Earth,
Ocean,
Air,
belovèd
brotherhood!
If
our
great
Mother
has
imbued
my
soul
With
aught
of
natural
piety
to
feel
Your
love,
and
recompense
the
boon
with
mine;
If
dewy
morn,
and
odorous
noon,
and
even,
With
sunset
and
its
gorgeous
ministers,
And
solemn
midnight's
tingling
silentness;
If
Autumn's
hollow
sighs
in
the
sere
wood,
And
Winter
robing
with
pure
snow
and
crowns
Of
starry
ice
the
gray
grass
and
bare
boughs;
If
Spring's
voluptuous
pantings
when
she
breathes
Her
first
sweet
kisses,—have
been
dear
to
me;
If
no
bright
bird,
insect,
or
gentle
beast
I
consciously
have
injured,
but
still
loved
And
cherished
these
my
kindred;
then
forgive
This
boast,
belovèd
brethren,
and
withdraw
No
portion
of
your
wonted
favor
now!
Mother
of
this
unfathomable
world!
Favor
my
solemn
song,
for
I
have
loved
Thee
ever,
and
thee
only;
I
have
watched
Thy
shadow,
and
the
darkness
of
thy
steps,
And
my
heart
ever
gazes
on
the
depth
Of
thy
deep
mysteries.
I
have
made
my
bed
In
charnels
and
on
coffins,
where
black
death
Keeps
record
of
the
trophies
won
from
thee,
Hoping
to
still
these
obstinate
questionings
Of
thee
and
thine,
by
forcing
some
lone
ghost,
Thy
messenger,
to
render
up
the
tale
Of
what
we
are.
In
lone
and
silent
hours,
When
night
makes
a
weird
sound
of
its
own
stillness,
Like
an
inspired
and
desperate
alchemist
Staking
his
very
life
on
some
dark
hope,
Have
I
mixed
awful
talk
and
asking
looks
With
my
most
innocent
love,
until
strange
tears,
Uniting
with
those
breathless
kisses,
made
Such
magic
as
compels
the
charmèd
night
To
render
up
thy
charge;
and,
though
ne'er
yet
Thou
hast
unveiled
thy
inmost
sanctuary,
Enough
from
incommunicable
dream,
And
twilight
phantasms,
and
deep
noonday
thought,
Has
shone
within
me,
that
serenely
now
And
moveless,
as
a
long-forgotten
lyre
Suspended
in
the
solitary
dome
Of
some
mysterious
and
deserted
fane,
I
wait
thy
breath,
Great
Parent,
that
my
strain
May
modulate
with
murmurs
of
the
air,
And
motions
of
the
forests
and
the
sea,
And
voice
of
living
beings,
and
woven
hymns
Of
night
and
day,
and
the
deep
heart
of
man.
There
was
a
Poet
whose
untimely
tomb
No
human
hands
with
pious
reverence
reared,
But
the
charmed
eddies
of
autumnal
winds
Built
o'er
his
mouldering
bones
a
pyramid
Of
mouldering
leaves
in
the
waste
wilderness:
A
lovely
youth,—no
mourning
maiden
decked
With
weeping
flowers,
or
votive
cypress
wreath,
The
lone
couch
of
his
everlasting
sleep:
Gentle,
and
brave,
and
generous,—no
lorn
bard
Breathed
o'er
his
dark
fate
one
melodious
sigh:
He
lived,
he
died,
he
sung
in
solitude.
Strangers
have
wept
to
hear
his
passionate
notes,
And
virgins,
as
unknown
he
passed,
have
pined
And
wasted
for
fond
love
of
his
wild
eyes.
The
fire
of
those
soft
orbs
has
ceased
to
burn,
And
Silence,
too
enamoured
of
that
voice,
Locks
its
mute
music
in
her
rugged
cell.
By
solemn
vision
and
bright
silver
dream
His
infancy
was
nurtured.
Every
sight
And
sound
from
the
vast
earth
and
ambient
air
Sent
to
his
heart
its
choicest
impulses.
The
fountains
of
divine
philosophy
Fled
not
his
thirsting
lips,
and
all
of
great,
Or
good,
or
lovely,
which
the
sacred
past
In
truth
or
fable
consecrates,
he
felt
And
knew.
When
early
youth
had
passed,
he
left
His
cold
fireside
and
alienated
home
To
seek
strange
truths
in
undiscovered
lands.
Many
a
wide
waste
and
tangled
wilderness
Has
lured
his
fearless
steps;
and
he
has
bought
With
his
sweet
voice
and
eyes,
from
savage
men,
His
rest
and
food.
Nature's
most
secret
steps
He
like
her
shadow
has
pursued,
where'er
The
red
volcano
overcanopies
Its
fields
of
snow
and
pinnacles
of
ice
With
burning
smoke,
or
where
bitumen
lakes
On
black
bare
pointed
islets
ever
beat
With
sluggish
surge,
or
where
the
secret
caves,
Rugged
and
dark,
winding
among
the
springs
Of
fire
and
poison,
inaccessible
To
avarice
or
pride,
their
starry
domes
Of
diamond
and
of
gold
expand
above
Numberless
and
immeasurable
halls,
Frequent
with
crystal
column,
and
clear
shrines
Of
pearl,
and
thrones
radiant
with
chrysolite.
Nor
had
that
scene
of
ampler
majesty
Than
gems
or
gold,
the
varying
roof
of
heaven
And
the
green
earth,
lost
in
his
heart
its
claims
To
love
and
wonder;
he
would
linger
long
In
lonesome
vales,
making
the
wild
his
home,
Until
the
doves
and
squirrels
would
partake
From
his
innocuous
band
his
bloodless
food,
Lured
by
the
gentle
meaning
of
his
looks,
And
the
wild
antelope,
that
starts
whene'er
The
dry
leaf
rustles
in
the
brake,
suspend
Her
timid
steps,
to
gaze
upon
a
form
More
graceful
than
her
own.
His
wandering
step,
Obedient
to
high
thoughts,
has
visited
The
awful
ruins
of
the
days
of
old:
Athens,
and
Tyre,
and
Balbec,
and
the
waste
Where
stood
Jerusalem,
the
fallen
towers
Of
Babylon,
the
eternal
pyramids,
Memphis
and
Thebes,
and
whatsoe'er
of
strange,
Sculptured
on
alabaster
obelisk
Or
jasper
tomb
or
mutilated
sphinx,
Dark
Æthiopia
in
her
desert
hills
Conceals.
Among
the
ruined
temples
there,
Stupendous
columns,
and
wild
images
Of
more
than
man,
where
marble
daemons
watch
The
Zodiac's
brazen
mystery,
and
dead
men
Hang
their
mute
thoughts
on
the
mute
walls
around,
He
lingered,
poring
on
memorials
Of
the
world's
youth:
through
the
long
burning
day
Gazed
on
those
speechless
shapes;
nor,
when
the
moon
Filled
the
mysterious
halls
with
floating
shades
Suspended
he
that
task,
but
ever
gazed
And
gazed,
till
meaning
on
his
vacant
mind
Flashed
like
strong
inspiration,
and
he
saw
The
thrilling
secrets
of
the
birth
of
time.
Meanwhile
an
Arab
maiden
brought
his
food,
Her
daily
portion,
from
her
father's
tent,
And
spread
her
matting
for
his
couch,
and
stole
From
duties
and
repose
to
tend
his
steps,
Enamoured,
yet
not
daring
for
deep
awe
To
speak
her
love,
and
watched
his
nightly
sleep,
Sleepless
herself,
to
gaze
upon
his
lips
Parted
in
slumber,
whence
the
regular
breath
Of
innocent
dreams
arose;
then,
when
red
morn
Made
paler
the
pale
moon,
to
her
cold
home
Wildered,
and
wan,
and
panting,
she
returned.
The
Poet,
wandering
on,
through
Arabie,
And
Persia,
and
the
wild
Carmanian
waste,
And
o'er
the
aërial
mountains
which
pour
down
Indus
and
Oxus
from
their
icy
caves,
In
joy
and
exultation
held
his
way;
Till
in
the
vale
of
Cashmire,
far
within
Its
loneliest
dell,
where
odorous
plants
entwine
Beneath
the
hollow
rocks
a
natural
bower,
Beside
a
sparkling
rivulet
he
stretched
His
languid
limbs.
A
vision
on
his
sleep
There
came,
a
dream
of
hopes
that
never
yet
Had
flushed
his
cheek.
He
dreamed
a
veilèd
maid
Sate
near
him,
talking
in
low
solemn
tones.
Her
voice
was
like
the
voice
of
his
own
soul
Heard
in
the
calm
of
thought;
its
music
long,
Like
woven
sounds
of
streams
and
breezes,
held
His
inmost
sense
suspended
in
its
web
Of
many-colored
woof
and
shifting
hues.
Knowledge
and
truth
and
virtue
were
her
theme,
And
lofty
hopes
of
divine
liberty,
Thoughts
the
most
dear
to
him,
and
poesy,
Herself
a
poet.
Soon
the
solemn
mood
Of
her
pure
mind
kindled
through
all
her
frame
A
permeating
fire;
wild
numbers
then
She
raised,
with
voice
stifled
in
tremulous
sobs
Subdued
by
its
own
pathos;
her
fair
hands
Were
bare
alone,
sweeping
from
some
strange
harp
Strange
symphony,
and
in
their
branching
veins
The
eloquent
blood
told
an
ineffable
tale.
The
beating
of
her
heart
was
heard
to
fill
The
pauses
of
her
music,
and
her
breath
Tumultuously
accorded
with
those
fits
Of
intermitted
song.
Sudden
she
rose,
As
if
her
heart
impatiently
endured
Its
bursting
burden;
at
the
sound
he
turned,
And
saw
by
the
warm
light
of
their
own
life
Her
glowing
limbs
beneath
the
sinuous
veil
Of
woven
wind,
her
outspread
arms
now
bare,
Her
dark
locks
floating
in
the
breath
of
night,
Her
beamy
bending
eyes,
her
parted
lips
Outstretched,
and
pale,
and
quivering
eagerly.
His
strong
heart
sunk
and
sickened
with
excess
Of
love.
He
reared
his
shuddering
limbs,
and
quelled
His
gasping
breath,
and
spread
his
arms
to
meet
Her
panting
bosom:—she
drew
back
awhile,
Then,
yielding
to
the
irresistible
joy,
With
frantic
gesture
and
short
breathless
cry
Folded
his
frame
in
her
dissolving
arms.
Now
blackness
veiled
his
dizzy
eyes,
and
night
Involved
and
swallowed
up
the
vision;
sleep,
Like
a
dark
flood
suspended
in
its
course,
Rolled
back
its
impulse
on
his
vacant
brain.
Roused
by
the
shock,
he
started
from
his
trance—
The
cold
white
light
of
morning,
the
blue
moon
Low
in
the
west,
the
clear
and
garish
hills,
The
distinct
valley
and
the
vacant
woods,
Spread
round
him
where
he
stood.
Whither
have
fled
The
hues
of
heaven
that
canopied
his
bower
Of
yesternight?
The
sounds
that
soothed
his
sleep,
The
mystery
and
the
majesty
of
Earth,
The
joy,
the
exultation?
His
wan
eyes
Gaze
on
the
empty
scene
as
vacantly
As
ocean's
moon
looks
on
the
moon
in
heaven.
The
spirit
of
sweet
human
love
has
sent
A
vision
to
the
sleep
of
him
who
spurned
Her
choicest
gifts.
He
eagerly
pursues
Beyond
the
realms
of
dream
that
fleeting
shade;
He
overleaps
the
bounds.
Alas!
alas!
Were
limbs
and
breath
and
being
intertwined
Thus
treacherously?
Lost,
lost,
forever
lost
In
the
wide
pathless
desert
of
dim
sleep,
That
beautiful
shape!
Does
the
dark
gate
of
death
Conduct
to
thy
mysterious
paradise,
O
Sleep?
Does
the
bright
arch
of
rainbow
clouds
And
pendent
mountains
seen
in
the
calm
lake
Lead
only
to
a
black
and
watery
depth,
While
death's
blue
vault
with
loathliest
vapors
hung,
Where
every
shade
which
the
foul
grave
exhales
Hides
its
dead
eye
from
the
detested
day,
Conducts,
O
Sleep,
to
thy
delightful
realms?
This
doubt
with
sudden
tide
flowed
on
his
heart;
The
insatiate
hope
which
it
awakened
stung
His
brain
even
like
despair.
While
daylight
held
The
sky,
the
Poet
kept
mute
conference
With
his
still
soul.
At
night
the
passion
came,
Like
the
fierce
fiend
of
a
distempered
dream,
And
shook
him
from
his
rest,
and
led
him
forth
Into
the
darkness.
As
an
eagle,
grasped
In
folds
of
the
green
serpent,
feels
her
breast
Burn
with
the
poison,
and
precipitates
Through
night
and
day,
tempest,
and
calm,
and
cloud,
Frantic
with
dizzying
anguish,
her
blind
flight
O'er
the
wide
aëry
wilderness:
thus
driven
By
the
bright
shadow
of
that
lovely
dream,
Beneath
the
cold
glare
of
the
desolate
night,
Through
tangled
swamps
and
deep
precipitous
dells,
Startling
with
careless
step
the
moon-light
snake,
He
fled.
Red
morning
dawned
upon
his
flight,
Shedding
the
mockery
of
its
vital
hues
Upon
his
cheek
of
death.
He
wandered
on
Till
vast
Aornos
seen
from
Petra's
steep
Hung
o'er
the
low
horizon
like
a
cloud;
Through
Balk,
and
where
the
desolated
tombs
Of
Parthian
kings
scatter
to
every
wind
Their
wasting
dust,
wildly
he
wandered
on,
Day
after
day,
a
weary
waste
of
hours,
Bearing
within
his
life
the
brooding
care
That
ever
fed
on
its
decaying
flame.
And
now
his
limbs
were
lean;
his
scattered
hair,
Sered
by
the
autumn
of
strange
suffering,
Sung
dirges
in
the
wind;
his
listless
hand
Hung
like
dead
bone
within
its
withered
skin;
Life,
and
the
lustre
that
consumed
it,
shone,
As
in
a
furnace
burning
secretly,
From
his
dark
eyes
alone.
The
cottagers,
Who
ministered
with
human
charity
His
human
wants,
beheld
with
wondering
awe
Their
fleeting
visitant.
The
mountaineer,
Encountering
on
some
dizzy
precipice
That
spectral
form,
deemed
that
the
Spirit
of
Wind,
With
lightning
eyes,
and
eager
breath,
and
feet
Disturbing
not
the
drifted
snow,
had
paused
In
its
career;
the
infant
would
conceal
His
troubled
visage
in
his
mother's
robe
In
terror
at
the
glare
of
those
wild
eyes,
To
remember
their
strange
light
in
many
a
dream
Of
after
times;
but
youthful
maidens,
taught
By
nature,
would
interpret
half
the
woe
That
wasted
him,
would
call
him
with
false
names
Brother
and
friend,
would
press
his
pallid
hand
At
parting,
and
watch,
dim
through
tears,
the
path
Of
his
departure
from
their
father's
door.
At
length
upon
the
lone
Chorasmian
shore
He
paused,
a
wide
and
melancholy
waste
Of
putrid
marshes.
A
strong
impulse
urged
His
steps
to
the
sea-shore.
A
swan
was
there,
Beside
a
sluggish
stream
among
the
reeds.
It
rose
as
he
approached,
and,
with
strong
wings
Scaling
the
upward
sky,
bent
its
bright
course
High
over
the
immeasurable
main.
His
eyes
pursued
its
flight:—'Thou
hast
a
home,
Beautiful
bird!
thou
voyagest
to
thine
home,
Where
thy
sweet
mate
will
twine
her
downy
neck
With
thine,
and
welcome
thy
return
with
eyes
Bright
in
the
lustre
of
their
own
fond
joy.
And
what
am
I
that
I
should
linger
here,
With
voice
far
sweeter
than
thy
dying
notes,
Spirit
more
vast
than
thine,
frame
more
attuned
To
beauty,
wasting
these
surpassing
powers
In
the
deaf
air,
to
the
blind
earth,
and
heaven
That
echoes
not
my
thoughts?'
A
gloomy
smile
Of
desperate
hope
wrinkled
his
quivering
lips.
For
sleep,
he
knew,
kept
most
relentlessly
Its
precious
charge,
and
silent
death
exposed,
Faithless
perhaps
as
sleep,
a
shadowy
lure,
With
doubtful
smile
mocking
its
own
strange
charms.
Startled
by
his
own
thoughts,
he
looked
around.
There
was
no
fair
fiend
near
him,
not
a
sight
Or
sound
of
awe
but
in
his
own
deep
mind.
A
little
shallop
floating
near
the
shore
Caught
the
impatient
wandering
of
his
gaze.
It
had
been
long
abandoned,
for
its
sides
Gaped
wide
with
many
a
rift,
and
its
frail
joints
Swayed
with
the
undulations
of
the
tide.
A
restless
impulse
urged
him
to
embark
And
meet
lone
Death
on
the
drear
ocean's
waste;
For
well
he
knew
that
mighty
Shadow
loves
The
slimy
caverns
of
the
populous
deep.
The
day
was
fair
and
sunny;
sea
and
sky
Drank
its
inspiring
radiance,
and
the
wind
Swept
strongly
from
the
shore,
blackening
the
waves.
Following
his
eager
soul,
the
wanderer
Leaped
in
the
boat;
he
spread
his
cloak
aloft
On
the
bare
mast,
and
took
his
lonely
seat,
And
felt
the
boat
speed
o'er
the
tranquil
sea
Like
a
torn
cloud
before
the
hurricane.
As
one
that
in
a
silver
vision
floats
Obedient
to
the
sweep
of
odorous
winds
Upon
resplendent
clouds,
so
rapidly
Along
the
dark
and
ruffled
waters
fled
The
straining
boat.
A
whirlwind
swept
it
on,
With
fierce
gusts
and
precipitating
force,
Through
the
white
ridges
of
the
chafèd
sea.
The
waves
arose.
Higher
and
higher
still
Their
fierce
necks
writhed
beneath
the
tempest's
scourge
Like
serpents
struggling
in
a
vulture's
grasp.
Calm
and
rejoicing
in
the
fearful
war
Of
wave
ruining
on
wave,
and
blast
on
blast
Descending,
and
black
flood
on
whirlpool
driven
With
dark
obliterating
course,
he
sate:
As
if
their
genii
were
the
ministers
Appointed
to
conduct
him
to
the
light
Of
those
belovèd
eyes,
the
Poet
sate,
Holding
the
steady
helm.
Evening
came
on;
The
beams
of
sunset
hung
their
rainbow
hues
High
'mid
the
shifting
domes
of
sheeted
spray
That
canopied
his
path
o'er
the
waste
deep;
Twilight,
ascending
slowly
from
the
east,
Entwined
in
duskier
wreaths
her
braided
locks
O'er
the
fair
front
and
radiant
eyes
of
Day;
Night
followed,
clad
with
stars.
On
every
side
More
horribly
the
multitudinous
streams
Of
ocean's
mountainous
waste
to
mutual
war
Rushed
in
dark
tumult
thundering,
as
to
mock
The
calm
and
spangled
sky.
The
little
boat
Still
fled
before
the
storm;
still
fled,
like
foam
Down
the
steep
cataract
of
a
wintry
river;
Now
pausing
on
the
edge
of
the
riven
wave;
Now
leaving
far
behind
the
bursting
mass
That
fell,
convulsing
ocean;
safely
fled—
As
if
that
frail
and
wasted
human
form
Had
been
an
elemental
god.
At
midnight
The
moon
arose;
and
lo!
the
ethereal
cliffs
Of
Caucasus,
whose
icy
summits
shone
Among
the
stars
like
sunlight,
and
around
Whose
caverned
base
the
whirlpools
and
the
waves
Bursting
and
eddying
irresistibly
Rage
and
resound
forever.—Who
shall
save?—
The
boat
fled
on,—the
boiling
torrent
drove,—
The
crags
closed
round
with
black
and
jagged
arms,
The
shattered
mountain
overhung
the
sea,
And
faster
still,
beyond
all
human
speed,
Suspended
on
the
sweep
of
the
smooth
wave,
The
little
boat
was
driven.
A
cavern
there
Yawned,
and
amid
its
slant
and
winding
depths
Ingulfed
the
rushing
sea.
The
boat
fled
on
With
unrelaxing
speed.—'Vision
and
Love!'
The
Poet
cried
aloud,
'I
have
beheld
The
path
of
thy
departure.
Sleep
and
death
Shall
not
divide
us
long.'
The
boat
pursued
The
windings
of
the
cavern.
Daylight
shone
At
length
upon
that
gloomy
river's
flow;
Now,
where
the
fiercest
war
among
the
waves
Is
calm,
on
the
unfathomable
stream
The
boat
moved
slowly.
Where
the
mountain,
riven,
Exposed
those
black
depths
to
the
azure
sky,
Ere
yet
the
flood's
enormous
volume
fell
Even
to
the
base
of
Caucasus,
with
sound
That
shook
the
everlasting
rocks,
the
mass
Filled
with
one
whirlpool
all
that
ample
chasm;
Stair
above
stair
the
eddying
waters
rose,
Circling
immeasurably
fast,
and
laved
With
alternating
dash
the
gnarlèd
roots
Of
mighty
trees,
that
stretched
their
giant
arms
In
darkness
over
it.
I'
the
midst
was
left,
Reflecting
yet
distorting
every
cloud,
A
pool
of
treacherous
and
tremendous
calm.
Seized
by
the
sway
of
the
ascending
stream,
With
dizzy
swiftness,
round
and
round
and
round,
Ridge
after
ridge
the
straining
boat
arose,
Till
on
the
verge
of
the
extremest
curve,
Where
through
an
opening
of
the
rocky
bank
The
waters
overflow,
and
a
smooth
spot
Of
glassy
quiet
'mid
those
battling
tides
Is
left,
the
boat
paused
shuddering.—Shall
it
sink
Down
the
abyss?
Shall
the
reverting
stress
Of
that
resistless
gulf
embosom
it?
Now
shall
it
fall?—A
wandering
stream
of
wind
Breathed
from
the
west,
has
caught
the
expanded
sail,
And,
lo!
with
gentle
motion
between
banks
Of
mossy
slope,
and
on
a
placid
stream,
Beneath
a
woven
grove,
it
sails,
and,
hark!
The
ghastly
torrent
mingles
its
far
roar
With
the
breeze
murmuring
in
the
musical
woods.
Where
the
embowering
trees
recede,
and
leave
A
little
space
of
green
expanse,
the
cove
Is
closed
by
meeting
banks,
whose
yellow
flowers
Forever
gaze
on
their
own
drooping
eyes,
Reflected
in
the
crystal
calm.
The
wave
Of
the
boat's
motion
marred
their
pensive
task,
Which
naught
but
vagrant
bird,
or
wanton
wind,
Or
falling
spear-grass,
or
their
own
decay
Had
e'er
disturbed
before.
The
Poet
longed
To
deck
with
their
bright
hues
his
withered
hair,
But
on
his
heart
its
solitude
returned,
And
he
forbore.
Not
the
strong
impulse
hid
In
those
flushed
cheeks,
bent
eyes,
and
shadowy
frame,
Had
yet
performed
its
ministry;
it
hung
Upon
his
life,
as
lightning
in
a
cloud
Gleams,
hovering
ere
it
vanish,
ere
the
floods
Of
night
close
over
it.
The
noonday
sun
Now
shone
upon
the
forest,
one
vast
mass
Of
mingling
shade,
whose
brown
magnificence
A
narrow
vale
embosoms.
There,
huge
caves,
Scooped
in
the
dark
base
of
their
aëry
rocks,
Mocking
its
moans,
respond
and
roar
forever.
The
meeting
boughs
and
implicated
leaves
Wove
twilight
o'er
the
Poet's
path,
as,
led
By
love,
or
dream,
or
god,
or
mightier
Death,
He
sought
in
Nature's
dearest
haunt
some
bank,
Her
cradle
and
his
sepulchre.
More
dark
And
dark
the
shades
accumulate.
The
oak,
Expanding
its
immense
and
knotty
arms,
Embraces
the
light
beech.
The
pyramids
Of
the
tall
cedar
overarching
frame
Most
solemn
domes
within,
and
far
below,
Like
clouds
suspended
in
an
emerald
sky,
The
ash
and
the
acacia
floating
hang
Tremulous
and
pale.
Like
restless
serpents,
clothed
In
rainbow
and
in
fire,
the
parasites,
Starred
with
ten
thousand
blossoms,
flow
around
The
gray
trunks,
and,
as
gamesome
infants'
eyes,
With
gentle
meanings,
and
most
innocent
wiles,
Fold
their
beams
round
the
hearts
of
those
that
love,
These
twine
their
tendrils
with
the
wedded
boughs,
Uniting
their
close
union;
the
woven
leaves
Make
network
of
the
dark
blue
light
of
day
And
the
night's
noontide
clearness,
mutable
As
shapes
in
the
weird
clouds.
Soft
mossy
lawns
Beneath
these
canopies
extend
their
swells,
Fragrant
with
perfumed
herbs,
and
eyed
with
blooms
Minute
yet
beautiful.
One
darkest
glen
Sends
from
its
woods
of
musk-rose
twined
with
jasmine
A
soul-dissolving
odor
to
invite
To
some
more
lovely
mystery.
Through
the
dell
Silence
and
Twilight
here,
twin-sisters,
keep
Their
noonday
watch,
and
sail
among
the
shades,
Like
vaporous
shapes
half-seen;
beyond,
a
well,
Dark,
gleaming,
and
of
most
translucent
wave,
Images
all
the
woven
boughs
above,
And
each
depending
leaf,
and
every
speck
Of
azure
sky
darting
between
their
chasms;
Nor
aught
else
in
the
liquid
mirror
laves
Its
portraiture,
but
some
inconstant
star,
Between
one
foliaged
lattice
twinkling
fair,
Or
painted
bird,
sleeping
beneath
the
moon,
Or
gorgeous
insect
floating
motionless,
Unconscious
of
the
day,
ere
yet
his
wings
Have
spread
their
glories
to
the
gaze
of
noon.
Hither
the
Poet
came.
His
eyes
beheld
Their
own
wan
light
through
the
reflected
lines
Of
his
thin
hair,
distinct
in
the
dark
depth
Of
that
still
fountain;
as
the
human
heart,
Gazing
in
dreams
over
the
gloomy
grave,
Sees
its
own
treacherous
likeness
there.
He
heard
The
motion
of
the
leaves—the
grass
that
sprung
Startled
and
glanced
and
trembled
even
to
feel
An
unaccustomed
presence—and
the
sound
Of
the
sweet
brook
that
from
the
secret
springs
Of
that
dark
fountain
rose.
A
Spirit
seemed
To
stand
beside
him—clothed
in
no
bright
robes
Of
shadowy
silver
or
enshrining
light,
Borrowed
from
aught
the
visible
world
affords
Of
grace,
or
majesty,
or
mystery;
But
undulating
woods,
and
silent
well,
And
leaping
rivulet,
and
evening
gloom
Now
deepening
the
dark
shades,
for
speech
assuming,
Held
commune
with
him,
as
if
he
and
it
Were
all
that
was;
only—when
his
regard
Was
raised
by
intense
pensiveness—two
eyes,
Two
starry
eyes,
hung
in
the
gloom
of
thought,
And
seemed
with
their
serene
and
azure
smiles
To
beckon
him.
Obedient
to
the
light
That
shone
within
his
soul,
he
went,
pursuing
The
windings
of
the
dell.
The
rivulet,
Wanton
and
wild,
through
many
a
green
ravine
Beneath
the
forest
flowed.
Sometimes
it
fell
Among
the
moss
with
hollow
harmony
Dark
and
profound.
Now
on
the
polished
stones
It
danced,
like
childhood
laughing
as
it
went;
Then,
through
the
plain
in
tranquil
wanderings
crept,
Reflecting
every
herb
and
drooping
bud
That
overhung
its
quietness.—'O
stream!
Whose
source
is
inaccessibly
profound,
Whither
do
thy
mysterious
waters
tend?
Thou
imagest
my
life.
Thy
darksome
stillness,
Thy
dazzling
waves,
thy
loud
and
hollow
gulfs,
Thy
searchless
fountain
and
invisible
course,
Have
each
their
type
in
me;
and
the
wide
sky
And
measureless
ocean
may
declare
as
soon
What
oozy
cavern
or
what
wandering
cloud
Contains
thy
waters,
as
the
universe
Tell
where
these
living
thoughts
reside,
when
stretched
Upon
thy
flowers
my
bloodless
limbs
shall
waste
I'
the
passing
wind!'
Beside
the
grassy
shore
Of
the
small
stream
he
went;
he
did
impress
On
the
green
moss
his
tremulous
step,
that
caught
Strong
shuddering
from
his
burning
limbs.
As
one
Roused
by
some
joyous
madness
from
the
couch
Of
fever,
he
did
move;
yet
not
like
him
Forgetful
of
the
grave,
where,
when
the
flame
Of
his
frail
exultation
shall
be
spent,
He
must
descend.
With
rapid
steps
he
went
Beneath
the
shade
of
trees,
beside
the
flow
Of
the
wild
babbling
rivulet;
and
now
The
forest's
solemn
canopies
were
changed
For
the
uniform
and
lightsome
evening
sky.
Gray
rocks
did
peep
from
the
spare
moss,
and
stemmed
The
struggling
brook;
tall
spires
of
windlestrae
Threw
their
thin
shadows
down
the
rugged
slope,
And
nought
but
gnarlèd
roots
of
ancient
pines
Branchless
and
blasted,
clenched
with
grasping
roots
The
unwilling
soil.
A
gradual
change
was
here
Yet
ghastly.
For,
as
fast
years
flow
away,
The
smooth
brow
gathers,
and
the
hair
grows
thin
And
white,
and
where
irradiate
dewy
eyes
Had
shone,
gleam
stony
orbs:—so
from
his
steps
Bright
flowers
departed,
and
the
beautiful
shade
Of
the
green
groves,
with
all
their
odorous
winds
And
musical
motions.
Calm
he
still
pursued
The
stream,
that
with
a
larger
volume
now
Rolled
through
the
labyrinthine
dell;
and
there
Fretted
a
path
through
its
descending
curves
With
its
wintry
speed.
On
every
side
now
rose
Rocks,
which,
in
unimaginable
forms,
Lifted
their
black
and
barren
pinnacles
In
the
light
of
evening,
and
its
precipice
Obscuring
the
ravine,
disclosed
above,
'Mid
toppling
stones,
black
gulfs
and
yawning
caves,
Whose
windings
gave
ten
thousand
various
tongues
To
the
loud
stream.
Lo!
where
the
pass
expands
Its
stony
jaws,
the
abrupt
mountain
breaks,
And
seems
with
its
accumulated
crags
To
overhang
the
world;
for
wide
expand
Beneath
the
wan
stars
and
descending
moon
Islanded
seas,
blue
mountains,
mighty
streams,
Dim
tracts
and
vast,
robed
in
the
lustrous
gloom
Of
leaden-colored
even,
and
fiery
hills
Mingling
their
flames
with
twilight,
on
the
verge
Of
the
remote
horizon.
The
near
scene,
In
naked
and
severe
simplicity,
Made
contrast
with
the
universe.
A
pine,
Rock-rooted,
stretched
athwart
the
vacancy
Its
swinging
boughs,
to
each
inconstant
blast
Yielding
one
only
response
at
each
pause
In
most
familiar
cadence,
with
the
howl,
The
thunder
and
the
hiss
of
homeless
streams
Mingling
its
solemn
song,
whilst
the
broad
river
Foaming
and
hurrying
o'er
its
rugged
path,
Fell
into
that
immeasurable
void,
Scattering
its
waters
to
the
passing
winds.
Yet
the
gray
precipice
and
solemn
pine
And
torrent
were
not
all;—one
silent
nook
Was
there.
Even
on
the
edge
of
that
vast
mountain,
Upheld
by
knotty
roots
and
fallen
rocks,
It
overlooked
in
its
serenity
The
dark
earth
and
the
bending
vault
of
stars.
It
was
a
tranquil
spot
that
seemed
to
smile
Even
in
the
lap
of
horror.
Ivy
clasped
The
fissured
stones
with
its
entwining
arms,
And
did
embower
with
leaves
forever
green
And
berries
dark
the
smooth
and
even
space
Of
its
inviolated
floor;
and
here
The
children
of
the
autumnal
whirlwind
bore
In
wanton
sport
those
bright
leaves
whose
decay,
Red,
yellow,
or
ethereally
pale,
Rivals
the
pride
of
summer.
'T
is
the
haunt
Of
every
gentle
wind
whose
breath
can
teach
The
wilds
to
love
tranquillity.
One
step,
One
human
step
alone,
has
ever
broken
The
stillness
of
its
solitude;
one
voice
Alone
inspired
its
echoes;—even
that
voice
Which
hither
came,
floating
among
the
winds,
And
led
the
loveliest
among
human
forms
To
make
their
wild
haunts
the
depository
Of
all
the
grace
and
beauty
that
endued
Its
motions,
render
up
its
majesty,
Scatter
its
music
on
the
unfeeling
storm,
And
to
the
damp
leaves
and
blue
cavern
mould,
Nurses
of
rainbow
flowers
and
branching
moss,
Commit
the
colors
of
that
varying
cheek,
That
snowy
breast,
those
dark
and
drooping
eyes.
The
dim
and
hornèd
moon
hung
low,
and
poured
A
sea
of
lustre
on
the
horizon's
verge
That
overflowed
its
mountains.
Yellow
mist
Filled
the
unbounded
atmosphere,
and
drank
Wan
moonlight
even
to
fulness;
not
a
star
Shone,
not
a
sound
was
heard;
the
very
winds,
Danger's
grim
playmates,
on
that
precipice
Slept,
clasped
in
his
embrace.—O
storm
of
death,
Whose
sightless
speed
divides
this
sullen
night!
And
thou,
colossal
Skeleton,
that,
still
Guiding
its
irresistible
career
In
thy
devastating
omnipotence,
Art
king
of
this
frail
world!
from
the
red
field
Of
slaughter,
from
the
reeking
hospital,
The
patriot's
sacred
couch,
the
snowy
bed
Of
innocence,
the
scaffold
and
the
throne,
A
mighty
voice
invokes
thee!
Ruin
calls
His
brother
Death!
A
rare
and
regal
prey
He
hath
prepared,
prowling
around
the
world;
Glutted
with
which
thou
mayst
repose,
and
men
Go
to
their
graves
like
flowers
or
creeping
worms,
Nor
ever
more
offer
at
thy
dark
shrine
The
unheeded
tribute
of
a
broken
heart.
When
on
the
threshold
of
the
green
recess
The
wanderer's
footsteps
fell,
he
knew
that
death
Was
on
him.
Yet
a
little,
ere
it
fled,
Did
he
resign
his
high
and
holy
soul
To
images
of
the
majestic
past,
That
paused
within
his
passive
being
now,
Like
winds
that
bear
sweet
music,
when
they
breathe
Through
some
dim
latticed
chamber.
He
did
place
His
pale
lean
hand
upon
the
rugged
trunk
Of
the
old
pine;
upon
an
ivied
stone
Reclined
his
languid
head;
his
limbs
did
rest,
Diffused
and
motionless,
on
the
smooth
brink
Of
that
obscurest
chasm;—and
thus
he
lay,
Surrendering
to
their
final
impulses
The
hovering
powers
of
life.
Hope
and
Despair,
The
torturers,
slept;
no
mortal
pain
or
fear
Marred
his
repose;
the
influxes
of
sense
And
his
own
being,
unalloyed
by
pain,
Yet
feebler
and
more
feeble,
calmly
fed
The
stream
of
thought,
till
he
lay
breathing
there
At
peace,
and
faintly
smiling.
His
last
sight
Was
the
great
moon,
which
o'er
the
western
line
Of
the
wide
world
her
mighty
horn
suspended,
With
whose
dun
beams
inwoven
darkness
seemed
To
mingle.
Now
upon
the
jagged
hills
It
rests;
and
still
as
the
divided
frame
Of
the
vast
meteor
sunk,
the
Poet's
blood,
That
ever
beat
in
mystic
sympathy
With
Nature's
ebb
and
flow,
grew
feebler
still;
And
when
two
lessening
points
of
light
alone
Gleamed
through
the
darkness,
the
alternate
gasp
Of
his
faint
respiration
scarce
did
stir
The
stagnate
night:—till
the
minutest
ray
Was
quenched,
the
pulse
yet
lingered
in
his
heart.
It
paused—it
fluttered.
But
when
heaven
remained
Utterly
black,
the
murky
shades
involved
An
image
silent,
cold,
and
motionless,
As
their
own
voiceless
earth
and
vacant
air.
Even
as
a
vapor
fed
with
golden
beams
That
ministered
on
sunlight,
ere
the
west
Eclipses
it,
was
now
that
wondrous
frame—
No
sense,
no
motion,
no
divinity—
A
fragile
lute,
on
whose
harmonious
strings
The
breath
of
heaven
did
wander—a
bright
stream
Once
fed
with
many-voicèd
waves—a
dream
Of
youth,
which
night
and
time
have
quenched
forever—
Still,
dark,
and
dry,
and
unremembered
now.
Oh,
for
Medea's
wondrous
alchemy,
Which
wheresoe'er
it
fell
made
the
earth
gleam
With
bright
flowers,
and
the
wintry
boughs
exhale
From
vernal
blooms
fresh
fragrance!
Oh,
that
God,
Profuse
of
poisons,
would
concede
the
chalice
Which
but
one
living
man
has
drained,
who
now,
Vessel
of
deathless
wrath,
a
slave
that
feels
No
proud
exemption
in
the
blighting
curse
He
bears,
over
the
world
wanders
forever,
Lone
as
incarnate
death!
Oh,
that
the
dream
Of
dark
magician
in
his
visioned
cave,
Raking
the
cinders
of
a
crucible
For
life
and
power,
even
when
his
feeble
hand
Shakes
in
its
last
decay,
were
the
true
law
Of
this
so
lovely
world!
But
thou
art
fled,
Like
some
frail
exhalation,
which
the
dawn
Robes
in
its
golden
beams,—ah!
thou
hast
fled!
The
brave,
the
gentle
and
the
beautiful,
The
child
of
grace
and
genius.
Heartless
things
Are
done
and
said
i'
the
world,
and
many
worms
And
beasts
and
men
live
on,
and
mighty
Earth
From
sea
and
mountain,
city
and
wilderness,
In
vesper
low
or
joyous
orison,
Lifts
still
its
solemn
voice:—but
thou
art
fled—
Thou
canst
no
longer
know
or
love
the
shapes
Of
this
phantasmal
scene,
who
have
to
thee
Been
purest
ministers,
who
are,
alas!
Now
thou
art
not!
Upon
those
pallid
lips
So
sweet
even
in
their
silence,
on
those
eyes
That
image
sleep
in
death,
upon
that
form
Yet
safe
from
the
worm's
outrage,
let
no
tear
Be
shed—not
even
in
thought.
Nor,
when
those
hues
Are
gone,
and
those
divinest
lineaments,
Worn
by
the
senseless
wind,
shall
live
alone
In
the
frail
pauses
of
this
simple
strain,
Let
not
high
verse,
mourning
the
memory
Of
that
which
is
no
more,
or
painting's
woe
Or
sculpture,
speak
in
feeble
imagery
Their
own
cold
powers.
Art
and
eloquence,
And
all
the
shows
o'
the
world,
are
frail
and
vain
To
weep
a
loss
that
turns
their
lights
to
shade.
It
is
a
woe
"too
deep
for
tears,"
when
all
Is
reft
at
once,
when
some
surpassing
Spirit,
Whose
light
adorned
the
world
around
it,
leaves
Those
who
remain
behind,
not
sobs
or
groans,
The
passionate
tumult
of
a
clinging
hope;
But
pale
despair
and
cold
tranquillity,
Nature's
vast
frame,
the
web
of
human
things,
Birth
and
the
grave,
that
are
not
as
they
were.