Light from the fountain of the setting sun.
Such was this Prisoner once; and, when his plumes 10 The sea-blast ruffles as the storm comes on,
Then, for a moment, he, in spirit, resumes
His rank 'mong freeborn creatures that live free, His power, his beauty, and his majesty.
SEE what gay wild flowers deck this earth-built Cot, Whose smoke, forth-issuing whence and how it may, Shines in the greeting of the sun's first ray
Like wreaths of vapour without stain or blot. The limpid mountain-rill avoids it not;
And why shouldst thou? If rightly trained and bred, Humanity is humble, finds no spot
Which her Heaven-guided feet refuse to tread. The walls are cracked, sunk is the flowery roof, Undressed the pathway leading to the door; But love, as Nature loves, the lonely Poor;
Search, for their worth, some gentle heart wrong-proof, Meek, patient, kind, and, were its trials fewer, Belike less happy. - Stand no more aloof!
TO THE PLANET VENUS, AN EVENING STAR.
THOUGH joy attend Thee orient at the birth
Of dawn, it cheers the lofty spirit most
To watch thy course when Day-light, fled from earth,
In the grey sky hath left his lingering Ghost, Perplexed as if between a splendour lost And splendour slowly mustering. The absolute, the world-absorbing One, Relinquished half his empire to the host Emboldened by thy guidance, holy Star, Holy as princely who that looks on thee, Touching, as now, in thy humility
The mountain borders of this seat of care, Can question that thy countenance is bright, Celestial Power, as much with love as light?
FROM THE ROMAN STATION AT OLD PENRITH.
How profitless the relics that we cull, Troubling the last holds of ambitious Rome, Unless they chasten fancies that presume Too high, or idle agitations lull!
Of the world's flatteries if the brain be full,
To have no seat for thought were better doom, Like this old helmet, or the eyeless skull
Of him who gloried in its nodding plume. Heaven out of view, our wishes what are they? Our fond regrets, tenacious in their grasp? The Sage's theory? the Poet's lay? Mere Fibula without a robe to clasp; Obsolete lamps, whose light no time recalls; Urns without ashes, tearless lacrymals!
TO THE AUTHOR'S PORTRAIT.
Painted at Rydal Mount, by W. Pickersgill, Esq., for St. John's College, Cambridge.
Go, faithful Portrait ! and where long hath knelt Margaret, the Saintly Foundress, take thy place; And, if Time spare the colours for the grace Which to the work surpassing skill hath dealt, Thou, on thy rock reclined, though kingdoms melt And states be torn up by the roots, wilt seem To breathe in rural peace, to hear the stream, And think and feel as once the Poet felt. Whate'er thy fate, those features have not grown Unrecognized through many a household tear More prompt, more glad, to fall than drops of dew By morning shed around a flower half-blown ; Tears of delight, that testified how true
To life thou art, and, in thy truth how dear!
IN SIGHT OF THE TOWN OF COCKERMOUTH.
A POINT of life between my Parent's dust, And yours, my buried Little-ones! am I ; And to those graves looking habitually In kindred quiet I repose my trust. Death to the innocent is more than just, And, to the sinner, mercifully bent; So may I hope, if truly I repent
And meekly bear the ills which bear I must: And You, my Offspring! that do still remain, Yet may outstrip me in the appointed race,
If e'er, through fault of mine, in mutual pain
We breathed together for a moment's space, The wrong, by love provoked, let love arraign, And only love keep in your hearts a place.
LANDING AT THE MOUTH OF THE DERWENT, WORKINGTON.
DEAR to the Loves, and to the Graces vowed, The Queen drew back the wimple that she wore ; And to the throng, that on the Cumbrian shore Her landing hailed, how touchingly she bowed! And like a Star (that, from a heavy cloud Of pine-tree foliage poised in air, forth darts, When a soft summer gale at evening parts The gloom that did its loveliness enshroud)
She smiled; but Time, the old Saturnian seer, Sighed on the wing as her foot pressed the strand, With step prelusive to a long array
Of woes and degradations hand in hand Weeping captivity, and shuddering fear
Stilled by the ensanguined block of Fotheringay!
DESIRE we past illusions to recall?
To reinstate wild Fancy, would we hide
Truths whose thick veil Science has drawn aside?
No, let this Age, high as she may, instal
In her esteem the thirst that wrought man's fall, The universe is infinitely wide;
And conquering Reason, if self-glorified,
Can nowhere move uncrossed by some new wall Or gulf of mystery, which thou alone, Imaginative Faith! canst overleap, In progress toward the fount of Love, Of Power whose ministers the records keep Of periods fixed, and laws established, less Flesh to exalt than prove its nothingness.
BY THE SEASHORE, ISLE OF MAN.
WHY stand we gazing on the sparkling Brine, With wonder smit by its transparency,
And all-enraptured with its purity?
Because the unstained, the clear, the crystalline, Have ever in them something of benign ; Whether in gem, in water, or in sky,
A sleeping infant's brow, or wakeful eye Of a young maiden, only not divine.
Scarcely the hand forbears to dip its palm For beverage drawn as from a mountain-well; Temptation centres in the liquid Calm; Our daily raiment seems no obstacle To instantaneous plunging in, deep Sea ! And revelling in long embrace with thee.1
"THERE!" said a Stripling, pointing with meet pride Towards a low roof with green trees half concealed, "Is Mosgiel Farm; and that's the very field
1 The sea-water on the coast of the Isle of Man is singularly pure and beautiful.
« ՆախորդըՇարունակել » |