Выбрать главу
Ah! who can e'er forget so fair a being?    Who can forget her half retiring sweets?    God! she is like a milk-white lamb that bleats  For man's protection. Surely the All-seeing,  Who joys to see us with his gifts agreeing,    Will never give him pinions, who intreats    Such innocence to ruin,—who vilely cheats  A dove-like bosom. In truth there is no freeing  One's thoughts from such a beauty; when I hear    A lay that once I saw her hand awake,  Her form seems floating palpable, and near;    Had I e'er seen her from an arbour take  A dewy flower, oft would that hand appear,    And o'er my eyes the trembling moisture shake. 

EPISTLES.

"Among the rest a shepheard (though but young

Yet hartned to his pipe) with all the skill

His few yeeres could, began to fit his quill."

Britannia's Pastorals.—BROWNE.

TO

GEORGE FELTON MATHEW.

Sweet are the pleasures that to verse belong,  And doubly sweet a brotherhood in song;  Nor can remembrance, Mathew! bring to view  A fate more pleasing, a delight more true  Than that in which the brother Poets joy'd,  Who with combined powers, their wit employ'd  To raise a trophy to the drama's muses.  The thought of this great partnership diffuses  Over the genius loving heart, a feeling  Of all that's high, and great, and good, and healing.
Too partial friend! fain would I follow thee  Past each horizon of fine poesy;  Fain would I echo back each pleasant note  As o'er Sicilian seas, clear anthems float  'Mong the light skimming gondolas far parted,  Just when the sun his farewell beam has darted:  But 'tis impossible; far different cares  Beckon me sternly from soft "Lydian airs,"  And hold my faculties so long in thrall,  That I am oft in doubt whether at all  I shall again see Phoebus in the morning:  Or flush'd Aurora in the roseate dawning!  Or a white Naiad in a rippling stream;  Or a rapt seraph in a moonlight beam;  Or again witness what with thee I've seen,  The dew by fairy feet swept from the green,  After a night of some quaint jubilee  Which every elf and fay had come to see:  When bright processions took their airy march  Beneath the curved moon's triumphal arch.
But might I now each passing moment give  To the coy muse, with me she would not live  In this dark city, nor would condescend  'Mid contradictions her delights to lend.  Should e'er the fine-eyed maid to me be kind,  Ah! surely it must be whene'er I find  Some flowery spot, sequester'd, wild, romantic,  That often must have seen a poet frantic;  Where oaks, that erst the Druid knew, are growing,  And flowers, the glory of one day, are blowing;  Where the dark-leav'd laburnum's drooping clusters  Reflect athwart the stream their yellow lustres,  And intertwined the cassia's arms unite,  With its own drooping buds, but very white.  Where on one side are covert branches hung,  'Mong which the nightingales have always sung  In leafy quiet; where to pry, aloof,  Atween the pillars of the sylvan roof,  Would be to find where violet beds were nestling,  And where the bee with cowslip bells was wrestling.  There must be too a ruin dark, and gloomy,  To say "joy not too much in all that's bloomy."
Yet this is vain—O Mathew lend thy aid  To find a place where I may greet the maid—  Where we may soft humanity put on,  And sit, and rhyme and think on Chatterton;  And that warm-hearted Shakspeare sent to meet him  Four laurell'd spirits, heaven-ward to intreat him.  With reverence would we speak of all the sages  Who have left streaks of light athwart their ages:  And thou shouldst moralize on Milton's blindness,  And mourn the fearful dearth of human kindness  To those who strove with the bright golden wing  Of genius, to flap away each sting  Thrown by the pitiless world. We next could tell  Of those who in the cause of freedom felclass="underline"   Of our own Alfred, of Helvetian Tell;  Of him whose name to ev'ry heart's a solace,  High-minded and unbending William Wallace.  While to the rugged north our musing turns  We well might drop a tear for him, and Burns.
Felton! without incitements such as these,  How vain for me the niggard Muse to tease:  For thee, she will thy every dwelling grace,  And make "a sun-shine in a shady place:"  For thou wast once a flowret blooming wild,  Close to the source, bright, pure, and undefil'd,  Whence gush the streams of song: in happy hour  Came chaste Diana from her shady bower,  Just as the sun was from the east uprising;  And, as for him some gift she was devising,  Beheld thee, pluck'd thee, cast thee in the stream  To meet her glorious brother's greeting beam.  I marvel much that thou hast never told  How, from a flower, into a fish of gold  Apollo chang'd thee; how thou next didst seem  A black-eyed swan upon the widening stream;  And when thou first didst in that mirror trace  The placid features of a human face:  That thou hast never told thy travels strange.  And all the wonders of the mazy range  O'er pebbly crystal, and o'er golden sands;  Kissing thy daily food from Naiad's pearly hands.

November, 1815.

TO 

MY BROTHER GEORGE.

Full many a dreary hour have I past,  My brain bewilder'd, and my mind o'ercast  With heaviness; in seasons when I've thought  No spherey strains by me could e'er be caught  From the blue dome, though I to dimness gaze  On the far depth where sheeted lightning plays;  Or, on the wavy grass outstretch'd supinely,  Pry 'mong the stars, to strive to think divinely:  That I should never hear Apollo's song,  Though feathery clouds were floating all along  The purple west, and, two bright streaks between,  The golden lyre itself were dimly seen:  That the still murmur of the honey bee  Would never teach a rural song to me:  That the bright glance from beauty's eyelids slanting  Would never make a lay of mine enchanting,  Or warm my breast with ardour to unfold  Some tale of love and arms in time of old.