At the close of the day, when
the hamlet is still,
And mortals the sweets of
forgetfulness prove,
When nought but the torrent
is heard on the hill,
And nought but the nightingale’s
song in the grove:
’Twas then, by the cave
of the mountain afar,
A Hermit his song of the night
thus began;
No more with himself, or with
nature, at war,
He thought as a sage, while
he felt as a man:
“Ah! why thus abandoned
to darkness and woe?
“Why thus, lonely Philomel,
flows thy sad strain?
“For spring shall return,
and a lover bestow,
“And thy bosom no trace
of misfortune retain.
“Yet, if pity inspire
thee, ah! cease not thy lay,
“Mourn, sweetest complainer!
man calls thee to mourn:
“O sooth him, whose
pleasures like thine pass away
“Full quickly they pass but
they never return.
“Now gliding remote
on the verge of the sky,
“The moon, half-extinguished,
her crescent displays:
“But lately I marked,
when majestic on high,
“She shone, and the
planets were lost in her blaze.
“Roll on, thou fair
orb, and with gladness pursue
“The path that conducts
thee to splendour again:
“But man’s faded
glory no change shall renew
“Ah fool! to exult in
a glory so vain!
“Tis night, and the
landscape is lovely no more:
“I mourn, but, ye woodlands,
I mourn not for you;
“For morn is approaching,
your charms to restore,
“Perfumed with fresh
fragrance, and glittering with dew.
“Nor yet for the ravage
of winter I mourn;
“Kind Nature the embryo
blossom will save.
“But when shall Spring
visit the mouldering urn?
“O, when shall it dawn
on the night of the grave?”
’Twas thus, by the glare
of false science betrayed,
That leads, to bewilder, and
dazzles, to blind;
My thoughts wont to roam,
from shade onward to shade,
Destruction before me, and
sorrow behind.
“O pity, great Father
of light,” then I cried,
“Thy creature, who fain
would not wander from Thee!
“Lo! humbled in dust,
I relinquish my pride:
“From doubt and from
darkness thou only canst free.”
And darkness and doubt are
now flying away:
No longer I roam in conjecture
forlorn.
So breaks on the traveller,
faint, and astray,
The bright and the balmy effulgence
of morn.
See Truth, Love, and Mercy,
in triumph descending,
And Nature all glowing in
Éden’s first bloom!
On the cold cheek of Death
smiles and roses are blending,
And Beauty immortal awakes
from the tomb!