TO THE RAINBOW. BY THOMAS CAMPBELL, ESQ. TRIUMPHAL arch, that fill'st the sky To teach me what thou art. Still seem, as to my childhood's sight, A midway station given For happy spirits to alight Çan all that optics teach, unfold When Science from Creation's face And yet, fair bow, no fabling dreams, When o'er the green undeluged earth Heaven's covenant thou didst shine, How came the world's grey fathers forth To watch thy sacred sign! And when its yellow lustre smiled Methinks, thy jubilee to keep, Nor ever shall the Muse's eye The earth to thee its incense yields, How glorious is thy girdle cast As fresh in yon horizon dark, For, faithful to its sacred page, Heaven still rebuilds thy span, New Monthly Magazine. COMPARISON. As the rose of the valley, when dripping with dew, SAPPHO. She was one Whose Lyre the spirit of sweet song had hung SHE leant upon her harp, and thousands looked First gave the full heart's homage; then came forth Her eye is on a Youth, and other days As a young bird, whose early flight he trained, Those songs;-but she looked up to him with all Youth's deep and passionate idolatry ;Love was her heart's sole universe he was To her, Hope, Genius, Energy, the God Her inmost spirit worshipped, in whose smile Was all e'en minstrel pride held precious; praise Was prized but as the echo of his own. But other times and other feelings came :Hope is love's element, and love with her Sickened of its own vanity. She lived Mid bright realities and brighter dreams, Those strange but exquisite imaginings That tinge with such sweet colours minstrel thoughts; And Fame, like sunlight, was upon her path; And strangers heard her name, and eyes that never Had looked on Sappho, yet had wept with her. Her first love never wholly lost its power, But, like rich incense shed, although no trace Was of its visible presence, yet its sweetness Mingled with every feeling, and it gave That soft and melancholy tenderness Which was the magic of her song. -That Youth Who knelt before her was so like the shape That haunted her spring dreams the same dark eyes, Whose light had once been as the light of heaven!Others breathed winning flatteries, she turned A careless hearing; but when Phaon spoke, Her heart beat quicker, and the crimson light Upon her cheek gave a most tender answer. She loved with all the ardour of a heart Which lives but in itself; her life had passed Amid the grand creations of the thought. Love was to her a vision; -it was now Heightened into devotion. But a soul So gifted and so passionate as her's Will seek companionship in vain, and find Its feelings solitary. Phaon soon Forgot the fondness of his Lesbian maid; And Sappho knew that talents, riches, fame, There is a dark rock looks on the blue sea; "Twas there love's last song echoed: there She sleeps, Literary Gazette. L. E. L. SAPPHO'S SONG. FAREWELL, my Lute! and would that I And fever has breathed in thy words. Yet wherefore, wherefore should I blame It was my evil star above, Not my sweet lute, that wrought me wrong; It was not song that taught me love, But it was love that taught me song. If song be past, and hope undone, And pulse, and head, and heart, are flame; It is thy work, thou faithless one! But, no! I will not name thy name! Sun-god, lute, wreath, are vowed to thee! L. E. L. |