1758.
When, in the crimson cloud of Even,
The lingering light decays,
And Hesper, on the front of heaven,
His glittering gem displays;
Deep in the silent vale, unseen,
Beside a lulling stream,
A pensive Youth, of placid mien,
Indulged this tender theme.
Ye cliffs, in hoary grandeur
piled,
High o’er the glimmering
dale;
Ye woods, along whose windings
wild,
Murmurs the solemn gale;
Where Melancholy strays forlorn,
And Woe retires to weep,
What time the wan moon’s
yellow horn
Gleams on the western deep.
To you, ye wastes, whose artless
charms
Ne’er drew Ambition’s
eye,
’Scaped a tumultuous
world’s alarms,
To your retreats I fly.
Deep in your most sequestered
bower,
Let me at last recline,
Where Solitude, mild, modest
power,
Leans on her ivy’d shrine.
How shall I woo thee, matchless
Fair!
Thy heavenly smile how win!
Thy smile, that smooths the
brow of care,
And stills the storm within.
O wilt thou to thy favourite
grove
Thine ardent votary bring,
And bless his hours, and bid
them move,
Serene, on silent wing.
Oft let remembrance sooth
his mind
With dreams of former days,
When, in the lap of peace
reclined,
He framed his infant lays;
When Fancy roved at large,
nor Care,
Nor cold Distrust alarmed,
Nor Envy, with malignant glare,
His simple youth had harmed.
’Twas then, O Solitude,
to thee
His early vows were paid,
From heart sincere, and warm,
and free,
Devoted to the shade.
Ah why did Fate his steps
decoy
In stormy paths to roam,
Remote from all congenial
joy?
O take the Wanderer home!
Thy shades, thy silence, now
be mine,
Thy charms my only theme;
My haunt the hollow cliff,
whose pine
Waves o’er the gloomy
stream,
Whence the scared owl, on
pinions grey,
Breaks from the rustling boughs,
And down the lone vale sails
away
To more profound repose.
O! while to thee the woodland
pours
Its wildly warbling song,
And balmy from the bank of
flowers
The zephyr breathes along;
Let no rude sound invade from
far,
No vagrant foot be nigh,
No ray from Grandeur’s
gilded car,
Flash on the startled eye.
But if some pilgrim through
the glade,
Thy hallowed bowers explore,
O guard from harm his hoary
head,
And listen to his lore;
For he of joys divine shall
tell,
That wean from earthly woe,
And triumph o’er the
mighty spell,
That chains this heart below.
For me, no more the path invites
Ambition loves to tread;
No more I climb those toilsome
heights
By guileful Hope misled;
Leaps my fond fluttering heart
no more
To Mirth’s enlivening
strain;
For present pleasure soon
is o’er,
And all the past is vain.