AFTER READING J. T. GILBERT’S “THE HISTORY OF DUBLIN
Long have I loved the beauty of thy streets,
Fair Dublin: long, with unavailing
vows,
Sigh’d to all guardian deities who
rouse
The spirits of dead nations to new heats
Of life and triumph: vain the fond conceits,
Nestling like eaves-warmed doves ’neath
patriot brows!
Vain as the “Hope,” that from
thy Custom-House
Looks o’er the vacant bay in vain for fleets.
Genius alone brings back the days of yore:
Look! look, what life is in these quaint old shops
The loneliest lanes are rattling with the roar
of coach and chair; fans, feathers, flambeaus,
fops,
Flutter and flicker through yon open door,
Where Handels hand moves the great organ stops.
March 11th, 1856.
TO HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW
(Dedication of Calderon’s “Chrysanthus
and Daria.”)
Pensive within the Coliseum’s walls
I stood with thee, O Poet of the West!
The day when each had been a welcome guest
In San Clemente’s venerable halls:
With what delight my memory now recalls
That hour of hours, that flower of all
the rest,
When, with thy white beard falling on
thy breast,
That noble head, that well might serve
as Paul’s
In some divinest vision of the saint
By Raffael dreamed I heard
thee mourn the dead
The martyred host who fearless there,
though faint,
Walked the rough road that up to heaven’s gate
led:
These were the pictures Calderon loved
to paint
In golden hues that here perchance have
fled.
Yet take the colder copy from my hand,
Not for its own but for the Master’s
sake;
Take it, as thou, returning home, wilt
take
From that divinest soft Italian land
Fixed shadows of the beautiful and grand
In sunless pictures that the sun doth
make
Reflections that may pleasant memories
wake
Of all that Raffael touched, or Angelo
planned:
As these may keep what memory else might lose,
So may this photograph of verse impart
An image, though without the native hues
Of Calderon’s fire, and yet with Calderon’s
art,
Of what thou lovest through a kindred
muse
That sings in heaven, yet nestles in the
heart.
Dublin, August 24th, 1869.
TO KENELM HENRU DIGBY
(On being presented by him with a
copy, painted by himself, of a rare
Portrait of Calderon.)
How can I thank thee for this gift of thine,
Digby, the dawn and day-star of our age,
Forerunner thou of many a saint and sage
Who since have fought and conquer’d ’neath
the Sign?
Thou hast left, as in a sacred shrine
What shrine more pure than thy unspotted
page?
The priceless relics, as a heritage,
Of loftiest thoughts and lessons most divine.
Poet and teacher of sublimest lore,
Thou scornest not the painter’s mimic skill,
And thus hath come, obedient to thy will
The outward form that Calderon’s
spirit wore.
Ah! happy canvas that two glories fill,
Where Calderon lives ’neath Digby’s
hand once more.
October 15th, 1878.
TO ETHNA
Ethna, to cull sweet flowers divinely fair,
To seek for gems of such transparent light
As would not be unworthy to unite
Round thy fair brow, and through thy dark-brown hair,
I would that I had wings to cleave the air,
In search of some far region of delight,
That back to thee from that adventurous
flight,
A glorious wreath my happy hands might bear;
Soon would the sweetest Persian rose be
thine
Soon would the glory of Golconda’s mine
Flash on thy forehead, like a star ah!
me,
In place of these, I bring, with trembling
hand,
These fading wild flowers from our native land
These simple pebbles from the Irish Sea!