THE MEETING.
I see her still-by her
fair train surrounded,
The fairest of them all, she
took her place;
Afar I stood, by her bright charms
confounded,
For, oh! they dazzled with
their heavenly grace.
With awe my soul was filled-with
bliss unbounded,
While gazing on her softly
radiant face;
But soon, as if up-borne on wings
of fire,
My fingers ’gan to sweep the
sounding lyre.
The thoughts that rushed across
me in that hour,
The words I sang, I’d
fain once more invoke;
Within, I felt a new-awakened power,
That each emotion of my bosom
spoke.
My soul, long time enchained in
sloth’s dull bower,
Through all its fetters now
triumphant broke,
And brought to light unknown, harmonious
numbers,
Which in its deepest depths, had
lived in slumbers.
And when the chords had ceased their
gentle sighing,
And when my soul rejoined
its mortal frame,
I looked upon her face and saw love
vieing,
In every feature, with her
maiden shame.
And soon my ravished heart seemed
heavenward flying,
When her soft whisper o’er
my senses came.
The blissful seraphs’ choral
strains alone
Can glad mine ear again with that
sweet tone,
Of that fond heart, which, pining
silently,
Ne’er ventures to express
its feelings lowly,
The real and modest worth is known
to me-
’Gainst cruel fate I’ll
guard its cause so holy.
Most blest of all, the meek one’s
lot shall be-
Love’s flowers by love’s
own hand are gathered solely-
The fairest prize to that fond heart
is due,
That feels it, and that beats responsive,
too!
THE SECRET.
She sought to breathe one word,
but vainly;
Too many listeners were nigh;
And yet my timid glance read plainly
The language of her speaking
eye.
Thy silent glades my footstep presses,
Thou fair and leaf-embosomed
grove!
Conceal within thy green recesses
From mortal eye our sacred
love!
Afar with strange discordant noises,
The busy day is echoing;
And ’mid the hollow hum of
voices,
I hear the heavy hammer ring.
’Tis thus that man, with toil
ne’er ending
Extorts from heaven his daily
bread;
Yet oft unseen the Gods are sending
The gifts of fortune on his
head!
Oh, let mankind discover never
How true love fills with bliss
our hearts
They would but crush our joy forever,
For joy to them no glow imparts.
Thou ne’er wilt from the world
obtain it-
’Tis never captured
save as prey;
Thou needs must strain each nerve
to gain it,
E’er envy dark asserts
her sway.
The hours of night and stillness
loving,
It comes upon us silently-
Away with hasty footstep moving
Soon as it sees a treacherous
eye.
Thou gentle stream, soft circlets
weaving,
A watery barrier cast around,
And, with thy waves in anger heaving,
Guard from each foe this holy
ground!
THE ASSIGNATION.
Hear I the creaking gate unclose?
The gleaming latch uplifted?
No-’twas the wind
that, whirring, rose,
Amidst the poplars drifted!
Adorn thyself, thou green leaf-bowering
roof,
Destined the bright one’s
presence to receive,
For her, a shadowy palace-hall aloof
With holy night, thy boughs
familiar weave.
And ye sweet flatteries of
the delicate air,
Awake and sport her rosy cheek
around,
When their light weight the tender
feet shall bear,
When beauty comes to passion’s
trysting-ground.
Hush! what amidst the copses crept-
So swiftly by me now?
No-’twas the startled bird
that swept
The light leaves of the bough!
Day, quench thy torch! come, ghostlike,
from on high,
With thy loved silence, come,
thou haunting Eve,
Broaden below thy web of purple
dye,
Which lulled boughs mysterious
round us weave.
For love’s delight, enduring
listeners none,
The froward witness of the
light will flee;
Hesper alone, the rosy silent one,
Down-glancing may our sweet
familiar be!
What murmur in the distance spoke,
And like a whisper died?
No-’twas the swan
that gently broke
In rings the silver tide!
Soft to my ear there comes a music-flow;
In gleesome murmur glides
the waterfall;
To zephyr’s kiss the flowers
are bending low;
Through life goes joy, exchanging
joy with all.
Tempt to the touch the grapes-the
blushing fruit,
Voluptuous swelling from the
leaves that bide;
And, drinking fever from my cheek,
the mute
Air sleeps all liquid in the
odor-tide!
Hark! through the alley hear I now
A footfall? Comes the
maiden?
No,-’twas the fruit
slid from the bough,
With its own richness laden!
Day’s lustrous eyes grow heavy
in sweet death,
And pale and paler wane his
jocund hues,
The flowers too gentle for his glowing
breath,
Ope their frank beauty to
the twilight dews.
The bright face of the moon is still
and lone,
Melts in vast masses the world
silently;
Slides from each charm the slowly-loosening
zone;
And round all beauty, veilless,
roves the eye.
What yonder seems to glimmer?
Her white robe’s glancing
hues?
No,-’twas the column’s
shimmer
Athwart the darksome yews!
O, longing heart, no more delight-upbuoyed
Let the sweet airy image thee
befool!
The arms that would embrace her
clasp the void
This feverish breast no phantom-bliss
can cool,
O, waft her here, the true, the
living one!
Let but my hand her hand,
the tender, feel-
The very shadow of her robe alone!-
So into life the idle dream
shall steal!
As glide from heaven, when least
we ween,
The rosy hours of bliss,
All gently came the maid, unseen:-
He waked beneath her kiss!
LONGING.
Could I from this valley drear,
Where the mist hangs heavily,
Soar to some more blissful sphere,
Ah! how happy should I be!
Distant hills enchant my sight,
Ever young and ever fair;
To those hills I’d take my
flight
Had I wings to scale the air.
Harmonies mine ear assail,
Tunes that breathe a heavenly
calm;
And the gently-sighing gale
Greets me with its fragrant
balm.
Peeping through the shady bowers,
Golden fruits their charms
display.
And those sweetly-blooming flowers
Ne’er become cold winter’s
prey.
In you endless sunshine bright,
Oh! what bliss ’twould
be to dwell!
How the breeze on yonder height
Must the heart with rapture
swell!
Yet the stream that hems my path
Checks me with its angry frown,
While its waves, in rising wrath,
Weigh my weary spirit down.
See-a bark is drawing
near,
But, alas, the pilot fails!
Enter boldly-wherefore
fear?
Inspiration fills its sails,
Faith and courage make thine own,-
Gods ne’er lend a helping-hand;
’Tis by magic power alone
Thou canst reach the magic
land!
EVENING
(After
A picture.)
Oh! thou bright-beaming god, the
plains are thirsting,
Thirsting for freshening dew, and
man is pining;
Wearily
move on thy horses-
Let,
then, thy chariot descend!
Seest thou her who, from ocean’s
crystal billows,
Lovingly nods and smiles?-Thy
heart must know her!
Joyously
speed on thy horses,-
Tethys,
the goddess, ’tis nods!
Swiftly from out his flaming chariot
leaping,
Into her arms he springs,-the
reins takes Cupid,-
Quietly
stand the horses,
Drinking
the cooling flood.
Now from the heavens with gentle
step descending,
Balmy night appears, by sweet love
followed;
Mortals,
rest ye, and love ye,-
Phoebus,
the loving one, rests!
THE PILGRIM.
Youth’s gay springtime scarcely
knowing
Went I forth the world to
roam-
And the dance of youth, the glowing,
Left I in my father’s
home,
Of my birthright, glad-believing,
Of my world-gear took I none,
Careless as an infant, cleaving
To my pilgrim staff alone.
For I placed my mighty hope in
Dim and holy words of faith,
“Wander forth-the
way is open,
Ever on the upward path-
Till thou gain the golden portal,
Till its gates unclose to
thee.
There the earthly and the mortal,
Deathless and divine shall
be!”
Night on morning stole, on stealeth,
Never, never stand I still,
And the future yet concealeth,
What I seek, and what I will!
Mount on mount arose before me,
Torrents hemmed me every side,
But I built a bridge that bore me
O’er the roaring tempest-tide.
Towards the east I reached a river,
On its shores I did not rest;
Faith from danger can deliver,
And I trusted to its breast.
Drifted in the whirling motion,
Seas themselves around me
roll-
Wide and wider spreads the ocean,
Far and farther flies the
goal.
While I live is never given
Bridge or wave the goal to
near-
Earth will never meet the heaven,
Never can the there be here!
THE IDEALS.
And wilt thou, faithless one, then,
leave me,
With all thy magic phantasy,-
With all the thoughts that joy or grieve me,
Wilt thou with all forever fly?
Can naught delay thine onward motion,
Thou golden time of life’s young dream?
In vain! eternity’s wide ocean
Ceaselessly drowns thy rolling stream.
The glorious suns my youth enchanting
Have set in never-ending night;
Those blest ideals now are wanting
That swelled my heart with
mad delight.
The offspring of my dream hath perished,
My faith in being passed away;
The godlike hopes that once I cherish
Are now reality’s sad
prey.
As once Pygmalion, fondly yearning,
Embraced the statue formed
by him,
Till the cold marble’s cheeks
were burning,
And life diffused through
every limb,
So I, with youthful passion fired,
My longing arms round Nature
threw,
Till, clinging to my breast inspired,
She ’gan to breathe,
to kindle too.
And all my fiery ardor proving,
Though mute, her tale she
soon could tell,
Returned each kiss I gave her loving,
The throbbings of my heart
read well.
Then living seemed each tree, each
flower,
Then sweetly sang the waterfall,
And e’en the soulless in that
hour
Shared in the heavenly bliss
of all.
For then a circling world was bursting
My bosom’s narrow prison-cell,
To enter into being thirsting,
In deed, word, shape, and
sound as well.
This world, how wondrous great I
deemed it,
Ere yet its blossoms could
unfold!
When open, oh, how little seemed
it!
That little, oh, how mean
and cold!
How happy, winged by courage daring,
The youth life’s mazy
path first pressed-
No care his manly strength impairing,
And in his dream’s sweet
vision blest!
The dimmest star in air’s
dominion
Seemed not too distant for
his flight;
His young and ever-eager pinion
Soared far beyond all mortal
sight.
Thus joyously toward heaven ascending,
Was aught for his bright hopes
too far?
The airy guides his steps attending,
How danced they round life’s
radiant car!
Soft love was there, her guerdon
bearing,
And fortune, with her crown
of gold,
And fame, her starry chaplet wearing,
And truth, in majesty untold.
But while the goal was yet before
them,
The faithless guides began
to stray;
Impatience of their task came o’er
them,
Then one by one they dropped
away.
Light-footed Fortune first retreating,
Then Wisdom’s thirst
remained unstilled,
While heavy storms of doubt were
beating
Upon the path truth’s
radiance filled.
I saw Fame’s sacred wreath
adorning
The brows of an unworthy crew;
And, ah! how soon Love’s happy
morning,
When spring had vanished,
vanished too!
More silent yet, and yet more weary,
Became the desert path I trod;
And even hope a glimmer dreary
Scarce cast upon the gloomy
road.
Of all that train, so bright with
gladness,
Oh, who is faithful to the
end?
Who now will seek to cheer my sadness,
And to the grave my steps
attend?
Thou, Friendship, of all guides
the fairest,
Who gently healest every wound;
Who all life’s heavy burdens
sharest,
Thou, whom I early sought
and found!
Employment too, thy loving neighbor,
Who quells the bosom’s
rising storms;
Who ne’er grows weary of her
labor,
And ne’er destroys,
though slow she forms;
Who, though but grains of sand she
places
To swell eternity sublime,
Yet minutes, days, ay! years effaces
From the dread reckoning kept
by Time!
THE YOUTH BY THE BROOK.
Beside the brook the boy reclined
And wove his flowery wreath,
And to the waves the wreath consigned-
The waves that danced beneath.
“So fleet mine hours,”
he sighed, “away
Like waves that restless flow:
And so my flowers of youth decay
Like those that float below.”
“Ask not why I, alone on earth,
Am sad in life’s young
time;
To all the rest are hope and mirth
When spring renews its prime.
Alas! the music Nature makes,
In thousand songs of gladness-
While charming all around me, wakes
My heavy heart to sadness.”
“Ah! vain to me the joys that
break
From spring, voluptuous are;
For only one ’t is mine to
seek-
The near, yet ever far!
I stretch my arms, that shadow-shape
In fond embrace to hold;
Still doth the shade the clasp escape-
The heart is unconsoled!”
“Come forth, fair friend,
come forth below,
And leave thy lofty hall,
The fairest flowers the spring can
know
In thy dear lap shall fall!
Clear glides the brook in silver
rolled,
Sweet carols fill the air;
The meanest hut hath space to hold
A happy loving pair!”
TO EMMA.
Far away, where darkness reigneth,
All my dreams of bliss are
flown;
Yet with love my gaze remaineth
Fixed on one fair star alone.
But, alas! that star so bright
Sheds no lustre save by night.
If in slumbers ending never,
Gloomy death had sealed thine
eyes,
Thou hadst lived in memory ever-
Thou hadst lived still in
my sighs;
But, alas! in light thou livest-
To my love no answer givest!
Can the sweet hopes love once cherished
Emma, can they transient prove?
What has passed away and perished-
Emma, say, can that be love?
That bright flame of heavenly birth-
Can it die like things of
earth?
THE FAVOR OF THE MOMENT.
Once more, then, we meet
In the circles of yore;
Let our song be as sweet
In its wreaths as before,
Who claims the first place
In the tribute of song?
The God to whose grace
All our pleasures belong.
Though Ceres may spread
All her gifts on the shrine,
Though the glass may be red
With the blush of the vine,
What boots-if the while
Fall no spark on the hearth;
If the heart do not smile
With the instinct of mirth?-
From the clouds, from God’s
breast
Must our happiness fall,
’Mid the blessed, most blest
Is the moment of all!
Since creation began
All that mortals have wrought,
All that’s godlike in man
Comes-the flash
of a thought!
For ages the stone
In the quarry may lurk,
An instant alone
Can suffice to the work;
An impulse give birth
To the child of the soul,
A glance stamp the worth
And the fame of the whole.
On the arch that she buildeth
From sunbeams on high,
As Iris just gildeth,
And fleets from the sky,
So shineth, so gloometh
Each gift that is ours;
The lightning illumeth-
The darkness devours!
THE LAY OF THE MOUNTAIN.
[The scenery of Gotthardt is here
personified.]
To the solemn abyss leads the terrible
path,
The life and death winding
dizzy between;
In thy desolate way, grim with menace
and wrath,
To daunt thee the spectres
of giants are seen;
That thou wake not the wild one
, all silently tread-
Let thy lip breathe no breath in
the pathway of dread!
High over the marge of the
horrible deep
Hangs and hovers a bridge
with its phantom-like span,
Not by man was it built, o’er
the vastness to sweep;
Such thought never came to
the daring of man!
The stream roars beneath-late
and early it raves-
But the bridge, which it threatens,
is safe from the waves.
Black-yawning a portal, thy soul
to affright,
Like the gate to the kingdom,
the fiend for the king-
Yet beyond it there smiles but a
land of delight,
Where the autumn in marriage
is met with the spring.
From a lot which the care and the
trouble assail,
Could I fly to the bliss of that
balm-breathing vale!
Through that field, from a fount
ever hidden their birth,
Four rivers in tumult rush
roaringly forth;
They fly to the fourfold divisions
of earth-
The sunrise, the sunset, the
south, and the north.
And, true to the mystical mother
that bore,
Forth they rush to their goal, and
are lost evermore.
High over the races of men in the
blue
Of the ether, the mount in
twin summits is riven;
There, veiled in the gold-woven
webs of the dew,
Moves the dance of the clouds-the
pale daughters of heaven!
There, in solitude, circles their
mystical maze,
Where no witness can hearken, no
earthborn surveys.
August on a throne which no ages
can move,
Sits a queen, in her beauty
serene and sublime,
The diadem blazing with diamonds
above
The glory of brows, never
darkened by time,
His arrows of light on that form
shoots the sun-
And he gilds them with all, but
he warms them with none!
THE ALPINE HUNTER.
Wilt thou not the lambkins guard?
Oh, how soft and meek they
look,
Feeding on the grassy sward,
Sporting round the silvery
brook!
“Mother, mother, let me go
On yon heights to chase the roe!”
Wilt thou not the flock compel
With the horn’s inspiring
notes?
Sweet the echo of yon bell,
As across the wood it floats!
“Mother, mother, let me go
On yon heights to hunt the roe!”
Wilt thou not the flow’rets
bind,
Smiling gently in their bed?
For no garden thou wilt find
On yon heights so wild and
dread.
“Leave the flow’rets,-let
them blow!
Mother, mother, let me go!”
And the youth then sought the chase,
Onward pressed with headlong
speed
To the mountain’s gloomiest
place,-
Naught his progress could
impede;
And before him, like the wind,
Swiftly flies the trembling hind!
Up the naked precipice
Clambers she, with footsteps
light,
O’er the chasm’s dark
abyss
Leaps with spring of daring
might;
But behind, unweariedly,
With his death-bow follows he.
Now upon the rugged top
Stands she,-on
the loftiest height,
Where the cliffs abruptly stop,
And the path is lost to sight.
There she views the steeps below,-
Close behind, her mortal foe.
She, with silent, woeful gaze,
Seeks the cruel boy to move;
But, alas! in vain she prays-
To the string he fits the
groove.
When from out the clefts, behold!
Steps the Mountain Genius old.
With his hand the Deity
Shields the beast that trembling
sighs;
“Must thou, even up to me,
Death and anguish send?” he
cries,-
Earth has room for all to dwell,-
“Why pursue my loved gazelle?”
DITHYRAMB.
Believe me, together
The bright gods
come ever,
Still
as of old;
Scarce see I Bacchus, the giver
of joy,
Than comes up fair Eros, the laugh-loving
boy,
And
Phoebus, the stately, behold!
They come near
and nearer,
The heavenly
ones all-
The gods with
their presence
Fill earth
as their hall!
Say, how shall
I welcome,
Human and earthborn,
Sons
of the sky?
Pour out to me-pour the
full life that ye live!
What to ye, O ye gods! can the mortal
one give?
The joys can dwell
only
In Jupiter’s
palace-
Brimmed bright
with your nectar,
Oh, reach
me the chalice!
“Hebe, the
chalice
Fill full to the
brim!
Steep his eyes-steep
his eyes in the bath of the dew,
Let him dream, while the Styx is
concealed from his view,
That the life
of the gods is for him!”
It murmurs, it
sparkles,
The fount
of delight;
The bosom grows
tranquil-
The eye
becomes bright.
THE FOUR AGES OF THE WORLD.
The goblet is sparkling with purpled-tinged
wine,
Bright glistens the eye of
each guest,
When into the hall comes the Minstrel
divine,
To the good he now brings
what is best;
For when from Elysium is absent
the lyre,
No joy can the banquet of nectar
inspire.
He is blessed by the gods, with
an intellect clear,
That mirrors the world as
it glides;
He has seen all that ever has taken
place here,
And all that the future still
hides.
He sat in the god’s secret
councils of old
And heard the command for each thing
to unfold.
He opens in splendor, with gladness
and mirth,
That life which was hid from
our eyes;
Adorns as a temple the dwelling
of earth,
That the Muse has bestowed
as his prize,
No roof is so humble, no hut is
so low,
But he with divinities bids it o’erflow.
And as the inventive descendant
of Zeus,
On the unadorned round of
the shield,
With knowledge divine could, reflected,
produce
Earth, sea, and the star’s
shining field,-
So he, on the moments, as onward
they roll,
The image can stamp of the infinite
whole.
From the earliest age of the world
he has come,
When nations rejoiced in their
prime;
A wanderer glad, he has still found
a home
With every race through all
time.
Four ages of man in his lifetime
have died,
And the place they once held by
the fifth is supplied.
Saturnus first governed, with fatherly
smile,
Each day then resembled the
last;
Then flourished the shepherds, a
race without guile
Their bliss by no care was
o’ercast,
They loved,-and no other
employment they had,
And earth gave her treasures with
willingness glad.
Then labor came next, and the conflict
began
With monsters and beasts famed
in song;
And heroes upstarted, as rulers
of man,
And the weak sought the aid
of the strong.
And strife o’er the field
of Scamander now reigned,
But beauty the god of the world
still remained.
At length from the conflict bright
victory sprang,
And gentleness blossomed from
might;
In heavenly chorus the Muses then
sang,
And figures divine saw the
light;-
The age that acknowledged sweet
phantasy’s sway
Can never return, it has fleeted
away.
The gods from their seats in the
heavens were hurled,
And their pillars of glory
o’erthrown;
And the Son of the Virgin appeared
in the world
For the sins of mankind to
atone.
The fugitive lusts of the sense
were suppressed,
And man now first grappled with
thought in his breast.
Each vain and voluptuous charm vanished
now,
Wherein the young world took
delight;
The monk and the nun made of penance
a vow,
And the tourney was sought
by the knight.
Though the aspect of life was now
dreary and wild,
Yet love remained ever both lovely
and mild.
An altar of holiness, free from
all stain,
The Muses in silence upreared;
And all that was noble and worthy,
again
In woman’s chaste bosom
appeared;
The bright flame of song was soon
kindled anew
By the minstrel’s soft lays,
and his love pure and true.
And so, in a gentle and ne’er-changing
band,
Let woman and minstrel unite;
They weave and they fashion, with
hand joined to hand,
The girdle of beauty and right.
When love blends with music, in
unison sweet,
The lustre of life’s youthful
days ne’er can fleet.
THE MAIDEN’S LAMENT.
The clouds fast
gather,
The forest-oaks
roar-
A maiden is sitting
Beside the
green shore,-
The billows are breaking with might,
with might,
And she sighs aloud in the darkling
night,
Her eyelid heavy with weeping.
“My heart’s
dead within me,
The world
is a void;
To the wish it
gives nothing,
Each hope
is destroyed.
I have tasted the fulness of bliss
below
I have lived, I have loved,-Thy
child, oh take now,
Thou Holy One, into Thy keeping!”
“In vain
is thy sorrow,
In vain
thy tears fall,
For the dead from
their slumbers
They ne’er
can recall;
Yet if aught can pour comfort and
balm in thy heart,
Now that love its sweet pleasures
no more can impart,
Speak thy wish, and thou granted
shalt find it!”
“Though
in vain is my sorrow,
Though in
vain my tears fall,-
Though the dead
from their slumbers
They ne’er
can recall,
Yet no balm is so sweet to the desolate
heart,
When love its soft pleasures no
more can impart,
As the torments that love
leaves behind it!”
TO MY FRIENDS.
Yes, my friends!-that
happier times have been
Than the present, none can contravene;
That a race once lived of
nobler worth;
And if ancient chronicles were dumb,
Countless stones in witness forth
would come
From the deepest entrails
of the earth.
But this highly-favored race has
gone,
Gone forever to the realms
of night.
We, we live! The moments are
our own,
And the living judge the right.
Brighter zones, my friends, no doubt
excel
This, the land wherein we’re
doomed to dwell,
As the hardy travellers proclaim;
But if Nature has denied us much,
Art is yet responsive to our touch,
And our hearts can kindle
at her flame.
If the laurel will not flourish
here-
If the myrtle is cold winter’s
prey,
Yet the vine, to crown us, year
by year,
Still puts forth its foliage
gay.
Of a busier life ’tis well
to speak,
Where four worlds their wealth to
barter seek,
On the world’s great
market, Thames’ broad stream;
Ships in thousands go there and
depart-
There are seen the costliest works
of art,
And the earth-god, Mammon,
reigns supreme
But the sun his image only graves
On the silent streamlet’s
level plain,
Not upon the torrent’s muddy
waves,
Swollen by the heavy rain.
Far more blessed than we, in northern
states
Dwells the beggar at the angel-gates,
For he sees the peerless city-Rome!
Beauty’s glorious charms around
him lie,
And, a second heaven, up toward
the sky
Mounts St. Peter’s proud
and wondrous dome.
But, with all the charms that splendor
grants,
Rome is but the tomb of ages
past;
Life but smiles upon the blooming
plants
That the seasons round her
cast.
Greater actions elsewhere may be
rife
Than with us, in our contracted
life-
But beneath the sun there’s
naught that’s new;
Yet we see the great of every age
Pass before us on the world’s
wide stage
Thoughtfully and calmly in
review
All. in life repeats itself forever,
Young for ay is phantasy alone;
What has happened nowhere,-happened
never,-
That has never older grown!
PUNCH SONG.
Four elements,
joined in
Harmonious
strife,
Shadow the world
forth,
And typify
life.
Into the goblet
The lemon’s
juice pour;
Acid is ever
Life’s
innermost core.
Now, with the
sugar’s
All-softening
juice,
The strength of
the acid
So burning
reduce.
The bright sparkling
water
Now pour
in the bowl;
Water all-gently
Encircles
the whole.
Let drops of the
spirit
To join
them now flow;
Life to the living
Naught else
can bestow.
Drain it off quickly
Before it
exhales;
Save when ’tis
glowing,
The draught
naught avails.
NADOWESSIAN DEATH -LAMENT
See, he sitteth on his mat
Sitteth there upright,
With the grace with which he sat
While he saw the light.
Where is now the sturdy gripe,-
Where the breath sedate,
That so lately whiffed the pipe
Toward the Spirit great?
Where the bright and falcon eye,
That the reindeer’s
tread
On the waving grass could spy,
Thick with dewdrops spread?
Where the limbs that used to dart
Swifter through the snow
Than the twenty-membered hart,
Than the mountain roe?
Where the arm that sturdily
Bent the deadly bow?
See, its life hath fleeted by,-
See, it hangeth low!
Happy he!-He now has
gone
Where no snow is found:
Where with maize the fields are
sown,
Self-sprung from the ground;
Where with birds each bush is filled,
Where with game the wood;
Where the fish, with joy unstilled,
Wanton in the flood.
With the spirits blest he feeds,-
Leaves us here in gloom;
We can only praise his deeds,
And his corpse entomb.
Farewell-gifts, then, hither bring,
Sound the death-note sad!
Bury with him everything
That can make him glad!
’Neath his head the hatchet
hide
That he boldly swung;
And the bear’s fat haunch
beside,
For the road is long;
And the knife, well sharpened,
That, with slashes three,
Scalp and skin from foeman’s
head
Tore off skilfully.
And to paint his body, place
Dyes within his hand;
Let him shine with ruddy grace
In the Spirit-land!
THE FEAST OF VICTORY.
Priam’s castle-walls had sunk,
Troy in dust and ashes lay,
And each Greek, with triumph drunk,
Richly laden with his prey,
Sat upon his ship’s high prow,
On the Hellespontic strand,
Starting on his journey now,
Bound for Greece, his own
fair land.
Raise the glad exulting shout!
Toward the land that gave
them birth
Turn they now the ships about,
As they seek their native
earth.
And in rows, all mournfully,
Sat the Trojan women there,-
Beat their breasts in agony,
Pallid, with dishevelled hair.
In the feast of joy so glad
Mingled they the song of woe,
Weeping o’er their fortunes
sad,
In their country’s overthrow.
“Land beloved, oh, fare thee
well!
By our foreign masters led,
Far from home we’re doomed
to dwell,-
Ah, how happy are the dead!”
Soon the blood by Calchas spilt
On the altar heavenward smokes;
Pallas, by whom towns are built
And destroyed, the priest
invokes;
Neptune, too, who all the earth
With his billowy girdle laves,-
Zeus, who gives to terror birth,
Who the dreaded Aegis waves.
Now the weary fight is done,
Ne’er again to be renewed;
Time’s wide circuit now is
run,
And the mighty town subdued!
Atreus’ son, the army’s
head,
Told the people’s numbers
o’er,
Whom he, as their captain, led
To Scamander’s vale
of yore.
Sorrow’s black and heavy clouds
Passed across the monarch’s
brow:
Of those vast and valiant crowds,
Oh, how few were left him
now!
Joyful songs let each one raise,
Who will see his home again,
In whose veins the life-blood plays,
For, alas! not all remain!
“All who homeward wend their
way,
Will not there find peace
of mind;
On their household altars, they
Murder foul perchance may
find.
Many fall by false friend’s
stroke,
Who in fight immortal proved:”-
So Ulysses warning spoke,
By Athene’s spirit moved.
Happy he, whose faithful spouse
Guards his home with honor
true!
Woman ofttimes breaks her vows,
Ever loves she what is new.
And Atrides glories there
In the prize he won in fight,
And around her body fair
Twines his arms with fond
delight.
Evil works must punished be.
Vengeance follows after crime,
For Kronion’s just decree
Rules the heavenly courts
sublime.
Evil must in evil end;
Zeus will on the impious band
Woe for broken guest-rights send,
Weighing with impartial hand.
“It may well the glad befit,”
Cried Olleus’ valiant
son,
“To extol the Gods who sit
On Olympus’ lofty throne!
Fortune all her gifts supplies,
Blindly, and no justice knows,
For Patroclus buried lies,
And Thersites homeward goes!
Since she blindly throws away
Each lot in her wheel contained,
Let him shout with joy to-day
Who the prize of life has
gained.”
“Ay, the wars the best devour!
Brother, we will think of
thee,
In the fight a very tower,
When we join in revelry!
When the Grecian ships were fired,
By thine arm was safety brought;
Yet the man by craft inspired
Won the spoils thy valor sought.
Peace be to thine ashes blest!
Thou wert vanquished not in
fight:
Anger ’tis destroys the best,-
Ajax fell by Ajax’ might!”
Neoptolemus poured then,
To his sire renowned
the wine-
“’Mongst the lots of
earthly men,
Mighty father, prize I thine!
Of the goods that life supplies,
Greatest far of all is fame;
Though to dust the body flies,
Yet still lives a noble name.
Valiant one, thy glory’s ray
Will immortal be in song;
For, though life may pass away,
To all time the dead belong!”
“Since the voice of minstrelsy
Speaks not of the vanquished
man,
I will Hector’s witness be,”-
Tydeus’ noble son
began:
“Fighting bravely in defence
Of his household-gods he fell.
Great the victor’s glory thence,
He in purpose did excel!
Battling for his altars dear,
Sank that rock, no more to
rise;
E’en the foemen will revere
One whose honored name ne’er
dies.”
Nestor, joyous reveller old,
Who three generations saw,
Now the leaf-crowned cup of gold
Gave to weeping Hecuba.
“Drain the goblet’s
draught so cool,
And forget each painful smart!
Bacchus’ gifts are wonderful,-
Balsam for a broken heart.
Drain the goblet’s draught
so cool,
And forget each painful smart!
Bacchus’ gifts are wonderful,-
Balsam for a broken heart.
“E’en to Niobe, whom
Heaven
Loved in wrath to persecute,
Respite from her pangs was given,
Tasting of the corn’s
ripe fruit.
Whilst the thirsty lip we lave
In the foaming, living spring,
Buried deep in Lethe’s wave
Lies all grief, all sorrowing!
Whilst the thirsty lip we lave
In the foaming, living spring,
Swallowed up in Lethe’s wave
Is all grief, all sorrowing!”
And the Prophetess inspired
By her God, upstarted now,-
Toward the smoke of homesteads fired,
Looking from the lofty prow.
“Smoke is each thing here
below;
Every worldly greatness dies,
As the vapory columns go,-
None are fixed but Deities!
Cares behind the horseman sit-
Round about the vessel play;
Lest the morrow hinder it,
Let us, therefore, live to-day.”
PUNCH SONG.
(To be sung in
northern countries.)
On the mountain’s breezy summit,
Where the southern sunbeams
shine,
Aided by their warming vigor,
Nature yields the golden wine.
How the wondrous mother formeth,
None have ever read aright;
Hid forever is her working,
And inscrutable her might.
Sparkling as a son of Phoebus,
As the fiery source of light,
From the vat it bubbling springeth,
Purple, and as crystal bright;
And rejoiceth all the senses,
And in every sorrowing breast
Poureth hope’s refreshing
balsam,
And on life bestows new zest.
But their slanting rays all feebly
On our zone the sunbeams shoot;
They can only tinge the foliage,
But they ripen ne’er
the fruit.
Yet the north insists on living,
And what lives will merry
be;
So, although the grape is wanting,
We invent wine cleverly.
Pale the drink we now are offering
On the household altar here;
But what living Nature maketh,
Sparkling is and ever clear.
Let us from the brimming goblet,
Drain the troubled flood with
mirth;
Art is but a gift of heaven,
Borrowed from the glow of
earth.
Even strength’s dominions
boundless
’Neath her rule obedient
lie;
From the old the new she fashions
With creative energy.
She the elements’ close union
Severs with her sovereign
nod;
With the flame upon the altar,
Emulates the great sun-god.
For the distant, happy islands
Now the vessel sallies forth,
And the southern fruits, all-golden,
Pours upon the eager north.
As a type, then,-as an
image,
Be to us this fiery juice,
Of the wonders that frail mortals
Can with steadfast will produce!
THE COMPLAINT OF CERES
Does pleasant spring return once
more?
Does earth her happy youth
regain?
Sweet suns green hills are shining
o’er;
Soft brooklets burst their
icy chain:
Upon the blue translucent river
Laughs down an all-unclouded
day,
The winged west winds gently quiver,
The buds are bursting from
the spray;
While birds are blithe on every
tree;
The Oread from the mountain-shore
Sighs, “Lo! thy flowers come
back to thee-
Thy child, sad mother, comes
no more!”
Alas! how long an age it seems
Since all the earth I wandered
over,
And vainly, Titan, tasked thy beams
The loved-the lost
one-to discover!
Though all may seek-yet
none can call
Her tender presence back to
me
The sun, with eyes detecting all,
Is blind one vanished form
to see.
Hast thou, O Zeus! hast thou away
From these sad arms my daughter
torn?
Has Pluto, from the realms of day,
Enamored-to dark
rivers borne?
Who to the dismal phantom-strand
The herald of my grief will
venture?
The boat forever leaves the land,
But only shadows there may
enter.-
Veiled from each holier eye repose
The realms where midnight
wraps the dead,
And, while the Stygian river flows,
No living footstep there may
tread!
A thousand pathways wind the drear
Descent;-none upward
lead to-day;-
No witness to the mother’s
ear
The daughter’s sorrows
can betray.
Mothers of happy human clay
Can share at least their children’s
doom;
And when the loved ones pass away,
Can track-can join
them-in the tomb!
The race alone of heavenly birth
Are banished from the darksome
portals;
The Fates have mercy on the earth,
And death is only kind to
mortals!
Oh, plunge me in the night of nights,
From heaven’s ambrosial
halls exiled!
Oh, let the goddess lose the rights
That shut the mother from
the child!
Where sits the dark king’s
joyless bride,
Where midst the dead her home
is made;
Oh that my noiseless steps might
glide,
Amidst the shades, myself
a shade!
I see her eyes, that search through
tears,
In vain the golden light to
greet;
That yearn for yonder distant spheres,
That pine the mother’s
face to meet!
Till some bright moment shall renew
The severed hearts’
familiar ties;
And softened pity steal in dew,
From Pluto’s slow-relenting
eyes!
Ah, vain the wish, the sorrows are!
Calm in the changeless paths
above
Rolls on the day-god’s golden
car-
Fast are the fixed decrees
of Jove!
Far from the ever-gloomy plain,
He turns his blissful looks
away.
Alas! night never gives again
What once it seizes as its
prey!
Till over Lethe’s sullen swell,
Aurora’s rosy hues shall
glow;
And arching through the midmost
hell
Shine forth the lovely Iris-bow!
And is there naught of her; no token-
No pledge from that beloved
hand?
To tell how love remains unbroken,
How far soever be the land?
Has love no link, no lightest thread,
The mother to the child to
bind?
Between the living and the dead,
Can hope no holy compact find?
No! every bond is not yet riven;
We are not yet divided wholly;
To us the eternal powers have given
A symbol language, sweet and
holy.
When Spring’s fair children
pass away,
When, in the north wind’s
icy air,
The leaf and flower alike decay,
And leave the rivelled branches
bare,
Then from Vertumnus’ lavish
horn
I take life’s seeds
to strew below-
And bid the gold that germs the
corn
An offering to the Styx to
go!
Sad in the earth the seeds I lay-
Laid at thy heart, my child-to
be
The mournful tokens which convey
My sorrow and my love to thee!
But, when the hours, in measured
dance,
The happy smile of spring
restore,
Rife in the sun-god’s golden
glance
The buried dead revive once
more!
The germs that perished to thine
eyes,
Within the cold breast of
the earth,
Spring up to bloom in gentler skies,
The brighter for the second
birth!
The stem its blossom rears above-
Its roots in night’s
dark womb repose-
The plant but by the equal love
Of light and darkness fostered-grows!
If half with death the germs may
sleep,
Yet half with life they share
the beams;
My heralds from the dreary deep,
Soft voices from the solemn
streams,-
Like her, so them, awhile entombs,
Stern Orcus, in his dismal
reign,
Yet spring sends forth their tender
blooms
With such sweet messages again,
To tell,-how far from
light above,
Where only mournful shadows
meet,
Memory is still alive to love,
And still the faithful heart
can beat!
Joy to ye children of the field!
Whose life each coming year
renews,
To your sweet cups the heaven shall
yield
The purest of its nectar-dews!
Steeped in the light’s resplendent
streams,
The hues that streak the Iris-bow
Shall trim your blooms as with the
beams
The looks of young Aurora
know.
The budding life of happy spring,
The yellow autumn’s
faded leaf,
Alike to gentle hearts shall bring
The symbols of my joy and
grief.
THE ELEUSINIAN FESTIVAL
Wreathe in a garland the corn’s
golden ear!
With it, the Cyane blue
intertwine
Rapture must render each glance
bright and clear,
For the great queen is approaching
her shrine,-
She who compels lawless passions
to cease,
Who to link man with his fellow
has come,
And into firm habitations of peace
Changed the rude tents’
ever-wandering home.
Shyly in the mountain-cleft
Was the Troglodyte concealed;
And the roving Nomad left,
Desert lying, each broad field.
With the javelin, with the bow,
Strode the hunter through
the land;
To the hapless stranger woe,
Billow-cast on that wild strand!
When, in her sad wanderings lost,
Seeking traces of her child,
Ceres hailed the dreary coast,
Ah, no verdant plain then
smiled!
That she here with trust may stay,
None vouchsafes a sheltering
roof;
Not a temple’s columns gay
Give of godlike worship proof.
Fruit of no propitious ear
Bids her to the pure feast
fly;
On the ghastly altars here
Human bones alone e’er
dry.
Far as she might onward rove,
Misery found she still in
all,
And within her soul of love,
Sorrowed she o’er man’s
deep fall.
“Is it thus I find the man
To whom we our image lend,
Whose fair limbs of noble span
Upward towards the heavens
ascend?
Laid we not before his feet
Earth’s unbounded godlike
womb?
Yet upon his kingly seat
Wanders he without a home?”
“Does no god compassion feel?
Will none of the blissful
race,
With an arm of miracle,
Raise him from his deep disgrace?
In the heights where rapture reigns
Pangs of others ne’er
can move;
Yet man’s anguish and man’s
pains
My tormented heart must prove.”
“So that a man a man may be,
Let him make an endless bond
With the kind earth trustingly,
Who is ever good and fond
To revere the law of time,
And the moon’s melodious
song
Who, with silent step sublime,
Move their sacred course along.”
And she softly parts the cloud
That conceals her from the
sight;
Sudden, in the savage crowd,
Stands she, as a goddess bright.
There she finds the concourse rude
In their glad feast revelling,
And the chalice filled with blood
As a sacrifice they bring.
But she turns her face away,
Horror-struck, and speaks
the while
“Bloody tiger-feasts ne’er
may
Of a god the lips defile,
He needs victims free from stain,
Fruits matured by autumn’s
sun;
With the pure gifts of the plain
Honored is the Holy One!”
And she takes the heavy shaft
From the hunter’s cruel
hand;
With the murderous weapon’s
haft
Furrowing the light-strown
sand,-
Takes from out her garland’s
crown,
Filled with life, one single
grain,
Sinks it in the furrow down,
And the germ soon swells amain.
And the green stalks gracefully
Shoot, ere long, the ground
above,
And, as far as eye can see,
Waves it like a golden grove.
With her smile the earth she cheers,
Binds the earliest sheaves
so fair,
As her hearth the landmark rears,-
And the goddess breathes this
prayer:
“Father Zeus, who reign’st
o’er all
That in ether’s mansions
dwell,
Let a sign from thee now fall
That thou lov’st this
offering well!
And from the unhappy crowd
That, as yet, has ne’er
known thee,
Take away the eye’s dark cloud,
Showing them their deity!”
Zeus, upon his lofty throne,
Harkens to his sister’s
prayer;
From the blue heights thundering
down,
Hurls his forked lightning
there,
Crackling, it begins to blaze,
From the altar whirling bounds,-
And his swift-winged eagle plays
High above in circling rounds.
Soon at the feet of their mistress
are kneeling,
Filled with emotion, the rapturous
throng;
Into humanity’s earliest feeling
Melt their rude spirits, untutored
and strong.
Each bloody weapon behind them they
leave,
Rays on their senses beclouded
soon shine,
And from the mouth of the queen
they receive,
Gladly and meekly, instruction
divine.
All the deities advance
Downward from their heavenly
seats;
Themis’ self ’tis leads
the dance,
And, with staff of justice,
metes
Unto every one his rights,-
Landmarks, too, ’tis
hers to fix;
And in witness she invites
All the hidden powers of Styx.
And the forge-god, too, is there,
The inventive son of Zeus;
Fashioner of vessels fair
Skilled in clay and brass’s
use.
’Tis from him the art man
knows
Tongs and bellows how to wield;
’Neath his hammer’s
heavy blows
Was the ploughshare first
revealed.
With projecting, weighty spear,
Front of all, Minerva stands,
Lifts her voice so strong and clear,
And the godlike host commands.
Steadfast walls ’tis hers
to found,
Shield and screen for every
one,
That the scattered world around
Bind in loving unison.
The immortals’ steps she guides
O’er the trackless plains
so vast,
And where’er her foot abides
Is the boundary god held fast;
And her measuring chain is led
Round the mountain’s
border green,-
E’en the raging torrent’s
bed
In the holy ring is seen.
All the Nymphs and Oreads too
Who, the mountain pathways
o’er,
Swift-foot Artemis pursue,
All to swell the concourse,
pour,
Brandishing the hunting-spear,-
Set to work,-glad
shouts uprise,-
‘Neath their axes’ blows
so clear
Crashing down the pine-wood
flies.
E’en the sedge-crowned God
ascends
From his verdant spring to
light,
And his raft’s direction bends
At the goddess’ word
of might,-
While the hours, all gently bound,
Nimbly to their duty fly;
Rugged trunks are fashioned round
By her skilled hand gracefully.
E’en the sea-god thither fares;-
Sudden, with his trident’s
blow,
He the granite columns tears
From earth’s entrails
far below;-
In his mighty hands, on high,
Waves he them, like some light
ball,
And with nimble Hermes by,
Raises up the rampart-wall.
But from out the golden strings
Lures Apollo harmony,
Measured time’s sweet murmurings,
And the might of melody.
The Camoenae swell the strain
With their song of ninefold
tone:
Captive bound in music’s chain,
Softly stone unites to stone.
Cybele, with skilful hand,
Open throws the wide-winged
door;
Locks and bolts by her are planned,
Sure to last forevermore.
Soon complete the wondrous halls
By the gods’ own hands
are made,
And the temple’s glowing walls
Stand in festal pomp arrayed.
With a crown of myrtle twined,
Now the goddess queen comes
there,
And she leads the fairest hind
To the shepherdess most fair.
Venus, with her beauteous boy,
That first pair herself attires;
All the gods bring gifts of joy,
Blessing their love’s
sacred fires.
Guided by the deities,
Soon the new-born townsmen
pour,
Ushered in with harmonies,
Through the friendly open
door.
Holding now the rites divine,
Ceres at Zeus’ altar
stands,-
Blessing those around the shrine,
Thus she speaks, with folded
hands:-
“Freedom’s love the
beast inflames,
And the god rules free in
air,
While the law of Nature tames
Each wild lust that lingers
there.
Yet, when thus together thrown,
Man with man must fain unite;
And by his own worth alone
Can he freedom gain, and might.”
Wreathe in a garland the corn’s
golden ear!
With it, the Cyane blue intertwine!
Rapture must render each glance
bright and clear,
For the great queen is approaching
her shrine,-
She who our homesteads so blissful
has given,
She who has man to his fellow-man
bound:
Let our glad numbers extol then
to heaven,
Her who the earth’s
kindly mother is found!
THE RING OF POLYCRATES
A
ballad.
Upon his battlements he stood,
And downward gazed in joyous mood,
On Samos’ Isle,
that owned his sway,
“All this is subject to my
yoke;”
To Egypt’s monarch thus he
spoke,-
“That I am truly
blest, then, say!”
“The immortals’ favor
thou hast known!
Thy sceptre’s might has overthrown
All those who once were
like to thee.
Yet to avenge them one lives still;
I cannot call thee blest, until
That dreaded foe has
ceased to be.”
While to these words the king gave
vent,
A herald from Miletus sent,
Appeared before the
tyrant there:
“Lord, let thy incense rise
to-day,
And with the laurel branches gay
Thou well may’st
crown thy festive hair!”
“Thy foe has sunk beneath
the spear,-
I’m sent to bear the glad
news here,
By thy true marshal
Polydore”-
Then from a basin black he takes-
The fearful sight their terror wakes-
A well-known head, besmeared
with gore.
The king with horror stepped aside,
And then with anxious look replied:
“Thy bliss to
fortune ne’er commit.
On faithless waves, bethink thee
how
Thy fleet with doubtful fate swims
now-
How soon the storm may
scatter it!”
But ere he yet had spoke the word,
A shout of jubilee is heard
Resounding from the
distant strand.
With foreign treasures teeming o’er,
The vessels’ mast-rich wood
once more
Returns home to its
native land.
The guest then speaks with startled
mind:
“Fortune to-day, in truth,
seems kind;
But thou her fickleness
shouldst fear:
The Cretan hordes, well skilled,
in arms,
Now threaten thee with war’s
alarms;
E’en now they
are approaching here.”
And, ere the word has ’scaped
his lips,
A stir is seen amongst the ships,
And thousand voices
“Victory!” cry:
“We are delivered from our
foe,
The storm has laid the Cretan low,
The war is ended, is
gone by!”
The shout with horror hears the
guest:
“In truth, I must esteem thee
blest!
Yet dread I the decrees
of heaven.
The envy of the gods I fear;
To taste of unmixed rapture here
Is never to a mortal
given.”
“With me, too, everything
succeeds;
In all my sovereign acts and deeds
The grace of Heaven
is ever by;
And yet I had a well-loved heir-
I paid my debt to fortune there-
God took him hence-I
saw him die.”
“Wouldst thou from sorrow,
then, be free.
Pray to each unseen Deity,
For thy well-being,
grief to send;
The man on whom the Gods bestow
Their gifts with hands that overflow,
Comes never to a happy
end.”
“And if the Gods thy prayer
resist,
Then to a friend’s instruction
list,-
Invoke thyself adversity;
And what, of all thy treasures bright,
Gives to thy heart the most delight-
That take and cast thou
in the sea!”
Then speaks the other, moved by
fear:
“This ring to me is far most
dear
Of all this isle within
it knows-
I to the furies pledge it now,
If they will happiness allow”-
And in the flood the
gem he throws.
And with the morrow’s earliest
light,
Appeared before the monarch’s
sight
A fisherman, all joyously;
“Lord, I this fish just now
have caught,
No net before e’er held the
sort;
And as a gift I bring
it thee.”
The fish was opened by the cook,
Who suddenly, with wondering look,
Runs up, and utters
these glad sounds:
“Within the fish’s maw,
behold,
I’ve found, great lord, thy
ring of gold!
Thy fortune truly knows
no bounds!”
The guest with terror turned away:
“I cannot here, then, longer
stay,-
My friend thou canst
no longer be!
The gods have willed that thou shouldst
die:
Lest I, too, perish, I must fly”-
He spoke,-and
sailed thence hastily.
THE CRANES OF LBYCUS
A
ballad.
Once to the song and chariot-fight,
Where all the tribes of Greece unite
On Corinth’s isthmus joyously,
The god-loved Ibycus drew nigh.
On him Apollo had bestowed
The gift of song and strains inspired;
So, with light staff, he took his road
From Rhegium, by the godhead fired.
Acrocorinth, on mountain high,
Now burns upon the wanderer’s
eye,
And he begins, with pious dread,
Poseidon’s grove of firs to
tread.
Naught moves around him, save a
swarm
Of cranes, who guide him on
his way;
Who from far southern regions warm
Have hither come in squadron
gray.
“Thou friendly band, all hail
to thee!
Who led’st me safely o’er
the sea!
I deem thee as a favoring sign,-
My destiny resembles thine.
Both come from a far distant coast,
Both pray for some kind sheltering
place;-
Propitious toward us be the host
Who from the stranger wards
disgrace!”
And on he hastes, in joyous wood,
And reaches soon the middle wood
When, on a narrow bridge, by force
Two murderers sudden bar his course.
He must prepare him for the fray,
But soon his wearied hand
sinks low;
Inured the gentle lyre to play,
It ne’er has strung
the deadly bow.
On gods and men for aid he cries,-
No savior to his prayer replies;
However far his voice he sends,
Naught living to his cry attends.
“And must I in a foreign land,
Unwept, deserted, perish here,
Falling beneath a murderous hand,
Where no avenger can appear?”
Deep-wounded, down he sinks at last,
When, lo! the cranes’ wings
rustle past.
He hears,-though he no
more can see,-
Their voices screaming fearfully.
“By you, ye cranes, that soar
on high,
If not another voice is heard,
Be borne to heaven my murder-cry!”
He speaks, and dies, too,
with the word.
The naked corpse, ere long, is found,
And, though defaced by many a wound,
His host in Corinth soon could tell
The features that he loved so well.
“And is it thus I find thee
now,
Who hoped the pine’s
victorious crown
To place upon the singer’s
brow,
Illumined by his bright renown?”
The news is heard with grief by
all
Met at Poseidon’s festival;
All Greece is conscious of the smart,
He leaves a void in every heart;
And to the Prytanis swift
hie
The people, and they urge
him on
The dead man’s manes to pacify
And with the murderer’s
blood atone.
But where’s the trace that
from the throng
The people’s streaming crowds
among,
Allured there by the sports so bright,
Can bring the villain back to light?
By craven robbers was he slain?
Or by some envious hidden
foe?
That Helios only can explain,
Whose rays illume all things
below.
Perchance, with shameless step and
proud,
He threads e’en now the Grecian
crowd-
Whilst vengeance follows in pursuit,
Gloats over his transgression’s
fruit.
The very gods perchance he braves
Upon the threshold of their
fane,-
Joins boldly in the human waves
That haste yon theatre to
gain.
For there the Grecian tribes appear,
Fast pouring in from far and near;
On close-packed benches sit they
there,-
The stage the weight can scarcely
bear.
Like ocean-billows’ hollow
roar,
The teaming crowds of living
man
Toward the cerulean heavens upsoar,
In bow of ever-widening span.
Who knows the nation, who the name,
Of all who there together came?
From Theseus’ town, from Aulis’
strand
From Phocis, from the Spartan land,
From Asia’s distant coast,
they wend,
From every island of the sea,
And from the stage they hear ascend
The chorus’s dread melody.
Who, sad and solemn, as of old,
With footsteps measured and controlled,
Advancing from the far background,
Circle the theatre’s wide
round.
Thus, mortal women never move!
No mortal home to them gave
birth!
Their giant-bodies tower above,
High o’er the puny sons
of earth.
With loins in mantle black concealed,
Within their fleshless bands they
wield
The torch, that with a dull red
glows,-
While in their cheek no life-blood
flows;
And where the hair is floating wide
And loving, round a mortal
brow,
Here snakes and adders are descried,
Whose bellies swell with poison
now.
And, standing in a fearful ring,
The dread and solemn chant they
sing,
That through the bosom thrilling
goes,
And round the sinner fetters throws.
Sense-robbing, of heart-maddening
power,
The furies’ strains
resound through air
The listener’s marrow they
devour,-
The lyre can yield such numbers
ne’er.
“Happy the man who, blemish-free,
Preserves a soul of purity!
Near him we ne’er avenging
come,
He freely o’er life’s
path may roam.
But woe to him who, hid from view,
Hath done the deed of murder
base!
Upon his heels we close pursue,-
We, who belong to night’s
dark race!”
“And if he thinks to ’scape
by flight,
Winged we appear, our snare of might
Around his flying feet to cast,
So that he needs must fall at last.
Thus we pursue him, tiring ne’er,-
Our wrath repentance cannot
quell,-
On to the shadows, and e’en
there
We leave him not in peace
to dwell!”
Thus singing, they the dance resume,
And silence, like that of the tomb,
O’er the whole house lies
heavily,
As if the deity were nigh.
And staid and solemn, as of old,
Circling the theatre’s
wide round,
With footsteps measured and controlled,
They vanish in the far background.
Between deceit and truth each breast.
Now doubting hangs, by awe possessed,
And homage pays to that dread might,
That judges what is hid from sight,-
That, fathomless, inscrutable,
The gloomy skein of fate entwines,
That reads the bosom’s depths
full well,
Yet flies away where sunlight
shines.
When sudden, from the tier most
high,
A voice is heard by all to cry:
“See there, see there, Timotheus!
Behold the cranes of Ibycus!”
The heavens become as black as night,
And o’er the theatre
they see,
Far over-head, a dusky flight
Of cranes, approaching hastily.
“Of Ibycus!”-That
name so blest
With new-born sorrow fills each
breast.
As waves on waves in ocean rise,
From mouth to mouth it swiftly flies:
“Of Ibycus, whom we lament?
Who fell beneath the murderer’s
hand?
What mean those words that from
him went?
What means this cranes’
advancing band?”
And louder still become the cries,
And soon this thought foreboding
flies
Through every heart, with speed
of light-
“Observe in this the furies’
might!
The poets manes are now appeased
The murderer seeks his own
arrest!
Let him who spoke the word be seized,
And him to whom it was addressed!”
That word he had no sooner spoke,
Than he its sound would fain invoke;
In vain! his mouth, with terror
pale,
Tells of his guilt the fearful tale.
Before the judge they drag them
now
The scene becomes the tribunal;
Their crimes the villains both avow,
When neath the vengeance-stroke
they fall.
THE PLAYING INFANT
Play on thy mother’s bosom,
babe, for in that holy isle
The error cannot find thee yet,
the grieving, nor the guile;
Held in thy mother’s arms
above life’s dark and troubled wave,
Thou lookest with thy fearless smile
upon the floating grave.
Play, loveliest innocence!-Thee
yet Arcadia circles round,
A charmed power for thee has set
the lists of fairy ground;
Each gleesome impulse Nature now
can sanction and befriend,
Nor to that willing heart as yet
the duty and the end.
Play, for the haggard labor soon
will come to seize its prey.
Alas! when duty grows thy law, enjoyment
fades away!
HERO AND LEANDER
A ballad.
See you the towers, that, gray and
old,
Frown through the sunlight’s liquid gold,
Steep sternly fronting steep?
The Hellespont beneath them swells,
And roaring cleaves the Dardanelles,
The rock-gates of the deep!
Hear you the sea, whose stormy wave,
From Asia, Europe clove in thunder?
That sea which rent a world, cannot
Rend love from love asunder!
In Hero’s, in Leander’s
heart,
Thrills the sweet anguish of the
dart
Whose feather flies from love.
All Hebe’s bloom in Hero’s
cheek-
And his the hunter’s steps
that seek
Delight, the hills above!
Between their sires the rival feud
Forbids their plighted hearts
to meet;
Love’s fruits hang over danger’s
gulf,
By danger made more sweet.
Alone on Sestos’ rocky tower,
Where upward sent in stormy shower,
The whirling waters foam,-
Alone the maiden sits, and eyes
The cliffs of fair Abydos rise
Afar-her lover’s
home.
Oh, safely thrown from strand to
strand,
No bridge can love to love
convey;
No boatman shoots from yonder shore,
Yet Love has found the way.-
That love, which could the labyrinth
pierce-
Which nerves the weak, and curbs
the fierce,
And wings with wit the dull;-
That love which o’er the furrowed
land
Bowed-tame beneath young
Jason’s hand-
The fiery-snorting bull!
Yes, Styx itself, that ninefold
flows,
Has love, the fearless, ventured
o’er,
And back to daylight borne the bride,
From Pluto’s dreary
shore!
What marvel then that wind and wave,
Leander doth but burn to brave,
When love, that goads him,
guides!
Still when the day, with fainter
glimmer,
Wanes pale-he leaps,
the daring swimmer,
Amid the darkening tides;
With lusty arms he cleaves the waves,
And strikes for that dear
strand afar;
Where high from Hero’s lonely
tower
Lone streams the beacon-star.
In vain his blood the wave may chill,
These tender arms can warm it still-
And, weary if the way,
By many a sweet embrace, above
All earthly boons-can
liberal love
The lover’s toil repay,
Until Aurora breaks the dream,
And warns the loiterer to
depart-
Back to the ocean’s icy bed,
Scared from that loving heart.
So thirty suns have sped their flight-
Still in that theft of sweet delight
Exult the happy pair;
Caress will never pall caress,
And joys that gods might envy, bless
The single bride-night there.
Ah! never he has rapture known,
Who has not, where the waves
are driven
Upon the fearful shores of hell,
Plucked fruits that taste
of heaven!
Now changing in their season are,
The morning and the Hesper star;-
Nor see those happy eyes
The leaves that withering droop
and fall,
Nor hear, when, from its northern
hall,
The neighboring winter sighs;
Or, if they see, the shortening
days
But seem to them to close
in kindness;
For longer joys, in lengthening
nights,
They thank the heaven in blindness.
It is the time, when night and day,
In equal scales contend for sway
-
Lone, on her rocky steep,
Lingers the girl with wistful eyes
That watch the sun-steeds down the
skies,
Careering towards the deep.
Lulled lay the smooth and silent
sea,
A mirror in translucent calm,
The breeze, along that crystal realm,
Unmurmuring, died in balm.
In wanton swarms and blithe array,
The merry dolphins glide and play
Amid the silver waves.
In gray and dusky troops are seen,
The hosts that serve the ocean-queen,
Upborne from coral caves:
They-only they-have
witnessed love
To rapture steal its secret
way:
And Hecate seals the only lips
That could the tale betray!
She marks in joy the lulled water,
And Sestos, thus thy tender daughter,
Soft-flattering, woos the
sea!
“Fair god-and canst
thou then betray?
No! falsehood dwells with them that
say
That falsehood dwells with
thee!
Ah! faithless is the race of man,
And harsh a father’s
heart can prove;
But thee, the gentle and the mild,
The grief of love can move!”
“Within these hated walls
of stone,
Should I, repining, mourn alone,
And fade in ceaseless care,
But thou, though o’er thy
giant tide,
Nor bridge may span, nor boat may
glide,
Dost safe my lover bear.
And darksome is thy solemn deep,
And fearful is thy roaring
wave;
But wave and deep are won by love-
Thou smilest on the brave!”
“Nor vainly, sovereign of
the sea,
Did Eros send his shafts to thee
What time the rain of gold,
Bright Helle, with her brother bore,
How stirred the waves she wandered
o’er,
How stirred thy deeps of old!
Swift, by the maiden’s charms
subdued,
Thou cam’st from out
the gloomy waves,
And in thy mighty arms, she sank
Into thy bridal caves.”
“A goddess with a god, to
keep
In endless youth, beneath the deep,
Her solemn ocean-court!
And still she smooths thine angry
tides,
Tames thy wild heart, and favoring
guides
The sailor to the port!
Beautiful Helle, bright one, hear
Thy lone adoring suppliant
pray!
And guide, O goddess-guide
my love
Along the wonted way!”
Now twilight dims the waters’
flow,
And from the tower, the beacon’s
glow
Waves flickering o’er
the main.
Ah, where athwart the dismal stream,
Shall shine the beacon’s faithful
beam
The lover’s eyes shall
strain!
Hark! sounds moan threatening from
afar-
From heaven the blessed stars
are gone-
More darkly swells the rising sea
The tempest labors on!
Along the ocean’s boundless
plains
Lies night-in torrents
rush the rains
From the dark-bosomed cloud-
Red lightning skirs the panting
air,
And, loosed from out their rocky
lair,
Sweep all the storms abroad.
Huge wave on huge wave tumbling
o’er,
The yawning gulf is rent asunder,
And shows, as through an opening
pall,
Grim earth-the
ocean under!
Poor maiden! bootless wail or vow-
“Have mercy, Jove-be
gracious, thou!
Dread prayer was mine before!”
What if the gods have heard-and
he,
Lone victim of the stormy sea,
Now struggles to the shore!
There’s not a sea-bird on
the wave-
Their hurrying wings the shelter
seek;
The stoutest ship the storms have
proved,
Takes refuge in the creek.
“Ah, still that heart, which
oft has braved
The danger where the daring saved,
Love lureth o’er the
sea;-
For many a vow at parting morn,
That naught but death should bar
return,
Breathed those dear lips to
me;
And whirled around, the while I
weep,
Amid the storm that rides
the wave,
The giant gulf is grasping down
The rash one to the grave!
“False Pontus! and the calm
I hailed,
The awaiting murder darkly veiled-
The lulled pellucid flow,
The smiles in which thou wert arrayed,
Were but the snares that love betrayed
To thy false realm below!
Now in the midway of the main,
Return relentlessly forbidden,
Thou loosenest on the path beyond
The horrors thou hadst hidden.”
Loud and more loud the tempest raves
In thunder break the mountain waves,
White-foaming on the rock-
No ship that ever swept the deep
Its ribs of gnarled oak could keep
Unshattered by the shock.
Dies in the blast the guiding torch
To light the struggler to
the strand;
’Tis death to battle with
the wave,
And death no less to land!
On Venus, daughter of the seas,
She calls the tempest to appease-
To each wild-shrieking wind
Along the ocean-desert borne,
She vows a steer with golden horn-
Vain vow-relentless
wind!
On every goddess of the deep,
On all the gods in heaven
that be,
She calls-to soothe in
calm, awhile
The tempest-laden sea!
“Hearken the anguish of my
cries!
From thy green halls, arise-arise,
Leucothoe the divine!
Who, in the barren main afar,
Oft on the storm-beat mariner
Dost gently-saving shine.
Oh,-reach to him thy
mystic veil,
To which the drowning clasp
may cling,
And safely from that roaring grave,
To shore my lover bring!”
And now the savage winds are hushing.
And o’er the arched horizon,
blushing,
Day’s chariot gleams
on high!
Back to their wonted channels rolled,
In crystal calm the waves behold
One smile on sea and sky!
All softly breaks the rippling tide,
Low-murmuring on the rocky
land,
And playful wavelets gently float
A corpse upon the strand!
’Tis he!-who even
in death would still
Not fail the sweet vow to fulfil;
She looks-sees-knows
him there!
From her pale lips no sorrow speaks,
No tears glide down her hueless
cheeks;
Cold-numbed in her despair-
She looked along the silent deep,
She looked upon the brightening
heaven,
Till to the marble face the soul
Its light sublime had given!
“Ye solemn powers men shrink
to name,
Your might is here, your rights
ye claim-
Yet think not I repine
Soon closed my course; yet I can
bless
The life that brought me happiness-
The fairest lot was mine!
Living have I thy temple served,
Thy consecrated priestess
been-
My last glad offering now receive
Venus, thou mightiest queen!”
Flashed the white robe along the
air,
And from the tower that beetled
there
She sprang into the wave;
Roused from his throne beneath the
waste,
Those holy forms the god embraced-
A god himself their grave!
Pleased with his prey, he glides
along-
More blithe the murmured music
seems,
A gush from unexhausted urns
His everlasting streams!
CASSANDRA
Mirth the halls of Troy was filling,
Ere its lofty ramparts fell;
From the golden lute so thrilling
Hymns of joy were heard to
swell.
From the sad and tearful slaughter
All had laid their arms aside,
For Pelides Priam’s daughter
Claimed then as his own fair
bride.
Laurel branches with them bearing,
Troop on troop in bright array
To the temples were repairing,
Owning Thymbrius’ sovereign
sway.
Through the streets, with frantic
measure,
Danced the bacchanal mad round,
And, amid the radiant pleasure,
Only one sad breast was found.
Joyless in the midst of gladness,
None to heed her, none to
love,
Roamed Cassandra, plunged in sadness,
To Apollo’s laurel grove.
To its dark and deep recesses
Swift the sorrowing priestess
hied,
And from off her flowing tresses
Tore the sacred band, and
cried:
“All around with joy is beaming,
Ev’ry heart is happy
now,
And my sire is fondly dreaming,
Wreathed with flowers my sister’s
brow
I alone am doomed to wailing,
That sweet vision flies from
me;
In my mind, these walls assailing,
Fierce destruction I can see.”
“Though a torch I see all-glowing,
Yet ’tis not in Hymen’s
hand;
Smoke across the skies is blowing,
Yet ’tis from no votive
brand.
Yonder see I feasts entrancing,
But in my prophetic soul,
Hear I now the God advancing,
Who will steep in tears the
bowl!”
“And they blame my lamentation,
And they laugh my grief to
scorn;
To the haunts of desolation
I must bear my woes forlorn.
All who happy are, now shun me,
And my tears with laughter
see;
Heavy lies thy hand upon me,
Cruel Pythian deity!”
“Thy divine decrees foretelling,
Wherefore hast thou thrown
me here,
Where the ever-blind are dwelling,
With a mind, alas, too clear?
Wherefore hast thou power thus given,
What must needs occur to know?
Wrought must be the will of Heaven-
Onward come the hour of woe!”
“When impending fate strikes
terror,
Why remove the covering?
Life we have alone in error,
Knowledge with it death must
bring.
Take away this prescience tearful,
Take this sight of woe from
me;
Of thy truths, alas! how fearful
’Tis the mouthpiece
frail to be!”
“Veil my mind once more in
slumbers
Let me heedlessly rejoice;
Never have I sung glad numbers
Since I’ve been thy
chosen voice.
Knowledge of the future giving,
Thou hast stolen the present
day,
Stolen the moment’s joyous
living,-
Take thy false gift, then,
away!”
“Ne’er with bridal train
around me,
Have I wreathed my radiant
brow,
Since to serve thy fane I bound
me-
Bound me with a solemn vow.
Evermore in grief I languish-
All my youth in tears was
spent;
And with thoughts of bitter anguish
My too-feeling heart is rent.”
“Joyously my friends are playing,
All around are blest and glad,
In the paths of pleasure straying,-
My poor heart alone is sad.
Spring in vain unfolds each treasure,
Filling all the earth with
bliss;
Who in life can e’er take
pleasure,
When is seen its dark abyss?”
“With her heart in vision
burning,
Truly blest is Polyxene,
As a bride to clasp him yearning.
Him, the noblest, best Hellene!
And her breast with rapture swelling,
All its bliss can scarcely
know;
E’en the Gods in heavenly
dwelling
Envying not, when dreaming
so.”
“He to whom my heart is plighted
Stood before my ravished eye,
And his look, by passion lighted,
Toward me turned imploringly.
With the loved one, oh, how gladly
Homeward would I take my flight
But a Stygian shadow sadly
Steps between us every night.”
“Cruel Proserpine is sending
All her spectres pale to me;
Ever on my steps attending
Those dread shadowy forms
I see.
Though I seek, in mirth and laughter
Refuge from that ghastly train,
Still I see them hastening after,-
Ne’er shall I know joy
again.”
“And I see the death-steel
glancing,
And the eye of murder glare;
On, with hasty strides advancing,
Terror haunts me everywhere.
Vain I seek alleviation;-
Knowing, seeing, suffering
all,
I must wait the consummation,
In a foreign land must fall.”
While her solemn words are ringing,
Hark! a dull and wailing tone
From the temple’s gate upspringing,-
Dead lies Thetis’ mighty
son!
Eris shakes her snake-locks hated,
Swiftly flies each deity,
And o’er Ilion’s
walls ill-fated
Thunder-clouds loom heavily!
THE HOSTAGE
A ballad.
The tyrant Dionys to seek,
Stern Moerus with his poniard crept;
The watchful guard upon him swept;
The grim king marked his changeless cheek:
“What wouldst thou with thy poniard?
Speak!”
“The city from the tyrant free!”
“The death-cross shall thy guerdon be.”
“I am prepared for death,
nor pray,”
Replied that haughty man, “I to live;
Enough, if thou one grace wilt give
For three brief suns the death delay
To wed my sister-leagues away;
I boast one friend whose life for mine,
If I should fail the cross, is thine.”
The tyrant mused,-and
smiled,-and said
With gloomy craft, “So
let it be;
Three days I will vouchsafe
to thee.
But mark-if, when the
time be sped,
Thou fail’st-thy
surety dies instead.
His life shall buy thine own release;
Thy guilt atoned, my wrath shall
cease.”
He sought his friend-“The
king’s decree
Ordains my life the cross
upon
Shall pay the deed I would
have done;
Yet grants three days’ delay
to me,
My sister’s marriage-rites
to see;
If thou, the hostage, wilt remain
Till I-set free-return
again!”
His friend embraced-No
word he said,
But silent to the tyrant strode-
The other went upon his road.
Ere the third sun in heaven was
red,
The rite was o’er, the sister
wed;
And back, with anxious heart unquailing,
He hastes to hold the pledge unfailing.
Down the great rains unending bore,
Down from the hills the torrents
rushed,
In one broad stream the brooklets
gushed.
The wanderer halts beside the shore,
The bridge was swept the tides before-
The shattered arches o’er
and under
Went the tumultuous waves in thunder.
Dismayed he takes his idle stand-
Dismayed, he strays and shouts
around;
His voice awakes no answering
sound.
No boat will leave the sheltering
strand,
To bear him to the wished-for land;
No boatman will Death’s pilot
be;
The wild stream gathers to a sea!
Sunk by the banks, awhile he weeps,
Then raised his arms to Jove,
and cried,
“Stay thou, oh stay
the maddening tide;
Midway behold the swift sun sweeps,
And, ere he sinks adown the deeps,
If I should fail, his beams will
see
My friend’s last anguish-slain
for me!”
More fierce it runs, more broad
it flows,
And wave on wave succeeds
and dies
And hour on hour remorseless
flies;
Despair at last to daring grows-
Amidst the flood his form he throws;
With vigorous arms the roaring waves
Cleaves-and a God that
pities, saves.
He wins the bank-he scours
the strand,
He thanks the God in breathless
prayer;
When from the forest’s
gloomy lair,
With ragged club in ruthless hand,
And breathing murder-rushed
the band
That find, in woods, their savage
den,
And savage prey in wandering men.
“What,” cried he, pale
with generous fear;
“What think to gain
ye by the strife?
All I bear with me is my life-
I take it to the king!”-and
here
He snatched the club from him most
near:
And thrice he smote, and thrice
his blows
Dealt death-before him
fly the foes!
The sun is glowing as a brand;
And faint before the parching
heat,
The strength forsakes the
feeble feet:
“Thou hast saved me from the
robbers’ hand,
Through wild floods given the blessed
land;
And shall the weak limbs fail me
now?
And he!-Divine one, nerve
me, thou!”
Hark! like some gracious murmur
by,
Babbles low music, silver-clear-
The wanderer holds his breath
to hear;
And from the rock, before his eye,
Laughs forth the spring delightedly;
Now the sweet waves he bends him
o’er,
And the sweet waves his strength
restore.
Through the green boughs the sun
gleams dying,
O’er fields that drink
the rosy beam,
The trees’ huge shadows
giant seem.
Two strangers on the road are hieing;
And as they fleet beside him flying,
These muttered words his ear dismay:
“Now-now the cross
has claimed its prey!”
Despair his winged path pursues,
The anxious terrors hound
him on-
There, reddening in the evening
sun,
From far, the domes of Syracuse!-
When towards him comes Philostratus
(His leal and trusty herdsman he),
And to the master bends his knee.
“Back-thou canst
aid thy friend no more,
The niggard time already flown-
His life is forfeit-save
thine own!
Hour after hour in hope he bore,
Nor might his soul its faith give
o’er;
Nor could the tyrant’s scorn
deriding,
Steal from that faith one thought
confiding!”
“Too late! what horror hast
thou spoken!
Vain life, since it cannot
requite him!
But death with me can yet
unite him;
No boast the tyrant’s scorn
shall make-
How friend to friend can faith forsake.
But from the double death shall
know,
That truth and love yet live below!”
The sun sinks down-the
gate’s in view,
The cross looms dismal on
the ground-
The eager crowd gape murmuring
round.
His friend is bound the cross unto.
. . .
Crowd-guards-all
bursts he breathless through:
“Me! Doomsman, me!”
he shouts, “alone!
His life is rescued-lo,
mine own!”
Amazement seized the circling ring!
Linked in each other’s
arms the pair-
Weeping for joy-yet
anguish there!
Moist every eye that gazed;-they
bring
The wondrous tidings to the king-
His breast man’s heart at
last hath known,
And the friends stand before his
throne.
Long silent, he, and wondering long,
Gazed on the pair-“In
peace depart,
Victors, ye have subdued my
heart!
Truth is no dream!-its
power is strong.
Give grace to him who owns his wrong!
’Tis mine your suppliant now
to be,
Ah, let the band of love-be
three!”
GREEKISM
Scarce has the fever so chilly of
Gallomania departed,
When a more burning attack in Grecomania
breaks out.
Greekism,-what did it
mean?-’Twas harmony, reason, and clearness!
Patience,-good gentlemen,
pray, ere ye of Greekism speak!
’Tis for an excellent cause
ye are fighting, and all that I ask for
Is that with reason it ne’er
may be a laughing-stock made.
THE DRIVER
A ballad.
“What knight or what vassal
will be so bold
As to plunge in the gulf below?
See! I hurl in its depths a goblet of gold,
Already the waters over it flow.
The man who can bring back the goblet to me,
May keep it henceforward,-his own it
shall be.”
Thus speaks the king, and he hurls
from the height
Of the cliffs that, rugged and steep,
Hang over the boundless sea, with strong might,
The goblet afar, in the bellowing deep.
“And who’ll be so daring,-I
ask it once more,-
As to plunge in these billows that wildly roar?”
And the vassals and knights of high
degree
Hear his words, but silent
remain.
They cast their eyes on the raging
sea,
And none will attempt the
goblet to gain.
And a third time the question is
asked by the king:
“Is there none that will dare
in the gulf now to spring?”
Yet all as before in silence stand,
When a page, with a modest
pride,
Steps out of the timorous squirely
band,
And his girdle and mantle
soon throws aside,
And all the knights, and the ladies
too,
The noble stripling with wonderment
view.
And when he draws nigh to the rocky
brow,
And looks in the gulf so black,
The waters that she had swallowed
but now,
The howling Charybdis is giving
back;
And, with the distant thunder’s
dull sound.
From her gloomy womb they all-foaming
rebound.
And it boils and it roars, and it
hisses and seethes,
As when water and fire first
blend;
To the sky spurts the foam in steam-laden
wreaths,
And wave presses hard upon
wave without end.
And the ocean will never exhausted
be,
As if striving to bring forth another
sea.
But at length the wild tumult seems
pacified,
And blackly amid the white
swell
A gaping chasm its jaws opens wide,
As if leading down to the
depths of hell:
And the howling billows are seen
by each eye
Down the whirling funnel all madly
to fly.
Then quickly, before the breakers
rebound,
The stripling commends him
to Heaven,
And-a scream of horror
is heard around,-
And now by the whirlpool away
he is driven,
And secretly over the swimmer brave
Close the jaws, and he vanishes
’neath the dark wave.
O’er the watery gulf dread
silence now lies,
But the deep sends up a dull
yell,
And from mouth to mouth thus trembling
it flies:
“Courageous stripling,
oh, fare thee well!”
And duller and duller the howls
recommence,
While they pause in anxious and
fearful suspense.
“If even thy crown in the
gulf thou shouldst fling,
And shouldst say, ’He
who brings it to me
Shall wear it henceforward, and
be the king,’
Thou couldst tempt me not
e’en with that precious foe;
What under the howling deep is concealed
To no happy living soul is revealed!”
Full many a ship, by the whirlpool
held fast,
Shoots straightway beneath
the mad wave,
And, dashed to pieces, the hull
and the mast
Emerge from the all-devouring
grave,-
And the roaring approaches still
nearer and nearer,
Like the howl of the tempest, still
clearer and clearer.
And it boils and it roars, and it
hisses and seethes,
As when water and fire first
blend;
To the sky spurts the foam in steam-laden
wreaths,
And wave passes hard upon
wave without end.
And, with the distant thunder’s
dull sound,
From the ocean-womb they all-bellowing
bound.
And lo! from the darkly flowing
tide
Comes a vision white as a swan,
And an arm and a glistening neck
are descried,
With might and with active zeal
steering on;
And ’tis he, and behold! his
left hand on high
Waves the goblet, while beaming
with joy is his eye.
Then breathes he deeply, then breathes
he long,
And blesses the light of the day;
While gladly exclaim to each other
the throng:
“He lives! he is here! he
is not the sea’s prey!
From the tomb, from the eddying
waters’ control,
The brave one has rescued his living
soul!”
And he comes, and they joyously
round him stand;
At the feet of the monarch
he falls,-
The goblet he, kneeling, puts in
his hand,
And the king to his beauteous
daughter calls,
Who fills it with sparkling wine
to the brim;
The youth turns to the monarch,
and speaks thus to him:
“Long life to the king!
Let all those be glad
Who breathe in the light of
the sky!
For below all is fearful, of moment
sad;
Let not man to tempt the immortals
e’er try,
Let him never desire the thing to
see
That with terror and night they
veil graciously.”
“I was torn below with the
speed of light,
When out of a cavern of rock
Rushed towards me a spring with
furious might;
I was seized by the twofold
torrent’s wild shock,
And like a top, with a whirl and
a bound,
Despite all resistance, was whirled
around.”
“Then God pointed out,-for
to Him I cried
In that terrible moment of
need,-
A craggy reef in the gulf’s
dark side;
I seized it in haste, and
from death was then freed.
And there, on sharp corals,
was hanging the cup,-
The fathomless pit had else swallowed
it up.”
“For under me lay it, still
mountain-deep,
In a darkness of purple-tinged
dye,
And though to the ear all might
seem then asleep
With shuddering awe ’twas
seen by the eye
How the salamanders’ and dragons’
dread forms
Filled those terrible jaws of hell
with their swarms.”
“There crowded, in union fearful
and black,
In a horrible mass entwined,
The rock-fish, the ray with the
thorny back,
And the hammer-fish’s
misshapen kind,
And the shark, the hyena dread of
the sea,
With his angry teeth, grinned fiercely
on me.”
“There hung I, by fulness
of terror possessed,
Where all human aid was unknown,
Amongst phantoms, the only sensitive
breast,
In that fearful solitude all
alone,
Where the voice of mankind could
not reach to mine ear,
’Mid the monsters foul of
that wilderness drear.”
“Thus shuddering methought-when
a something crawled near,
And a hundred limbs it out-flung,
And at me it snapped;-in
my mortal fear,
I left hold of the coral to
which I had clung;
Then the whirlpool seized on me
with maddened roar,
Yet ’twas well, for it brought
me to light once more.”
The story in wonderment hears the
king,
And he says, “The cup
is thine own,
And I purpose also to give thee
this ring,
Adorned with a costly, a priceless
stone,
If thou’lt try once again,
and bring word to me
What thou saw’st in the nethermost
depths of the sea.”
His daughter hears this with emotions
soft,
And with flattering accent
prays she:
“That fearful sport, father,
attempt not too oft!
What none other would dare,
he hath ventured for thee;
If thy heart’s wild longings
thou canst not tame,
Let the knights, if they can, put
the squire to shame.”
The king then seizes the goblet
in haste,
In the gulf he hurls it with
might:
“When the goblet once more
in my hands thou hast placed,
Thou shalt rank at my court
as the noblest knight,
And her as a bride thou shalt clasp
e’en to-day,
Who for thee with tender compassion
doth pray.”
Then a force, as from Heaven, descends
on him there,
And lightning gleams in his
eye,
And blushes he sees on her features
so fair,
And he sees her turn pale,
and swooning lie;
Then eager the precious guerdon
to win,
For life or for death, lo! he plunges
him in!
The breakers they hear, and the
breakers return,
Proclaimed by a thundering
sound;
They bend o’er the gulf with
glances that yearn,
And the waters are pouring
in fast around;
Though upwards and downwards they
rush and they rave,
The youth is brought back by no
kindly wave.
THE KNIGHT OF
TOGGENBURG.
A ballad.
“I Can love thee well, believe
me,
As a sister true;
Other love, Sir Knight, would grieve me,
Sore my heart would rue.
Calmly would I see thee going,
Calmly, too, appear;
For those tears in silence flowing
Find no answer here.”
Thus she speaks,-he hears
her sadly,-
How his heartstrings
bleed!
In his arms he clasps her madly,
Then he mounts his steed.
From the Switzer land collects he
All his warriors brave;-
Cross on breast, their course directs
he
To the Holy Grave.
In triumphant march advancing,
Onward moves the host,
While their morion plumes are dancing
Where the foes are most.
Mortal terror strikes the Paynim
At the chieftain’s
name;
But the knight’s sad thoughts
enchain him-
Grief consumes his frame.
Twelve long months, with courage
daring,
Peace he strives to
find;
Then, at last, of rest despairing,
Leaves the host behind;
Sees a ship, whose sails are swelling,
Lie on Joppa’s
strand;
Ships him homeward for her dwelling,
In his own loved land.
Now behold the pilgrim weary
At her castle gate!
But alas! these accents dreary
Seal his mournful fate:-
“She thou seek’st her
troth hath plighted
To all-gracious heaven;
To her God she was united
Yesterday at even!”
To his father’s home forever
Bids he now adieu;
Sees no more his arms and beaver,
Nor his steed so true.
Then descends he, sadly, slowly,-
None suspect the sight,-
For a garb of penance lowly
Wears the noble knight.
Soon he now, the tempest braving,
Builds an humble shed,
Where o’er the lime-trees
darkly waving,
Peeps the convent’s
head.
From the orb of day’s first
gleaming,
Till his race has run,
Hope in every feature beaming,
There he sits alone.
Toward the convent straining ever
His unwearied eyes,-
From her casement looking never
Till it open flies,
Till the loved one, soft advancing,
Shows her gentle face,
O’er the vale her sweet eye
glancing,
Full of angel-grace.
Then he seeks his bed of rushes,
Stilled all grief and
pain,
Slumbering calm, till morning’s
blushes
Waken life again.
Days and years fleet on, yet never
Breathes he plaint or
sighs,
On her casement gazing ever
Till it open flies.
Till the loved one, soft advancing,
Shows her gentle face,
O’er the vale her sweet eyes
glancing,
Full of angel-grace.
But at length, the morn returning
Finds him dead and chill;-
Pale and wan, his gaze, with yearning,
Seeks her casement still.
The fight
with the dragon.
Why run the crowd? What means
the throng
That rushes fast the streets along?
Can Rhodes a prey to flames, then,
be?
In crowds they gather hastily,
And, on his steed, a noble knight
Amid the rabble, meets my sight;
Behind him-prodigy unknown!-
A monster fierce they’re drawing
on;
A dragon stems it by its shape,
With wide and crocodile-like
jaw,
And on the knight and dragon gape,
In turns, the people, filled
with awe.
And thousand voices shout with glee
“The fiery dragon come and
see,
Who hind and flock tore limb from
limb!-
The hero see, who vanquished him!
Full many a one before him went,
To dare the fearful combat bent,
But none returned home from the
fight;
Honor ye, then, the noble knight!”
And toward the convent move they
all,
While met in hasty council
there
The brave knights of the Hospital,
St. John the Baptist’s
Order, were.
Up to the noble master sped
The youth, with firm but modest
tread;
The people followed with wild shout,
And stood the landing-place about,
While thus outspoke that daring
one:
“My knightly duty I have done.
The dragon that laid waste the land
Has fallen beneath my conquering
hand.
The way is to the wanderer free,
The shepherd o’er the
plains may rove;
Across the mountains joyfully
The pilgrim to the shrine
may move.”
But sternly looked the prince, and
said:
“The hero’s part thou
well hast played
By courage is the true knight known,-
A dauntless spirit thou hast shown.
Yet speak! What duty first
should he
Regard, who would Christ’s
champion be,
Who wears the emblem of the Cross?”-
And all turned pale at his discourse.
Yet he replied, with noble grace,
While blushingly he bent him
low:
“That he deserves so proud
a place
Obedience best of all can
show.”
“My son,” the master
answering spoke,
“Thy daring act this duty
broke.
The conflict that the law forbade
Thou hast with impious mind essayed.”-
“Lord, judge when all to thee
is known,”
The other spake, in steadfast tone,-
“For I the law’s commands
and will
Purposed with honor to fulfil.
I went not out with heedless thought.
Hoping the monster dread to
find;
To conquer in the fight I sought
By cunning, and a prudent
mind.”
“Five of our noble Order,
then
(Our faith could boast no better
men),
Had by their daring lost their life,
When thou forbadest us the strife.
And yet my heart I felt a prey
To gloom, and panted for the fray;
Ay, even in the stilly night,
In vision gasped I in the fight;
And when the glimmering morning
came,
And of fresh troubles knowledge
gave,
A raging grief consumed my frame,
And I resolved the thing to
brave.”
“And to myself I thus began:
’What is’t adorns the
youth, the man?
What actions of the heroes bold,
Of whom in ancient song we’re
told,
Blind heathendom raised up on high
To godlike fame and dignity?
The world, by deeds known far and
wide,
From monsters fierce they purified;
The lion in the fight they met,
And wrestled with the minotaur,
Unhappy victims free to set,
And were not sparing of their
gore.’”
“’Are none but Saracens
to feel
The prowess of the Christian steel?
False idols only shall be brave?
His mission is the world to save;
To free it, by his sturdy arm,
From every hurt, from every harm;
Yet wisdom must his courage bend,
And cunning must with strength contend.’
Thus spake I oft, and went alone
The monster’s traces
to espy;
When on my mind a bright light shone,-
‘I have it!’ was
my joyful cry.”
“To thee I went, and thus
I spake:
‘My homeward journey I would
take.’
Thou, lord, didst grant my prayer
to me,-
Then safely traversed I the sea;
And, when I reached my native strand,
I caused a skilful artist’s
hand
To make a dragon’s image,
true
To his that now so well I knew.
On feet of measure short was placed
Its lengthy body’s heavy
load;
A scaly coat of mail embraced
The back, on which it fiercely
showed.”
“Its stretching neck appeared
to swell,
And, ghastly as a gate of hell,
Its fearful jaws were open wide,
As if to seize the prey it tried;
And in its black mouth, ranged about,
Its teeth in prickly rows stood
out;
Its tongue was like a sharp-edged
sword,
And lightning from its small eyes
poured;
A serpent’s tail of many a
fold
Ended its body’s monstrous
span,
And round itself with fierceness
rolled,
So as to clasp both steed
and man.”
“I formed the whole to nature
true,
In skin of gray and hideous hue;
Part dragon it appeared, part snake,
Engendered in the poisonous lake.
And, when the figure was complete,
A pair of dogs I chose me, fleet,
Of mighty strength, of nimble pace,
Inured the savage boar to chase;
The dragon, then, I made them bait,
Inflaming them to fury dread,
With their sharp teeth to seize
it straight,
And with my voice their motions
led.”
“And, where the belly’s
tender skin
Allowed the tooth to enter in,
I taught them how to seize it there,
And, with their fangs, the part
to tear.
I mounted, then, my Arab steed,
The offspring of a noble breed;
My hand a dart on high held forth,
And, when I had inflamed his wrath,
I stuck my sharp spurs in his side,
And urged him on as quick
as thought,
And hurled my dart in circles wide
As if to pierce the beast
I sought.”
“And though my steed reared
high in pain,
And champed and foamed beneath the
rein,
And though the dogs howled fearfully,
Till they were calmed ne’er
rested I.
This plan I ceaselessly pursued,
Till thrice the moon had been renewed;
And when they had been duly taught,
In swift ships here I had them brought;
And since my foot these shores has
pressed
Flown has three mornings’
narrow span;
I scarce allowed my limbs to rest
Ere I the mighty task began.”
“For hotly was my bosom stirred
When of the land’s fresh grief
I heard;
Shepherds of late had been his prey,
When in the marsh they went astray.
I formed my plans then hastily,-
My heart was all that counselled
me.
My squires instructing to proceed,
I sprang upon my well-trained steed,
And, followed by my noble pair
Of dogs, by secret pathways
rode,
Where not an eye could witness bear,
To find the monster’s
fell abode.”
“Thou, lord, must know the
chapel well,
Pitched on a rocky pinnacle,
That overlooks the distant isle;
A daring mind ’twas raised
the pile.
Though humble, mean, and small it
shows
Its walls a miracle enclose,-
The Virgin and her infant Son,
Vowed by the three kings of Cologne.
By three times thirty steps is led
The pilgrim to the giddy height;
Yet, when he gains it with bold
tread,
He’s quickened by his
Saviour’s sight.”
“Deep in the rock to which
it clings,
A cavern dark its arms outflings,
Moist with the neighboring moorland’s
dew,
Where heaven’s bright rays
can ne’er pierce through.
There dwelt the monster, there he
lay,
His spoil awaiting, night and day;
Like the hell-dragon, thus he kept
Watch near the shrine, and never
slept;
And if a hapless pilgrim chanced
To enter on that fatal way,
From out his ambush quick advanced
The foe, and seized him as
his prey.”
“I mounted now the rocky height;
Ere I commenced the fearful fight,
There knelt I to the infant Lord,
And pardon for my sins implored.
Then in the holy fane I placed
My shining armor round my waist,
My right hand grasped my javelin,
The fight then went I to begin;
Instructions gave my squires among,
Commanding them to tarry there;
Then on my steed I nimbly sprung,
And gave my spirit to God’s
care.”
“Soon as I reached the level
plain,
My dogs found out the scent amain;
My frightened horse soon reared
on high,-
His fear I could not pacify,
For, coiled up in a circle, lo!
There lay the fierce and hideous
foe,
Sunning himself upon the ground.
Straight at him rushed each nimble
hound;
Yet thence they turned, dismayed
and fast,
When he his gaping jaws op’d
wide,
Vomited forth his poisonous blast,
And like the howling jackal
cried.”
“But soon their courage I
restored;
They seized with rage the foe abhorred,
While I against the beast’s
loins threw
My spear with sturdy arm and true:
But, powerless as a bulrush frail,
It bounded from his coat of mail;
And ere I could repeat the throw,
My horse reeled wildly to and fro
Before his basilisk-like look,
And at his poison-teeming
breath,-
Sprang backward, and with terror
shook,
While I seemed doomed to certain
death.”
“Then from my steed I nimbly
sprung,
My sharp-edged sword with vigor
swung;
Yet all in vain my strokes I plied,-
I could not pierce his rock-like
hide.
His tail with fury lashing round,
Sudden he bore me to the ground.
His jaws then opening fearfully,
With angry teeth he struck at me;
But now my dogs, with wrath new-born,
Rushed on his belly with fierce
bite,
So that, by dreadful anguish torn,
He howling stood before my
sight.”
“And ere he from their teeth
was free,
I raised myself up hastily,
The weak place of the foe explored,
And in his entrails plunged my sword,
Sinking it even to the hilt;
Black gushing forth, his blood was
spilt.
Down sank he, burying in his fall
Me with his body’s giant ball,
So that my senses quickly fled;
And when I woke with strength
renewed,
The dragon in his blood lay dead,
While round me grouped my
squires all stood.”
The joyous shouts, so long suppressed,
Now burst from every hearer’s
breast,
Soon as the knight these words had
spoken;
And ten times ’gainst the
high vault broken,
The sound of mingled voices rang,
Re-echoing back with hollow clang.
The Order’s sons demand, in
haste,
That with a crown his brow be graced,
And gratefully in triumph now
The mob the youth would bear
along
When, lo! the master knit his brow,
And called for silence ’mongst
the throng.
And said, “The dragon that
this land
Laid waste, thou slew’st with
daring hand;
Although the people’s idol
thou,
The Order’s foe I deem thee
now.
Thy breast has to a fiend more base
Than e’en this dragon given
place.
The serpent that the heart most
stings,
And hatred and destruction brings,
That spirit is, which stubborn lies,
And impiously cast off the
rein,
Despising order’s sacred ties;
’Tis that destroys the
world amain.”
“The Mameluke makes of courage
boast,
Obedience decks the Christian most;
For where our great and blessed
Lord
As a mere servant walked abroad,
The fathers, on that holy ground,
This famous Order chose to found,
That arduous duty to fulfil
To overcome one’s own self-will!
’Twas idle glory moved thee
there:
So take thee hence from out
my sight!
For who the Lord’s yoke cannot
bear,
To wear his cross can have
no right.”
A furious shout now raise the crowd,
The place is filled with outcries
loud;
The brethren all for pardon cry;
The youth in silence droops his
eye-
Mutely his garment from him throws,
Kisses the master’s hand,
and-goes.
But he pursues him with his gaze,
Recalls him lovingly, and says:
“Let me embrace thee now,
my son!
The harder fight is gained
by thee.
Take, then, this cross-the
guerdon won
By self-subdued humility.”
FEMALE JUDGMENT
Man frames his judgment on reason;
but woman on love founds her verdict;
If her judgment loves not, woman already has judged.
FRIDOLIN OR THE WALK TO THE IRON FOUNDRY
A gentle was Fridolin,
And he his mistress dear,
Savern’s fair Countess, honored
in
All truth and godly fear.
She was so meek, and, ah! so good!
Yet each wish of her wayward mood,
He would have studied to fulfil,
To please his God, with earnest
will.
From the first hour when daylight
shone
Till rang the vesper-chime,
He lived but for her will alone,
And deemed e’en that
scarce time.
And if she said, “Less anxious
be!”
His eye then glistened tearfully.
Thinking that he in duty failed,
And so before no toil he quailed.
And so, before her serving train,
The Countess loved to raise
him;
While her fair mouth, in endless
strain,
Was ever wont to praise him.
She never held him as her slave,
Her heart a child’s rights
to him gave;
Her clear eye hung in fond delight
Upon his well-formed features bright.
Soon in the huntsman Robert’s
breast
Was poisonous anger fired;
His black soul, long by lust possessed,
With malice was inspired;
He sought the Count, whom, quick
in deed,
A traitor might with ease mislead,
As once from hunting home they rode,
And in his heart suspicion sowed.
“Happy art thou, great Count,
in truth,”
Thus cunningly he spoke;
“For ne’er mistrust’s
envenomed tooth
Thy golden slumbers broke;
A noble wife thy love rewards,
And modesty her person guards.
The tempter will be able ne’er
Her true fidelity to snare.”
A gloomy scowl the Count’s
eye filled:
“What’s this thou
say’st to me?
Shall I on woman’s virtue
build,
Inconstant as the sea?
The flatterer’s mouth with
ease may lure;
My trust is placed on ground more
sure.
No one, methinks, dare ever burn
To tempt the wife of Count Savern.”
The other spoke: “Thou
sayest it well,
The fool deserves thy scorn
Who ventures on such thoughts to
dwell,
A mere retainer born,-
Who to the lady he obeys
Fears not his wishes’ lust
to raise.”-
“What!” tremblingly
the Count began,
“Dost speak, then, of a living
man?”-
“Is, then, the thing, to all
revealed,
Hid from my master’s
view?
Yet, since with care from thee concealed,
I’d fain conceal it
too”-
“Speak quickly, villain! speak
or die!”
Exclaimed the other fearfully.
“Who dares to look on Cunigond?”
“’Tis the fair page
that is so fond.”
“He’s not ill-shaped
in form, I wot,”
He craftily went on;
The Count meanwhile felt cold and
hot,
By turns in every bone.
“Is’t possible thou
seest not, sir,
How he has eyes for none but her?
At table ne’er attends to
thee,
But sighs behind her ceaselessly?”
“Behold the rhymes that from
him came
His passion to confess”-
“Confess!”-“And
for an answering flame,-
The impious knave!-to
press.
My gracious lady, soft and meek,
Through pity, doubtless, feared
to speak;
That it has ’scaped me, sore
I rue;
What, lord, canst thou to help it
do?”
Into the neighboring wood then rode
The Count, inflamed with wrath,
Where, in his iron foundry, glowed
The ore, and bubbled forth.
The workmen here, with busy hand,
The fire both late and early fanned.
The sparks fly out, the bellows
ply,
As if the rock to liquefy.
The fire and water’s might
twofold
Are here united found;
The mill-wheel, by the flood seized
hold,
Is whirling round and round;
The works are clattering night and
day,
With measured stroke the hammers
play,
And, yielding to the mighty blows,
The very iron plastic grows.
Then to two workmen beckons he,
And speaks thus in his ire;
“The first who’s hither
sent by me
Thus of ye to inquire
‘Have ye obeyed my lord’s
word well?’
Him cast ye into yonder hell,
That into ashes he may fly,
And ne’er again torment mine
eye!”
The inhuman pair were overjoyed,
With devilish glee possessed
For as the iron, feeling void,
Their heart was in their breast,
And brisker with the bellows’
blast,
The foundry’s womb now heat
they fast,
And with a murderous mind prepare
To offer up the victim there.
Then Robert to his comrade spake,
With false hypocrisy:
“Up, comrade, up! no tarrying
make!
Our lord has need of thee.”
The lord to Fridolin then said:
“The pathway toward the foundry
tread,
And of the workmen there inquire,
If they have done their lord’s
desire.”
The other answered, “Be it
so!”
But o’er him came this
thought,
When he was all-prepared to go,
“Will she command me
aught?”
So to the Countess straight he went:
“I’m to the iron-foundry
sent;
Then say, can I do aught for thee?
For thou ’tis who commandest
me.”
To this the Lady of Savern
Replied in gentle tone:
“To hear the holy mass I yearn,
For sick now lies my son;
So go, my child, and when thou’rt
there,
Utter for me a humble prayer,
And of thy sins think ruefully,
That grace may also fall on me.”
And in this welcome duty glad,
He quickly left the place;
But ere the village bounds he had
Attained with rapid pace,
The sound of bells struck on his
ear,
From the high belfry ringing clear,
And every sinner, mercy-sent,
Inviting to the sacrament.
“Never from praising God refrain
Where’er by thee He’s
found!”
He spoke, and stepped into the fane,
But there he heard no sound;
For ’twas the harvest time,
and now
Glowed in the fields the reaper’s
brow;
No choristers were gathered there,
The duties of the mass to share.
The matter paused he not to weigh,
But took the sexton’s
part;
“That thing,” he said,
“makes no delay
Which heavenward guides the
heart.”
Upon the priest, with helping hand,
He placed the stole and sacred band,
The vessels he prepared beside,
That for the mass were sanctified.
And when his duties here were o’er,
Holding the mass-book, he,
Ministering to the priest, before
The altar bowed his knee,
And knelt him left, and knelt him
right,
While not a look escaped his sight,
And when the holy Sanctus came,
The bell thrice rang he at the name.
And when the priest, bowed humbly
too,
In hand uplifted high,
Facing the altar, showed to view
The present Deity,
The sacristan proclaimed it well,
Sounding the clearly-tinkling bell,
While all knelt down, and beat the
breast,
And with a cross the Host confessed.
The rites thus served he, leaving
none,
With quick and ready wit;
Each thing that in God’s house
is done,
He also practised it.
Unweariedly he labored thus,
Till the Vobiscum Dominus,
When toward the people turned the
priest,
Blessed them,-and so
the service ceased.
Then he disposed each thing again,
In fair and due array;
First purified the holy fane,
And then he went his way,
And gladly, with a mind at rest,
On to the iron-foundry pressed,
Saying the while, complete to be,
Twelve paternósters silently.
And when he saw the furnace smoke,
And saw the workmen stand,
“Have ye, ye fellows,”
thus he spoke,
“Obeyed the Count’s
command?”
Grinning they ope the orifice,
And point into the fell abyss:
“He’s cared for-all
is at an end!
The Count his servants will commend.”
The answer to his lord he brought,
Returning hastily,
Who, when his form his notice caught,
Could scarcely trust his eye:
“Unhappy one! whence comest
thou?”-
“Back from the foundry”-“Strange,
I vow!
Hast in thy journey, then, delayed?”-
“’Twas only, lord, till
I had prayed.”
“For when I from thy presence
went
(Oh pardon me!) to-day,
As duty bid, my steps I bent
To her whom I obey.
She told me, lord, the mass to hear,
I gladly to her wish gave ear,
And told four rosaries at the shrine,
For her salvation and for thine.”
In wonder deep the Count now fell,
And, shuddering, thus spake
he:
“And, at the foundry, quickly
tell,
What answer gave they thee?”
“Obscure the words they answered
in,-
Showing the furnace with a grin:
’He’s cared for-all
is at an end!
The Count his servants will commend.’”
“And Robert?” interrupted
he,
While deadly pale he stood,-
“Did he not, then, fall in
with thee?
I sent him to the wood.”-
“Lord, neither in the wood
nor field
Was trace of Robert’s foot
revealed.”-
“Then,” cried the Count,
with awe-struck mien,
“Great God in heaven his judge
hath been!”
With kindness he before ne’er
proved,
He led him by the hand
Up to the Countess,-deeply
moved,-
Who naught could understand.
“This child, let him be dear
to thee,
No angel is so pure as he!
Though we may have been counselled
ill,
God and His hosts watch o’er
him still.”
THE GENIUS WITH THE INVERTED TORCH
Lovely he looks, ’tis true,
with the light of his torch now extinguished;
But remember that death is not aesthetic, my friends!
THE COUNT OF HAPSBURG
A ballad.
At Aix-la-Chapelle, in imperial
array,
In its halls renowned in old story,
At the coronation banquet so gay
King Rudolf was sitting in glory.
The meats were served up by the Palsgrave of Rhine,
The Bohemian poured out the bright sparkling wine,
And all the Electors, the seven,
Stood waiting around the world-governing one,
As the chorus of stars encircle the sun,
That honor might duly be given.
And the people the lofty balcony
round
In a throng exulting were
filling;
While loudly were blending the trumpets’
glad sound,
The multitude’s voices
so thrilling;
For the monarchless period, with
horror rife,
Has ended now, after long baneful
strife,
And the earth had a lord to
possess her.
No longer ruled blindly the iron-bound
spear,
And the weak and the peaceful no
longer need fear
Being crushed by the cruel
oppressor.
And the emperor speaks with a smile
in his eye,
While the golden goblet he
seizes:
“With this banquet in glory
none other can vie,
And my regal heart well it
pleases;
Yet the minstrel, the bringer of
joy, is not here,
Whose melodious strains to my heart
are so dear,
And whose words heavenly wisdom
inspire;
Since the days of my youth it hath
been my delight,
And that which I ever have loved
as a knight,
As a monarch I also require.”
And behold! ’mongst the princes
who stand round the throne
Steps the bard, in his robe
long and streaming,
While, bleached by the years that
have over him flown,
His silver locks brightly
are gleaming;
“Sweet harmony sleeps in the
golden strings,
The minstrel of true love reward
ever sings,
And adores what to virtue
has tended-
What the bosom may wish, what the
senses hold dear;
But say, what is worthy the emperor’s
ear
At this, of all feasts the
most splendid?”
“No restraint would I place
on the minstrel’s own choice,”
Speaks the monarch, a smile
on each feature;
“He obeys the swift hour’s
imperious voice,
Of a far greater lord is the
creature.
For, as through the air the storm-wind
on-speeds,-
One knows not from whence its wild
roaring proceeds-
As the spring from hid sources
up-leaping,
So the lay of the bard from the
inner heart breaks
While the might of sensations unknown
it awakes,
That within us were wondrously
sleeping.”
Then the bard swept the cords with
a finger of might,
Evoking their magical sighing:
“To the chase once rode forth
a valorous knight,
In pursuit of the antelope
flying.
His hunting-spear bearing, there
came in his train
His squire; and when o’er
a wide-spreading plain
On his stately steed he was
riding,
He heard in the distance a bell
tinkling clear,
And a priest, with the Host, he
saw soon drawing near,
While before him the sexton
was striding.”
“And low to the earth the
Count then inclined,
Bared his head in humble submission,
To honor, with trusting and Christian-like
mind,
What had saved the whole world
from perdition.
But a brook o’er the plain
was pursuing its course,
That swelled by the mountain stream’s
headlong force,
Barred the wanderer’s
steps with its current;
So the priest on one side the blest
sacrament put,
And his sandal with nimbleness drew
from his foot,
That he safely might pass
through the torrent.”
“‘What wouldst thou?’
the Count to him thus began,
His wondering look toward
him turning:
’My journey is, lord, to a
dying man,
Who for heavenly diet is yearning;
But when to the bridge o’er
the brook I came nigh,
In the whirl of the stream, as it
madly rushed by
With furious might ’twas
uprooted.
And so, that the sick the salvation
may find
That he pants for, I hasten with
resolute mind
To wade through the waters
barefooted.’”
“Then the Count made him mount
on his stately steed,
And the reins to his hands
he confided,
That he duly might comfort the sick
in his need,
And that each holy rite be
provided.
And himself, on the back of the
steed of his squire,
Went after the chase to his heart’s
full desire,
While the priest on his journey
was speeding
And the following morning, with
thankful look,
To the Count once again his charger
he took,
Its bridle with modesty leading.”
“‘God forbid that in
chase or in battle,’ then cried
The Count with humility lowly,
’The steed I henceforward
should dare to bestride
That had borne my Creator
so holy!
And if, as a guerdon, he may not
be thine,
He devoted shall be to the service
divine,
Proclaiming His infinite merit,
From whom I each honor and earthly
good
Have received in fee, and my body
and blood,
And my breath, and my life,
and my spirit.’”
“’Then may God, the
sure rock, whom no time can e’er move,
And who lists to the weak’s
supplication,
For the honor thou pay’st
Him, permit thee to prove
Honor here, and hereafter
salvation!
Thou’rt a powerful Count,
and thy knightly command
Hath blazoned thy fame through the
Switzer’s broad land;
Thou art blest with six daughters
admired;
May they each in thy house introduce
a bright crown,
Filling ages unborn with their glorious
renown’-
Thus exclaimed he in accents
inspired.”
And the emperor sat there all-thoughtfully,
While the dream of the past
stood before him;
And when on the minstrel he turned
his eye,
His words’ hidden meaning
stole o’er him;
For seeing the traits of the priest
there revealed,
In the folds of his purple-dyed
robe he concealed
His tears as they swiftly
coursed down.
And all on the emperor wonderingly
gazed,
And the blest dispensations of Providence
praised,
For the Count and the Cæsar
were one.
THE FORUM OF WOMAN
Woman, never judge man by his individual
actions;
But upon man as a whole, pass thy
decisive decree.
THE GLOVE
A
tale.
Before his lion-court,
Impatient for the sport,
King Francis sat one day;
The peers of his realm sat around,
And in balcony high from the ground
Sat the ladies in beauteous
array.
And when with his finger he beckoned,
The gate opened wide in a second,-
And in, with deliberate tread,
Enters a lion dread,
And looks around
Yet utters no sound;
Then long he yawns
And shakes his mane,
And, stretching each limb,
Down lies he again.
Again signs the king,-
The next gate open flies,
And, lo! with a wild spring,
A tiger out hies.
When the lion he sees, loudly roars
he about,
And a terrible circle his tail traces
out.
Protruding his tongue, past the
lion he walks,
And, snarling with rage, round him
warily stalks:
Then, growling anew,
On one side lies down too.
Again signs the king,-
And two gates open fly,
And, lo! with one spring,
Two leopards out hie.
On the tiger they rush, for the
fight nothing loth,
But he with his paws seizes hold
of them both.
And the lion, with roaring, gets
up,-then all’s still;
The fierce beasts stalk around,
madly thirsting to kill.
From the balcony raised high above
A fair hand lets fall down a glove
Into the lists, where ’tis
seen
The lion and tiger between.
To the knight, Sir Delorges, in
tone of jest,
Then speaks young Cunigund
fair;
“Sir Knight, if the love that
thou feel’st in thy breast
Is as warm as thou’rt
wont at each moment to swear,
Pick up, I pray thee, the
glove that lies there!”
And the knight, in a moment, with
dauntless tread,
Jumps into the lists, nor
seeks to linger,
And, from out the midst of those
monsters dread,
Picks up the glove with a
daring finger.
And the knights and ladies of high
degree
With wonder and horror the action
see,
While he quietly brings in his hand
the glove,
The praise of his courage
each mouth employs;
Meanwhile, with a tender look of
love,
The promise to him of coming
joys,
Fair Cunigund welcomes him back
to his place.
But he threw the glove point-blank
in her face:
“Lady, no thanks from thee
I’ll receive!”
And that selfsame hour he took his
leave.
THE CIRCLE OF NATURE
All, thou gentle one, lies embraced
in thy kingdom; the graybeard
Back to the days of his youth, childish
and child-like, returns.
THE VEILED STATUE AT SAIS
A youth, impelled by a burning thirst
for knowledge
To roam to Sais, in fair Egypt’s
land,
The priesthood’s secret learning
to explore,
Had passed through many a grade
with eager haste,
And still was hurrying on with fond
impatience.
Scarce could the Hierophant impose
a rein
Upon his headlong efforts.
“What avails
A part without the whole?”
the youth exclaimed;
“Can there be here a lesser
or a greater?
The truth thou speak’st of,
like mere earthly dross,
Is’t but a sum that can be
held by man
In larger or in smaller quantity?
Surely ’tis changeless, indivisible;
Deprive a harmony of but one note,
Deprive the rainbow of one single
color,
And all that will remain is naught,
so long
As that one color, that one note,
is wanting.”
While thus they converse held, they
chanced to stand
Within the precincts of a lonely
temple,
Where a veiled statue of gigantic
size
The youth’s attention caught.
In wonderment
He turned him toward his guide,
and asked him, saying,
“What form is that concealed
beneath yon veil?”
“Truth!” was the answer.
“What!” the young man cried,
“When I am striving after
truth alone,
Seekest thou to hide that very truth
from me?”
“The Godhead’s self
alone can answer thee,”
Replied the Hierophant. “’Let
no rash mortal
Disturb this veil,’ said he,
’till raised by me;
For he who dares with sacrilegious
hand
To move the sacred mystic covering,
He’-said the Godhead-”
“Well?”-“‘will see
the truth.’”
“Strangely oracular, indeed!
And thou
Hast never ventured, then, to raise
the veil?”
“I? Truly not! I
never even felt
The least desire.”-“Is’t
possible? If I
Were severed from the truth by nothing
else
Than this thin gauze-”
“And a divine decree,”
His guide broke in. “Far
heavier than thou thinkest
Is this thin gauze, my son.
Light to thy hand
It may be-but most weighty
to thy conscience.”
The youth now sought his home, absorbed
in thought;
His burning wish to solve the mystery
Banished all sleep; upon his couch
he lay,
Tossing his feverish limbs.
When midnight came,
He rose, and toward the temple timidly,
Led by a mighty impulse, bent his
way.
The walls he scaled, and soon one
active spring
Landed the daring boy beneath the
dome.
Behold him now, in utter solitude,
Welcomed by naught save fearful,
deathlike silence,-
A silence which the echo of his
steps
Alone disturbs, as through the vaults
he paces.
Piercing an opening in the cupola,
The moon cast down her pale and
silvery beams,
And, awful as a present deity,
Glittering amid the darkness of
the pile,
In its long veil concealed, the
statue stands.
With hesitating step, he now draws
near-
His impious hand would fain remove
the veil-
Sudden a burning chill assails his
bones
And then an unseen arm repulses
him.
“Unhappy one, what wouldst
thou do?” Thus cries
A faithful voice within his trembling
breast.
“Wouldst thou profanely violate
the All-Holy?”
“’Tis true the oracle
declared, ’Let none
Venture to raise the veil till raised
by me.’
But did the oracle itself not add,
That he who did so would behold
the truth?
Whate’er is hid behind, I’ll
raise the veil.”
And then he shouted: “Yes!
I will behold it!”
“Behold
it!”
Repeats in mocking tone the distant
echo.
He speaks, and, with the word, lifts
up the veil.
Would you inquire what form there met his eye?
I know not,-but, when day appeared,
the priests
Found him extended senseless, pale as death,
Before the pedestal of Isis’ statue.
What had been seen and heard by him when there
He never would disclose, but from that hour
His happiness in life had fled forever,
And his deep sorrow soon conducted him
To an untimely grave. “Woe to that man,”
He warning said to every questioner,
“Woe to that man who wins the truth by guilt,
For truth so gained will ne’er reward its
owner.”
THE DIVISON OF THE EARTH
“Take the world!” Zeus
exclaimed from his throne in the skies
To the children of man-“take
the world I now give;
It shall ever remain as your heirloom
and prize,
So divide it as brothers,
and happily live.”
Then all who had hands sought their
share to obtain,
The young and the aged made
haste to appear;
The husbandman seized on the fruits
of the plain,
The youth through the forest
pursued the fleet deer.
The merchant took all that his warehouse
could hold,
The abbot selected the last
year’s best wine,
The king barred the bridges,-the
highways controlled,
And said, “Now remember,
the tithes shall be mine!”
But when the division long-settled
had been,
The poet drew nigh from a
far distant land;
But alas! not a remnant was now
to be seen,
Each thing on the earth owned
a master’s command.
“Alas! shall then I, of thy
sons the most true,-
Shall I, ’mongst them
all, be forgotten alone?”
Thus loudly he cried in his anguish,
and threw
Himself in despair before
Jupiter’s throne.
“If thou in the region of
dreams didst delay,
Complain not of me,”
the Immortal replied;
“When the world was apportioned,
where then wert thou, pray?”
“I was,” said
the poet, “I was-by thy side!”
“Mine eye was then fixed on
thy features so bright,
Mine ear was entranced by
thy harmony’s power;
Oh, pardon the spirit that, awed
by thy light,
All things of the earth could
forget in that hour!”
“What to do?” Zeus exclaimed,-“for
the world has been given;
The harvest, the market, the
chase, are not free;
But if thou with me wilt abide in
my heaven,
Whenever thou comest, ’twill
be open to thee!”
THE FAIREST APPARITION
If thou never hast gazed upon beauty
in moments of sorrow,
Thou canst with truth never
boast that thou true beauty hast seen.
If thou never hast gazed upon gladness
in beauteous features,
Thou canst with truth never
boast that thou true gladness hast seen.
THE IDEAL AND THE ACTUAL LIFE
Forever fair, forever calm and bright,
Life flies on plumage, zephyr-light,
For those who on the Olympian
hill rejoice-
Moons wane, and races wither to
the tomb,
And ’mid the universal ruin,
bloom
The rosy days of Gods-With
man, the choice,
Timid and anxious, hesitates between
The sense’s pleasure
and the soul’s content;
While on celestial brows, aloft
and sheen,
The beams of both are blent.
Seekest thou on earth the life of
gods to share,
Safe in the realm of death?-beware
To pluck the fruits that glitter
to thine eye;
Content thyself with gazing on their
glow-
Short are the joys possession can
bestow,
And in possession sweet desire
will die.
’Twas not the ninefold chain
of waves that bound
Thy daughter, Ceres, to the
Stygian river-
She plucked the fruit of the unholy
ground,
And so-was hell’s
forever!
The weavers of the web-the
fates-but sway
The matter and the things of clay;
Safe from change that time
to matter gives,
Nature’s blest playmate, free
at will to stray
With gods a god, amidst the fields
of day,
The form, the archetype ,
serenely lives.
Would’st thou soar heavenward
on its joyous wing?
Cast from thee, earth, the
bitter and the real,
High from this cramped and dungeon
being, spring
Into the realm of the ideal!
Here, bathed, perfection, in thy
purest ray,
Free from the clogs and taints of
clay,
Hovers divine the archetypal
man!
Dim as those phantom ghosts of life
that gleam
And wander voiceless by the Stygian
stream,-
Fair as it stands in fields
Elysian,
Ere down to flesh the immortal doth
descend:-
If doubtful ever in the actual
life
Each contest-here a victory
crowns the end
Of every nobler strife.
Not from the strife itself to set
thee free,
But more to nerve-doth
victory
Wave her rich garland from
the ideal clime.
Whate’er thy wish, the earth
has no repose-
Life still must drag thee onward
as it flows,
Whirling thee down the dancing
surge of time.
But when the courage sinks beneath
the dull
Sense of its narrow limits-on
the soul,
Bright from the hill-tops of the
beautiful,
Bursts the attained goal!
If worth thy while the glory and
the strife
Which fire the lists of actual life-
The ardent rush to fortune
or to fame,
In the hot field where strength
and valor are,
And rolls the whirling thunder of
the car,
And the world, breathless,
eyes the glorious game-
Then dare and strive-the
prize can but belong
To him whose valor o’er
his tribe prevails;
In life the victory only crowns
the strong-
He who is feeble fails.
But life, whose source, by crags
around it piled,
Chafed while confined, foams fierce
and wild,
Glides soft and smooth when
once its streams expand,
When its waves, glassing in their
silver play,
Aurora blent with Hesper’s
milder ray,
Gain the still beautiful-that
shadow-land!
Here, contest grows but interchange
of love,
All curb is but the bondage
of the grace;
Gone is each foe,-peace
folds her wings above
Her native dwelling-place.
When, through dead stone to breathe
a soul of light,
With the dull matter to unite
The kindling genius, some
great sculptor glows;
Behold him straining, every nerve
intent-
Behold how, o’er the subject
element,
The stately thought its march
laborious goes!
For never, save to toil untiring,
spoke
The unwilling truth from her
mysterious well-
The statue only to the chisel’s
stroke
Wakes from its marble cell.
But onward to the sphere of beauty-go
Onward, O child of art! and, lo!
Out of the matter which thy
pains control
The statue springs!-not
as with labor wrung
From the hard block, but as from
nothing sprung-
Airy and light-the
offspring of the soul!
The pangs, the cares, the weary
toils it cost
Leave not a trace when once
the work is done-
The Artist’s human frailty
merged and lost
In art’s great victory
won!
If human sin confronts the rigid
law
Of perfect truth and virtue ,
awe
Seizes and saddens thee to
see how far
Beyond thy reach, perfection;-if
we test
By the ideal of the good, the best,
How mean our efforts and our
actions are!
This space between the ideal of
man’s soul
And man’s achievement,
who hath ever past?
An ocean spreads between us and
that goal,
Where anchor ne’er was
cast!
But fly the boundary of the senses-live
The ideal life free thought can
give;
And, lo, the gulf shall vanish,
and the chill
Of the soul’s impotent despair
be gone!
And with divinity thou sharest the
throne,
Let but divinity become thy
will!
Scorn not the law-permit
its iron band
The sense (it cannot chain
the soul) to thrall.
Let man no more the will of Jove
withstand ,
And Jove the bolt lets fall!
If, in the woes of actual human
life-
If thou could’st see the serpent
strife
Which the Greek art has made
divine in stone-
Could’st see the writhing
limbs, the livid cheek,
Note every pang, and hearken every
shriek,
Of some despairing lost Laocoon,
The human nature would thyself subdue
To share the human woe before
thine eye-
Thy cheek would pale, and all thy
soul be true
To man’s great sympathy.
But in the ideal realm, aloof and
far,
Where the calm art’s pure
dwellers are,
Lo, the Laocoon writhes, but
does not groan.
Here, no sharp grief the high emotion
knows-
Here, suffering’s self is
made divine, and shows
The brave resolve of the firm
soul alone:
Here, lovely as the rainbow on the
dew
Of the spent thunder-cloud,
to art is given,
Gleaming through grief’s dark
veil, the peaceful blue
Of the sweet moral heaven.
So, in the glorious parable, behold
How, bowed to mortal bonds, of old
Life’s dreary path divine
Alcides trod:
The hydra and the lion were his
prey,
And to restore the friend he loved
to-day,
He went undaunted to the black-browed
god;
And all the torments and the labors
sore
Wroth Juno sent-the
meek majestic one,
With patient spirit and unquailing,
bore,
Until the course was run-
Until the god cast down his garb
of clay,
And rent in hallowing flame away
The mortal part from the divine-to
soar
To the empyreal air! Behold
him spring
Blithe in the pride of the unwonted
wing,
And the dull matter that confined
before
Sinks downward, downward, downward
as a dream!
Olympian hymns receive the
escaping soul,
And smiling Hebe, from the ambrosial
stream,
Fills for a god the bowl!
GERMANYAND HER PRINCES
Thou hast produced mighty monarchs,
of whom thou art not unworthy,
For the obedient alone make
him who governs them great.
But, O Germany, try if thou for
thy rulers canst make it
Harder as kings to be great,-easier,
though, to be men!
DANGEROUS CONSEQUENCES
Deeper and bolder truths be careful,
my friends, of avowing;
For as soon as ye do all the world
on ye will fall.
THE MAIDEN FROM AFAR
(Or from
abroad.)
Within a vale, each infant year,
When earliest larks first
carol free,
To humble shepherds cloth appear
A wondrous maiden, fair to
see.
Not born within that lowly place-
From whence she wandered,
none could tell;
Her parting footsteps left no trace,
When once the maiden sighed
farewell.
And blessed was her presence there-
Each heart, expanding, grew
more gay;
Yet something loftier still than
fair
Kept man’s familiar
looks away.
From fairy gardens, known to none,
She brought mysterious fruits
and flowers-
The things of some serener sun-
Some Nature more benign than
ours.
With each her gifts the maiden shared-
To some the fruits, the flowers
to some;
Alike the young, the aged fared;
Each bore a blessing back
to home.
Though every guest was welcome there,
Yet some the maiden held more
dear,
And culled her rarest sweets whene’er
She saw two hearts that loved
draw near.
THE HONORABLE
Ever honor the whole; individuals
only I honor;
In individuals I always discover the whole.
PARABLES AND RIDDLES
I.
A bridge of pearls its form uprears
High o’er a gray and
misty sea;
E’en in a moment it appears,
And rises upwards giddily.
Beneath its arch can find a road
The loftiest vessel’s
mast most high,
Itself hath never borne a load,
And seems, when thou draw’st
near, to fly.
It comes first with the stream,
and goes
Soon as the watery flood is
dried.
Where may be found this bridge,
disclose,
And who its beauteous form
supplied!
II.
It bears thee many a mile away,
And yet its place it changes
ne’er;
It has no pinions to display,
And yet conducts thee through
the air.
It is the bark of swiftest motion
That every weary wanderer bore;
With speed of thought the greatest ocean
It carries thee in safety o’er;
One moment wafts thee to the shore.
III.
Upon a spacious meadow play
Thousands of sheep, of silvery hue;
And as we see them move to-day,
The man most aged saw them too.
They ne’er grow old, and,
from a rill
That never dries, their life is drawn;
A shepherd watches o’er them still,
With curved and beauteous silver horn.
He drives them out through gates
of gold,
And every night their number
counts;
Yet ne’er has lost, of all
his fold,
One lamb, though oft that
path he mounts.
A hound attends him faithfully,
A nimble ram precedes the
way;
Canst thou point out that flock
to me,
And who the shepherd, canst
thou say?
IV.
There stands a dwelling, vast and
tall,
On unseen columns fair;
No wanderer treads or leaves its
hall,
And none can linger there.
Its wondrous structure first was
planned
With art no mortal knows;
It lights the lamps with its own
hand
’Mongst which it brightly
glows.
It has a roof, as crystal bright,
Formed of one gem of dazzling
light;
Yet mortal eye has ne’er
Seen Him who placed it there.
V.
Within a well two buckets lie,
One mounts, and one descends;
When one is full, and rises high,
The other downward wends.
They wander ever to and fro-
Now empty are, now overflow.
If to the mouth thou liftest this,
That hangs within the dark abyss.
In the same moment they can ne’er
Refresh thee with their treasures fair.
VI.
Know’st thou the form on tender
ground?
It gives itself its glow, its light;
And though each moment changing found.
Is ever whole and ever bright.
In narrow compass ’tis confined,
Within the smallest frame it lies;
Yet all things great that move thy mind,
That form alone to thee supplies.
And canst thou, too, the crystal
name?
No gem can equal it in worth;
It gleams, yet kindles near to flame,
It sucks in even all the earth.
Within its bright and wondrous ring
Is pictured forth the glow of heaven,
And yet it mirrors back each thing
Far fairer than to it ’twas given.
VII.
For ages an edifice here has been
found,
It is not a dwelling, it is not a Pane;
A horseman for hundreds of days may ride round,
Yet the end of his journey he ne’er can
attain.
Full many a century o’er it
has passed,
The might of the storm and of time it defies!
Neath the rainbow of Heaven stands free to the
last,-
In the ocean it dips, and soars up to the skies.
It was not vain glory that bade its erection,
It serves as a refuge, a shield, a protection;
Its like on the earth never yet has been known
And yet by man’s hand it is fashioned alone.
VIII.
Among all serpents there is one,
Born of no earthly breed;
In fury wild it stands alone,
And in its matchless speed.
With fearful voice and headlong
force
It rushes on its prey,
And sweeps the rider and his horse
In one fell swoop away.
The highest point it loves to gain;
And neither bar nor lock
Its fiery onslaught can restrain;
And arms-invite
its shock.
It tears in twain like tender grass,
The strongest forest-trees;
It grinds to dust the hardened brass,
Though stout and firm it be.
And yet this beast, that none can
tame,
Its threat ne’er twice
fulfils;
It dies in its self-kindled flame.
And dies e’en when it
kills.
IX.
We children six our being had
From a most strange and wondrous
pair,-
Our mother ever grave and sad,
Our father ever free from
care.
Our virtues we from both receive,-
Meekness from her, from him
our light;
And so in endless youth we weave
Round thee a circling figure
bright.
We ever shun the caverns black,
And revel in the glowing day;
’Tis we who light the world’s
dark track,
With our life’s clear
and magic ray.
Spring’s joyful harbingers
are we,
And her inspiring streams
we swell;
And so the house of death we flee,
For life alone must round
us dwell.
Without us is no perfect bliss,
When man is glad, we, too,
attend,
And when a monarch worshipped is,
To him our majesty attend.
X.
What is the thing esteemed by few?
The monarch’s hand it
decks with pride,
Yet it is made to injure too,
And to the sword is most allied.
No blood it sheds, yet many a wound
Inflicts,-gives
wealth, yet takes from none;
Has vanquished e’en the earth’s
wide round,
And makes life’s current
smoothly run.
The greatest kingdoms it has framed,
The oldest cities reared from
dust,
Yet war’s fierce torch has
ne’er inflamed;
Happy are they who in it trust!
XI.
I live within a dwelling of stone,
There buried in slumber I
dally;
Yet, armed with a weapon of iron
alone,
The foe to encounter I sally.
At first I’m invisible, feeble,
and mean,
And o’er me thy breath
has dominion;
I’m easily drowned in a raindrop
e’en,
Yet in victory waxes my pinion.
When my sister, all-powerful, gives
me her hand,
To the terrible lord of the world
I expand.
XII.
Upon a disk my course I trace,
There restlessly forever flit;
Small is the circuit I embrace,
Two hands suffice to cover it.
Yet ere that field I traverse, I
Full many a thousand mile must go,
E’en though with tempest-speed I fly,
Swifter than arrow from a bow.
XIII.
A bird it is, whose rapid motion
With eagle’s flight divides the air;
A fish it is, and parts the ocean,
That bore a greater monster ne’er;
An elephant it is, whose rider
On his broad back a tower has put:
’Tis like the reptile base, the spider,
Whenever it extends its foot;
And when, with iron tooth projecting,
It seeks its own life-blood to drain,
On footing firm, itself erecting,
It braves the raging hurricane.
THE VIRTUE OF WOMAN
Man of virtue has need;-into life
with boldness he plunges,
Entering with fortune more sure into the hazardous
strife;
But to woman one virtue suffices; it is ever shining
Lovingly forth to the heart; so let it shine to
the eye!
THE WALK
Hail to thee, mountain beloved, with
thy glittering purple-dyed summit!
Hail to thee also, fair sun, looking so lovingly
on!
Thee, too, I hail, thou smiling plain, and ye murmuring
lindens,
Ay, and the chorus so glad, cradled on yonder high
boughs;
Thee, too, peaceably azure, in infinite measure extending
Round the dusky-hued mount, over the forest so green,-
Round about me, who now from my chamber’s confinement
escaping,
And from vain frivolous talk, gladly seek refuge
with thee.
Through me to quicken me runs the balsamic stream
of thy breezes,
While the energetical light freshens the gaze as
it thirsts.
Bright o’er the blooming meadow the changeable
colors are gleaming,
But the strife, full of charms, in its own grace
melts away
Freely the plain receives me,-with carpet
far away reaching,
Over its friendly green wanders the pathway along.
Round me is humming the busy bee, and with pinion
uncertain
Hovers the butterfly gay over the trefoil’s
red flower.
Fiercely the darts of the sun fall on me,-the
zephyr is silent,
Only the song of the lark echoes athwart the clear
air.
Now from the neighboring copse comes a roar, and
the tops of the alders
Bend low down,-in the wind dances the
silvery grass;
Night ambrosial circles me round; in the coolness
so fragrant
Greets me a beauteous roof, formed by the beeches’
sweet shade.
In the depths of the wood the landscape suddenly
leaves me
And a serpentine path guides up my footsteps on
high.
Only by stealth can the light through the leafy trellis
of branches
Sparingly pierce, and the blue smilingly peeps through
the boughs,
But in a moment the veil is rent, and the opening
forest
Suddenly gives back the day’s glittering brightness
to me!
Boundlessly seems the distance before my gaze to
be stretching,
And in a purple-tinged hill terminates sweetly the
world.
Deep at the foot of the mountain, that under
me falls away steeply,
Wanders the greenish-hued stream, looking
like glass as it flows.
Endlessly under me see I the ether, and endlessly
o’er
Giddily look I above, shudderingly look
I below,
But between the infinite height and the infinite
hollow
Safely the wanderer moves over a well-guarded
path.
Smilingly past me are flying the banks all teeming
with riches,
And the valley so bright boasts of its
industry glad.
See how yonder hedgerows that sever the farmer’s
possessions
Have by Demeter been worked into the tapestried
plain!
Kindly decree of the law, of the Deity mortal-sustaining,
Since from the brazen world love vanished
forever away.
But in freer windings the measured pastures
are traversed
(Now swallowed up in the wood, now climbing
up to the hills)
By a glimmering streak, the highway that knits
lands together;
Over the smooth-flowing stream, quietly
glide on the rafts.
Ofttimes resound the bells of the flocks in
the fields that seem living,
And the shepherd’s lone song wakens
the echo again.
Joyous villages crown the stream, in the copse
others vanish,
While from the back of the mount, others
plunge wildly below.
Man still lives with the land in neighborly
friendship united,
And round his sheltering roof calmly repose
still his fields;
Trustingly climbs the vine high over the low-reaching
window,
While round the cottage the tree circles
its far-stretching boughs.
Happy race of the plain! Not yet awakened
to freedom,
Thou and thy pastures with joy share in
the limited law;
Bounded thy wishes all are by the harvest’s
peaceable circuit,
And thy lifetime is spent e’en as
the task of the day!
But what suddenly hides the beauteous view?
A strange spirit
Over the still-stranger plain spreads
itself quickly afar-
Coyly separates now, what scarce had lovingly
mingled,
And ’tis the like that alone joins
itself on to the like.
Orders I see depicted; the haughty tribes of
the poplars
Marshalled in regular pomp, stately and
beauteous appear.
All gives token of rule and choice, and all
has its meaning,-
’Tis this uniform plan points out
the Ruler to me.
Brightly the glittering domes in far-away distance
proclaim him.
Out of the kernel of rocks rises the city’s
high wall.
Into the desert without, the fauns of the forest
are driven,
But by devotion is lent life more sublime
to the stone.
Man is brought into nearer union with man, and
around him
Closer, more actively wakes, swifter moves
in him the world.
See! the emulous forces in fiery conflict are
kindled,
Much, they effect when they strive, more
they effect when they join.
Thousands of hands by one spirit are moved,
yet in thousands of bosoms
Beats one heart all alone, by but one
feeling inspired-
Beats for their native land, and glows for their
ancestors’ precepts;
Here on the well-beloved spot, rest now
time-honored bones.
Down from the heavens descends the blessed troop
of immortals,
In the bright circle divine making their
festal abode;
Granting glorious gifts, they appear: and
first of all, Ceres
Offers the gift of the plough, Hermes
the anchor brings next,
Bacchus the grape, and Minerva the verdant olive-tree’s
branches,
Even his charger of war brings there Poseidon
as well.
Mother Cybele yokes to the pole of her chariot
the lions,
And through the wide-open door comes as
a citizen in.
Sacred stones! ’Tis from ye that
proceed humanity’s founders,
Morals and arts ye sent forth, e’en
to the ocean’s far isles.
’Twas at these friendly gates that the
law was spoken by sages;
In their Penates’ defence, heroes
rushed out to the fray.
On the high walls appeared the mothers, embracing
their infants,
Looking after the march, till the distance
’twas lost.
Then in prayer they threw themselves down at
the deities’ altars,
Praying for triumph and fame, praying
for your safe return.
Honor and triumph were yours, but naught returned
save your glory,
And by a heart-touching stone, told are
your valorous deeds.
“Traveller! when thou com’st to
Sparta, proclaim to the people
That thou hast seen us lie here, as by
the law we were bid.”
Slumber calmly, ye loved ones! for sprinkled
o’er by your life-blood,
Flourish the olive-trees there, joyously
sprouts the good seed.
In its possessions exulting, industry gladly
is kindled.
And from the sedge of the stream smilingly
signs the blue god.
Crushingly falls the axe on the tree, the Dryad
sighs sadly;
Down from the crest of the mount plunges
the thundering load.
Winged by the lever, the stone from the rocky
crevice is loosened;
Into the mountain’s abyss boldly
the miner descends.
Mulciber’s anvil resounds with the measured
stroke of the hammer;
Under the fist’s nervous blow, spurt
out the sparks of the steel.
Brilliantly twines the golden flax round the
swift-whirling spindles,
Through the strings of the yarn whizzes
the shuttle away.
Far in the roads the pilot calls, and the vessels
are waiting,
That to the foreigner’s land carry
the produce of home;
Others gladly approach with the treasures of
far-distant regions,
High on the mast’s lofty head flutters
the garland of mirth.
See how yon markets, those centres of life and
of gladness, are swarming!
Strange confusion of tongues sounds in
the wondering ear.
On to the pile the wealth of the earth is heaped
by the merchant,
All that the sun’s scorching rays
bring forth on Africa’s soil,
All that Arabia prepares, that the uttermost
Thule produces,
High with heart-gladdening stores fills
Amalthea her horn.
Fortune wedded to talent gives birth there to
children immortal,
Suckled in liberty’s arms, flourish
the arts there of joy.
With the image of life the eyes by the sculptor
are ravished,
And by the chisel inspired, speaks e’en
the sensitive stone.
Skies artificial repose on slender Ionian columns,
And a Pantheon includes all that Olympus
contains.
Light as the rainbow’s spring through
the air, as the dart from
the
bowstring,
Leaps the yoke of the bridge over the
boisterous stream.
But in his silent chamber the thoughtful
sage is projecting
Magical circles, and steals e’en on the spirit
that forms,
Proves the force of matter, the hatreds and loves
of the magnet,
Follows the tune through the air, follows through
ether the ray,
Seeks the familiar law in chance’s miracles
dreaded,
Looks for the ne’er-changing pole in the phenomena’s
flight.
Bodies and voices are lent by writing to thought
ever silent,
Over the centuries’ stream bears it the eloquent
page.
Then to the wondering gaze dissolves the cloud of
the fancy,
And the vain phantoms of night yield to the dawning
of day.
Man now breaks through his fetters, the happy one!
Oh, let him never
Break from the bridle of shame, when from fear’s
fetters he breaks
Freedom! is reason’s cry,-ay, freedom!
The wild raging passions
Eagerly cast off the bonds Nature divine had imposed.
Ah! in the tempest the anchors break loose,
that warningly held him
On to the shore, and the stream tears
him along in its flood,-
Into infinity whirls him,-the coasts
soon vanish before him,
High on the mountainous waves rocks all-dismasted
the bark;
Under the clouds are hid the steadfast stars
of the chariot,
Naught now remains,-in the
breast even the god goes astray.
Truth disappears from language, from life all
faith and all honor
Vanish, and even the oath is but a lie
on the lips.
Into the heart’s most trusty bond, and
into love’s secrets,
Presses the sycophant base, tearing the
friend from the friend.
Treason on innocence leers, with looks that
seek to devour,
And the fell slanderer’s tooth kills
with its poisonous bite.
In the dishonored bosom, thought is now venal,
and love, too,
Scatters abroad to the winds, feelings
once god-like and free.
All thy holy symbols, O truth, deceit has adopted,
And has e’en dared to pollute Nature’s
own voices so fair,
That the craving heart in the tumult of gladness
discovers;
True sensations are now mute and can scarcely
be heard.
Justice boasts at the tribune, and harmony vaunts
in the cottage,
While the ghost of the law stands at the
throne of the king.
Years together, ay, centuries long, may the
mummy continue,
And the deception endure, apeing the fulness
of life.
Until Nature awakes, and with hands all-brazen
and heavy
’Gainst the hollow-formed pile time
and necessity strikes.
Like a tigress, who, bursting the massive grating
iron,
Of her Numidian wood suddenly, fearfully
thinks,-
So with the fury of crime and anguish, humanity
rises
Hoping nature, long-lost in the town’s
ashes, to find.
Oh then open, ye walls, and set the captive
at freedom
To the long desolate plains let him in
safety return!
But where am I? The path is now hid, declivities
rugged
Bar, with their wide-yawning gulfs, progress
before and behind.
Now far behind me is left the gardens’
and hedges’ sure escort,
Every trace of man’s hand also remains
far behind.
Only the matter I see piled up, whence life
has its issue,
And the raw mass of basalt waits for a
fashioning hand.
Down through its channel of rock the torrent
roaringly rushes,
Angrily forcing a path under the roots
of the trees.
All is here wild and fearfully desolate.
Naught but the eagle
Hangs in the lone realms of air, knitting
the world to the clouds.
Not one zephyr on soaring pinion conveys to
my hearing
Echoes, however remote, marking man’s
pleasures and pains.
Am I in truth, then, alone? Within thine
arms, on thy bosom,
Nature, I lie once again!-Ah,
and ’twas only a dream
That assailed me with horrors so fearful; with
life’s dreaded phantom,
And with the down-rushing vale, vanished
the gloomy one too.
Purer my life I receive again from thine altar
unsullied,-
Purer receive the bright glow felt by
my youth’s hopeful days.
Ever the will is changing its aim and its rule,
while forever,
In a still varying form, actions revolve
round themselves.
But in enduring youth, in beauty ever renewing.
Kindly Nature, with grace thou dost revere
the old law!
Ever the same, for the man in thy faithful hands
thou preservest
That which the child in its sport, that
which the youth lent to thee;
At the same breast thou dost suckle the ceaselessly-varying
ages;
Under the same azure vault, over the same
verdant earth,
Races, near and remote, in harmony wander together,
See, even Homer’s own sun looks
on us, too, with a smile!
THE LAY OF THE BELL
“Vivos voco-Mortuos
plango-Fulgura frango.”
Fast, in its prison-walls
of earth,
Awaits the mould
of baked clay.
Up, comrades, up, and
aid the birth
The bell that
shall be born to-day!
Who
would honor obtain,
With
the sweat and the pain,
The praise that man gives to the
master must buy.-
But the blessing withal must descend
from on high!
And well an earnest
word beseems
The work the earnest
hand prepares;
Its load more light
the labor deems,
When sweet discourse
the labor shares.
So let us ponder-nor
in vain-
What strength
can work when labor wills;
For who would not the
fool disdain
Who ne’er
designs what he fulfils?
And well it stamps our
human race,
And hence the
gift to understand,
That man within the
heart should trace
Whate’er
he fashions with the hand.
From the fir the fagot
take,
Keep it, heap
it hard and dry,
That the gathered flame
may break
Through the furnace,
wroth and high.
When
the copper within
Seeths
and simmers-the tin,
Pour quick, that the fluid that
feeds the bell
May flow in the right course glib
and well.
Deep hid within this
nether cell,
What force with
fire is moulding thus,
In yonder airy tower
shall dwell,
And witness wide
and far of us!
It shall, in later days,
unfailing,
Rouse many an
ear to rapt emotion;
Its solemn voice with
sorrow wailing,
Or choral chiming
to devotion.
Whatever fate to man
may bring,
Whatever weal
or woe befall,
That metal tongue shall
backward ring,
The warning moral
drawn from all.
See the silvery bubbles
spring!
Good! the mass
is melting now!
Let the salts we duly
bring
Purge the flood,
and speed the flow.
From
the dross and the scum,
Pure,
the fusion must come;
For perfect and pure we the metal
must keep,
That its voice may be perfect, and
pure, and deep.
That voice, with merry
music rife,
The cherished
child shall welcome in;
What time the rosy dreams
of life,
In the first slumber’s
arms begin.
As yet, in Time’s
dark womb unwarning,
Repose the days,
or foul or fair;
And watchful o’er
that golden morning,
The mother-love’s
untiring care!
And swift the years
like arrows fly
No more with girls content
to play,
Bounds the proud boy
upon his way,
Storms through loud
life’s tumultuous pleasures,
With pilgrim staff the
wide world measures;
And, wearied with the
wish to roam,
Again seeks, stranger-like,
the father-home.
And, lo, as some sweet
vision breaks
Out from its native
morning skies
With rosy shame on downcast
cheeks,
The virgin stands
before his eyes.
A nameless longing seizes
him!
From all his wild
compassions flown;
Tears, strange till
then, his eyes bedim;
He wanders all
alone.
Blushing, he glides
where’er she move;
Her greeting can
transport him;
To every mead to deck
his love,
The happy wild
flowers court him!
Sweet hope-and
tender longing-ye
The growth of
life’s first age of gold;
When the heart, swelling,
seems to see
The gates of heaven
unfold!
O love, the beautiful and brief!
O prime,
Glory, and verdure, of life’s
summer time!
Browning o’er,
the pipes are simmering,
Dip this wand
of clay within;
If like glass the wand
be glimmering,
Then the casting
may begin.
Brisk,
brisk now, and see
If
the fusion flow free;
If-(happy and welcome
indeed were the sign!)
If the hard and the ductile united
combine.
For still where the strong is betrothed
to the weak,
And the stern in sweet marriage
is blent with the meek,
Rings the concord harmonious,
both tender and strong
So be it with thee, if forever united,
The heart to the heart flows in
one, love-delighted;
Illusion is brief, but repentance
is long.
Lovely, thither are
they bringing.
With the virgin
wreath, the bride!
To the love-feast clearly
ringing,
Tolls the church-bell
far and wide!
With that sweetest holiday,
Must the May of
life depart;
With the cestus loosed-away
Flies illusion from the heart!
Yet love lingers lonely,
When passion is
mute,
And the blossoms may
only
Give way to the
fruit.
The husband must enter
The hostile life,
With struggle
and strife
To plant or to
watch.
To snare or to
snatch,
To pray and importune,
Must wager and venture
And hunt down
his fortune!
Then flows in a current the gear
and the gain,
And the garners are filled with
the gold of the grain,
Now a yard to the court, now a wing
to the centre!
Within sits
another,
The
thrifty housewife;
The mild
one, the mother-
Her
home is her life.
In its circle
she rules,
And the
daughters she schools
And
she cautions the boys,
With a bustling
command,
And a diligent
hand
Employed
she employs;
Gives order
to store,
And the
much makes the more;
Locks the chest and the wardrobe,
with lavender smelling,
And the hum of the spindle goes
quick through the dwelling;
And she hoards in the presses, well
polished and full,
The snow of the linen, the shine
of the wool;
Blends the sweet with the good,
and from care and endeavor
Rests never!
Blithe the master (where
the while
From his roof he sees
them smile)
Eyes the lands,
and counts the gain;
There, the beams projecting
far,
And the laden storehouse
are,
And the granaries bowed
beneath
The blessed golden
grain;
There, in undulating
motion,
Wave the cornfields
like an ocean.
Proud the boast the
proud lips breathe:-
“My house is built
upon a rock,
And sees unmoved the
stormy shock
Of waves that
fret below!”
What chain so strong,
what girth so great,
To bind the giant form
of fate?-
Swift are the
steps of woe.
Now the casting may
begin;
See the breach
indented there:
Ere we run the fusion
in,
Halt-and
speed the pious prayer!
Pull
the bung out-
See
around and about
What vapor, what vapor-God
help us!-has risen?-
Ha! the flame like a torrent leaps
forth from its prison!
What friend is like the might of
fire
When man can watch and wield the
ire?
Whate’er we shape or work,
we owe
Still to that heaven-descended glow.
But dread the heaven-descended glow,
When from their chain its wild wings
go,
When, where it listeth, wide and
wild
Sweeps free Nature’s free-born
child.
When the frantic one fleets,
While no force can withstand,
Through the populous streets
Whirling ghastly the brand;
For the element hates
What man’s labor creates,
And the work of his hand!
Impartially out from the cloud,
Or the curse or the blessing
may fall!
Benignantly out from the cloud
Come the dews, the revivers
of all!
Avengingly out from the cloud
Come the levin, the bolt,
and the ball!
Hark-a wail from the
steeple!-aloud
The bell shrills its voice to the
crowd!
Look-look-red
as blood
All
on high!
It is not the daylight that fills
with its flood
The
sky!
What a clamor awaking
Roars up through the street,
What a hell-vapor breaking.
Rolls on through the street,
And higher and higher
Aloft moves the column of fire!
Through the vistas and rows
Like a whirlwind it goes,
And the air like the stream from
the furnace glows.
Beams are crackling-posts
are shrinking
Walls are sinking-windows
clinking-
Children
crying-
Mothers
flying-
And the beast (the black ruin yet
smouldering under)
Yells the howl of its pain and its
ghastly wonder!
Hurry and skurry-away-away,
The face of the night is as clear
as day!
As
the links in a chain,
Again
and again
Flies the bucket from hand to hand;
High
in arches up-rushing
The
engines are gushing,
And the flood, as a beast on the
prey that it hounds
With a roar on the breast of the
element bounds.
To
the grain and the fruits,
Through
the rafters and beams,
Through the barns and garners it
crackles and streams!
As if they would rend up the earth
from its roots,
Rush
the flames to the sky
Giant-high;
And at length,
Wearied out and despairing, man
bows to their strength!
With an idle gaze sees their wrath
consume,
And submits to his doom!
Desolate
The place, and dread
For storms the barren bed.
In the blank voids that cheerful
casements were,
Comes to and fro the melancholy
air,
And sits despair;
And through the ruin, blackening
in its shroud
Peers, as it flits, the melancholy
cloud.
One human glance of grief upon the
grave
Of all that fortune gave
The loiterer takes-then
turns him to depart,
And grasps the wanderer’s
staff and mans his heart
Whatever else the element bereaves
One blessing more than all it reft-it
leaves,
The faces that he loves!-He
counts them o’er,
See-not one look is missing
from that store!
Now clasped the bell within the
clay-
The mould the mingled metals
fill-
Oh, may it, sparkling into day,
Reward the labor and the skill!
Alas!
should it fail,
For
the mould may be frail-
And still with our hope must be
mingled the fear-
And, ev’n now, while we speak,
the mishap may be near!
To the dark womb of sacred earth
This labor of our hands is
given,
As seeds that wait the second birth,
And turn to blessings watched
by heaven!
Ah, seeds, how dearer far than they,
We bury in the dismal tomb,
Where hope and sorrow bend to pray
That suns beyond the realm of day
May warm them into bloom!
From the steeple
Tolls the bell,
Deep and heavy,
The death-knell!
Guiding with dirge-note-solemn, sad,
and slow,
To the last home earth’s weary wanderers
know.
It is that worshipped wife-
It is that faithful mother!
Whom the dark prince of shadows leads benighted,
From that dear arm where oft she hung delighted
Far from those blithe companions, born
Of her, and blooming in their morn;
On whom, when couched her heart above,
So often looked the mother-love!
Ah! rent the sweet home’s
union-band,
And never, never more to come-
She dwells within the shadowy land,
Who was the mother of that
home!
How oft they miss that tender guide,
The care-the watch-the
face-the mother-
And where she sate the babes beside,
Sits with unloving looks-another!
While the mass
is cooling now,
Let the
labor yield to leisure,
As the bird upon
the bough,
Loose the
travail to the pleasure.
When the soft
stars awaken,
Each task be forsaken!
And the vesper-bell lulling the
earth into peace,
If the master still toil, chimes
the workman’s release!
Homeward from the tasks of
day,
Through the greenwood’s
welcome way
Wends the wanderer, blithe
and cheerly,
To the cottage loved so dearly!
And the eye and ear are meeting,
Now, the slow sheep homeward
bleating-
Now, the wonted shelter near,
Lowing the lusty-fronted steer;
Creaking now the heavy wain,
Reels with the happy harvest
grain.
While with many-colored leaves,
Glitters the garland on the
sheaves;
For the mower’s work
is done,
And the young folks’
dance begun!
Desert street, and quiet mart;-
Silence is in the city’s
heart;
And the social taper lighteth;
Each dear face that home uniteth;
While the gate the town before
Heavily swings with sullen
roar!
Though darkness is spreading
O’er earth-the
upright
And the honest, undreading,
Look safe on the
night-
Which the evil man watches
in awe,
For the eye of the night
is the law!
Bliss-dowered!
O daughter of the skies,
Hail, holy order, whose
employ
Blends like to like
in light and joy-
Builder of cities, who
of old
Called the wild man
from waste and wold.
And, in his hut thy
presence stealing,
Roused each familiar
household feeling;
And, best of all
the happy ties,
The centre of the social
band,-
The instinct of the
Fatherland!
United thus-each helping
each,
Brisk work the countless hands
forever;
For naught its power to strength
can teach,
Like emulation and endeavor!
Thus linked the master with the
man,
Each in his rights can each
revere,
And while they march in freedom’s
van,
Scorn the lewd rout that dogs
the rear!
To freemen labor is renown!
Who works-gives
blessings and commands;
Kings glory in the orb and crown-
Be ours the glory of our hands.
Long in these walls-long
may we greet
Your footfalls, peace and concord
sweet!
Distant the day, oh! distant far,
When the rude hordes of trampling
war
Shall scare the silent vale;
And where,
Now the sweet heaven,
when day doth leave
The air,
Limns its soft rose-hues
on the veil of eve;
Shall the fierce war-brand
tossing in the gale,
From town and hamlet shake the horrent
glare!
Now, its destined task
fulfilled,
Asunder break
the prison-mould;
Let the goodly bell
we build,
Eye and heart
alike behold.
The
hammer down heave,
Till
the cover it cleave:-
For not till we shatter the wall
of its cell
Can we lift from its darkness and
bondage the bell.
To break the mould, the master
may,
If skilled the hand
and ripe the hour;
But woe, when on its fiery
way
The metal seeks itself
to pour.
Frantic and blind, with thunder-knell,
Exploding from its shattered
home,
And glaring forth, as from
a hell,
Behold the red destruction
come!
When rages strength that has
no reason,
There breaks the mould before
the season;
When numbers burst what bound
before,
Woe to the state that thrives
no more!
Yea, woe, when in the city’s
heart,
The latent spark to
flame is blown;
And millions from their silence
start,
To claim, without a
guide, their own!
Discordant howls the warning
bell,
Proclaiming discord
wide and far,
And, born but things of peace
to tell,
Becomes the ghastliest
voice of war:
“Freedom! Equality!”-to
blood
Rush the roused people
at the sound!
Through street, hall, palace,
roars the flood,
And banded murder closes
round!
The hyena-shapes (that women
were!),
Jest with the horrors
they survey;
They hound-they
rend-they mangle there-
As panthers with their
prey!
Naught rests to hollow-burst
the ties
Of life’s sublime
and reverent awe;
Before the vice the virtue
flies,
And universal crime
is law!
Man fears the lion’s
kingly tread;
Man fears the tiger’s
fangs of terror;
And still the dreadliest of
the dread,
Is man himself in error!
No torch, though lit from
heaven, illumes
The blind!-Why
place it in his hand?
It lights not him-it
but consumes
The city and the land!
Rejoice and laud the
prospering skies!
The kernel bursts
its husk-behold
From the dull clay the
metal rise,
Pure-shining,
as a star of gold!
Neck
and lip, but as one beam,
It
laughs like a sunbeam.
And even the scutcheon, clear-graven,
shall tell
That the art of a master has fashioned
the bell!
Come in-come in
My merry men-we’ll
form a ring
The new-born labor christening;
And “Concord”
we will name her!-
To union may her heartfelt
call
In brother-love attune us
all!
May she the destined glory win
For which the master
sought to frame her-
Aloft-(all earth’s
existence under),
In blue-pavillioned heaven
afar
To dwell-the neighbor
of the thunder,
The borderer of the star!
Be hers above a voice to rise
Like those bright hosts in
yonder sphere,
Who, while they move, their Maker
praise,
And lead around the wreathed
year!
To solemn and eternal things
We dedicate her lips sublime!-
As hourly, calmly, on she swings
Fanned by the fleeting wings
of time!-
No pulse-no heart-no
feeling hers!
She lends the warning voice
to fate;
And still companions, while she
stirs,
The changes of the human state!
So may she teach us, as her tone
But now so mighty, melts away-
That earth no life which earth has
known
From the last silence can
delay!
Slowly now the cords
upheave her!
From her earth-grave
soars the bell;
Mid the airs of heaven
we leave her!
In the music-realm
to dwell!
Up-upwards
yet raise-
She
has risen-she sways.
Fair bell to our city bode joy and
increase,
And oh, may thy first sound be hallowed
to peace!
THE POWER OF SONG
The foaming stream from out the
rock
With thunder roar begins to
rush,-
The oak falls prostrate at the shock,
And mountain-wrecks attend
the gush.
With rapturous awe, in wonder lost,
The wanderer hearkens to the
sound;
From cliff to cliff he hears it
tossed,
Yet knows not whither it is
bound:
’Tis thus that song’s
bright waters pour
From sources never known before.
In union with those dreaded ones
That spin life’s thread
all-silently,
Who can resist the singer’s
tones?
Who from his magic set him
free?
With wand like that the gods bestow,
He guides the heaving bosom’s
chords,
He steeps it in the realms below,
He bears it, wondering, heavenward,
And rocks it, ’twixt the grave
and gay,
On feeling’s scales that trembling
sway.
As when before the startled eyes
Of some glad throng, mysteriously,
With giant-step, in spirit-guise,
Appears a wondrous deity,
Then bows each greatness of the
earth
Before the stranger heaven-born,
Mute are the thoughtless sounds
of mirth,
While from each face the mask
is torn,
And from the truth’s triumphant
might
Each work of falsehood takes to
flight.
So from each idle burden free,
When summoned by the voice
of song,
Man soars to spirit-dignity,
Receiving force divinely strong:
Among the gods is now his home,
Naught earthly ventures to
approach-
All other powers must now be dumb,
No fate can on his realms
encroach;
Care’s gloomy wrinkles disappear,
Whilst music’s charms still
linger here,
As after long and hopeless yearning,
And separation’s bitter
smart,
A child, with tears repentant burning,
Clings fondly to his mother’s
heart-
So to his youthful happy dwelling,
To rapture pure and free from
stain,
All strange and false conceits expelling,
Song guides the wanderer back
again,
In faithful Nature’s loving
arm,
From chilling precepts to grow warm.
TO PROSELYTIZERS
“Give me only a fragment of
earth beyond the earth’s limits,”-
So the godlike man said,-“and
I will move it with ease.”
Only give me permission to leave
myself for one moment,
And without any delay I will
engage to be yours.
HONORTO WOMAN
[Literally “Dignity
of Women.”]
Honor to woman! To her it is
given
To garden the earth with the roses
of heaven!
All blessed, she linketh the
loves in their choir
In the veil of the graces her beauty
concealing,
She tends on each altar that’s
hallowed to feeling,
And keeps ever-living the
fire!
From the bounds of truth careering,
Man’s strong spirit
wildly sweeps,
With each hasty impulse veering
Down to passion’s troubled
deeps.
And his heart, contented never,
Greeds to grapple with the
far,
Chasing his own dream forever,
On through many a distant
star!
But woman with looks that can charm
and enchain,
Lureth back at her beck the wild
truant again,
By the spell of her presence
beguiled-
In the home of the mother her modest
abode,
And modest the manners by Nature
bestowed
On Nature’s most exquisite
child!
Bruised and worn, but fiercely breasting,
Foe to foe, the angry strife;
Man, the wild one, never resting,
Roams along the troubled life;
What he planneth, still pursuing;
Vainly as the Hydra bleeds,
Crest the severed crest renewing-
Wish to withered wish succeeds.
But woman at peace with all being,
reposes,
And seeks from the moment to gather
the roses-
Whose sweets to her culture
belong.
Ah! richer than he, though his soul
reigneth o’er
The mighty dominion of genius and
lore,
And the infinite circle of
song.
Strong, and proud, and self-depending,
Man’s cold bosom beats
alone;
Heart with heart divinely blending,
In the love that gods have
known,
Soul’s sweet interchange of
feeling,
Melting tears-he
never knows,
Each hard sense the hard one steeling,
Arms against a world of foes.
Alive, as the wind-harp, how lightly
soever
If wooed by the zephyr, to music
will quiver,
Is woman to hope and to fear;
All, tender one! still at the shadow
of grieving,
How quiver the chords-how
thy bosom is heaving-
How trembles thy glance through
the tear!
Man’s dominion, war and labor;
Might to right the statue
gave;
Laws are in the Scythian’s
sabre;
Where the Mede reigned-see
the slave!
Peace and meekness grimly routing,
Prowls the war-lust, rude
and wild;
Eris rages, hoarsely shouting,
Where the vanished graces
smiled.
But woman, the soft one, persuasively
prayeth-
Of the life that she charmeth,
the sceptre she swayeth;
She lulls, as she looks from
above,
The discord whose bell for its victims
is gaping,
And blending awhile the forever
escaping,
Whispers hate to the image
of love!
HOPE
We speak with the lip, and we dream
in the soul,
Of some better and fairer
day;
And our days, the meanwhile, to
that golden goal
Are gliding and sliding away.
Now the world becomes old, now again
it is young,
But “The better” ’s
forever the word on the tongue.
At the threshold of life hope leads
us in-
Hope plays round the mirthful
boy;
Though the best of its charms may
with youth begin,
Yet for age it reserves its
toy.
THE GERMAN ART
By no kind Augustus reared,
To no Medici endeared,
German art arose;
Fostering glory smiled not on her,
Ne’er with kingly smiles to
sun her,
Did her blooms unclose.
No,-she went by monarchs
slighted
Went unhonored, unrequited,
From high Frederick’s
throne;
Praise and pride be all the greater,
That man’s genius did create
her,
From man’s worth alone.
Therefore, all from loftier mountains,
Purer wells and richer fountains,
Streams our poet-art;
So no rule to curb its rushing-
All the fuller flows it gushing
From its deep-the
heart!
ODYSSEUS
Seeking to find his home, Odysseus
crosses each water;
Through Charybdis so dread;
ay, and through Scylla’s wild yells,
Through the alarms of the raging
sea, the alarms of the land too,-
E’en to the kingdom
of hell leads him his wandering course.
And at length, as he sleeps, to
Ithaca’s coast fate conducts him;
There he awakes, and, with
grief, knows not his fatherland now.
CARTHAGE
Oh thou degenerate child of the great and glorious
mother,
Who with the Romans’ strong might couplest
the Tyrians’ deceit!
But those ever governed with vigor the earth they
had conquered,-
These instructed the world that they with cunning
had won.
Say! what renown does history grant thee? Thou,
Roman-like, gained’st
That with the steel, which with gold, Tyrian-like,
then thou didst rule!
THE SOWER
Sure of the spring that warms them
into birth,
The golden seeds thou trustest to
the earth;
And dost thou doubt the eternal
spring sublime,
For deeds-the seeds which
wisdom sows in time.
THE KNIGHTS OF ST.JOHN
Oh, nobly shone the fearful cross upon your
mail afar,
When Rhodes and Acre hailed your might, O lions
of the war!
When leading many a pilgrim horde, through wastes
of Syrian gloom;
Or standing with the cherub’s sword before
the holy tomb.
Yet on your forms the apron seemed a nobler
armor far,
When by the sick man’s bed ye stood, O
lions of the war!
When ye, the high-born, bowed your pride to
tend the lowly weakness,
The duty, though it brought no fame, fulfilled
by Christian meekness-
Religion of the cross, thou blend’st,
as in a single flower,
The twofold branches of the palm-humility
and power.
THE MERCHANT
Where sails the ship?-It
leads the Tyrian forth
For the rich amber of the liberal
north.
Be kind, ye seas-winds,
lend your gentlest wing,
May in each creek sweet wells restoring
spring!-
To you, ye gods, belong the merchant!-o’er
The waves his sails the wide world’s
goods explore;
And, all the while, wherever waft
the gales
The wide world’s good sails
with him as he sails!
GERMAN FAITH
Once for the sceptre of Germany,
fought with Bavarian Louis
Frederick, of Hapsburg descent,
both being called to the throne.
But the envious fortune of war delivered
the Austrian
Into the hands of the foe,
who overcame him in fight.
With the throne he purchased his
freedom, pledging his honor
For the victor to draw ’gainst
his own people his sword;
But what he vowed when in chains,
when free he could not accomplish,
So, of his own free accord,
put on his fetters again.
Deeply moved, his foe embraced him,-and
from thenceforward
As a friend with a friend,
pledged they the cup at the feast;
Arm-in-arm, the princes on one couch
slumbered together.
While a still bloodier hate
severed the nations apart.
’Gainst the army of Frederick
Louis now went, and behind him
Left the foe he had fought,
over Bavaria to watch.
“Ay, it is true! ’Tis
really true! I have it in writing!”
Thus did the Pontifex cry,
when he first heard of the news.
THE SEXES
See in the babe two loveliest flowers united-yet
in truth,
While in the bud they seem the same-the
virgin and the youth!
But loosened is the gentle bond, no longer side
by side-
From holy shame the fiery strength will soon
itself divide.
Permit the youth to sport, and still the wild
desire to chase,
For, but when sated, weary strength returns
to seek the grace.
Yet in the bud, the double flowers the future
strife begin,
How precious all-yet naught can still
the longing heart within.
In ripening charms the virgin bloom to woman
shape hath grown,
But round the ripening charms the pride hath
clasped its guardian zone;
Shy, as before the hunter’s horn the doe
all trembling moves,
She flies from man as from a foe, and hates
before she loves!
From lowering brows this struggling world the
fearless youth observes,
And hardened for the strife betimes, he strains
the willing nerves;
Far to the armed throng and to the race prepared
to start,
Inviting glory calls him forth, and grasps the
troubled heart:-
Protect thy work, O Nature now! one from the
other flies,
Till thou unitest each at last that for the
other sighs.
There art thou, mighty one! where’er the
discord darkest frown,
Thou call’st the meek harmonious peace,
the god-like soother down.
The noisy chase is lulled asleep, day’s
clamor dies afar,
And through the sweet and veiled air in beauty
comes the star.
Soft-sighing through the crisped reeds, the
brooklet glides along,
And every wood the nightingale melodious fills
with song.
O virgin! now what instinct heaves thy bosom
with the sigh?
O youth! and wherefore steals the tear into
thy dreaming eye?
Alas! they seek in vain within the charm around
bestowed,
The tender fruit is ripened now, and bows to
earth its load.
And restless goes the youth to feed his heart
upon its fire,
All, where the gentle breath to cool the flame
of young desire!
And now they meet-the holy love that
leads them lights their eyes,
And still behind the winged god the winged victory
flies.
O heavenly love!-’tis thy sweet
task the human flowers to bind,
For ay apart, and yet by thee forever intertwined!
LOVE AND DESIRE
Rightly said, Schlosser! Man loves what he has;
what he has not, desireth;
None but the wealthy minds love; poor minds
desire alone.
THE BARDS OF OLDEN TIME
Say, where is now that glorious race,
where now are the singers
Who, with the accents of life, listening nations
enthralled,
Sung down from heaven the gods, and sung mankind
up to heaven,
And who the spirit bore up high on the pinions of
song?
Ah! the singers still live; the actions only are
wanting,
And to awake the glad harp, only a welcoming ear.
Happy bards of a happy world! Your life-teeming
accents
Flew round from mouth unto mouth, gladdening every
race.
With the devotion with which the gods were received,
each one welcomed
That which the genius for him, plastic and breathing,
then formed.
With the glow of the song were inflamed the listener’s
senses,
And with the listener’s sense, nourished the
singer the glow-
Nourished and cleansed it,-fortunate one!
for whom in the voices
Of the people still clear echoed the soul of the
song,
And to whom from without appeared, in life, the great
godhead,
Whom the bard of these days scarcely can feel in
his breast.
JOVETO HERCULES
’Twas not my nectar made thy
strength divine,
But ’twas thy strength which
made my nectar thine!
THE ANTIQUES AT PARIS
That which Grecian art created,
Let the Frank, with joy elated,
Bear to Seine’s triumphant
strand,
And in his museums glorious
Show the trophies all-victorious
To his wondering fatherland.
They to him are silent ever,
Into life’s fresh circle never
From their pedestals come down.
He alone e’er holds the Muses
Through whose breast their power diffuses,-
To the Vandal they’re but stone!
THEKLA
A spirit voice.
Whither was it that my spirit wended
When from thee my fleeting shadow moved?
Is not now each earthly conflict ended?
Say,-have I not lived,-have
I not loved?
Art thou for the nightingales inquiring
Who entranced thee in the early year
With their melody so joy-inspiring?
Only whilst they loved they lingered here.
Is the lost one lost to me forever?
Trust me, with him joyfully
I stray
There, where naught united souls
can sever,
And where every tear is wiped
away.
And thou, too, wilt find us in yon
heaven,
When thy love with our love
can compare;
There my father dwells, his sins
forgiven,-
Murder foul can never reach
him there.
And he feels that him no vision
cheated
When he gazed upon the stars
on high;
For as each one metes, to him ’tis
meted;
Who believes it, hath the
Holy nigh.
Faith is kept in those blest regions
yonder
With the feelings true that
ne’er decay.
Venture thou to dream, then, and
to wander
Noblest thoughts oft lie in
childlike play.
THE ANTIQUE TO THE NORTHERN WANDERE
Thou hast crossed over torrents, and swung through
wide-spreading ocean,-
Over the chain of the Alps dizzily bore thee
the bridge,
That thou might’st see me from near, and learn
to value my beauty,
Which the voice of renown spreads through the
wandering world.
And now before me thou standest,-canst
touch my altar so holy,-
But art thou nearer to me, or am I nearer to
thee?
THE LLIAD
Tear forever the garland of Homer,
and number the fathers
Of the immortal work, that through all time will
survive!
Yet it has but one mother, and bears that mother’s
own feature,
’Tis thy features it bears,-Nature,-thy
features eterne!
POMPEII AND HERCULANEUM
What wonder this?-we
ask the lympid well,
O earth! of thee-and
from thy solemn womb
What yieldest thou?-is
there life in the abyss-
Doth a new race beneath the lava
dwell?
Returns the past, awakening from
the tomb?
Rome-Greece!-Oh,
come!-Behold-behold! for this!
Our living world-the
old Pompeii sees;
And built anew the town of Dorian
Hercules!
House upon house-its
silent halls once more
Opes the broad portico!-Oh,
haste and fill
Again those halls with life!-Oh,
pour along
Through the seven-vista’d
theatre the throng!
Where are ye, mimes?-Come
forth, the steel prepare
For crowned Atrides, or Orestes
haunt,
Ye choral Furies, with your dismal
chant!
The arch of triumph!-whither
leads it?-still
Behold the forum!-on
the curule chair
Where the majestic image? Lictors,
where
Your solemn fasces?-Place
upon his throne
The Praetor-here the
witness lead, and there
Bid the accuser stand
-O
God! how lone
The clear streets glitter in the
quiet day-
The footpath by the doors winding
its lifeless way!
The roofs arise in shelter, and
around
The desolate Atrium-every
gentle room
Wears still the dear familiar smile
of home!
Open the doors-the shops-on
dreary night
Let lusty day laugh down in jocund
light!
See the trim benches ranged in order!-See
The marble-tesselated floor-and there
The very walls are glittering livingly
With their clear colors. But the artist, where!
Sure but this instant he hath laid aside
Pencil and colors!-Glittering on the
eye
Swell the rich fruits, and bloom the flowers!-See
all
Art’s gentle wreaths still fresh upon the
wall!
Here the arch Cupid slyly seems to glide
By with bloom-laden basket. There the shapes
Of genii press with purpling feet the grapes,
Here springs the wild Bacchante to the dance,
And there she sleeps [while that voluptuous trance
Eyes the sly faun with never-sated glance]
Now on one knee upon the centaur-steeds
Hovering-the Thyrsus plies.-Hurrah!-away
she speeds!
Come-come, why loiter
ye?-Here, here, how fair
The goodly vessels still! Girls, hither turn,
Fill from the fountain the Etruscan urn!
On the winged sphinxes see the tripod.-
Ho!
Quick-quick, ye slaves, come-fire!-the
hearth prepare!
Ha! wilt thou sell?-this coin shall
pay thee-this,
Fresh from the mint of mighty Titus!-Lo!
Here lie the scales, and not a weight we miss
So-bring the light! The delicate
lamp!-what toil
Shaped thy minutest grace!-quick pour
the oil!
Yonder the fairy chest!-come, maid,
behold
The bridegroom’s gifts-the armlets-they
are gold,
And paste out-feigning jewels!-lead
the bride
Into the odorous bath-lo! unguents still-
And still the crystal vase the arts for beauty
fill!
But where the men of old-perchance
a prize
More precious yet in yon papyrus
lies,
And see ev’n still the tokens
of their toil-
The waxen tablets-the
recording style.
The earth, with faithful watch,
has hoarded all!
Still stand the mute penates in
the hall;
Back to his haunts returns each
ancient god.
Why absent only from their ancient
stand
The priests?-waves Hermes
his Caducean rod,
And the winged victory struggles
from the hand.
Kindle the flame-behold
the altar there!
Long hath the god been worshipless-to
prayer.
NAENIA
Even the beauteous must die!
This vanquishes men and immortals;
But of the Stygian god moves not the bosom of
steel.
Once and once only could love prevail on the ruler
of shadows,
And on the threshold, e’en then, sternly
his gift he recalled.
Venus could never heal the wounds of the beauteous
stripling,
That the terrible boar made in his delicate skin;
Nor could his mother immortal preserve the hero
so godlike,
When at the west gate of Troy, falling, his fate
he fulfilled.
But she arose from the ocean with all the daughters
of Nereus,
And o’er her glorified son raised the loud
accents of woe.
See! where all the gods and goddesses yonder are
weeping,
That the beauteous must fade, and that the perfect
must die.
Even a woe-song to be in the mouth of the loved
ones is glorious,
For what is vulgar descends mutely to Orcus’
dark shades.
THE MAID OF ORLEANS
Humanity’s bright image to
impair.
Scorn laid thee prostrate
in the deepest dust;
Wit wages ceaseless war on all that’s
fair,-
In angel and in God it puts
no trust;
The bosom’s treasures it would
make its prey,-
Besieges fancy,-dims
e’en faith’s pure ray.
Yet issuing like thyself from humble
line,
Like thee a gentle shepherdess
is she-
Sweet poesy affords her rights divine,
And to the stars eternal soars
with thee.
Around thy brow a glory she hath
thrown;
The heart ’twas formed thee,-ever
thou’lt live on!
The world delights whate’er
is bright to stain,
And in the dust to lay the glorious low;
Yet fear not! noble bosoms still remain,
That for the lofty, for the radiant glow
Let Momus serve to fill the booth with mirth;
A nobler mind loves forms of nobler worth.
ARCHIMEDES
To Archimedes once a scholar came,
“Teach me,” he said, “the art
that won thy fame;-
The godlike art which gives such boons to toil,
And showers such fruit upon thy native soil;-
The godlike art that girt the town when all
Rome’s vengeance burst in thunder on the
wall!”
“Thou call’st art godlike-it
is so, in truth,
And was,” replied the master to the youth,
“Ere yet its secrets were applied to use-
Ere yet it served beleaguered Syracuse:-
Ask’st thou from art, but what the art is
worth?
The fruit?-for fruit go cultivate the
earth.-
He who the goddess would aspire unto,
Must not the goddess as the woman woo!”
THE DANCE
See how, like lightest waves at play, the
airy dancers fleet;
And scarcely feels the floor the wings of those harmonious
feet.
Ob, are they flying shadows from their native
forms set free?
Or phantoms in the fairy ring that summer moonbeams
see?
As, by the gentle zephyr blown, some light mist flees
in air,
As skiffs that skim adown the tide, when silver waves
are fair,
So sports the docile footstep to the heave of that
sweet measure,
As music wafts the form aloft at its melodious pleasure,
Now breaking through the woven chain of the entangled
dance,
From where the ranks the thickest press, a bolder
pair advance,
The path they leave behind them lost-wide
open the path beyond,
The way unfolds or closes up as by a magic wand.
See now, they vanish from the gaze in wild confusion
blended;
All, in sweet chaos whirled again, that gentle world
is ended!
No!-disentangled glides the knot, the
gay disorder ranges-
The only system ruling here, a grace that ever changes.
For ay destroyed-for ay renewed, whirls
on that fair creation;
And yet one peaceful law can still pervade in each
mutation.
And what can to the reeling maze breathe harmony
and vigor,
And give an order and repose to every gliding figure?
That each a ruler to himself doth but himself obey,
Yet through the hurrying course still keeps his own
appointed way.
What, would’st thou know? It is in truth
the mighty power of tune,
A power that every step obeys, as tides obey the
moon;
That threadeth with a golden clue the intricate employment,
Curbs bounding strength to tranquil grace, and tames
the wild enjoyment.
And comes the world’s wide harmony in vain
upon thine ears?
The stream of music borne aloft from yonder choral
spheres?
And feel’st thou not the measure which eternal
Nature keeps?
The whirling dance forever held in yonder azure deeps?
The suns that wheel in varying maze?-That
music thou discernest?
No! Thou canst honor that in sport which thou
forgettest in earnest.
THE FORTUNE-FAVORED
Ah! happy he, upon whose birth each
god
Looks down in love, whose
earliest sleep the bright
Idalia cradles, whose young lips
the rod
Of eloquent Hermes kindles-to
whose eyes,
Scarce wakened yet, Apollo steals
in light,
While on imperial brows Jove
sets the seal of might!
Godlike the lot ordained for him
to share,
He wins the garland ere he
runs the race;
He learns life’s wisdom ere
he knows life’s care,
And, without labor vanquished,
smiles the grace.
Great is the man, I grant, whose
strength of mind,
Self-shapes its objects and
subdues the fates-
Virtue subdues the fates, but cannot
blind
The fickle happiness, whose
smile awaits
Those who scarce seek it; nor can
courage earn
What the grace showers not from
her own free urn!
From aught unworthy, the determined
will
Can guard the watchful spirit-there
it ends
The all that’s glorious
from the heaven descends;
As some sweet mistress loves us,
freely still
Come the spontaneous gifts of heaven!-Above
Favor rules Jove, as it below rules
love!
The immortals have their bias!-Kindly
they
See the bright locks of youth enamored
play,
And where the glad one goes, shed
gladness round the way.
It is not they who boast the best
to see,
Whose eyes the holy apparitions
bless;
The stately light of their divinity
Hath oft but shone the
brightest on the blind;-
And their choice spirit found
its calm recess
In the pure childhood
of a simple mind.
Unasked they come delighted to delude
The expectation of our baffled
pride;
No law can call their free
steps to our side.
Him whom he loves, the
sire of men and gods
(Selected from the marvelling multitude)
Bears on his eagle to
his bright abodes;
And showers, with partial hand and
lavish, down,
The minstrel’s laurel or the
monarch’s crown!
Before the fortune-favored son of
earth,
Apollo walks-and, with
his jocund mirth,
The heart-enthralling smiler of
the skies
For him gray Neptune smooths
the pliant wave-
Harmless the waters
for the ship that bore
The Cæsar and his fortunes
to the shore!
Charmed at his feet the crouching
lion lies,
To him his back the murmuring
dolphin gave;
His soul is born a sovereign o’er
the strife-
The lord of all the beautiful of
life;
Where’er his presence in its
calm has trod,
It charms-it sways as
solve diviner God.
Scorn not the fortune-favored, that
to him
The light-won victory by the
gods is given,
Or that, as Paris, from
the strife severe,
The Venus draws her darling-Whom
the heaven
So prospers, love so
watches, I revere!
And not the man upon whose eyes,
with dim
And baleful night, sits fate.
Achaia boasts,
No less the glory of the Dorian
lord
That Vulcan wrought for him
the shield and sword-
That round the mortal hovered all
the hosts
Of all Olympus-that his
wrath to grace,
The best and bravest of the Grecian
race
Untimely slaughtered, with resentful
ghosts
Awed the pale people of the Stygian
coasts!
Scorn not the darlings of the beautiful,
If without labor they life’s
blossoms cull;
If, like the stately lilies, they
have won
A crown for which they neither toiled
nor spun;-
If without merit, theirs be beauty,
still
Thy sense, unenvying, with the beauty
fill.
Alike for thee no merit wins the
right,
To share, by simply seeing, their
delight.
Heaven breathes the soul into the
minstrel’s breast,
But with that soul he animates the
rest;
The god inspires the mortal-but
to God,
In turn, the mortal lifts thee from
the sod.
Oh, not in vain to heaven the bard
is dear;
Holy himself-he hallows
those who hear!
The busy mart let justice still
control,
Weighing the guerdon to the
toil!-What then?
A God alone claims joy-all
joy is his,
Flushing with unsought light
the cheeks of men.
Where is no miracle,
why there no bliss!
Grow, change, and ripen all that
mortal be,
Shapened from form to form,
by toiling time;
The blissful and the
beautiful are born
Full grown, and ripened from eternity-
No gradual changes to their
glorious prime,
No childhood dwarfs
them, and no age has worn.-
Like heaven’s, each earthly Venus
on the sight
Comes, a dark birth, from out an
endless sea;
Like the first Pallas, in maturest might,
Armed, from the thunderer’s-brow,
leaps forth each thought of light.
BOOKSELLER'S ANNOUNCEMENT
Naught is for man so important as
rightly to know his own purpose;
For but twelve groschen hard
cash ’tis to be bought at my shop!
Genius.
“Do I believe,” sayest thou, “what
the masters of wisdom would teach me,
And what their followers’ band boldly
and readily swear?
Cannot I ever attain to true peace, excepting
through knowledge,
Or is the system upheld only by fortune
and law?
Must I distrust the gently-warning impulse,
the precept
That thou, Nature, thyself hast in my
bosom impressed,
Till the schools have affixed to the writ eternal
their signet,
Till a mere formula’s chain binds
down the fugitive soul?
Answer me, then! for thou hast down into these
deeps e’en descended,-
Out of the mouldering grave thou didst
uninjured return.
Is’t to thee known what within the tomb
of obscure works is hidden,
Whether, yon mummies amid, life’s
consolations can dwell?
Must I travel the darksome road? The thought
makes me tremble;
Yet I will travel that road, if ’tis
to truth and to right.”
Friend, hast thou heard of the golden age?
Full many a story
Poets have sung in its praise, simply
and touchingly sung-
Of the time when the holy still wandered over
life’s pathways,-
When with a maidenly shame every sensation
was veiled,-
When the mighty law that governs the sun in
his orbit,
And that, concealed in the bud, teaches
the point how to move,
When necessity’s silent law, the steadfast,
the changeless,
Stirred up billows more free, e’en
in the bosom of man,-
When the sense, unerring, and true as the hand
of the dial,
Pointed only to truth, only to what was
eternal?
Then no profane one was seen, then no initiate
was met with,
And what as living was felt was not then
sought ’mongst the dead;
Equally clear to every breast was the precept
eternal,
Equally hidden the source whence it to
gladden us sprang;
But that happy period has vanished! And
self-willed presumption
Nature’s godlike repose now has
forever destroyed.
Feelings polluted the voice of the deities echo
no longer,
In the dishonored breast now is the oracle
dumb.
Save in the silenter self, the listening soul
cannot find it,
There does the mystical word watch o’er
the meaning divine;
There does the searcher conjure it, descending
with bosom unsullied;
There does the nature long-lost give him
back wisdom again.
If thou, happy one, never hast lost the angel
that guards thee,
Forfeited never the kind warnings that
instinct holds forth;
If in thy modest eye the truth is still purely
depicted;
If in thine innocent breast clearly still
echoes its call;
If in thy tranquil mind the struggles of doubt
still are silent,
If they will surely remain silent forever
as now;
If by the conflict of feelings a judge will
ne’er be required;
If in its malice thy heart dims not the
reason so clear,
Oh, then, go thy way in all thy innocence precious!
Knowledge can teach thee in naught; thou
canst instruct her in much!
Yonder law, that with brazen staff is directing
the struggling,
Naught is to thee. What thou dost,
what thou mayest will is thy law,
And to every race a godlike authority issues.
What thou with holy hand formest, what
thou with holy mouth speakest,
Will with omnipotent power impel the wondering
senses;
Thou but observest not the god ruling
within thine own breast,
Not the might of the signet that bows all spirits
before thee;
Simple and silent thou goest through the
wide world thou hast won.
HONORS
[Dignities would be the better title,
if the word were not so
essentially unpoetical.]
When the column of light on the
waters is glassed,
As blent in one glow seem the shine and the stream;
But wave after wave through the glory has passed,
Just catches, and flies as it catches, the beam
So honors but mirror on mortals their light;
Not the man but the place that he passes is bright.
THE PHILOSOPHICAL EGOTIST
Hast thou the infant seen that yet,
unknowing of the love
Which warms and cradles, calmly
sleeps the mother’s heart above-
Wandering from arm to arm, until
the call of passion wakes,
And glimmering on the conscious
eye-the world in glory breaks?
And hast thou seen the mother there
her anxious vigil keep?
Buying with love that never sleeps
the darling’s happy sleep?
With her own life she fans and feeds
that weak life’s trembling rays,
And with the sweetness of the care,
the care itself repays.
And dost thou Nature then blaspheme-that
both the child and mother
Each unto each unites, the while
the one doth need the other?-
All self-sufficing wilt thou from
that lovely circle stand-
That creature still to creature
links in faith’s familiar band?
Ah! dar’st thou, poor one,
from the rest thy lonely self estrange?
Eternal power itself is but all
powers in interchange!
THE BEST STATE CONSTITUTION
I can recognize only as such, the one that enables
Each to think what is right,-but
that he thinks so, cares not.
THE WORDS OF BELIEF
Three words will I name thee-around
and about,
From the lip to the lip, full
of meaning, they flee;
But they had not their birth in
the being without,
And the heart, not the lip,
must their oracle be!
And all worth in the man shall forever
be o’er
When in those three words he believes
no more.
Man is made free!-Man
by birthright is free,
Though the tyrant may deem
him but born for his tool.
Whatever the shout of the rabble
may be-
Whatever the ranting misuse
of the fool-
Still fear not the slave, when he
breaks from his chain,
For the man made a freeman grows
safe in his gain.
And virtue is more than a shade
or a sound,
And man may her voice, in
this being, obey;
And though ever he slip on the stony
ground,
Yet ever again to the godlike
way,
To the science of good though the
wise may be blind,
Yet the practice is plain to the
childlike mind.
And a God there is!-over
space, over time,
While the human will rocks,
like a reed, to and fro,
Lives the will of the holy-a
purpose sublime,
A thought woven over creation
below;
Changing and shifting the all we
inherit,
But changeless through all one immutable
spirit
Hold fast the three words of belief-though
about
From the lip to the lip, full
of meaning, they flee;
Yet they take not their birth from
the being without-
But a voice from within must
their oracle be;
And never all worth in the man can
be o’er,
Till in those three words he believes
no more.
THE WORDS OF ERROR
Three errors there are, that forever
are found
On the lips of the good, on
the lips of the best;
But empty their meaning and hollow
their sound-
And slight is the comfort
they bring to the breast.
The fruits of existence escape from
the clasp
Of the seeker who strives but those
shadows to grasp-
So long as man dreams of some age
in this life
When the right and the good
will all evil subdue;
For the right and the good lead
us ever to strife,
And wherever they lead us
the fiend will pursue.
And (till from the earth borne,
and stifled at length)
The earth that he touches still
gifts him with strength!
So long as man fancies that fortune
will live,
Like a bride with her lover,
united with worth;
For her favors, alas! to the mean
she will give-
And virtue possesses no title
to earth!
That foreigner wanders to regions
afar,
Where the lands of her birthright
immortally are!
So long as man dreams that, to mortals
a gift,
The truth in her fulness of
splendor will shine;
The veil of the goddess no earth-born
may lift,
And all we can learn is-to
guess and divine!
Dost thou seek, in a dogma, to prison
her form?
The spirit flies forth on the wings
of the storm!
O, noble soul! fly from delusions
like these,
More heavenly belief be it
thine to adore;
Where the ear never hearkens, the
eye never sees,
Meet the rivers of beauty
and truth evermore!
Not without thee the streams-there
the dull seek them;-No!
Look within thee-behold
both the fount and the flow!
THE POWER OF WOMAN
Mighty art thou, because of the
peaceful charms of thy presence;
That which the silent does
not, never the boastful can do.
Vigor in man I expect, the law in
its honors maintaining,
But, through the graces alone,
woman e’er rules or should rule.
Many, indeed, have ruled through
the might of the spirit and action,
But then thou noblest of crowns,
they were deficient in thee.
No real queen exists but the womanly
beauty of woman;
Where it appears, it must
rule; ruling because it appears!
THE TWO PATHS OF VIRTUE
Two are the pathways by which mankind
can to virtue mount upward;
If thou should find the one
barred, open the other will lie.
’Tis by exertion the happy
obtain her, the suffering by patience.
Blest is the man whose kind
fate guides him along upon both!
THE PROVERBS OF CONFUCIUS
I.
Threefold is the march of time
While the future slow advances,
Like a dart the present glances,
Silent stands the past sublime.
No impatience e’er can speed
him
On his course if he delay;
No alarm, no doubts impede him
If he keep his onward way;
No regrets, no magic numbers
Wake the tranced one from his slumbers.
Wouldst thou wisely and with pleasure,
Pass the days of life’s short
measure,
From the slow one counsel take,
But a tool of him ne’er make;
Ne’er as friend the swift
one know,
Nor the constant one as foe!
II.
Threefold is the form of space:
Length, with ever restless motion,
Seeks eternity’s wide ocean;
Breadth with boundless sway extends;
Depth to unknown realms descends.
All as types to thee are given;
Thou must onward strive for heaven,
Never still or weary be
Would’st thou perfect glory
see;
Far must thy researches go.
Wouldst thou learn the world to
know;
Thou must tempt the dark abyss
Wouldst thou prove what Being is.
Naught but firmness gains the prize,-
Naught but fulness makes us wise,-
Buried deep, truth ever lies!
HUMAN KNOWLEDGE
Since thou readest in her what thou
thyself hast there written,
And, to gladden the eye, placest her wonders in
groups;-
Since o’er her boundless expanses thy cords
to extend thou art able,
Thou dost think that thy mind wonderful Nature
can grasp.
Thus the astronomer draws his figures over the
heavens,
So that he may with more ease traverse the infinite
space,
Knitting together e’en suns that by Sirius-distance
are parted,
Making them join in the swan and in the horns
of the bull.
But because the firmament shows him its glorious
surface,
Can he the spheres’ mystic dance therefore
decipher aright?
COLUMBUS
Steer on, bold sailor-Wit
may mock thy soul that sees the land,
And hopeless at the helm may droop the weak and
weary hand,
Yet ever-ever to the West, for there
the coast must lie,
And dim it dawns, and glimmering dawns before thy
reason’s eye;
Yea, trust the guiding God-and go along
the floating grave,
Though hid till now-yet now behold the
New World o’er the wave!
With genius Nature ever stands in solemn union
still,
And ever what the one foretells the other shall
fulfil.
LIGHT AND WARMTH
In cheerful faith that fears no
ill
The good man doth the world
begin;
And dreams that all without shall
still
Reflect the trusting soul
within.
Warm with the noble vows of youth,
Hallowing his true arm to the truth;
Yet is the littleness of all
So soon to sad experience
shown,
That crowds but teach him to recall
And centre thought on self
alone;
Till love, no more, emotion knows,
And the heart freezes to repose.
Alas! though truth may light bestow,
Not always warmth the beams
impart,
Blest he who gains the boon to know,
Nor buys the knowledge with
the heart.
For warmth and light a blessing
both to be,
Feel as the enthusiast-as
the world-wise see.
BREADTH AND DEPTH
Full many a shining wit one sees,
With tongue on all things
well conversing;
The what can charm, the what can
please,
In every nice detail rehearsing.
Their raptures so transport the
college,
It seems one honeymoon of knowledge.
Yet out they go in silence where
They whilom held their learned
prate;
Ah! he who would achieve the fair,
Or sow the embryo of the great,
Must hoard-to wait the
ripening hour-
In the least point the loftiest
power.
With wanton boughs and pranksome
hues,
Aloft in air aspires the stem;
The glittering leaves inhale the
dews,
But fruits are not concealed
in them.
From the small kernel’s undiscerned
repose
The oak that lords it o’er
the forest grows.
THE TWO GUIDES OF LIFE
The sublime
and the beautiful.
Two genii are there, from thy birth through
weary life to guide thee;
Ah, happy when, united both, they stand to aid
beside thee?
With gleesome play to cheer the path, the one
comes blithe with beauty,
And lighter, leaning on her arm, the destiny
and duty.
With jest and sweet discourse she goes unto
the rock sublime,
Where halts above the eternal sea the shuddering
child of time.
The other here, resolved and mute and solemn,
claspeth thee,
And bears thee in her giant arms across the
fearful sea.
Never admit the one alone!-Give not
the gentle guide
Thy honor-nor unto the stern thy
happiness confide!
THE IMMUTABLE
Time flies on restless pinions-constant
never.
Be constant-and thou chainest time forever.
VOTIVE TABLETS
That which I learned from the Deity,-
that which through lifetime hath helped me,
Meekly and gratefully now, here I suspend in his
shrine.
DIFFERENT DESTINIES
Millions busily toil, that the human
race may continue;
But by only a few is propagated our kind.
Thousands of seeds by the autumn are scattered, yet
fruit is engendered
Only by few, for the most back to the element go.
But if one only can blossom, that one is able to
scatter
Even a bright living world, filled with creations
eterne.
THE ANIMATING PRINCIPLE
Nowhere in the organic or sensitive
world ever kindles
Novelty, save in the flower,
noblest creation of life.
TWO DESCRIPTION OF ACTION
Do what is good, and humanity’s
godlike plant thou wilt nourish;
Plan what is fair, and thou’lt
strew seeds of the godlike around.
DIFFERENCE OF STATION
Even the moral world its nobility
boasts-vulgar natures
Reckon by that which they
do; noble, by that which they are.
WORTHAND THE WORTHY
If thou anything hast, let me have
it,-I’ll pay what is proper;
If thou anything art, let
us our spirits exchange.
THE MORAL FORCE
If thou feelest not the beautiful, still thou
with reason canst will it;
And as a spirit canst do, that which as
man thou canst not.
PARTICIPATION
E’en by the hand of the wicked
can truth be working with vigor;
But the vessel is filled by
what is beauteous alone.
To -
Tell me all that thou knowest, and I will thankfully
hear it!
But wouldst thou give me thyself,-let
me, my friend, be excused!
To -
Wouldst thou teach me the truth? Don’t
take the trouble! I wish not,
Through thee, the thing to observe,-but
to see thee through the thing.
To -
Thee would I choose as my teacher
and friend. Thy living example
Teaches me,-thy
teaching word wakens my heart unto life.
THE PRESENT GENERATION
Was it always as now? This
race I truly can’t fathom.
Nothing is young but old age;
youth, alas! only is old.
TO THE MUSE
What I had been without thee, I
know not-yet, to my sorrow
See I what, without thee,
hundreds and thousands now are.
THE LEARNED WORKMAN
Ne’er does he taste the fruit of the tree that
he raised with such trouble;
Nothing but taste e’er enjoys that which
by learning is reared.
THE DUTY OF ALL
Ever strive for the whole; and if
no whole thou canst make thee,
Join, then, thyself to some
whole, as a subservient limb!
A PROBLEM
Let none resemble another; let each
resemble the highest!
How can that happen? let each
be all complete in itself.
THE PECULIAR IDEAL
What thou thinkest, belongs to all; what thou
feelest, is thine only.
Wouldst thou make him thine own, feel
thou the God whom thou thinkest!
TO MYSTICS
That is the only true secret, which
in the presence of all men
Lies, and surrounds thee for
ay, but which is witnessed by none.
THE KEY
Wouldst thou know thyself, observe
the actions of others.
Wouldst thou other men know,
look thou within thine own heart.
THE OBSERVER
Stern as my conscience, thou seest
the points wherein I’m deficient;
Therefore I’ve always
loved thee, as my own conscience I’ve loved.
WISDOMAND PRUDENCE
Wouldst thou, my friend, mount up
to the highest summit of wisdom,
Be not deterred by the fear,
prudence thy course may deride
That shortsighted one sees but the
bank that from thee is flying,
Not the one which ere long
thou wilt attain with bold flight.
THE AGREEMENT
Both of us seek for truth-in
the world without thou dost seek it,
I in the bosom within; both
of us therefore succeed.
If the eye be healthy, it sees from
without the Creator;
And if the heart, then within
doubtless it mirrors the world.
POLITICAL PRECEPT
All that thou doest is right; but,
friend, don’t carry this precept
On too far,-be
content, all that is right to effect.
It is enough to true zeal, if what
is existing be perfect;
False zeal always would find finished
perfection at once.
MAJESTASPOPULI
Majesty of the nature of man!
In crowds shall I seek thee?
’Tis with only a few
that thou hast made thine abode.
Only a few ever count; the rest
are but blanks of no value,
And the prizes are hid ’neath
the vain stir that they make.
THE DIFFICULT UNION
Why are taste and genius so seldom
met with united?
Taste of strength is afraid,-genius
despises the rein.
TO A WORLD-REFORMER
“I Have sacrificed all,”
thou sayest, “that man I might succor;
Vain the attempt; my reward
was persecution and hate.”
Shall I tell thee, my friend, how
I to humor him manage?
Trust the proverb! I
ne’er have been deceived by it yet.
Thou canst not sufficiently prize
humanity’s value;
Let it be coined in deed as
it exists in thy breast.
E’en to the man whom thou
chancest to meet in life’s narrow pathway,
If he should ask it of thee,
hold forth a succoring hand.
But for rain and for dew, for the
general welfare of mortals,
Leave thou Heaven to care,
friend, as before, so e’en now.
MY ANTIPATHY
I have a heartfelt aversion for crime,-a
twofold aversion,
Since ’tis the reason why man prates about
virtue so much.
“What! thou hatest, then, virtue?”-I
would that by all it were practised,
So that, God willing, no man ever need speak
of it more.
ASTRONOMICAL WRITINGS
Oh, how infinite, how unspeakably
great, are the heavens!
Yet by frivolity’s hand
downwards the heavens are pulled!
THE BEST STATE
“How can I know the best state?”
In the way that thou
know’st the best woman;
Namely, my friend, that the world
ever is silent of both.
TO ASTRONOMERS
Prate not to me so much of suns and of nebulous
bodies;
Think ye Nature but great, in that she
gives thee to count?
Though your object may be the sublimest that
space holds within it,
Yet, my good friends, the sublime dwells
not in the regions of space.
MY FAITH
Which religion do I acknowledge?
None that thou namest.
“None that I name?
And why so?”-Why, for religion’s
own sake?
INSIDE OUTSIDE
God alone sees the heart and therefore,
since he alone sees it,
Be it our care that we, too,
something that’s worthy may see.
FRIEND AND FOE
Dearly I love a friend; yet a foe I may turn
to my profit;
Friends show me that which I can; foes
teach me that which I should.
LIGHT AND COLOR
Thou that art ever the same, with the changeless One
take up thy dwelling!
Color, thou changeable one, kindly descends
upon man!
GENIUS
Understanding, indeed, can repeat
what already existed,-
That which Nature has built,
after her she, too, can build.
Over Nature can reason build, but
in vacancy only:
But thou, genius, alone, nature
in nature canst form.
BEAUTEOUS INDIVIDUALITY
Thou in truth shouldst be one, yet not with the whole
shouldst thou be so.
’Tis through the reason thou’rt
one,-art so with it through the heart.
Voice of the whole is thy reason, but thou thine own
heart must be ever;
If in thy heart reason dwells evermore, happy
art thou.
VARIETY
Many are good and wise; yet all
for one only reckon,
For ’tis conception,
alas, rules them, and not a fond heart.
Sad is the sway of conception,-from
thousandfold varying figures,
Needy and empty but one it
is e’er able to bring.
But where creative beauty is ruling,
there life and enjoyment
Dwell; to the ne’er-changing
One, thousands of new forms she gives.
THE IMITATOR
Good from the good,-to
the reason this is not hard of conception;
But the genius has power good
from the bad to evoke.
’Tis the conceived alone,
that thou, imitator, canst practise;
Food the conceived never is,
save to the mind that conceives.
GENIALITY
How does the genius make itself
known? In the way that in nature
Shows the Creator himself,-e’en
in the infinite whole.
Clear is the ether, and yet of depth
that ne’er can be fathomed;
Seen by the eye, it remains
evermore closed to the sense.
THE INQUIRERS
Men now seek to explore each thing from within
and without too!
How canst thou make thy escape, Truth,
from their eager pursuit?
That they may catch thee, with nets and poles
extended they seek thee
But with a spirit-like tread, glidest
thou out of the throng.
CORRECTNESS
Free from blemish to be, is the
lowest of steps, and highest;
Weakness and greatness alone
ever arrive at this point.
THE THREE AGES OF NATURE
Life she received from fable; the
schools deprived her of being,
Life creative again she has
from reason received.
THE LAW OF NATURE
It has ever been so, my friend,
and will ever remain so:
Weakness has rules for itself,-vigor
is crowned with success.
CHOICE
If thou canst not give pleasure to all by thy
deeds and thy knowledge,
Give it then, unto the few; many to please
is but vain.
SCIENCE OF MUSIC
Let the creative art breathe life,
and the bard furnish spirit;
But the soul is expressed
by Polyhymnia alone.
TO THE POET
Let thy speech be to thee what the
body is to the loving;
Beings it only can part,-beings
it only can join.
LANGUAGE
Why can the living spirit be never
seen by the spirit?
Soon as the soul ’gins
to speak, then can the soul speak no more!
THE MASTER
Other masters one always can tell
by the words that they utter;
That which he wisely omits
shows me the master of style.
THE GIRDLE
Aphrodite preserves her beauty concealed
by her girdle;
That which lends her her charms
is what she covers-her shame.
THE DILETTANTE
Merely because thou hast made a
good verse in a language poetic,
One which composes for thee,
thou art a poet forsooth!
THE BABBLER OF ART
Dost thou desire the good in art?
Of the good art thou worthy,
Which by a ne’er ceasing
war ’gainst thee thyself is produced?
THE PHILOSOPHIES
Which among the philosophies will
be enduring? I know not,
But that philosophy’s
self ever may last is my hope.
THE FAVOUR OF THE MUSES
Fame with the vulgar expires; but,
Muse immortal, thou bearest
Those whom thou lovest, who
love thee, into Mnemosyne’s arms.
HOMER'S HEAD AS A SEAL
Trusty old Homer! to thee I confide
the secret so tender;
For the raptures of love none
but the bard should e’er know.
GOODNESS AND GREATNESS
Only two virtues exist. Oh,
would they were ever united!
Ever the good with the great,
ever the great with the good!
THE IMPULSES
Fear with his iron staff may urge
the slave onward forever;
Rapture, do thou lead me on
ever in roseate chains!
NATURALISTS AND TRANSCENDENTAL PHILOSOPHERS
Enmity be between ye! Your
union too soon is cemented;
Ye will but learn to know
truth when ye divide in the search.
GERMAN GENIUS
Strive, O German, for Roman-like strength and
for Grecian-like beauty!
Thou art successful in both; ne’er
has the Gaul had success.
THE OPANIA
When the happy appear, I forget
the gods in the heavens;
But before me they stand,
when I the suffering see.
TRIFLES
THE EPIC HEXAMETER
Giddily onward it bears thee with
resistless impetuous billows;
Naught but the ocean and air
seest thou before or behind.
THE DISTICH
In the hexameter rises the fountain’s
watery column,
In the pentameter sweet falling
in melody down.
THE EIGHT -LINE STANZA
Stanza, by love thou’rt created,-by
love, all-tender and yearning;
Thrice dost thou bashfully
fly; thrice dost with longing return.
THE OBELISK
On a pedestal lofty the sculptor
in triumph has raised me.
“Stand thou,”
spake he,-and I stand proudly and joyfully
here.
THE TRIUMPHAL ARCH
“Fear not,” the builder exclaimed, “the
rainbow that stands in the heavens;
I will extend thee, like it, into infinity far!”
THE BEAUTIFUL BRIDGE
Under me, over me, hasten the waters,
the chariots; my builder
Kindly has suffered e’en
me, over myself, too, to go!
THE GATE
Let the gate open stand, to allure
the savage to precepts;
Let it the citizen lead into
free nature with joy.
ST.PETERS
If thou seekest to find immensity
here, thou’rt mistaken;
For my greatness is meant
greater to make thee thyself!
THE PHILOSOPHERS
Pupil.
I am rejoiced, worthy sirs, to find you in pleno
assembled;
For I have come down below, seeking
the one needful thing.
Aristotle.
Quick to the point, my good friend! For
the Jena Gazette comes
to hand here,
Even in hell,-so we know all
that is passing above.
Pupil.
So much the better! So give me (I will
not depart hence without it)
Some good principle now,-one
that will always avail!
First philosopher.
Cogito, ergo sum. I have thought, and therefore
existence!
If the first be but true, then is the
second one sure.
Pupil.
As I think, I exist. ’Tis good!
But who always is thinking?
Oft I’ve existed e’en when
I have been thinking of naught.
Second philosopher.
Since there are things that exist, a thing of
all things there must
needs be;
In the thing of all things dabble we,
just as we are.
Third philosopher.
Just the reverse, say I. Besides myself there
is nothing;
Everything else that there is is but a
bubble to me.
Fourth philosopher.
Two kinds of things I allow to exist,-the
world and the spirit;
Naught of others I know; even these signify
one.
Fifth philosopher.
I know naught of the thing, and know still less
of the spirit;
Both but appear unto me; yet no appearance
they are.
Sixth philosopher.
I am I, and settle myself,-and if
I then settle
Nothing to be, well and good-there’s
a nonentity formed.
Seventh philosopher.
There is conception at least! A thing conceived
there is, therefore;
And a conceiver as well,-which,
with conception, make three.
Pupil.
All this nonsense, good sirs, won’t answer
my purpose a tittle:
I a real principle need,-one
by which something is fixed.
Eighth philosopher.
Nothing is now to be found in the theoretical
province;
Practical principles hold, such as:
thou canst, for thou shouldst.
Pupil.
If I but thought so! When people know no
more sensible answer,
Into the conscience at once plunge they
with desperate haste.
David Hume.
Don’t converse with those fellows!
That Kant has turned them all crazy;
Speak to me, for in hell I am the same
that I was.
Law point.
I have made use of my nose for years together
to smell with;
Have I a right to my nose that can be
legally proved?
Puffendorf.
Truly a delicate point! Yet the first possession
appeareth
In thy favor to tell; therefore make use
of it still!
Scruple of conscience.
Willingly serve I my friends; but, alas, I do
it with pleasure;
Therefore I often am vexed that no true
virtue I have.
DECISION
As there is no other means, thou hadst better
begin to despise them;
And with aversion, then, do that which
thy duty commands.
THE HOMERIDES
Who is the bard of the Iliad among you?
For since he likes puddings,
Heyne begs he’ll accept these that
from Göttingen come.
“Give them to me! The kings’
quarrel I sang!”-
“I, the fight near the vessels!”-“Hand
me the puddings!
I sang what upon Ida took place!”
Gently! Don’t tear me to pieces!
The puddings will not be sufficient;
He by whom they are sent destined them only
for one.
G.
G.
Each one, when seen by himself,
is passably wise and judicious;
When they in corpore are, naught
but a blockhead is seen.
THE MORAL POET
Man is in truth a poor creature,-I
know it,-and fain would forget it;
Therefore (how sorry I am!) came I, alas,
unto thee!
THE DANAIDES
Into the sieve we’ve been
pouring for years,-
o’er the stone
we’ve been brooding;
But the stone never warms,-nor
does the sieve ever fill.
THE SUBLIME SUBJECT
’Tis thy Muse’s delight
to sing God’s pity to mortals;
But, that they pitiful are,-is
it a matter for song?
THE ARTIFICE
Wouldst thou give pleasure at once
to the children of earth and
the righteous?
Draw the image of lust-adding
the devil as well!
IMMORTALITY
Dreadest thou the aspect of death! Thou
wishest to live on forever?
Live in the whole, and when long thou
shalt have gone, ’twill remain!
JEREMIADS
All, both in prose and in verse, in Germany fast is
decaying;
Far behind us, alas, lieth the golden age now!
For by philosophers spoiled is our language-our
logic by poets,
And no more common sense governs our passage
through life.
From the aesthetic, to which she belongs, now virtue
is driven,
And into politics forced, where she’s
a troublesome guest.
Where are we hastening now? If natural, dull
we are voted,
And if we put on constraint, then the world
calls us absurd.
Oh, thou joyous artlessness ’mongst the poor
maidens of Leipzig,
Witty simplicity come,-come, then,
to glad us again!
Comedy, oh repeat thy weekly visits so precious,
Sigismund, lover so sweet,-Mascarill,
valet jocose!
Tragedy, full of salt and pungency epigrammatic,-
And thou, minuet-step of our old buskin preserved!
Philosophic romance, thou mannikin waiting with patience,
When, ’gainst the pruner’s attack,
Nature defendeth herself!
Ancient prose, oh return,-so nobly and
boldly expressing
All that thou thinkest and hast thought,-and
what the reader thinks too
All, both in prose and in verse, in Germany fast is
decaying;
Far behind us, alas, lieth the golden age now!
SHAKESPEARE'S GHOST
A
Parody.
I, too, at length discerned great Hercules’
energy mighty,-
Saw his shade. He himself was not,
alas, to be seen.
Round him were heard, like the screaming of
birds,
the screams of tragedians,
And, with the baying of dogs, barked dramaturgists
around.
There stood the giant in all his terrors; his
bow was extended,
And the bolt, fixed on the string, steadily
aimed at the heart.
“What still hardier action, unhappy one,
dost thou now venture,
Thus to descend to the grave of the departed
souls here?”-
“’Tis to see Tiresias I come, to
ask of the prophet
Where I the buskin of old, that now has
vanished, may find?”
“If they believe not in Nature, nor the
old Grecian, but vainly
Wilt thou convey up from hence that dramaturgy
to them.”
“Oh, as for Nature, once more to tread
our stage she has ventured,
Ay, and stark-naked beside, so that each
rib we count.”
“What? Is the buskin of old to be
seen in truth on your stage, then,
Which even I came to fetch, out of mid-Tartarus’
gloom?”-
“There is now no more of that tragic bustle,
for scarcely
Once in a year on the boards moves thy
great soul, harness-clad.”
“Doubtless ’tis well! Philosophy
now has refined your sensations,
And from the humor so bright fly the affections
so black.”-
“Ay, there is nothing that beats a jest
that is stolid and barren,
But then e’en sorrow can please,
if ’tis sufficiently moist.”
“But do ye also exhibit the graceful dance
of Thalia,
Joined to the solemn step with which Melpomene
moves?”-
“Neither! For naught we love but
what is Christian and moral;
And what is popular, too, homely, domestic,
and plain.”
“What? Does no Cæsar, does no Achilles,
appear on your stage now,
Not an Andromache e’en, not an Orestes,
my friend?”
“No! there is naught to be seen there
but parsons,
and syndics of commerce,
Secretaries perchance, ensigns, and majors
of horse.”
“But, my good friend, pray tell me, what
can such people e’er meet with
That can be truly called great?-what
that is great can they do?”
“What? Why they form cabals, they
lend upon mortgage, they pocket
Silver spoons, and fear not e’en
in the stocks to be placed.”
“Whence do ye, then, derive the destiny,
great and gigantic,
Which raises man up on high, e’en
when it grinds him to dust?”-
“All mere nonsense! Ourselves, our
worthy acquaintances also,
And our sorrows and wants, seek we, and
find we, too, here.”
“But all this ye possess at home both
apter and better,-
Wherefore, then, fly from yourselves,
if ’tis yourselves that ye seek?”
“Be not offended, great hero, for that
is a different question;
Ever is destiny blind,-ever
is righteous the bard.”
“Then one meets on your stage your own
contemptible nature,
While ’tis in vain one seeks there
nature enduring and great?”
“There the poet is host, and act the fifth
is the reckoning;
And, when crime becomes sick, virtue sits
down to the feast!”
RHINE
True, as becometh a Switzer, I watch
over Germany’s borders;
But the light-footed Gaul jumps o’er the
suffering stream.
RHINE AND MOSELLE
Many a year have I clasped in my
arms the Lorrainian maiden;
But our union as yet ne’er has been blest
with a son.
DANUBEIN
Round me are dwelling the falcon-eyed
race, the Phaeacian people;
Sunday with them never ends;
ceaselessly moves round the spit.
MAIN
Ay, it is true that my castles are
crumbling; yet, to my comfort,
Have I for centuries past
seen my old race still endure.
SAALE
Short is my course, during which
I salute many princes and nations;
Yet the princes are good-ay!
and the nations are free.
ILM.
Poor are my banks, it is true; but
yet my soft-flowing waters
Many immortal lays here, borne
by the current along.
PLEISSE.
Flat is my shore and shallow my
current; alas, all my writers,
Both in prose and in verse,
drink far too deep of its stream!
ELBE
All ye others speak only a jargon;
’mongst Germany’s rivers
None speak German but me;
I but in Misnia alone.
SPREE
Ramler once gave me language,-my
Cæsar a subject; and therefore
I had my mouth then stuffed
full; but I’ve been silent since that.
WESER
Nothing, alas, can be said about
me; I really can’t furnish
Matter enough to the Muse
e’en for an epigram, small.
MINERAL WATERS AT
Singular country! what excellent
taste in its fountains and rivers
In its people alone none have
I ever yet found!
PEGNTTZ.
I for a long time have been a hypochondriacal
subject;
I but flow on because it has
my habit been long.
THE RIVERS
We would gladly remain in the lands
that own-as their masters;
Soft their yoke ever is, and
all their burdens are light.
SALZACH.
I, to salt the archbishopric, come
from Juvavia’s mountains;
Then to Bavaria turn, where
they have great need of salt!
THE ANONYMOUS RIVER
Lenten food for the pious bishop’s
table to furnish,
By my Creator I’m poured
over the famishing land.
LESFLEUVES INDISCRETS.
Pray be silent, ye rivers!
One sees ye have no more discretion
Than, in a case we could name,
Diderot’s favorites had.
ZENITHAND NADIR
Wheresoever thou wanderest in space,
thy Zenith and Nadir
Unto the heavens knit thee,
unto the axis of earth.
Howsoever thou attest, let heaven
be moved by thy purpose,
Let the aim of thy deeds traverse
the axis of earth!
KANTAND HIS COMMENTATORS
See how a single rich man gives
a living to numbers of beggars!
’Tis when sovereigns
build, carters are kept in employ.
THE PHILOSOPHERS
The principle by which each thing
Toward strength and shape
first tended,-
The pulley whereon Zeus the ring
Of earth, that loosely used to swing,
With cautiousness suspended,-
he is a clever man, I vow,
Who its real name can tell me now,
Unless to help him I consent-
’Tis: ten and twelve
are different!
Fire burns,-’tis
chilly when it snows,
Man always is two-footed,-
The sun across the heavens goes,-
This, he who naught of logic knows
Finds to his reason suited.
Yet he who metaphysics learns,
Knows that naught freezes when it
burns-
Knows that what’s wet is never
dry,-
And that what’s bright attracts
the eye.
Old Homer sings his noble lays,
The hero goes through dangers;
The brave man duty’s call
obeys,
And did so, even in the days
When sages yet were strangers-
But heart and genius now have taught
What Locke and what Descartes never
thought;
By them immediately is shown
That which is possible alone.
In life avails the right of force.
The bold the timid worries;
Who rules not, is a slave of course,
Without design each thing across
Earth’s stage forever
hurries.
Yet what would happen if the plan
Which guides the world now first
began,
Within the moral system lies
Disclosed with clearness to our
eyes.
“When man would seek his destiny,
Man’s help must then
be given;
Save for the whole, ne’er
labors he,-
Of many drops is formed the sea,-
By water mills are driven;
Therefore the wolf’s wild
species flies,-
Knit are the state’s enduring
ties.”
Thus Puffendorf and Feder, each
Is, ex cathedra, wont to teach.
Yet, if what such professors say,
Each brain to enter durst
not,
Nature exerts her mother-sway,
Provides that ne’er the chain
gives way,
And that the ripe fruits burst
not.
Meanwhile, until earth’s structure
vast
Philosophy can bind at last,
’Tis she that bids its pinion
move,
By means of hunger and of love!
THEMETAPHYSICIAN
“How far beneath me seems
the earthly ball!
The pigmy race below I scarce
can see;
How does my art, the noblest art
of all,
Bear me close up to heaven’s
bright canopy!”
So cries the slater from his tower’s
high top,
And so the little would-be
mighty man,
Hans Metaphysicus, from out his
critic-shop.
Explain, thou little would-be
mighty man!
The tower from which thy looks the
world survey,
Whereof,-whereon is it
erected, pray?
How didst thou mount it? Of
what use to thee
Its naked heights, save o’er
the vale to see?
PEGASUSIN HARNESS
Once to a horse-fair,-it
may perhaps have been
Where other things are bought and
sold,-I mean
At the Haymarket,-there
the muses’ horse
A hungry poet brought-to
sell, of course.
’The hippogriff neighed shrilly,
loudly,
And reared upon his hind-legs proudly;
In utter wonderment each stood and
cried:
“The noble regal beast!”
But, woe betide!
Two hideous wings his slender form
deface,
The finest team he else would not
disgrace.
“The breed,” said they,
“is doubtless rare,
But who would travel through the
air?”
Not one of them would risk his gold.
At length a farmer grew more bold:
“As for his wings, I of no
use should find them,
But then how easy ’tis to
clip or bind them!
The horse for drawing may be useful
found,-
So, friend, I don’t mind giving
twenty pound!”
The other glad to sell his merchandise,
Cried, “Done!”-and
Hans rode off upon his prize.
The noble creature was, ere long,
put-to,
But scarcely felt the unaccustomed
load,
Than, panting to soar upwards, off
he flew,
And, filled with honest anger, overthrew
The cart where an abyss just
met the road.
“Ho! ho!” thought Hans:
“No cart to this mad beast
I’ll trust. Experience
makes one wise at least.
To drive the coach to-morrow now
my course is,
And he as leader in the team
shall go.
The lively fellow’ll save
me full two horses;
As years pass on, he’ll
doubtless tamer grow.”
All went on well at first.
The nimble steed
His partners roused,-like
lightning was their speed.
What happened next? Toward
heaven was turned his eye,-
Unused across the solid ground to
fly,
He quitted soon the safe and beaten
course,
And true to nature’s strong
resistless force,
Ran over bog and moor, o’er
hedge and pasture tilled;
An equal madness soon the other
horses filled-
No reins could hold them in, no
help was near,
Till,-only picture the
poor travellers’ fear!-
The coach, well shaken, and completely
wrecked,
Upon a hill’s steep top at
length was checked.
“If this is always sure to
be the case,”
Hans cried, and cut a very sorry
face,
“He’ll never do to draw
a coach or wagon;
Let’s see if we can’t
tame the fiery dragon
By means of heavy work and little
food.”
And so the plan was tried.-But
what ensued?
The handsome beast, before three
days had passed,
Wasted to nothing. “Stay!
I see at last!”
Cried Hans. “Be quick,
you fellows! yoke him now
With my most sturdy ox before the
plough.”
No sooner said than done. In
union queer
Together yoked were soon winged
horse and steer.
The griffin pranced with rage, and
his remaining might
Exerted to resume his old-accustomed
flight.
’Twas all in vain-his
partner stepped with circumspection,
And Phoebus’ haughty steed
must follow his direction;
Until at last, by long resistance
spent,
When strength his limbs no
longer was controlling,
The noble creature, with affliction
bent,
Fell to the ground, and in
the dust lay rolling.
“Accursed beast!” at
length with fury mad
Hans shouted, while he soundly
plied the lash,-
“Even for ploughing, then,
thou art too bad!-
That fellow was a rogue to
sell such trash!”
Ere yet his heavy blows had ceased
to fly,
A brisk and merry youth by chance
came by.
A lute was tinkling in his hand,
And through his light and
flowing hair
Was twined with grace a golden band.
“Whither, my friend,
with that strange pair?”
From far he to the peasant cried.
“A bird and ox to one rope
tied-
Was such a team e’er heard
of, pray?
Thy horse’s worth I’d
fain essay;
Just for one moment lend him me,-
Observe, and thou shalt wonders
see!”
The hippogriff was loosened from
the plough,
Upon his back the smiling youth
leaped now;
No sooner did the creature understand
That he was guided by a master-hand,
Than ’ginst his bit he champed,
and upward soared
While lightning from his flaming
eyes outpoured.
No longer the same being, royally
A spirit, ay, a god, ascended he,
Spread in a moment to the stormy
wind
His noble wings, and left the earth
behind,
And, ere the eye could follow him,
Had vanished in the heavens dim.
KNOWLEDGE
Knowledge to one is a goddess both
heavenly and high,-to another
Only an excellent cow, yielding
the butter he wants.
THE POETRY OF LIFE
“Who would himself with shadows
entertain,
Or gild his life with lights that
shine in vain,
Or nurse false hopes that do but
cheat the true?-
Though with my dream my heaven should
be resigned-
Though the free-pinioned soul that
once could dwell
In the large empire of the possible,
This workday life with iron chains
may bind,
Yet thus the mastery o’er
ourselves we find,
And solemn duty to our acts decreed,
Meets us thus tutored in the hour
of need,
With a more sober and submissive
mind!
How front necessity-yet
bid thy youth
Shun the mild rule of life’s
calm sovereign, truth.”
So speakest thou, friend, how stronger
far than I;
As from experience-that
sure port serene-
Thou lookest;-and straight,
a coldness wraps the sky,
The summer glory withers from the
scene,
Scared by the solemn spell; behold
them fly,
The godlike images that seemed so
fair!
Silent the playful Muse-the
rosy hours
Halt in their dance; and the May-breathing
flowers
Fall from the sister-graces’
waving hair.
Sweet-mouthed Apollo breaks his
golden lyre,
Hermes, the wand with many a marvel
rife;-
The veil, rose-woven, by the young
desire
With dreams, drops from the hueless
cheeks of life.
The world seems what it is-a
grave! and love
Casts down the bondage wound his
eyes above,
And sees!-He sees but
images of clay
Where he dreamed gods; and sighs-and
glides away.
The youngness of the beautiful grows
old,
And on thy lips the bride’s
sweet kiss seems cold;
And in the crowd of joys-upon
thy throne
Thou sittest in state, and hardenest
into stone.
TO GOETHE
On his producing
VOLTAIRE’S “Mahomet” On
the stage.
Thou, by whom, freed from rules
constrained and wrong,
On truth and nature once again
we’re placed,-
Who, in the cradle e’en a
hero strong,
Stiffest the serpents round
our genius laced,-
Thou whom the godlike science has
so long
With her unsullied sacred
fillet graced,-
Dost thou on ruined altars sacrifice
To that false muse whom we no longer
prize?
This theatre belongs to native art,
No foreign idols worshipped
here are seen;
A laurel we can show, with joyous
heart,
That on the German Pindus
has grown green
The sciences’ most holy, hidden
part
The German genius dares to
enter e’en,
And, following the Briton and the
Greek,
A nobler glory now attempts to seek.
For yonder, where slaves kneel,
and despots hold
The reins,-where
spurious greatness lifts its head,
Art has no power the noble there
to mould,
’Tis by no Louis that
its seed is spread;
From its own fulness it must needs
unfold,
By earthly majesty ’tis
never fed;
’Tis with truth only it can
e’er unite,
Its glow free spirits only e’er
can light.
’Tis not to bind us in a worn-out
chain
Thou dost this play of olden
time recall,-
’Tis not to seek to lead us
back again
To days when thoughtless childhood
ruled o’er all.
It were, in truth, an idle risk
and vain
Into the moving wheel of time
to fall;
The winged hours forever bear it
on,
The new arrives, and, lo! the old
has gone.
The narrow theatre is now more wide,
Into its space a universe
now steals;
In pompous words no longer is our
pride,
Nature we love when she her
form reveals;
Fashion’s false rules no more
are deified;
And as a man the hero acts
and feels.
’Tis passion makes the notes
of freedom sound,
And ’tis in truth the beautiful
is found.
Weak is the frame of Thespis’
chariot fair,
Resembling much the bark of
Acheron,
That carries naught but shades and
forms of air;
And if rude life should venture
to press on,
The fragile bark its weight no more
can bear,
For fleeting spirits it can
hold alone.
Appearance ne’er can reach
reality,-
If nature be victorious, art must
fly.
For on the stage’s boarded
scaffold here
A world ideal opens to our
eyes,
Nothing is true and genuine save-a
tear;
Emotion on no dream of sense
relies.
The real Melpomene is still sincere,
Naught as a fable merely she
supplies-
By truth profound to charm us is
her care;
The false one, truth pretends, but
to ensnare.
Now from the scene, art threatens
to retire,
Her kingdom wild maintains
still phantasy;
The stage she like the world would
set on fire,
The meanest and the noblest
mingles she.
The Frank alone ’tis art can
now inspire,
And yet her archetype can
his ne’er be;
In bounds unchangeable confining
her,
He holds her fast, and vainly would
she stir.
The stage to him is pure and undefiled;
Chased from the regions that
to her belong
Are Nature’s tones, so careless
and so wild,
To him e’en language
rises into song;
A realm harmonious ’tis, of
beauty mild,
Where limb unites to limb
in order strong.
The whole into a solemn temple blends,
And ’tis the dance that grace
to motion lends.
And yet the Frank must not be made
our guide.
For in his art no living spirit
reigns:
The boasting gestures of a spurious
pride
That mind which only loves
the true disdains.
To nobler ends alone be it applied,
Returning, like some soul’s
long-vanished manes.
To render the oft-sullied stage
once more
A throne befitting the great muse
of yore.
THE PRESENT
Ring and staff, oh to me on a Rhenish flask
ye are welcome!
Him a true shepherd I call, who thus gives
drink to his sheep.
Draught thrice blest! It is by the Muse
I have won thee,-the Muse, too,
Sends thee,-and even the church
places upon thee her seal.
DEPARTURE FROM LIFE
Two are the roads that before thee lie open from life
to conduct thee;
To the ideal one leads thee, the other
to death.
See that while yet thou art free, on the first thou
commencest thy journey,
Ere by the merciless fates on to the other
thou’rt led!
VERSES WRITTEN IN THE FOLIO ALBUM OF A LEARNED FRIEND
Once wisdom dwelt in tomes of ponderous
size,
While friendship from a pocketbook
would talk;
But now that knowledge in small
compass lies,
And floats in almanacs, as
light as cork,
Courageous man, thou dost not hesitate
To open for thy friends this house
so great!
Hast thou no fear, I seriously would
ask,
That thou may’st thus their
patience overtask?
VERSES WRITTEN IN THE ALBUM OF A FRIEND
(Herr
Von MECHELN of basle.)
Nature in charms is exhaustless,
in beauty ever reviving;
And, like Nature, fair art
is inexhaustible too.
Hail, thou honored old man! for
both in thy heart thou preservest
Living sensations, and thus
ne’er-ending youth is thy lot!
THE SUNDAY CHILDREN
Years has the master been laboring, but always
without satisfaction;
To an ingenious race ’twould be
in vision conferred.
What they yesterday learned, to-day they fain
would be teaching:
Small compassion, alas, is by those gentlemen
shown!
THE HIGHEST
Seerest thou the highest, the greatest!
In that the plant can
instruct thee;
What it unwittingly is, be thou
of thine own free will!
THE PUPPET SHOW OF LIFE
Thou’rt welcome in my
box to peep!
Life’s puppet-show, the world
in little,
Thou’lt see depicted to a
tittle,-
But pray at some small distance
keep!
’Tis by the torch of
love alone,
By Cupid’s taper, it
is shown.
See, not a moment void the stage
is!
The child in arms at first
they bring,-
The boy then skips,-the
youth now storms and rages,-
The man contends, and ventures
everything!
Each one attempts success
to find,
Yet narrow is the race-course ever;
The chariot rolls, the axles quiver,
The hero presses on, the coward
stays behind,
The proud man falls with mirth-inspiring
fall,
The wise man overtakes them all!
Thou see’st fair woman it
the barrier stand,
With beauteous hands, with smiling
eyes,
To glad the victor with his prize.
TO LAW GIVERS
Ever take it for granted, that man
collectively wishes
That which is right; but take
care never to think so of one!
FALSE IMPULSE TO STUDY
Oh, how many new foes against truth!
My very soul bleedeth
When I behold the owl-race
now bursting forth to the light.
THE PRICE OF WEIMAR
(Sung in
A circle of friends.)
With one last bumper let us hail
The wanderer beloved,
Who takes his leave of this still
vale
Wherein in youth he roved.
From loving arms, from native home,
He tears himself away,
To yonder city proud to roam,
That makes whole lands its
prey.
Dissension flies, all tempests end,
And chained is strife abhorred;
We in the crater may descend
From whence the lava poured.
A gracious fate conduct thee through
Life’s wild and mazy
track!
A bosom nature gave thee true,-
A bosom true bring back!
Thou’lt visit lands that war’s
wild train
Had crushed with careless
heed;
Now smiling peace salutes the plain,
And strews the golden seed.
The hoary Father Rhine thou’lt
greet,
Who thy forefather blest
Will think of, whilst his waters
fleet
In ocean’s bed to rest.
Do homage to the hero’s manes,
And offer to the Rhine,
The German frontier who maintains,
His own-created wine,-
So that thy country’s soul
thy guide
May be, when thou hast crossed
On the frail bark to yonder side,
Where German faith is lost!
THE IDEAL OF WOMAN
To Amanda.
Woman in everything yields to man;
but in that which is highest,
Even the manliest man yields to the woman most weak.
But that highest,-what is it? The
gentle radiance of triumph
As in thy brow upon me, beauteous Amanda, it beams.
When o’er the bright shining disk the clouds
of affliction are fleeting,
Fairer the image appears, seen through the vapor
of gold.
Man may think himself free! thou art so,-for
thou never knowest
What is the meaning of choice,-know’st
not necessity’s name.
That which thou givest, thou always givest wholly;
but one art thou ever,
Even thy tenderest sound is thine harmonious self.
Youth everlasting dwells here, with fulness that
never is exhausted,
And with the flower at once pluckest thou the ripe
golden fruit.
THE FOUNTAIN OF SECOND YOUTH
Trust me, ’tis not a mere tale,-the
fountain of youth really runneth,
Runneth forever. Thou ask’st,
where? In the poet’s sweet art!
WILLIAMTELL
When hostile elements with rage
resound,
And fury blindly fans war’s
lurid flame,-
When in the strife of party quarrel
drowned,
The voice of justice no regard
can claim,-
When crime is free, and impious
hands are found
The sacred to pollute, devoid
of shame,
And loose the anchor which the state
maintains,-
No subject there we find for joyous
strains.
But when a nation, that its flocks
still feeds
With calm content, nor other’s
wealth desires
Throws off the cruel yoke ’neath
which it bleeds,
Yet, e’en in wrath,
humanity admires,-
And, e’en in triumph, moderation
heeds,-
That is immortal, and our
song requires.
To show thee such an image now is
mine;
Thou knowest it well, for all that’s
great is thine!
TO A YOUNG FRIEND DEVOTING HIMSLEF TO PHILOSOPHY
Severe the proof the Grecian youth was doomed
to undergo,
Before he might what lurks beneath the Eleusinia
know-
Art thou prepared and ripe, the shrine-the
inner shrine-to win,
Where Pallas guards from vulgar eyes the mystic
prize within?
Knowest thou what bars thy way? how dear the
bargain thou dost make,
When but to buy uncertain good, sure good thou
dost forsake?
Feel’st thou sufficient strength to brave
the deadliest human fray,
When heart from reason-sense from
thought, shall rend themselves away?
Sufficient valor, war with doubt, the hydra-shape,
to wage;
And that worst foe within thyself with manly
soul engage?
With eyes that keep their heavenly health-the
innocence of youth
To guard from every falsehood, fair beneath
the mask of truth?
Fly, if thou canst not trust thy heart to guide
thee on the way-
Oh, fly the charmed margin ere th’ abyss
engulf its prey.
Round many a step that seeks the light, the
shades of midnight close;
But in the glimmering twilight, see-how
safely childhood goes!
EXPECTATIONAL AND FULFILMENT
Into life’s ocean the youth
with a thousand masts daringly launches;
Mute, in a boat saved from
wreck, enters the gray-beard the port.
THE COMMON FATE
See how we hate, how we quarrel, how thought and how
feeling divide us!
But thy locks, friend, like mine, meanwhile
are bleachening fast.
HUMANACTION
Where the pathway begins, eternity
seems to lie open,
Yet at the narrowest point
even the wisest man stops.
NUPTIAL ODE
Fair bride, attended by our blessing,
Glad Hymen’s flowery
path ’gin pressing!
We witnessed with enraptured
eye
The graces of thy soul unfolding,
Thy youthful charms their beauty
moulding
To blossom for love’s
ecstasy.
A happy fate now hovers round thee,
And friendship yields without
a smart
To that sweet god whose might hath
bound thee;-
He needs must have, he hath
thy heart!
To duties dear, to trouble tender,
Thy youthful breast must now surrender,
Thy garland’s summons
must obey.
Each toying infantine sensation,
Each fleeting sport of youth’s
creation,
Forevermore hath passed away;
And Hymen’s sacred bond
now chaineth
Where soft and fluttering
love was shrined;
Yet for a heart, where beauty reigneth,
Of flowers alone that bond
is twined.
The secret that can keep forever
In verdant links, that naught can
sever,
The bridal garland, wouldst
thou find?
’Tis purity the heart pervading,
The blossoms of a grace unfading,
And yet with modest shame
combined,
Which, like the sun’s reflection
glowing,
Makes every heart throb blissfully;-
’Tis looks with mildness overflowing,
And self-maintaining dignity!
THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE NEW CENTURY
Where will a place of refuge, noble
friend,
For peace and freedom ever
open lie!
The century in tempests had its
end,
The new one now begins with
murder’s cry.
Each land-connecting bond is torn
away,
Each ancient custom hastens
to decline;
Not e’en the ocean can war’s
tumult stay.
Not e’en the Nile-god,
not the hoary Rhine.
Two mighty nations strive, with
hostile power,
For undivided mastery of the
world;
And, by them, each land’s
freedom to devour,
The trident brandished is-the
lightning hurled.
Each country must to them its gold
afford,
And, Brennus-like, upon the
fatal day,
The Frank now throws his heavy iron
sword,
The even scales of justice
to o’erweigh.
His merchant-fleets the Briton greedily
Extends, like polyp-limbs,
on every side;
And the domain of Amphitrite free
As if his home it were, would
fain bestride.
E’en to the south pole’s
dim, remotest star,
His restless course moves
onward, unrestrained;
Each isle he tracks,-each
coast, however far,
But paradise alone he ne’er
has gained!
Although thine eye may every map
explore,
Vainly thou’lt seek
to find that blissful place,
Where freedom’s garden smiles
for evermore,
And where in youth still blooms
the human race.
Before thy gaze the world extended
lies,
The very shipping it can scarce
embrace;
And yet upon her back, of boundless
size,
E’en for ten happy men
there is not space!
Into thy bosom’s holy, silent
cells,
Thou needs must fly from life’s
tumultuous throng!
Freedom but in the realm of vision
dwells,
And beauty bears no blossoms
but in song.
GRECIAN GENIUS
ToMeyer in Italy.
Speechless to thousands of others, who with deaf hearts
would consult him,
Talketh the spirit to thee, who art his kinsman
and friend.
THE FATHER
Work as much as thou wilt, alone
thou’lt be standing forever,
Till by nature thou’rt
joined forcibly on to the whole.
THE CONNECTING MEDIUM
How does nature proceed to unite
the high and the lowly
In mankind? She commands
vanity ’tween them to stand!
THEMOMENT
Doubtless an epoch important has
with the century risen;
But the moment so great finds
but a race of small worth.
GERMAN COMEDY
Fools we may have in plenty, and
simpletons, too, by the dozen;
But for comedy these never
make use of themselves.
FAREWELL TO READER
A maiden blush o’er every
feature straying,
The Muse her gentle harp now
lays down here,
And stands before thee, for thy
judgment praying,-
She waits with reverence,
but not with fear;
Her last farewell for his kind smile
delaying.
Whom splendor dazzles not
who holds truth dear.
The hand of him alone whose soaring
spirit
Worships the beautiful, can crown
her merit.
These simple lays are only heard
resounding,
While feeling hearts are gladdened
by their tone,
With brighter phantasies their path
surrounding,
To nobler aims their footsteps
guiding on.
Yet coming ages ne’er will
hear them sounding,
They live but for the present
hour alone;
The passing moment called them into
being,
And, as the hours dance on, they,
too, are fleeing.
The spring returns, and nature then
awaking,
Bursts into life across the
smiling plain;
Each shrub its perfume through the
air is shaking,
And heaven is filled with
one sweet choral strain;
While young and old, their secret
haunts forsaking,
With raptured eye and ear
rejoice again.
The spring then flies,-to
seed return the flowers.
And naught remains to mark the vanished
hours.