Shall feel congenial stirrings late and long, In spite of all the weakness that life brings, Its cares and sorrows; he, though taught to own The tranquillizing power of time, shall wake, Wake sometimes to a noble restlessness Loving the sports which once he gloried in.
"Compatriot, Friend, remote are Garry's Hills, The Streams far distant of your native Glen; Yet is their form and Image here expressed With brotherly resemblance. Turn your steps Wherever fancy leads, by day, by night, Are various engines working, not the same As those by which your soul in youth was moved, But by the great Artificer endued
With no inferior power. You dwell alone;
You walk, you live, you speculate alone;
Yet doth Remembrance, like a sovereign Prince, For you a stately gallery maintain
Of gay or tragic pictures. You have seen, Have acted, suffered, travelled far, observed With no incurious eye; and books are yours, Within whose silent chambers treasure lies Preserved from age to age; more precious far Than that accumulated store of gold
And orient gems, which, for a day of need,
The Sultan hides within ancestral tombs.
These hoards of truth you can unlock at will.
And music waits upon your skilful touch,
Sounds which the wandering Shepherd from these
Hears, and forgets his purpose; furnished thus,
How can you droop, if willing to be raised?
"A piteous lot it were to flee from Man
Yet not rejoice in Nature! He, whose hours Are by domestic Pleasures uncaressed And unenlivened; who exists whole years Apart from benefits received or done
'Mid the transactions of the bustling crowd Who neither hears, nor feels a wish to hear, Of the world's interests—such a One hath need Of a quick fancy, and an active heart,
That, for the day's consumption, books may yield A not unwholesome food, and earth and air Supply his morbid humor with delight.
-Truth has her pleasure-grounds, her haunts of ease And easy contemplation gay parterres, And labyrinthine walks, her sunny glades And shady groves for recreation framed. These may he range, if willing to partake Their soft indulgences, and in due time May issue thence, recruited for the tasks And course of service Truth requires from those Who tend her Altars, wait upon her Throne, And guard her Fortresses. Who thinks, and feels, And recognises ever and anon
The breeze of Nature stirring in his soul, Why need such man go desperately astray, And nurse the dreadful appetite of death?' If tired with Systems—each in its degree Substantial — and all crumbling in their turn, Let him build Systems of his own, and smile At the fond work demolished with a touch! If unreligious, let him be at once, Among ten thousand Innocents, enrolled A Pupil in the many-chambered school, Where Superstition weaves her airy dreams.
"Life's Autumn past, I stand on Winter's verge,
And daily lose what I desire to keep: Yet rather would I instantly decline To the traditionary sympathies
Of a most rustic ignorance, and take A fearful apprehension from the owl Or death-watch, and as readily rejoice, If two auspicious magpies crossed my way; To this would rather bend than see and hear The repititions wearisome of sense,
Where soul is dead, and feeling hath no place; Where knowledge, ill begun in cold remark On outward things, with formal inference ends: Or, if the Mind turn inward, 'tis perplexed, Lost in a gloom of uninspired research; Meanwhile, the Heart within the Heart, the seat Where Peace and happy Consciousness should dwell, On its own axis restlessly revolves,
Yet nowhere finds the cheering light of truth.
"Upon the breast of new-created Earth
Man walked; and when and wheresoe'er he moved, Alone or mated, Solitude was not.
He heard, upon the wind, the articulate Voice Of God; and Angels to his sight appeared, Crowning the glorious hills of Paradise;
Or through the groves gliding like morning mist Enkindled by the sun. He sate, and talked With winged Messengers, who daily brought To his small Island in the ethereal deep Tidings of joy and love. From these pure Heights (Whether of actual vision, sensible
To sight and feeling, or that in this sort Have condescendingly been shadowed forth. Communications spiritually maintained, And Intuitions moral and divine)
Fell Human-kind - to banishment condemned That flowing years repealed not: and distress
And grief spread wide; but Man escaped the doom Of destitution; Solitude was not!
- Jehovah shapeless Power above all Powers, Single and one, the omnipresent God,
By vocal utterance, or blaze of light,
Or cloud of darkness, localized in heaven; On earth, enshrined within the wandering ark ; Or, out of Sion, thundering from his throne Between the Cherubim-on the chosen Race Showered miracles, and ceased not to dispense Judgments, that filled the Land, from age to age, With hope, and love, and gratitude, and fear; And with amazement smote;
His scorned or unacknowledged Sovereignty.
And when the One, ineffable of name,
Of nature indivisible, withdrew
From mortal adoration or regard,
Not then was Deity engulfed, nor Man,
The rational Creature, left, to feel the weight Of his own reason, without sense or thought Of higher reason and a purer will,
To benefit and bless, through mightier power; Whether the Persian - zealous to reject Altar and Image, and the inclusive walls And roofs of Temples built by human hands To loftiest heights ascending, from their tops With myrtle-wreathed Tiara on his brow, Presented sacrifice to Moon and Stars, And to the winds and Mother Elements, And the whole Circle of the Heavens, for him
A sensitive Existence, and a God, With lifted hands invoked, and songs of praise Or, less reluctantly to bonds of sense
Yielding his Soul, the Babylonian framed For influence undefined a personal Shape; And, from the Plain, with toil immense, upreared Tower eight times planted on the top of Tower; That Belus, nightly to his splendid Couch Descending, there might rest; upon that Height Pure and serene, diffused O overloo Winding Euphrates, and the City vast Of his devoted Worshippers, far-stretched, With grove, and field, and garden, interspersed; Their Town, and foodful Region for support Against the pressure of beleaguring war.
"Chaldean Shepherds, ranging trackless fields, Beneath the concave of unclouded skies Spread like a sea, in boundless solitude, Looked on the Polar Star, as on a Guide
And Guardian of their course, that never closed His steadfast eye. The Planetary Five With a submissive reverence they beheld;
Watched, from the centre of their sleeping flocks Those radiant Mercuries, that seemed to move Carrying through Ether, in perpetual round, Decrees and resolutions of the Gods;
And, by their aspects, signifying works Of dim futurity, to man revealed.
The Imaginative Faculty was Lord
Of observations natural; and, thus
Led on, those Shepherds made report of Stars In set rotation passing to and fro, Between the orbs of our apparent sphere And its invisible counterpart, adorned With answering Constellations, under earth, Removed from all approach of living sight But present to the Dead; who, so they deemed,
« AnteriorContinuar » |