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Hope at that meeting smiled fair. Years in number, it seem'd,

Lay before both, and a fame
Heighten'd and multiplied power.—
Behold! The elder, to-day,
Lies expecting from death,
In mortal weakness, a last
Summons! the younger is dead!

First to the living we pay
Mournful homage;-the Muse
Gains not an earth-deafen'd ear.

Hail to the steadfast soul,
Which, unflinching and keen,
Wrought to erase from its depth
Mist and illusion and fear!
Hail to the spirit which dared
Trust its own thoughts, before yet
Echoed her back by the crowd!
Hail to the courage which gave
Voice to its creed, ere the creed
Won consecration from time!

Turn we next to the dead.—
How shall we honour the young,
The ardent, the gifted? how mourn?
Console we cannot, her ear

Is deaf. Far northward from here,
In a churchyard high 'mid the moors
Of Yorkshire, a little earth

Stops it for ever to praise.

Where behind Keighley the road
Up to the heart of the moors
Between heath-clad showery hills

Runs, and colliers' carts

Poach the deep ways coming down,

And a rough, grimed race have their homesThere on its slope is built

The moorland town. But the church

Stands on the crest of the hill,

Lonely and bleak;-at its side
The parsonage-house and the graves.
Strew with laurel the grave
Of the early-dying! Alas,
Early she goes on the path

To the silent country, and leaves
Half her laurels unwon,

Dying too soon! yet green
Laurels she had, and a course
Short, but redoubled by fame.
And not friendless, and not
Only with strangers to meet,
Faces ungreeting and cold,
Thou, O mourn'd one, to-day

Enterest the house of the grave!

Those of thy blood, whom thou lov❜dst,

Have preceded thee-young,

Loving, a sisterly band;

Some in art, some in gift

Inferior-all in fame.

They, like friends, shall receive
This comer, greet her with joy;
Welcome the sister, the friend;
Hear with delight of thy fame!

Round thee they lie the grass
Blows from their graves to thy own!

She, whose genius, though not

Puissant like thine, was yet

Sweet and graceful;—and she

(How shall I sing her?) whose soul

Knew no fellow for might,

Passion, vehemence, grief,

Daring, since Byron died,

That world-famed son of fire-she, who sank

Baffled, unknown, self-consumed;

Whose too bold dying song

24

Shook, like a clarion-blast, my soul.

Of one, too, I have heard,

A brother-sleeps he here?
Of all that gifted race

Not the least gifted; young,
Unhappy, eloquent-the child
Of many hopes, of many tears.

O boy, if here thou sleep'st, sleep well!
On thee too did the Muse

Bright in thy cradle smile;
But some dark shadow came

(I know not what) and interposed.

Sleep, O cluster of friends,

Sleep-or only when May,

Brought by the west-wind, returns

Back to your native heaths,

And the plover is heard on the moors,

Yearly awake to behold

The opening summer, the sky,
The shining moorland-to hear
The drowsy bee, as of old,

Hum o'er the thyme, the grouse
Call from the heather in bloom!

Sleep, or only for this

Break your united repose!

EPILOGUE.

So I sang; but the Muse,

Shaking her head, took the harp-
Stern interrupted my strain,
Angrily smote on the chords.

April showers

Rush o'er the Yorkshire moors.

Stormy, through driving mist,

Loom the blurr'd hills; the rain
Lashes the newly-made grave.

Unquiet souls!

-In the dark fermentation of earth, In the never idle workshop of nature, In the eternal movement,

Ye shall find yourselves again!

RUGBY CHAPEL.

NOVEMBER, 1857.

COLDLY, sadly descends

The autumn-evening. The field
Strewn with its dank yellow drifts
Of wither'd leaves, and the elms,
Fade into dimness apace,

Silent; hardly a shout

From a few boys late at their play!
The lights come out in the street,
In the school-room windows-but cold,
Solemn, unlighted, austere,

Through the gathering darkness, arise

Y

The chapel-walls, in whose bound
Thou, my father! art laid.

There thou dost lie, in the gloom
Of the autumn evening. But ah!
That word, gloom, to my mind
Brings thee back in the light
Of thy radiant vigour again;
In the gloom of November we pass'd
Days not dark at thy side;
Seasons impair'd not the ray
Of thy buoyant cheerfulness clear.
Such thou wast! and I stand
In the autumn evening, and think
Of bygone autumns with thee.

Fifteen years have gone round
Since thou arosest to tread,
In the summer-morning, the road
Of death, at a call unforeseen,
Sudden. For fifteen years,
We who till then in thy shade
Rested as under the boughs
Of a mighty oak, have endured
Sunshine and rain as we might,
Bare, unshaded, alone,
Lacking the shelter of thee.

O strong soul, by what shore.
Tarriest thou now? For that force,
Surely, has not been left vain !
Somewhere, surely, afar,

In the sounding labour-house vast
Of being, is practised that strength,
Zealous, beneficent, firm!

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