BOOK FIRST.
I.
Ah! who can tell how hard it
is to climb
The steep, where Fame’s proud temple shines
afar!
Ah! who can tell how many a soul sublime
Has felt the influence of malignant star,
And waged with Fortune an eternal war!
Checked by the scoff of Pride, by Envy’s
frown,
And Poverty’s unconquerable bar,
In life’s low vale remote has pined alone,
Then dropt into the grave, unpitied and unknown!
II.
And yet, the languor
of inglorious days
Not equally oppressive
is to all.
Him, who ne’er
listened to the voice of praise,
The silence of
neglect can ne’er appal.
There are, who,
deaf to mad Ambition’s call,
Would shrink to
hear th’ obstreperous trump of Fame;
Supremely blest,
if to their portion fall
Health, competence,
and peace. Nor higher aim
Had He, whose simple tale
these artless lines proclaim.
III.
This sapient age
disclaims all classic lore;
Else I should
here, in cunning phrase, display,
How forth the
minstrel fared in days of yore,
Right glad of
heart, though homely in array;
His waving locks
and beard all hoary grey:
And, from his
bending shoulder, decent hung
His harp, the
sole companion of his way,
Which to the whistling
wind responsive rung:
And ever as he went some merry
lay he sung.
IV.
Fret not yourselves,
ye silken sons of pride,
That a poor Wanderer
should inspire my strain.
The Muses fortune’s
fickle smile deride,
Nor ever bow the
knee in Mammon’s fane;
For their delights
are with the village-train,
Whom Nature’s
laws engage, and Nature’s charms:
They hate the
sensual, and scorn the vain;
The parasite their
influence never warms,
Nor him whose sordid soul
the love of wealth alarms.
V.
Though richest hues the peacock’s
plumes adorn,
Yet horror screams from his discordant throat.
Rise, sons of harmony, and hail the morn,
While warbling larks on russet pinions float;
Or seek, at noon, the woodland scene remote,
Where the grey linnets carol from the hill.
O let them ne’er, with artificial note,
To please a tyrant, strain the little bill!
But sing what heaven inspires, and wander where
they will.
VI.
Liberal, not lavish,
is kind Nature’s hand;
Nor was perfection
made for man below.
Yet all her schemes
with nicest art are planned,
Good counteracting
ill, and gladness woe.
With gold and
gems if Chilian mountains glow,
If bleak and barren
Scotia’s hills arise;
There, plague
and poison, lust and rapine grow;
Here, peaceful
are the vales, and pure the skies,
And freedom fires the soul,
and sparkles in the eyes.
VII.
Then grieve not,
thou, to whom the indulgent Muse
Vouchsafes a portion
of celestial fire;
Nor blame the
partial fates, if they refuse
The imperial banquet,
and the rich attire.
Know thine own
worth, and reverence the lyre.
Wilt thou debase
the heart which God refined?
No; let thy heaven-taught
soul to heaven aspire,
To fancy, freedom,
harmony, resigned;
Ambition’s grovelling
crew for ever left behind.
VIII.
Canst thou forego the pure ethereal
soul
In each fine sense so exquisitely keen,
On the dull couch of Luxury to loll,
Stung with disease, and stupified with spleen;
Fain to implore the aid of Flattery’s
screen,
Even from thyself thy loathsome heart to hide,
(The mansion, then, no more of joy serene)
Where fear, distrust, malevolence, abide,
And impotent desire, and disappointed pride?
IX.
O, how canst thou
renounce the boundless store
Of charms which
Nature to her votary yields!
The warbling woodland,
the resounding shore,
The pomp of groves,
and garniture of fields;
All that the genial
ray of morning gilds,
And all that echoes
to the song of even,
All that the mountain’s
sheltering bosom shields,
And all the dread
magnificence of heaven,
O how canst thou renounce,
and hope to be forgiven!
X.
These charms shall work thy soul’s
eternal health,
And love, and gentleness, and joy, impart.
But these thou must renounce, if lust of wealth
E’er win its way to thy corrupted heart;
For ah! it poisons like a scorpion’s dart;
Prompting the ungenerous wish, the selfish scheme,
The stern resolve, unmoved by pity’s smart,
The troublous day, and long distressful dream.
Return, my roving Muse! resume thy purposed theme.
XI.
There lived, in
Gothic days, as legends tell,
A shepherd-swain,
a man of low degree;
Whose sires, perchance,
in Fairyland might dwell,
Sicilian groves,
or vales of Arcady;
But he, I ween,
was of the North Countrie:
A nation famed
for song, and beauty’s charms;
Zealous, yet modest;
innocent, though free;
Patient of toil;
serene amidst alarms;
Inflexible in faith; invincible
in arms.
XII.
The shepherd-swain,
of whom I mention made,
On Scotia’s
mountains fed his little flock;
The sickle, scythe,
or plough, he never swayed;
An honest heart
was almost all his stock;
His drink the
living water from the rock:
The milky dams
supplied his board, and lent
Their kindly fleece
to baffle winter’s shock;
And he, though
oft with dust and sweat besprent,
Did guide and guard their
wanderings, wheresoe’er they went.
XIII.
From labour health, from health
contentment springs.
Contentment opes the source of every joy.
He envied not, he never thought of kings;
Nor from those appetites sustained annoy,
Which chance may frustrate, or indulgence cloy:
Nor fate his calm and humble hopes beguiled;
He mourned no recreant friend, nor mistress
coy,
For on his vows the blameless Phoebe smiled,
And her alone he loved, and loved her from a child.
XIV.
No jealousy their
dawn of love o’ercast,
Nor blasted were
their wedded days with strife;
Each season looked
delightful, as it past,
To the fond husband,
and the faithful wife.
Beyond the lowly
vale of shepherd life
They never roamed;
secure beneath the storm
Which in Ambition’s
lofty land is rife,
Where peace and
love are cankered by the worm
Of pride, each bud of joy
industrious to deform.
XV.
The wight, whose
tale these artless lines unfold,
Was all the offspring
of this simple pair.
His birth no oracle
or seer foretold:
No prodigy appeared
in earth or air,
Nor aught that
might a strange event declare.
You guess each
circumstance of Edwin’s birth;
The parent’s
transport, and the parent’s care;
The gossip’s
prayer for wealth, and wit, and worth;
And one long summer-day of
indolence and mirth.
XVI.
And yet poor Edwin
was no vulgar boy;
Deep thought oft
seemed to fix his infant eye.
Dainties he heeded
not, nor gaude, nor toy,
Save one short
pipe of rudest minstrelsy.
Silent when glad;
affectionate, though shy;
And now his look
was most demurely sad,
And now he laughed
aloud, yet none knew why.
The neighbours
stared and sighed, yet blessed the lad:
Some deemed him wondrous wise,
and some believed him mad.
XVII.
But why should I his childish
feats display?
Concourse, and noise, and toil, he ever fled;
Nor cared to mingle in the clamorous fray
Of squabbling imps; but to the forest sped,
Or roamed at large the lonely mountain’s
head;
Or, where the maze of some bewildered stream
To deep untrodden groves his footsteps led,
There would he wander wild, ‘till Phoebus’
beam,
Shot from the western cliff, released the weary
team.
XVIII.
The exploit of strength, dexterity,
or speed,
To him nor vanity nor joy could bring.
His heart, from cruel sport estranged, would
bleed
To work the woe of any living thing,
By trap, or net; by arrow, or by sling;
These he detested, those he scorned to wield:
He wished to be the guardian, not the king,
Tyrant, far less, or traitor, of the field.
And sure the sylvan reign unbloody joy might yield.
XIX.
Lo! where the
stripling, wrapt in wonder, roves
Beneath the precipice
o’erhung with pine;
And sees, on high,
amidst the encircling groves,
From cliff to
cliff the foaming torrents shine:
While waters,
woods, and winds, in concert join,
And Echo swells
the chorus to the skies.
Would Edwin this
majestic scene resign
For aught the
huntsman’s puny craft supplies?
Ah! no: he better knows
great Nature’s charms to prize.
XX.
And oft he traced
the uplands, to survey,
When o’er
the sky advanced the kindling dawn,
The crimson cloud,
blue main, and mountain grey,
And lake, dim-gleaming
on the smoky lawn;
Far to the west
the long, long vale withdrawn,
Where twilight
loves to linger for a while;
And now he faintly
kens the bounding fawn,
And villager abroad
at early toil.
But, lo! the sun appears!
and heaven, earth, ocean, smile.
XXI.
And oft the craggy
cliff he loved to climb,
When all in mist
the world below was lost.
What dreadful
pleasure! there to stand sublime,
Like shipwrecked
mariner on desert coast,
And view the enormous
waste of vapour, tost
In billows, lengthening
to the horizon round,
Now scooped in
gulfs, with mountains now embossed!
And hear the voice
of mirth and song rebound,
Flocks, herds, and waterfalls,
along the hoar profound!
XXII.
In truth he was a strange and
wayward wight,
Fond of each gentle, and each dreadful scene.
In darkness, and in storm, he found delight:
Nor less, than when on ocean-wave serene
The southern sun diffused his dazzling shene.
Even sad vicissitude amused his soul:
And if a sigh would sometimes intervene,
And down his cheek a tear of pity roll,
A sigh, a tear, so sweet, he wished not to controul.
XXIII.
‘O ye wild groves, O where
is now your bloom!’
(The Muse interprets thus his tender thought.)
’Your flowers, your verdure, and your
balmy gloom,
’Of late so grateful in the hour of drought!
’Why do the birds, that song and rapture
brought
’To all your bowers, their mansions now
forsake?
’Ah! why has fickle chance this ruin wrought!
’For now the storm howls mournful through
the brake,
’And the dead foliage flies in many a shapeless
flake.
XXIV.
’Where now the rill, melodious,
pure, and cool,
’And meads, with life, and mirth, and
beauty, crowned!
’Ah! see, the unsightly slime, and sluggish
pool,
’Have all the solitary vale imbrowned;
’Fled each fair form, and mute each melting
sound.
’The raven croaks forlorn on naked spray:
’And, hark! the river, bursting every
mound,
’Down the vale thunders; and, with wasteful
sway,
’Uproots the grove, and rolls the shattered
rocks away.
XXV.
’Yet such
the destiny of all on earth:
’So flourishes
and fades majestic man.
’Fair is
the bud his vernal morn brings forth,
’And fostering
gales awhile the nursling fan.
’O smile,
ye heavens, serene; ye mildews wan,
’Ye blighting
whirlwinds, spare his balmy prime,
’Nor lessen
of his life the little span.
’Borne on
the swift, though silent, wings of Time,
’Old-age comes on apace
to ravage all the clime.
XXVI.
’And be it so. Let
those deplore their doom,
’Whose hope still grovels in this dark
sojourn.
’But lofty souls, who look beyond the
tomb,
’Can smile at Fate, and wonder how they
mourn.
’Shall spring to these sad scenes no more
return?
’Is yonder wave the sun’s eternal
bed?
’Soon shall the orient with new lustre
burn,
’And spring shall soon her vital influence
shed,
’Again attune the grove, again adorn the
mead.
XXVII.
’Shall I be left abandoned
in the dust,
’When Fate, relenting, lets the flower
revive?
’Shall Nature’s voice, to man alone
unjust,
’Bid him, though doomed to perish, hope
to live?
’Is it for this fair Virtue oft must strive
’With disappointment, penury, and pain?
’No: Heaven’s immortal spring
shall yet arrive;
’And man’s majestic beauty bloom
again,
‘Bright through the eternal year of Love’s
triumphant reign.’
XXVIII.
This truth sublime his simple
sire had taught.
In sooth, ’twas almost all the shepherd
knew.
No subtle nor superfluous lore he sought,
Nor ever wished his Edwin to pursue.
’Let man’s own sphere (quoth he)
confine his view,
‘Be man’s peculiar work his sole
delight.’
And much, and oft, he warned him, to eschew
Falsehood and guile, and aye maintain the right,
By pleasure unseduced, unawed by lawless might.
XXIX.
’And, from the prayer of
Want, and plaint of Woe,
’O never, never turn away thine ear.
’Forlorn, in this bleak wilderness below,
’Ah! what were man, should Heaven refuse
to hear!
’To others do (the law is not severe)
’What to thyself thou wishest to be done.
’Forgive thy foes; and love thy parents
dear,
’And friends, and native land; nor those
alone;
‘All human weal and woe learn thou to make
thine own.’
XXX.
See, in the rear
of the warm sunny shower,
The visionary
boy from shelter fly!
For now the storm
of summer-rain is o’er,
And cool, and
fresh, and fragrant is the sky.
And, lo! in the
dark east, expanded high,
The rainbow brightens
to the setting sun!
Fond fool, that
deem’st the streaming glory nigh,
How vain the chace
thine ardour has begun!
’Tis fled afar, ere
half thy purposed race be run.
XXXI.
Yet couldst thou learn, that
thus it fares with age,
When pleasure, wealth, or power, the bosom warm,
This baffled hope might tame thy manhood’s
rage,
And Disappointment of her sting disarm.
But why should foresight thy fond heart alarm?
Perish the lore that deadens young desire!
Pursue, poor imp, the imaginary charm,
Indulge gay hope, and fancy’s pleasing
fire:
Fancy and Hope too soon shall of themselves expire.
XXXII.
When the long-sounding curfew,
from afar,
Loaded with loud lament the lonely gale,
Young Edwin, lighted by the evening star,
Lingering and listening, wandered down the vale.
There would he dream of graves, and corsés
pale;
And ghosts, that to the charnel-dungeon throng,
And drag a length of clanking chain, and wail,
Till silenced by the owl’s terrific song,
Or blast that shrieks by fits the shuddering aisles
along.
XXXIII.
Or, when the setting moon, in
crimson dyed,
Hung o’er the dark and melancholy deep,
To haunted stream, remote from man, he hied,
Where fays, of yore, their revels wont to keep;
And there let Fancy roam at large, till sleep
A vision brought to his entranced sight.
And first, a wildly murmuring wind ’gan
creep
Shrill to his ringing ear; then tapers bright,
With instantaneous gleam, illumed the vault of
night.
XXXIV.
Anon in view a portal’s
blazoned arch
Arose; the trumpet bids the valves unfold;
And forth an host of little warriors march,
Grasping the diamond lance, and targe of gold.
Their look was gentle, their demeanour bold,
And green their helms, and green their silk
attire;
And here and there, right venerably old,
The long-robed minstrels wake the warbling wire,
And some with mellow breath the martial pipe inspire.
XXXV.
With merriment, and song, and
timbrels clear,
A troop of dames from myrtle bowers advance;
The little warriors doff the targe and spear,
And loud enlivening strains provoke the dance.
They meet, they dart away, they wheel askance;
To right, to left, they thrid the flying maze;
Now bound aloft with vigorous spring, then glance
Rapid along: with many-coloured rays
Of tapers, gems, and gold, the echoing forests
blaze.
XXXVI.
The dream is fled. Proud
harbinger of day,
Who scar’dst the vision with thy clarion
shrill,
Fell chanticleer! who oft hast reft away
My fancied good, and brought substantial ill!
O to thy cursed scream, discordant still,
Let Harmony aye shut her gentle ear:
Thy boastful mirth let jealous rivals spill,
Insult thy crest, and glossy pinions tear,
And ever in thy dreams the ruthless fox appear.
XXXVII.
Forbear, my Muse. Let love
attune thy line.
Revoke the spell. Thine Edwin frets not
so.
For how should he at wicked chance repine,
Who feels, from every change, amusement flow?
Even now his eyes with smiles of rapture glow,
As on he wanders through the scenes of morn,
Where the fresh flowers in living lustre blow,
Where thousand pearls the dewy lawns adorn,
A thousand notes of joy in every breeze are borne.
XXXVIII.
But who the melodies
of morn can tell?
The wild brook
babbling down the mountain side;
The lowing herd;
the sheepfold’s simple bell;
The pipe of early
shepherd, dim descried
In the lone valley;
echoing far and wide,
The clamorous
horn, along the cliffs above;
The hollow murmur
of the ocean-tide;
The hum of bees,
and linnet’s lay of love,
And the full choir that wakes
the universal grove.
XXXIX.
The cottage-curs at early pilgrim
bark;
Crowned with her pail the tripping milkmaid
sings;
The whistling ploughman stalks afield; and,
hark!
Down the rough slope the ponderous waggon rings;
Through rustling corn the hare astonished springs;
Slow tolls the village-clock the drowsy hour;
The partridge bursts away on whirring wings;
Deep mourns the turtle in sequestered bower,
And shrill lark carols clear from her aerial tour.
XL.
O Nature, how
in every charm supreme!
Whose votaries
feast on raptures ever new!
O for the voice
and fire of seraphim,
To sing thy glories
with devotion due!
Blessed be the
day I ’scaped the wrangling crew,
From Pyrrho’s
maze, and Epicurus’ sty;
And held high
converse with the godlike few,
Who to the enraptured
heart, and ear, and eye,
Teach beauty, virtue, truth,
and love, and melody.
XLI.
Hence! ye, who
snare and stupify the mind,
Sophists, of beauty,
virtue, joy, the bane!
Greedy and fell,
though impotent and blind,
Who spread your
filthy nets in Truth’s fair fane,
And ever ply your
venomed fangs amain!
Hence to dark
Error’s den, whose rankling slime
First gave you
form! hence! lest the Muse should deign,
(Though loath
on theme so mean to waste a rhyme),
With vengeance to pursue your
sacrilegious crime.
XLII.
But hail, ye mighty masters of
the lay,
Nature’s true sons, the friends of man
and truth!
Whose song, sublimely sweet, serenely gay,
Amused my childhood, and informed my youth.
O let your spirit still my bosom sooth,
Inspire my dreams, and my wild wanderings guide!
Your voice each rugged path of life can smooth;
For well I know, wherever ye reside,
There harmony, and peace, and innocence, abide.
XLIII.
Ah me! abandoned on the lonesome
plain,
As yet poor Edwin never knew your lore,
Save when against the winter’s drenching
rain,
And driving snow, the cottage shut the door.
Then, as instructed by tradition hoar,
Her legends when the Beldam ’gan impart,
Or chant the old heroic ditty o’er,
Wonder and joy ran thrilling to his heart;
Much he the tale admired, but more the tuneful
art.
XLIV.
Various and strange was the long-winded
tale;
And halls, and knights, and feats of arms, displayed;
Or merry swains, who quaff the nut-brown ale,
And sing, enamoured of the nut-brown maid;
The moon-light revel of the fairy glade;
Or hags, that suckle an infernal brood,
And ply in caves the unutterable trade,
’Midst fiends and spectres, quench the
moon in blood,
Yell in the midnight storm, or ride the infuriate
flood.
XLV.
But when to horror
his amazement rose,
A gentler strain
the Beldam would rehearse,
A tale of rural
life, a tale of woes,
The orphan-babes,
and guardian uncle fierce.
O cruel! will
no pang of pity pierce
That heart by
lust of lucre seared to stone!
For sure, if aught
of virtue last, or verse,
To latest times
shall tender souls bemoan
Those helpless orphan-babes
by thy fell arts undone.
XLVI.
Behold, with berries smeared,
with brambles torn,
The babes, now famished, lay them down to die;
’Midst the wild howl of darksome woods
forlorn,
Folded in one another’s arms they lie;
Nor friend, nor stranger, hears their dying
cry:
‘For from the town the man returns no
more.’
But thou, who Heaven’s just vengeance
darest defy,
This deed with fruitless tears shalt soon deplore,
When Death lays waste thy house, and flames consume
thy store.
XLVII.
A stifled smile of stern vindictive
joy
Brightened one moment Edwin’s starting
tear.
’But why should gold man’s feeble
mind decoy,
‘And innocence thus die by doom severe?’
O Edwin! while thy heart is yet sincere,
The assaults of discontent and doubt repel:
Dark even at noontide is our mortal sphere;
But let us hope; to doubt, is to rebel;
Let us exult in hope, that all shall yet be well.
XLVIII.
Nor be thy generous indignation
checked,
Nor checked the tender tear to misery given;
From Guilt’s contagious power shall that
protect,
This soften and refine the soul for heaven.
But dreadful is their doom, whom doubt hath
driven
To censure Fate, and pious hope forego;
Like yonder blasted boughs by lightning riven,
Perfection, beauty, life, they never know,
But frown on all that pass, a monument of woe.
XLIX.
Shall he, whose birth, maturity,
and age,
Scarce fill the circle of one summer-day,
Shall the poor gnat, with discontent and rage,
Exclaim that Nature hastens to decay,
If but a cloud obstruct the solar ray,
If but a momentary shower descend!
Or shall frail man Heaven’s dread decree
gainsay,
Which bade the series of events extend
Wide through unnumbered worlds, and ages without
end!
L.
One part, one little part, we
dimly scan,
Through the dark medium of life’s feverish
dream;
Yet dare arraign the whole stupendous plan,
If but that little part incongruous seem.
Nor is that part, perhaps, what mortals deem;
Oft from apparent ill our blessings rise.
O then, renounce that impious self-esteem,
That aims to trace the secrets of the skies:
For thou art but of dust; be humble, and be wise.
LI.
Thus, Heaven enlarged
his soul in riper years.
For Nature gave
him strength, and fire, to soar,
On Fancy’s
wing above this vale of tears;
Where dark cold-hearted
sceptics, creeping, pore
Through microscope
of metaphysic lore:
And much they
grope for truth, but never hit.
For why? their
powers, inadequate before,
This art preposterous
renders more unfit;
Yet deem they darkness light,
and their vain blunders wit.
LII.
Nor was this ancient
dame a foe to mirth.
Her ballad, jest,
and riddle’s quaint device,
Oft cheered the
shepherds round their social hearth;
Whom levity or
spleen could ne’er entice
To purchase chat
or laughter at the price
Of decency.
Nor let it faith exceed,
That Nature forms
a rustic taste so nice.
Ah! had they been
of court or city breed,
Such delicacy were right marvellous
indeed.
LIII.
Oft when the winter-storm had
ceased to rave,
He roamed the snowy waste at even, to view
The cloud stupendous, from the Atlantic wave
High-towering, sail along the horizon blue:
Where, ’midst the changeful scenery ever
new,
Fancy a thousand wondrous forms descries,
More wildly great than ever pencil drew;
Rocks, torrents, gulfs, and shapes of giant
size,
And glittering cliffs on cliffs, and fiery ramparts
rise.
LIV.
Thence, musing,
onward to the sounding shore,
The lone enthusiast
oft would take his way,
Listening, with
pleasing dread, to the deep roar
Of the wide-weltering
waves. In black array
When sulphurous
clouds rolled on the vernal day,
Even then he hastened
from the haunt of man,
Along the darkening
wilderness to stray,
What time the
lightning’s fierce career began,
And o’er heaven’s
rending arch the rattling thunder ran.
LV.
Responsive to
the sprightly pipe, when all
In sprightly dance
the village-youth were joined,
Edwin, of melody
aye held in thrall,
From the rude
gambol far remote reclined,
Soothed with the
soft notes warbling in the wind.
Ah then, all jollity
seemed noise and folly.
To the pure soul,
by Fancy’s fire refined,
Ah, what is mirth,
but turbulence unholy,
When with the charm compared
of heavenly melancholy!
LVI.
Is there a heart
that music cannot melt?
Ah me! how is
that rugged heart forlorn!
Is there, who
ne’er those mystic transports felt,
Of solitude and
melancholy born?
He needs not woo
the Muse; he is her scorn.
The sophist’s
rope of cobweb he shall twine;
Mope o’er
the schoolman’s peevish page; or mourn,
And delve for
life, in Mammon’s dirty mine;
Sneak with the scoundrel fox,
or grunt with glutton swine.
LVII.
For Edwin, Fate a nobler doom
had planned;
Song was his favourite and first pursuit.
The wild harp rang to his adventurous hand,
And languished to his breath the plaintive flute.
His infant muse, though artless, was not mute:
Of elegance, as yet, he took no care;
For this of time and culture is the fruit;
And Edwin gained, at last, this fruit so rare:
As in some future verse I purpose to declare.
LVIII.
Meanwhile, whate’er of
beautiful, or new,
Sublime, or dreadful, in earth, sea, or sky,
By chance, or search, was offered to his view,
He scanned with curious and romantic eye.
Whate’er of lore tradition could supply
From Gothic tale, or song, or fable old,
Roused him, still keen to listen and to pry.
At last, though long by penury controuled,
And solitude, his soul her graces ’gan unfold.
LIX.
Thus, on the chill
Lapponian’s dreary land,
For many a long
month lost in snow profound,
When Sol from
Cancer sends the season bland,
And in their northern
cave the storms hath bound;
From silent mountains,
straight, with startling sound,
Torrents are hurled;
green hills emerge; and lo,
The trees with
foliage, cliffs with flowers are crowned;
Pure rills through
vales of verdure warbling go;
And wonder, love, and joy,
the peasant’s heart o’erflow.
LX.
Here pause, my
Gothic lyre, a little while.
The leisure hour
is all that thou can’st claim.
But on this verse
if montagu should smile,
New strains, ere
long, shall animate thy frame:
And his applause
to me is more than fame;
For still with
truth accords his taste refined.
At lucre or renown
let others aim,
I only wish to
please the gentle mind,
Whom Nature’s charms
inspire, and love of humankind.
BOOK SECOND.
I.
Of chance or change, O let not
man complain,
Else shall he never never cease to wail:
For, from the imperial dome, to where the swain
Rears the lone cottage in the silent dale,
All feel the assault of fortune’s fickle
gale;
Art, empire, earth itself, to change are doomed;
Earthquakes have raised to heaven the humble
vale;
And gulfs the mountain’s mighty mass entombed;
And where the Atlantic rolls wide continents have
bloomed.
II.
But sure to foreign
climes we need not range,
Nor search the
ancient records of our race,
To learn the dire
effects of time and change,
Which in ourselves,
alas! we daily trace.
Yet, at the darkened
eye, the withered face,
Or hoary hair,
I never will repine:
But spare, O Time,
whate’er of mental grace,
Of candour, love,
or sympathy divine,
Whate’er of fancy’s
ray, or friendship’s flame, is mine.
III.
So I, obsequious
to Truth’s dread command,
Shall here, without
reluctance, change my lay,
And smite the
Gothic lyre with harsher hand;
Now when I leave
that flowery path, for aye,
Of childhood,
where I sported many a day,
Warbling, and
sauntering carelessly along;
Where every face
was innocent and gay,
Each vale romantic,
tuneful every tongue,
Sweet, wild, and artless all,
as Edwin’s infant song.
IV.
‘Perish
the lore that deadens young desire,’
Is the soft tenor
of my song no more.
Edwin, though
loved of heaven, must not aspire
To bliss, which
mortals never knew before.
On trembling wings
let youthful fancy soar,
Nor always haunt
the sunny realms of joy,
But now and then
the shades of life explore;
Though many a
sound and sight of woe annoy,
And many a qualm of care his
rising hopes destroy.
V.
Vigour from toil, from trouble
patience grows.
The weakly blossom, warm in summer bower,
Some tints of transient beauty may disclose;
But ah, it withers in the chilling hour.
Mark yonder oaks! Superior to the power
Of all the warring winds of heaven, they rise,
And from the stormy promontory tower,
And toss their giant arms amid the skies,
While each assailing blast increase of strength
supplies.
VI.
And now the downy
cheek and deepened voice
Gave dignity to
Edwin’s blooming prime;
And walks of wider
circuit were his choice,
And vales more
wild, and mountains more sublime.
One evening, as
he framed the careless rhyme,
It was his chance
to wander far abroad,
And o’er
a lonely eminence to climb,
Which heretofore
his foot had never trode;
A vale appeared below, a deep
retired abode.
VII.
Thither he hied,
enamoured of the scene:
For rocks on rocks
piled, as by magic spell,
Here scorched
with lightning, there with ivy green,
Fenced from the
north and east this savage dell;
Southward a mountain
rose with easy swell,
Whose long long
groves eternal murmur made;
And toward the
western sun a streamlet fell,
Where, through
the cliffs, the eye, remote, surveyed
Blue hills, and glittering
waves, and skies in gold arrayed.
VIII.
Along this narrow valley, you
might see
The wild deer sporting on the meadow ground,
And, here and there, a solitary tree,
Or mossy stone, or rock with woodbine crowned.
Oft did the cliffs reverberate the sound
Of parted fragments tumbling from on high;
And, from the summit of that craggy mound,
The perching eagle oft was heard to cry,
Or on resounding wings to shoot athwart the sky.
IX.
One cultivated
spot there was, that spread
Its flowery bosom
to the noon-day beam,
Where many a rose-bud
rears its blushing head,
And herbs, for
food, with future plenty teem.
Soothed by the
lulling sound of grove and stream,
Romantic visions
swarm on Edwin’s soul:
He minded not
the sun’s last trembling gleam,
Nor heard from
far the twilight curfew toll,
When slowly on his ear these
moving accents stole.
X.
’Hail, awful scenes, that
calm the troubled breast,
’And woo the weary to profound repose;
’Can passion’s wildest uproar lay
to rest,
’And whisper comfort to the man of woes!
’Here Innocence may wander, safe from
foes,
’And Contemplation soar on seraph wings.
’O Solitude, the man who thee foregoes,
’When lucre lures him, or ambition stings,
’Shall never know the source whence real
grandeur springs.
XI.
’Vain man,
is grandeur given to gay attire?
’Then let
the butterfly thy pride upbraid:
’To friends,
attendants, armies, bought with hire?
’It is thy
weakness that requires their aid:
’To palaces,
with gold and gems inlaid?
’They fear
the thief, and tremble in the storm:
’To hosts,
through carnage who to conquest wade?
’Behold
the victor vanquished by the worm!
’Behold what deeds of
woe the locust can perform!
XII.
’True dignity
is his, whose tranquil mind
’Virtue
has raised above the things below;
’Who, every
hope and fear to heaven resigned,
‘Shrinks
not, though Fortune aim her deadliest blow.’
This strain, from
midst the rocks, was heard to flow
In solemn sounds.
Now beamed the evening-star;
And from embattled
clouds, emerging slow,
Cynthia came riding
on her silver car;
And hoary mountain-cliffs
shone faintly from afar.
XIII.
Soon did the solemn voice its
theme renew;
(While Edwin, wrapt in wonder, listening stood)
’Ye tools and toys of tyranny, adieu;
’Scorned by the wise, and hated by the
good!
’Ye only can engage the servile brood
’Of Levity and Lust, who, all their days,
’Ashamed of truth and liberty, have wooed,
’And hugged the chain, that, glittering
on their gaze,
’Seems to outshine the pomp of heaven’s
empyreal blaze.
XIV.
’Like them,
abandoned to Ambition’s sway,
’I sought
for glory in the paths of guile;
’And fawned
and smiled, to plunder and betray,
’Myself
betrayed and plundered all the while;
’So gnawed
the viper the corroding file.
’But now,
with pangs of keen remorse, I rue
’Those years
of trouble and debasement vile.
’Yet why
should I this cruel theme pursue?
’Fly, fly, detested
thoughts, for ever from my view!
XV.
’The gusts
of appetite, the clouds of care,
’And storms
of disappointment, all o’erpast,
’Henceforth,
no earthly hope with heaven shall share
’This heart,
where peace serenely shines at last.
’And if
for me no treasure be amassed,
’And if
no future age shall hear my name,
’I lurk
the more secure from fortune’s blast,
’And with
more leisure feed this pious flame,
’Whose rapture far transcends
the fairest hopes of fame.
XVI.
’The end
and the reward of toil is rest.
’Be all
my prayer for virtue and for peace.
’Of wealth
and fame, of pomp and power possessed,
’Who ever
felt his weight of woe decrease!
’Ah! what
avails the lore of Rome and Greece,
’The lay,
heaven-prompted, and harmonious string,
’The dust
of Ophir, or the Tyrian fleece,
’All that
art, fortune, enterprise, can bring,
’If envy, scorn, remorse,
or pride, the bosom wring!
XVII.
’Let Vanity adorn the marble
tomb
’With trophies, rhymes, and scutcheons
of renown,
’In the deep dungeon of some Gothic dome,
’Where night and desolation ever frown.
’Mine be the breezy hill that skirts the
down;
’Where a green grassy turf is all I crave,
’With here and there a violet bestrown,
’Fast by a brook, or fountain’s
murmuring wave;
’And many an evening sun shine sweetly on
my grave.
XVIII.
’And thither let the village
swain repair;
’And, light of heart, the village maiden
gay,
’To deck with flowers her half-dishevelled
hair,
’And celebrate the merry morn of May.
’There let the shepherd’s pipe,
the live-long day,
’Fill all the grove with love’s
bewitching woe;
’And when mild Evening comes with mantle
grey,
’Let not the blooming band make haste
to go;
’No ghost, nor spell, my long and last abode
shall know.
XIX.
’For though
I fly to ’scape from fortune’s rage,
’And bear
the scars of envy, spite, and scorn,
’Yet with
mankind no horrid war I wage,
’Yet with
no impious spleen my breast is torn:
’For virtue
lost, and ruined man, I mourn.
’O Man!
creation’s pride, heaven’s darling child,
’Whom Nature’s
best, divinest, gifts adorn,
’Why from
thy home are truth and joy exiled,
’And all thy favourite
haunts with blood and tears defiled!
XX.
’Along yon
glittering sky what glory streams!
’What majesty
attends night’s lovely queen!
’Fair laugh
our vallies in the vernal beams;
’And mountains
rise, and oceans roll between,
’And all
conspire to beautify the scene.
’But, in
the mental world, what chaos drear!
’What forms
of mournful, loathsome, furious mien!
’O when
shall that eternal morn appear,
’These dreadful forms
to chace, this chaos dark to clear!
XXI.
’O Thou,
at whose creative smile, yon heaven,
’In all
the pomp of beauty, life, and light,
’Rose from
the abyss; when dark Confusion, driven
’Down down
the bottomless profound of night,
’Fled, where
he ever flies thy piercing sight!
’O glance
on these sad shades one pitying ray,
’To blast
the fury of oppressive might,
’Melt the
hard heart to love and mercy’s sway,
‘And cheer the wandering
soul, and light him on the way.’
XXII.
Silence ensued: and Edwin
raised his eyes
In tears, for grief lay heavy at his heart.
‘And is it thus in courtly life,’
(he cries)
’That man to man acts a betrayer’s
part?
’And dares he thus the gifts of heaven
pervert,
’Each social instinct, and sublime desire?
’Hail Poverty! if honour, wealth, and
art,
’If what the great pursue, and learned
admire,
‘Thus dissipate and quench the soul’s
ethereal fire!’
XXIII.
He said, and turned away; nor
did the Sage
O’erhear, in silent orisons employed.
The Youth, his rising sorrow to assuage,
Home as he hied, the evening scene enjoyed:
For now no cloud obscures the starry void;
The yellow moonlight sleeps on all the hills;
Nor is the mind with startling sounds annoyed;
A soothing murmur the lone region fills,
Of groves, and dying gales, and melancholy rills.
XXIV.
But he, from day to day, more
anxious grew.
The voice still seemed to vibrate on his ear.
Nor durst he hope the Hermit’s tale untrue;
For man he seemed to love, and heaven to fear;
And none speaks false, where there is none to
hear.
’Yet, can man’s gentle heart become
so fell?
’No more in vain conjecture let me wear
’My hours away, but seek the Hermit’s
cell;
‘Tis he my doubt can clear, perhaps my care
dispel.’
XXV.
At early dawn
the youth his journey took,
And many a mountain
passed, and valley wide,
Then reached the
wild; where, in a flowery nook,
And seated on
a mossy stone, he spied
An ancient man:
his harp lay him beside.
A stag sprang
from the pasture at his call,
And, kneeling,
licked the withered hand, that tied
A wreath of woodbine
round his antlers tall,
And hung his lofty neck with
many a floweret small.
XXVI.
And now the hoary Sage arose,
and saw
The wanderer approaching: innocence
Smiled on his glowing cheek, but modest awe
Depressed his eye, that feared to give offence.
’Who art thou, courteous stranger? and
from whence?
‘Why roam thy steps to this abandoned
dale?’
’A shepherd-boy (the Youth replied), far
hence
’My habitation; hear my artless tale;
’Nor levity nor falsehood shall thine ear
assail.
XXVII.
’Late as I roamed, intent
on Nature’s charms,
’I reached, at eve, this wilderness profound;
’And, leaning where yon oak expands her
arms,
’Heard these rude cliffs thine awful voice
rebound,
’(For, in thy speech, I recognise the
sound.)
’You mourned for ruined man, and virtue
lost,
’And seemed to feel of keen remorse the
wound,
’Pondering on former days, by guilt engrossed,
’Or in the giddy storm of dissipation tossed.
XXVIII.
’But say, in courtly life
can craft be learned,
’Where knowledge opens, and exalts the
soul?
’Where Fortune lavishes her gifts unearned,
’Can selfishness the liberal heart controul?
’Is glory there achieved by arts, as foul
’As those which felons, fiends, and furies
plan?
’Spiders ensnare, snakes poison, tygers
prowl;
’Love is the godlike attribute of man.
’O teach a simple Youth this mystery to
scan!
XXIX.
’Or else the lamentable
strain disclaim,
’And give me back the calm, contented
mind;
’Which, late, exulting, viewed, in Nature’s
frame,
’Goodness untainted, wisdom unconfined,
’Grace, grandeur, and utility combined.
’Restore those tranquil days, that saw
me still
’Well pleased with all, but most with
humankind;
’When Fancy roamed through Nature’s
works at will,
‘Unchecked by cold distrust, and uninformed
of ill.’
XXX.
’Wouldst
thou (the Sage replied) in peace return
’To the
gay dreams of fond romantic youth,
’Leave me
to hide, in this remote sojourn,
’From every
gentle ear the dreadful truth:
’For if
my desultory strain with ruth
’And indignation
make thine eyes o’erflow,
’Alas! what
comfort could thy anguish sooth,
’Shouldst
thou the extent of human folly know?
’Be ignorance thy choice,
where knowledge leads to woe.
XXXI.
’But let untender thoughts
afar be driven;
’Nor venture to arraign the dread decree:
’For know, to man, as candidate for heaven,
’The voice of The Eternal said, Be free:
’And this divine prerogative to thee
’Does virtue, happiness, and heaven convey;
’For virtue is the child of liberty,
’And happiness of virtue; nor can they
’Be free to keep the path, who are not free
to stray.
XXXII.
’Yet leave me not.
I would allay that grief,
’Which else might thy young virtue overpower;
’And in thy converse I shall find relief,
’When the dark shades of melancholy lower:
’For solitude has many a dreary hour,
’Even when exempt from grief, remorse,
and pain:
’Come often then; for, haply, in my bower,
’Amusement, knowledge, wisdom, thou may’st
gain:
‘If I one soul improve, I have not lived
in vain.’
XXXIII.
And now, at length, to Edwin’s
ardent gaze
The Muse of History unrolls her page.
But few, alas! the scenes her art displays,
To charm his fancy, or his heart engage.
Here, chiefs their thirst of power in blood
assuage,
And straight their flames with tenfold fierceness
burn:
Here, smiling Virtue prompts the patriot’s
rage,
But lo, ere long, is left alone to mourn,
And languish in the dust, and clasp the abandoned
urn.
XXXIV.
’Ah, what avails (he said)
to trace the springs
’That whirl of empire the stupendous wheel!
’Ah, what have I to do with conquering
kings,
’Hands drenched in blood, and breasts
begirt with steel!
’To those, whom Nature taught to think
and feel,
’Heroes, alas! are things of small concern.
’Could History man’s secret heart
reveal,
’And what imports a heaven-born mind to
learn,
’Her transcripts to explore what bosom would
not yearn!
XXXV.
’This praise, O Cheronean
Sage, is thine.
’(Why should this praise to thee alone
belong!)
’All else from Nature’s moral path
decline,
’Lured by the toys that captivate the
throng;
’To herd in cabinets and camps, among
’Spoil, carnage, and the cruel pomp of
pride;
’Or chaunt of heraldry the drowsy song,
’How tyrant blood, o’er many a region
wide,
’Rolls to a thousand thrones its execrable
tide.
XXXVI.
’O, who of man the story
will unfold,
’Ere victory and empire wrought annoy,
’In that elysian age (misnamed of gold)
’The age of love, and innocence, and joy,
’When all were great and free! man’s
sole employ
’To deck the bosom of his parent earth;
’Or toward his bower the murmuring stream
decoy,
’To aid the floweret’s long-expected
birth,
’And lull the bed of peace, and crown the
board of mirth.
XXXVII.
’Sweet were your shades,
O ye primeval groves,
’Whose boughs to man his food and shelter
lent,
’Pure in his pleasures, happy in his loves,
’His eye still smiling, and his heart
content.
’Then, hand in hand, Health, Sport, and
Labour went.
’Nature supplied the wish she taught to
crave.
’None prowled for prey, none watched to
circumvent.
’To all an equal lot Heaven’s bounty
gave:
’No vassal feared his lord, no tyrant feared
his slave.
XXXVIII.
’But ah!
the Historic Muse has never dared
’To pierce
those hallowed bowers: ’tis Fancy’s
beam,
’Poured
on the vision of the enraptured Bard,
’That paints
the charms of that delicious theme.
’Then hail
sweet Fancy’s ray! and hail the dream
’That weans
the weary soul from guilt and woe!
’Careless
what others of my choice may deem,
’I long
where Love and Fancy lead to go,
‘And meditate on heaven;
enough of earth I know.’
XXXIX.
’I cannot blame thy choice
(the Sage replied),
’For soft and smooth are Fancy’s
flowery ways.
’And yet, even there, if left without
a guide,
’The young adventurer unsafely plays.
’Eyes, dazzled long by Fiction’s
gaudy rays,
’In modest Truth no light nor beauty find.
’And who, my child, would trust the meteor-blaze,
’That soon must fail, and leave the wanderer
blind,
’More dark and helpless far, than if it
ne’er had shined?
XL.
’Fancy enervates,
while it sooths, the heart,
’And, while
it dazzles, wounds the mental sight:
’To joy
each heightening charm it can impart,
’But wraps
the hour of woe in tenfold night.
’And often,
where no real ills affright,
’Its visionary
fiends, an endless train,
’Assail
with equal or superior might,
’And through
the throbbing heart, and dizzy brain,
’And shivering nerves,
shoot stings of more than mortal pain.
XLI.
’And yet,
alas! the real ills of life
’Claim the
full vigour of a mind prepared;
’Prepared
for patient, long, laborious strife,
’Its guide
Experience, and Truth its guard.
’We fare
on earth, as other men have fared:
’Were they
successful? Let not us despair.
’Was disappointment
oft their sole reward?
’Yet shall
their tale instruct, if it declare,
’How they have borne
the load ourselves are doomed to bear.
XLII.
’What charms the Historic
Muse adorn, from spoils,
’And blood, and tyrants, when she wings
her flight,
’To hail the patriot Prince, whose pious
toils
’Sacred to science, liberty, and right,
’And peace, through every age divinely
bright,
’Shall shine the boast and wonder of mankind!
’Sees yonder sun, from his meridian height,
’A lovelier scene, than Virtue thus inshrined
’In power, and man with man for mutual aid
combine!
XLIII.
’Hail, sacred Polity, by
Freedom reared!
’Hail, sacred Freedom, when by Law restrained!
’Without you what were man? A grovelling
herd,
’In darkness, wretchedness, and want enchained.
’Sublimed by you, the Greek and Roman
reigned
’In arts unrivalled: O, to latest
days,
’In Albion may your influence, unprofaned,
’To godlike worth the generous bosom raise,
’And prompt the Sage’s lore, and fire
the Poet’s lays.
XLIV.
’But now let other themes
our care engage.
’For lo, with modest, yet majestic grace,
’To curb Imagination’s lawless rage,
’And from within the cherished heart to
brace,
’Philosophy appears. The gloomy race,
’By Indolence and moping Fancy bred,
’Fear, Discontent, Solicitude give place,
’And Hope and Courage brighten in their
stead,
’While on the kindling soul her vital beams
are shed.
XLV.
’Then waken
from long lethargy to life
’The seeds
of happiness, and powers of thought;
’Then jarring
appetites forego their strife,
’A strife
by ignorance to madness wrought.
’Pleasure
by savage man is dearly bought
’With fell
revenge, lust that defies controul,
’With gluttony
and death. The mind untaught,
’Is a dark
waste, where fiends and tempests howl;
’As Phoebus to the world,
is Science to the soul.
XLVI.
’And Reason, now, through
Number, Time, and Space,
’Darts the keen lustre of her serious
eye,
’And learns, from facts compared, the
laws to trace,
’Whose long progression leads to Deity.
’Can mortal strength presume to soar so
high?
’Can mortal sight, so oft bedimmed with
tears,
’Such glory bear? for lo, the
shadows fly
’From Nature’s face; Confusion disappears,
’And order charms the eyes, and harmony
the ears.
XLVII.
’In the deep windings of
the grove, no more
’The hag obscene, and grisly phantom dwell;
’Nor in the fall of mountain-stream, or
roar
’Of winds, is heard the angry spirit’s
yell;
’No wizard mutters the tremendous spell,
’Nor sinks convulsive in prophetic swoon;
’Nor bids the noise of drums and trumpets
swell,
’To ease of fancied pangs the labouring
moon,
’Or chace the shade that blots the blazing
orb of noon.
XLVIII.
’Many a long lingering
year, in lonely isle,
’Stunned with the eternal turbulence of
waves,
’Lo, with dim eyes, that never learned
to smile,
’And trembling hands, the famished native
craves
’Of Heaven his wretched fare: shivering
in caves,
’Or scorched on rocks, he pines from day
to day;
’But Science gives the word; and lo, he
braves
’The surge and tempest, lighted by her
ray,
’And to a happier land wafts merrily away.
XLIX.
’And even where Nature
loads the teeming plain
’With the full pomp of vegetable store,
’Her bounty, unimproved, is deadly bane:
’Dark woods and rankling wilds, from shore
to shore,
’Stretch their enormous gloom; which,
to explore,
’Even Fancy trembles, in her sprightliest
mood;
’For there, each eyeball gleams with lust
of gore,
’Nestles each murderous and each monstrous
brood,
’Plague lurks in every shade, and streams
from every flood.
L.
’Twas from Philosophy man
learned to tame
’The soil, by plenty to intemperance fed.
’Lo, from the echoing axe, and thundering
flame,
’Poison, and plague, and yelling rage,
are fled.
’The waters, bursting from their slimy
bed,
’Bring health and melody to every vale:
’And, from the breezy main, and mountain’s
head,
’Ceres and Flora, to the sunny dale,
’To fan their glowing charms, invite the
fluttering gale.
LI.
’What dire
necessities, on every hand,
’Our art,
our strength, our fortitude, require!
’Of foes
intestine, what a numerous band
’Against
this little throb of life conspire!
’Yet Science
can elude their fatal ire
’Awhile,
and turn aside Death’s levelled dart,
’Sooth the
sharp pang, allay the fever’s fire,
’And brace
the nerves once more, and cheer the heart,
’And yet a few soft
nights and balmy days impart.
LII.
’Nor less
to regulate man’s moral frame
’Science
exerts her all-composing sway.
’Flutters
thy breast with fear, or pants for fame,
’Or pines,
to indolence and spleen a prey,
’Or avarice,
a fiend more fierce than they?
‘Flee to
the shade of Academus’ grove;
’Where cares
molest not, discord melts away
’In harmony,
and the pure passions prove,
’How sweet the words
of truth, breathed from the lips of Love.
LIII.
’What cannot Art and Industry
perform,
’When Science plans the progress of their
toil!
’They smile at penury, disease, and storm;
’And oceans from their mighty mounds recoil.
’When tyrants scourge, or demagogues embroil
’A land, or when the rabble’s headlong
rage
’Order transforms to anarchy and spoil,
’Deep-versed in man, the philosophic Sage
’Prepares, with lenient hand, their phrenzy
to assuage.
LIV.
’’Tis
he alone, whose comprehensive mind,
’From situation,
temper, soil, and clime
’Explored,
a nation’s various powers can bind,
’And various
orders, in one form sublime
’Of polity,
that, midst the wrecks of time,
’Secure
shall lift its head on high, nor fear
’The assault
of foreign or domestic crime,
’While public
Faith, and public Love sincere,
‘And Industry and Law
maintain their sway severe.’
LV.
Enraptured by
the Hermit’s strain, the Youth
Proceeds the path
of science to explore.
And now, expanding
to the beams of truth,
New energies,
and charms unknown before,
His mind discloses:
Fancy now no more
Wantons on fickle
pinion through the skies;
But, fixed in
aim, and conscious of her power,
Sublime from cause
to cause exults to rise,
Creation’s blended stores
arranging as she flies.
LVI.
Nor love of novelty
alone inspires,
Their laws and
nice dependencies to scan;
For, mindful of
the aids that life requires,
And of the services
man owes to man,
He meditates new
arts on Nature’s plan;
The cold desponding
breast of Sloth to warm,
The flame of Industry
and Genius fan,
And Émulation’s
noble rage alarm,
And the long hours of Toil
and Solitude to charm.
LVII.
But She, who set on fire his
infant heart,
And all his dreams, and all his wanderings shared
And blessed, the Muse, and her celestial art,
Still claim the Enthusiast’s fond and
first regard.
From Nature’s beauties variously compared,
And variously combined, he learns to frame
Those forms of bright perfection, which the
Bard,
While boundless hopes and boundless views inflame,
Enamoured consecrates to never-dying fame.
LVIII.
Of late, with cumbersome, though
pompous show,
Edwin would oft his flowery rhyme deface,
Through ardour to adorn; but Nature now
To his experienced eye a modest grace
Presents, where Ornament the second place
Holds, to intrinsic worth and just design
Subservient still. Simplicity apace
Tempers his rage: he owns her charm divine,
And clears the ambiguous phrase, and lops the
unwieldy line.
LIX.
Fain would I sing
(much yet unsung remains)
What sweet delirium
o’er his bosom stole,
When the great
Shepherd of the Mantuan plains
His deep majestic
melody ’gan roll:
Fain would I sing,
what transport stormed his soul,
How the red current
throbbed his veins along,
When, like Pelides,
bold beyond controul,
Gracefully terrible,
sublimely strong,
Homer raised high to heaven
the loud, the impetuous song.
LX.
And how his lyre,
though rude her first essays,
Now skilled to
sooth, to triumph, to complain,
Warbling at will
through each harmonious maze,
Was taught to
modulate the artful strain,
I fain would sing:
but ah! I strive in vain.
Sighs from a breaking
heart my voice confound.
With trembling
step, to join yon weeping train,
I haste, where
gleams funereal glare around,
And, mixed with shrieks of
woe, the knells of death resound.
LXI.
Adieu, ye lays,
that fancy’s flowers adorn,
The soft amusement
of the vacant mind!
He sleeps in dust,
and all the Muses mourn,
He, whom each
virtue fired, each grace refined,
Friend, teacher,
pattern, darling of mankind!
He sleeps in dust.
Ah! how should I pursue
My theme!
To heart-consuming grief resigned,
Here, on his recent
grave I fix my view,
And pour my bitter tears. Ye
flowery lays, adieu!
LXII.
Art thou, my Gregory, for
ever fled!
And am I left to unavailing woe!
When fortune’s storms assail this weary
head,
Where cares long since have shed untimely snow,
Ah, now for comfort whither shall I go!
No more thy soothing voice my anguish chears:
Thy placid eyes with smiles no longer glow,
My hopes to cherish, and allay my fears.
’Tis meet that I should mourn: flow
forth afresh my tears.