How gracefully, O man, with thy
palm-bough,
Upon the waning century standest
thou,
In proud and noble manhood’s
prime,
With unlocked senses, with a spirit
freed,
Of firmness mild,-though
silent, rich in deed,
The ripest son of Time,
Through meekness great, through
precepts strong,
Through treasures rich, that time
had long
Hid in thy bosom, and through
reason free,-
Master of Nature, who thy fetters
loves,
And who thy strength in thousand
conflicts proves,
And from the desert soared
in pride with thee!
Flushed with the glow of victory,
Never forget to prize the hand
That found the weeping orphan
child
Deserted on life’s barren
strand,
And left a prey to hazard
wild,-
That, ere thy spirit-honor saw the
day,
Thy youthful heart watched
over silently,
And from thy tender bosom turned
away
Each thought that might have
stained its purity;
That kind one ne’er forget
who, as in sport,
Thy youth to noble aspirations
trained,
And who to thee in easy riddles
taught
The secret how each virtue
might be gained;
Who, to receive him back more perfect
still,
E’en into strangers’
arms her favorite gave-
Oh, may’st thou never with
degenerate will,
Humble thyself to be her abject
slave!
In industry, the bee the palm may
bear;
In skill, the worm a lesson
may impart;
With spirits blest thy knowledge
thou dost share,
But thou, O man, alone hast
art!
Only through beauty’s morning
gate
Didst thou the land of knowledge
find.
To merit a more glorious fate,
In graces trains itself the
mind.
What thrilled thee through with
trembling blessed,
When erst the Muses swept
the chord,
That power created in thy breast,
Which to the mighty spirit
soared.
When first was seen by doting reason’s
ken,
When many a thousand years
had passed away,
A symbol of the fair and great e’en
then,
Before the childlike mind
uncovered lay.
Its blessed form bade us honor virtue’s
cause,-
The honest sense ’gainst
vice put forth its powers,
Before a Solon had devised the laws
That slowly bring to light
their languid flowers.
Before Eternity’s vast scheme
Was to the thinker’s
mind revealed,
Was’t not foreshadowed in
his dream,
Whose eyes explored yon starry
field?
Urania,-the majestic
dreaded one,
Who wears a glory of Orions
twined
Around her brow, and who is seen
by none
Save purest spirits, when,
in splendor shrined,
She soars above the stars in pride,
Ascending to her sunny throne,-
Her fiery chaplet lays aside,
And now, as beauty, stands
alone;
While, with the Graces’ girdle
round her cast,
She seems a child, by children
understood;
For we shall recognize as truth
at last,
What here as beauty only we
have viewed.
When the Creator banished from his
sight
Frail man to dark mortality’s
abode,
And granted him a late return to
light,
Only by treading reason’s
arduous road,-
When each immortal turned his face
away,
She, the compassionate, alone
Took up her dwelling in that house
of clay,
With the deserted, banished
one.
With drooping wing she hovers here
Around her darling, near the
senses’ land,
And on his prison-walls so drear
Elysium paints with fond deceptive
hand.
While soft humanity still lay at
rest,
Within her tender arms extended,
No flame was stirred by bigots’
murderous zest,
No guiltless blood on high
ascended.
The heart that she in gentle fetters
binds,
Views duty’s slavish
escort scornfully;
Her path of light, though fairer
far it winds,
Sinks in the sun-track of
morality.
Those who in her chaste service
still remain,
No grovelling thought can
tempt, no fate affright;
The spiritual life, so free from
stain,
Freedom’s sweet birthright,
they receive again,
Under the mystic sway of holy
might.
The purest among millions, happy
they
Whom to her service she has
sanctified,
Whose mouths the mighty one’s
commands convey,
Within whose breasts she deigneth
to abide;
Whom she ordained to feed her holy
fire
Upon her altar’s ever-flaming
pyre,-
Whose eyes alone her unveiled graces
meet,
And whom she gathers round in union
sweet
In the much-honored place be glad
Where noble order bade ye
climb,
For in the spirit-world sublime,
Man’s loftiest rank ye’ve
ever had!
Ere to the world proportion ye revealed,
That every being joyfully
obeys,-
A boundless structure, in night’s
veil concealed,
Illumed by naught but faint
and languid rays,
A band of phantoms, struggling ceaselessly,
Holding his mind in slavish
fetters bound,
Unsociable and rude as be,
Assailing him on every side
around,-
Thus seemed to man creation in that
day!
United to surrounding forms
alone
By the blind chains the passions
had put on,
Whilst Nature’s beauteous
spirit fled away
Unfelt, untasted, and unknown.
And, as it hovered o’er with
parting ray,
Ye seized the shades so neighborly,
With silent hand, with feeling mind,
And taught how they might be combined
In one firm bond of harmony.
The gaze, light-soaring, felt uplifted
then,
When first the cedar’s
slender trunk it viewed;
And pleasingly the ocean’s
crystal flood
Reflected back the dancing form
again.
Could ye mistake the look, with
beauty fraught,
That Nature gave to help ye
on your way?
The image floating on the billows
taught
The art the fleeting shadow
to portray.
From her own being torn apart,
Her phantom, beauteous as
a dream,
She plunged into the silvery
stream,
Surrendering to her spoiler’s
art.
Creative power soon in your breast
unfolded;
Too noble far, not idly to
conceive,
The shadow’s form in sand,
in clay ye moulded,
And made it in the sketch
its being leave.
The longing thirst for action then
awoke,-
And from your breast the first creation
broke.
By contemplation captive made,
Ensnared by your discerning
eye,
The friendly phantom’s soon
betrayed
The talisman that roused your
ecstasy.
The laws of wonder-working might,
The stores by beauty brought to
light,
Inventive reason in soft union planned
To blend together ’neath your
forming hand.
The obelisk, the pyramid ascended,
The Hermes stood, the column
sprang on high,
The reed poured forth the
woodland melody,
Immortal song on victor’s
deeds attended.
The fairest flowers that decked
the earth,
Into a nosegay, with wise
choice combined,
Thus the first art from Nature had
its birth;
Into a garland then were nosegays
twined,
And from the works that mortal hands
had made,
A second, nobler art was now displayed.
The child of beauty, self-sufficient
now,
That issued from your hands to perfect
day,
Loses the chaplet that adorned
its brow,
Soon as reality asserts its sway.
The column, yielding to proportion’s
chains,
Must with its sisters join
in friendly link,
The hero in the hero-band
must sink,
The Muses’ harp peals forth
its tuneful strains.
The wondering savages soon came
To view the new creation’s
plan
“Behold!”-the
joyous crowds exclaim,-
“Behold, all this is
done by man!”
With jocund and more social aim
The minstrel’s lyre their
awe awoke,
Telling of Titans, and of giant’s
frays
And lion-slayers, turning,
as he spoke,
Even into heroes those who heard
his lays.
For the first time the soul feels
joy,
By raptures blessed that calmer
are,
That only greet it from afar,
That passions wild can ne’er
destroy,
And that, when tasted, do not cloy.
And now the spirit, free and fair,
Awoke from out its sensual
sleep;
By you unchained, the slave of care
Into the arms of joy could
leap.
Each brutish barrier soon was set
at naught,
Humanity first graced the
cloudless brow,
And the majestic, noble stranger,
thought,
From out the wondering brain
sprang boldly now.
Man in his glory stood upright,
And showed the stars his kingly
face;
His speaking glance the sun’s
bright light
Blessed in the realms sublime
of space.
Upon the cheek now bloomed the smile,
The voice’s soulful
harmony
Expanded into song the while,
And feeling swam in the moist eye;
And from the mouth, with spirit
teeming o’er,
Jest, sweetly linked with grace,
began to pour.
Sunk in the instincts of the worm,
By naught but sensual lust
possessed,
Ye recognized within his breast
Love-spiritual’s noble germ;
And that this germ of love
so blest
Escaped the senses’ abject
load,
To the first pastoral song he owed.
Raised to the dignity of thought,
Passions more calm to flow were
taught
From the bard’s mouth
with melody.
The cheeks with dewy softness burned;
The longing that, though quenched,
still yearned,
Proclaimed the spirit-harmony.
The wisest’s wisdom, and the
strongest’s vigor,-
The meekest’s meekness,
and the noblest’s grace,
By you were knit together in one
figure,
Wreathing a radiant glory
round the place.
Man at the Unknown’s sight
must tremble,
Yet its refulgence needs must
love;
That mighty Being to resemble,
Each glorious hero madly strove;
The prototype of beauty’s
earliest strain
Ye made resound through Nature’s
wide domain.
The passions’ wild and headlong
course,
The ever-varying plan of fate,
Duty and instinct’s twofold
force,
With proving mind and guidance
straight
Ye then conducted to their ends.
What Nature, as she moves
along,
Far from each other ever rends,
Become upon the stage, in
song,
Members of order, firmly bound.
Awed by the Furies’
chorus dread,
Murder draws down upon its
head
The doom of death from their wild
sound.
Long e’er the wise to give
a verdict dared,
An Iliad had fate’s mysteries
declared
To early ages from afar;
While Providence in silence fared
Into the world from Thespis’
car.
Yet into that world’s current
so sublime
Your symmetry was borne before its
time,
When the dark hand of destiny
Failed in your sight to part by
force.
What it had fashioned ’neath
your eye,
In darkness life made haste to die,
Ere it fulfilled its beauteous
course.
Then ye with bold and self-sufficient
might
Led the arch further through the
future’s night:
Then, too, ye plunged, without a
fear,
Into Avernus’ ocean
black,
And found the vanished life so dear
Beyond the urn, and brought
it back.
A blooming Pollux-form appeared
now soon,
On Castor leaning, and enshrined
in light-
The shadow that is seen upon the
moon,
Ere she has filled her silvery
circle bright!
Yet higher,-higher still
above the earth
Inventive genius never ceased
to rise:
Creations from creations had their
birth,
And harmonies from harmonies.
What here alone enchants the ravished
sight,
A nobler beauty yonder must
obey;
The graceful charms that in the
nymph unite,
In the divine Athene
melt away;
The strength with which the wrestler
is endowed,
In the god’s beauty
we no longer find:
The wonder of his time-Jove’s
image proud-
In the Olympian temple is
enshrined.
The world, transformed by industry’s
bold hand,
The human heart, by new-born
instincts moved,
That have in burning fights
been fully proved,
Your circle of creation now expand.
Advancing man bears on his soaring
pinions,
In gratitude, art with him
in his flight,
And out of Nature’s now-enriched
dominions
New worlds of beauty issue
forth to light.
The barriers upon knowledge are
o’erthrown;
The spirit that, with pleasure
soon matured,
Has in your easy triumphs
been inured
To hasten through an artist-whole
of graces,
Nature’s more distant
columns duly places.
And overtakes her on her pathway
lone.
He weighs her now with weights that
human are,
Metes her with measures that
she lent of old;
While in her beauty’s rites
more practised far,
She now must let his eye her
form behold.
With youthful and self-pleasing
bliss,
He lends the spheres his harmony,
And, if he praise earth’s
edifice,
’Tis for its wondrous
symmetry.
In all that now around him breathes,
Proportion sweet is ever rife;
And beauty’s golden girdle
wreathes
With mildness round his path
through life;
Perfection blest, triumphantly,
Before him in your works soars high;
Wherever boisterous rapture swells,
Wherever silent sorrow flees,
Where pensive contemplation dwells,
Where he the tears of anguish
sees,
Where thousand terrors on him glare,
Harmonious streams are yet
behind-
He sees the Graces sporting there,
With feeling silent and refined.
Gentle as beauty’s lines together
linking,
As the appearances that round
him play,
In tender outline in each other
sinking,
The soft breath of his life
thus fleets away.
His spirit melts in the harmonious
sea,
That, rich in rapture, round
his senses flows,
And the dissolving thought all silently
To omnipresent Cytherea grows.
Joining in lofty union with the
Fates,
On Graces and on Muses calm
relying,
With freely-offered bosom he awaits
The shaft that soon against
him will be flying
From the soft bow necessity creates.
Favorites beloved of blissful harmony,
Welcome attendants on life’s
dreary road,
The noblest and the dearest far
that she,
Who gave us life, to bless
that life bestowed!
That unyoked man his duties bears
in mind,
And loves the fetters that his motions
bind,
That Chance with brazen sceptre
rules him not,-
For this eternity is now your lot,
Your heart has won a bright reward
for this.
That round the cup where freedom
flows,
Merrily sport the gods of bliss,-
The beauteous dream its fragrance
throws,
For this, receive a loving kiss!
The spirit, glorious and serene,
Who round necessity the graces
trains,-
Who bids his ether and his
starry plains
Upon us wait with pleasing mien,-
Who, ’mid his terrors, by
his majesty gives joy,
And who is beauteous e’en
when seeking to destroy,-
Him imitate, the artist good!
As o’er the streamlet’s
crystal flood
The banks with checkered dances
hover,
The flowery mead, the sunset’s
light,-
Thus gleams, life’s barren
pathway over,
Poesy’s shadowy world
so bright.
In bridal dress ye led us on
Before the terrible Unknown,
Before the inexorable fate,
As in your urns the bones
are laid,
With beauteous magic veil
ye shade
The chorus dread that cares create.
Thousands of years I hastened through
The boundless realm of vanished
time
How sad it seems when left by you-
But where ye linger, how sublime!
She who, with fleeting wing, of
yore
From your creating hand arose
in might,
Within your arms was found once
more,
When, vanquished by Time’s
silent flight,
Life’s blossoms faded from
the cheek,
And from the limbs all vigor
went,
And mournfully, with footstep weak,
Upon his staff the gray-beard
leant.
Then gave ye to the languishing,
Life’s waters from a new-born
spring;
Twice was the youth of time renewed,
Twice, from the seeds that ye had
strewed.
When chased by fierce barbarian
hordes away,
The last remaining votive
brand ye tore
From Orient’s altars,
now pollution’s prey,
And to these western lands
in safety bore.
The fugitive from yonder eastern
shore,
The youthful day, the West
her dwelling made;
And on Hesperia’s plains sprang
up once more
Ionia’s flowers, in
pristine bloom arrayed.
Over the spirit fairer Nature shed,
With soft refulgence, a reflection
bright,
And through the graceful soul with
stately tread
Advanced the mighty Deity
of light.
Millions of chains were burst asunder
then,
And to the slave then human
laws applied,
And mildly rose the younger race
of men,
As brethren, gently wandering
side by side,
With noble inward ecstasy,
The bliss imparted ye receive,
And in the veil of modesty,
With silent merit take your
leave.
If on the paths of thought, so freely
given,
The searcher now with daring
fortune stands,
And, by triumphant Pæans onward
driven,
Would seize upon the crown
with dauntless hands-
If he with grovelling hireling’s
pay
Thinks to dismiss his glorious
guide-
Or, with the first slave’s-place
array
Art near the throne his dream
supplied-
Forgive him!-O’er
your head to-day
Hovers perfection’s
crown in pride,
With you the earliest plant Spring
had,
Soul-forming Nature first
began;
With you, the harvest-chaplet glad,
Perfected Nature ends her
plan.
The art creative, that all-modestly
arose
From clay and stone, with silent
triumph throws
Its arms around the spirit’s
vast domain.
What in the land of knowledge the
discoverer knows,
He knows, discovers, only
for your gain
The treasures that the thinker has
amassed,
He will enjoy within your
arms alone,
Soon as his knowledge, beauty-ripe
at last.
To art ennobled shall have
grown,-
Soon as with you he scales a mountain-height,
And there, illumined by the
setting sun,
The smiling valley bursts upon his
sight.
The richer ye reward the eager gaze
The higher, fairer orders
that the mind
May traverse with its magic rays,
Or compass with enjoyment
unconfined-
The wider thoughts and feelings
open lie
To more luxuriant floods of harmony.
To beauty’s richer, more majestic
stream,-
The fair members of the world’s
vast scheme,
That, maimed, disgrace on his creation
bring,
He sees the lofty forms then perfecting-
The fairer riddles come from out
the night-
The richer is the world his
arms enclose,
The broader stream the sea
with which he flows-
The weaker, too, is destiny’s
blind might-
The nobler instincts does he prove-
The smaller he himself, the greater
grows his love.
Thus is he led, in still and hidden
race,
By poetry, who strews his
path with flowers,
Through ever-purer forms,
and purer powers,
Through ever higher heights, and
fairer grace.
At length, arrived at the ripe goal
of time,-
Yet one more inspiration all-sublime,
Poetic outburst of man’s latest
youth,
And-he will glide into
the arms of truth!
Herself, the gentle Cypria,
Illumined by her fiery crown,
Then stands before her full-grown
son
Unveiled-as great Urania;
The sooner only by him caught,
The fairer he had fled away!
Thus stood, in wonder rapture-fraught,
Ulysses’ noble son that
day,
When the sage mentor who his youth
beguiled;
Herself transfigured as Jove’s
glorious child!
Man’s honor is confided to
your hand,-
There let it well protected
be!
It sinks with you! with you it will
expand!
Poesy’s sacred sorcery
Obeys a world-plan wise and good;
In silence let it swell the flood
Of mighty-rolling harmony.
By her own time viewed with disdain,
Let solemn truth in song remain,
And let the Muses’ band defend
her!
In all the fullness of her splendor,
Let her survive in numbers glorious,
More dread, when veiled her
charms appear,
And vengeance take, with strains
victorious,
On her tormentor’s ear!
The freest mother’s children
free,
With steadfast countenance
then rise
To highest beauty’s radiancy,
And every other crown despise!
The sisters who escaped you here,
Within your mother’s
arms ye’ll meet;
What noble spirits may revere,
Must be deserving and complete.
High over your own course of time
Exalt yourselves with pinion
bold,
And dimly let your glass sublime
The coming century unfold!
On thousand roads advancing fast
Of ever-rich variety,
With fond embraces meet at last
Before the throne of harmony!
As into seven mild rays we view
With softness break the glimmer
white,
As rainbow-beams of sevenfold hue
Dissolve again in that soft
light,
In clearness thousandfold thus throw
Your magic round the ravished
gaze,-
Into one stream of light thus flow,-
One bond of truth that ne’er
decays!