LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DAVIS PAMPINEA AND OTHER POEMS BY THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH NEW YOKE RUDD & CARLETON 130 GRAND STREET UBRARY ONIVERSITY OF CALIFORtft* DAVIS ENTERED according to Act of Congress, In the year 1860, by THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, for the Southern District of New York. CONTENTS. i. PACK PAMPINEA, 9 PYTHAGORAS, 15 THE TRAGEDY, 21 TWO LEAVES FROM A PLAY, .29 KATHIE MORRIS, 82 HASCHEESH, 41 n. HESPERIDES, 45 THE CRESCENT AND THE CROSS, 47 SONG, 49 PISCATAQUA RIVER, 50 THE LUNCH, 53 HAUNTED, 54 SONG, . . 5T yi CONTENTS. PAGB MIRIAM'S WOE, 59 THE ROBIN, 62 IN THE OLD CHURCH TOWER, 64 SONG 67 LAMIA, 68 THE MAN AND THE HOUR, 71 OUR COLORS AT FORT SUMTER, 72 Qfo MY FRIEND, PAMPINEA. AN IDYL. LYING by the summer sea I had a dream of Italy. Chalky cliffs and miles of sand, Mossy reefs and salty caves, Then the sparkling emerald waves, Faded ; and I seemed to stand, Myself a languid Florentine, In the heart of that fair land. And in a garden cool and green, 10 PAMPINEA. Boccaccio's own enchanted place, I met Pampinea face to face A maid so lovely that to see Her smile is to know Italy ! Her hair was like a coronet Upon her Grecian forehead set, Where one gem glistened sunnily Like Venice, when first seen at sea ! I saw within her violet eyes The starlight of Italian skies, And on her brow and breast and hand The olive of her native land ! And knowing how in other times Her lips were ripe with Tuscan rhymes Of love and wine and dance, I spread My mantle by an almond-tree, " And here, beneath the rose," I said, " I'll hear thy Tuscan melody !" PAMPINEA. 11 I heard a tale that was not told In those ten dreamy days of old, When Heaven, for some divine offence, Smote Florence with the pestilence ; And in that garden's odorous shade, The dames of the Decameron, With each a loyal lover, strayed, To laugh and sing, at sorest need, To lie in the lilies in the sun With glint of plume and golden brede ! And while she whispered in my ear, The pleasant Arno murmured near, The dewy, slim chameleons run Through twenty colors in the sun ; The breezes broke the fountain's glass, And woke aeolian melodies, And shook from out the scented trees The bleached lemon-blossoms on the grass. ] 2 PAMPINEA. The tale ? I have forgot the tale ! A Lady all for love forlorn, A Rose-bud, and a Nightingale That bruised his bosom on the thorn ; A pot of rubies buried deep, A glen, a corpse, a child asleep, A Monk, that was no monk at all, In the moonlight by a castle wall. Now while the sweet-eyed Tuscan wove The gilded thread of her romance Which I have lost by grievous chance The one dear woman that I love, Beside me in our sea-side nook, Closed a white finger in her book, Half vexed that she should read, and weep For Petrarch, to a man asleep ! And scorning me, so tame and cold, She rose, and wandered down the shore, Her wine-dark drapery, fold in fold, PAMPINEA. 13 Imprisoned by an ivory hand ; And on a ledge of oolite, half in sand, She stood, and looked at Appledore. And waking, I beheld her there Sea-dreaming in the moted air, A siren sweet and debonair, With wristlets woven of scarlet weeds, And oblong lucent amber beads Of sea-kelp shining in her hair. And as I thought of dreams, and how The something in us never sleeps, But laughs, or sings, or moans, or weeps, She turned and on her breast and brow I saw the tint that seemed not won From kisses of New England sun ; I saw on brow and breast and hand The olive of a sunnier land ! She turned and, lo ! within her eyes There lay the starlight of Italian skies ! 14 PAMPINEA. Most dreams are dark, beyond the range Of reason ; oft we cannot tell If they are born of heaven or hell : But to my soul it seems not strange That, lying by the summer sea, With that dark woman watching me, I slept and dreamed of Italy ! PYTHAGORAS. ABOVE the petty passions of the crowd I stand in frozen marble like a god, Inviolate, and ancient as the moon. The thing I am, and not the thing Man is, Fills these deep sockets. Let him moan and die ; For he is dust that shall be laid again : I know my own creation was divine. Strewn on the breezy continents I see The veined shells and burnished scales which once Enwrapped my being husks that had their use ; I brood on all the shapes I must attain Before I reach the Perfect, which is God, 15 16 PYTHAGORAS. And dream my dream, and let the rabble go : For I am of the mountains and the sea, The deserts, and the caverns in the earth, The catacombs and fragments of old worlds. I was a spirit on the mountain-tops, A perfume in the valleys, a simoom On arid deserts, a nomadic wind Roaming the universe, a tireless Voice. I was ere Romulus and Remus were ; I was ere Nineveh and Babylon ; I was, and am, and evermore shall be, Progressing, never reaching to the end. A hundred years I trembled in the grass, The delicate trefoil that muffled warm A slope on Ida ; for a hundred years Moved in the purple gyre of those dark flowers The Grecian women strew upon the dead. Under the earth, in fragrant glooms, I dwelt ; Then in the veins and sinews of a pine On a lone isle, where, from the Cyclades, PYTHAGORAS. il A mighty wind, like a leviathan, Ploughed through the brine, and from those solitudes Sent Silence, frightened. To and fro I swayed, Drawing the sunshine from the stooping clouds. Suns came and went, and many a mystic moon, Orbing and waning, and fierce meteors, Leaving their lurid ghosts to haunt the night. I heard loud voices by the sounding shore, The stormy sea-gods, and from fluted conchs Wild music, and strange shadows floated by, Some moaning and some singing. So the years Clustered about me, till the hand of God Let down the lightning from a sultry sky, Splintered the pine and split the iron rock ; And from my odorous prison-house a bird, I in its bosom, darted : so we fled, Turning the brittle edge of one high wave, Island and tree and sea-gods left behind ! Free as the air, from zone to zone I flew, 18 PYTHAGORAS. Far from the tumult to the quiet gates Of day-break ; and beneath me I beheld Vineyards, and rivers that like silver threads Ran through the green and gold of pasture-lands, And here and there a hamlet, a white rose, And here and there a city, whose slim spires And palace-roofs and swollen domes uprose Like scintillant stalagmites in the sun ; I saw huge navies battling with a storm By ragged reefs along the desolate coasts, And lazy merchantmen, that crawled, like flies, Over the blue enamel of the sea To India or the icy Labradors. A century was as a single day. What is a day to an immortal soul ? A breath, no more. And yet I hold one hour Beyond all price that hour when from the sky I circled near and nearer to the earth, Nearer and nearer, till I brushed my wings Against the pointed chestnuts, where a stream PYTHAGORAS. 19 That foamed and chattered over pebbly shoals, Fled through the briony, and with a shout Leaped headlong down a precipice ; and there, Gathering wild-flowers in the cool ravine, Wandered a woman more divinely shaped Than any of the creatures of the air, Or river-goddesses, or restless shades Of noble matrons marvellous in their time For beauty and great suffering ; and I sung, I charmed her thought, I gave her dreams, and then Down from the sunny atmosphere I stole And nestled in her bosom. There I slept From moon to moon, while in her eyes a thought Grew sweet and sweeter, deepening like the dawn A mystical forewarning ! When the stream, Breaking through leafless brambles and dead leaves, Piped shriller treble, and from chestnut boughs 20 PYTHAGORAS. The fruit dropped noiseless through the autumn night, I gave a quick, low cry, as infants do : We weep when we are born, not when we die ! So was it destined ; and thus came I here, To suffer bravely as becomes my state, One step, one grade, one cycle nearer God. And knowing these things, can I stoop to fret, And lie, and haggle in the market-place, Give dross for dross, or everything for naught ? No ! let me sit above the crowd, and sing, Waiting with hope for that miraculous change Which seems like sleep ; and though I waiting starve, I cannot kiss the idols that are set By every gate, in every street and park ; I cannot fawn, I cannot soil my soul : For I am of the mountains and the sea, The deserts and the caverns in the earth, The catacombs and fragments of old worlds. THE TRAGEDY LA DAME AUX CAMELIAS. THE " Dame with the Camelias " I think that was the play ; The house was packed from pit to dome With the gallant and the gay, Who had corne to see the Tragedy, And while the hours away ! There was the faint Exquisite, With gloves and glass sublime ; There was the grave Historian, And there the man of Rhyme, And the surly Critic, front to front, To see the play of Crime. 21 22 THE TRAGEDY. And there was heavy Ignorance, And Vice in Honiton lace ; Sir Croesus and Sir Pandarus And the music played apace. But of all that crowd I only saw A single, single face ! 'Twas that of a girl whom I had known In the summers long ago, When her breath was like the new-mown hay, Or the sweetest flowers that grow When her heart was light, and her soul was white As the winter's driven snow. 'Tvvas in our own New England She breathed the morning air ; 'Twas the sunshine of New England That blended with her hair ; And modesty and purity Walked with her everywhere ! THE TRAGEDY. 23 All day like a ray of light she played About old Harvey's mill ; And her grandsire held her on his knee In the evenings long and still, And told her tales of Lexington, And the trench at Bunker's Hill And of the painted Wamponsags, The Indians who of yore Builded their wigwams out of bark In the woods of Sagamore ; And how the godly Puritans Burnt witches by the score ! Or, touching on his sailor-life, He told how, years ago, In the dark of a cruel winter night, In the rain and sleet and snow, The good bark Martha Jane went down On the rocks off Holmes' Ho' ! 24 THE TRAGEDY. The years flew by, and the maiden grew Like a harebell in the glade ; The chestnut shadows crept in her eyes Sweet eyes that were not afraid To look to heaven at morn or even, Or any time she prayed ! She walked with him to the village church, And his eyes would fill with pride To see her walk with the man she loved To see them side by side ! Sweet Heaven ! she were an angel now If she had only died. If she had only died ! Alas ! How keen must be the woe That makes it better one should lie Where the sunshine cannot go, Than to live in this sunny world of ours. Where the happy blossoms blow ! THE TRAGEDY. 25 Would she had wed some country clown Before the luckless day When her cousin came to that lowly home Her cousin Richard May, With his city airs and handsome eyes, To lead her soul astray ! One night they left the cottage One night in the mist and rain ; And the old man never saw his child Nor Richard May again ; Never saw his pet in the clover patch, In the meadow, nor the lane. Ah ! never was a heart so torn Since this wild world began, As day by day he looked for her, This pitiful old man. " Where's my pretty maid ?" he said, This pitiful old man. THE TRAGEDY. Many a dreary winter came, And he had passed away ; And we never heard of her who fled In the night with Richard May ; Never knew if she were alive or dead Till I met her at the play ! And there she sat with her great brown eyes, They wore a troubled look ; And I read the history of her life As it were an open book ; And saw her Soul, like a slimy thing In the bottom of a brook. There she sat in her rustling silk, With diamonds on her wrist, And on her brow a slender thread Of pearl and amethyst. " A cheat, a gilded grief!" I said, And my eyes were filled with mist. THE TRAGEDY. 27 I could not see the~players play, I heard the music moan ; It moaned like a dismal autumn wind, That dies in the woods alone ; And when it stopped I heard it still, The mournful monotone ! What if the Count were true or false ? I did not care, not I ; What if Camille for Armand died ? I did not see her die. There sat a woman opposite Who held me with her eye I The great green curtain fell on all, On laugh, and wine, and woe, Just as death some day will fall 'Twixt us and life, I know ! The play was done, the bitter play, And the 'people turned to go. THE TRAGEDY. And did they see the Tragedy ? They saw the painted scene ; They saw Armand, the jealous fool, And the sick Parisian quean ; But they did not see the Tragedy The one I saw, I mean ! They did not see that cold-cut face, Those braids of golden hair ; Or, seeing her jewels, only said, " The lady's rich and fair." But I tell you, 'twas the Play of Life, And that woman played Despair ! TWO LEAVES FROM A PLAY. 1. Hortense. O, BUT she loved him, and the death she died Wrote Love across her bosom. Fainter hearts Had wept and pined themselves into the grave. She was not fashioned of such gossamer ; For one bleak midnight, robed as for a fete, With all her splendor, and her jewels on, She sucked quick poison from a finger-ring, And so they found her, in the morning dead. The pearls lay on her bosom like pale flowers When no wind stirs them ; with one waxen hand She held his crumpled letter : in the room Sat Silence and white Slumber ! So she died. 30 TWO LEAVES FROM A PLAY. 2. After the Masquerade. We've danced the night out, Madaline. Pleasure is sick, and Music's self has grown As languid as a weary ballet-girl ! There's not a dozen maskers in the hall. How like the pictures on a wizard's glass The particolored pageant has swept by Fools with their bells, and Monarchs with their crowns, Athenians, and bearded Mamalukes, Death-heads and Satyrs, and weird shadows born In the brains of crazy poets. Yet so real Such bitter mimicry ! O, Madaline, This is the very world in miniature : We each wear dresses that become us not, We each are maskers in a Carnival. The spangles and the tinsel of our lives, The soul in song, the jests above our wine, Are pleasant lies that tell not what we are. The Droll's at best a melancholy man ; TWO LEAVES FROM A PLAY. 31 His wit is only honey in a skull ; And though he glitter like a prism i' the light His colors cannot hide the skeleton ! The Scholar is a cynic, and the Priest A solemn epicurean in a cowl ; Philanthropy is politic : the Slave Wears not such fetters as the Emperor. And so, my love, Life plays at harlequin, Smothers itself in ermine, or puts on The icy front of virtue for effect. A smile's a mask to hide a broken heart : Fair words are masks, and all this blazoned world Against the frozen opal in your ring, There's no such mask as woman's tears may be ! KATHIE MORKIS. AN IDYL. 1. AH! fine it was that April time, when gentle winds were blowing, To hunt for pale arbutus-blooms that hide be neath the leaves, To hear the slanting rain come down, and see the clover growing, And watch the airy swallows as they darted round the eaves ! KATHIE MORRIS. 33 You wonder why I dream to-night of clover that was growing So many years ago, my wife, when we were in our prime ; For, hark ! the wind is in the flue, and Johnny says 'tis snowing, And through the storm the clanging bells ring in the Christmas time. 3. I cannot tell, but something sweet about my heart is clinging. A vision and a memory 'tis little that I mind The weary wintry weather, for I hear the robins singing, And the petals of the apple-blooms are ruffled in the wind ! 34 KATHIE MOKRIS. 4. It was a sunny morn in May, and in the fragrant meadow I lay, and dreamed of one fair face, as fair and fresh as spring : Would Kathie Morris love me ? then in sunshine and in shadow I built up lofty castles on a golden wedding- ring! 5. O, sweet it was to dream of her, the soldier's only daughter, The pretty pious Puritan, that flirted so with Will; The music of her winsome mouth was like the laughing water That broke in silvery syllables by Farmer Philip's mill. KATHIE MORRIS. 35 6. And Will had gone away to sea ; he did not leave her grieving ; Her bonny heart was not for him, so reckless and so vain ; And Will turned out a buccaneer, and hanged was he for thieving And scuttling helpless ships that sailed across the Spanish Main. 7. And I had come to grief for her, the scornful vil lage beauty, For, oh ! she had a witty tongue could cut you like a knife ; She scorned me with her haughty eyes, and I, in bounden duty, Did love her loved her more for that, and wearied of my life ! 36 KATHIE MORRIS. 8. And yet 'twas sweet to dream of her, to think her wavy tresses Might rest some happy, happy day, like sun shine, on my cheek; The idle winds that fanned my brow I dreamed were her caresses, And in the robin's twitterings I heard my sweetheart speak. 9. And as I lay and thought of her, her fairy face adorning With lover's fancies, treasuring the slightest word she'd said, 'Twas Kathie broke upon me like a blushing summer morning, And a half-blown rosy clover reddened under neath her tread ! KATHIE MORRIS. 3t 10. Then I looked up at Kathie, and her eyes were full of laughter : "O, Kathie, Kathie Morris, I am lying at your feet ; Bend above me, say you love me, that you'll love me ever after, Or let me lie and die here, in the fragrant mea dow-sweet !" 11. And then I turned my face away, and trembled at my daring, For wildly, wildly had I spoke, with flashing cheek and eye ; And there was silence ; I looked up, all pallid and despairing, For fear she'd take me at my word, and leave me there to die. 38 KATHIE MORRIS. 12. The silken fringes of her eyes upon her cheeks were drooping, Her merciless white fingers tore a blushing bud apart ; Then, quick as lightning, Kathie came, and kneel ing half and stooping, She hid her bonny, bonny face against my beating heart. 13. O, nestle, nestle, nestle there ! the heart would give thee greeting ; Lie thou there, all trustfully, in trouble and in pain; This breast shall shield thee from the storm, and bear its bitter beating, These arms shall hold thee tenderly in sun shine and in rain ! KATHIE MORRIS. 39 14. Old sexton! set your chimes in tune, and let there be no snarling, Ring out a joyous wedding-hymn to all the listening air ; And, girls, strew roses as she comes, the scorn ful, brown-eyed darling A princess, by the wavy gold and glistening of her hair ! 15. Hark! hear the bells. The Christmas bells? O, no ; who set them ringing ? I think I hear our bridal-bells, and I with joy am blind ; I smell the clover in the fields, I hear the robins singing. And the petals of the apple-blooms are ruffled in the wind ! 40 KATHIE MORRIS. 16. Ah ! Kathie, you've been true to me in fair and cloudy weather ; Our Father has been good to us when we've been sorely tried : I pray to God, when we must die, that we may die together, And slumber softly underneath the clover, side by side. HASCHEESH. 1. STKICKEN with thought, I staggered through the night; The heavens leaned down to me with splendid fires; The seven Pleiads, changed to magic lyres, Made music as I went ; and to my sight A Palace shaped itself against the skies : Great sapphire-studded portals suddenly Opened upon vast Gothic galleries Of gold and ebony, and I could see, Through half-drawn curtains that let in the day, Dim tropic gardens stretching far away ! 41 42 HASCHEESH. 2. Ah ! what a wonder seized upon my soul, When from that structure of the upper airs I saw unfold a flight of crystal stairs For my ascending Then I heard the roll Of unseen oceans clashing at the Pole. . . . A terror fell upon me .... a vague sense Of near calamity. O, lead me hence ! I shrieked, and lo ! from out a darkling hole That opened at my feet, crawled after me, Up the broad staircase, creatures of huge size, Fanged, warty monsters, with their lips and eyes Hung with slim leeches sucking hungrily. Away, vile drug ! I will avoid thy spell, Honey of Paradise, black dew of Hell ! II. HESPERIDES. IF thy soul, Herrick, dwelt with me, This is what my songs would be : Hints of our sea-breezes, blent With odors from the Orient ; Indian vessels deep with spice ; Star-showers from the Norland ice ; Wine-red jewels that seem to hold Fire, but only burn with cold ; Antique goblets, strangely wrought, Filled with the wine of happy thought ; 45 46 HESPERIDES. Bridal measures, dim regrets, Laburnum buds and violets ; Hopeful as the break of day ; Clear as crystal ; fresh as May ; Musical as brooks that run O'er yellow shallows in the sun ; Soft as the glossy fringe that shades The eyelids of thy fragrant maids ; Brief as thy lyrics, Herrick, are, And polished as the bosom of a star ! THE CRESCENT AND THE CROSS. KIND was my friend who, in the Eastern land, Remembered me with such a gracious hand, And sent this Moorish Crescent which has been Worn on the tawny bosom of a queen. No more it sinks and rises in unrest To the soft music of her heathen breast ; No barbarous chief shall bow before it more, No turban'd slave shall envy and adore ! I place beside this relic of the Sun A Cross of Cedar brought from Lebanon, Once borne, perchance, by some pale monk who trod The desert to Jerusalem and his God ! 48 THE CRESCENT AND THE CROSS. Here do they lie, two symbols of two creeds, Each meaning something to our human needs, Both stained with blood, and sacred made by faith, By tears, and prayers, and martyrdom, and death. That for the Moslem is, but this for me ! The waning Crescent lacks divinity : It gives me dreams of battles, and the woes Of women shut in hushed seraglios. But when this Cross of simple wood I see, The Star of Bethlehem shines again for me, And glorious visions break upon my gloom The patient Christ, and Mary at the Tomb ! SONG. 1. THE chestnuts shine through the cloven rind, And the woodland leaves are red, my dear ; The scarlet fuchsias burn in the wind Funeral plumes for the Year ! 2. The Year which has brought me so much woe, That if it were not for you, my dear, I should wish the fuchsias' fire might glow For me as well as the Year ! PISCATAQUA RIVER. I860. THOU singest by the gleaming isles, By woods and fields of corn, Thou singest, and the heaven smiles Upon my birthday morn. But I within a city, I, So full of vague unrest, Would almost give my life to lie An hour upon thy breast. 50 PISCATAQUA RIVER. 51 To let the wherry listless go, And, wrapped in dreamy joy, Dip, and surge idly to and fro, Like the red harbor-buoy ! To sit in happy indolence, To rest upon the oars, And catch the heavy earthy scents That blow from summer shores : To see the rounded sun go down, And with its parting fires Light up the windows of the town And burn the tapering spires ! And then to hear the muffled tolls From steeples slim and white, And watch, among the Isles of Shoals, The Beacon's orange light. 52 PISCATAQUA RIVER. O, River ! flowing to the main Through woods and fields of corn, Hear thou my longing and my pain This sunny birthday morn ! And take this song which sorrow shapes To music like thine own, And sing it to the cliffs and capes And crags where I am known ! THE LUNCH. A GOTHIC window, where a damask curtain Made the blank daylight shadowy and uncertain : A slab like agate on four eagle-talons Held trimly up and neatly taught to balance : A porcelain dish, o'er which in many a cluster Plump grapes hung down, dead -ripe and without lustre : A melon cut in thin delicious slices : A cake that seemed mosaic-work in spices : Two China cups with golden tulips sunny, And rich inside with chocolate like honey ; And she and I the banquet-scene completing With dreamy words and very dainty eating ! 58 HAUNTED. A NOISOME mildewed vine Crawls to the rotting eaves ; The gate has dropt from the rusty hinge And the walks are strewn with leaves. Close by the shattered fence The red-clay road runs by To a haunted wood, where the hemlocks groan And the willows sob and sigh. 54 HAUNTED. 55 Among the dank lush flowers The spiteful firefly glows, And a woman steals by the stagnant pond Wrapped in her burial-clothes. There's a dark blue scar on her throat, And ever she makes a moan ; And the humid lizards shine in the grass, And the lichens weep on the stone, And the Moon shrinks in a cloud, And the traveller shakes with fear, And an Owl on the skirts of the wood Hoots, and says, Do you hear ? Go not there at night, For a spell hangs over ah 1 The palsied elms, and the dismal road, And the broken garden-wall. 56 HAUNTED. O, go not there at night, For a curse is on the place ; Go not there, for fear you meet The Murdered face to face ! SONG. 1. MERRY is the robin That pipes away his care, And merry is the mackerel That leaps a yard in air ! And merry is the butter-cup Beneath the April sky, And merry as the spring-time, Love, are you and I ! 57 58 SONG. 2. Now the robin's chilly, And all his songs are done ; No more the spotted mackerel Leaps silvery in the sun. O, mournful is the scarlet leaf, And mournful is the sky But merry as the spring-time, Love, are you and I ! MIRIAM'S WOE. MIRIAM at the planter's door, Her child upon her knee, Sat as the twilight gathered round The vale of Nacoochee. Sat with an anguish in her eyes, And forehead bended low Sat like a statue carved in stone, All pallid with her woe I 59 60 MIRIAM'S WOE. By dark bayou and cypress-swamp, By rice-field and lagoon, Her soul went wandering to the land That scorches in the noon ! And on the lover of her youth She turned her patient eyes, And saw him sad, and fault, and sick Beneath those alien skies. She saw him pick the cotton-blooms And cut the sugar-cane A ring of iron on his wrist, And round his heart a chain ! She saw him, when his work was done, Sit down in some lone place, To dream of her, and weep for her, His hands across his face ! MIRIAM'S WOE. 61 She heard the dear old violin That he was wont to play At twilight, in their courting-time, When life was sweet as May ! Then suddenly a catbird called From out a neighboring tree, And Miriam's soul came back again To the vale of Nacoochee. And closer, closer to her heart She held the little child, Who stretched its fragile hand to feel Her bosom's warmth, and smiled. But she she did not own a touch Of that fond little hand Great God ! that such a thing should be Within a Christian land ! THE ROBIN. FROM out the blossomed cherry-tops Sing, blithsome Robin, chant and sing ; With chirp, and trill, and magic-stops Win thou the listening ear of Spring ! For while thou lingerest in delight, An idle poet, with thy rhyme, The summer hours will take their flight And leave thee in a barren clime. THE ROBIN. 63 Not all the autumn's brittle gold, Nor sun, nor moon, nor star shall bring The jocund spirit which of old Made it an easy joy to sing! So said a poet having lost The precious time when he was young Now wandering by the wintry coast With empty heart and silent tongue. IN THE OLD CHURCH-TOWER. 1859. 1. IN the old church-tower Hangs the bell ; And above it on the vane, In the sunshine and the rain, Cut in gold, Saint Peter stands, With the keys in his two hands, And all is well ! 64 IN THE OLD CHURCH-TOWER. 65 2. In the old church-tower Hangs the bell ; You can hear its great heart beat, Ah ! so loud, and wild, and sweet, As the parson says a prayer Over wedded lovers there, While all is well ! 3. In the old church-tower Hangs the bell, Deep and solemn. Hark ! again, Ah ! what passion, and what pain ! With her hands upon her breast, Some poor Soul has gone to rest Where all is well ! 5 66 IN THE OLD CHURCH-TOWER. 4. In the old church-tower Hangs the bell An old friend that seems to know All our joy and all our woe : It is glad when we are wed, It is sad when we are dead And all is well ! SONG. BLOW from the temples of the Sun, Thou heavy-scented wind ; O, blow across the spicy isles And strike the roses blind ! And kiss the eyes of my true-love, And tell me if she be Not lovelier than the KhaleePs wife Beyond the Indian sea ! LAMIA. " Go on your way, and let me pass. You stop a wild despair. I would that I were turned to brass Like that grim dragon there, " Which, couchant by the groined gate, In weather foul or fair, Looks down serenely desolate, And nothing does but stare ! LAMIA. 69 " What care I for the burgeoned year, The sad leaf or the gay ? Let Launcelot and Guinevere Their falcons fly this day. " Twill be as royal sport, pardie, As falconers have tried At Astolat but let me be ! I would that I had died. " I met a woman in the glade : Her hair was soft and brown, And long bent silken lashes weighed Her ivory eyelids down. " I kissed her hand, I called her blest, I held her true and fair She turned to shadow on my breast, And melted in the air ! 70 LAMIA. u And, lo ! about me, fold on fold, A golden serpent hung An eye of jet, a skin of gold, A garnet for a tongue ! " O, let the petted falcons fly Right merry in the sun ; But let me be I for I shall die Before the year is done." THE MAN AND THE HOUR. As some rare jewel, sealed within a rock, Would ne'er have glittered in the sunny air, Had not the lightning or an earthquake's shock Crumbled the ledge, and laid its splendor bare So do fine souls lie darkling in the earth Until some mighty tumult heaves them forth. Men of this land and lovers of these States! What master-spirit from the dark shall rise, And, with a will inviolate as fate's, God-like and prudent, merciful and wise, Do battle in God's name and set us right Ere on our glory ruin broods and night ! December, 1860. 71 OUR COLORS AT FORT SUMTER. 1. HERE'S to the Hero of Moultrie, The valiant and the true ! True to our Flag by land and sea Long may it wave for you ! 2. May never traitor's touch pollute Those colors of the sky We want them pure, to wrap about Our heroes when they die! January, 1861. 72 THIS BOOK IS DUE ON THE LAST DATE STAMPED BELOW RENEWED BOOKS ARE SUBJECT TO IMMEDIATE RECALL LIBRARY, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, DAVIS Book Slip-25wz-6,'66 (G3855s4)458 U168U9 Aldrich, T.B, Pampinea PS102U P2 LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DAVIS