Leaps on the back of my sailing rack,
- When the morning star shines dead;
- As on the jag of a mountain crag, _35
- Which an earthquake rocks and swings,
- An eagle alit one moment may sit
- In the light of its golden wings.
- And when Sunset may breathe, from the lit sea beneath,
- Its ardours of rest and of love, _40
- And the crimson pall of eve may fall
- From the depth of Heaven above.
- With wings folded I rest, on mine aery nest,
- As still as a brooding dove.
- That orbed maiden with white fire laden, _45
- Whom mortals call the Moon,
- Glides glimmering o'er my fleece-like floor,
- By the midnight breezes strewn;
- And wherever the beat of her unseen feet,
- Which only the angels hear, _50
- May have broken the woof of my tent's thin roof.
- The stars peep behind her and peer;
- And I laugh to see them whirl and flee,
- Like a swarm of golden bees.
- When I widen the rent in my wind-built tent, _55
- Till the calm rivers, lakes, and seas,
- Like strips of the sky fallen through me on high,
- Are each paved with the moon and these.
- I bind the Sun's throne with a burning zone,
- And the Moon's with a girdle of pearl; _60
- The volcanoes are dim, and the stars reel and swim,
- When the whirlwinds my banner unfurl.
- From cape to cape, with a bridge-like shape,
- Over a torrent sea,
- Sunbeam-proof, I hand like a roof,-- _65
- The mountains its columns be.
- The triumphal arch through which I march
- With hurricane, fire, and snow,
- When the Powers of the air are chained to my chair,
- Is the million-coloured bow; _70
- The sphere-fire above its soft colours wove,
- While the moist Earth was laughing below.
- I am the daughter of Earth and Water,
- And the nursling of the Sky;
- I pass through the pores of the ocean and shores; _75
- I change, but I cannot die.
- For after the rain when with never a stain
- The pavilion of Heaven is bare,
- And the winds and sunbeams with their convex gleams
- Build up the blue dome of air, _80
- I silently laugh at my own cenotaph,
- And out of the caverns of rain,
- Like a child from the womb, like a ghost from the tomb,
- I arise and unbuild it again.
- NOTES:
- _3 shade 1820; shades 1839.
- _6 buds 1839; birds 1820.
- _59 with a 1820; with the 1830.
- ***
- TO A SKYLARK.
- [Composed at Leghorn, 1820, and published with "Prometheus Unbound" in
- the same year. There is a transcript in the Harvard manuscript.]
- Hail to thee, blithe Spirit!
- Bird thou never wert,
- That from Heaven, or near it,
- Pourest thy full heart
- In profuse strains of unpremeditated art. _5
- Higher still and higher
- From the earth thou springest
- Like a cloud of fire;
- The blue deep thou wingest,
- And singing still dost soar, and soaring ever singest. _10
- In the golden lightning
- Of the sunken sun,
- O'er which clouds are bright'ning.
- Thou dost float and run;
- Like an unbodied joy whose race is just begun. _15
- The pale purple even
- Melts around thy flight;
- Like a star of Heaven,
- In the broad daylight
- Thou art unseen, but yet I hear thy shrill delight, _20
- Keen as are the arrows
- Of that silver sphere,
- Whose intense lamp narrows
- In the white dawn clear
- Until we hardly see--we feel that it is there. _25
- All the earth and air
- With thy voice is loud,
- As, when night is bare,
- From one lonely cloud
- The moon rains out her beams, and Heaven is overflowed. _30
- What thou art we know not;
- What is most like thee?
- From rainbow clouds there flow not
- Drops so bright to see
- As from thy presence showers a rain of melody. _35
- Like a Poet hidden
- In the light of thought,
- Singing hymns unbidden,
- Till the world is wrought
- To sympathy with hopes and fears it heeded not: _40
- Like a high-born maiden
- In a palace-tower,
- Soothing her love-laden
- Soul in secret hour
- With music sweet as love, which overflows her bower: _45
- Like a glow-worm golden
- In a dell of dew,
- Scattering unbeholden
- Its aereal hue
- Among the flowers and grass, which screen it from the view! _50
- Like a rose embowered
- In its own green leaves,
- By warm winds deflowered,
- Till the scent it gives
- Makes faint with too much sweet those heavy-winged thieves: _55
- Sound of vernal showers
- On the twinkling grass,
- Rain-awakened flowers,
- All that ever was
- Joyous, and clear, and fresh, thy music doth surpass: _60
- Teach us, Sprite or Bird,
- What sweet thoughts are thine:
- I have never heard
- Praise of love or wine
- That panted forth a flood of rapture so divine. _65
- Chorus Hymeneal,
- Or triumphal chant,
- Matched with thine would be all
- But an empty vaunt,
- A thing wherein we feel there is some hidden want. _70
- What objects are the fountains
- Of thy happy strain?
- What fields, or waves, or mountains?
- What shapes of sky or plain?
- What love of thine own kind? what ignorance of pain? _75
- With thy clear keen joyance
- Languor cannot be:
- Shadow of annoyance
- Never came near thee:
- Thou lovest--but ne'er knew love's sad satiety. _80
- Waking or asleep,
- Thou of death must deem
- Things more true and deep
- Than we mortals dream,
- Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream? _85
- We look before and after,
- And pine for what is not:
- Our sincerest laughter
- With some pain is fraught;
- Our sweetest songs are those that tell of saddest thought. _90
- Yet if we could scorn
- Hate, and pride, and fear;
- If we were things born
- Not to shed a tear,
- I know not how thy joy we ever should come near. _95
- Better than all measures
- Of delightful sound,
- Better than all treasures
- That in books are found,
- Thy skill to poet were, thou scorner of the ground! _100
- Teach me half the gladness
- That thy brain must know,
- Such harmonious madness
- From my lips would flow
- The world should listen then--as I am listening now. _105
- NOTE:
- _55 those Harvard manuscript: these 1820, 1839.
- ***
- ODE TO LIBERTY.
- [Composed early in 1820, and published, with "Prometheus Unbound", in
- the same year. A transcript in Shelley's hand of lines 1-21 is included
- in the Harvard manuscript book, and amongst the Boscombe manuscripts
- there is a fragment of a rough draft (Garnett). For further particulars
- concerning the text see Editor's Notes.]
- Yet, Freedom, yet, thy banner, torn but flying,
- Streams like a thunder-storm against the wind.--BYRON.
- 1.
- A glorious people vibrated again
- The lightning of the nations: Liberty
- From heart to heart, from tower to tower, o'er Spain,
- Scattering contagious fire into the sky,
- Gleamed. My soul spurned the chains of its dismay, _5
- And in the rapid plumes of song
- Clothed itself, sublime and strong;
- As a young eagle soars the morning clouds among,
- Hovering inverse o'er its accustomed prey;
- Till from its station in the Heaven of fame _10
- The Spirit's whirlwind rapped it, and the ray
- Of the remotest sphere of living flame
- Which paves the void was from behind it flung,
- As foam from a ship's swiftness, when there came
- A voice out of the deep: I will record the same. _15
- 2.
- The Sun and the serenest Moon sprang forth:
- The burning stars of the abyss were hurled
- Into the depths of Heaven. The daedal earth,
- That island in the ocean of the world,
- Hung in its cloud of all-sustaining air: _20
- But this divinest universe
- Was yet a chaos and a curse,
- For thou wert not: but, power from worst producing worse,
- The spirit of the beasts was kindled there,
- And of the birds, and of the watery forms, _25
- And there was war among them, and despair
- Within them, raging without truce or terms:
- The bosom of their violated nurse
- Groaned, for beasts warred on beasts, and worms on worms,
- And men on men; each heart was as a hell of storms. _30
- 3.
- Man, the imperial shape, then multiplied
- His generations under the pavilion
- Of the Sun's throne: palace and pyramid,
- Temple and prison, to many a swarming million
- Were, as to mountain-wolves their ragged caves. _35
- This human living multitude
- Was savage, cunning, blind, and rude,
- For thou wert not; but o'er the populous solitude,
- Like one fierce cloud over a waste of waves,
- Hung Tyranny; beneath, sate deified _40
- The sister-pest, congregator of slaves;
- Into the shadow of her pinions wide
- Anarchs and priests, who feed on gold and blood
- Till with the stain their inmost souls are dyed,
- Drove the astonished herds of men from every side. _45
- 4.
- The nodding promontories, and blue isles,
- And cloud-like mountains, and dividuous waves
- Of Greece, basked glorious in the open smiles
- Of favouring Heaven: from their enchanted caves
- Prophetic echoes flung dim melody. _50
- On the unapprehensive wild
- The vine, the corn, the olive mild,
- Grew savage yet, to human use unreconciled;
- And, like unfolded flowers beneath the sea,
- Like the man's thought dark in the infant's brain, _55
- Like aught that is which wraps what is to be,
- Art's deathless dreams lay veiled by many a vein
- Of Parian stone; and, yet a speechless child,
- Verse murmured, and Philosophy did strain
- Her lidless eyes for thee; when o'er the Aegean main _60
- 5.
- Athens arose: a city such as vision
- Builds from the purple crags and silver towers
- Of battlemented cloud, as in derision
- Of kingliest masonry: the ocean-floors
- Pave it; the evening sky pavilions it; _65
- Its portals are inhabited
- By thunder-zoned winds, each head
- Within its cloudy wings with sun-fire garlanded,--
- A divine work! Athens, diviner yet,
- Gleamed with its crest of columns, on the will _70
- Of man, as on a mount of diamond, set;
- For thou wert, and thine all-creative skill
- Peopled, with forms that mock the eternal dead
- In marble immortality, that hill
- Which was thine earliest throne and latest oracle. _75
- 6.
- Within the surface of Time's fleeting river
- Its wrinkled image lies, as then it lay
- Immovably unquiet, and for ever
- It trembles, but it cannot pass away!
- The voices of thy bards and sages thunder _80
- With an earth-awakening blast
- Through the caverns of the past:
- (Religion veils her eyes; Oppression shrinks aghast:)
- A winged sound of joy, and love, and wonder,
- Which soars where Expectation never flew, _85
- Rending the veil of space and time asunder!
- One ocean feeds the clouds, and streams, and dew;
- One Sun illumines Heaven; one Spirit vast
- With life and love makes chaos ever new,
- As Athens doth the world with thy delight renew. _90
- 7.
- Then Rome was, and from thy deep bosom fairest,
- Like a wolf-cub from a Cadmaean Maenad,
- She drew the milk of greatness, though thy dearest
- From that Elysian food was yet unweaned;
- And many a deed of terrible uprightness _95
- By thy sweet love was sanctified;
- And in thy smile, and by thy side,
- Saintly Camillus lived, and firm Atilius died.
- But when tears stained thy robe of vestal-whiteness,
- And gold profaned thy Capitolian throne, _100
- Thou didst desert, with spirit-winged lightness,
- The senate of the tyrants: they sunk prone
- Slaves of one tyrant: Palatinus sighed
- Faint echoes of Ionian song; that tone
- Thou didst delay to hear, lamenting to disown _105
- 8.
- From what Hyrcanian glen or frozen hill,
- Or piny promontory of the Arctic main,
- Or utmost islet inaccessible,
- Didst thou lament the ruin of thy reign,
- Teaching the woods and waves, and desert rocks, _110
- And every Naiad's ice-cold urn,
- To talk in echoes sad and stern
- Of that sublimest lore which man had dared unlearn?
- For neither didst thou watch the wizard flocks
- Of the Scald's dreams, nor haunt the Druid's sleep. _115
- What if the tears rained through thy shattered locks
- Were quickly dried? for thou didst groan, not weep,
- When from its sea of death, to kill and burn,
- The Galilean serpent forth did creep,
- And made thy world an undistinguishable heap. _120
- 9.
- A thousand years the Earth cried, 'Where art thou?'
- And then the shadow of thy coming fell
- On Saxon Alfred's olive-cinctured brow:
- And many a warrior-peopled citadel.
- Like rocks which fire lifts out of the flat deep, _125
- Arose in sacred Italy,
- Frowning o'er the tempestuous sea
- Of kings, and priests, and slaves, in tower-crowned majesty;
- That multitudinous anarchy did sweep
- And burst around their walls, like idle foam, _130
- Whilst from the human spirit's deepest deep
- Strange melody with love and awe struck dumb
- Dissonant arms; and Art, which cannot die,
- With divine wand traced on our earthly home
- Fit imagery to pave Heaven's everlasting dome. _135
- 10.
- Thou huntress swifter than the Moon! thou terror
- Of the world's wolves! thou bearer of the quiver,
- Whose sunlike shafts pierce tempest-winged Error,
- As light may pierce the clouds when they dissever
- In the calm regions of the orient day! _140
- Luther caught thy wakening glance;
- Like lightning, from his leaden lance
- Reflected, it dissolved the visions of the trance
- In which, as in a tomb, the nations lay;
- And England's prophets hailed thee as their queen, _145
- In songs whose music cannot pass away,
- Though it must flow forever: not unseen
- Before the spirit-sighted countenance
- Of Milton didst thou pass, from the sad scene
- Beyond whose night he saw, with a dejected mien. _150
- 11.
- The eager hours and unreluctant years
- As on a dawn-illumined mountain stood.
- Trampling to silence their loud hopes and fears,
- Darkening each other with their multitude,
- And cried aloud, 'Liberty!' Indignation _155
- Answered Pity from her cave;
- Death grew pale within the grave,
- And Desolation howled to the destroyer, Save!
- When like Heaven's Sun girt by the exhalation
- Of its own glorious light, thou didst arise. _160
- Chasing thy foes from nation unto nation
- Like shadows: as if day had cloven the skies
- At dreaming midnight o'er the western wave,
- Men started, staggering with a glad surprise,
- Under the lightnings of thine unfamiliar eyes. _165
- 12.
- Thou Heaven of earth! what spells could pall thee then
- In ominous eclipse? a thousand years
- Bred from the slime of deep Oppression's den.
- Dyed all thy liquid light with blood and tears.
- Till thy sweet stars could weep the stain away; _170
- How like Bacchanals of blood
- Round France, the ghastly vintage, stood
- Destruction's sceptred slaves, and Folly's mitred brood!
- When one, like them, but mightier far than they,
- The Anarch of thine own bewildered powers, _175
- Rose: armies mingled in obscure array,
- Like clouds with clouds, darkening the sacred bowers
- Of serene Heaven. He, by the past pursued,
- Rests with those dead, but unforgotten hours,
- Whose ghosts scare victor kings in their ancestral towers. _180
- 13.
- England yet sleeps: was she not called of old?
- Spain calls her now, as with its thrilling thunder
- Vesuvius wakens Aetna, and the cold
- Snow-crags by its reply are cloven in sunder:
- O'er the lit waves every Aeolian isle _185
- From Pithecusa to Pelorus
- Howls, and leaps, and glares in chorus:
- They cry, 'Be dim; ye lamps of Heaven suspended o'er us!'
- Her chains are threads of gold, she need but smile
- And they dissolve; but Spain's were links of steel, _190
- Till bit to dust by virtue's keenest file.
- Twins of a single destiny! appeal
- To the eternal years enthroned before us
- In the dim West; impress us from a seal,
- All ye have thought and done! Time cannot dare conceal. _195
- 14.
- Tomb of Arminius! render up thy dead
- Till, like a standard from a watch-tower's staff,
- His soul may stream over the tyrant's head;
- Thy victory shall be his epitaph,
- Wild Bacchanal of truth's mysterious wine, _200
- King-deluded Germany,
- His dead spirit lives in thee.
- Why do we fear or hope? thou art already free!
- And thou, lost Paradise of this divine
- And glorious world! thou flowery wilderness! _205
- Thou island of eternity! thou shrine
- Where Desolation, clothed with loveliness,
- Worships the thing thou wert! O Italy,
- Gather thy blood into thy heart; repress
- The beasts who make their dens thy sacred palaces. _210
- 15.
- Oh, that the free would stamp the impious name
- Of KING into the dust! or write it there,
- So that this blot upon the page of fame
- Were as a serpent's path, which the light air
- Erases, and the flat sands close behind! _215
- Ye the oracle have heard:
- Lift the victory-flashing sword.
- And cut the snaky knots of this foul gordian word,
- Which, weak itself as stubble, yet can bind
- Into a mass, irrefragably firm, _220
- The axes and the rods which awe mankind;
- The sound has poison in it, 'tis the sperm
- Of what makes life foul, cankerous, and abhorred;
- Disdain not thou, at thine appointed term,
- To set thine armed heel on this reluctant worm. _225
- 16.
- Oh, that the wise from their bright minds would kindle
- Such lamps within the dome of this dim world,
- That the pale name of PRIEST might shrink and dwindle
- Into the hell from which it first was hurled,
- A scoff of impious pride from fiends impure; _230
- Till human thoughts might kneel alone,
- Each before the judgement-throne
- Of its own aweless soul, or of the Power unknown!
- Oh, that the words which make the thoughts obscure
- From which they spring, as clouds of glimmering dew _235
- From a white lake blot Heaven's blue portraiture,
- Were stripped of their thin masks and various hue
- And frowns and smiles and splendours not their own,
- Till in the nakedness of false and true
- They stand before their Lord, each to receive its due! _240
- 17.
- He who taught man to vanquish whatsoever
- Can be between the cradle and the grave
- Crowned him the King of Life. Oh, vain endeavour!
- If on his own high will, a willing slave,
- He has enthroned the oppression and the oppressor _245
- What if earth can clothe and feed
- Amplest millions at their need,
- And power in thought be as the tree within the seed?
- Or what if Art, an ardent intercessor,
- Driving on fiery wings to Nature's throne, _250
- Checks the great mother stooping to caress her,
- And cries: 'Give me, thy child, dominion
- Over all height and depth'? if Life can breed
- New wants, and wealth from those who toil and groan,
- Rend of thy gifts and hers a thousandfold for one! _255
- 18.
- Come thou, but lead out of the inmost cave
- Of man's deep spirit, as the morning-star
- Beckons the Sun from the Eoan wave,
- Wisdom. I hear the pennons of her car
- Self-moving, like cloud charioted by flame; _260
- Comes she not, and come ye not,
- Rulers of eternal thought,
- To judge, with solemn truth, life's ill-apportioned lot?
- Blind Love, and equal Justice, and the Fame
- Of what has been, the Hope of what will be? _265
- O Liberty! if such could be thy name
- Wert thou disjoined from these, or they from thee:
- If thine or theirs were treasures to be bought
- By blood or tears, have not the wise and free
- Wept tears, and blood like tears?--The solemn harmony _270
- 19.
- Paused, and the Spirit of that mighty singing
- To its abyss was suddenly withdrawn;
- Then, as a wild swan, when sublimely winging
- Its path athwart the thunder-smoke of dawn,
- Sinks headlong through the aereal golden light _275
- On the heavy-sounding plain,
- When the bolt has pierced its brain;
- As summer clouds dissolve, unburthened of their rain;
- As a far taper fades with fading night,
- As a brief insect dies with dying day,-- _280
- My song, its pinions disarrayed of might,
- Drooped; o'er it closed the echoes far away
- Of the great voice which did its flight sustain,
- As waves which lately paved his watery way
- Hiss round a drowner's head in their tempestuous play. _285
- NOTES:
- _4 into]unto Harvard manuscript.
- _9 inverse cj. Rossetti; in verse 1820.
- _92 See the Bacchae of Euripides--[SHELLEY'S NOTE].
- _113 lore 1839; love 1820.
- _116 shattered]scattered cj. Rossetti.
- _134 wand 1820; want 1830.
- _194 us]as cj. Forman.
- _212 KING Boscombe manuscript; **** 1820, 1839; CHRIST cj. Swinburne.
- _249 Or 1839; O, 1820.
- _250 Driving 1820; Diving 1839.
- ***
- CANCELLED PASSAGE OF THE ODE TO LIBERTY.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- Within a cavern of man's trackless spirit
- Is throned an Image, so intensely fair
- That the adventurous thoughts that wander near it
- Worship, and as they kneel, tremble and wear
- The splendour of its presence, and the light _5
- Penetrates their dreamlike frame
- Till they become charged with the strength of flame.
- ***
- TO --.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden,
- Thou needest not fear mine;
- My spirit is too deeply laden
- Ever to burthen thine.
- 2.
- I fear thy mien, thy tones, thy motion, _5
- Thou needest not fear mine;
- Innocent is the heart's devotion
- With which I worship thine.
- ***
- ARETHUSA.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824, and dated by her
- 'Pisa, 1820.' There is a fair draft amongst the Shelley manuscripts at
- the Bodleian Library. See Mr. C.D. Locock's "Examination", etc., 1903,
- page 24.]
- 1.
- Arethusa arose
- From her couch of snows
- In the Acroceraunian mountains,--
- From cloud and from crag,
- With many a jag, _5
- Shepherding her bright fountains.
- She leapt down the rocks,
- With her rainbow locks
- Streaming among the streams;--
- Her steps paved with green _10
- The downward ravine
- Which slopes to the western gleams;
- And gliding and springing
- She went, ever singing,
- In murmurs as soft as sleep; _15
- The Earth seemed to love her,
- And Heaven smiled above her,
- As she lingered towards the deep.
- 2.
- Then Alpheus bold,
- On his glacier cold, _20
- With his trident the mountains strook;
- And opened a chasm
- In the rocks--with the spasm
- All Erymanthus shook.
- And the black south wind _25
- It unsealed behind
- The urns of the silent snow,
- And earthquake and thunder
- Did rend in sunder
- The bars of the springs below. _30
- And the beard and the hair
- Of the River-god were
- Seen through the torrent's sweep,
- As he followed the light
- Of the fleet nymph's flight _35
- To the brink of the Dorian deep.
- 3.
- 'Oh, save me! Oh, guide me!
- And bid the deep hide me,
- For he grasps me now by the hair!'
- The loud Ocean heard, _40
- To its blue depth stirred,
- And divided at her prayer;
- And under the water
- The Earth's white daughter
- Fled like a sunny beam; _45
- Behind her descended
- Her billows, unblended
- With the brackish Dorian stream:--
- Like a gloomy stain
- On the emerald main _50
- Alpheus rushed behind,--
- As an eagle pursuing
- A dove to its ruin
- Down the streams of the cloudy wind.
- 4.
- Under the bowers _55
- Where the Ocean Powers
- Sit on their pearled thrones;
- Through the coral woods
- Of the weltering floods,
- Over heaps of unvalued stones; _60
- Through the dim beams
- Which amid the streams
- Weave a network of coloured light;
- And under the caves,
- Where the shadowy waves _65
- Are as green as the forest's night:--
- Outspeeding the shark,
- And the sword-fish dark,
- Under the Ocean's foam,
- And up through the rifts _70
- Of the mountain clifts
- They passed to their Dorian home.
- 5.
- And now from their fountains
- In Enna's mountains,
- Down one vale where the morning basks, _75
- Like friends once parted
- Grown single-hearted,
- They ply their watery tasks.
- At sunrise they leap
- From their cradles steep _80
- In the cave of the shelving hill;
- At noontide they flow
- Through the woods below
- And the meadows of asphodel;
- And at night they sleep _85
- In the rocking deep
- Beneath the Ortygian shore;--
- Like spirits that lie
- In the azure sky
- When they love but live no more. _90
- NOTES:
- _6 unsealed B.; concealed 1824.
- _31 And the B.; The 1824.
- _69 Ocean's B.; ocean 1824.
- ***
- SONG OF PROSERPINE WHILE GATHERING FLOWERS ON THE PLAIN OF ENNA.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition. There
- is a fair draft amongst the Shelley manuscripts at the Bodleian
- Library. See Mr. C.D. Locock's "Examination," etc., 1903, page 24.]
- 1.
- Sacred Goddess, Mother Earth,
- Thou from whose immortal bosom
- Gods, and men, and beasts have birth,
- Leaf and blade, and bud and blossom,
- Breathe thine influence most divine _5
- On thine own child, Proserpine.
- 2.
- If with mists of evening dew
- Thou dost nourish these young flowers
- Till they grow, in scent and hue,
- Fairest children of the Hours, _10
- Breathe thine influence most divine
- On thine own child, Proserpine.
- ***
- HYMN OF APOLLO.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824. There is a fair
- draft amongst the Shelley manuscripts at the Bodleian. See Mr. C.D.
- Locock's "Examination", etc., 1903, page 25.]
- 1.
- The sleepless Hours who watch me as I lie,
- Curtained with star-inwoven tapestries
- From the broad moonlight of the sky,
- Fanning the busy dreams from my dim eyes,--
- Waken me when their Mother, the gray Dawn, _5
- Tells them that dreams and that the moon is gone.
- 2.
- Then I arise, and climbing Heaven's blue dome,
- I walk over the mountains and the waves,
- Leaving my robe upon the ocean foam;
- My footsteps pave the clouds with fire; the caves _10
- Are filled with my bright presence, and the air
- Leaves the green Earth to my embraces bare.
- 3.
- The sunbeams are my shafts, with which I kill
- Deceit, that loves the night and fears the day;
- All men who do or even imagine ill _15
- Fly me, and from the glory of my ray
- Good minds and open actions take new might,
- Until diminished by the reign of Night.
- 4.
- I feed the clouds, the rainbows and the flowers
- With their aethereal colours; the moon's globe _20
- And the pure stars in their eternal bowers
- Are cinctured with my power as with a robe;
- Whatever lamps on Earth or Heaven may shine
- Are portions of one power, which is mine.
- 5.
- I stand at noon upon the peak of Heaven, _25
- Then with unwilling steps I wander down
- Into the clouds of the Atlantic even;
- For grief that I depart they weep and frown:
- What look is more delightful than the smile
- With which I soothe them from the western isle? _30
- 6.
- I am the eye with which the Universe
- Beholds itself and knows itself divine;
- All harmony of instrument or verse,
- All prophecy, all medicine is mine,
- All light of art or nature;--to my song _35
- Victory and praise in its own right belong.
- NOTES:
- _32 itself divine]it is divine B.
- _34 is B.; are 1824.
- _36 its cj. Rossetti, 1870, B.; their 1824.
- ***
- HYMN OF PAN.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824. There is a fair
- draft amongst the Shelley manuscripts at the Bodleian. See Mr. C.D.
- Locock's "Examination", etc., 1903, page 25.]
- 1.
- From the forests and highlands
- We come, we come;
- From the river-girt islands,
- Where loud waves are dumb
- Listening to my sweet pipings. _5
- The wind in the reeds and the rushes,
- The bees on the bells of thyme,
- The birds on the myrtle bushes,
- The cicale above in the lime,
- And the lizards below in the grass, _10
- Were as silent as ever old Tmolus was,
- Listening to my sweet pipings.
- 2.
- Liquid Peneus was flowing,
- And all dark Tempe lay
- In Pelion's shadow, outgrowing _15
- The light of the dying day,
- Speeded by my sweet pipings.
- The Sileni, and Sylvans, and Fauns,
- And the Nymphs of the woods and the waves,
- To the edge of the moist river-lawns, _20
- And the brink of the dewy caves,
- And all that did then attend and follow,
- Were silent with love, as you now, Apollo,
- With envy of my sweet pipings.
- 3.
- I sang of the dancing stars, _25
- I sang of the daedal Earth,
- And of Heaven--and the giant wars,
- And Love, and Death, and Birth,--
- And then I changed my pipings,--
- Singing how down the vale of Maenalus _30
- I pursued a maiden and clasped a reed.
- Gods and men, we are all deluded thus!
- It breaks in our bosom and then we bleed:
- All wept, as I think both ye now would,
- If envy or age had not frozen your blood, _35
- At the sorrow of my sweet pipings.
- NOTE:
- _5, _12 Listening to]Listening B.
- ***
- THE QUESTION.
- [Published by Leigh Hunt (with the signature Sigma) in "The Literary
- Pocket-Book", 1822. Reprinted by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems",
- 1824. Copies exist in the Harvard manuscript book, amongst the Boscombe
- manuscripts, and amongst Ollier manuscripts.]
- 1.
- I dreamed that, as I wandered by the way,
- Bare Winter suddenly was changed to Spring,
- And gentle odours led my steps astray,
- Mixed with a sound of waters murmuring
- Along a shelving bank of turf, which lay _5
- Under a copse, and hardly dared to fling
- Its green arms round the bosom of the stream,
- But kissed it and then fled, as thou mightest in dream.
- 2.
- There grew pied wind-flowers and violets,
- Daisies, those pearled Arcturi of the earth, _10
- The constellated flower that never sets;
- Faint oxslips; tender bluebells, at whose birth
- The sod scarce heaved; and that tall flower that wets--
- Like a child, half in tenderness and mirth--
- Its mother's face with Heaven's collected tears, _15
- When the low wind, its playmate's voice, it hears.
- 3.
- And in the warm hedge grew lush eglantine,
- Green cowbind and the moonlight-coloured may,
- And cherry-blossoms, and white cups, whose wine
- Was the bright dew, yet drained not by the day; _20
- And wild roses, and ivy serpentine,
- With its dark buds and leaves, wandering astray;
- And flowers azure, black, and streaked with gold,
- Fairer than any wakened eyes behold.
- 4.
- And nearer to the river's trembling edge _25
- There grew broad flag-flowers, purple pranked with white.
- And starry river buds among the sedge,
- And floating water-lilies, broad and bright,
- Which lit the oak that overhung the hedge
- With moonlight beams of their own watery light; _30
- And bulrushes, and reeds of such deep green
- As soothed the dazzled eye with sober sheen.
- 5.
- Methought that of these visionary flowers
- I made a nosegay, bound in such a way
- That the same hues, which in their natural bowers _35
- Were mingled or opposed, the like array
- Kept these imprisoned children of the Hours
- Within my hand,--and then, elate and gay,
- I hastened to the spot whence I had come,
- That I might there present it!--Oh! to whom? _40
- NOTES:
- _14 Like...mirth Harvard manuscript, Boscombe manuscript;
- wanting in Ollier manuscript, 1822, 1824, 1839.
- _15 Heaven's collected Harvard manuscript, Ollier manuscript, 1822;
- Heaven-collected 1824, 1839.
- ***
- THE TWO SPIRITS: AN ALLEGORY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- FIRST SPIRIT:
- O thou, who plumed with strong desire
- Wouldst float above the earth, beware!
- A Shadow tracks thy flight of fire--
- Night is coming!
- Bright are the regions of the air, _5
- And among the winds and beams
- It were delight to wander there--
- Night is coming!
- SECOND SPIRIT:
- The deathless stars are bright above;
- If I would cross the shade of night, _10
- Within my heart is the lamp of love,
- And that is day!
- And the moon will smile with gentle light
- On my golden plumes where'er they move;
- The meteors will linger round my flight, _15
- And make night day.
- FIRST SPIRIT:
- But if the whirlwinds of darkness waken
- Hail, and lightning, and stormy rain;
- See, the bounds of the air are shaken--
- Night is coming! _20
- The red swift clouds of the hurricane
- Yon declining sun have overtaken,
- The clash of the hail sweeps over the plain--
- Night is coming!
- SECOND SPIRIT:
- I see the light, and I hear the sound; _25
- I'll sail on the flood of the tempest dark
- With the calm within and the light around
- Which makes night day:
- And thou, when the gloom is deep and stark,
- Look from thy dull earth, slumber-bound, _30
- My moon-like flight thou then mayst mark
- On high, far away.
- ...
- Some say there is a precipice
- Where one vast pine is frozen to ruin
- O'er piles of snow and chasms of ice _35
- Mid Alpine mountains;
- And that the languid storm pursuing
- That winged shape, for ever flies
- Round those hoar branches, aye renewing
- Its aery fountains. _40
- Some say when nights are dry and clear,
- And the death-dews sleep on the morass,
- Sweet whispers are heard by the traveller,
- Which make night day:
- And a silver shape like his early love doth pass _45
- Upborne by her wild and glittering hair,
- And when he awakes on the fragrant grass,
- He finds night day.
- NOTES:
- _2 Wouldst 1839; Would 1824.
- _31 moon-like 1824; moonlight 1839.
- _44 make]makes 1824, 1839.
- ***
- ODE TO NAPLES.
- (The Author has connected many recollections of his visit to Pompeii
- and Baiae with the enthusiasm excited by the intelligence of the
- proclamation of a Constitutional Government at Naples. This has given a
- tinge of picturesque and descriptive imagery to the introductory Epodes
- which depicture these scenes, and some of the majestic feelings
- permanently connected with the scene of this animating
- event.--[SHELLEY'S NOTE.])
- [Composed at San Juliano di Pisa, August 17-25, 1820; published in
- "Posthumous Poems", 1824. There is a copy, 'for the most part neat and
- legible,' amongst the Shelley manuscripts at the Bodleian Library. See
- Mr. C.D. Locock's "Examination", etc., 1903, pages 14-18.]
- EPODE 1a.
- I stood within the City disinterred;
- And heard the autumnal leaves like light footfalls
- Of spirits passing through the streets; and heard
- The Mountain's slumberous voice at intervals
- Thrill through those roofless halls; _5
- The oracular thunder penetrating shook
- The listening soul in my suspended blood;
- I felt that Earth out of her deep heart spoke--
- I felt, but heard not:--through white columns glowed
- The isle-sustaining ocean-flood, _10
- A plane of light between two heavens of azure!
- Around me gleamed many a bright sepulchre
- Of whose pure beauty, Time, as if his pleasure
- Were to spare Death, had never made erasure;
- But every living lineament was clear _15
- As in the sculptor's thought; and there
- The wreaths of stony myrtle, ivy, and pine,
- Like winter leaves o'ergrown by moulded snow,
- Seemed only not to move and grow
- Because the crystal silence of the air _20
- Weighed on their life; even as the Power divine
- Which then lulled all things, brooded upon mine.
- NOTE:
- _1 Pompeii.--[SHELLEY'S NOTE.]
- EPODE 2a.
- Then gentle winds arose
- With many a mingled close
- Of wild Aeolian sound, and mountain-odours keen; _25
- And where the Baian ocean
- Welters with airlike motion,
- Within, above, around its bowers of starry green,
- Moving the sea-flowers in those purple caves,
- Even as the ever stormless atmosphere _30
- Floats o'er the Elysian realm,
- It bore me, like an Angel, o'er the waves
- Of sunlight, whose swift pinnace of dewy air
- No storm can overwhelm.
- I sailed, where ever flows _35
- Under the calm Serene
- A spirit of deep emotion
- From the unknown graves
- Of the dead Kings of Melody.
- Shadowy Aornos darkened o'er the helm _40
- The horizontal aether; Heaven stripped bare
- Its depth over Elysium, where the prow
- Made the invisible water white as snow;
- From that Typhaean mount, Inarime,
- There streamed a sunbright vapour, like the standard _45
- Of some aethereal host;
- Whilst from all the coast,
- Louder and louder, gathering round, there wandered
- Over the oracular woods and divine sea
- Prophesyings which grew articulate--
- They seize me--I must speak them!--be they fate! _50
- NOTES:
- _25 odours B.; odour 1824.
- _42 depth B.; depths 1824.
- _45 sun-bright B.; sunlit 1824.
- _39 Homer and Virgil.--[SHELLEY'S NOTE.]
- STROPHE 1.
- Naples! thou Heart of men which ever pantest
- Naked, beneath the lidless eye of Heaven!
- Elysian City, which to calm enchantest
- The mutinous air and sea! they round thee, even _55
- As sleep round Love, are driven!
- Metropolis of a ruined Paradise
- Long lost, late won, and yet but half regained!
- Bright Altar of the bloodless sacrifice
- Which armed Victory offers up unstained _60
- To Love, the flower-enchained!
- Thou which wert once, and then didst cease to be,
- Now art, and henceforth ever shalt be, free,
- If Hope, and Truth, and Justice can avail,--
- Hail, hail, all hail! _65
- STROPHE 2.
- Thou youngest giant birth
- Which from the groaning earth
- Leap'st, clothed in armour of impenetrable scale!
- Last of the Intercessors!
- Who 'gainst the Crowned Transgressors _70
- Pleadest before God's love! Arrayed in Wisdom's mail,
- Wave thy lightning lance in mirth
- Nor let thy high heart fail,
- Though from their hundred gates the leagued Oppressors
- With hurried legions move! _75
- Hail, hail, all hail!
- ANTISTROPHE 1a.
- What though Cimmerian Anarchs dare blaspheme
- Freedom and thee? thy shield is as a mirror
- To make their blind slaves see, and with fierce gleam
- To turn his hungry sword upon the wearer; _80
- A new Actaeon's error
- Shall theirs have been--devoured by their own hounds!
- Be thou like the imperial Basilisk
- Killing thy foe with unapparent wounds!
- Gaze on Oppression, till at that dread risk _85
- Aghast she pass from the Earth's disk:
- Fear not, but gaze--for freemen mightier grow,
- And slaves more feeble, gazing on their foe:--
- If Hope, and Truth, and Justice may avail,
- Thou shalt be great--All hail! _90
- ANTISTROPHE 2a.
- From Freedom's form divine,
- From Nature's inmost shrine,
- Strip every impious gawd, rend
- Error veil by veil;
- O'er Ruin desolate,
- O'er Falsehood's fallen state, _95
- Sit thou sublime, unawed; be the Destroyer pale!
- And equal laws be thine,
- And winged words let sail,
- Freighted with truth even from the throne of God:
- That wealth, surviving fate, _100
- Be thine.--All hail!
- NOTE:
- _100 wealth-surviving cj. A.C. Bradley.
- ANTISTROPHE 1b.
- Didst thou not start to hear Spain's thrilling paean
- From land to land re-echoed solemnly,
- Till silence became music? From the Aeaean
- To the cold Alps, eternal Italy _105
- Starts to hear thine! The Sea
- Which paves the desert streets of Venice laughs
- In light, and music; widowed Genoa wan
- By moonlight spells ancestral epitaphs,
- Murmuring, 'Where is Doria?' fair Milan, _110
- Within whose veins long ran
- The viper's palsying venom, lifts her heel
- To bruise his head. The signal and the seal
- (If Hope and Truth and Justice can avail)
- Art thou of all these hopes.--O hail! _115
- NOTES:
- _104 Aeaea, the island of Circe.--[SHELLEY'S NOTE.]
- _112 The viper was the armorial device of the Visconti,
- tyrants of Milan.--[SHELLEY'S NOTE.]
- ANTISTROPHE 2b.
- Florence! beneath the sun,
- Of cities fairest one,
- Blushes within her bower for Freedom's expectation:
- From eyes of quenchless hope
- Rome tears the priestly cope, _120
- As ruling once by power, so now by admiration,--
- An athlete stripped to run
- From a remoter station
- For the high prize lost on Philippi's shore:--
- As then Hope, Truth, and Justice did avail, _125
- So now may Fraud and Wrong! O hail!
- EPODE 1b.
- Hear ye the march as of the Earth-born Forms
- Arrayed against the ever-living Gods?
- The crash and darkness of a thousand storms
- Bursting their inaccessible abodes _130
- Of crags and thunder-clouds?
- See ye the banners blazoned to the day,
- Inwrought with emblems of barbaric pride?
- Dissonant threats kill Silence far away,
- The serene Heaven which wraps our Eden wide _135
- With iron light is dyed;
- The Anarchs of the North lead forth their legions
- Like Chaos o'er creation, uncreating;
- An hundred tribes nourished on strange religions
- And lawless slaveries,--down the aereal regions _140
- Of the white Alps, desolating,
- Famished wolves that bide no waiting,
- Blotting the glowing footsteps of old glory,
- Trampling our columned cities into dust,
- Their dull and savage lust _145
- On Beauty's corse to sickness satiating--
- They come! The fields they tread look black and hoary
- With fire--from their red feet the streams run gory!
- EPODE 2b.
- Great Spirit, deepest Love!
- Which rulest and dost move _150
- All things which live and are, within the Italian shore;
- Who spreadest Heaven around it,
- Whose woods, rocks, waves, surround it;
- Who sittest in thy star, o'er Ocean's western floor;
- Spirit of beauty! at whose soft command _155
- The sunbeams and the showers distil its foison
- From the Earth's bosom chill;
- Oh, bid those beams be each a blinding brand
- Of lightning! bid those showers be dews of poison!
- Bid the Earth's plenty kill! _160
- Bid thy bright Heaven above,
- Whilst light and darkness bound it,
- Be their tomb who planned
- To make it ours and thine!
- Or, with thine harmonizing ardours fill _165
- And raise thy sons, as o'er the prone horizon
- Thy lamp feeds every twilight wave with fire--
- Be man's high hope and unextinct desire
- The instrument to work thy will divine!
- Then clouds from sunbeams, antelopes from leopards, _170
- And frowns and fears from thee,
- Would not more swiftly flee
- Than Celtic wolves from the Ausonian shepherds.--
- Whatever, Spirit, from thy starry shrine
- Thou yieldest or withholdest, oh, let be _175
- This city of thy worship ever free!
- NOTES:
- _143 old 1824; lost B.
- _147 black 1824; blue B.
- ***
- AUTUMN: A DIRGE.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- The warm sun is failing, the bleak wind is wailing,
- The bare boughs are sighing, the pale flowers are dying,
- And the Year
- On the earth her death-bed, in a shroud of leaves dead,
- Is lying. _5
- Come, Months, come away,
- From November to May,
- In your saddest array;
- Follow the bier
- Of the dead cold Year, _10
- And like dim shadows watch by her sepulchre.
- 2.
- The chill rain is falling, the nipped worm is crawling,
- The rivers are swelling, the thunder is knelling
- For the Year;
- The blithe swallows are flown, and the lizards each gone _15
- To his dwelling;
- Come, Months, come away;
- Put on white, black, and gray;
- Let your light sisters play--
- Ye, follow the bier _20
- Of the dead cold Year,
- And make her grave green with tear on tear.
- ***
- THE WANING MOON.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- And like a dying lady, lean and pale,
- Who totters forth, wrapped in a gauzy veil,
- Out of her chamber, led by the insane
- And feeble wanderings of her fading brain,
- The moon arose up in the murky East, _5
- A white and shapeless mass--
- ***
- TO THE MOON.
- [Published (1) by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824, (2) by W.M.
- Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works", 1870.]
- 1.
- Art thou pale for weariness
- Of climbing heaven and gazing on the earth,
- Wandering companionless
- Among the stars that have a different birth,--
- And ever changing, like a joyless eye _5
- That finds no object worth its constancy?
- 2.
- Thou chosen sister of the Spirit,
- That grazes on thee till in thee it pities...
- ***
- DEATH.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- Death is here and death is there,
- Death is busy everywhere,
- All around, within, beneath,
- Above is death--and we are death.
- 2.
- Death has set his mark and seal _5
- On all we are and all we feel,
- On all we know and all we fear,
- ...
- 3.
- First our pleasures die--and then
- Our hopes, and then our fears--and when
- These are dead, the debt is due, _10
- Dust claims dust--and we die too.
- 4.
- All things that we love and cherish,
- Like ourselves must fade and perish;
- Such is our rude mortal lot--
- Love itself would, did they not. _15
- ***
- LIBERTY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- The fiery mountains answer each other;
- Their thunderings are echoed from zone to zone;
- The tempestuous oceans awake one another,
- And the ice-rocks are shaken round Winter's throne,
- When the clarion of the Typhoon is blown. _5
- 2.
- From a single cloud the lightening flashes,
- Whilst a thousand isles are illumined around,
- Earthquake is trampling one city to ashes,
- An hundred are shuddering and tottering; the sound
- Is bellowing underground. _10
- 3.
- But keener thy gaze than the lightening's glare,
- And swifter thy step than the earthquake's tramp;
- Thou deafenest the rage of the ocean; thy stare
- Makes blind the volcanoes; the sun's bright lamp
- To thine is a fen-fire damp. _15
- 4.
- From billow and mountain and exhalation
- The sunlight is darted through vapour and blast;
- From spirit to spirit, from nation to nation,
- From city to hamlet thy dawning is cast,--
- And tyrants and slaves are like shadows of night _20
- In the van of the morning light.
- NOTE:
- _4 zone editions 1824, 1839; throne later editions.
- ***
- SUMMER AND WINTER.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley in "The Keepsake", 1829. Mr. C.W.
- Frederickson of Brooklyn possesses a transcript in Mrs. Shelley's
- handwriting.]
- It was a bright and cheerful afternoon,
- Towards the end of the sunny month of June,
- When the north wind congregates in crowds
- The floating mountains of the silver clouds
- From the horizon--and the stainless sky _5
- Opens beyond them like eternity.
- All things rejoiced beneath the sun; the weeds,
- The river, and the corn-fields, and the reeds;
- The willow leaves that glanced in the light breeze,
- And the firm foliage of the larger trees. _10
- It was a winter such as when birds die
- In the deep forests; and the fishes lie
- Stiffened in the translucent ice, which makes
- Even the mud and slime of the warm lakes
- A wrinkled clod as hard as brick; and when, _15
- Among their children, comfortable men
- Gather about great fires, and yet feel cold:
- Alas, then, for the homeless beggar old!
- NOTE:
- _11 birds die 1839; birds do die 1829.
- ***
- THE TOWER OF FAMINE.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley in "The Keepsake", 1829. Mr. C.W.
- Frederickson of Brooklyn possesses a transcript in Mrs. Shelley's
- handwriting.]
- Amid the desolation of a city,
- Which was the cradle, and is now the grave
- Of an extinguished people,--so that Pity
- Weeps o'er the shipwrecks of Oblivion's wave,
- There stands the Tower of Famine. It is built _5
- Upon some prison-homes, whose dwellers rave
- For bread, and gold, and blood: Pain, linked to Guilt,
- Agitates the light flame of their hours,
- Until its vital oil is spent or spilt.
- There stands the pile, a tower amid the towers _10
- And sacred domes; each marble-ribbed roof,
- The brazen-gated temples, and the bowers
- Of solitary wealth,--the tempest-proof
- Pavilions of the dark Italian air,--
- Are by its presence dimmed--they stand aloof, _15
- And are withdrawn--so that the world is bare;
- As if a spectre wrapped in shapeless terror
- Amid a company of ladies fair
- Should glide and glow, till it became a mirror
- Of all their beauty, and their hair and hue, _20
- The life of their sweet eyes, with all its error,
- Should be absorbed, till they to marble grew.
- NOTE:
- _7 For]With 1829.
- ***
- AN ALLEGORY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- A portal as of shadowy adamant
- Stands yawning on the highway of the life
- Which we all tread, a cavern huge and gaunt;
- Around it rages an unceasing strife
- Of shadows, like the restless clouds that haunt _5
- The gap of some cleft mountain, lifted high
- Into the whirlwinds of the upper sky.
- 2.
- And many pass it by with careless tread,
- Not knowing that a shadowy ...
- Tracks every traveller even to where the dead _10
- Wait peacefully for their companion new;
- But others, by more curious humour led,
- Pause to examine;--these are very few,
- And they learn little there, except to know
- That shadows follow them where'er they go. _15
- NOTE:
- _8 pass Rossetti; passed editions 1824, 1839.
- ***
- THE WORLD'S WANDERERS.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- Tell me, thou Star, whose wings of light
- Speed thee in thy fiery flight,
- In what cavern of the night
- Will thy pinions close now?
- 2.
- Tell me, Moon, thou pale and gray _5
- Pilgrim of Heaven's homeless way,
- In what depth of night or day
- Seekest thou repose now?
- 3.
- Weary Wind, who wanderest
- Like the world's rejected guest, _10
- Hast thou still some secret nest
- On the tree or billow?
- ***
- SONNET.
- [Published by Leigh Hunt, "The Literary Pocket-Book", 1823. There is a
- transcript amongst the Ollier manuscripts, and another in the Harvard
- manuscript book.]
- Ye hasten to the grave! What seek ye there,
- Ye restless thoughts and busy purposes
- Of the idle brain, which the world's livery wear?
- O thou quick heart, which pantest to possess
- All that pale Expectation feigneth fair! _5
- Thou vainly curious mind which wouldest guess
- Whence thou didst come, and whither thou must go,
- And all that never yet was known would know--
- Oh, whither hasten ye, that thus ye press,
- With such swift feet life's green and pleasant path, _10
- Seeking, alike from happiness and woe,
- A refuge in the cavern of gray death?
- O heart, and mind, and thoughts! what thing do you
- Hope to inherit in the grave below?
- NOTE:
- _1 grave Ollier manuscript;
- dead Harvard manuscript, 1823, editions 1824, 1839.
- _5 pale Expectation Ollier manuscript;
- anticipation Harvard manuscript, 1823, editions 1824, 1839.
- _7 must Harvard manuscript, 1823; mayst 1824; mayest editions 1839.
- _8 all that Harvard manuscript, 1823; that which editions 1824, 1839.
- would Harvard manuscript, 1823; wouldst editions 1839.
- ***
- LINES TO A REVIEWER.
- [Published by Leigh Hunt, "The Literary Pocket-Book", 1823. These
- lines, and the "Sonnet" immediately preceding, are signed Sigma in the
- "Literary Pocket-Book".]
- Alas, good friend, what profit can you see
- In hating such a hateless thing as me?
- There is no sport in hate where all the rage
- Is on one side: in vain would you assuage
- Your frowns upon an unresisting smile, _5
- In which not even contempt lurks to beguile
- Your heart, by some faint sympathy of hate.
- Oh, conquer what you cannot satiate!
- For to your passion I am far more coy
- Than ever yet was coldest maid or boy _10
- In winter noon. Of your antipathy
- If I am the Narcissus, you are free
- To pine into a sound with hating me.
- NOTE:
- _3 where editions 1824, 1839; when 1823.
- ***
- FRAGMENT OF A SATIRE ON SATIRE.
- [Published by Edward Dowden, "Correspondence of Robert Southey and
- Caroline Bowles", 1880.]
- If gibbets, axes, confiscations, chains,
- And racks of subtle torture, if the pains
- Of shame, of fiery Hell's tempestuous wave,
- Seen through the caverns of the shadowy grave,
- Hurling the damned into the murky air _5
- While the meek blest sit smiling; if Despair
- And Hate, the rapid bloodhounds with which Terror
- Hunts through the world the homeless steps of Error,
- Are the true secrets of the commonweal
- To make men wise and just;... _10
- And not the sophisms of revenge and fear,
- Bloodier than is revenge...
- Then send the priests to every hearth and home
- To preach the burning wrath which is to come,
- In words like flakes of sulphur, such as thaw _15
- The frozen tears...
- If Satire's scourge could wake the slumbering hounds
- Of Conscience, or erase the deeper wounds,
- The leprous scars of callous Infamy;
- If it could make the present not to be, _20
- Or charm the dark past never to have been,
- Or turn regret to hope; who that has seen
- What Southey is and was, would not exclaim,
- 'Lash on!' ... be the keen verse dipped in flame;
- Follow his flight with winged words, and urge _25
- The strokes of the inexorable scourge
- Until the heart be naked, till his soul
- See the contagion's spots ... foul;
- And from the mirror of Truth's sunlike shield,
- From which his Parthian arrow... _30
- Flash on his sight the spectres of the past,
- Until his mind's eye paint thereon--
- Let scorn like ... yawn below,
- And rain on him like flakes of fiery snow.
- This cannot be, it ought not, evil still-- _35
- Suffering makes suffering, ill must follow ill.
- Rough words beget sad thoughts, ... and, beside,
- Men take a sullen and a stupid pride
- In being all they hate in others' shame,
- By a perverse antipathy of fame. _40
- 'Tis not worth while to prove, as I could, how
- From the sweet fountains of our Nature flow
- These bitter waters; I will only say,
- If any friend would take Southey some day,
- And tell him, in a country walk alone, _45
- Softening harsh words with friendship's gentle tone,
- How incorrect his public conduct is,
- And what men think of it, 'twere not amiss.
- Far better than to make innocent ink--
- ***
- GOOD-NIGHT.
- [Published by Leigh Hunt over the signature Sigma, "The Literary
- Pocket-Book", 1822. It is included in the Harvard manuscript book, and
- there is a transcript by Shelley in a copy of "The Literary
- Pocket-Book", 1819, presented by him to Miss Sophia Stacey, December
- 29, 1820. (See "Love's Philosophy" and "Time Long Past".) Our text is
- that of the editio princeps, 1822, with which the Harvard manuscript
- and "Posthumous Poems", 1824, agree. The variants of the Stacey
- manuscript, 1820, are given in the footnotes.]
- 1.
- Good-night? ah! no; the hour is ill
- Which severs those it should unite;
- Let us remain together still,
- Then it will be GOOD night.
- 2.
- How can I call the lone night good, _5
- Though thy sweet wishes wing its flight?
- Be it not said, thought, understood--
- Then it will be--GOOD night.
- 3.
- To hearts which near each other move
- From evening close to morning light, _10
- The night is good; because, my love,
- They never SAY good-night.
- NOTES:
- _1 Good-night? no, love! the night is ill Stacey manuscript.
- _5 How were the night without thee good Stacey manuscript.
- _9 The hearts that on each other beat Stacey manuscript.
- _11 Have nights as good as they are sweet Stacey manuscript.
- _12 But never SAY good night Stacey manuscript.
- ***
- BUONA NOTTE.
- [Published by Medwin, "The Angler in Wales, or Days and Nights of
- Sportsmen", 1834. The text is revised by Rossetti from the Boscombe
- manuscript.]
- 1.
- 'Buona notte, buona notte!'--Come mai
- La notte sara buona senza te?
- Non dirmi buona notte,--che tu sai,
- La notte sa star buona da per se.
- 2.
- Solinga, scura, cupa, senza speme, _5
- La notte quando Lilla m'abbandona;
- Pei cuori chi si batton insieme
- Ogni notte, senza dirla, sara buona.
- 3.
- Come male buona notte ci suona
- Con sospiri e parole interrotte!-- _10
- Il modo di aver la notte buona
- E mai non di dir la buona notte.
- NOTES:
- _2 sara]sia 1834.
- _4 buona]bene 1834.
- _9 Come]Quanto 1834.
- ***
- ORPHEUS.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862; revised and
- enlarged by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- A:
- Not far from hence. From yonder pointed hill,
- Crowned with a ring of oaks, you may behold
- A dark and barren field, through which there flows,
- Sluggish and black, a deep but narrow stream,
- Which the wind ripples not, and the fair moon _5
- Gazes in vain, and finds no mirror there.
- Follow the herbless banks of that strange brook
- Until you pause beside a darksome pond,
- The fountain of this rivulet, whose gush
- Cannot be seen, hid by a rayless night _10
- That lives beneath the overhanging rock
- That shades the pool--an endless spring of gloom,
- Upon whose edge hovers the tender light,
- Trembling to mingle with its paramour,--
- But, as Syrinx fled Pan, so night flies day, _15
- Or, with most sullen and regardless hate,
- Refuses stern her heaven-born embrace.
- On one side of this jagged and shapeless hill
- There is a cave, from which there eddies up
- A pale mist, like aereal gossamer, _20
- Whose breath destroys all life--awhile it veils
- The rock--then, scattered by the wind, it flies
- Along the stream, or lingers on the clefts,
- Killing the sleepy worms, if aught bide there.
- Upon the beetling edge of that dark rock _25
- There stands a group of cypresses; not such
- As, with a graceful spire and stirring life,
- Pierce the pure heaven of your native vale,
- Whose branches the air plays among, but not
- Disturbs, fearing to spoil their solemn grace; _30
- But blasted and all wearily they stand,
- One to another clinging; their weak boughs
- Sigh as the wind buffets them, and they shake
- Beneath its blasts--a weatherbeaten crew!
- CHORUS:
- What wondrous sound is that, mournful and faint, _35
- But more melodious than the murmuring wind
- Which through the columns of a temple glides?
- A:
- It is the wandering voice of Orpheus' lyre,
- Borne by the winds, who sigh that their rude king
- Hurries them fast from these air-feeding notes; _40
- But in their speed they bear along with them
- The waning sound, scattering it like dew
- Upon the startled sense.
- CHORUS:
- Does he still sing?
- Methought he rashly cast away his harp
- When he had lost Eurydice.
- A:
- Ah, no! _45
- Awhile he paused. As a poor hunted stag
- A moment shudders on the fearful brink
- Of a swift stream--the cruel hounds press on
- With deafening yell, the arrows glance and wound,--
- He plunges in: so Orpheus, seized and torn _50
- By the sharp fangs of an insatiate grief,
- Maenad-like waved his lyre in the bright air,
- And wildly shrieked 'Where she is, it is dark!'
- And then he struck from forth the strings a sound
- Of deep and fearful melody. Alas! _55
- In times long past, when fair Eurydice
- With her bright eyes sat listening by his side,
- He gently sang of high and heavenly themes.
- As in a brook, fretted with little waves
- By the light airs of spring--each riplet makes _60
- A many-sided mirror for the sun,
- While it flows musically through green banks,
- Ceaseless and pauseless, ever clear and fresh,
- So flowed his song, reflecting the deep joy
- And tender love that fed those sweetest notes, _65
- The heavenly offspring of ambrosial food.
- But that is past. Returning from drear Hell,
- He chose a lonely seat of unhewn stone,
- Blackened with lichens, on a herbless plain.
- Then from the deep and overflowing spring _70
- Of his eternal ever-moving grief
- There rose to Heaven a sound of angry song.
- 'Tis as a mighty cataract that parts
- Two sister rocks with waters swift and strong, _75
- And casts itself with horrid roar and din
- Adown a steep; from a perennial source
- It ever flows and falls, and breaks the air
- With loud and fierce, but most harmonious roar,
- And as it falls casts up a vaporous spray
- Which the sun clothes in hues of Iris light. _80
- Thus the tempestuous torrent of his grief
- Is clothed in sweetest sounds and varying words
- Of poesy. Unlike all human works,
- It never slackens, and through every change
- Wisdom and beauty and the power divine _85
- Of mighty poesy together dwell,
- Mingling in sweet accord. As I have seen
- A fierce south blast tear through the darkened sky,
- Driving along a rack of winged clouds,
- Which may not pause, but ever hurry on, _90
- As their wild shepherd wills them, while the stars,
- Twinkling and dim, peep from between the plumes.
- Anon the sky is cleared, and the high dome
- Of serene Heaven, starred with fiery flowers,
- Shuts in the shaken earth; or the still moon _95
- Swiftly, yet gracefully, begins her walk,
- Rising all bright behind the eastern hills.
- I talk of moon, and wind, and stars, and not
- Of song; but, would I echo his high song,
- Nature must lend me words ne'er used before, _100
- Or I must borrow from her perfect works,
- To picture forth his perfect attributes.
- He does no longer sit upon his throne
- Of rock upon a desert herbless plain,
- For the evergreen and knotted ilexes, _105
- And cypresses that seldom wave their boughs,
- And sea-green olives with their grateful fruit,
- And elms dragging along the twisted vines,
- Which drop their berries as they follow fast,
- And blackthorn bushes with their infant race _110
- Of blushing rose-blooms; beeches, to lovers dear,
- And weeping willow trees; all swift or slow,
- As their huge boughs or lighter dress permit,
- Have circled in his throne, and Earth herself
- Has sent from her maternal breast a growth _115
- Of starlike flowers and herbs of odour sweet,
- To pave the temple that his poesy
- Has framed, while near his feet grim lions couch,
- And kids, fearless from love, creep near his lair.
- Even the blind worms seem to feel the sound. _120
- The birds are silent, hanging down their heads,
- Perched on the lowest branches of the trees;
- Not even the nightingale intrudes a note
- In rivalry, but all entranced she listens.
- NOTES:
- _16, _17, _24 1870 only.
- _45-_55 Ah, no!... melody 1870 only.
- _66 1870 only.
- _112 trees 1870; too 1862.
- _113 huge 1870; long 1862.
- _116 starlike 1870; starry 1862. odour 1862; odours 1870.
- ***
- FIORDISPINA.
- [Published in part (lines 11-30) by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems",
- 1824; in full (from the Boscombe manuscript) by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of
- Shelley", 1862.]
- The season was the childhood of sweet June,
- Whose sunny hours from morning until noon
- Went creeping through the day with silent feet,
- Each with its load of pleasure; slow yet sweet;
- Like the long years of blest Eternity _5
- Never to be developed. Joy to thee,
- Fiordispina and thy Cosimo,
- For thou the wonders of the depth canst know
- Of this unfathomable flood of hours,
- Sparkling beneath the heaven which embowers-- _10
- ...
- They were two cousins, almost like to twins,
- Except that from the catalogue of sins
- Nature had rased their love--which could not be
- But by dissevering their nativity.
- And so they grew together like two flowers _15
- Upon one stem, which the same beams and showers
- Lull or awaken in their purple prime,
- Which the same hand will gather--the same clime
- Shake with decay. This fair day smiles to see
- All those who love--and who e'er loved like thee, _20
- Fiordispina? Scarcely Cosimo,
- Within whose bosom and whose brain now glow
- The ardours of a vision which obscure
- The very idol of its portraiture.
- He faints, dissolved into a sea of love; _25
- But thou art as a planet sphered above;
- But thou art Love itself--ruling the motion
- Of his subjected spirit: such emotion
- Must end in sin and sorrow, if sweet May
- Had not brought forth this morn--your wedding-day. _30
- ...
- 'Lie there; sleep awhile in your own dew,
- Ye faint-eyed children of the ... Hours,'
- Fiordispina said, and threw the flowers
- Which she had from the breathing--
- ...
- A table near of polished porphyry. _35
- They seemed to wear a beauty from the eye
- That looked on them--a fragrance from the touch
- Whose warmth ... checked their life; a light such
- As sleepers wear, lulled by the voice they love, which did reprove _40
- The childish pity that she felt for them,
- And a ... remorse that from their stem
- She had divided such fair shapes ... made
- A feeling in the ... which was a shade
- Of gentle beauty on the flowers: there lay _45
- All gems that make the earth's dark bosom gay.
- ... rods of myrtle-buds and lemon-blooms,
- And that leaf tinted lightly which assumes
- The livery of unremembered snow--
- Violets whose eyes have drunk-- _50
- ...
- Fiordispina and her nurse are now
- Upon the steps of the high portico,
- Under the withered arm of Media
- She flings her glowing arm
- ...
- ... step by step and stair by stair, _55
- That withered woman, gray and white and brown--
- More like a trunk by lichens overgrown
- Than anything which once could have been human.
- And ever as she goes the palsied woman
- ...
- 'How slow and painfully you seem to walk, _60
- Poor Media! you tire yourself with talk.'
- 'And well it may,
- Fiordispina, dearest--well-a-day!
- You are hastening to a marriage-bed;
- I to the grave!'--'And if my love were dead, _65
- Unless my heart deceives me, I would lie
- Beside him in my shroud as willingly
- As now in the gay night-dress Lilla wrought.'
- 'Fie, child! Let that unseasonable thought
- Not be remembered till it snows in June; _70
- Such fancies are a music out of tune
- With the sweet dance your heart must keep to-night.
- What! would you take all beauty and delight
- Back to the Paradise from which you sprung,
- And leave to grosser mortals?-- _75
- And say, sweet lamb, would you not learn the sweet
- And subtle mystery by which spirits meet?
- Who knows whether the loving game is played,
- When, once of mortal [vesture] disarrayed,
- The naked soul goes wandering here and there _80
- Through the wide deserts of Elysian air?
- The violet dies not till it'--
- NOTES:
- _11 to 1824; two editions 1839.
- _20 e'er 1862; ever editions 1824, 1839.
- _25 sea edition 1862; sense editions 1824, 1839.
- ***
- TIME LONG PAST.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.
- This is one of three poems (cf. "Love's Philosophy" and "Good-Night")
- transcribed by Shelley in a copy of Leigh Hunt's "Literary Pocket-Book"
- for 1819 presented by him to Miss Sophia Stacey, December 29, 1820.]
- 1.
- Like the ghost of a dear friend dead
- Is Time long past.
- A tone which is now forever fled,
- A hope which is now forever past,
- A love so sweet it could not last, _5
- Was Time long past.
- 2.
- There were sweet dreams in the night
- Of Time long past:
- And, was it sadness or delight,
- Each day a shadow onward cast _10
- Which made us wish it yet might last--
- That Time long past.
- 3.
- There is regret, almost remorse,
- For Time long past.
- 'Tis like a child's beloved corse _15
- A father watches, till at last
- Beauty is like remembrance, cast
- From Time long past.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: THE DESERTS OF DIM SLEEP.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- I went into the deserts of dim sleep--
- That world which, like an unknown wilderness,
- Bounds this with its recesses wide and deep--
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'THE VIEWLESS AND INVISIBLE CONSEQUENCE'.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- The viewless and invisible Consequence
- Watches thy goings-out, and comings-in,
- And...hovers o'er thy guilty sleep,
- Unveiling every new-born deed, and thoughts
- More ghastly than those deeds-- _5
- ***
- FRAGMENT: A SERPENT-FACE.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- His face was like a snake's--wrinkled and loose
- And withered--
- ***
- FRAGMENT: DEATH IN LIFE.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- My head is heavy, my limbs are weary,
- And it is not life that makes me move.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'SUCH HOPE, AS IS THE SICK DESPAIR OF GOOD'.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- Such hope, as is the sick despair of good,
- Such fear, as is the certainty of ill,
- Such doubt, as is pale Expectation's food
- Turned while she tastes to poison, when the will
- Is powerless, and the spirit... _5
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'ALAS! THIS IS NOT WHAT I THOUGHT LIFE WAS'.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition. This
- fragment is joined by Forman with that immediately preceding.]
- Alas! this is not what I thought life was.
- I knew that there were crimes and evil men,
- Misery and hate; nor did I hope to pass
- Untouched by suffering, through the rugged glen.
- In mine own heart I saw as in a glass _5
- The hearts of others ... And when
- I went among my kind, with triple brass
- Of calm endurance my weak breast I armed,
- To bear scorn, fear, and hate, a woful mass!
- ***
- FRAGMENT: MILTON'S SPIRIT.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- I dreamed that Milton's spirit rose, and took
- From life's green tree his Uranian lute;
- And from his touch sweet thunder flowed, and shook
- All human things built in contempt of man,--
- And sanguine thrones and impious altars quaked, _5
- Prisons and citadels...
- NOTE:
- _2 lute Uranian cj. A.C. Bradley.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'UNRISEN SPLENDOUR OF THE BRIGHTEST SUN'.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- Unrisen splendour of the brightest sun,
- To rise upon our darkness, if the star
- Now beckoning thee out of thy misty throne
- Could thaw the clouds which wage an obscure war
- With thy young brightness! _5
- ***
- FRAGMENT: PATER OMNIPOTENS.
- [Edited from manuscript Shelley E 4 in the Bodleian Library, and
- published by Mr. C.D. Locock, "Examination" etc., Oxford, Clarendon
- Press, 1903. Here placed conjecturally amongst the compositions of
- 1820, but of uncertain date, and belonging possibly to 1819 or a still
- earlier year.]
- Serene in his unconquerable might
- Endued[,] the Almighty King, his steadfast throne
- Encompassed unapproachably with power
- And darkness and deep solitude an awe
- Stood like a black cloud on some aery cliff _5
- Embosoming its lightning--in his sight
- Unnumbered glorious spirits trembling stood
- Like slaves before their Lord--prostrate around
- Heaven's multitudes hymned everlasting praise.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: TO THE MIND OF MAN.
- [Edited, published and here placed as the preceding.]
- Thou living light that in thy rainbow hues
- Clothest this naked world; and over Sea
- And Earth and air, and all the shapes that be
- In peopled darkness of this wondrous world
- The Spirit of thy glory dost diffuse _5
- ... truth ... thou Vital Flame
- Mysterious thought that in this mortal frame
- Of things, with unextinguished lustre burnest
- Now pale and faint now high to Heaven upcurled
- That eer as thou dost languish still returnest _10
- And ever
- Before the ... before the Pyramids
- So soon as from the Earth formless and rude
- One living step had chased drear Solitude
- Thou wert, Thought; thy brightness charmed the lids _15
- Of the vast snake Eternity, who kept
- The tree of good and evil.--
- ***
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1820, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- We spent the latter part of the year 1819 in Florence, where Shelley
- passed several hours daily in the Gallery, and made various notes on
- its ancient works of art. His thoughts were a good deal taken up also
- by the project of a steamboat, undertaken by a friend, an engineer, to
- ply between Leghorn and Marseilles, for which he supplied a sum of
- money. This was a sort of plan to delight Shelley, and he was greatly
- disappointed when it was thrown aside.
- There was something in Florence that disagreed excessively with his
- health, and he suffered far more pain than usual; so much so that we
- left it sooner than we intended, and removed to Pisa, where we had some
- friends, and, above all, where we could consult the celebrated Vacca as
- to the cause of Shelley's sufferings. He, like every other medical man,
- could only guess at that, and gave little hope of immediate relief; he
- enjoined him to abstain from all physicians and medicine, and to leave
- his complaint to Nature. As he had vainly consulted medical men of the
- highest repute in England, he was easily persuaded to adopt this
- advice. Pain and ill-health followed him to the end; but the residence
- at Pisa agreed with him better than any other, and there in consequence
- we remained.
- In the Spring we spent a week or two near Leghorn, borrowing the house
- of some friends who were absent on a journey to England. It was on a
- beautiful summer evening, while wandering among the lanes whose
- myrtle-hedges were the bowers of the fire-flies, that we heard the
- carolling of the skylark which inspired one of the most beautiful of
- his poems. He addressed the letter to Mrs. Gisborne from this house,
- which was hers: he had made his study of the workshop of her son, who
- was an engineer. Mrs. Gisborne had been a friend of my father in her
- younger days. She was a lady of great accomplishments, and charming
- from her frank and affectionate nature. She had the most intense love
- of knowledge, a delicate and trembling sensibility, and preserved
- freshness of mind after a life of considerable adversity. As a
- favourite friend of my father, we had sought her with eagerness; and
- the most open and cordial friendship was established between us.
- Our stay at the Baths of San Giuliano was shortened by an accident. At
- the foot of our garden ran the canal that communicated between the
- Serchio and the Arno. The Serchio overflowed its banks, and, breaking
- its bounds, this canal also overflowed; all this part of the country is
- below the level of its rivers, and the consequence was that it was
- speedily flooded. The rising waters filled the Square of the Baths, in
- the lower part of which our house was situated. The canal overflowed in
- the garden behind; the rising waters on either side at last burst open
- the doors, and, meeting in the house, rose to the height of six feet.
- It was a picturesque sight at night to see the peasants driving the
- cattle from the plains below to the hills above the Baths. A fire was
- kept up to guide them across the ford; and the forms of the men and the
- animals showed in dark relief against the red glare of the flame, which
- was reflected again in the waters that filled the Square.
- We then removed to Pisa, and took up our abode there for the winter.
- The extreme mildness of the climate suited Shelley, and his solitude
- was enlivened by an intercourse with several intimate friends. Chance
- cast us strangely enough on this quiet half-unpeopled town; but its
- very peace suited Shelley. Its river, the near mountains, and not
- distant sea, added to its attractions, and were the objects of many
- delightful excursions. We feared the south of Italy, and a hotter
- climate, on account of our child; our former bereavement inspiring us
- with terror. We seemed to take root here, and moved little afterwards;
- often, indeed, entertaining projects for visiting other parts of Italy,
- but still delaying. But for our fears on account of our child, I
- believe we should have wandered over the world, both being passionately
- fond of travelling. But human life, besides its great unalterable
- necessities, is ruled by a thousand lilliputian ties that shackle at
- the time, although it is difficult to account afterwards for their
- influence over our destiny.
- ***
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1821.
- DIRGE FOR THE YEAR.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824, and dated
- January 1, 1821.]
- 1.
- Orphan Hours, the Year is dead,
- Come and sigh, come and weep!
- Merry Hours, smile instead,
- For the Year is but asleep.
- See, it smiles as it is sleeping, _5
- Mocking your untimely weeping.
- 2.
- As an earthquake rocks a corse
- In its coffin in the clay,
- So White Winter, that rough nurse,
- Rocks the death-cold Year to-day; _10
- Solemn Hours! wail aloud
- For your mother in her shroud.
- 3.
- As the wild air stirs and sways
- The tree-swung cradle of a child,
- So the breath of these rude days _15
- Rocks the Year:--be calm and mild,
- Trembling Hours, she will arise
- With new love within her eyes.
- 4.
- January gray is here,
- Like a sexton by her grave; _20
- February bears the bier,
- March with grief doth howl and rave,
- And April weeps--but, O ye Hours!
- Follow with May's fairest flowers.
- ***
- TO NIGHT.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.
- There is a transcript in the Harvard manuscript book.]
- 1.
- Swiftly walk o'er the western wave,
- Spirit of Night!
- Out of the misty eastern cave,
- Where, all the long and lone daylight,
- Thou wovest dreams of joy and fear, _5
- 'Which make thee terrible and dear,--
- Swift be thy flight!
- 2.
- Wrap thy form in a mantle gray,
- Star-inwrought!
- Blind with thine hair the eyes of Day; _10
- Kiss her until she be wearied out,
- Then wander o'er city, and sea, and land,
- Touching all with thine opiate wand--
- Come, long-sought!
- 3.
- When I arose and saw the dawn, _15
- I sighed for thee;
- When light rode high, and the dew was gone,
- And noon lay heavy on flower and tree,
- And the weary Day turned to his rest,
- Lingering like an unloved guest, I sighed for thee. _20
- 4.
- Thy brother Death came, and cried,
- Wouldst thou me?
- Thy sweet child Sleep, the filmy-eyed,
- Murmured like a noontide bee, _25
- Shall I nestle near thy side?
- Wouldst thou me?--And I replied,
- No, not thee!
- 5.
- Death will come when thou art dead,
- Soon, too soon-- _30
- Sleep will come when thou art fled;
- Of neither would I ask the boon
- I ask of thee, beloved Night--
- Swift be thine approaching flight,
- Come soon, soon! _35
- NOTE:
- _1 o'er Harvard manuscript; over editions 1824, 1839.
- ***
- TIME.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- Unfathomable Sea! whose waves are years,
- Ocean of Time, whose waters of deep woe
- Are brackish with the salt of human tears!
- Thou shoreless flood, which in thy ebb and flow
- Claspest the limits of mortality, _5
- And sick of prey, yet howling on for more,
- Vomitest thy wrecks on its inhospitable shore;
- Treacherous in calm, and terrible in storm,
- Who shall put forth on thee,
- Unfathomable Sea? _10
- ***
- LINES.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- Far, far away, O ye
- Halcyons of Memory,
- Seek some far calmer nest
- Than this abandoned breast!
- No news of your false spring _5
- To my heart's winter bring,
- Once having gone, in vain
- Ye come again.
- 2.
- Vultures, who build your bowers
- High in the Future's towers, _10
- Withered hopes on hopes are spread!
- Dying joys, choked by the dead,
- Will serve your beaks for prey
- Many a day.
- ***
- FROM THE ARABIC: AN IMITATION.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824. There is an
- intermediate draft amongst the Bodleian manuscripts. See Locock,
- "Examination", etc., 1903, page 13.]
- 1.
- My faint spirit was sitting in the light
- Of thy looks, my love;
- It panted for thee like the hind at noon
- For the brooks, my love.
- Thy barb whose hoofs outspeed the tempest's flight _5
- Bore thee far from me;
- My heart, for my weak feet were weary soon,
- Did companion thee.
- 2.
- Ah! fleeter far than fleetest storm or steed
- Or the death they bear, _10
- The heart which tender thought clothes like a dove
- With the wings of care;
- In the battle, in the darkness, in the need,
- Shall mine cling to thee,
- Nor claim one smile for all the comfort, love, _15
- It may bring to thee.
- NOTES:
- _3 hoofs]feet B.
- _7 were]grew B.
- _9 Ah!]O B.
- ***
- TO EMILIA VIVIANI.
- [Published, (1) by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824; (2, 1) by
- Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862; (2, 2 and 3) by H. Buxton
- Forman, "Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1876.]
- 1.
- Madonna, wherefore hast thou sent to me
- Sweet-basil and mignonette?
- Embleming love and health, which never yet
- In the same wreath might be.
- Alas, and they are wet! _5
- Is it with thy kisses or thy tears?
- For never rain or dew
- Such fragrance drew
- From plant or flower--the very doubt endears
- My sadness ever new, _10
- The sighs I breathe, the tears I shed for thee.
- 2.
- Send the stars light, but send not love to me,
- In whom love ever made
- Health like a heap of embers soon to fade--
- ***
- THE FUGITIVES.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems". 1824.]
- 1.
- The waters are flashing,
- The white hail is dashing,
- The lightnings are glancing,
- The hoar-spray is dancing--
- Away! _5
- The whirlwind is rolling,
- The thunder is tolling,
- The forest is swinging,
- The minster bells ringing--
- Come away! _10
- The Earth is like Ocean,
- Wreck-strewn and in motion:
- Bird, beast, man and worm
- Have crept out of the storm--
- Come away! _15
- 2.
- 'Our boat has one sail
- And the helmsman is pale;--
- A bold pilot I trow,
- Who should follow us now,'--
- Shouted he-- _20
- And she cried: 'Ply the oar!
- Put off gaily from shore!'--
- As she spoke, bolts of death
- Mixed with hail, specked their path
- O'er the sea. _25
- And from isle, tower and rock,
- The blue beacon-cloud broke,
- And though dumb in the blast,
- The red cannon flashed fast
- From the lee. _30
- 3.
- And 'Fear'st thou?' and 'Fear'st thou?'
- And Seest thou?' and 'Hear'st thou?'
- And 'Drive we not free
- O'er the terrible sea,
- I and thou?' _35
- One boat-cloak did cover
- The loved and the lover--
- Their blood beats one measure,
- They murmur proud pleasure
- Soft and low;-- _40
- While around the lashed Ocean,
- Like mountains in motion,
- Is withdrawn and uplifted,
- Sunk, shattered and shifted
- To and fro. _45
- 4.
- In the court of the fortress
- Beside the pale portress,
- Like a bloodhound well beaten
- The bridegroom stands, eaten
- By shame; _50
- On the topmost watch-turret,
- As a death-boding spirit
- Stands the gray tyrant father,
- To his voice the mad weather
- Seems tame; _55
- And with curses as wild
- As e'er clung to child,
- He devotes to the blast,
- The best, loveliest and last
- Of his name! _60
- NOTES:
- _28 And though]Though editions 1839.
- _57 clung]cling editions 1839.
- ***
- TO --.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- Music, when soft voices die,
- Vibrates in the memory--
- Odours, when sweet violets sicken,
- Live within the sense they quicken.
- Rose leaves, when the rose is dead, _5
- Are heaped for the beloved's bed;
- And so thy thoughts, when thou art gone,
- Love itself shall slumber on.
- ***
- SONG.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.
- There is a transcript in the Harvard manuscript book.]
- 1.
- Rarely, rarely, comest thou,
- Spirit of Delight!
- Wherefore hast thou left me now
- Many a day and night?
- Many a weary night and day _5
- 'Tis since thou art fled away.
- 2.
- How shall ever one like me
- Win thee back again?
- With the joyous and the free
- Thou wilt scoff at pain. _10
- Spirit false! thou hast forgot
- All but those who need thee not.
- 3.
- As a lizard with the shade
- Of a trembling leaf,
- Thou with sorrow art dismayed; _15
- Even the sighs of grief
- Reproach thee, that thou art not near,
- And reproach thou wilt not hear.
- 4.
- Let me set my mournful ditty
- To a merry measure; _20
- Thou wilt never come for pity,
- Thou wilt come for pleasure;
- Pity then will cut away
- Those cruel wings, and thou wilt stay.
- 5.
- I love all that thou lovest, _25
- Spirit of Delight!
- The fresh Earth in new leaves dressed,
- And the starry night;
- Autumn evening, and the morn
- When the golden mists are born. _30
- 6.
- I love snow, and all the forms
- Of the radiant frost;
- I love waves, and winds, and storms,
- Everything almost
- Which is Nature's, and may be _35
- Untainted by man's misery.
- 7.
- I love tranquil solitude,
- And such society
- As is quiet, wise, and good
- Between thee and me _40
- What difference? but thou dost possess
- The things I seek, not love them less.
- 8.
- I love Love--though he has wings,
- And like light can flee,
- But above all other things, _45
- Spirit, I love thee--
- Thou art love and life! Oh, come,
- Make once more my heart thy home.
- ***
- MUTABILITY.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.
- There is a fair draft amongst the Boscombe manuscripts.]
- 1.
- The flower that smiles to-day
- To-morrow dies;
- All that we wish to stay
- Tempts and then flies.
- What is this world's delight? _5
- Lightning that mocks the night,
- Brief even as bright.
- 2.
- Virtue, how frail it is!
- Friendship how rare!
- Love, how it sells poor bliss _10
- For proud despair!
- But we, though soon they fall,
- Survive their joy, and all
- Which ours we call.
- 3.
- Whilst skies are blue and bright, _15
- Whilst flowers are gay,
- Whilst eyes that change ere night
- Make glad the day;
- Whilst yet the calm hours creep,
- Dream thou--and from thy sleep _20
- Then wake to weep.
- NOTES:
- _9 how Boscombe manuscript; too editions 1824, 1839.
- _12 though soon they fall]though soon we or so soon they cj. Rossetti.
- ***
- LINES WRITTEN ON HEARING THE NEWS OF THE DEATH OF NAPOLEON.
- [Published with "Hellas", 1821.]
- What! alive and so bold, O Earth?
- Art thou not overbold?
- What! leapest thou forth as of old
- In the light of thy morning mirth,
- The last of the flock of the starry fold? _5
- Ha! leapest thou forth as of old?
- Are not the limbs still when the ghost is fled,
- And canst thou move, Napoleon being dead?
- How! is not thy quick heart cold?
- What spark is alive on thy hearth? _10
- How! is not HIS death-knell knolled?
- And livest THOU still, Mother Earth?
- Thou wert warming thy fingers old
- O'er the embers covered and cold
- Of that most fiery spirit, when it fled-- _15
- What, Mother, do you laugh now he is dead?
- 'Who has known me of old,' replied Earth,
- 'Or who has my story told?
- It is thou who art overbold.'
- And the lightning of scorn laughed forth _20
- As she sung, 'To my bosom I fold
- All my sons when their knell is knolled,
- And so with living motion all are fed,
- And the quick spring like weeds out of the dead.
- 'Still alive and still bold,' shouted Earth, _25
- 'I grow bolder and still more bold.
- The dead fill me ten thousandfold
- Fuller of speed, and splendour, and mirth.
- I was cloudy, and sullen, and cold,
- Like a frozen chaos uprolled, _30
- Till by the spirit of the mighty dead
- My heart grew warm. I feed on whom I fed.
- 'Ay, alive and still bold.' muttered Earth,
- 'Napoleon's fierce spirit rolled,
- In terror and blood and gold, _35
- A torrent of ruin to death from his birth.
- Leave the millions who follow to mould
- The metal before it be cold;
- And weave into his shame, which like the dead
- Shrouds me, the hopes that from his glory fled.' _40
- ***
- SONNET: POLITICAL GREATNESS.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824. There is a
- transcript, headed "Sonnet to the Republic of Benevento", in the
- Harvard manuscript book.]
- Nor happiness, nor majesty, nor fame,
- Nor peace, nor strength, nor skill in arms or arts,
- Shepherd those herds whom tyranny makes tame;
- Verse echoes not one beating of their hearts,
- History is but the shadow of their shame, _5
- Art veils her glass, or from the pageant starts
- As to oblivion their blind millions fleet,
- Staining that Heaven with obscene imagery
- Of their own likeness. What are numbers knit
- By force or custom? Man who man would be, _10
- Must rule the empire of himself; in it
- Must be supreme, establishing his throne
- On vanquished will, quelling the anarchy
- Of hopes and fears, being himself alone.
- ***
- THE AZIOLA.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley in "The Keepsake", 1829.]
- 1.
- 'Do you not hear the Aziola cry?
- Methinks she must be nigh,'
- Said Mary, as we sate
- In dusk, ere stars were lit, or candles brought;
- And I, who thought _5
- This Aziola was some tedious woman,
- Asked, 'Who is Aziola?' How elate
- I felt to know that it was nothing human,
- No mockery of myself to fear or hate:
- And Mary saw my soul, _10
- And laughed, and said, 'Disquiet yourself not;
- 'Tis nothing but a little downy owl.'
- 2.
- Sad Aziola! many an eventide
- Thy music I had heard
- By wood and stream, meadow and mountain-side, _15
- And fields and marshes wide,--
- Such as nor voice, nor lute, nor wind, nor bird,
- The soul ever stirred;
- Unlike and far sweeter than them all.
- Sad Aziola! from that moment I _20
- Loved thee and thy sad cry.
- NOTES:
- _4 ere stars]ere the stars editions 1839.
- _9 or]and editions 1839.
- _19 them]they editions 1839.
- ***
- A LAMENT.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- O world! O life! O time!
- On whose last steps I climb,
- Trembling at that where I had stood before;
- When will return the glory of your prime?
- No more--Oh, never more! _5
- 2.
- Out of the day and night
- A joy has taken flight;
- Fresh spring, and summer, and winter hoar,
- Move my faint heart with grief, but with delight
- No more--Oh, never more! _10
- ***
- REMEMBRANCE.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824, where it is
- entitled "A Lament". Three manuscript copies are extant: The Trelawny
- manuscript ("Remembrance"), the Harvard manuscript ("Song") and the
- Houghton manuscript--the last written by Shelley on a flyleaf of a copy
- of "Adonais".]
- 1.
- Swifter far than summer's flight--
- Swifter far than youth's delight--
- Swifter far than happy night,
- Art thou come and gone--
- As the earth when leaves are dead, _5
- As the night when sleep is sped,
- As the heart when joy is fled,
- I am left lone, alone.
- 2.
- The swallow summer comes again--
- The owlet night resumes her reign-- _10
- But the wild-swan youth is fain
- To fly with thee, false as thou.--
- My heart each day desires the morrow;
- Sleep itself is turned to sorrow;
- Vainly would my winter borrow _15
- Sunny leaves from any bough.
- 3.
- Lilies for a bridal bed--
- Roses for a matron's head--
- Violets for a maiden dead--
- Pansies let MY flowers be: _20
- On the living grave I bear
- Scatter them without a tear--
- Let no friend, however dear,
- Waste one hope, one fear for me.
- NOTES:
- _5-_7 So editions 1824, 1839, Trelawny manuscript, Harvard manuscript;
- As the wood when leaves are shed,
- As the night when sleep is fled,
- As the heart when joy is dead Houghton manuscript.
- _13 So editions 1824, 1839, Harvard manuscript, Houghton manuscript.
- My heart to-day desires to-morrow Trelawny manuscript.
- _20 So editions 1824, 1839, Harvard manuscript, Houghton manuscript.
- Sadder flowers find for me Trelawny manuscript.
- _24 one hope, one fear]a hope, a fear Trelawny manuscript.
- ***
- TO EDWARD WILLIAMS.
- [Published in Ascham's edition of the "Poems", 1834.
- There is a copy amongst the Trelawny manuscripts.]
- 1.
- The serpent is shut out from Paradise.
- The wounded deer must seek the herb no more
- In which its heart-cure lies:
- The widowed dove must cease to haunt a bower
- Like that from which its mate with feigned sighs _5
- Fled in the April hour.
- I too must seldom seek again
- Near happy friends a mitigated pain.
- 2.
- Of hatred I am proud,--with scorn content;
- Indifference, that once hurt me, now is grown _10
- Itself indifferent;
- But, not to speak of love, pity alone
- Can break a spirit already more than bent.
- The miserable one
- Turns the mind's poison into food,-- _15
- Its medicine is tears,--its evil good.
- 3.
- Therefore, if now I see you seldomer,
- Dear friends, dear FRIEND! know that I only fly
- Your looks, because they stir
- Griefs that should sleep, and hopes that cannot die: _20
- The very comfort that they minister
- I scarce can bear, yet I,
- So deeply is the arrow gone,
- Should quickly perish if it were withdrawn.
- 4.
- When I return to my cold home, you ask _25
- Why I am not as I have ever been.
- YOU spoil me for the task
- Of acting a forced part in life's dull scene,--
- Of wearing on my brow the idle mask
- Of author, great or mean, _30
- In the world's carnival. I sought
- Peace thus, and but in you I found it not.
- 5.
- Full half an hour, to-day, I tried my lot
- With various flowers, and every one still said,
- 'She loves me--loves me not.' _35
- And if this meant a vision long since fled--
- If it meant fortune, fame, or peace of thought--
- If it meant,--but I dread
- To speak what you may know too well:
- Still there was truth in the sad oracle. _40
- 6.
- The crane o'er seas and forests seeks her home;
- No bird so wild but has its quiet nest,
- When it no more would roam;
- The sleepless billows on the ocean's breast
- Break like a bursting heart, and die in foam, _45
- And thus at length find rest:
- Doubtless there is a place of peace
- Where MY weak heart and all its throbs will cease.
- 7.
- I asked her, yesterday, if she believed
- That I had resolution. One who HAD _50
- Would ne'er have thus relieved
- His heart with words,--but what his judgement bade
- Would do, and leave the scorner unrelieved.
- These verses are too sad
- To send to you, but that I know, _55
- Happy yourself, you feel another's woe.
- NOTES:
- _10 Indifference, which once hurt me, is now grown Trelawny manuscript.
- _18 Dear friends, dear friend Trelawny manuscript, 1839, 2nd edition;
- Dear gentle friend 1834, 1839, 1st edition.
- _26 ever]lately Trelawny manuscript.
- _28 in Trelawny manuscript; on 1834, editions 1839,
- _43 When 1839, 2nd edition; Whence 1834, 1839, 1st edition.
- _48 will 1839, 2nd edition; shall 1834, 1839, 1st edition.
- _53 unrelieved Trelawny manuscript, 1839, 2nd. edition;
- unreprieved 1834, 1839, 1st edition.
- _54 are]were Trelawny manuscript.
- ***
- TO --.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- One word is too often profaned
- For me to profane it,
- One feeling too falsely disdained
- For thee to disdain it;
- One hope is too like despair _5
- For prudence to smother,
- And pity from thee more dear
- Than that from another.
- 2.
- I can give not what men call love,
- But wilt thou accept not _10
- The worship the heart lifts above
- And the Heavens reject not,--
- The desire of the moth for the star,
- Of the night for the morrow,
- The devotion to something afar _15
- From the sphere of our sorrow?
- ***
- TO --.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.
- There is a Boscombe manuscript.]
- 1.
- When passion's trance is overpast,
- If tenderness and truth could last,
- Or live, whilst all wild feelings keep
- Some mortal slumber, dark and deep,
- I should not weep, I should not weep! _5
- 2.
- It were enough to feel, to see,
- Thy soft eyes gazing tenderly,
- And dream the rest--and burn and be
- The secret food of fires unseen,
- Couldst thou but be as thou hast been, _10
- 3.
- After the slumber of the year
- The woodland violets reappear;
- All things revive in field or grove,
- And sky and sea, but two, which move
- And form all others, life and love. _15
- NOTE:
- _15 form Boscombe manuscript; for editions 1824, 1839.
- ***
- A BRIDAL SONG.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- The golden gates of Sleep unbar
- Where Strength and Beauty, met together,
- Kindle their image like a star
- In a sea of glassy weather!
- Night, with all thy stars look down,-- _5
- Darkness, weep thy holiest dew,--
- Never smiled the inconstant moon
- On a pair so true.
- Let eyes not see their own delight;--
- Haste, swift Hour, and thy flight _10
- Oft renew.
- 2.
- Fairies, sprites, and angels, keep her!
- Holy stars, permit no wrong!
- And return to wake the sleeper,
- Dawn,--ere it be long! _15
- O joy! O fear! what will be done
- In the absence of the sun!
- Come along!
- ***
- EPITHALAMIUM.
- ANOTHER VERSION OF THE PRECEDING.
- [Published by Medwin, "Life of Shelley", 1847.]
- Night, with all thine eyes look down!
- Darkness shed its holiest dew!
- When ever smiled the inconstant moon
- On a pair so true?
- Hence, coy hour! and quench thy light, _5
- Lest eyes see their own delight!
- Hence, swift hour! and thy loved flight
- Oft renew.
- BOYS:
- O joy! O fear! what may be done
- In the absence of the sun? _10
- Come along!
- The golden gates of sleep unbar!
- When strength and beauty meet together,
- Kindles their image like a star
- In a sea of glassy weather. _15
- Hence, coy hour! and quench thy light,
- Lest eyes see their own delight!
- Hence, swift hour! and thy loved flight
- Oft renew.
- GIRLS:
- O joy! O fear! what may be done _20
- In the absence of the sun?
- Come along!
- Fairies! sprites! and angels, keep her!
- Holiest powers, permit no wrong!
- And return, to wake the sleeper, _25
- Dawn, ere it be long.
- Hence, swift hour! and quench thy light,
- Lest eyes see their own delight!
- Hence, coy hour! and thy loved flight
- Oft renew. _30
- BOYS AND GIRLS:
- O joy! O fear! what will be done
- In the absence of the sun?
- Come along!
- NOTE:
- _17 Lest]Let 1847.
- ***
- ANOTHER VERSION OF THE SAME.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870,
- from the Trelawny manuscript of Edward Williams's play, "The Promise:
- or, A Year, a Month, and a Day".]
- BOYS SING:
- Night! with all thine eyes look down!
- Darkness! weep thy holiest dew!
- Never smiled the inconstant moon
- On a pair so true.
- Haste, coy hour! and quench all light, _5
- Lest eyes see their own delight!
- Haste, swift hour! and thy loved flight
- Oft renew!
- GIRLS SING:
- Fairies, sprites, and angels, keep her!
- Holy stars! permit no wrong! _10
- And return, to wake the sleeper,
- Dawn, ere it be long!
- O joy! O fear! there is not one
- Of us can guess what may be done
- In the absence of the sun:-- _15
- Come along!
- BOYS:
- Oh! linger long, thou envious eastern lamp
- In the damp
- Caves of the deep!
- GIRLS:
- Nay, return, Vesper! urge thy lazy car! _20
- Swift unbar
- The gates of Sleep!
- CHORUS:
- The golden gate of Sleep unbar,
- When Strength and Beauty, met together,
- Kindle their image, like a star _25
- In a sea of glassy weather.
- May the purple mist of love
- Round them rise, and with them move,
- Nourishing each tender gem
- Which, like flowers, will burst from them. _30
- As the fruit is to the tree
- May their children ever be!
- ***
- LOVE, HOPE, DESIRE, AND FEAR.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862. 'A very free
- translation of Brunetto Latini's "Tesoretto", lines 81-154.'--A.C.
- Bradley.]
- ...
- And many there were hurt by that strong boy,
- His name, they said, was Pleasure,
- And near him stood, glorious beyond measure
- Four Ladies who possess all empery
- In earth and air and sea, _5
- Nothing that lives from their award is free.
- Their names will I declare to thee,
- Love, Hope, Desire, and Fear,
- And they the regents are
- Of the four elements that frame the heart, _10
- And each diversely exercised her art
- By force or circumstance or sleight
- To prove her dreadful might
- Upon that poor domain.
- Desire presented her [false] glass, and then _15
- The spirit dwelling there
- Was spellbound to embrace what seemed so fair
- Within that magic mirror,
- And dazed by that bright error,
- It would have scorned the [shafts] of the avenger _20
- And death, and penitence, and danger,
- Had not then silent Fear
- Touched with her palsying spear,
- So that as if a frozen torrent
- The blood was curdled in its current; _25
- It dared not speak, even in look or motion,
- But chained within itself its proud devotion.
- Between Desire and Fear thou wert
- A wretched thing, poor heart!
- Sad was his life who bore thee in his breast, _30
- Wild bird for that weak nest.
- Till Love even from fierce Desire it bought,
- And from the very wound of tender thought
- Drew solace, and the pity of sweet eyes
- Gave strength to bear those gentle agonies, _35
- Surmount the loss, the terror, and the sorrow.
- Then Hope approached, she who can borrow
- For poor to-day, from rich tomorrow,
- And Fear withdrew, as night when day
- Descends upon the orient ray, _40
- And after long and vain endurance
- The poor heart woke to her assurance.
- --At one birth these four were born
- With the world's forgotten morn,
- And from Pleasure still they hold _45
- All it circles, as of old.
- When, as summer lures the swallow,
- Pleasure lures the heart to follow--
- O weak heart of little wit!
- The fair hand that wounded it, _50
- Seeking, like a panting hare,
- Refuge in the lynx's lair,
- Love, Desire, Hope, and Fear,
- Ever will be near.
- ***
- FRAGMENTS WRITTEN FOR HELLAS.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- 1.
- Fairest of the Destinies,
- Disarray thy dazzling eyes:
- Keener far thy lightnings are
- Than the winged [bolts] thou bearest,
- And the smile thou wearest _5
- Wraps thee as a star
- Is wrapped in light.
- 2.
- Could Arethuse to her forsaken urn
- From Alpheus and the bitter Doris run,
- Or could the morning shafts of purest light _10
- Again into the quivers of the Sun
- Be gathered--could one thought from its wild flight
- Return into the temple of the brain
- Without a change, without a stain,--
- Could aught that is, ever again _15
- Be what it once has ceased to be,
- Greece might again be free!
- 3.
- A star has fallen upon the earth
- Mid the benighted nations,
- A quenchless atom of immortal light, _20
- A living spark of Night,
- A cresset shaken from the constellations.
- Swifter than the thunder fell
- To the heart of Earth, the well
- Where its pulses flow and beat, _25
- And unextinct in that cold source
- Burns, and on ... course
- Guides the sphere which is its prison,
- Like an angelic spirit pent
- In a form of mortal birth, _30
- Till, as a spirit half-arisen
- Shatters its charnel, it has rent,
- In the rapture of its mirth,
- The thin and painted garment of the Earth,
- Ruining its chaos--a fierce breath _35
- Consuming all its forms of living death.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'I WOULD NOT BE A KING'.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- I would not be a king--enough
- Of woe it is to love;
- The path to power is steep and rough,
- And tempests reign above.
- I would not climb the imperial throne; _5
- 'Tis built on ice which fortune's sun
- Thaws in the height of noon.
- Then farewell, king, yet were I one,
- Care would not come so soon.
- Would he and I were far away _10
- Keeping flocks on Himalay!
- ***
- GINEVRA.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824,
- and dated 'Pisa, 1821.']
- Wild, pale, and wonder-stricken, even as one
- Who staggers forth into the air and sun
- From the dark chamber of a mortal fever,
- Bewildered, and incapable, and ever
- Fancying strange comments in her dizzy brain _5
- Of usual shapes, till the familiar train
- Of objects and of persons passed like things
- Strange as a dreamer's mad imaginings,
- Ginevra from the nuptial altar went;
- The vows to which her lips had sworn assent _10
- Rung in her brain still with a jarring din,
- Deafening the lost intelligence within.
- And so she moved under the bridal veil,
- Which made the paleness of her cheek more pale,
- And deepened the faint crimson of her mouth, _15
- And darkened her dark locks, as moonlight doth,--
- And of the gold and jewels glittering there
- She scarce felt conscious,--but the weary glare
- Lay like a chaos of unwelcome light,
- Vexing the sense with gorgeous undelight, _20
- A moonbeam in the shadow of a cloud
- Was less heavenly fair--her face was bowed,
- And as she passed, the diamonds in her hair
- Were mirrored in the polished marble stair
- Which led from the cathedral to the street; _25
- And ever as she went her light fair feet
- Erased these images.
- The bride-maidens who round her thronging came,
- Some with a sense of self-rebuke and shame,
- Envying the unenviable; and others
- Making the joy which should have been another's _30
- Their own by gentle sympathy; and some
- Sighing to think of an unhappy home:
- Some few admiring what can ever lure
- Maidens to leave the heaven serene and pure
- Of parents' smiles for life's great cheat; a thing _35
- Bitter to taste, sweet in imagining.
- But they are all dispersed--and, lo! she stands
- Looking in idle grief on her white hands,
- Alone within the garden now her own; _40
- And through the sunny air, with jangling tone,
- The music of the merry marriage-bells,
- Killing the azure silence, sinks and swells;--
- Absorbed like one within a dream who dreams
- That he is dreaming, until slumber seems _45
- A mockery of itself--when suddenly
- Antonio stood before her, pale as she.
- With agony, with sorrow, and with pride,
- He lifted his wan eyes upon the bride,
- And said--'Is this thy faith?' and then as one _50
- Whose sleeping face is stricken by the sun
- With light like a harsh voice, which bids him rise
- And look upon his day of life with eyes
- Which weep in vain that they can dream no more,
- Ginevra saw her lover, and forbore _55
- To shriek or faint, and checked the stifling blood
- Rushing upon her heart, and unsubdued
- Said--'Friend, if earthly violence or ill,
- Suspicion, doubt, or the tyrannic will
- Of parents, chance or custom, time or change, _60
- Or circumstance, or terror, or revenge,
- Or wildered looks, or words, or evil speech,
- With all their stings and venom can impeach
- Our love,--we love not:--if the grave which hides
- The victim from the tyrant, and divides _65
- The cheek that whitens from the eyes that dart
- Imperious inquisition to the heart
- That is another's, could dissever ours,
- We love not.'--'What! do not the silent hours
- Beckon thee to Gherardi's bridal bed? _70
- Is not that ring'--a pledge, he would have said,
- Of broken vows, but she with patient look
- The golden circle from her finger took,
- And said--'Accept this token of my faith,
- The pledge of vows to be absolved by death; _75
- And I am dead or shall be soon--my knell
- Will mix its music with that merry bell,
- Does it not sound as if they sweetly said
- "We toll a corpse out of the marriage-bed"?
- The flowers upon my bridal chamber strewn _80
- Will serve unfaded for my bier--so soon
- That even the dying violet will not die
- Before Ginevra.' The strong fantasy
- Had made her accents weaker and more weak,
- And quenched the crimson life upon her cheek, _85
- And glazed her eyes, and spread an atmosphere
- Round her, which chilled the burning noon with fear,
- Making her but an image of the thought
- Which, like a prophet or a shadow, brought
- News of the terrors of the coming time. _90
- Like an accuser branded with the crime
- He would have cast on a beloved friend,
- Whose dying eyes reproach not to the end
- The pale betrayer--he then with vain repentance
- Would share, he cannot now avert, the sentence-- _95
- Antonio stood and would have spoken, when
- The compound voice of women and of men
- Was heard approaching; he retired, while she
- Was led amid the admiring company
- Back to the palace,--and her maidens soon _100
- Changed her attire for the afternoon,
- And left her at her own request to keep
- An hour of quiet rest:--like one asleep
- With open eyes and folded hands she lay,
- Pale in the light of the declining day. _105
- Meanwhile the day sinks fast, the sun is set,
- And in the lighted hall the guests are met;
- The beautiful looked lovelier in the light
- Of love, and admiration, and delight
- Reflected from a thousand hearts and eyes, _110
- Kindling a momentary Paradise.
- This crowd is safer than the silent wood,
- Where love's own doubts disturb the solitude;
- On frozen hearts the fiery rain of wine
- Falls, and the dew of music more divine _115
- Tempers the deep emotions of the time
- To spirits cradled in a sunny clime:--
- How many meet, who never yet have met,
- To part too soon, but never to forget.
- How many saw the beauty, power and wit _120
- Of looks and words which ne'er enchanted yet;
- But life's familiar veil was now withdrawn,
- As the world leaps before an earthquake's dawn,
- And unprophetic of the coming hours,
- The matin winds from the expanded flowers _125
- Scatter their hoarded incense, and awaken
- The earth, until the dewy sleep is shaken
- From every living heart which it possesses,
- Through seas and winds, cities and wildernesses,
- As if the future and the past were all _130
- Treasured i' the instant;--so Gherardi's hall
- Laughed in the mirth of its lord's festival,
- Till some one asked--'Where is the Bride?' And then
- A bridesmaid went,--and ere she came again
- A silence fell upon the guests--a pause _135
- Of expectation, as when beauty awes
- All hearts with its approach, though unbeheld;
- Then wonder, and then fear that wonder quelled;--
- For whispers passed from mouth to ear which drew
- The colour from the hearer's cheeks, and flew _140
- Louder and swifter round the company;
- And then Gherardi entered with an eye
- Of ostentatious trouble, and a crowd
- Surrounded him, and some were weeping loud.
- They found Ginevra dead! if it be death _145
- To lie without motion, or pulse, or breath,
- With waxen cheeks, and limbs cold, stiff, and white,
- And open eyes, whose fixed and glassy light
- Mocked at the speculation they had owned.
- If it be death, when there is felt around _150
- A smell of clay, a pale and icy glare,
- And silence, and a sense that lifts the hair
- From the scalp to the ankles, as it were
- Corruption from the spirit passing forth,
- And giving all it shrouded to the earth, _155
- And leaving as swift lightning in its flight
- Ashes, and smoke, and darkness: in our night
- Of thought we know thus much of death,--no more
- Than the unborn dream of our life before
- Their barks are wrecked on its inhospitable shore. _160
- The marriage feast and its solemnity
- Was turned to funeral pomp--the company,
- With heavy hearts and looks, broke up; nor they
- Who loved the dead went weeping on their way
- Alone, but sorrow mixed with sad surprise _165
- Loosened the springs of pity in all eyes,
- On which that form, whose fate they weep in vain,
- Will never, thought they, kindle smiles again.
- The lamps which, half extinguished in their haste,
- Gleamed few and faint o'er the abandoned feast, _170
- Showed as it were within the vaulted room
- A cloud of sorrow hanging, as if gloom
- Had passed out of men's minds into the air.
- Some few yet stood around Gherardi there,
- Friends and relations of the dead,--and he, _175
- A loveless man, accepted torpidly
- The consolation that he wanted not;
- Awe in the place of grief within him wrought.
- Their whispers made the solemn silence seem
- More still--some wept,... _180
- Some melted into tears without a sob,
- And some with hearts that might be heard to throb
- Leaned on the table and at intervals
- Shuddered to hear through the deserted halls
- And corridors the thrilling shrieks which came _185
- Upon the breeze of night, that shook the flame
- Of every torch and taper as it swept
- From out the chamber where the women kept;--
- Their tears fell on the dear companion cold
- Of pleasures now departed; then was knolled _190
- The bell of death, and soon the priests arrived,
- And finding Death their penitent had shrived,
- Returned like ravens from a corpse whereon
- A vulture has just feasted to the bone.
- And then the mourning women came.-- _195
- ...
- THE DIRGE.
- Old winter was gone
- In his weakness back to the mountains hoar,
- And the spring came down
- From the planet that hovers upon the shore
- Where the sea of sunlight encroaches _200
- On the limits of wintry night;--
- If the land, and the air, and the sea,
- Rejoice not when spring approaches,
- We did not rejoice in thee,
- Ginevra! _205
- She is still, she is cold
- On the bridal couch,
- One step to the white deathbed,
- And one to the bier,
- And one to the charnel--and one, oh where? _210
- The dark arrow fled
- In the noon.
- Ere the sun through heaven once more has rolled,
- The rats in her heart
- Will have made their nest, _215
- And the worms be alive in her golden hair,
- While the Spirit that guides the sun,
- Sits throned in his flaming chair,
- She shall sleep.
- NOTES:
- 22 Was]Were cj. Rossetti.old
- 26 ever 1824; even editions 1839.
- _37 Bitter editions 1839; Better 1824.
- _63 wanting in 1824.
- _103 quiet rest cj. A.C. Bradley; quiet and rest 1824.
- _129 winds]lands cj. Forman; waves, sands or strands cj. Rossetti.
- _167 On]In cj. Rossetti.
- ***
- EVENING: PONTE AL MARE, PISA
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.
- There is a draft amongst the Boscombe manuscripts.]
- 1.
- The sun is set; the swallows are asleep;
- The bats are flitting fast in the gray air;
- The slow soft toads out of damp corners creep,
- And evening's breath, wandering here and there
- Over the quivering surface of the stream, _5
- Wakes not one ripple from its summer dream.
- 2.
- There is no dew on the dry grass to-night,
- Nor damp within the shadow of the trees;
- The wind is intermitting, dry, and light;
- And in the inconstant motion of the breeze _10
- The dust and straws are driven up and down,
- And whirled about the pavement of the town.
- 3.
- Within the surface of the fleeting river
- The wrinkled image of the city lay,
- Immovably unquiet, and forever _15
- It trembles, but it never fades away;
- Go to the...
- You, being changed, will find it then as now.
- 4.
- The chasm in which the sun has sunk is shut
- By darkest barriers of cinereous cloud, _20
- Like mountain over mountain huddled--but
- Growing and moving upwards in a crowd,
- And over it a space of watery blue,
- Which the keen evening star is shining through..
- NOTES:
- _6 summer 1839, 2nd edition; silent 1824, 1839, 1st edition.
- _20 cinereous Boscombe manuscript; enormous editions 1824, 1839.
- ***
- THE BOAT ON THE SERCHIO.
- [Published in part (lines 1-61, 88-118) by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous
- Poems", 1824; revised and enlarged by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical
- Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- Our boat is asleep on Serchio's stream,
- Its sails are folded like thoughts in a dream,
- The helm sways idly, hither and thither;
- Dominic, the boatman, has brought the mast,
- And the oars, and the sails; but 'tis sleeping fast, _5
- Like a beast, unconscious of its tether.
- The stars burnt out in the pale blue air,
- And the thin white moon lay withering there;
- To tower, and cavern, and rift, and tree,
- The owl and the bat fled drowsily. _10
- Day had kindled the dewy woods,
- And the rocks above and the stream below,
- And the vapours in their multitudes,
- And the Apennine's shroud of summer snow,
- And clothed with light of aery gold _15
- The mists in their eastern caves uprolled.
- Day had awakened all things that be,
- The lark and the thrush and the swallow free,
- And the milkmaid's song and the mower's scythe
- And the matin-bell and the mountain bee: _20
- Fireflies were quenched on the dewy corn,
- Glow-worms went out on the river's brim,
- Like lamps which a student forgets to trim:
- The beetle forgot to wind his horn,
- The crickets were still in the meadow and hill: _25
- Like a flock of rooks at a farmer's gun
- Night's dreams and terrors, every one,
- Fled from the brains which are their prey
- From the lamp's death to the morning ray.
- All rose to do the task He set to each, _30
- Who shaped us to His ends and not our own;
- The million rose to learn, and one to teach
- What none yet ever knew or can be known.
- And many rose
- Whose woe was such that fear became desire;-- _35
- Melchior and Lionel were not among those;
- They from the throng of men had stepped aside,
- And made their home under the green hill-side.
- It was that hill, whose intervening brow
- Screens Lucca from the Pisan's envious eye, _40
- Which the circumfluous plain waving below,
- Like a wide lake of green fertility,
- With streams and fields and marshes bare,
- Divides from the far Apennines--which lie
- Islanded in the immeasurable air. _45
- 'What think you, as she lies in her green cove,
- Our little sleeping boat is dreaming of?'
- 'If morning dreams are true, why I should guess
- That she was dreaming of our idleness,
- And of the miles of watery way _50
- We should have led her by this time of day.'-
- 'Never mind,' said Lionel,
- 'Give care to the winds, they can bear it well
- About yon poplar-tops; and see
- The white clouds are driving merrily, _55
- And the stars we miss this morn will light
- More willingly our return to-night.--
- How it whistles, Dominic's long black hair!
- List, my dear fellow; the breeze blows fair:
- Hear how it sings into the air--' _60
- --'Of us and of our lazy motions,'
- Impatiently said Melchior,
- 'If I can guess a boat's emotions;
- And how we ought, two hours before,
- To have been the devil knows where.' _65
- And then, in such transalpine Tuscan
- As would have killed a Della-Cruscan,
- ...
- So, Lionel according to his art
- Weaving his idle words, Melchior said:
- 'She dreams that we are not yet out of bed; _70
- We'll put a soul into her, and a heart
- Which like a dove chased by a dove shall beat.'
- ...
- 'Ay, heave the ballast overboard,
- And stow the eatables in the aft locker.'
- 'Would not this keg be best a little lowered?' _75
- 'No, now all's right.' 'Those bottles of warm tea--
- (Give me some straw)--must be stowed tenderly;
- Such as we used, in summer after six,
- To cram in greatcoat pockets, and to mix
- Hard eggs and radishes and rolls at Eton, _80
- And, couched on stolen hay in those green harbours
- Farmers called gaps, and we schoolboys called arbours,
- Would feast till eight.'
- ...
- With a bottle in one hand,
- As if his very soul were at a stand _85
- Lionel stood--when Melchior brought him steady:--
- 'Sit at the helm--fasten this sheet--all ready!'
- The chain is loosed, the sails are spread,
- The living breath is fresh behind,
- As with dews and sunrise fed, _90
- Comes the laughing morning wind;--
- The sails are full, the boat makes head
- Against the Serchio's torrent fierce,
- Then flags with intermitting course,
- And hangs upon the wave, and stems _95
- The tempest of the...
- Which fervid from its mountain source
- Shallow, smooth and strong doth come,--
- Swift as fire, tempestuously
- It sweeps into the affrighted sea; _100
- In morning's smile its eddies coil,
- Its billows sparkle, toss and boil,
- Torturing all its quiet light
- Into columns fierce and bright.
- The Serchio, twisting forth _105
- Between the marble barriers which it clove
- At Ripafratta, leads through the dread chasm
- The wave that died the death which lovers love,
- Living in what it sought; as if this spasm
- Had not yet passed, the toppling mountains cling, _110
- But the clear stream in full enthusiasm
- Pours itself on the plain, then wandering
- Down one clear path of effluence crystalline
- Sends its superfluous waves, that they may fling
- At Arno's feet tribute of corn and wine;
- Then, through the pestilential deserts wild
- Of tangled marsh and woods of stunted pine,
- It rushes to the Ocean.
- NOTES:
- _58-_61 List, my dear fellow, the breeze blows fair;
- How it scatters Dominic's long black hair!
- Singing of us, and our lazy motions,
- If I can guess a boat's emotions.'--editions 1824, 1839.
- _61-_67 Rossetti places these lines conjecturally between lines 51 and 52.
- _61-_65 'are evidently an alternative version of 48-51' (A.C. Bradley).
- _95, _96 and stems The tempest of the wanting in editions 1824, 1839.
- _112 then Boscombe manuscript; until editions 1824, 1839
- _114 superfluous Boscombe manuscript; clear editions 1824, 1839.
- _117 pine Boscombe manuscript; fir editions 1824, 1839.
- ***
- MUSIC.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- 1.
- I pant for the music which is divine,
- My heart in its thirst is a dying flower;
- Pour forth the sound like enchanted wine,
- Loosen the notes in a silver shower;
- Like a herbless plain, for the gentle rain, _5
- I gasp, I faint, till they wake again.
- 2.
- Let me drink of the spirit of that sweet sound,
- More, oh more,--I am thirsting yet;
- It loosens the serpent which care has bound
- Upon my heart to stifle it; _10
- The dissolving strain, through every vein,
- Passes into my heart and brain.
- 3.
- As the scent of a violet withered up,
- Which grew by the brink of a silver lake,
- When the hot noon has drained its dewy cup, _15
- And mist there was none its thirst to slake--
- And the violet lay dead while the odour flew
- On the wings of the wind o'er the waters blue--
- 4.
- As one who drinks from a charmed cup
- Of foaming, and sparkling, and murmuring wine, _20
- Whom, a mighty Enchantress filling up,
- Invites to love with her kiss divine...
- NOTES:
- _16 mist 1824; tank 1839, 2nd edition.
- ***
- SONNET TO BYRON.
- [Published by Medwin, "The Shelley Papers", 1832 (lines 1-7), and "Life
- of Shelley", 1847 (lines 1-9, 12-14). Revised and completed from the
- Boscombe manuscript by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.",
- 1870.]
- [I am afraid these verses will not please you, but]
- If I esteemed you less, Envy would kill
- Pleasure, and leave to Wonder and Despair
- The ministration of the thoughts that fill
- The mind which, like a worm whose life may share
- A portion of the unapproachable, _5
- Marks your creations rise as fast and fair
- As perfect worlds at the Creator's will.
- But such is my regard that nor your power
- To soar above the heights where others [climb],
- Nor fame, that shadow of the unborn hour _10
- Cast from the envious future on the time,
- Move one regret for his unhonoured name
- Who dares these words:--the worm beneath the sod
- May lift itself in homage of the God.
- NOTES:
- _1 you edition 1870; him 1832; thee 1847.
- _4 So edition 1870; My soul which as a worm may haply share 1832;
- My soul which even as a worm may share 1847.
- _6 your edition 1870; his 1832; thy 1847.
- _8, _9 So edition 1870 wanting 1832 -
- But not the blessings of thy happier lot,
- Nor thy well-won prosperity, and fame 1847.
- _10, _11 So edition 1870; wanting 1832, 1847.
- _12-_14 So 1847, edition 1870; wanting 1832.
- ***
- FRAGMENT ON KEATS.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition--ED.]
- ON KEATS, WHO DESIRED THAT ON HIS TOMB SHOULD BE INSCRIBED--
- 'Here lieth One whose name was writ on water.
- But, ere the breath that could erase it blew,
- Death, in remorse for that fell slaughter,
- Death, the immortalizing winter, flew
- Athwart the stream,--and time's printless torrent grew _5
- A scroll of crystal, blazoning the name
- Of Adonais!
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'METHOUGHT I WAS A BILLOW IN THE CROWD'.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- Methought I was a billow in the crowd
- Of common men, that stream without a shore,
- That ocean which at once is deaf and loud;
- That I, a man, stood amid many more
- By a wayside..., which the aspect bore _5
- Of some imperial metropolis,
- Where mighty shapes--pyramid, dome, and tower--
- Gleamed like a pile of crags--
- ***
- TO-MORROW.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- Where art thou, beloved To-morrow?
- When young and old, and strong and weak,
- Rich and poor, through joy and sorrow,
- Thy sweet smiles we ever seek,--
- In thy place--ah! well-a-day! _5
- We find the thing we fled--To-day.
- ***
- STANZA.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.
- Connected by Dowden with the preceding.]
- If I walk in Autumn's even
- While the dead leaves pass,
- If I look on Spring's soft heaven,--
- Something is not there which was
- Winter's wondrous frost and snow, _5
- Summer's clouds, where are they now?
- ***
- FRAGMENT: A WANDERER.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- He wanders, like a day-appearing dream,
- Through the dim wildernesses of the mind;
- Through desert woods and tracts, which seem
- Like ocean, homeless, boundless, unconfined.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: LIFE ROUNDED WITH SLEEP.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- The babe is at peace within the womb;
- The corpse is at rest within the tomb:
- We begin in what we end.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'I FAINT, I PERISH WITH MY LOVE!'.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- I faint, I perish with my love! I grow
- Frail as a cloud whose [splendours] pale
- Under the evening's ever-changing glow:
- I die like mist upon the gale,
- And like a wave under the calm I fail. _5
- ***
- FRAGMENT: THE LADY OF THE SOUTH.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- Faint with love, the Lady of the South
- Lay in the paradise of Lebanon
- Under a heaven of cedar boughs: the drouth
- Of love was on her lips; the light was gone
- Out of her eyes-- _5
- ***
- FRAGMENT: ZEPHYRUS THE AWAKENER.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- Come, thou awakener of the spirit's ocean,
- Zephyr, whom to thy cloud or cave
- No thought can trace! speed with thy gentle motion!
- ***
- FRAGMENT: RAIN.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- The gentleness of rain was in the wind.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'WHEN SOFT WINDS AND SUNNY SKIES'.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- When soft winds and sunny skies
- With the green earth harmonize,
- And the young and dewy dawn,
- Bold as an unhunted fawn,
- Up the windless heaven is gone,-- _5
- Laugh--for ambushed in the day,--
- Clouds and whirlwinds watch their prey.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'AND THAT I WALK THUS PROUDLY CROWNED'.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- And that I walk thus proudly crowned withal
- Is that 'tis my distinction; if I fall,
- I shall not weep out of the vital day,
- To-morrow dust, nor wear a dull decay.
- NOTE:
- _2 'Tis that is or In that is cj. A.C. Bradley.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'THE RUDE WIND IS SINGING'.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- The rude wind is singing
- The dirge of the music dead;
- The cold worms are clinging
- Where kisses were lately fed.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'GREAT SPIRIT'.
- [Published by Rossetti, "Complete Poetical Works of P. B. S.", 1870.]
- Great Spirit whom the sea of boundless thought
- Nurtures within its unimagined caves,
- In which thou sittest sole, as in my mind,
- Giving a voice to its mysterious waves--
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'O THOU IMMORTAL DEITY'.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.]
- O thou immortal deity
- Whose throne is in the depth of human thought,
- I do adjure thy power and thee
- By all that man may be, by all that he is not,
- By all that he has been and yet must be! _5
- ***
- FRAGMENT: THE FALSE LAUREL AND THE TRUE.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition.]
- 'What art thou, Presumptuous, who profanest
- The wreath to mighty poets only due,
- Even whilst like a forgotten moon thou wanest?
- Touch not those leaves which for the eternal few
- Who wander o'er the Paradise of fame, _5
- In sacred dedication ever grew:
- One of the crowd thou art without a name.'
- 'Ah, friend, 'tis the false laurel that I wear;
- Bright though it seem, it is not the same
- As that which bound Milton's immortal hair; _10
- Its dew is poison; and the hopes that quicken
- Under its chilling shade, though seeming fair,
- Are flowers which die almost before they sicken.'
- ***
- FRAGMENT: MAY THE LIMNER.
- [This and the three following Fragments were edited from manuscript
- Shelley D1 at the Bodleian Library and published by Mr. C.D. Locock,
- "Examination", etc., Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1903. They are printed
- here as belonging probably to the year 1821.]
- When May is painting with her colours gay
- The landscape sketched by April her sweet twin...
- ***
- FRAGMENT: BEAUTY'S HALO.
- [Published by Mr. C.D. Locock, "Examination", etc, 1903.]
- Thy beauty hangs around thee like
- Splendour around the moon--
- Thy voice, as silver bells that strike
- Upon
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'THE DEATH KNELL IS RINGING'.
- ('This reads like a study for "Autumn, A Dirge"' (Locock). Might it not
- be part of a projected Fit v. of "The Fugitives"?--ED.)
- [Published by Mr. C.D. Locock, "Examination", etc., 1903.]
- The death knell is ringing
- The raven is singing
- The earth worm is creeping
- The mourners are weeping
- Ding dong, bell-- _5
- ***
- FRAGMENT: 'I STOOD UPON A HEAVEN-CLEAVING TURRET'.
- I stood upon a heaven-cleaving turret
- Which overlooked a wide Metropolis--
- And in the temple of my heart my Spirit
- Lay prostrate, and with parted lips did kiss
- The dust of Desolations [altar] hearth-- _5
- And with a voice too faint to falter
- It shook that trembling fane with its weak prayer
- 'Twas noon,--the sleeping skies were blue
- The city
- ***
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1821, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- My task becomes inexpressibly painful as the year draws near that which
- sealed our earthly fate, and each poem, and each event it records, has
- a real or mysterious connection with the fatal catastrophe. I feel that
- I am incapable of putting on paper the history of those times. The
- heart of the man, abhorred of the poet, who could
- 'peep and botanize
- Upon his mother's grave,'
- does not appear to me more inexplicably framed than that of one who can
- dissect and probe past woes, and repeat to the public ear the groans
- drawn from them in the throes of their agony.
- The year 1821 was spent in Pisa, or at the Baths of San Giuliano. We
- were not, as our wont had been, alone; friends had gathered round us.
- Nearly all are dead, and, when Memory recurs to the past, she wanders
- among tombs. The genius, with all his blighting errors and mighty
- powers; the companion of Shelley's ocean-wanderings, and the sharer of
- his fate, than whom no man ever existed more gentle, generous, and
- fearless; and others, who found in Shelley's society, and in his great
- knowledge and warm sympathy, delight, instruction, and solace; have
- joined him beyond the grave. A few survive who have felt life a desert
- since he left it. What misfortune can equal death? Change can convert
- every other into a blessing, or heal its sting--death alone has no
- cure. It shakes the foundations of the earth on which we tread; it
- destroys its beauty; it casts down our shelter; it exposes us bare to
- desolation. When those we love have passed into eternity, 'life is the
- desert and the solitude' in which we are forced to linger--but never
- find comfort more.
- There is much in the "Adonais" which seems now more applicable to
- Shelley himself than to the young and gifted poet whom he mourned. The
- poetic view he takes of death, and the lofty scorn he displays towards
- his calumniators, are as a prophecy on his own destiny when received
- among immortal names, and the poisonous breath of critics has vanished
- into emptiness before the fame he inherits.
- Shelley's favourite taste was boating; when living near the Thames or
- by the Lake of Geneva, much of his life was spent on the water. On the
- shore of every lake or stream or sea near which he dwelt, he had a boat
- moored. He had latterly enjoyed this pleasure again. There are no
- pleasure-boats on the Arno; and the shallowness of its waters (except
- in winter-time, when the stream is too turbid and impetuous for
- boating) rendered it difficult to get any skiff light enough to float.
- Shelley, however, overcame the difficulty; he, together with a friend,
- contrived a boat such as the huntsmen carry about with them in the
- Maremma, to cross the sluggish but deep streams that intersect the
- forests,--a boat of laths and pitched canvas. It held three persons;
- and he was often seen on the Arno in it, to the horror of the Italians,
- who remonstrated on the danger, and could not understand how anyone
- could take pleasure in an exercise that risked life. 'Ma va per la
- vita!' they exclaimed. I little thought how true their words would
- prove. He once ventured, with a friend, on the glassy sea of a calm
- day, down the Arno and round the coast to Leghorn, which, by keeping
- close in shore, was very practicable. They returned to Pisa by the
- canal, when, missing the direct cut, they got entangled among weeds,
- and the boat upset; a wetting was all the harm done, except that the
- intense cold of his drenched clothes made Shelley faint. Once I went
- down with him to the mouth of the Arno, where the stream, then high and
- swift, met the tideless sea, and disturbed its sluggish waters. It was
- a waste and dreary scene; the desert sand stretched into a point
- surrounded by waves that broke idly though perpetually around; it was a
- scene very similar to Lido, of which he had said--
- 'I love all waste
- And solitary places; where we taste
- The pleasure of believing what we see
- Is boundless, as we wish our souls to be:
- And such was this wide ocean, and this shore
- More barren than its billows.'
- Our little boat was of greater use, unaccompanied by any danger, when
- we removed to the Baths. Some friends lived at the village of Pugnano,
- four miles off, and we went to and fro to see them, in our boat, by the
- canal; which, fed by the Serchio, was, though an artificial, a full and
- picturesque stream, making its way under verdant banks, sheltered by
- trees that dipped their boughs into the murmuring waters. By day,
- multitudes of Ephemera darted to and fro on the surface; at night, the
- fireflies came out among the shrubs on the banks; the cicale at
- noon-day kept up their hum; the aziola cooed in the quiet evening. It
- was a pleasant summer, bright in all but Shelley's health and
- inconstant spirits; yet he enjoyed himself greatly, and became more and
- more attached to the part of the country were chance appeared to cast
- us. Sometimes he projected taking a farm situated on the height of one
- of the near hills, surrounded by chestnut and pine woods, and
- overlooking a wide extent of country: or settling still farther in the
- maritime Apennines, at Massa. Several of his slighter and unfinished
- poems were inspired by these scenes, and by the companions around us.
- It is the nature of that poetry, however, which overflows from the soul
- oftener to express sorrow and regret than joy; for it is when oppressed
- by the weight of life, and away from those he loves, that the poet has
- recourse to the solace of expression in verse.
- Still, Shelley's passion was the ocean; and he wished that our summers,
- instead of being passed among the hills near Pisa, should be spent on
- the shores of the sea. It was very difficult to find a spot. We shrank
- from Naples from a fear that the heats would disagree with Percy:
- Leghorn had lost its only attraction, since our friends who had resided
- there were returned to England; and, Monte Nero being the resort of
- many English, we did not wish to find ourselves in the midst of a
- colony of chance travellers. No one then thought it possible to reside
- at Via Reggio, which latterly has become a summer resort. The low lands
- and bad air of Maremma stretch the whole length of the western shores
- of the Mediterranean, till broken by the rocks and hills of Spezia. It
- was a vague idea, but Shelley suggested an excursion to Spezia, to see
- whether it would be feasible to spend a summer there. The beauty of the
- bay enchanted him. We saw no house to suit us; but the notion took
- root, and many circumstances, enchained as by fatality, occurred to
- urge him to execute it.
- He looked forward this autumn with great pleasure to the prospect of a
- visit from Leigh Hunt. When Shelley visited Lord Byron at Ravenna, the
- latter had suggested his coming out, together with the plan of a
- periodical work in which they should all join. Shelley saw a prospect
- of good for the fortunes of his friend, and pleasure in his society;
- and instantly exerted himself to have the plan executed. He did not
- intend himself joining in the work: partly from pride, not wishing to
- have the air of acquiring readers for his poetry by associating it with
- the compositions of more popular writers; and also because he might
- feel shackled in the free expression of his opinions, if any friends
- were to be compromised. By those opinions, carried even to their
- outermost extent, he wished to live and die, as being in his conviction
- not only true, but such as alone would conduce to the moral improvement
- and happiness of mankind. The sale of the work might meanwhile, either
- really or supposedly, be injured by the free expression of his
- thoughts; and this evil he resolved to avoid.
- ***
- POEMS WRITTEN IN 1822.
- THE ZUCCA.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824, and dated
- 'January, 1822.' There is a copy amongst the Boscombe manuscripts.]
- 1.
- Summer was dead and Autumn was expiring,
- And infant Winter laughed upon the land
- All cloudlessly and cold;--when I, desiring
- More in this world than any understand,
- Wept o'er the beauty, which, like sea retiring, _5
- Had left the earth bare as the wave-worn sand
- Of my lorn heart, and o'er the grass and flowers
- Pale for the falsehood of the flattering Hours.
- 2.
- Summer was dead, but I yet lived to weep
- The instability of all but weeping; _10
- And on the Earth lulled in her winter sleep
- I woke, and envied her as she was sleeping.
- Too happy Earth! over thy face shall creep
- The wakening vernal airs, until thou, leaping
- From unremembered dreams, shalt ... see _15
- No death divide thy immortality.
- 3.
- I loved--oh, no, I mean not one of ye,
- Or any earthly one, though ye are dear
- As human heart to human heart may be;--
- I loved, I know not what--but this low sphere _20
- And all that it contains, contains not thee,
- Thou, whom, seen nowhere, I feel everywhere.
- From Heaven and Earth, and all that in them are,
- Veiled art thou, like a ... star.
- 4.
- By Heaven and Earth, from all whose shapes thou flowest, _25
- Neither to be contained, delayed, nor hidden;
- Making divine the loftiest and the lowest,
- When for a moment thou art not forbidden
- To live within the life which thou bestowest;
- And leaving noblest things vacant and chidden, _30
- Cold as a corpse after the spirit's flight
- Blank as the sun after the birth of night.
- 5.
- In winds, and trees, and streams, and all things common,
- In music and the sweet unconscious tone
- Of animals, and voices which are human, _35
- Meant to express some feelings of their own;
- In the soft motions and rare smile of woman,
- In flowers and leaves, and in the grass fresh-shown,
- Or dying in the autumn, I the most
- Adore thee present or lament thee lost. _40
- 6.
- And thus I went lamenting, when I saw
- A plant upon the river's margin lie
- Like one who loved beyond his nature's law,
- And in despair had cast him down to die;
- Its leaves, which had outlived the frost, the thaw _45
- Had blighted; like a heart which hatred's eye
- Can blast not, but which pity kills; the dew
- Lay on its spotted leaves like tears too true.
- 7.
- The Heavens had wept upon it, but the Earth
- Had crushed it on her maternal breast _50
- ...
- 8.
- I bore it to my chamber, and I planted
- It in a vase full of the lightest mould;
- The winter beams which out of Heaven slanted
- Fell through the window-panes, disrobed of cold,
- Upon its leaves and flowers; the stars which panted _55
- In evening for the Day, whose car has rolled
- Over the horizon's wave, with looks of light
- Smiled on it from the threshold of the night.
- 9.
- The mitigated influences of air
- And light revived the plant, and from it grew _60
- Strong leaves and tendrils, and its flowers fair,
- Full as a cup with the vine's burning dew,
- O'erflowed with golden colours; an atmosphere
- Of vital warmth enfolded it anew,
- And every impulse sent to every part
- The unbeheld pulsations of its heart. _65
- 10.
- Well might the plant grow beautiful and strong,
- Even if the air and sun had smiled not on it;
- For one wept o'er it all the winter long
- Tears pure as Heaven's rain, which fell upon it _70
- Hour after hour; for sounds of softest song
- Mixed with the stringed melodies that won it
- To leave the gentle lips on which it slept,
- Had loosed the heart of him who sat and wept.
- 11.
- Had loosed his heart, and shook the leaves and flowers _75
- On which he wept, the while the savage storm
- Waked by the darkest of December's hours
- Was raving round the chamber hushed and warm;
- The birds were shivering in their leafless bowers,
- The fish were frozen in the pools, the form _80
- Of every summer plant was dead
- Whilst this....
- ...
- NOTES:
- _7 lorn Boscombe manuscript; poor edition 1824.
- _23 So Boscombe manuscript; Dim object of soul's idolatry edition 1824.
- _24 star Boscombe manuscript; wanting edition 1824.
- _38 grass fresh Boscombe manuscript; fresh grass edition 1824.
- _46 like Boscombe manuscript; as edition 1824.
- _68 air and sun Boscombe manuscript; sun and air edition 1824.
- ***
- THE MAGNETIC LADY TO HER PATIENT.
- [Published by Medwin, "The Athenaeum", August 11, 1832.
- There is a copy amongst the Trelawny manuscripts.]
- 1.
- 'Sleep, sleep on! forget thy pain;
- My hand is on thy brow,
- My spirit on thy brain;
- My pity on thy heart, poor friend;
- And from my fingers flow _5
- The powers of life, and like a sign,
- Seal thee from thine hour of woe;
- And brood on thee, but may not blend
- With thine.
- 2.
- 'Sleep, sleep on! I love thee not; _10
- But when I think that he
- Who made and makes my lot
- As full of flowers as thine of weeds,
- Might have been lost like thee;
- And that a hand which was not mine _15
- Might then have charmed his agony
- As I another's--my heart bleeds
- For thine.
- 3.
- 'Sleep, sleep, and with the slumber of
- The dead and the unborn _20
- Forget thy life and love;
- Forget that thou must wake forever;
- Forget the world's dull scorn;
- Forget lost health, and the divine
- Feelings which died in youth's brief morn; _25
- And forget me, for I can never
- Be thine.
- 4.
- 'Like a cloud big with a May shower,
- My soul weeps healing rain
- On thee, thou withered flower! _30
- It breathes mute music on thy sleep
- Its odour calms thy brain!
- Its light within thy gloomy breast
- Spreads like a second youth again.
- By mine thy being is to its deep _35
- Possessed.
- 5.
- 'The spell is done. How feel you now?'
- 'Better--Quite well,' replied
- The sleeper.--'What would do _39
- You good when suffering and awake?
- What cure your head and side?--'
- 'What would cure, that would kill me, Jane:
- And as I must on earth abide
- Awhile, yet tempt me not to break
- My chain.' _45
- NOTES;
- _1, _10 Sleep Trelawny manuscript, 1839, 2nd edition;
- Sleep on 1832, 1839, 1st edition.
- _16 charmed Trelawny manuscript;
- chased 1832, editions 1839.
- _21 love]woe 1832.
- _42 so Trelawny manuscript
- 'Twould kill me what would cure my pain 1832, editions 1839.
- _44 Awhile yet, cj. A.C. Bradley.
- ***
- LINES: 'WHEN THE LAMP IS SHATTERED'.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.
- There is a copy amongst the Trelawny manuscripts.]
- 1.
- When the lamp is shattered
- The light in the dust lies dead--
- When the cloud is scattered
- The rainbow's glory is shed.
- When the lute is broken, _5
- Sweet tones are remembered not;
- When the lips have spoken,
- Loved accents are soon forgot.
- 2.
- As music and splendour
- Survive not the lamp and the lute, _10
- The heart's echoes render
- No song when the spirit is mute:--
- No song but sad dirges,
- Like the wind through a ruined cell,
- Or the mournful surges _15
- That ring the dead seaman's knell.
- 3.
- When hearts have once mingled
- Love first leaves the well-built nest;
- The weak one is singled
- To endure what it once possessed. _20
- O Love! who bewailest
- The frailty of all things here,
- Why choose you the frailest
- For your cradle, your home, and your bier?
- 4.
- Its passions will rock thee _25
- As the storms rock the ravens on high;
- Bright reason will mock thee,
- Like the sun from a wintry sky.
- From thy nest every rafter
- Will rot, and thine eagle home _30
- Leave thee naked to laughter,
- When leaves fall and cold winds come.
- NOTES:
- _6 tones edition 1824; notes Trelawny manuscript.
- _14 through edition 1824; in Trelawny manuscript.
- _16 dead edition 1824; lost Trelawny manuscript.
- _23 choose edition 1824; chose Trelawny manuscript.
- _25-_32 wanting Trelawny manuscript.
- ***
- TO JANE: THE INVITATION.
- [This and the following poem were published together in their original
- form as one piece under the title, "The Pine Forest of the Cascine near
- Pisa", by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824; reprinted in the same
- shape, "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition; republished separately in
- their present form, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition. There is a
- copy amongst the Trelawny manuscripts.]
- Best and brightest, come away!
- Fairer far than this fair Day,
- Which, like thee to those in sorrow,
- Comes to bid a sweet good-morrow
- To the rough Year just awake _5
- In its cradle on the brake.
- The brightest hour of unborn Spring,
- Through the winter wandering,
- Found, it seems, the halcyon Morn
- To hoar February born, _10
- Bending from Heaven, in azure mirth,
- It kissed the forehead of the Earth,
- And smiled upon the silent sea,
- And bade the frozen streams be free,
- And waked to music all their fountains, _15
- And breathed upon the frozen mountains,
- And like a prophetess of May
- Strewed flowers upon the barren way,
- Making the wintry world appear
- Like one on whom thou smilest, dear. _20
- Away, away, from men and towns,
- To the wild wood and the downs--
- To the silent wilderness
- Where the soul need not repress
- Its music lest it should not find _25
- An echo in another's mind,
- While the touch of Nature's art
- Harmonizes heart to heart.
- I leave this notice on my door
- For each accustomed visitor:-- _30
- 'I am gone into the fields
- To take what this sweet hour yields;--
- Reflection, you may come to-morrow,
- Sit by the fireside with Sorrow.--
- You with the unpaid bill, Despair,--
- You, tiresome verse-reciter, Care,-- _35
- I will pay you in the grave,--
- Death will listen to your stave.
- Expectation too, be off!
- To-day is for itself enough; _40
- Hope, in pity mock not Woe
- With smiles, nor follow where I go;
- Long having lived on thy sweet food,
- At length I find one moment's good
- After long pain--with all your love, _45
- This you never told me of.'
- Radiant Sister of the Day,
- Awake! arise! and come away!
- To the wild woods and the plains,
- And the pools where winter rains _50.
- Image all their roof of leaves,
- Where the pine its garland weaves
- Of sapless green and ivy dun
- Round stems that never kiss the sun;
- Where the lawns and pastures be, _55
- And the sandhills of the sea;--
- Where the melting hoar-frost wets
- The daisy-star that never sets,
- And wind-flowers, and violets,
- Which yet join not scent to hue, _60
- Crown the pale year weak and new;
- When the night is left behind
- In the deep east, dun and blind,
- And the blue noon is over us,
- And the multitudinous _65
- Billows murmur at our feet,
- Where the earth and ocean meet,
- And all things seem only one
- In the universal sun.
- NOTES:
- _34 with Trelawny manuscript; of 1839, 2nd edition.
- _44 moment's Trelawny manuscript; moment 1839, 2nd edition.
- _50 And Trelawny manuscript; To 1839, 2nd edition.
- _53 dun Trelawny manuscript; dim 1839, 2nd edition.
- ***
- TO JANE: THE RECOLLECTION.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition.
- See the Editor's prefatory note to the preceding.]
- 1.
- Now the last day of many days,
- All beautiful and bright as thou,
- The loveliest and the last, is dead,
- Rise, Memory, and write its praise!
- Up,--to thy wonted work! come, trace _5
- The epitaph of glory fled,--
- For now the Earth has changed its face,
- A frown is on the Heaven's brow.
- 2.
- We wandered to the Pine Forest
- That skirts the Ocean's foam, _10
- The lightest wind was in its nest,
- The tempest in its home.
- The whispering waves were half asleep,
- The clouds were gone to play,
- And on the bosom of the deep _15
- The smile of Heaven lay;
- It seemed as if the hour were one
- Sent from beyond the skies,
- Which scattered from above the sun
- A light of Paradise. _20
- 3.
- We paused amid the pines that stood
- The giants of the waste,
- Tortured by storms to shapes as rude
- As serpents interlaced;
- And, soothed by every azure breath, _25
- That under Heaven is blown,
- To harmonies and hues beneath,
- As tender as its own,
- Now all the tree-tops lay asleep,
- Like green waves on the sea, _30
- As still as in the silent deep
- The ocean woods may be.
- 4.
- How calm it was!--the silence there
- By such a chain was bound
- That even the busy woodpecker _35
- Made stiller by her sound
- The inviolable quietness;
- The breath of peace we drew
- With its soft motion made not less
- The calm that round us grew. _40
- There seemed from the remotest seat
- Of the white mountain waste,
- To the soft flower beneath our feet,
- A magic circle traced,--
- A spirit interfused around _45
- A thrilling, silent life,--
- To momentary peace it bound
- Our mortal nature's strife;
- And still I felt the centre of
- The magic circle there _50
- Was one fair form that filled with love
- The lifeless atmosphere.
- 5.
- We paused beside the pools that lie
- Under the forest bough,--
- Each seemed as 'twere a little sky _55
- Gulfed in a world below;
- A firmament of purple light
- Which in the dark earth lay,
- More boundless than the depth of night,
- And purer than the day-- _60
- In which the lovely forests grew,
- As in the upper air,
- More perfect both in shape and hue
- Than any spreading there.
- There lay the glade and neighbouring lawn, _65
- And through the dark green wood
- The white sun twinkling like the dawn
- Out of a speckled cloud.
- Sweet views which in our world above
- Can never well be seen, _70
- Were imaged by the water's love
- Of that fair forest green.
- And all was interfused beneath
- With an Elysian glow,
- An atmosphere without a breath, _75
- A softer day below.
- Like one beloved the scene had lent
- To the dark water's breast,
- Its every leaf and lineament
- With more than truth expressed; _80
- Until an envious wind crept by,
- Like an unwelcome thought,
- Which from the mind's too faithful eye
- Blots one dear image out.
- Though thou art ever fair and kind, _85
- The forests ever green,
- Less oft is peace in Shelley's mind,
- Than calm in waters, seen.
- NOTES:
- _6 fled edition. 1824; dead Trelawny manuscript, 1839, 2nd edition.
- _10 Ocean's]Ocean 1839, 2nd edition.
- _24 Interlaced, 1839; interlaced; cj. A.C. Bradley.
- _28 own; 1839 own, cj. A.C. Bradley.
- _42 white Trelawny manuscript; wide 1839, 2nd edition
- _87 Shelley's Trelawny manuscript; S--'s 1839, 2nd edition.]
- ***
- THE PINE FOREST OF THE CASCINE NEAR PISA.
- [This, the first draft of "To Jane: The Invitation, The Recollection",
- was published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824, and reprinted,
- "Poetical Works", 1839, 1st edition. See Editor's Prefatory Note to
- "The Invitation", above.]
- Dearest, best and brightest,
- Come away,
- To the woods and to the fields!
- Dearer than this fairest day
- Which, like thee to those in sorrow, _5
- Comes to bid a sweet good-morrow
- To the rough Year just awake
- In its cradle in the brake.
- The eldest of the Hours of Spring,
- Into the Winter wandering, _10
- Looks upon the leafless wood,
- And the banks all bare and rude;
- Found, it seems, this halcyon Morn
- In February's bosom born,
- Bending from Heaven, in azure mirth, _15
- Kissed the cold forehead of the Earth,
- And smiled upon the silent sea,
- And bade the frozen streams be free;
- And waked to music all the fountains,
- And breathed upon the rigid mountains, _20
- And made the wintry world appear
- Like one on whom thou smilest, Dear.
- Radiant Sister of the Day,
- Awake! arise! and come away!
- To the wild woods and the plains, _25
- To the pools where winter rains
- Image all the roof of leaves,
- Where the pine its garland weaves
- Sapless, gray, and ivy dun
- Round stems that never kiss the sun-- _30
- To the sandhills of the sea,
- Where the earliest violets be.
- Now the last day of many days,
- All beautiful and bright as thou,
- The loveliest and the last, is dead, _35
- Rise, Memory, and write its praise!
- And do thy wonted work and trace
- The epitaph of glory fled;
- For now the Earth has changed its face,
- A frown is on the Heaven's brow. _40
- We wandered to the Pine Forest
- That skirts the Ocean's foam,
- The lightest wind was in its nest,
- The tempest in its home.
- The whispering waves were half asleep, _45
- The clouds were gone to play,
- And on the woods, and on the deep
- The smile of Heaven lay.
- It seemed as if the day were one
- Sent from beyond the skies, _50
- Which shed to earth above the sun
- A light of Paradise.
- We paused amid the pines that stood,
- The giants of the waste,
- Tortured by storms to shapes as rude _55
- With stems like serpents interlaced.
- How calm it was--the silence there
- By such a chain was bound,
- That even the busy woodpecker
- Made stiller by her sound _60
- The inviolable quietness;
- The breath of peace we drew
- With its soft motion made not less
- The calm that round us grew.
- It seemed that from the remotest seat _65
- Of the white mountain's waste
- To the bright flower beneath our feet,
- A magic circle traced;--
- A spirit interfused around,
- A thinking, silent life; _70
- To momentary peace it bound
- Our mortal nature's strife;--
- And still, it seemed, the centre of
- The magic circle there,
- Was one whose being filled with love _75
- The breathless atmosphere.
- Were not the crocuses that grew
- Under that ilex-tree
- As beautiful in scent and hue
- As ever fed the bee? _80
- We stood beneath the pools that lie
- Under the forest bough,
- And each seemed like a sky
- Gulfed in a world below;
- A purple firmament of light _85
- Which in the dark earth lay,
- More boundless than the depth of night,
- And clearer than the day--
- In which the massy forests grew
- As in the upper air, _90
- More perfect both in shape and hue
- Than any waving there.
- Like one beloved the scene had lent
- To the dark water's breast
- Its every leaf and lineament _95
- With that clear truth expressed;
- There lay far glades and neighbouring lawn,
- And through the dark green crowd
- The white sun twinkling like the dawn
- Under a speckled cloud. _100
- Sweet views, which in our world above
- Can never well be seen,
- Were imaged by the water's love
- Of that fair forest green.
- And all was interfused beneath _105
- With an Elysian air,
- An atmosphere without a breath,
- A silence sleeping there.
- Until a wandering wind crept by,
- Like an unwelcome thought, _110
- Which from my mind's too faithful eye
- Blots thy bright image out.
- For thou art good and dear and kind,
- The forest ever green,
- But less of peace in S--'s mind,
- Than calm in waters, seen. _116.
- ***
- WITH A GUITAR, TO JANE.
- [Published by Medwin, "The Athenaeum", October 20, 1832; "Frazer's
- Magazine", January 1833. There is a copy amongst the Trelawny
- manuscripts.]
- Ariel to Miranda:--Take
- This slave of Music, for the sake
- Of him who is the slave of thee,
- And teach it all the harmony
- In which thou canst, and only thou, _5
- Make the delighted spirit glow,
- Till joy denies itself again,
- And, too intense, is turned to pain;
- For by permission and command
- Of thine own Prince Ferdinand, _10
- Poor Ariel sends this silent token
- Of more than ever can be spoken;
- Your guardian spirit, Ariel, who,
- From life to life, must still pursue
- Your happiness;--for thus alone _15
- Can Ariel ever find his own.
- From Prospero's enchanted cell,
- As the mighty verses tell,
- To the throne of Naples, he
- Lit you o'er the trackless sea, _20
- Flitting on, your prow before,
- Like a living meteor.
- When you die, the silent Moon,
- In her interlunar swoon,
- Is not sadder in her cell
- Than deserted Ariel.
- When you live again on earth,
- Like an unseen star of birth,
- Ariel guides you o'er the sea
- Of life from your nativity. _30
- Many changes have been run
- Since Ferdinand and you begun
- Your course of love, and Ariel still
- Has tracked your steps, and served your will;
- Now, in humbler, happier lot, _35
- This is all remembered not;
- And now, alas! the poor sprite is
- Imprisoned, for some fault of his,
- In a body like a grave;--
- From you he only dares to crave, _40
- For his service and his sorrow,
- A smile today, a song tomorrow.
- The artist who this idol wrought,
- To echo all harmonious thought,
- Felled a tree, while on the steep _45
- The woods were in their winter sleep,
- Rocked in that repose divine
- On the wind-swept Apennine;
- And dreaming, some of Autumn past,
- And some of Spring approaching fast, _50
- And some of April buds and showers,
- And some of songs in July bowers,
- And all of love; and so this tree,--
- O that such our death may be!--
- Died in sleep, and felt no pain, _55
- To live in happier form again:
- From which, beneath Heaven's fairest star,
- The artist wrought this loved Guitar,
- And taught it justly to reply,
- To all who question skilfully, _60
- In language gentle as thine own;
- Whispering in enamoured tone
- Sweet oracles of woods and dells,
- And summer winds in sylvan cells;
- For it had learned all harmonies _65
- Of the plains and of the skies,
- Of the forests and the mountains,
- And the many-voiced fountains;
- The clearest echoes of the hills,
- The softest notes of falling rills, _70
- The melodies of birds and bees,
- The murmuring of summer seas,
- And pattering rain, and breathing dew,
- And airs of evening; and it knew
- That seldom-heard mysterious sound, _75
- Which, driven on its diurnal round,
- As it floats through boundless day,
- Our world enkindles on its way.--
- All this it knows, but will not tell
- To those who cannot question well _80
- The Spirit that inhabits it;
- It talks according to the wit
- Of its companions; and no more
- Is heard than has been felt before,
- By those who tempt it to betray _85
- These secrets of an elder day:
- But, sweetly as its answers will
- Flatter hands of perfect skill,
- It keeps its highest, holiest tone
- For our beloved Jane alone. _90
- NOTES:
- _12 Of more than ever]Of love that never 1833.
- _46 woods Trelawny manuscript, 1839, 2nd edition;
- winds 1832, 1833, 1839, 1st edition.
- _58 this Trelawny manuscript, 1839, 2nd edition;
- that 1832, 1833, 1839, 1st edition.
- _61 thine own Trelawny manuscript, 1839, 2nd edition;
- its own 1832, 1833, 1839, 1st edition.
- _76 on Trelawny manuscript, 1839, 2nd edition;
- in 1832, 1833, 1839, 1st edition.
- _90 Jane Trelawny manuscript; friend 1832, 1833, editions 1839.
- ***
- TO JANE: 'THE KEEN STARS WERE TWINKLING'.
- [Published in part (lines 7-24) by Medwin (under the title, "An Ariette
- for Music. To a Lady singing to her Accompaniment on the Guitar"), "The
- Athenaeum", November 17, 1832; reprinted by Mrs. Shelley, "Poetical
- Works", 1839, 1st edition. Republished in full (under the title, To
- --.), "Poetical Works", 1839, 2nd edition. The Trelawny manuscript is
- headed "To Jane". Mr. C.W. Frederickson of Brooklyn possesses a
- transcript in an unknown hand.]
- 1.
- The keen stars were twinkling,
- And the fair moon was rising among them,
- Dear Jane!
- The guitar was tinkling,
- But the notes were not sweet till you sung them _5
- Again.
- 2.
- As the moon's soft splendour
- O'er the faint cold starlight of Heaven
- Is thrown,
- So your voice most tender _10
- To the strings without soul had then given
- Its own.
- 3.
- The stars will awaken,
- Though the moon sleep a full hour later,
- To-night; _15
- No leaf will be shaken
- Whilst the dews of your melody scatter
- Delight.
- 4.
- Though the sound overpowers,
- Sing again, with your dear voice revealing _20
- A tone
- Of some world far from ours,
- Where music and moonlight and feeling
- Are one.
- NOTES:
- _3 Dear *** 1839, 2nd edition.
- _7 soft]pale Fred. manuscript.
- _10 your 1839, 2nd edition.;
- thy 1832, 1839, 1st edition, Fred. manuscript.
- _11 had then 1839, 2nd edition; has 1832, 1839, 1st edition;
- hath Fred. manuscript.
- _12 Its]Thine Fred. manuscript.
- _17 your 1839, 2nd edition;
- thy 1832, 1839, 1st edition, Fred. manuscript.
- _19 sound]song Fred. manuscript.
- _20 your dear 1839, 2nd edition; thy sweet 1832, 1839, 1st edition;
- thy soft Fred. manuscript.
- ***
- A DIRGE.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- Rough wind, that moanest loud
- Grief too sad for song;
- Wild wind, when sullen cloud
- Knells all the night long;
- Sad storm whose tears are vain, _5
- Bare woods, whose branches strain,
- Deep caves and dreary main,--
- Wail, for the world's wrong!
- NOTE:
- _6 strain cj. Rossetti; stain edition 1824.
- ***
- LINES WRITTEN IN THE BAY OF LERICI.
- [Published from the Boscombe manuscripts by Dr. Garnett, "Macmillan's
- Magazine", June, 1862; reprinted, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- She left me at the silent time
- When the moon had ceased to climb
- The azure path of Heaven's steep,
- And like an albatross asleep,
- Balanced on her wings of light, _5
- Hovered in the purple night,
- Ere she sought her ocean nest
- In the chambers of the West.
- She left me, and I stayed alone
- Thinking over every tone _10
- Which, though silent to the ear,
- The enchanted heart could hear,
- Like notes which die when born, but still
- Haunt the echoes of the hill;
- And feeling ever--oh, too much!-- _15
- The soft vibration of her touch,
- As if her gentle hand, even now,
- Lightly trembled on my brow;
- And thus, although she absent were,
- Memory gave me all of her _20
- That even Fancy dares to claim:--
- Her presence had made weak and tame
- All passions, and I lived alone
- In the time which is our own;
- The past and future were forgot, _25
- As they had been, and would be, not.
- But soon, the guardian angel gone,
- The daemon reassumed his throne
- In my faint heart. I dare not speak
- My thoughts, but thus disturbed and weak _30
- I sat and saw the vessels glide
- Over the ocean bright and wide,
- Like spirit-winged chariots sent
- O'er some serenest element
- For ministrations strange and far; _35
- As if to some Elysian star
- Sailed for drink to medicine
- Such sweet and bitter pain as mine.
- And the wind that winged their flight
- From the land came fresh and light, _40
- And the scent of winged flowers,
- And the coolness of the hours
- Of dew, and sweet warmth left by day,
- Were scattered o'er the twinkling bay.
- And the fisher with his lamp _45
- And spear about the low rocks damp
- Crept, and struck the fish which came
- To worship the delusive flame.
- Too happy they, whose pleasure sought
- Extinguishes all sense and thought _50
- Of the regret that pleasure leaves,
- Destroying life alone, not peace!
- NOTES:
- _11 though silent Relics 1862; though now silent Mac. Mag. 1862.
- _31 saw Relics 1862; watched Mac. Mag. 1862.
- ***
- LINES: 'WE MEET NOT AS WE PARTED'.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- 1.
- We meet not as we parted,
- We feel more than all may see;
- My bosom is heavy-hearted,
- And thine full of doubt for me:--
- One moment has bound the free. _5
- 2.
- That moment is gone for ever,
- Like lightning that flashed and died--
- Like a snowflake upon the river--
- Like a sunbeam upon the tide,
- Which the dark shadows hide. _10
- 3.
- That moment from time was singled
- As the first of a life of pain;
- The cup of its joy was mingled
- --Delusion too sweet though vain!
- Too sweet to be mine again. _15
- 4.
- Sweet lips, could my heart have hidden
- That its life was crushed by you,
- Ye would not have then forbidden
- The death which a heart so true
- Sought in your briny dew. _20
- 5.
- ...
- ...
- ...
- Methinks too little cost
- For a moment so found, so lost! _25
- ***
- THE ISLE.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- There was a little lawny islet
- By anemone and violet,
- Like mosaic, paven:
- And its roof was flowers and leaves
- Which the summer's breath enweaves, _5
- Where nor sun nor showers nor breeze
- Pierce the pines and tallest trees,
- Each a gem engraven;--
- Girt by many an azure wave
- With which the clouds and mountains pave _10
- A lake's blue chasm.
- ***
- FRAGMENT: TO THE MOON.
- [Published by Dr. Garnett, "Relics of Shelley", 1862.]
- Bright wanderer, fair coquette of Heaven,
- To whom alone it has been given
- To change and be adored for ever,
- Envy not this dim world, for never
- But once within its shadow grew _5
- One fair as--
- ***
- EPITAPH.
- [Published by Mrs. Shelley, "Posthumous Poems", 1824.]
- These are two friends whose lives were undivided;
- So let their memory be, now they have glided
- Under the grave; let not their bones be parted,
- For their two hearts in life were single-hearted.
- ***
- NOTE ON POEMS OF 1822, BY MRS. SHELLEY.
- This morn thy gallant bark
- Sailed on a sunny sea:
- 'Tis noon, and tempests dark
- Have wrecked it on the lee.
- Ah woe! ah woe!
- By Spirits of the deep
- Thou'rt cradled on the billow
- To thy eternal sleep.
- Thou sleep'st upon the shore
- Beside the knelling surge,
- And Sea-nymphs evermore
- Shall sadly chant thy dirge.
- They come, they come,
- The Spirits of the deep,--
- While near thy seaweed pillow
- My lonely watch I keep.
- From far across the sea
- I hear a loud lament,
- By Echo's voice for thee
- From Ocean's caverns sent.
- O list! O list!
- The Spirits of the deep!
- They raise a wail of sorrow,
- While I forever weep.
- With this last year of the life of Shelley these Notes end. They are
- not what I intended them to be. I began with energy, and a burning
- desire to impart to the world, in worthy language, the sense I have of
- the virtues and genius of the beloved and the lost; my strength has
- failed under the task. Recurrence to the past, full of its own deep and
- unforgotten joys and sorrows, contrasted with succeeding years of
- painful and solitary struggle, has shaken my health. Days of great
- suffering have followed my attempts to write, and these again produced
- a weakness and languor that spread their sinister influence over these
- notes. I dislike speaking of myself, but cannot help apologizing to the
- dead, and to the public, for not having executed in the manner I
- desired the history I engaged to give of Shelley's writings. (I at one
- time feared that the correction of the press might be less exact
- through my illness; but I believe that it is nearly free from error.
- Some asterisks occur in a few pages, as they did in the volume of
- "Posthumous Poems", either because they refer to private concerns, or
- because the original manuscript was left imperfect. Did any one see the
- papers from which I drew that volume, the wonder would be how any eyes
- or patience were capable of extracting it from so confused a mass,
- interlined and broken into fragments, so that the sense could only be
- deciphered and joined by guesses which might seem rather intuitive than
- founded on reasoning. Yet I believe no mistake was made.)
- The winter of 1822 was passed in Pisa, if we might call that season
- winter in which autumn merged into spring after the interval of but few
- days of bleaker weather. Spring sprang up early, and with extreme
- beauty. Shelley had conceived the idea of writing a tragedy on the
- subject of Charles I. It was one that he believed adapted for a drama;
- full of intense interest, contrasted character, and busy passion. He
- had recommended it long before, when he encouraged me to attempt a
- play. Whether the subject proved more difficult than he anticipated, or
- whether in fact he could not bend his mind away from the broodings and
- wanderings of thought, divested from human interest, which he best
- loved, I cannot tell; but he proceeded slowly, and threw it aside for
- one of the most mystical of his poems, the "Triumph of Life", on which
- he was employed at the last.
- His passion for boating was fostered at this time by having among our
- friends several sailors. His favourite companion, Edward Ellerker
- Williams, of the 8th Light Dragoons, had begun his life in the navy,
- and had afterwards entered the army; he had spent several years in
- India, and his love for adventure and manly exercises accorded with
- Shelley's taste. It was their favourite plan to build a boat such as
- they could manage themselves, and, living on the sea-coast, to enjoy at
- every hour and season the pleasure they loved best. Captain Roberts,
- R.N., undertook to build the boat at Genoa, where he was also occupied
- in building the "Bolivar" for Lord Byron. Ours was to be an open boat,
- on a model taken from one of the royal dockyards. I have since heard
- that there was a defect in this model, and that it was never seaworthy.
- In the month of February, Shelley and his friend went to Spezia to seek
- for houses for us. Only one was to be found at all suitable; however, a
- trifle such as not finding a house could not stop Shelley; the one
- found was to serve for all. It was unfurnished; we sent our furniture
- by sea, and with a good deal of precipitation, arising from his
- impatience, made our removal. We left Pisa on the 26th of April.
- The Bay of Spezia is of considerable extent, and divided by a rocky
- promontory into a larger and smaller one. The town of Lerici is
- situated on the eastern point, and in the depth of the smaller bay,
- which bears the name of this town, is the village of San Terenzo. Our
- house, Casa Magni, was close to this village; the sea came up to the
- door, a steep hill sheltered it behind. The proprietor of the estate on
- which it was situated was insane; he had begun to erect a large house
- at the summit of the hill behind, but his malady prevented its being
- finished, and it was falling into ruin. He had (and this to the
- Italians had seemed a glaring symptom of very decided madness) rooted
- up the olives on the hillside, and planted forest trees. These were
- mostly young, but the plantation was more in English taste than I ever
- elsewhere saw in Italy; some fine walnut and ilex trees intermingled
- their dark massy foliage, and formed groups which still haunt my
- memory, as then they satiated the eye with a sense of loveliness. The
- scene was indeed of unimaginable beauty. The blue extent of waters, the
- almost landlocked bay, the near castle of Lerici shutting it in to the
- east, and distant Porto Venere to the west; the varied forms of the
- precipitous rocks that bound in the beach, over which there was only a
- winding rugged footpath towards Lerici, and none on the other side; the
- tideless sea leaving no sands nor shingle, formed a picture such as one
- sees in Salvator Rosa's landscapes only. Sometimes the sunshine
- vanished when the sirocco raged--the 'ponente' the wind was called on
- that shore. The gales and squalls that hailed our first arrival
- surrounded the bay with foam; the howling wind swept round our exposed
- house, and the sea roared unremittingly, so that we almost fancied
- ourselves on board ship. At other times sunshine and calm invested sea
- and sky, and the rich tints of Italian heaven bathed the scene in
- bright and ever-varying tints.
- The natives were wilder than the place. Our near neighbours of San
- Terenzo were more like savages than any people I ever before lived
- among. Many a night they passed on the beach, singing, or rather
- howling; the women dancing about among the waves that broke at their
- feet, the men leaning against the rocks and joining in their loud wild
- chorus. We could get no provisions nearer than Sarzana, at a distance
- of three miles and a half off, with the torrent of the Magra between;
- and even there the supply was very deficient. Had we been wrecked on an
- island of the South Seas, we could scarcely have felt ourselves farther
- from civilisation and comfort; but, where the sun shines, the latter
- becomes an unnecessary luxury, and we had enough society among
- ourselves. Yet I confess housekeeping became rather a toilsome task,
- especially as I was suffering in my health, and could not exert myself
- actively.
- At first the fatal boat had not arrived, and was expected with great
- impatience. On Monday, 12th May, it came. Williams records the
- long-wished-for fact in his journal: 'Cloudy and threatening weather.
- M. Maglian called; and after dinner, and while walking with him on the
- terrace, we discovered a strange sail coming round the point of Porto
- Venere, which proved at length to be Shelley's boat. She had left Genoa
- on Thursday last, but had been driven back by the prevailing bad winds.
- A Mr. Heslop and two English seamen brought her round, and they speak
- most highly of her performances. She does indeed excite my surprise and
- admiration. Shelley and I walked to Lerici, and made a stretch off the
- land to try her: and I find she fetches whatever she looks at. In
- short, we have now a perfect plaything for the summer.'--It was thus
- that short-sighted mortals welcomed Death, he having disguised his grim
- form in a pleasing mask! The time of the friends was now spent on the
- sea; the weather became fine, and our whole party often passed the
- evenings on the water when the wind promised pleasant sailing. Shelley
- and Williams made longer excursions; they sailed several times to
- Massa. They had engaged one of the seamen who brought her round, a boy,
- by name Charles Vivian; and they had not the slightest apprehension of
- danger. When the weather was unfavourable, they employed themselves
- with alterations in the rigging, and by building a boat of canvas and
- reeds, as light as possible, to have on board the other for the
- convenience of landing in waters too shallow for the larger vessel.
- When Shelley was on board, he had his papers with him; and much of the
- "Triumph of Life" was written as he sailed or weltered on that sea
- which was soon to engulf him.
- The heats set in in the middle of June; the days became excessively
- hot. But the sea-breeze cooled the air at noon, and extreme heat always
- put Shelley in spirits. A long drought had preceded the heat; and
- prayers for rain were being put up in the churches, and processions of
- relics for the same effect took place in every town. At this time we
- received letters announcing the arrival of Leigh Hunt at Genoa. Shelley
- was very eager to see him. I was confined to my room by severe illness,
- and could not move; it was agreed that Shelley and Williams should go
- to Leghorn in the boat. Strange that no fear of danger crossed our
- minds! Living on the sea-shore, the ocean became as a plaything: as a
- child may sport with a lighted stick, till a spark inflames a forest,
- and spreads destruction over all, so did we fearlessly and blindly
- tamper with danger, and make a game of the terrors of the ocean. Our
- Italian neighbours, even, trusted themselves as far as Massa in the
- skiff; and the running down the line of coast to Leghorn gave no more
- notion of peril than a fair-weather inland navigation would have done
- to those who had never seen the sea. Once, some months before, Trelawny
- had raised a warning voice as to the difference of our calm bay and the
- open sea beyond; but Shelley and his friend, with their one sailor-boy,
- thought themselves a match for the storms of the Mediterranean, in a
- boat which they looked upon as equal to all it was put to do.
- On the 1st of July they left us. If ever shadow of future ill darkened
- the present hour, such was over my mind when they went. During the
- whole of our stay at Lerici, an intense presentiment of coming evil
- brooded over my mind, and covered this beautiful place and genial
- summer with the shadow of coming misery. I had vainly struggled with
- these emotions--they seemed accounted for by my illness; but at this
- hour of separation they recurred with renewed violence. I did not
- anticipate danger for them, but a vague expectation of evil shook me to
- agony, and I could scarcely bring myself to let them go. The day was
- calm and clear; and, a fine breeze rising at twelve, they weighed for
- Leghorn. They made the run of about fifty miles in seven hours and a
- half. The "Bolivar" was in port; and, the regulations of the
- Health-office not permitting them to go on shore after sunset, they
- borrowed cushions from the larger vessel, and slept on board their
- boat.
- They spent a week at Pisa and Leghorn. The want of rain was severely
- felt in the country. The weather continued sultry and fine. I have
- heard that Shelley all this time was in brilliant spirits. Not long
- before, talking of presentiment, he had said the only one that he ever
- found infallible was the certain advent of some evil fortune when he
- felt peculiarly joyous. Yet, if ever fate whispered of coming disaster,
- such inaudible but not unfelt prognostics hovered around us. The beauty
- of the place seemed unearthly in its excess: the distance we were at
- from all signs of civilization, the sea at our feet, its murmurs or its
- roaring for ever in our ears,--all these things led the mind to brood
- over strange thoughts, and, lifting it from everyday life, caused it to
- be familiar with the unreal. A sort of spell surrounded us; and each
- day, as the voyagers did not return, we grew restless and disquieted,
- and yet, strange to say, we were not fearful of the most apparent
- danger.
- The spell snapped; it was all over; an interval of agonizing doubt--of
- days passed in miserable journeys to gain tidings, of hopes that took
- firmer root even as they were more baseless--was changed to the
- certainty of the death that eclipsed all happiness for the survivors
- for evermore.
- There was something in our fate peculiarly harrowing. The remains of
- those we lost were cast on shore; but, by the quarantine-laws of the
- coast, we were not permitted to have possession of them--the law with
- respect to everything cast on land by the sea being that such should be
- burned, to prevent the possibility of any remnant bringing the plague
- into Italy; and no representation could alter the law. At length,
- through the kind and unwearied exertions of Mr. Dawkins, our Charge
- d'Affaires at Florence, we gained permission to receive the ashes after
- the bodies were consumed. Nothing could equal the zeal of Trelawny in
- carrying our wishes into effect. He was indefatigable in his exertions,
- and full of forethought and sagacity in his arrangements. It was a
- fearful task; he stood before us at last, his hands scorched and
- blistered by the flames of the funeral-pyre, and by touching the burnt
- relics as he placed them in the receptacles prepared for the purpose.
- And there, in compass of that small case, was gathered all that
- remained on earth of him whose genius and virtue were a crown of glory
- to the world--whose love had been the source of happiness, peace, and
- good,--to be buried with him!
- The concluding stanzas of the "Adonais" pointed out where the remains
- ought to be deposited; in addition to which our beloved child lay
- buried in the cemetery at Rome. Thither Shelley's ashes were conveyed;
- and they rest beneath one of the antique weed-grown towers that recur
- at intervals in the circuit of the massy ancient wall of Rome. He
- selected the hallowed place himself; there is
- 'the sepulchre,
- Oh, not of him, but of our joy!--
- ...
- And gray walls moulder round, on which dull Time
- Feeds, like slow fire upon a hoary brand;
- And one keen pyramid with wedge sublime,
- Pavilioning the dust of him who planned
- This refuge for his memory, doth stand
- Like flame transformed to marble; and beneath,
- A field is spread, on which a newer band
- Have pitched in Heaven's smile their camp of death,
- Welcoming him we lose with scarce extinguished breath.'
- Could sorrow for the lost, and shuddering anguish at the vacancy left
- behind, be soothed by poetic imaginations, there was something in
- Shelley's fate to mitigate pangs which yet, alas! could not be so
- mitigated; for hard reality brings too miserably home to the mourner
- all that is lost of happiness, all of lonely unsolaced struggle that
- remains. Still, though dreams and hues of poetry cannot blunt grief, it
- invests his fate with a sublime fitness, which those less nearly allied
- may regard with complacency. A year before he had poured into verse all
- such ideas about death as give it a glory of its own. He had, as it now
- seems, almost anticipated his own destiny; and, when the mind figures
- his skiff wrapped from sight by the thunder-storm, as it was last seen
- upon the purple sea, and then, as the cloud of the tempest passed away,
- no sign remained of where it had been (Captain Roberts watched the
- vessel with his glass from the top of the lighthouse of Leghorn, on its
- homeward track. They were off Via Reggio, at some distance from shore,
- when a storm was driven over the sea. It enveloped them and several
- larger vessels in darkness. When the cloud passed onwards, Roberts
- looked again, and saw every other vessel sailing on the ocean except
- their little schooner, which had vanished. From that time he could
- scarcely doubt the fatal truth; yet we fancied that they might have
- been driven towards Elba or Corsica, and so be saved. The observation
- made as to the spot where the boat disappeared caused it to be found,
- through the exertions of Trelawny for that effect. It had gone down in
- ten fathom water; it had not capsized, and, except such things as had
- floated from her, everything was found on board exactly as it had been
- placed when they sailed. The boat itself was uninjured. Roberts
- possessed himself of her, and decked her; but she proved not seaworthy,
- and her shattered planks now lie rotting on the shore of one of the
- Ionian islands, on which she was wrecked.)--who but will regard as a
- prophecy the last stanza of the "Adonais"?
- 'The breath whose might I have invoked in song
- Descends on me; my spirit's bark is driven,
- Far from the shore, far from the trembling throng
- Whose sails were never to the tempest given;
- The massy earth and sphered skies are riven!
- I am borne darkly, fearfully, afar;
- Whilst burning through the inmost veil of Heaven,
- The soul of Adonais, like a star,
- Beacons from the abode where the Eternal are.'
- Putney, May 1, 1839.
- End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Complete Poetical Works of Percy
- Bysshe Shelley Volume II, by Percy Bysshe Shelley
- *** END OF PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SHELLEY'S COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS ***
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