Who struck, in heat, his child he loved so well, And his child's reason flicker'd, and did die. Painted (he will'd it) in the gallery
They hang; the picture doth the story tell.
Behold the stern, mail'd father, staff in hand! The little fair-hair'd son, with vacant gaze, Where no more lights of sense or knowledge are!
Methinks the woe, which made that father stand Baring his dumb remorse to future days, Was woe than Byron's woe more tragic far.
IN Paris all look'd hot and like to fade;
Sere, in the garden of the Tuileries,
Sere with September, droop'd the chestnut-trees; 'Twas dawn, a brougham roll'd through the streets and made
Halt at the white and silent colonnade
Of the French Theatre. Worn with disease, Rachel, with eyes no gazing can appease,
Sate in the brougham and those blank walls survey'd.
She follows the gay world, whose swarms have fled To Switzerland, to Baden, to the Rhine; Why stops she by this empty play-house drear?
Ah, where the spirit its highest life hath led, All spots, match'd with that spot, are less divine; And Rachel's Switzerland, her Rhine, is here!
UNTO a lonely villa, in a dell
Above the fragrant warm Provençal shore, The dying Rachel in a chair they bore Up the steep pine-plumed paths of the Estrelle, And laid her in a stately room, where fell The shadow of a marble Muse of yore, The rose-crown'd queen of legendary lore, Polymnia, full on her death-bed.-'Twas well! The fret and misery of our northern towns, In this her life's last day, our poor, our pain, Our jangle of false wits, our climate's frowns, Do for this radiant Greek-soul'd artist cease; Sole object of her dying eyes remain
The beauty and the glorious art of Greece.
SPRUNG from the blood of Israel's scatter'd race, At a mean inn in German Aarau born,
To forms from antique Greece and Rome uptorn, Trick'd out with a Parisian speech and face,
Imparting life renew'd, old classic grace;
Then, soothing with thy Christian strain forlorn, A-Kempis! her departing soul outworn, While by her bedside Hebrew rites have place- Ah, not the radiant spirit of Greece alone She had-one power, which made her breast its home! In her, like us, there clash'd, contending powers,
Germany, France, Christ, Moses, Athens, Rome. The strife, the mixture in her soul, are ours; Her genius and her glory are her own.
EVEN in a palace, life may be led well! So spake the imperial sage, purest of men, Marcus Aurelius. But the stifling den.
Of common life, where, crowded up pell-mell, Our freedom for a little bread we sell, And drudge under some foolish master's ken Who rates us if we peer outside our pen- Match'd with a palace, is not this a hell? Even in a palace! On his truth sincere, Who spoke these words, no shadow ever came; And when my ill-school'd spirit is aflame
Some nobler, ampler stage of life to win,
I'll stop, and say: 'There were no succour here! The aids to noble life are all within.'
'Twas August, and the fierce sun overhead Smote on the squalid streets of Bethnal Green, And the pale weaver, through his windows seen In Spitalfields, look'd thrice dispirited.
I met a preacher there I knew, and said:
'Ill and o'erwork'd, how fare you in this scene ?’— Bravely!' said he; 'for I of late have been Much cheer'd with thoughts of Christ, the living bread. O human soul! as long as thou canst so Set up a mark of everlasting light, Above the howling senses' ebb and flow,
To cheer thee, and to right thee if thou roam— Not with lost toil thou labourest through the night! Thou mak'st the heaven thou hop'st indeed thy home.
CROUCH'D On the pavement, close by Belgrave Square, A tramp I saw, ill, moody, and tongue-tied.
A babe was in her arms, and at her side
A girl; their clothes were rags, their feet were bare. Some labouring men, whose work lay somewhere there, Pass'd opposite; she touch'd her girl, who hied Across, and begg'd, and came back satisfied. The rich she had let pass with frozen stare.
Thought I: Above her state this spirit towers; She will not ask of aliens, but of friends,
Of sharers in a common human fate.
She turns from that cold succour, which attends The unknown little from the unknowing great, And points us to a better time than ours.'
In the bare midst of Anglesey they show Two springs which close by one another play; And, 'Thirteen hundred years agone,' they say, 'Two saints met often where those waters flow. One came from Penmon westward, and a glow Whiten'd his face from the sun's fronting ray; Eastward the other, from the dying day, And he with unsunn'd face did always go.' Seiriol the Bright, Kybi the Dark! men said. The seër from the East was then in light, The seër from the West was then in shade.
Ah! now 'tis changed. In conquering sunshine bright The man of the bold West now comes array'd; He of the mystic East is touch'd with night.
LONG fed on boundless hopes, O race of man, How angrily thou spurn'st all simpler fare! 'Christ,' some one says, 'was human as we are; No judge eyes us from Heaven, our sin to scan; We live no more, when we have done our span.'- 'Well, then, for Christ,' thou answerest, 'who can care? From sin, which Heaven records not, why forbear? Live we like brutes our life without a plan!' So answerest thou; but why not rather say: 'Hath man no second life?-Pitch this one high ! Sits there no judge in Heaven, our sin to see?- More strictly, then, the inward judge obey! Was Christ a man like us?-Ah! let us try If we then, too, can be such men as hel
'YES, write it in the rock,' Saint Bernard said, Grave it on brass with adamantine pen! 'Tis God himself becomes apparent, when God's wisdom and God's goodness are display'd,
For God of these his attributes is made.'- Well spake the impetuous Saint, and bore of men The suffrage captive; now, not one in ten Recalls the obscure opposer he outweigh'd.' God's wisdom and God's goodness —Ay, but fools Mis-define thee till God knows them no more. Wisdom and goodness, they are God!-what schools Have yet so much as heard this simpler lore? This no Saint preaches, and this no Church rules; 'Tis in the desert, now and heretofore.
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