I.
I
weep
for
Adonais
-he
is
dead!
O,
weep
for
Adonais!
though
our
tears
Thaw
not
the
frost
which
binds
so
dear
a
head!
And
thou,
sad
Hour,
selected
from
all
years
To
mourn
our
loss,
rouse
thy
obscure
compeers,
And
teach
them
thine
own
sorrow,
say:
"With
me
Died
Adonais;
till
the
Future
dares
Forget
the
Past,
his
fate
and
fame
shall
be
An
echo
and
a
light
unto
eternity!"
II.
Where
wert
thou,
mighty
Mother,
when
he
lay,
When
thy
Son
lay,
pierced
by
the
shaft
which
flies
In
darkness?
where
was
lorn
Urania
When
Adonais
died?
With
veiled
eyes,
Mid
listening
Echoes,
in
her
Paradise
She
sate,
while
one,
with
soft
enamoured
breath,
Rekindled
all
the
fading
melodies
With
which,
like
flowers
that
mock
the
corse
beneath,
He
had
adorned
and
hid
the
coming
bulk
of
death.
III.
O,
weep
for
Adonais
-he
is
dead!
Wake,
melancholy
Mother,
wake
and
weep!
Yet
wherefore?
Quench
within
their
burning
bed
Thy
fiery
tears,
and
let
thy
loud
heart
keep
Like
his,
a
mute
and
uncomplaining
sleep;
For
he
is
gone,
where
all
things
wise
and
fair
Descend;
-oh,
dream
not
that
the
amorous
Deep
Will
yet
restore
him
to
the
vital
air;
Death
feeds
on
his
mute
voice,
and
laughs
at
our
despair.
IV.
Most
musical
of
mourners,
weep
again!
Lament
anew,
Urania!
-He
died,
Who
was
the
Sire
of
an
immortal
strain,
Blind,
old,
and
lonely,
when
his
country's
pride,
The
priest,
the
slave,
and
the
liberticide
Trampled
and
mocked
with
many
a
loathed
rite
Of
lust
and
blood;
he
went,
unterrified,
Into
the
gulf
of
death;
but
his
clear
Sprite
Yet
reigns
o'er
earth;
the
third
among
the
sons
of
light.
V.
Most
musical
of
mourners,
weep
anew!
Not
all
to
that
bright
station
dared
to
climb;
And
happier
they
their
happiness
who
knew,
Whose
tapers
yet
burn
through
that
night
of
time
In
which
suns
perished;
others
more
sublime,
Struck
by
the
envious
wrath
of
man
or
god,
Have
sunk,
extinct
in
their
refulgent
prime;
And
some
yet
live,
treading
the
thorny
road
Which
leads,
through
toil
and
hate,
to
Fame's
serene
abode.
VI.
But
now,
thy
youngest,
dearest
one,
has
perished
-
The
nursling
of
thy
widowhood,
who
grew,
Like
a
pale
flower
by
some
sad
maiden
cherished,
And
fed
with
true-love
tears,
instead
of
dew;
Most
musical
of
mourners,
weep
anew!
Thy
extreme
hope,
the
loveliest
and
the
last,
The
bloom,
whose
petals
nipped
before
they
blew
Died
on
the
promise
of
the
fruit,
is
waste;
The
broken
lily
lies
-the
storm
is
overpast.
VII.
To
that
high
Capital,
where
kingly
Death
Keeps
his
pale
court
in
beauty
and
decay,
He
came;
and
bought,
with
price
of
purest
breath,
A
grave
among
the
eternal.
-Come
away!
Haste,
while
the
vault
of
blue
Italian
day
Is
yet
his
fitting
charnel-roof!
while
still
He
lies,
as
if
in
dewy
sleep
he
lay;
Awake
him
not!
surely
he
takes
his
fill
Of
deep
and
liquid
rest,
forgetful
of
all
ill.
VIII.
He
will
awake
no
more,
oh,
never
more!
-
Within
the
twilight
chamber
spreads
apace
The
shadow
of
white
Death,
and
at
the
door
Invisible
Corruption
waits
to
trace
His
extreme
way
to
her
dim
dwelling-place;
The
eternal
Hunger
sits,
but
pity
and
awe
Soothe
her
pale
rage,
nor
dares
she
to
deface
So
fair
a
prey,
till
darkness,
and
the
law
Of
change,
shall
o'er
his
sleep
the
mortal
curtain
draw.
IX.
O,
weep
for
Adonais!
-The
quick
Dreams,
The
passion-winged
Ministers
of
thought,
Who
were
his
flocks,
whom
near
the
living
streams
Of
his
young
spirit
he
fed,
and
whom
he
taught
The
love
which
was
its
music,
wander
not,
-
Wander
no
more,
from
kindling
brain
to
brain,
But
droop
there,
whence
they
sprung;
and
mourn
their
lot
Round
the
cold
heart,
where,
after
their
sweet
pain,
They
ne'er
will
gather
strength,
or
find
a
home
again.
X.
And
one
with
trembling
hands
clasps
his
cold
head,
And
fans
him
with
her
moonlight
wings,
and
cries,
"Our
love,
our
hope,
our
sorrow,
is
not
dead;
See,
on
the
silken
fringe
of
his
faint
eyes,
Like
dew
upon
a
sleeping
flower,
there
lies
A
tear
some
Dream
has
loosened
from
his
brain."
Lost
Angel
of
a
ruined
Paradise!
She
knew
not
'twas
her
own;
as
with
no
stain
She
faded,
like
a
cloud
which
had
outwept
its
rain.
XI.
One
from
a
lucid
urn
of
starry
dew
Washed
his
light
limbs
as
if
embalming
them;
Another
clipped
her
profuse
locks,
and
threw
The
wreath
upon
him,
like
an
anadem,
Which
frozen
tears
instead
of
pearls
begem;
Another
in
her
wilful
grief
would
break
Her
bow
and
winged
reeds,
as
if
to
stem
A
greater
loss
with
one
which
was
more
weak;
And
dull
the
barbed
fire
against
his
frozen
cheek.
XII.
Another
Splendour
on
his
mouth
alit,
That
mouth,
whence
it
was
wont
to
draw
the
breath
Which
gave
it
strength
to
pierce
the
guarded
wit,
And
pass
into
the
panting
heart
beneath
With
lightning
and
with
music:
the
damp
death
Quenched
its
caress
upon
his
icy
lips;
And,
as
a
dying
meteor
stains
a
wreath
Of
moonlight
vapour,
which
the
cold
night
clips,
It
flushed
through
his
pale
limbs,
and
passed
to
its
eclipse.
XIII.
And
others
came…
Desires
and
Adorations,
Winged
Persuasions
and
veiled
Destinies,
Splendours,
and
Glooms,
and
glimmering
Incarnations
Of
hopes
and
fears,
and
twilight
Phantasies;
And
Sorrow,
with
her
family
of
Sighs,
And
Pleasure,
blind
with
tears,
led
by
the
gleam
Of
her
own
dying
smile
instead
of
eyes,
Came
in
slow
pomp;
-the
moving
pomp
might
seem
Like
pageantry
of
mist
on
an
autumnal
stream.
XIV.
All
he
had
loved,
and
moulded
into
thought,
From
shape,
and
hue,
and
odour,
and
sweet
sound,
Lamented
Adonais.
Morning
sought
Her
eastern
watch-tower,
and
her
hair
unbound,
Wet
with
the
tears
which
should
adorn
the
ground,
Dimmed
the
aereal
eyes
that
kindle
day;
Afar
the
melancholy
thunder
moaned,
Pale
Ocean
in
unquiet
slumber
lay,
And
the
wild
Winds
flew
round,
sobbing
in
their
dismay.
XV.
Lost
Echo
sits
amid
the
voiceless
mountains,
And
feeds
her
grief
with
his
remembered
lay,
And
will
no
more
reply
to
winds
or
fountains,
Or
amorous
birds
perched
on
the
young
green
spray,
Or
herdsman's
horn,
or
bell
at
closing
day;
Since
she
can
mimic
not
his
lips,
more
dear
Than
those
for
whose
disdain
she
pined
away
Into
a
shadow
of
all
sounds:
-a
drear
Murmur,
between
their
songs,
is
all
the
woodmen
hear.
XVI.
Grief
made
the
young
Spring
wild,
and
she
threw
down
Her
kindling
buds,
as
if
she
Autumn
were,
Or
they
dead
leaves;
since
her
delight
is
flown,
For
whom
should
she
have
waked
the
sullen
year?
To
Phoebus
was
not
Hyacinth
so
dear
Nor
to
himself
Narcissus,
as
to
both
Thou,
Adonais:
wan
they
stand
and
sere
Amid
the
faint
companions
of
their
youth,
With
dew
all
turned
to
tears;
odour,
to
sighing
ruth.
XVII.
Thy
spirit's
sister,
the
lorn
nightingale
Mourns
not
her
mate
with
such
melodious
pain;
Not
so
the
eagle,
who
like
thee
could
scale
Heaven,
and
could
nourish
in
the
sun's
domain
Her
mighty
youth
with
morning,
doth
complain,
Soaring
and
screaming
round
her
empty
nest,
As
Albion
wails
for
thee:
the
curse
of
Cain
Light
on
his
head
who
pierced
thy
innocent
breast,
And
scared
the
angel
soul
that
was
its
earthly
guest!
XVIII.
Ah,
woe
is
me!
Winter
is
come
and
gone,
But
grief
returns
with
the
revolving
year;
The
airs
and
streams
renew
their
joyous
tone;
The
ants,
the
bees,
the
swallows
reappear;
Fresh
leaves
and
flowers
deck
the
dead
Season's
bier;
The
amorous
birds
now
pair
in
every
brake,
And
build
their
mossy
homes
in
field
and
brere;
And
the
green
lizard,
and
the
golden
snake,
Like
unimprisoned
flames,
out
of
their
trance
awake.
XIX.
Through
wood
and
stream
and
field
and
hill
and
Ocean
A
quickening
life
from
the
Earth's
heart
has
burst
As
it
has
ever
done,
with
change
and
motion,
From
the
great
morning
of
the
world
when
first
God
dawned
on
Chaos;
in
its
stream
immersed,
The
lamps
of
Heaven
flash
with
a
softer
light;
All
baser
things
pant
with
life's
sacred
thirst;
Diffuse
themselves;
and
spend
in
love's
delight
The
beauty
and
the
joy
of
their
renewed
might.
XX.
The
leprous
corpse,
touched
by
this
spirit
tender,
Exhales
itself
in
flowers
of
gentle
breath;
Like
incarnations
of
the
stars,
when
splendour
Is
changed
to
fragrance,
they
illumine
death
And
mock
the
merry
worm
that
wakes
beneath;
Nought
we
know,
dies.
Shall
that
alone
which
knows
Be
as
a
sword
consumed
before
the
sheath
By
sightless
lightning?
-the
intense
atom
glows
A
moment,
then
is
quenched
in
a
most
cold
repose.
XXI.
Alas!
that
all
we
loved
of
him
should
be,
But
for
our
grief,
as
if
it
had
not
been,
And
grief
itself
be
mortal!
Woe
is
me!
Whence
are
we,
and
why
are
we?
of
what
scene
The
actors
or
spectators?
Great
and
mean
Meet
massed
in
death,
who
lends
what
life
must
borrow.
As
long
as
skies
are
blue,
and
fields
are
green,
Evening
must
usher
night,
night
urge
the
morrow,
Month
follow
month
with
woe,
and
year
wake
year
to
sorrow.
XXII.
He
will
awake
no
more,
oh,
never
more!
"Wake
thou,"
cried
Misery,
"childless
Mother,
rise
Out
of
thy
sleep,
and
slake,
in
thy
heart's
core,
A
wound
more
fierce
than
his
with
tears
and
sighs."
And
all
the
Dreams
that
watched
Urania's
eyes,
And
all
the
Echoes
whom
their
sister's
song
Had
held
in
holy
silence,
cried:
"Arise!"
Swift
as
a
Thought
by
the
snake
Memory
stung,
From
her
ambrosial
rest
the
fading
Splendour
sprung.
XXIII.
She
rose
like
an
autumnal
Night,
that
springs
Our
of
the
East,
and
follows
wild
and
drear
The
golden
Day,
which,
on
eternal
wings,
Even
as
a
ghost
abandoning
a
bier,
Had
left
the
Earth
a
corpse.
Sorrow
and
fear
So
struck,
so
roused,
so
rapt
Urania;
So
saddened
round
her
like
an
atmosphere
Of
stormy
mist;
so
swept
her
on
her
way
Even
to
the
mournful
place
where
Adonais
lay.
XXIV.
Our
of
her
secret
Paradise
she
sped,
Through
camps
and
cities
rough
with
stone,
and
steel,
And
human
hearts,
which
to
her
aery
tread
Yielding
not,
wounded
the
invisible
Palms
of
her
tender
feet
where'er
they
fell:
And
barbed
tongues,
and
thoughts
more
sharp
than
they,
Rent
the
soft
Form
they
never
could
repel,
Whose
sacred
blood,
like
the
young
tears
of
May,
Paved
with
eternal
flowers
that
undeserving
way.
XXV.
In
the
death-chamber
for
a
moment
Death,
Shamed
by
the
presence
of
that
living
Might,
Blushed
to
annihilation,
and
the
breath
Revisited
those
lips,
and
Life's
pale
light
Flashed
through
those
limbs,
so
late
her
dear
delight.
"Leave
me
not
wild
and
drear
and
comfortless,
As
silent
lightning
leaves
the
starless
night!
Leave
me
not!"
cried
Urania:
her
distress
Roused
Death:
Death
rose
and
smiled,
and
met
her
vain
caress.
XXVI.
"'Stay
yet
awhile!
speak
to
me
once
again;
Kiss
me,
so
long
but
as
a
kiss
may
live;
And
in
my
heartless
breast
and
burning
brain
That
word,
that
kiss,
shall
all
thoughts
else
survive,
With
food
of
saddest
memory
kept
alive,
Now
thou
art
dead,
as
if
it
were
a
part
Of
thee,
my
Adonais!
I
would
give
All
that
I
am
to
be
as
thou
now
art!
But
I
am
chained
to
Time,
and
cannot
thence
depart!
XXVII.
"O
gentle
child,
beautiful
as
thou
wert,
Why
didst
thou
leave
the
trodden
paths
of
men
Too
soon,
and
with
weak
hands
though
mighty
heart
Dare
the
unpastured
dragon
in
his
den?
Defenceless
as
thou
wert,
oh,
where
was
then
Wisdom
the
mirrored
shield,
or
scorn
the
spear?
Or
hadst
thou
waited
the
full
cycle,
when
Thy
spirit
should
have
filled
its
crescent
sphere,
The
monsters
of
life's
waste
had
fled
from
thee
like
deer.
XXVIII.
"The
herded
wolves,
bold
only
to
pursue;
The
obscene
ravens,
clamorous
o'er
the
dead;
The
vultures
to
the
conqueror's
banner
true
Who
feed
where
Desolation
first
has
fed,
And
whose
wings
rain
contagion;
-how
they
fled,
When,
like
Apollo,
from
his
golden
bow
The
Pythian
of
the
age
one
arrow
sped
And
smiled!
-The
spoilers
tempt
no
second
blow,
They
fawn
on
the
proud
feet
that
spurn
them
lying
low.
XXIX.
"The
sun
comes
forth,
and
many
reptiles
spawn;
He
sets,
and
each
ephemeral
insect
then
Is
gathered
into
death
without
a
dawn,
And
the
immortal
stars
awake
again;
So
is
it
in
the
world
of
living
men:
A
godlike
mind
soars
forth,
in
its
delight
Making
earth
bare
and
veiling
heaven,
and
when
It
sinks,
the
swarms
that
dimmed
or
shared
its
light
Leave
to
its
kindred
lamps
the
spirit's
awful
night."
XXX.
Thus
ceased
she:
and
the
mountain
shepherds
came,
Their
garlands
sere,
their
magic
mantles
rent;
The
Pilgrim
of
Eternity,
whose
fame
Over
his
living
head
like
Heaven
is
bent,
An
early
but
enduring
monument,
Came,
veiling
all
the
lightnings
of
his
song
In
sorrow;
from
her
wilds
Irene
sent
The
sweetest
lyrist
of
her
saddest
wrong,
And
Love
taught
Grief
to
fall
like
music
from
his
tongue.
XXXI.
Midst
others
of
less
note,
came
one
frail
Form,
A
phantom
among
men;
companionless
As
the
last
cloud
of
an
expiring
storm
Whose
thunder
is
its
knell;
he,
as
I
guess,
Had
gazed
on
Nature's
naked
loveliness,
Actaeon-like,
and
now
he
fled
astray
With
feeble
steps
o'er
the
world's
wilderness,
And
his
own
thoughts,
along
that
rugged
way,
Pursued,
like
raging
hounds,
their
father
and
their
prey.
XXXII.
A
pardlike
Spirit
beautiful
and
swift
-
A
Love
in
desolation
masked;
-a
Power
Girt
round
with
weakness;
-it
can
scarce
uplift
The
weight
of
the
superincumbent
hour;
It
is
a
dying
lamp,
a
falling
shower,
A
breaking
billow;
-even
whilst
we
speak
Is
it
not
broken?
On
the
withering
flower
The
killing
sun
smiles
brightly:
on
a
cheek
The
life
can
burn
in
blood,
even
while
the
heart
may
break.
XXXIII.
His
head
was
bound
with
pansies
overblown,
And
faded
violets,
white,
and
pied,
and
blue;
And
a
light
spear
topped
with
a
cypress
cone,
Round
whose
rude
shaft
dark
ivy-tresses
grew
Yet
dripping
with
the
forest's
noonday
dew,
Vibrated,
as
the
ever-beating
heart
Shook
the
weak
hand
that
grasped
it;
of
that
crew
He
came
the
last,
neglected
and
apart;
A
herd-abandoned
deer
struck
by
the
hunter's
dart.
XXXIV.
All
stood
aloof,
and
at
his
partial
moan
Smiled
through
their
tears;
well
knew
that
gentle
band
Who
in
another's
fate
now
wept
his
own,
As
in
the
accents
of
an
unknown
land
He
sung
new
sorrow;
sad
Urania
scanned
The
Stranger's
mien,
and
murmured:
"Who
art
thou?"
He
answered
not,
but
with
a
sudden
hand
Made
bare
his
branded
and
ensanguined
brow,
Which
was
like
Cain's
or
Christ's
-oh!
that
it
should
be
so!
XXXV.
What
softer
voice
is
hushed
over
the
dead?
Athwart
what
brow
is
that
dark
mantle
thrown?
What
form
leans
sadly
o'er
the
white
death-bed,
In
mockery
of
monumental
stone,
The
heavy
heart
heaving
without
a
moan?
If
it
be
He,
who,
gentlest
of
the
wise,
Taught,
soothed,
loved,
honoured
the
departed
one,
Let
me
not
vex,
with
inharmonious
sighs,
The
silence
of
that
heart's
accepted
sacrifice.
XXXVI.
Our
Adonais
has
drunk
poison
-oh!
What
deaf
and
viperous
murderer
could
crown
Life's
early
cup
with
such
a
draught
of
woe?
The
nameless
worm
would
now
itself
disown:
It
felt,
yet
could
escape,
the
magic
tone
Whose
prelude
held
all
envy,
hate,
and
wrong,
But
what
was
howling
in
one
breast
alone,
Silent
with
expectation
of
the
song,
Whose
master's
hand
is
cold,
whose
silver
lyre
unstrung.
XXXVII.
Live
thou,
whose
infamy
is
not
thy
fame!
Live!
fear
no
heavier
chastisement
from
me,
Thou
noteless
blot
on
a
remembered
name!
But
be
thyself,
and
know
thyself
to
be!
And
ever
at
thy
season
be
thou
free
To
spill
the
venom
when
thy
fangs
o'erflow:
Remorse
and
Self-contempt
shall
cling
to
thee;
Hot
Shame
shall
burn
upon
thy
secret
brow,
And
like
a
beaten
hound
tremble
thou
shalt
-as
now.
XXXVIII.
Nor
let
us
weep
that
our
delight
is
fled
Far
from
these
carrion
kites
that
scream
below;
He
wakes
or
sleeps
with
the
enduring
dead;
Thou
canst
not
soar
where
he
is
sitting
now
-
Dust
to
the
dust!
but
the
pure
spirit
shall
flow
Back
to
the
burning
fountain
whence
it
came,
A
portion
of
the
Eternal,
which
must
glow
Through
time
and
change,
unquenchably
the
same,
Whilst
thy
cold
embers
choke
the
sordid
hearth
of
shame.
XXXIX.
Peace,
peace!
he
is
not
dead,
he
doth
not
sleep
-
He
hath
awakened
from
the
dream
of
life
-
'Tis
we,
who
lost
in
stormy
visions,
keep
With
phantoms
an
unprofitable
strife,
And
in
mad
trance,
strike
with
our
spirit's
knife
Invulnerable
nothings.
-We
decay
Like
corpses
in
a
charnel;
fear
and
grief
Convulse
us
and
consume
us
day
by
day,
And
cold
hopes
swarm
like
worms
within
our
living
clay.
XL.
He
has
outsoared
the
shadow
of
our
night;
Envy
and
calumny
and
hate
and
pain,
And
that
unrest
which
men
miscall
delight,
Can
touch
him
not
and
torture
not
again;
From
the
contagion
of
the
world's
slow
stain
He
is
secure,
and
now
can
never
mourn
A
heart
grown
cold,
a
head
grown
grey
in
vain;
Nor,
when
the
spirit's
self
has
ceased
to
burn,
With
sparkless
ashes
load
an
unlamented
urn.
XLI.
He
lives,
he
wakes
-'tis
Death
is
dead,
not
he;
Mourn
not
for
Adonais.
-Thou
young
Dawn,
Turn
all
thy
dew
to
splendour,
for
from
thee
The
spirit
thou
lamentest
is
not
gone;
Ye
caverns
and
ye
forests,
cease
to
moan!
Cease,
ye
faint
flowers
and
fountains,
and
thou
Air
Which
like
a
mourning
veil
thy
scarf
hadst
thrown
O'er
the
abandoned
Earth,
now
leave
it
bare
Even
to
the
joyous
stars
which
smile
on
its
despair!
XLII.
He
is
made
one
with
Nature:
there
is
heard
His
voice
in
all
her
music,
from
the
moan
Of
thunder,
to
the
song
of
night's
sweet
bird;
He
is
a
presence
to
be
felt
and
known
In
darkness
and
in
light,
from
herb
and
stone,
Spreading
itself
where'er
that
Power
may
move
Which
has
withdrawn
his
being
to
its
own;
Which
wields
the
world
with
never-wearied
love,
Sustains
it
from
beneath,
and
kindles
it
above.
XLIII.
He
is
a
portion
of
the
loveliness
Which
once
he
made
more
lovely:
he
doth
bear
His
part,
while
the
one
Spirit's
plastic
stress
Sweeps
through
the
dull
dense
world,
compelling
there
All
new
successions
to
the
forms
they
wear;
Torturing
th'
unwilling
dross
that
checks
its
flight
To
its
own
likeness,
as
each
mass
may
bear;
And
bursting
in
its
beauty
and
its
might
From
trees
and
beasts
and
men
into
the
Heavens'
light.
XLIV.
The
splendours
of
the
firmament
of
time
May
be
eclipsed,
but
are
extinguished
not;
Like
stars
to
their
appointed
height
they
climb,
And
death
is
a
low
mist
which
cannot
blot
The
brightness
it
may
veil.
When
lofty
thought
Lifts
a
young
heart
above
its
mortal
lair,
And
love
and
life
contend
in
it,
for
what
Shall
be
its
earthly
doom,
the
dead
live
there
And
move
like
winds
of
light
on
dark
and
stormy
air.
XLV.
The
inheritors
of
unfulfilled
renown
Rose
from
their
thrones,
built
beyond
mortal
thought,
Far
in
the
Unapparent.
Chatterton
Rose
pale,
-his
solemn
agony
had
not
Yet
faded
from
him;
Sidney,
as
he
fought
And
as
he
fell
and
as
he
lived
and
loved
Sublimely
mild,
a
Spirit
without
spot,
Arose;
and
Lucan,
by
his
death
approved:
Oblivion
as
they
rose
shrank
like
a
thing
reproved.
XLVI.
And
many
more,
whose
names
on
Earth
are
dark,
But
whose
transmitted
effluence
cannot
die
So
long
as
fire
outlives
the
parent
spark,
Rose,
robed
in
dazzling
immortality.
"Thou
art
become
as
one
of
us,"
they
cry,
"It
was
for
thee
yon
kingless
sphere
has
long
Swung
blind
in
unascended
majesty,
Silent
alone
amid
an
Heaven
of
Song.
Assume
thy
winged
throne,
thou
Vesper
of
our
throng!"
XLVII.
Who
mourns
for
Adonais?
Oh,
come
forth,
Fond
wretch!
and
know
thyself
and
him
aright.
Clasp
with
thy
panting
soul
the
pendulous
Earth;
As
from
a
centre,
dart
thy
spirit's
light
Beyond
all
worlds,
until
its
spacious
might
Satiate
the
void
circumference:
then
shrink
Even
to
a
point
within
our
day
and
night;
And
keep
thy
heart
light
lest
it
make
thee
sink
When
hope
has
kindled
hope,
and
lured
thee
to
the
brink.
XLVIII.
Or
go
to
Rome,
which
is
the
sepulchre,
Oh,
not
of
him,
but
of
our
joy:
'tis
nought
That
ages,
empires,
and
religions
there
Lie
buried
in
the
ravage
they
have
wrought;
For
such
as
he
can
lend,
-they
borrow
not
Glory
from
those
who
made
the
world
their
prey;
And
he
is
gathered
to
the
kings
of
thought
Who
waged
contention
with
their
time's
decay,
And
of
the
past
are
all
that
cannot
pass
away.
XLIX.
Go
thou
to
Rome,
-at
once
the
Paradise,
The
grave,
the
city,
and
the
wilderness;
And
where
its
wrecks
like
shattered
mountains
rise,
And
flowering
weeds,
and
fragrant
copses
dress
The
bones
of
Desolation's
nakedness
Pass,
till
the
spirit
of
the
spot
shall
lead
Thy
footsteps
to
a
slope
of
green
access
Where,
like
an
infant's
smile,
over
the
dead
A
light
of
laughing
flowers
along
the
grass
is
spread;
L.
And
grey
walls
moulder
round,
on
which
dull
Time
Feeds,
like
slow
fire
upon
a
hoary
brand;
And
one
keen
pyramid
with
wedge
sublime,
Pavilioning
the
dust
of
him
who
planned
This
refuge
for
his
memory,
doth
stand
Like
flame
transformed
to
marble;
and
beneath,
A
field
is
spread,
on
which
a
newer
band
Have
pitched
in
Heaven's
smile
their
camp
of
death,
Welcoming
him
we
lose
with
scarce
extinguished
breath.
LI.
Here
pause:
these
graves
are
all
too
young
as
yet
To
have
outgrown
the
sorrow
which
consigned
Its
charge
to
each;
and
if
the
seal
is
set,
Here,
on
one
fountain
of
a
mourning
mind,
Break
it
not
thou!
too
surely
shalt
thou
find
Thine
own
well
full,
if
thou
returnest
home,
Of
tears
and
gall.
From
the
world's
bitter
wind
Seek
shelter
in
the
shadow
of
the
tomb.
What
Adonais
is,
why
fear
we
to
become?
LII.
The
One
remains,
the
many
change
and
pass;
Heaven's
light
forever
shines,
Earth's
shadows
fly;
Life,
like
a
dome
of
many-coloured
glass,
Stains
the
white
radiance
of
Eternity,
Until
Death
tramples
it
to
fragments.
-Die,
If
thou
wouldst
be
with
that
which
thou
dost
seek!
Follow
where
all
is
fled!
-Rome's
azure
sky,
Flowers,
ruins,
statues,
music,
words,
are
weak
The
glory
they
transfuse
with
fitting
truth
to
speak.
LIII.
Why
linger,
why
turn
back,
why
shrink,
my
Heart?
Thy
hopes
are
gone
before:
from
all
things
here
They
have
departed;
thou
shouldst
now
depart!
A
light
is
passed
from
the
revolving
year,
And
man,
and
woman;
and
what
still
is
dear
Attracts
to
crush,
repels
to
make
thee
wither.
The
soft
sky
smiles,
-the
low
wind
whispers
near:
'Tis
Adonais
calls!
oh,
hasten
thither,
No
more
let
Life
divide
what
Death
can
join
together.
LIV.
That
Light
whose
smile
kindles
the
Universe,
That
Beauty
in
which
all
things
work
and
move,
That
Benediction
which
the
eclipsing
Curse
Of
birth
can
quench
not,
that
sustaining
Love
Which
through
the
web
of
being
blindly
wove
By
man
and
beast
and
earth
and
air
and
sea,
Burns
bright
or
dim,
as
each
are
mirrors
of
The
fire
for
which
all
thirst,
now
beams
on
me,
Consuming
the
last
clouds
of
cold
mortality.
LV.
The
breath
whose
might
I
have
invoked
in
song
Descends
on
me;
my
spirit's
bark
is
driven
Far
from
the
shore,
far
from
the
trembling
throng
Whose
sails
were
never
to
the
tempest
given;
The
massy
earth
and
sphered
skies
are
riven!
I
am
borne
darkly,
fearfully,
afar;
Whilst,
burning
through
the
inmost
veil
of
Heaven,
The
soul
of
Adonais,
like
a
star,
Beacons
from
the
abode
where
the
Eternal
are.