In
these
deep
solitudes
and
awful
cells,
Where
heav'nly-pensive
contemplation
dwells,
And
ever-musing
melancholy
reigns;
What
means
this
tumult
in
a
vestal's
veins?
Why
rove
my
thoughts
beyond
this
last
retreat?
Why
feels
my
heart
its
long-forgotten
heat?
Yet,
yet
I
love!—From
Abelard
it
came,
And
Eloisa
yet
must
kiss
the
name.
Dear
fatal
name!
rest
ever
unreveal'd,
Nor
pass
these
lips
in
holy
silence
seal'd.
Hide
it,
my
heart,
within
that
close
disguise,
Where
mix'd
with
God's,
his
lov'd
idea
lies:
O
write
it
not,
my
hand—the
name
appears
Already
written—wash
it
out,
my
tears!
In
vain
lost
Eloisa
weeps
and
prays,
Her
heart
still
dictates,
and
her
hand
obeys.
Relentless
walls!
whose
darksome
round
contains
Repentant
sighs,
and
voluntary
pains:
Ye
rugged
rocks!
which
holy
knees
have
worn;
Ye
grots
and
caverns
shagg'd
with
horrid
thorn!
Shrines!
where
their
vigils
pale-ey'd
virgins
keep,
And
pitying
saints,
whose
statues
learn
to
weep!
Though
cold
like
you,
unmov'd,
and
silent
grown,
I
have
not
yet
forgot
myself
to
stone.
All
is
not
Heav'n's
while
Abelard
has
part,
Still
rebel
nature
holds
out
half
my
heart;
Nor
pray'rs
nor
fasts
its
stubborn
pulse
restrain,
Nor
tears,
for
ages,
taught
to
flow
in
vain.
Soon
as
thy
letters
trembling
I
unclose,
That
well-known
name
awakens
all
my
woes.
Oh
name
for
ever
sad!
for
ever
dear!
Still
breath'd
in
sighs,
still
usher'd
with
a
tear.
I
tremble
too,
where'er
my
own
I
find,
Some
dire
misfortune
follows
close
behind.
Line
after
line
my
gushing
eyes
o'erflow,
Led
through
a
sad
variety
of
woe:
Now
warm
in
love,
now
with'ring
in
thy
bloom,
Lost
in
a
convent's
solitary
gloom!
There
stern
religion
quench'd
th'
unwilling
flame,
There
died
the
best
of
passions,
love
and
fame.
Yet
write,
oh
write
me
all,
that
I
may
join
Griefs
to
thy
griefs,
and
echo
sighs
to
thine.
Nor
foes
nor
fortune
take
this
pow'r
away;
And
is
my
Abelard
less
kind
than
they?
Tears
still
are
mine,
and
those
I
need
not
spare,
Love
but
demands
what
else
were
shed
in
pray'r;
No
happier
task
these
faded
eyes
pursue;
To
read
and
weep
is
all
they
now
can
do.
Then
share
thy
pain,
allow
that
sad
relief;
Ah,
more
than
share
it!
give
me
all
thy
grief.
Heav'n
first
taught
letters
for
some
wretch's
aid,
Some
banish'd
lover,
or
some
captive
maid;
They
live,
they
speak,
they
breathe
what
love
inspires,
Warm
from
the
soul,
and
faithful
to
its
fires,
The
virgin's
wish
without
her
fears
impart,
Excuse
the
blush,
and
pour
out
all
the
heart,
Speed
the
soft
intercourse
from
soul
to
soul,
And
waft
a
sigh
from
Indus
to
the
Pole.
Thou
know'st
how
guiltless
first
I
met
thy
flame,
When
Love
approach'd
me
under
Friendship's
name;
My
fancy
form'd
thee
of
angelic
kind,
Some
emanation
of
th'
all-beauteous
Mind.
Those
smiling
eyes,
attemp'ring
ev'ry
day,
Shone
sweetly
lambent
with
celestial
day.
Guiltless
I
gaz'd;
heav'n
listen'd
while
you
sung;
And
truths
divine
came
mended
from
that
tongue.
From
lips
like
those
what
precept
fail'd
to
move?
Too
soon
they
taught
me
'twas
no
sin
to
love.
Back
through
the
paths
of
pleasing
sense
I
ran,
Nor
wish'd
an
Angel
whom
I
lov'd
a
Man.
Dim
and
remote
the
joys
of
saints
I
see;
Nor
envy
them,
that
heav'n
I
lose
for
thee.
How
oft,
when
press'd
to
marriage,
have
I
said,
Curse
on
all
laws
but
those
which
love
has
made!
Love,
free
as
air,
at
sight
of
human
ties,
Spreads
his
light
wings,
and
in
a
moment
flies,
Let
wealth,
let
honour,
wait
the
wedded
dame,
August
her
deed,
and
sacred
be
her
fame;
Before
true
passion
all
those
views
remove,
Fame,
wealth,
and
honour!
what
are
you
to
Love?
The
jealous
God,
when
we
profane
his
fires,
Those
restless
passions
in
revenge
inspires;
And
bids
them
make
mistaken
mortals
groan,
Who
seek
in
love
for
aught
but
love
alone.
Should
at
my
feet
the
world's
great
master
fall,
Himself,
his
throne,
his
world,
I'd
scorn
'em
all:
Not
Caesar's
empress
would
I
deign
to
prove;
No,
make
me
mistress
to
the
man
I
love;
If
there
be
yet
another
name
more
free,
More
fond
than
mistress,
make
me
that
to
thee!
Oh
happy
state!
when
souls
each
other
draw,
When
love
is
liberty,
and
nature,
law:
All
then
is
full,
possessing,
and
possess'd,
No
craving
void
left
aching
in
the
breast:
Ev'n
thought
meets
thought,
ere
from
the
lips
it
part,
And
each
warm
wish
springs
mutual
from
the
heart.
This
sure
is
bliss
(if
bliss
on
earth
there
be)
And
once
the
lot
of
Abelard
and
me.
Alas,
how
chang'd!
what
sudden
horrors
rise!
A
naked
lover
bound
and
bleeding
lies!
Where,
where
was
Eloise?
her
voice,
her
hand,
Her
poniard,
had
oppos'd
the
dire
command.
Barbarian,
stay!
that
bloody
stroke
restrain;
The
crime
was
common,
common
be
the
pain.
I
can
no
more;
by
shame,
by
rage
suppress'd,
Let
tears,
and
burning
blushes
speak
the
rest.
Canst
thou
forget
that
sad,
that
solemn
day,
When
victims
at
yon
altar's
foot
we
lay?
Canst
thou
forget
what
tears
that
moment
fell,
When,
warm
in
youth,
I
bade
the
world
farewell?
As
with
cold
lips
I
kiss'd
the
sacred
veil,
The
shrines
all
trembl'd,
and
the
lamps
grew
pale:
Heav'n
scarce
believ'd
the
conquest
it
survey'd,
And
saints
with
wonder
heard
the
vows
I
made.
Yet
then,
to
those
dread
altars
as
I
drew,
Not
on
the
Cross
my
eyes
were
fix'd,
but
you:
Not
grace,
or
zeal,
love
only
was
my
call,
And
if
I
lose
thy
love,
I
lose
my
all.
Come!
with
thy
looks,
thy
words,
relieve
my
woe;
Those
still
at
least
are
left
thee
to
bestow.
Still
on
that
breast
enamour'd
let
me
lie,
Still
drink
delicious
poison
from
thy
eye,
Pant
on
thy
lip,
and
to
thy
heart
be
press'd;
Give
all
thou
canst—and
let
me
dream
the
rest.
Ah
no!
instruct
me
other
joys
to
prize,
With
other
beauties
charm
my
partial
eyes,
Full
in
my
view
set
all
the
bright
abode,
And
make
my
soul
quit
Abelard
for
God.
Ah,
think
at
least
thy
flock
deserves
thy
care,
Plants
of
thy
hand,
and
children
of
thy
pray'r.
From
the
false
world
in
early
youth
they
fled,
By
thee
to
mountains,
wilds,
and
deserts
led.
You
rais'd
these
hallow'd
walls;
the
desert
smil'd,
And
Paradise
was
open'd
in
the
wild.
No
weeping
orphan
saw
his
father's
stores
Our
shrines
irradiate,
or
emblaze
the
floors;
No
silver
saints,
by
dying
misers
giv'n,
Here
brib'd
the
rage
of
ill-requited
heav'n:
But
such
plain
roofs
as
piety
could
raise,
And
only
vocal
with
the
Maker's
praise.
In
these
lone
walls
(their
days
eternal
bound)
These
moss-grown
domes
with
spiry
turrets
crown'd,
Where
awful
arches
make
a
noonday
night,
And
the
dim
windows
shed
a
solemn
light;
Thy
eyes
diffus'd
a
reconciling
ray,
And
gleams
of
glory
brighten'd
all
the
day.
But
now
no
face
divine
contentment
wears,
'Tis
all
blank
sadness,
or
continual
tears.
See
how
the
force
of
others'
pray'rs
I
try,
(O
pious
fraud
of
am'rous
charity!)
But
why
should
I
on
others'
pray'rs
depend?
Come
thou,
my
father,
brother,
husband,
friend!
Ah
let
thy
handmaid,
sister,
daughter
move,
And
all
those
tender
names
in
one,
thy
love!
The
darksome
pines
that
o'er
yon
rocks
reclin'd
Wave
high,
and
murmur
to
the
hollow
wind,
The
wand'ring
streams
that
shine
between
the
hills,
The
grots
that
echo
to
the
tinkling
rills,
The
dying
gales
that
pant
upon
the
trees,
The
lakes
that
quiver
to
the
curling
breeze;
No
more
these
scenes
my
meditation
aid,
Or
lull
to
rest
the
visionary
maid.
But
o'er
the
twilight
groves
and
dusky
caves,
Long-sounding
aisles,
and
intermingled
graves,
Black
Melancholy
sits,
and
round
her
throws
A
death-like
silence,
and
a
dread
repose:
Her
gloomy
presence
saddens
all
the
scene,
Shades
ev'ry
flow'r,
and
darkens
ev'ry
green,
Deepens
the
murmur
of
the
falling
floods,
And
breathes
a
browner
horror
on
the
woods.
Yet
here
for
ever,
ever
must
I
stay;
Sad
proof
how
well
a
lover
can
obey!
Death,
only
death,
can
break
the
lasting
chain;
And
here,
ev'n
then,
shall
my
cold
dust
remain,
Here
all
its
frailties,
all
its
flames
resign,
And
wait
till
'tis
no
sin
to
mix
with
thine.
Ah
wretch!
believ'd
the
spouse
of
God
in
vain,
Confess'd
within
the
slave
of
love
and
man.
Assist
me,
Heav'n!
but
whence
arose
that
pray'r?
Sprung
it
from
piety,
or
from
despair?
Ev'n
here,
where
frozen
chastity
retires,
Love
finds
an
altar
for
forbidden
fires.
I
ought
to
grieve,
but
cannot
what
I
ought;
I
mourn
the
lover,
not
lament
the
fault;
I
view
my
crime,
but
kindle
at
the
view,
Repent
old
pleasures,
and
solicit
new;
Now
turn'd
to
Heav'n,
I
weep
my
past
offence,
Now
think
of
thee,
and
curse
my
innocence.
Of
all
affliction
taught
a
lover
yet,
'Tis
sure
the
hardest
science
to
forget!
How
shall
I
lose
the
sin,
yet
keep
the
sense,
And
love
th'
offender,
yet
detest
th'
offence?
How
the
dear
object
from
the
crime
remove,
Or
how
distinguish
penitence
from
love?
Unequal
task!
a
passion
to
resign,
For
hearts
so
touch'd,
so
pierc'd,
so
lost
as
mine.
Ere
such
a
soul
regains
its
peaceful
state,
How
often
must
it
love,
how
often
hate!
How
often
hope,
despair,
resent,
regret,
Conceal,
disdain—do
all
things
but
forget.
But
let
Heav'n
seize
it,
all
at
once
'tis
fir'd;
Not
touch'd,
but
rapt;
not
waken'd,
but
inspir'd!
Oh
come!
oh
teach
me
nature
to
subdue,
Renounce
my
love,
my
life,
myself—and
you.
Fill
my
fond
heart
with
God
alone,
for
he
Alone
can
rival,
can
succeed
to
thee.
How
happy
is
the
blameless
vestal's
lot!
The
world
forgetting,
by
the
world
forgot.
Eternal
sunshine
of
the
spotless
mind!
Each
pray'r
accepted,
and
each
wish
resign'd;
Labour
and
rest,
that
equal
periods
keep;
"Obedient
slumbers
that
can
wake
and
weep;"
Desires
compos'd,
affections
ever
ev'n,
Tears
that
delight,
and
sighs
that
waft
to
Heav'n.
Grace
shines
around
her
with
serenest
beams,
And
whisp'ring
angels
prompt
her
golden
dreams.
For
her
th'
unfading
rose
of
Eden
blooms,
And
wings
of
seraphs
shed
divine
perfumes,
For
her
the
Spouse
prepares
the
bridal
ring,
For
her
white
virgins
hymeneals
sing,
To
sounds
of
heav'nly
harps
she
dies
away,
And
melts
in
visions
of
eternal
day.
Far
other
dreams
my
erring
soul
employ,
Far
other
raptures,
of
unholy
joy:
When
at
the
close
of
each
sad,
sorrowing
day,
Fancy
restores
what
vengeance
snatch'd
away,
Then
conscience
sleeps,
and
leaving
nature
free,
All
my
loose
soul
unbounded
springs
to
thee.
Oh
curs'd,
dear
horrors
of
all-conscious
night!
How
glowing
guilt
exalts
the
keen
delight!
Provoking
Daemons
all
restraint
remove,
And
stir
within
me
every
source
of
love.
I
hear
thee,
view
thee,
gaze
o'er
all
thy
charms,
And
round
thy
phantom
glue
my
clasping
arms.
I
wake—no
more
I
hear,
no
more
I
view,
The
phantom
flies
me,
as
unkind
as
you.
I
call
aloud;
it
hears
not
what
I
say;
I
stretch
my
empty
arms;
it
glides
away.
To
dream
once
more
I
close
my
willing
eyes;
Ye
soft
illusions,
dear
deceits,
arise!
Alas,
no
more—methinks
we
wand'ring
go
Through
dreary
wastes,
and
weep
each
other's
woe,
Where
round
some
mould'ring
tower
pale
ivy
creeps,
And
low-brow'd
rocks
hang
nodding
o'er
the
deeps.
Sudden
you
mount,
you
beckon
from
the
skies;
Clouds
interpose,
waves
roar,
and
winds
arise.
I
shriek,
start
up,
the
same
sad
prospect
find,
And
wake
to
all
the
griefs
I
left
behind.
For
thee
the
fates,
severely
kind,
ordain
A
cool
suspense
from
pleasure
and
from
pain;
Thy
life
a
long,
dead
calm
of
fix'd
repose;
No
pulse
that
riots,
and
no
blood
that
glows.
Still
as
the
sea,
ere
winds
were
taught
to
blow,
Or
moving
spirit
bade
the
waters
flow;
Soft
as
the
slumbers
of
a
saint
forgiv'n,
And
mild
as
opening
gleams
of
promis'd
heav'n.
Come,
Abelard!
for
what
hast
thou
to
dread?
The
torch
of
Venus
burns
not
for
the
dead.
Nature
stands
check'd;
Religion
disapproves;
Ev'n
thou
art
cold—yet
Eloisa
loves.
Ah
hopeless,
lasting
flames!
like
those
that
burn
To
light
the
dead,
and
warm
th'
unfruitful
urn.
What
scenes
appear
where'er
I
turn
my
view?
The
dear
ideas,
where
I
fly,
pursue,
Rise
in
the
grove,
before
the
altar
rise,
Stain
all
my
soul,
and
wanton
in
my
eyes.
I
waste
the
matin
lamp
in
sighs
for
thee,
Thy
image
steals
between
my
God
and
me,
Thy
voice
I
seem
in
ev'ry
hymn
to
hear,
With
ev'ry
bead
I
drop
too
soft
a
tear.
When
from
the
censer
clouds
of
fragrance
roll,
And
swelling
organs
lift
the
rising
soul,
One
thought
of
thee
puts
all
the
pomp
to
flight,
Priests,
tapers,
temples,
swim
before
my
sight:
In
seas
of
flame
my
plunging
soul
is
drown'd,
While
altars
blaze,
and
angels
tremble
round.
While
prostrate
here
in
humble
grief
I
lie,
Kind,
virtuous
drops
just
gath'ring
in
my
eye,
While
praying,
trembling,
in
the
dust
I
roll,
And
dawning
grace
is
op'ning
on
my
soul:
Come,
if
thou
dar'st,
all
charming
as
thou
art!
Oppose
thyself
to
Heav'n;
dispute
my
heart;
Come,
with
one
glance
of
those
deluding
eyes
Blot
out
each
bright
idea
of
the
skies;
Take
back
that
grace,
those
sorrows,
and
those
tears;
Take
back
my
fruitless
penitence
and
pray'rs;
Snatch
me,
just
mounting,
from
the
blest
abode;
Assist
the
fiends,
and
tear
me
from
my
God!
No,
fly
me,
fly
me,
far
as
pole
from
pole;
Rise
Alps
between
us!
and
whole
oceans
roll!
Ah,
come
not,
write
not,
think
not
once
of
me,
Nor
share
one
pang
of
all
I
felt
for
thee.
Thy
oaths
I
quit,
thy
memory
resign;
Forget,
renounce
me,
hate
whate'er
was
mine.
Fair
eyes,
and
tempting
looks
(which
yet
I
view!)
Long
lov'd,
ador'd
ideas,
all
adieu!
Oh
Grace
serene!
oh
virtue
heav'nly
fair!
Divine
oblivion
of
low-thoughted
care!
Fresh
blooming
hope,
gay
daughter
of
the
sky!
And
faith,
our
early
immortality!
Enter,
each
mild,
each
amicable
guest;
Receive,
and
wrap
me
in
eternal
rest!
See
in
her
cell
sad
Eloisa
spread,
Propp'd
on
some
tomb,
a
neighbour
of
the
dead.
In
each
low
wind
methinks
a
spirit
calls,
And
more
than
echoes
talk
along
the
walls.
Here,
as
I
watch'd
the
dying
lamps
around,
From
yonder
shrine
I
heard
a
hollow
sound.
"Come,
sister,
come!"
(it
said,
or
seem'd
to
say)
"Thy
place
is
here,
sad
sister,
come
away!
Once
like
thyself,
I
trembled,
wept,
and
pray'd,
Love's
victim
then,
though
now
a
sainted
maid:
But
all
is
calm
in
this
eternal
sleep;
Here
grief
forgets
to
groan,
and
love
to
weep,
Ev'n
superstition
loses
ev'ry
fear:
For
God,
not
man,
absolves
our
frailties
here."
I
come,
I
come!
prepare
your
roseate
bow'rs,
Celestial
palms,
and
ever-blooming
flow'rs.
Thither,
where
sinners
may
have
rest,
I
go,
Where
flames
refin'd
in
breasts
seraphic
glow:
Thou,
Abelard!
the
last
sad
office
pay,
And
smooth
my
passage
to
the
realms
of
day;
See
my
lips
tremble,
and
my
eye-balls
roll,
Suck
my
last
breath,
and
catch
my
flying
soul!
Ah
no—in
sacred
vestments
may'st
thou
stand,
The
hallow'd
taper
trembling
in
thy
hand,
Present
the
cross
before
my
lifted
eye,
Teach
me
at
once,
and
learn
of
me
to
die.
Ah
then,
thy
once-lov'd
Eloisa
see!
It
will
be
then
no
crime
to
gaze
on
me.
See
from
my
cheek
the
transient
roses
fly!
See
the
last
sparkle
languish
in
my
eye!
Till
ev'ry
motion,
pulse,
and
breath
be
o'er;
And
ev'n
my
Abelard
be
lov'd
no
more.
O
Death
all-eloquent!
you
only
prove
What
dust
we
dote
on,
when
'tis
man
we
love.
Then
too,
when
fate
shall
thy
fair
frame
destroy,
(That
cause
of
all
my
guilt,
and
all
my
joy)
In
trance
ecstatic
may
thy
pangs
be
drown'd,
Bright
clouds
descend,
and
angels
watch
thee
round,
From
op'ning
skies
may
streaming
glories
shine,
And
saints
embrace
thee
with
a
love
like
mine.
May
one
kind
grave
unite
each
hapless
name,
And
graft
my
love
immortal
on
thy
fame!
Then,
ages
hence,
when
all
my
woes
are
o'er,
When
this
rebellious
heart
shall
beat
no
more;
If
ever
chance
two
wand'ring
lovers
brings
To
Paraclete's
white
walls
and
silver
springs,
O'er
the
pale
marble
shall
they
join
their
heads,
And
drink
the
falling
tears
each
other
sheds;
Then
sadly
say,
with
mutual
pity
mov'd,
"Oh
may
we
never
love
as
these
have
lov'd!"
From
the
full
choir
when
loud
Hosannas
rise,
And
swell
the
pomp
of
dreadful
sacrifice,
Amid
that
scene
if
some
relenting
eye
Glance
on
the
stone
where
our
cold
relics
lie,
Devotion's
self
shall
steal
a
thought
from
Heav'n,
One
human
tear
shall
drop
and
be
forgiv'n.
And
sure,
if
fate
some
future
bard
shall
join
In
sad
similitude
of
griefs
to
mine,
Condemn'd
whole
years
in
absence
to
deplore,
And
image
charms
he
must
behold
no
more;
Such
if
there
be,
who
loves
so
long,
so
well;
Let
him
our
sad,
our
tender
story
tell;
The
well-sung
woes
will
soothe
my
pensive
ghost;
He
best
can
paint
'em,
who
shall
feel
'em
most.