Childe Harold's Pilgrimage: A Romaunt. Canto I
To
Ianthe:
Not
in
those
climes
where
I
have
late
been
straying,
Though
Beauty
long
hath
there
been
matchless
deem'd;
Not
in
those
visions
to
the
heart
displaying
Forms
which
it
sighs
but
to
have
only
dream'd,
Hath
aught
like
thee
in
truth
or
fancy
seem'd:
Nor,
having
seen
thee,
shall
I
vainly
seek
To
paint
those
charms
which
varied
as
they
beam'd
--
To
such
as
see
thee
not
my
words
were
weak;
To
those
who
gaze
on
thee
what
language
could
they
speak?
Ah!
may'st
thou
ever
be
what
now
thou
art,
Nor
unbeseem
the
promise
of
thy
spring,
As
fair
in
form,
as
warm
yet
pure
in
heart,
Love's
image
upon
earth
without
his
wing,
And
guileless
beyond
Hope's
imagining!
And
surely
she
who
now
so
fondly
rears
Thy
youth,
in
thee,
thus
hourly
brightening,
Beholds
the
rainbow
of
her
future
years,
Before
whose
heavenly
hues
all
sorrow
disappears.
Young
Peri
of
the
West!-'tis
well
for
me
My
years
already
doubly
number
thine;
My
loveless
eye
unmov'd
may
gaze
on
thee,
And
safely
view
thy
ripening
beauties
shine;
Happy,
I
ne'er
shall
see
them
in
decline,
Happier,
that
while
all
younger
hearts
shall
bleed,
Mine
shall
escape
the
doom
thine
eyes
assign
To
those
whose
admiration
shall
succeed,
But
mixed
with
pangs
to
Love's
even
loveliest
hours
decreed.
Oh!
let
that
eye,
which,
wild
as
the
Gazelle's,
Now
brightly
bold
or
beautifully
shy,
Wins
as
it
wanders,
dazzles
where
it
dwells,
Glance
o'er
this
page;
nor
to
my
verse
deny
That
smile
for
which
my
breast
might
vainly
sigh,
Could
I
to
thee
be
ever
more
than
friend:
This
much,
dear
maid,
accord;
nor
question
why
To
one
so
young
my
strain
I
would
commend,
But
bid
me
with
my
wreath
one
matchless
lily
blend.
Such
is
thy
name
with
this
my
verse
entwin'd;
And
long
as
kinder
eyes
a
look
shall
cast
On
Harold's
page,
Ianthe's
here
enshrin'd
Shall
thus
be
first
beheld,
forgotten
last:
My
days
once
number'd,
should
this
homage
past
Attract
thy
fairy
fingers
near
the
lyre
Of
him
who
hail'd
thee,
loveliest
as
thou
wast,
Such
is
the
most
my
memory
may
desire;
Though
more
than
Hope
can
claim,
could
Friendship
less
require?
CANTO
THE
FIRST
I.
Oh,
thou,
in
Hellas
deemed
of
heavenly
birth,
Muse,
formed
or
fabled
at
the
minstrel's
will!
Since
shamed
full
oft
by
later
lyres
on
earth,
Mine
dares
not
call
thee
from
thy
sacred
hill:
Yet
there
I've
wandered
by
thy
vaunted
rill;
Yes!
sighed
o'er
Delphi's
long-deserted
shrine
Where,
save
that
feeble
fountain,
all
is
still;
Nor
mote
my
shell
awake
the
weary
Nine
To
grace
so
plain
a
tale--this
lowly
lay
of
mine.
II.
Whilome
in
Albion's
isle
there
dwelt
a
youth,
Who
ne
in
virtue's
ways
did
take
delight;
But
spent
his
days
in
riot
most
uncouth,
And
vexed
with
mirth
the
drowsy
ear
of
Night.
Ah,
me!
in
sooth
he
was
a
shameless
wight,
Sore
given
to
revel
and
ungodly
glee;
Few
earthly
things
found
favour
in
his
sight
Save
concubines
and
carnal
companie,
And
flaunting
wassailers
of
high
and
low
degree.
III.
Childe
Harold
was
he
hight:
--but
whence
his
name
And
lineage
long,
it
suits
me
not
to
say;
Suffice
it,
that
perchance
they
were
of
fame,
And
had
been
glorious
in
another
day:
But
one
sad
losel
soils
a
name
for
aye,
However
mighty
in
the
olden
time;
Nor
all
that
heralds
rake
from
coffined
clay,
Nor
florid
prose,
nor
honeyed
lines
of
rhyme,
Can
blazon
evil
deeds,
or
consecrate
a
crime.
IV.
Childe
Harold
basked
him
in
the
noontide
sun,
Disporting
there
like
any
other
fly,
Nor
deemed
before
his
little
day
was
done
One
blast
might
chill
him
into
misery.
But
long
ere
scarce
a
third
of
his
passed
by,
Worse
than
adversity
the
Childe
befell;
He
felt
the
fulness
of
satiety:
Then
loathed
he
in
his
native
land
to
dwell,
Which
seemed
to
him
more
lone
than
eremite's
sad
cell.
V.
For
he
through
Sin's
long
labyrinth
had
run,
Nor
made
atonement
when
he
did
amiss,
Had
sighed
to
many,
though
he
loved
but
one,
And
that
loved
one,
alas,
could
ne'er
be
his.
Ah,
happy
she!
to
'scape
from
him
whose
kiss
Had
been
pollution
unto
aught
so
chaste;
Who
soon
had
left
her
charms
for
vulgar
bliss,
And
spoiled
her
goodly
lands
to
gild
his
waste,
Nor
calm
domestic
peace
had
ever
deigned
to
taste.
VI.
And
now
Childe
Harold
was
sore
sick
at
heart,
And
from
his
fellow
bacchanals
would
flee;
'Tis
said,
at
times
the
sullen
tear
would
start,
But
pride
congealed
the
drop
within
his
e'e:
Apart
he
stalked
in
joyless
reverie,
And
from
his
native
land
resolved
to
go,
And
visit
scorching
climes
beyond
the
sea;
With
pleasure
drugged,
he
almost
longed
for
woe,
And
e'en
for
change
of
scene
would
seek
the
shades
below.
VII.
The
Childe
departed
from
his
father's
hall;
It
was
a
vast
and
venerable
pile;
So
old,
it
seemed
only
not
to
fall,
Yet
strength
was
pillared
in
each
massy
aisle.
Monastic
dome!
condemned
to
uses
vile!
Where
superstition
once
had
made
her
den,
Now
Paphian
girls
were
known
to
sing
and
smile;
And
monks
might
deem
their
time
was
come
agen,
If
ancient
tales
say
true,
nor
wrong
these
holy
men.
VIII.
Yet
ofttimes
in
his
maddest
mirthful
mood,
Strange
pangs
would
flash
along
Childe
Harold's
brow,
As
if
the
memory
of
some
deadly
feud
Or
disappointed
passion
lurked
below:
But
this
none
knew,
nor
haply
cared
to
know;
For
his
was
not
that
open,
artless
soul
That
feels
relief
by
bidding
sorrow
flow;
Nor
sought
he
friend
to
counsel
or
condole,
Whate'er
this
grief
mote
be,
which
he
could
not
control.
IX.
And
none
did
love
him:
though
to
hall
and
bower
He
gathered
revellers
from
far
and
near,
He
knew
them
flatterers
of
the
festal
hour;
The
heartless
parasites
of
present
cheer.
Yea,
none
did
love
him--not
his
lemans
dear
-
But
pomp
and
power
alone
are
woman's
care,
And
where
these
are
light
Eros
finds
a
feere;
Maidens,
like
moths,
are
ever
caught
by
glare,
And
Mammon
wins
his
way
where
seraphs
might
despair.
X.
Childe
Harold
had
a
mother--not
forgot,
Though
parting
from
that
mother
he
did
shun;
A
sister
whom
he
loved,
but
saw
her
not
Before
his
weary
pilgrimage
begun:
If
friends
he
had,
he
bade
adieu
to
none.
Yet
deem
not
thence
his
breast
a
breast
of
steel;
Ye,
who
have
known
what
'tis
to
dote
upon
A
few
dear
objects,
will
in
sadness
feel
Such
partings
break
the
heart
they
fondly
hope
to
heal.
XI.
His
house,
his
home,
his
heritage,
his
lands,
The
laughing
dames
in
whom
he
did
delight,
Whose
large
blue
eyes,
fair
locks,
and
snowy
hands,
Might
shake
the
saintship
of
an
anchorite,
And
long
had
fed
his
youthful
appetite;
His
goblets
brimmed
with
every
costly
wine,
And
all
that
mote
to
luxury
invite,
Without
a
sigh
he
left
to
cross
the
brine,
And
traverse
Paynim
shores,
and
pass
earth's
central
line.
XII.
The
sails
were
filled,
and
fair
the
light
winds
blew
As
glad
to
waft
him
from
his
native
home;
And
fast
the
white
rocks
faded
from
his
view,
And
soon
were
lost
in
circumambient
foam;
And
then,
it
may
be,
of
his
wish
to
roam
Repented
he,
but
in
his
bosom
slept
The
silent
thought,
nor
from
his
lips
did
come
One
word
of
wail,
whilst
others
sate
and
wept,
And
to
the
reckless
gales
unmanly
moaning
kept.
XIII.
But
when
the
sun
was
sinking
in
the
sea,
He
seized
his
harp,
which
he
at
times
could
string,
And
strike,
albeit
with
untaught
melody,
When
deemed
he
no
strange
ear
was
listening:
And
now
his
fingers
o'er
it
he
did
fling,
And
tuned
his
farewell
in
the
dim
twilight,
While
flew
the
vessel
on
her
snowy
wing,
And
fleeting
shores
receded
from
his
sight,
Thus
to
the
elements
he
poured
his
last
'Good
Night.'
Adieu,
adieu!
my
native
shore
Fades
o'er
the
waters
blue;
The
night-winds
sigh,
the
breakers
roar,
And
shrieks
the
wild
sea-mew.
Yon
sun
that
sets
upon
the
sea
We
follow
in
his
flight;
Farewell
awhile
to
him
and
thee,
My
Native
Land--Good
Night!
A
few
short
hours,
and
he
will
rise
To
give
the
morrow
birth;
And
I
shall
hail
the
main
and
skies,
But
not
my
mother
earth.
Deserted
is
my
own
good
hall,
Its
hearth
is
desolate;
Wild
weeds
are
gathering
on
the
wall,
My
dog
howls
at
the
gate.
'Come
hither,
hither,
my
little
page:
Why
dost
thou
weep
and
wail?
Or
dost
thou
dread
the
billow's
rage,
Or
tremble
at
the
gale?
But
dash
the
tear-drop
from
thine
eye,
Our
ship
is
swift
and
strong;
Our
fleetest
falcon
scarce
can
fly
More
merrily
along.'
'Let
winds
be
shrill,
let
waves
roll
high,
I
fear
not
wave
nor
wind;
Yet
marvel
not,
Sir
Childe,
that
I
Am
sorrowful
in
mind;
For
I
have
from
my
father
gone,
A
mother
whom
I
love,
And
have
no
friend,
save
these
alone,
But
thee--and
One
above.
'My
father
blessed
me
fervently,
Yet
did
not
much
complain;
But
sorely
will
my
mother
sigh
Till
I
come
back
again.'
-
'Enough,
enough,
my
little
lad!
Such
tears
become
thine
eye;
If
I
thy
guileless
bosom
had,
Mine
own
would
not
be
dry.
'Come
hither,
hither,
my
staunch
yeoman,
Why
dost
thou
look
so
pale?
Or
dost
thou
dread
a
French
foeman,
Or
shiver
at
the
gale?'
-
'Deem'st
thou
I
tremble
for
my
life?
Sir
Childe,
I'm
not
so
weak;
But
thinking
on
an
absent
wife
Will
blanch
a
faithful
cheek.
'My
spouse
and
boys
dwell
near
thy
hall,
Along
the
bordering
lake;
And
when
they
on
their
father
call,
What
answer
shall
she
make?'
-
'Enough,
enough,
my
yeoman
good,
Thy
grief
let
none
gainsay;
But
I,
who
am
of
lighter
mood,
Will
laugh
to
flee
away.'
For
who
would
trust
the
seeming
sighs
Of
wife
or
paramour?
Fresh
feeres
will
dry
the
bright
blue
eyes
We
late
saw
streaming
o'er.
For
pleasures
past
I
do
not
grieve,
Nor
perils
gathering
near;
My
greatest
grief
is
that
I
leave
No
thing
that
claims
a
tear.
And
now
I'm
in
the
world
alone,
Upon
the
wide,
wide
sea;
But
why
should
I
for
others
groan,
When
none
will
sigh
for
me?
Perchance
my
dog
will
whine
in
vain
Till
fed
by
stranger
hands;
But
long
ere
I
come
back
again
He'd
tear
me
where
he
stands.
With
thee,
my
bark,
I'll
swiftly
go
Athwart
the
foaming
brine;
Nor
care
what
land
thou
bear'st
me
to,
So
not
again
to
mine.
Welcome,
welcome,
ye
dark
blue
waves!
And
when
you
fail
my
sight,
Welcome,
ye
deserts,
and
ye
caves!
My
Native
Land--Good
Night!
XIV.
On,
on
the
vessel
flies,
the
land
is
gone,
And
winds
are
rude
in
Biscay's
sleepless
bay.
Four
days
are
sped,
but
with
the
fifth,
anon,
New
shores
descried
make
every
bosom
gay;
And
Cintra's
mountain
greets
them
on
their
way,
And
Tagus
dashing
onward
to
the
deep,
His
fabled
golden
tribute
bent
to
pay;
And
soon
on
board
the
Lusian
pilots
leap,
And
steer
'twixt
fertile
shores
where
yet
few
rustics
reap.
XV.
Oh,
Christ!
it
is
a
goodly
sight
to
see
What
Heaven
hath
done
for
this
delicious
land!
What
fruits
of
fragrance
blush
on
every
tree!
What
goodly
prospects
o'er
the
hills
expand!
But
man
would
mar
them
with
an
impious
hand:
And
when
the
Almighty
lifts
his
fiercest
scourge
'Gainst
those
who
most
transgress
his
high
command,
With
treble
vengeance
will
his
hot
shafts
urge
Gaul's
locust
host,
and
earth
from
fellest
foemen
purge.
XVI.
What
beauties
doth
Lisboa
first
unfold!
Her
image
floating
on
that
noble
tide,
Which
poets
vainly
pave
with
sands
of
gold,
But
now
whereon
a
thousand
keels
did
ride
Of
mighty
strength,
since
Albion
was
allied,
And
to
the
Lusians
did
her
aid
afford
A
nation
swoll'n
with
ignorance
and
pride,
Who
lick,
yet
loathe,
the
hand
that
waves
the
sword.
To
save
them
from
the
wrath
of
Gaul's
unsparing
lord.
XVII.
But
whoso
entereth
within
this
town,
That,
sheening
far,
celestial
seems
to
be,
Disconsolate
will
wander
up
and
down,
Mid
many
things
unsightly
to
strange
e'e;
For
hut
and
palace
show
like
filthily;
The
dingy
denizens
are
reared
in
dirt;
No
personage
of
high
or
mean
degree
Doth
care
for
cleanness
of
surtout
or
shirt,
Though
shent
with
Egypt's
plague,
unkempt,
unwashed,
unhurt.
XVIII.
Poor,
paltry
slaves!
yet
born
midst
noblest
scenes
-
Why,
Nature,
waste
thy
wonders
on
such
men?
Lo!
Cintra's
glorious
Eden
intervenes
In
variegated
maze
of
mount
and
glen.
Ah
me!
what
hand
can
pencil
guide,
or
pen,
To
follow
half
on
which
the
eye
dilates
Through
views
more
dazzling
unto
mortal
ken
Than
those
whereof
such
things
the
bard
relates,
Who
to
the
awe-struck
world
unlocked
Elysium's
gates?
XIX.
The
horrid
crags,
by
toppling
convent
crowned,
The
cork-trees
hoar
that
clothe
the
shaggy
steep,
The
mountain
moss
by
scorching
skies
imbrowned,
The
sunken
glen,
whose
sunless
shrubs
must
weep,
The
tender
azure
of
the
unruffled
deep,
The
orange
tints
that
gild
the
greenest
bough,
The
torrents
that
from
cliff
to
valley
leap,
The
vine
on
high,
the
willow
branch
below,
Mixed
in
one
mighty
scene,
with
varied
beauty
glow.
XX.
Then
slowly
climb
the
many-winding
way,
And
frequent
turn
to
linger
as
you
go,
From
loftier
rocks
new
loveliness
survey,
And
rest
ye
at
'Our
Lady's
House
of
Woe;'
Where
frugal
monks
their
little
relics
show,
And
sundry
legends
to
the
stranger
tell:
Here
impious
men
have
punished
been;
and
lo,
Deep
in
yon
cave
Honorius
long
did
dwell,
In
hope
to
merit
Heaven
by
making
earth
a
Hell.
XXI.
And
here
and
there,
as
up
the
crags
you
spring,
Mark
many
rude-carved
crosses
near
the
path;
Yet
deem
not
these
devotion's
offering
-
These
are
memorials
frail
of
murderous
wrath;
For
wheresoe'er
the
shrieking
victim
hath
Poured
forth
his
blood
beneath
the
assassin's
knife,
Some
hand
erects
a
cross
of
mouldering
lath;
And
grove
and
glen
with
thousand
such
are
rife
Throughout
this
purple
land,
where
law
secures
not
life!
XXII.
On
sloping
mounds,
or
in
the
vale
beneath,
Are
domes
where
whilom
kings
did
make
repair;
But
now
the
wild
flowers
round
them
only
breathe:
Yet
ruined
splendour
still
is
lingering
there.
And
yonder
towers
the
prince's
palace
fair:
There
thou,
too,
Vathek!
England's
wealthiest
son,
Once
formed
thy
Paradise,
as
not
aware
When
wanton
Wealth
her
mightiest
deeds
hath
done,
Meek
Peace
voluptuous
lures
was
ever
wont
to
shun.
XXIII.
Here
didst
thou
dwell,
here
schemes
of
pleasure
plan.
Beneath
yon
mountain's
ever
beauteous
brow;
But
now,
as
if
a
thing
unblest
by
man,
Thy
fairy
dwelling
is
as
lone
as
thou!
Here
giant
weeds
a
passage
scarce
allow
To
halls
deserted,
portals
gaping
wide;
Fresh
lessons
to
the
thinking
bosom,
how
Vain
are
the
pleasaunces
on
earth
supplied;
Swept
into
wrecks
anon
by
Time's
ungentle
tide.
XXIV.
Behold
the
hall
where
chiefs
were
late
convened!
Oh!
dome
displeasing
unto
British
eye!
With
diadem
hight
foolscap,
lo!
a
fiend,
A
little
fiend
that
scoffs
incessantly,
There
sits
in
parchment
robe
arrayed,
and
by
His
side
is
hung
a
seal
and
sable
scroll,
Where
blazoned
glare
names
known
to
chivalry,
And
sundry
signatures
adorn
the
roll,
Whereat
the
urchin
points,
and
laughs
with
all
his
soul.
XXV.
Convention
is
the
dwarfish
demon
styled
That
foiled
the
knights
in
Marialva's
dome:
Of
brains
(if
brains
they
had)
he
them
beguiled,
And
turned
a
nation's
shallow
joy
to
gloom.
Here
Folly
dashed
to
earth
the
victor's
plume,
And
Policy
regained
what
Arms
had
lost:
For
chiefs
like
ours
in
vain
may
laurels
bloom!
Woe
to
the
conquering,
not
the
conquered
host,
Since
baffled
Triumph
droops
on
Lusitania's
coast.
XXVI.
And
ever
since
that
martial
synod
met,
Britannia
sickens,
Cintra,
at
thy
name;
And
folks
in
office
at
the
mention
fret,
And
fain
would
blush,
if
blush
they
could,
for
shame.
How
will
posterity
the
deed
proclaim!
Will
not
our
own
and
fellow-nations
sneer,
To
view
these
champions
cheated
of
their
fame,
By
foes
in
fight
o'erthrown,
yet
victors
here,
Where
Scorn
her
finger
points
through
many
a
coming
year?
XXVII.
So
deemed
the
Childe,
as
o'er
the
mountains
he
Did
take
his
way
in
solitary
guise:
Sweet
was
the
scene,
yet
soon
he
thought
to
flee,
More
restless
than
the
swallow
in
the
skies:
Though
here
awhile
he
learned
to
moralise,
For
Meditation
fixed
at
times
on
him,
And
conscious
Reason
whispered
to
despise
His
early
youth
misspent
in
maddest
whim;
But
as
he
gazed
on
Truth,
his
aching
eyes
grew
dim.
XXVIII.
To
horse!
to
horse!
he
quits,
for
ever
quits
A
scene
of
peace,
though
soothing
to
his
soul:
Again
he
rouses
from
his
moping
fits,
But
seeks
not
now
the
harlot
and
the
bowl.
Onward
he
flies,
nor
fixed
as
yet
the
goal
Where
he
shall
rest
him
on
his
pilgrimage;
And
o'er
him
many
changing
scenes
must
roll,
Ere
toil
his
thirst
for
travel
can
assuage,
Or
he
shall
calm
his
breast,
or
learn
experience
sage.
XXIX.
Yet
Mafra
shall
one
moment
claim
delay,
Where
dwelt
of
yore
the
Lusians'
luckless
queen;
And
church
and
court
did
mingle
their
array,
And
mass
and
revel
were
alternate
seen;
Lordlings
and
freres--ill-sorted
fry,
I
ween!
But
here
the
Babylonian
whore
had
built
A
dome,
where
flaunts
she
in
such
glorious
sheen,
That
men
forget
the
blood
which
she
hath
spilt,
And
bow
the
knee
to
Pomp
that
loves
to
garnish
guilt.
XXX.
O'er
vales
that
teem
with
fruits,
romantic
hills,
(Oh
that
such
hills
upheld
a
free-born
race!)
Whereon
to
gaze
the
eye
with
joyaunce
fills,
Childe
Harold
wends
through
many
a
pleasant
place.
Though
sluggards
deem
it
but
a
foolish
chase,
And
marvel
men
should
quit
their
easy
chair,
The
toilsome
way,
and
long,
long
league
to
trace.
Oh,
there
is
sweetness
in
the
mountain
air
And
life,
that
bloated
Ease
can
never
hope
to
share.
XXXI.
More
bleak
to
view
the
hills
at
length
recede,
And,
less
luxuriant,
smoother
vales
extend:
Immense
horizon-bounded
plains
succeed!
Far
as
the
eye
discerns,
withouten
end,
Spain's
realms
appear,
whereon
her
shepherds
tend
Flocks,
whose
rich
fleece
right
well
the
trader
knows
-
Now
must
the
pastor's
arm
his
lambs
defend:
For
Spain
is
compassed
by
unyielding
foes,
And
all
must
shield
their
all,
or
share
Subjection's
woes.
XXXII.
Where
Lusitania
and
her
Sister
meet,
Deem
ye
what
bounds
the
rival
realms
divide?
Or
e'er
the
jealous
queens
of
nations
greet,
Doth
Tayo
interpose
his
mighty
tide?
Or
dark
sierras
rise
in
craggy
pride?
Or
fence
of
art,
like
China's
vasty
wall?
-
Ne
barrier
wall,
ne
river
deep
and
wide,
Ne
horrid
crags,
nor
mountains
dark
and
tall
Rise
like
the
rocks
that
part
Hispania's
land
from
Gaul
XXXIII.
But
these
between
a
silver
streamlet
glides,
And
scarce
a
name
distinguisheth
the
brook,
Though
rival
kingdoms
press
its
verdant
sides.
Here
leans
the
idle
shepherd
on
his
crook,
And
vacant
on
the
rippling
waves
doth
look,
That
peaceful
still
'twixt
bitterest
foemen
flow:
For
proud
each
peasant
as
the
noblest
duke:
Well
doth
the
Spanish
hind
the
difference
know
'Twixt
him
and
Lusian
slave,
the
lowest
of
the
low.
XXXIV.
But
ere
the
mingling
bounds
have
far
been
passed,
Dark
Guadiana
rolls
his
power
along
In
sullen
billows,
murmuring
and
vast,
So
noted
ancient
roundelays
among.
Whilome
upon
his
banks
did
legions
throng
Of
Moor
and
Knight,
in
mailed
splendour
drest;
Here
ceased
the
swift
their
race,
here
sunk
the
strong;
The
Paynim
turban
and
the
Christian
crest
Mixed
on
the
bleeding
stream,
by
floating
hosts
oppressed.
XXXV.
Oh,
lovely
Spain!
renowned,
romantic
land!
Where
is
that
standard
which
Pelagio
bore,
When
Cava's
traitor-sire
first
called
the
band
That
dyed
thy
mountain-streams
with
Gothic
gore?
Where
are
those
bloody
banners
which
of
yore
Waved
o'er
thy
sons,
victorious
to
the
gale,
And
drove
at
last
the
spoilers
to
their
shore?
Red
gleamed
the
cross,
and
waned
the
crescent
pale,
While
Afric's
echoes
thrilled
with
Moorish
matrons'
wail.
XXXVI.
Teems
not
each
ditty
with
the
glorious
tale?
Ah!
such,
alas,
the
hero's
amplest
fate!
When
granite
moulders
and
when
records
fail,
A
peasant's
plaint
prolongs
his
dubious
date.
Pride!
bend
thine
eye
from
heaven
to
thine
estate,
See
how
the
mighty
shrink
into
a
song!
Can
volume,
pillar,
pile,
preserve
thee
great?
Or
must
thou
trust
Tradition's
simple
tongue,
When
Flattery
sleeps
with
thee,
and
History
does
thee
wrong?
XXXVII.
Awake,
ye
sons
of
Spain!
awake!
advance
Lo!
Chivalry,
your
ancient
goddess,
cries,
But
wields
not,
as
of
old,
her
thirsty
lance,
Nor
shakes
her
crimson
plumage
in
the
skies:
Now
on
the
smoke
of
blazing
bolts
she
flies,
And
speaks
in
thunder
through
yon
engine's
roar!
In
every
peal
she
calls--'Awake!
arise!'
Say,
is
her
voice
more
feeble
than
of
yore,
When
her
war-song
was
heard
on
Andalusia's
shore?
XXXVIII.
Hark!
heard
you
not
those
hoofs
of
dreadful
note?
Sounds
not
the
clang
of
conflict
on
the
heath?
Saw
ye
not
whom
the
reeking
sabre
smote;
Nor
saved
your
brethren
ere
they
sank
beneath
Tyrants
and
tyrants'
slaves?--the
fires
of
death,
The
bale-fires
flash
on
high:
--from
rock
to
rock
Each
volley
tells
that
thousands
cease
to
breathe:
Death
rides
upon
the
sulphury
Siroc,
Red
Battle
stamps
his
foot,
and
nations
feel
the
shock.
XXXIX.
Lo!
where
the
Giant
on
the
mountain
stands,
His
blood-red
tresses
deepening
in
the
sun,
With
death-shot
glowing
in
his
fiery
hands,
And
eye
that
scorcheth
all
it
glares
upon;
Restless
it
rolls,
now
fixed,
and
now
anon
Flashing
afar,--and
at
his
iron
feet
Destruction
cowers,
to
mark
what
deeds
are
done;
For
on
this
morn
three
potent
nations
meet,
To
shed
before
his
shrine
the
blood
he
deems
most
sweet.
XL.
By
Heaven!
it
is
a
splendid
sight
to
see
(For
one
who
hath
no
friend,
no
brother
there)
Their
rival
scarfs
of
mixed
embroidery,
Their
various
arms
that
glitter
in
the
air!
What
gallant
war-hounds
rouse
them
from
their
lair,
And
gnash
their
fangs,
loud
yelling
for
the
prey!
All
join
the
chase,
but
few
the
triumph
share:
The
Grave
shall
bear
the
chiefest
prize
away,
And
Havoc
scarce
for
joy
can
cumber
their
array.
XLI.
Three
hosts
combine
to
offer
sacrifice;
Three
tongues
prefer
strange
orisons
on
high;
Three
gaudy
standards
flout
the
pale
blue
skies.
The
shouts
are
France,
Spain,
Albion,
Victory!
The
foe,
the
victim,
and
the
fond
ally
That
fights
for
all,
but
ever
fights
in
vain,
Are
met--as
if
at
home
they
could
not
die
-
To
feed
the
crow
on
Talavera's
plain,
And
fertilise
the
field
that
each
pretends
to
gain.
XLII.
There
shall
they
rot--Ambition's
honoured
fools!
Yes,
Honour
decks
the
turf
that
wraps
their
clay!
Vain
Sophistry!
in
these
behold
the
tools,
The
broken
tools,
that
tyrants
cast
away
By
myriads,
when
they
dare
to
pave
their
way
With
human
hearts--to
what?--a
dream
alone.
Can
despots
compass
aught
that
hails
their
sway?
Or
call
with
truth
one
span
of
earth
their
own,
Save
that
wherein
at
last
they
crumble
bone
by
bone?
XLIII.
O
Albuera,
glorious
field
of
grief!
As
o'er
thy
plain
the
Pilgrim
pricked
his
steed,
Who
could
foresee
thee,
in
a
space
so
brief,
A
scene
where
mingling
foes
should
boast
and
bleed.
Peace
to
the
perished!
may
the
warrior's
meed
And
tears
of
triumph
their
reward
prolong!
Till
others
fall
where
other
chieftains
lead,
Thy
name
shall
circle
round
the
gaping
throng,
And
shine
in
worthless
lays,
the
theme
of
transient
song.
XLIV.
Enough
of
Battle's
minions!
let
them
play
Their
game
of
lives,
and
barter
breath
for
fame:
Fame
that
will
scarce
reanimate
their
clay,
Though
thousands
fall
to
deck
some
single
name.
In
sooth,
'twere
sad
to
thwart
their
noble
aim
Who
strike,
blest
hirelings!
for
their
country's
good,
And
die,
that
living
might
have
proved
her
shame;
Perished,
perchance,
in
some
domestic
feud,
Or
in
a
narrower
sphere
wild
Rapine's
path
pursued.
XLV.
Full
swiftly
Harold
wends
his
lonely
way
Where
proud
Sevilla
triumphs
unsubdued:
Yet
is
she
free--the
spoiler's
wished-for
prey!
Soon,
soon
shall
Conquest's
fiery
foot
intrude,
Blackening
her
lovely
domes
with
traces
rude.
Inevitable
hour!
'Gainst
fate
to
strive
Where
Desolation
plants
her
famished
brood
Is
vain,
or
Ilion,
Tyre,
might
yet
survive,
And
Virtue
vanquish
all,
and
Murder
cease
to
thrive.
XLVI.
But
all
unconscious
of
the
coming
doom,
The
feast,
the
song,
the
revel
here
abounds;
Strange
modes
of
merriment
the
hours
consume,
Nor
bleed
these
patriots
with
their
country's
wounds;
Nor
here
War's
clarion,
but
Love's
rebeck
sounds;
Here
Folly
still
his
votaries
enthralls,
And
young-eyed
Lewdness
walks
her
midnight
rounds:
Girt
with
the
silent
crimes
of
capitals,
Still
to
the
last
kind
Vice
clings
to
the
tottering
walls.
XLVII.
Not
so
the
rustic:
with
his
trembling
mate
He
lurks,
nor
casts
his
heavy
eye
afar,
Lest
he
should
view
his
vineyard
desolate,
Blasted
below
the
dun
hot
breath
of
war.
No
more
beneath
soft
Eve's
consenting
star
Fandango
twirls
his
jocund
castanet:
Ah,
monarchs!
could
ye
taste
the
mirth
ye
mar,
Not
in
the
toils
of
Glory
would
ye
fret;
The
hoarse
dull
drum
would
sleep,
and
Man
be
happy
yet.
XLVIII.
How
carols
now
the
lusty
muleteer?
Of
love,
romance,
devotion
is
his
lay,
As
whilome
he
was
wont
the
leagues
to
cheer,
His
quick
bells
wildly
jingling
on
the
way?
No!
as
he
speeds,
he
chants
'Viva
el
Rey!'
And
checks
his
song
to
execrate
Godoy,
The
royal
wittol
Charles,
and
curse
the
day
When
first
Spain's
queen
beheld
the
black-eyed
boy,
And
gore-faced
Treason
sprung
from
her
adulterate
joy.
XLIX.
On
yon
long
level
plain,
at
distance
crowned
With
crags,
whereon
those
Moorish
turrets
rest,
Wide
scattered
hoof-marks
dint
the
wounded
ground;
And,
scathed
by
fire,
the
greensward's
darkened
vest
Tells
that
the
foe
was
Andalusia's
guest:
Here
was
the
camp,
the
watch-flame,
and
the
host,
Here
the
brave
peasant
stormed
the
dragon's
nest;
Still
does
he
mark
it
with
triumphant
boast,
And
points
to
yonder
cliffs,
which
oft
were
won
and
lost.
L.
And
whomsoe'er
along
the
path
you
meet
Bears
in
his
cap
the
badge
of
crimson
hue,
Which
tells
you
whom
to
shun
and
whom
to
greet:
Woe
to
the
man
that
walks
in
public
view
Without
of
loyalty
this
token
true:
Sharp
is
the
knife,
and
sudden
is
the
stroke;
And
sorely
would
the
Gallic
foemen
rue,
If
subtle
poniards,
wrapt
beneath
the
cloak,
Could
blunt
the
sabre's
edge,
or
clear
the
cannon's
smoke.
LI.
At
every
turn
Morena's
dusky
height
Sustains
aloft
the
battery's
iron
load;
And,
far
as
mortal
eye
can
compass
sight,
The
mountain-howitzer,
the
broken
road,
The
bristling
palisade,
the
fosse
o'erflowed,
The
stationed
bands,
the
never-vacant
watch,
The
magazine
in
rocky
durance
stowed,
The
holstered
steed
beneath
the
shed
of
thatch,
The
ball-piled
pyramid,
the
ever-blazing
match,
LII.
Portend
the
deeds
to
come:
--but
he
whose
nod
Has
tumbled
feebler
despots
from
their
sway,
A
moment
pauseth
ere
he
lifts
the
rod;
A
little
moment
deigneth
to
delay:
Soon
will
his
legions
sweep
through
these
the
way;
The
West
must
own
the
Scourger
of
the
world.
Ah,
Spain!
how
sad
will
be
thy
reckoning
day,
When
soars
Gaul's
Vulture,
with
his
wings
unfurled,
And
thou
shalt
view
thy
sons
in
crowds
to
Hades
hurled.
LIII.
And
must
they
fall--the
young,
the
proud,
the
brave
-
To
swell
one
bloated
chief's
unwholesome
reign?
No
step
between
submission
and
a
grave?
The
rise
of
rapine
and
the
fall
of
Spain?
And
doth
the
Power
that
man
adores
ordain
Their
doom,
nor
heed
the
suppliant's
appeal?
Is
all
that
desperate
Valour
acts
in
vain?
And
Counsel
sage,
and
patriotic
Zeal,
The
veteran's
skill,
youth's
fire,
and
manhood's
heart
of
steel?
LIV.
Is
it
for
this
the
Spanish
maid,
aroused,
Hangs
on
the
willow
her
unstrung
guitar,
And,
all
unsexed,
the
anlace
hath
espoused,
Sung
the
loud
song,
and
dared
the
deed
of
war?
And
she,
whom
once
the
semblance
of
a
scar
Appalled,
an
owlet's
larum
chilled
with
dread,
Now
views
the
column-scattering
bayonet
jar,
The
falchion
flash,
and
o'er
the
yet
warm
dead
Stalks
with
Minerva's
step
where
Mars
might
quake
to
tread.
LV.
Ye
who
shall
marvel
when
you
hear
her
tale,
Oh!
had
you
known
her
in
her
softer
hour,
Marked
her
black
eye
that
mocks
her
coal-black
veil,
Heard
her
light,
lively
tones
in
lady's
bower,
Seen
her
long
locks
that
foil
the
painter's
power,
Her
fairy
form,
with
more
than
female
grace,
Scarce
would
you
deem
that
Saragoza's
tower
Beheld
her
smile
in
Danger's
Gorgon
face,
Thin
the
closed
ranks,
and
lead
in
Glory's
fearful
chase.
LVI.
Her
lover
sinks--she
sheds
no
ill-timed
tear;
Her
chief
is
slain--she
fills
his
fatal
post;
Her
fellows
flee--she
checks
their
base
career;
The
foe
retires--she
heads
the
sallying
host:
Who
can
appease
like
her
a
lover's
ghost?
Who
can
avenge
so
well
a
leader's
fall?
What
maid
retrieve
when
man's
flushed
hope
is
lost?
Who
hang
so
fiercely
on
the
flying
Gaul,
Foiled
by
a
woman's
hand,
before
a
battered
wall?
LVII.
Yet
are
Spain's
maids
no
race
of
Amazons,
But
formed
for
all
the
witching
arts
of
love:
Though
thus
in
arms
they
emulate
her
sons,
And
in
the
horrid
phalanx
dare
to
move,
'Tis
but
the
tender
fierceness
of
the
dove,
Pecking
the
hand
that
hovers
o'er
her
mate:
In
softness
as
in
firmness
far
above
Remoter
females,
famed
for
sickening
prate;
Her
mind
is
nobler
sure,
her
charms
perchance
as
great.
LVIII.
The
seal
Love's
dimpling
finger
hath
impressed
Denotes
how
soft
that
chin
which
bears
his
touch:
Her
lips,
whose
kisses
pout
to
leave
their
nest,
Bid
man
be
valiant
ere
he
merit
such:
Her
glance,
how
wildly
beautiful!
how
much
Hath
Phoebus
wooed
in
vain
to
spoil
her
cheek
Which
glows
yet
smoother
from
his
amorous
clutch!
Who
round
the
North
for
paler
dames
would
seek?
How
poor
their
forms
appear?
how
languid,
wan,
and
weak!
LIX.
Match
me,
ye
climes!
which
poets
love
to
laud;
Match
me,
ye
harems!
of
the
land
where
now
I
strike
my
strain,
far
distant,
to
applaud
Beauties
that
even
a
cynic
must
avow!
Match
me
those
houris,
whom
ye
scarce
allow
To
taste
the
gale
lest
Love
should
ride
the
wind,
With
Spain's
dark-glancing
daughters--deign
to
know,
There
your
wise
Prophet's
paradise
we
find,
His
black-eyed
maids
of
Heaven,
angelically
kind.
LX.
O
thou,
Parnassus!
whom
I
now
survey,
Not
in
the
frenzy
of
a
dreamer's
eye,
Not
in
the
fabled
landscape
of
a
lay,
But
soaring
snow-clad
through
thy
native
sky,
In
the
wild
pomp
of
mountain
majesty!
What
marvel
if
I
thus
essay
to
sing?
The
humblest
of
thy
pilgrims
passing
by
Would
gladly
woo
thine
echoes
with
his
string,
Though
from
thy
heights
no
more
one
muse
will
wave
her
wing.
LXI.
Oft
have
I
dreamed
of
thee!
whose
glorious
name
Who
knows
not,
knows
not
man's
divinest
lore:
And
now
I
view
thee,
'tis,
alas,
with
shame
That
I
in
feeblest
accents
must
adore.
When
I
recount
thy
worshippers
of
yore
I
tremble,
and
can
only
bend
the
knee;
Nor
raise
my
voice,
nor
vainly
dare
to
soar,
But
gaze
beneath
thy
cloudy
canopy
In
silent
joy
to
think
at
last
I
look
on
thee!
LXII.
Happier
in
this
than
mightiest
bards
have
been,
Whose
fate
to
distant
homes
confined
their
lot,
Shall
I
unmoved
behold
the
hallowed
scene,
Which
others
rave
of,
though
they
know
it
not?
Though
here
no
more
Apollo
haunts
his
grot,
And
thou,
the
Muses'
seat,
art
now
their
grave,
Some
gentle
spirit
still
pervades
the
spot,
Sighs
in
the
gale,
keeps
silence
in
the
cave,
And
glides
with
glassy
foot
o'er
yon
melodious
wave.
LXIII.
Of
thee
hereafter.--Even
amidst
my
strain
I
turned
aside
to
pay
my
homage
here;
Forgot
the
land,
the
sons,
the
maids
of
Spain;
Her
fate,
to
every
free-born
bosom
dear;
And
hailed
thee,
not
perchance
without
a
tear.
Now
to
my
theme--but
from
thy
holy
haunt
Let
me
some
remnant,
some
memorial
bear;
Yield
me
one
leaf
of
Daphne's
deathless
plant,
Nor
let
thy
votary's
hope
be
deemed
an
idle
vaunt.
LXIV.
But
ne'er
didst
thou,
fair
mount,
when
Greece
was
young,
See
round
thy
giant
base
a
brighter
choir;
Nor
e'er
did
Delphi,
when
her
priestess
sung
The
Pythian
hymn
with
more
than
mortal
fire,
Behold
a
train
more
fitting
to
inspire
The
song
of
love
than
Andalusia's
maids,
Nurst
in
the
glowing
lap
of
soft
desire:
Ah!
that
to
these
were
given
such
peaceful
shades
As
Greece
can
still
bestow,
though
Glory
fly
her
glades.
LXV.
Fair
is
proud
Seville;
let
her
country
boast
Her
strength,
her
wealth,
her
site
of
ancient
days,
But
Cadiz,
rising
on
the
distant
coast,
Calls
forth
a
sweeter,
though
ignoble
praise.
Ah,
Vice!
how
soft
are
thy
voluptuous
ways!
While
boyish
blood
is
mantling,
who
can
'scape
The
fascination
of
thy
magic
gaze?
A
cherub-hydra
round
us
dost
thou
gape,
And
mould
to
every
taste
thy
dear
delusive
shape.
LXVI.
When
Paphos
fell
by
Time--accursed
Time!
The
Queen
who
conquers
all
must
yield
to
thee
-
The
Pleasures
fled,
but
sought
as
warm
a
clime;
And
Venus,
constant
to
her
native
sea,
To
nought
else
constant,
hither
deigned
to
flee,
And
fixed
her
shrine
within
these
walls
of
white;
Though
not
to
one
dome
circumscribeth
she
Her
worship,
but,
devoted
to
her
rite,
A
thousand
altars
rise,
for
ever
blazing
bright.
LXVII.
From
morn
till
night,
from
night
till
startled
morn
Peeps
blushing
on
the
revel's
laughing
crew,
The
song
is
heard,
the
rosy
garland
worn;
Devices
quaint,
and
frolics
ever
new,
Tread
on
each
other's
kibes.
A
long
adieu
He
bids
to
sober
joy
that
here
sojourns:
Nought
interrupts
the
riot,
though
in
lieu
Of
true
devotion
monkish
incense
burns,
And
love
and
prayer
unite,
or
rule
the
hour
by
turns.
LXVIII.
The
sabbath
comes,
a
day
of
blessed
rest;
What
hallows
it
upon
this
Christian
shore?
Lo!
it
is
sacred
to
a
solemn
feast:
Hark!
heard
you
not
the
forest
monarch's
roar?
Crashing
the
lance,
he
snuffs
the
spouting
gore
Of
man
and
steed,
o'erthrown
beneath
his
horn:
The
thronged
arena
shakes
with
shouts
for
more;
Yells
the
mad
crowd
o'er
entrails
freshly
torn,
Nor
shrinks
the
female
eye,
nor
e'en
affects
to
mourn.
LXIX.
The
seventh
day
this;
the
jubilee
of
man.
London!
right
well
thou
know'st
the
day
of
prayer:
Then
thy
spruce
citizen,
washed
artizan,
And
smug
apprentice
gulp
their
weekly
air:
Thy
coach
of
hackney,
whiskey,
one-horse
chair,
And
humblest
gig,
through
sundry
suburbs
whirl;
To
Hampstead,
Brentford,
Harrow,
make
repair;
Till
the
tired
jade
the
wheel
forgets
to
hurl,
Provoking
envious
gibe
from
each
pedestrian
churl.
LXX.
Some
o'er
thy
Thamis
row
the
ribboned
fair,
Others
along
the
safer
turnpike
fly;
Some
Richmond
Hill
ascend,
some
scud
to
Ware,
And
many
to
the
steep
of
Highgate
hie.
Ask
ye,
Boeotian
shades,
the
reason
why?
'Tis
to
the
worship
of
the
solemn
Horn,
Grasped
in
the
holy
hand
of
Mystery,
In
whose
dread
name
both
men
and
maids
are
sworn,
And
consecrate
the
oath
with
draught
and
dance
till
morn.
LXXI.
All
have
their
fooleries;
not
alike
are
thine,
Fair
Cadiz,
rising
o'er
the
dark
blue
sea!
Soon
as
the
matin
bell
proclaimeth
nine,
Thy
saint
adorers
count
the
rosary:
Much
is
the
Virgin
teased
to
shrive
them
free
(Well
do
I
ween
the
only
virgin
there)
From
crimes
as
numerous
as
her
beadsmen
be;
Then
to
the
crowded
circus
forth
they
fare:
Young,
old,
high,
low,
at
once
the
same
diversion
share.
LXXII.
The
lists
are
oped,
the
spacious
area
cleared,
Thousands
on
thousands
piled
are
seated
round;
Long
ere
the
first
loud
trumpet's
note
is
heard,
No
vacant
space
for
lated
wight
is
found:
Here
dons,
grandees,
but
chiefly
dames
abound,
Skilled
in
the
ogle
of
a
roguish
eye,
Yet
ever
well
inclined
to
heal
the
wound;
None
through
their
cold
disdain
are
doomed
to
die,
As
moon-struck
bards
complain,
by
Love's
sad
archery.
LXXIII.
Hushed
is
the
din
of
tongues--on
gallant
steeds,
With
milk-white
crest,
gold
spur,
and
light-poised
lance,
Four
cavaliers
prepare
for
venturous
deeds,
And
lowly
bending
to
the
lists
advance;
Rich
are
their
scarfs,
their
chargers
featly
prance:
If
in
the
dangerous
game
they
shine
to-day,
The
crowd's
loud
shout,
and
ladies'
lovely
glance,
Best
prize
of
better
acts,
they
bear
away,
And
all
that
kings
or
chiefs
e'er
gain
their
toils
repay.
LXXIV.
In
costly
sheen
and
gaudy
cloak
arrayed,
But
all
afoot,
the
light-limbed
matadore
Stands
in
the
centre,
eager
to
invade
The
lord
of
lowing
herds;
but
not
before
The
ground,
with
cautious
tread,
is
traversed
o'er,
Lest
aught
unseen
should
lurk
to
thwart
his
speed:
His
arms
a
dart,
he
fights
aloof,
nor
more
Can
man
achieve
without
the
friendly
steed
-
Alas!
too
oft
condemned
for
him
to
bear
and
bleed.
LXXV.
Thrice
sounds
the
clarion;
lo!
the
signal
falls,
The
den
expands,
and
expectation
mute
Gapes
round
the
silent
circle's
peopled
walls.
Bounds
with
one
lashing
spring
the
mighty
brute,
And
wildly
staring,
spurns,
with
sounding
foot,
The
sand,
nor
blindly
rushes
on
his
foe:
Here,
there,
he
points
his
threatening
front,
to
suit
His
first
attack,
wide
waving
to
and
fro
His
angry
tail;
red
rolls
his
eye's
dilated
glow.
LXXVI.
Sudden
he
stops;
his
eye
is
fixed:
away,
Away,
thou
heedless
boy!
prepare
the
spear;
Now
is
thy
time
to
perish,
or
display
The
skill
that
yet
may
check
his
mad
career.
With
well-timed
croupe
the
nimble
coursers
veer;
On
foams
the
bull,
but
not
unscathed
he
goes;
Streams
from
his
flank
the
crimson
torrent
clear:
He
flies,
he
wheels,
distracted
with
his
throes:
Dart
follows
dart;
lance,
lance;
loud
bellowings
speak
his
woes.
LXXVII.
Again
he
comes;
nor
dart
nor
lance
avail,
Nor
the
wild
plunging
of
the
tortured
horse;
Though
man
and
man's
avenging
arms
assail,
Vain
are
his
weapons,
vainer
is
his
force.
One
gallant
steed
is
stretched
a
mangled
corse;
Another,
hideous
sight!
unseamed
appears,
His
gory
chest
unveils
life's
panting
source;
Though
death-struck,
still
his
feeble
frame
he
rears;
Staggering,
but
stemming
all,
his
lord
unharmed
he
bears.
LXXVIII.
Foiled,
bleeding,
breathless,
furious
to
the
last,
Full
in
the
centre
stands
the
bull
at
bay,
Mid
wounds,
and
clinging
darts,
and
lances
brast,
And
foes
disabled
in
the
brutal
fray:
And
now
the
matadores
around
him
play,
Shake
the
red
cloak,
and
poise
the
ready
brand:
Once
more
through
all
he
bursts
his
thundering
way
-
Vain
rage!
the
mantle
quits
the
conynge
hand,
Wraps
his
fierce
eye--'tis
past--he
sinks
upon
the
sand.
LXXIX.
Where
his
vast
neck
just
mingles
with
the
spine,
Sheathed
in
his
form
the
deadly
weapon
lies.
He
stops--he
starts--disdaining
to
decline:
Slowly
he
falls,
amidst
triumphant
cries,
Without
a
groan,
without
a
struggle
dies.
The
decorated
car
appears
on
high:
The
corse
is
piled--sweet
sight
for
vulgar
eyes;
Four
steeds
that
spurn
the
rein,
as
swift
as
shy,
Hurl
the
dark
bull
along,
scarce
seen
in
dashing
by.
LXXX.
Such
the
ungentle
sport
that
oft
invites
The
Spanish
maid,
and
cheers
the
Spanish
swain:
Nurtured
in
blood
betimes,
his
heart
delights
In
vengeance,
gloating
on
another's
pain.
What
private
feuds
the
troubled
village
stain!
Though
now
one
phalanxed
host
should
meet
the
foe,
Enough,
alas,
in
humble
homes
remain,
To
meditate
'gainst
friends
the
secret
blow,
For
some
slight
cause
of
wrath,
whence
life's
warm
stream
must
flow.
LXXXI.
But
Jealousy
has
fled:
his
bars,
his
bolts,
His
withered
sentinel,
duenna
sage!
And
all
whereat
the
generous
soul
revolts,
Which
the
stern
dotard
deemed
he
could
encage,
Have
passed
to
darkness
with
the
vanished
age.
Who
late
so
free
as
Spanish
girls
were
seen
(Ere
War
uprose
in
his
volcanic
rage),
With
braided
tresses
bounding
o'er
the
green,
While
on
the
gay
dance
shone
Night's
lover-loving
Queen?
LXXXII.
Oh!
many
a
time
and
oft
had
Harold
loved,
Or
dreamed
he
loved,
since
rapture
is
a
dream;
But
now
his
wayward
bosom
was
unmoved,
For
not
yet
had
he
drunk
of
Lethe's
stream:
And
lately
had
he
learned
with
truth
to
deem
Love
has
no
gift
so
grateful
as
his
wings:
How
fair,
how
young,
how
soft
soe'er
he
seem,
Full
from
the
fount
of
joy's
delicious
springs
Some
bitter
o'er
the
flowers
its
bubbling
venom
flings.
LXXXIII.
Yet
to
the
beauteous
form
he
was
not
blind,
Though
now
it
moved
him
as
it
moves
the
wise;
Not
that
Philosophy
on
such
a
mind
E'er
deigned
to
bend
her
chastely-awful
eyes:
But
Passion
raves
itself
to
rest,
or
flies;
And
Vice,
that
digs
her
own
voluptuous
tomb,
Had
buried
long
his
hopes,
no
more
to
rise:
Pleasure's
palled
victim!
life-abhorring
gloom
Wrote
on
his
faded
brow
curst
Cain's
unresting
doom.
LXXXIV.
Still
he
beheld,
nor
mingled
with
the
throng;
But
viewed
them
not
with
misanthropic
hate;
Fain
would
he
now
have
joined
the
dance,
the
song,
But
who
may
smile
that
sinks
beneath
his
fate?
Nought
that
he
saw
his
sadness
could
abate:
Yet
once
he
struggled
'gainst
the
demon's
sway,
And
as
in
Beauty's
bower
he
pensive
sate,
Poured
forth
this
unpremeditated
lay,
To
charms
as
fair
as
those
that
soothed
his
happier
day.
TO
INEZ.
Nay,
smile
not
at
my
sullen
brow,
Alas!
I
cannot
smile
again:
Yet
Heaven
avert
that
ever
thou
Shouldst
weep,
and
haply
weep
in
vain.
And
dost
thou
ask
what
secret
woe
I
bear,
corroding
joy
and
youth?
And
wilt
thou
vainly
seek
to
know
A
pang
even
thou
must
fail
to
soothe?
It
is
not
love,
it
is
not
hate,
Nor
low
Ambition's
honours
lost,
That
bids
me
loathe
my
present
state,
And
fly
from
all
I
prized
the
most:
It
is
that
weariness
which
springs
From
all
I
meet,
or
hear,
or
see:
To
me
no
pleasure
Beauty
brings;
Thine
eyes
have
scarce
a
charm
for
me.
It
is
that
settled,
ceaseless
gloom
The
fabled
Hebrew
wanderer
bore,
That
will
not
look
beyond
the
tomb,
But
cannot
hope
for
rest
before.
What
exile
from
himself
can
flee?
To
zones,
though
more
and
more
remote,
Still,
still
pursues,
where'er
I
be,
The
blight
of
life--the
demon
Thought.
Yet
others
rapt
in
pleasure
seem,
And
taste
of
all
that
I
forsake:
Oh!
may
they
still
of
transport
dream,
And
ne'er,
at
least
like
me,
awake!
Through
many
a
clime
'tis
mine
to
go,
With
many
a
retrospection
curst;
And
all
my
solace
is
to
know,
Whate'er
betides,
I've
known
the
worst.
What
is
that
worst?
Nay,
do
not
ask
-
In
pity
from
the
search
forbear:
Smile
on--nor
venture
to
unmask
Man's
heart,
and
view
the
hell
that's
there.
LXXXV.
Adieu,
fair
Cadiz!
yea,
a
long
adieu!
Who
may
forget
how
well
thy
walls
have
stood?
When
all
were
changing,
thou
alone
wert
true,
First
to
be
free,
and
last
to
be
subdued.
And
if
amidst
a
scene,
a
shock
so
rude,
Some
native
blood
was
seen
thy
streets
to
dye,
A
traitor
only
fell
beneath
the
feud:
Here
all
were
noble,
save
nobility;
None
hugged
a
conqueror's
chain
save
fallen
Chivalry!
LXXXVI.
Such
be
the
sons
of
Spain,
and
strange
her
fate!
They
fight
for
freedom,
who
were
never
free;
A
kingless
people
for
a
nerveless
state,
Her
vassals
combat
when
their
chieftains
flee,
True
to
the
veriest
slaves
of
Treachery;
Fond
of
a
land
which
gave
them
nought
but
life,
Pride
points
the
path
that
leads
to
liberty;
Back
to
the
struggle,
baffled
in
the
strife,
War,
war
is
still
the
cry,
'War
even
to
the
knife!'
LXXXVII.
Ye,
who
would
more
of
Spain
and
Spaniards
know,
Go,
read
whate'er
is
writ
of
bloodiest
strife:
Whate'er
keen
Vengeance
urged
on
foreign
foe
Can
act,
is
acting
there
against
man's
life:
From
flashing
scimitar
to
secret
knife,
War
mouldeth
there
each
weapon
to
his
need
-
So
may
he
guard
the
sister
and
the
wife,
So
may
he
make
each
curst
oppressor
bleed,
So
may
such
foes
deserve
the
most
remorseless
deed!
LXXXVIII.
Flows
there
a
tear
of
pity
for
the
dead?
Look
o'er
the
ravage
of
the
reeking
plain:
Look
on
the
hands
with
female
slaughter
red;
Then
to
the
dogs
resign
the
unburied
slain,
Then
to
the
vulture
let
each
corse
remain;
Albeit
unworthy
of
the
prey-bird's
maw,
Let
their
bleached
bones,
and
blood's
unbleaching
stain,
Long
mark
the
battle-field
with
hideous
awe:
Thus
only
may
our
sons
conceive
the
scenes
we
saw!
LXXXIX.
Nor
yet,
alas,
the
dreadful
work
is
done;
Fresh
legions
pour
adown
the
Pyrenees:
It
deepens
still,
the
work
is
scarce
begun,
Nor
mortal
eye
the
distant
end
foresees.
Fall'n
nations
gaze
on
Spain:
if
freed,
she
frees
More
than
her
fell
Pizarros
once
enchained.
Strange
retribution!
now
Columbia's
ease
Repairs
the
wrongs
that
Quito's
sons
sustained,
While
o'er
the
parent
clime
prowls
Murder
unrestrained.
XC.
Not
all
the
blood
at
Talavera
shed,
Not
all
the
marvels
of
Barossa's
fight,
Not
Albuera
lavish
of
the
dead,
Have
won
for
Spain
her
well-asserted
right.
When
shall
her
Olive-Branch
be
free
from
blight?
When
shall
she
breathe
her
from
the
blushing
toil?
How
many
a
doubtful
day
shall
sink
in
night,
Ere
the
Frank
robber
turn
him
from
his
spoil,
And
Freedom's
stranger-tree
grow
native
of
the
soil?
XCI.
And
thou,
my
friend!
since
unavailing
woe
Bursts
from
my
heart,
and
mingles
with
the
strain
-
Had
the
sword
laid
thee
with
the
mighty
low,
Pride
might
forbid
e'en
Friendship
to
complain:
But
thus
unlaurelled
to
descend
in
vain,
By
all
forgotten,
save
the
lonely
breast,
And
mix
unbleeding
with
the
boasted
slain,
While
glory
crowns
so
many
a
meaner
crest!
What
hadst
thou
done,
to
sink
so
peacefully
to
rest?
XCII.
Oh,
known
the
earliest,
and
esteemed
the
most!
Dear
to
a
heart
where
nought
was
left
so
dear!
Though
to
my
hopeless
days
for
ever
lost,
In
dreams
deny
me
not
to
see
thee
here!
And
Morn
in
secret
shall
renew
the
tear
Of
Consciousness
awaking
to
her
woes,
And
Fancy
hover
o'er
thy
bloodless
bier,
Till
my
frail
frame
return
to
whence
it
rose,
And
mourned
and
mourner
lie
united
in
repose.
XCIII.
Here
is
one
fytte
of
Harold's
pilgrimage.
Ye
who
of
him
may
further
seek
to
know,
Shall
find
some
tidings
in
a
future
page,
If
he
that
rhymeth
now
may
scribble
moe.
Is
this
too
much?
Stern
critic,
say
not
so:
Patience!
and
ye
shall
hear
what
he
beheld
In
other
lands,
where
he
was
doomed
to
go:
Lands
that
contain
the
monuments
of
eld,
Ere
Greece
and
Grecian
arts
by
barbarous
hands
were
quelled.