AWAKE, my love! ere morning's ray Throws off night's weed of pilgrim grey; Ere yet the hare, cowered close from view Licks from her fleece the clover dew; Or wild swan shakes her snowy wings, By hunters roused from secret springs; Or birds upon the boughs awake, Till green Arbigland's woodlands shake!
She combed her curling ringlets down, Laced her green jupes and clasped her shoon, And from her home by Preston burn Came forth the rival light of morn. The lark's song dropt, now loud, now hush ;- The gold-spink answered from the bush,- The plover, fed on heather crop, Called from the misty mountain top.
'Tis sweet, she said, while thus the day Grows into gold from silvery grey, To hearken heaven, and bush and brake, Instinct with soul of song, awake ;- To see the smoke, in many a wreath, Stream blue from hall and bower beneath, Where yon blithe mower hastes along With glittering scythe and rustic song.
Yes, lovely one! and dost thou mark The moral of yon caroling lark ? Tak'st thou from nature's counsellor tongue The warning precept of her song ? Each bird that shakes the dewy grove Warms its wild note with nuptial love- The bird, the bee, with various sound, Proclaim the sweets of wedlock 'round.
THE shore was reefed with rocks, whose rugged sides Were venturous footing for the fowler's step: They were shaped out in wild and curious forms, Above, all jagged and broken, but below The waves had worn the shaggy points away ; For there they rave incessantly. When last I past along the beach, it was at eve, A summer's eve, stormy, but beautiful; I looked in silence, on the western sky, The rest was hidden from my view; but there The day had spent its glory. One rich light Broke through the shadow of the tempest's wing, While the black clouds, with gold and purple edged, Caught every moment warmer hues, until "Twas all one sparkling arch, and, like a king, In triumph o'er his foes, the Sun-god sought The blue depths of the sea; -the waters yet Were ruffled with the storm, and the white foam Yet floated on the billows, while the wind Murmured at times like to an angry child, Who sobs even in his slumber. Mid the rocks That rose stern barriers to the rebel waves, There was one spot less rugged than the rest : Some firs had taken root there, and waved o'er The entrance of a cave, where Grecian bards Had said some Sea-maid dwelt, and decked the place With ocean treasures, for the walls were bright With crystal spar: In sooth, it seemed just formed For some fair daughter of the main; at noon, Here she might bind her hair with shells, and wake Her golden harp. But now a legend's told Of human love and sorrow it is called The Cavern of the Pirate's Love: her fate Is soon and sadly told: she followed one, A lawless wanderer of the deep, for whom She left her father's halls. A little while She might know happiness-it is the heart That gives the colour to our destiny.
But lovely things are fleeting-blushes, sighs, The hours of youth, smiles, hopes, and minstrel-dreams, Spring days and blossoms, music's tones, are all Most fugitive; and swifter still than these Will love dissolve into forgetfulness. She was deserted. For awhile this cave Was her sad refuge; for awhile the rocks Echoed her wild complainings. I can deem How she would gaze upon the sea, and think Each passing cloud her lover's bark, 'till, hope Sickened of its own vanity, and life Sickened with hope; she passed and left a tale, A melancholy tale, just fit to tell On such an eve as this, when sky and sea Are sleeping in the mute and mournful calm Of passion sunk to rest.
Ан, why to my too feeling mind Is this my native place so dear, As if it had some chain to bind In lasting links my being here?
I need not ask! twas this calm scene Witnessed ere yet a stranger! I Had mingled with tumultuous men My purest grief-my purest joy.
For 'twas this spot on my young cheek That saw the first emotion rise, That saw its little woe to speak, The first tear dim my infant eyes.
BESIDE her babe, who sweetly slept, A widowed mother sat and wept
O'er years of love gone by; And as the sobs thick-gathering came, She murmured her dead husband's name Mid that sad lullaby.
Well might that lullaby be sad, For not one single friend she had On this cold-hearted earth; The sea will not give back its prey- And they were wrapt in foreign clay Who gave the orphan birth.
Steadfastly as a star doth look Upon a little murmuring brook, She gazed upon the bosom And fair brow of her sleeping son,- O merciful heaven! when I am gone 'Thine is this earthly blossom!'
While thus she sat, -a sunbeam broke Into the room; -the babe awoke,
And from his cradle smiled!
Ah! me! what kindling smiles met there! I know not whether was more fair, The mother or her child!
With joy fresh-sprung from short alarms, The smiler stretched his rosy arms,
And to her bosom leapt,- All tears at once were swept away, And said a face as bright as day,- 'Forgive me! that I wept!"
Sufferings there are from nature sprung, Ear hath not heard, nor poet's tongue May venture to declare;
But this as holy-writ is sure,
'The grief's she bids us here endure 'She can herself repair!'
Blackwood's Magazine.
IN glowing youth, he stood beside His native stream, and saw it glide Shewing each gem beneath its tide, Calm as though nought could break its rest, Reflecting heaven on its breast, And seeming, in its flow, to be Like candour, peace, and piety.
When life began its brilliant dream, His heart was like his native stream: The wave-shrined gems could scarcely seem Less hidden than each wish it knew; Its life flowed on as calmly too: And heaven shielded it from sin, To see itself reflected in.
He stood beside that stream again, When years had fled in strife and pain; He looked for its calm course in vain,- For storms profaned its peaceful flow, And clouds o'erhung its crystal brow :- And turning then, he sighed to deem His heart still like his native stream.
New Monthly Magazine.
« AnteriorContinuar » |