when from yon height?Descends the mad mountain-stream, foaming and bright;
Now in a song of love?Dying away,?As through the aspen grove?Soft zephyrs play:?Now heavier and more mournful seems the strain,?As when across the desert, death-like plain,?Whence whispers dread and yells despairing rise,?Cocytus' sluggish, wailing current sighs.
Maiden fair, oh, answer me!?Are not spirits leagued with thee??Speak they in the realms of bliss?Other language e'er than this?
GROUP FROM TARTARUS.
Hark! like the sea in wrath the heavens assailing,?Or like a brook through rocky basin wailing,?Comes from below, in groaning agony,?A heavy, vacant torment-breathing sigh!?Their faces marks of bitter torture wear,?While from their lips burst curses of despair;?Their eyes are hollow, and full of woe,?And their looks with heartfelt anguish?Seek Cocytus' stream that runs wailing below,?For the bridge o'er its waters they languish.
And they say to each other in accents of fear,?"Oh, when will the time of fulfilment appear?"?High over them boundless eternity quivers,?And the scythe of Saturnus all-ruthlessly, shivers!
RAPTURE--TO LAURA.
From earth I seem to wing my flight,?And sun myself in Heaven's pure light,?When thy sweet gaze meets mine?I dream I quaff ethereal dew,?When my own form I mirrored view?In those blue eyes divine!
Blest notes from Paradise afar,?Or strains from some benignant star?Enchant my ravished ear:?My Muse feels then the shepherd's hour?When silvery tones of magic power?Escape those lips so dear!
Young Loves around thee fan their wings--?Behind, the maddened fir-tree springs,?As when by Orpheus fired:?The poles whirl round with swifter motion,?When in the dance, like waves o'er Ocean,?Thy footsteps float untired!
Thy look, if it but beam with love,?Could make the lifeless marble move,?And hearts in rocks enshrine:?My visions to reality?Will turn, if, Laura, in thine eye?I read--that thou art mine!
TO LAURA. (THE MYSTERY OF REMINISCENCE.) [2]
Who and what gave to me the wish to woo thee--?Still, lip to lip, to cling for aye unto thee??Who made thy glances to my soul the link--?Who bade me burn thy very breath to drink--
My life in thine to sink??As from the conqueror's unresisted glaive,?Flies, without strife subdued, the ready slave--?So, when to life's unguarded fort, I see?Thy gaze draw near and near triumphantly--
Yields not my soul to thee??Why from its lord doth thus my soul depart?--?Is it because its native home thou art??Or were they brothers in the days of yore,?Twin-bound both souls, and in the link they bore
Sigh to be bound once more??Were once our beings blent and intertwining,?And therefore still my heart for thine is pining??Knew we the light of some extinguished sun--?The joys remote of some bright realm undone,
Where once our souls were ONE??Yes, it is so!--And thou wert bound to me?In the long-vanish'd Eld eternally!?In the dark troubled tablets which enroll?The Past--my Muse beheld this blessed scroll--
"One with thy love my soul!"?Oh yes, I learned in awe, when gazing there,?How once one bright inseparate life we were,?How once, one glorious essence as a God,?Unmeasured space our chainless footsteps trod--
All Nature our abode!?Round us, in waters of delight, forever?Voluptuous flowed the heavenly Nectar river;?We were the master of the seal of things,?And where the sunshine bathed Truth's mountain-springs
Quivered our glancing wings.?Weep for the godlike life we lost afar--?Weep!--thou and I its scattered fragments are;?And still the unconquered yearning we retain--?Sigh to restore the rapture and the reign,
And grow divine again.?And therefore came to me the wish to woo thee--?Still, lip to lip, to cling for aye unto thee;?This made thy glances to my soul the link--?This made me burn thy very breath to drink--
My life in thine to sink;?And therefore, as before the conqueror's glaive,?Flies, without strife subdued, the ready slave,?So, when to life's unguarded fort, I see?Thy gaze draw near and near triumphantly--
Yieldeth my soul to thee!?Therefore my soul doth from its lord depart,?Because, beloved, its native home thou art;?Because the twins recall the links they bore,?And soul with soul, in the sweet kiss of yore,
Meets and unites once more!?Thou, too--Ah, there thy gaze upon me dwells,?And thy young blush the tender answer tells;?Yes! with the dear relation still we thrill,?Both lives--though exiles from the homeward hill--
One life--all glowing still!
MELANCHOLY--TO LAURA.
Laura! a sunrise seems to break?Where'er thy happy looks may glow.?Joy sheds its roses o'er thy cheek,?Thy tears themselves do but bespeak?The rapture whence they flow;?Blest youth to whom those tears are given--?The tears that change his earth to heaven;?His best reward those melting eyes--?For him new suns are in the skies!
Thy soul--a crystal river passing,?Silver-clear, and sunbeam-glassing,?Mays into bloom sad Autumn by thee;?Night and desert, if they spy thee,?To gardens laugh--with daylight shine,?Lit by those happy smiles of thine!?Dark with cloud the future far?Goldens itself beneath thy star.?Smilest thou to see the harmony?Of charm the laws of Nature keep??Alas! to me the harmony?Brings only cause to weep!
Holds not Hades its domain?Underneath this earth of ours??Under palace, under fame,?Underneath the cloud-capped towers??Stately cities soar and spread?O'er your mouldering bones, ye dead!?From corruption, from decay,?Springs
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