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THE LIBRARY
OF
THE UNIVERSITY
OF CALIFORNIA
LOS ANGELES
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THE VESTAL
AND
OTHER POEMS.
BY
HENRY VERLANDER, B.A.
ST. JOHN S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE.
LONDON:
JOHN MA CRONE, ST. JAMES'S SQUARE.
MDCCCXXXVII.
VIZBTEI.I.V, BllANSTON AND CO. PKINTKHS,
FLEET iTREBT.
VK
Ti..
CONTENTS.
Pag-e
The Vestal : Part 1 9
Part II 36
The Evil Spirit quelled G3
The First-born smitten 71
To E. C. (who died young) 73
Epitaph for Hofer, the Tyrolese Patriot ... 75
The Wanderer's Return 76
Dirge, for a Maiden who died on a Spring Morning 78
The Voice and the Lyre of the Girl that we love 82
Written in the empty Theatre of Drury Lane, "j
after the Death of Malibran J
84
Occasioned by Byron's "Lament of Tasso " ... 86
To T. H. T 88
The Charm 90
Lines on a dead Canary 92
Fidelity 93
On the Death of the Duke of Gloucester . . . 9.5
" Territi etiam super tantas clades, cum ceteris pro-
digiis, tuiij quod duae Vestales eo anno, Opimia atque
Floronia, violato vote, altera sub terra, ut mos est, ad
portam Collinam necata fuerat ; altera sibimet ipsa
mortem consciverat."
Tit. Liv. lib. xxii. cap. .57.
They were also dismayed, in addition to these
losses, as well by other prodigies, as, moreover,
because two Vestal virgins, in that year, Opimia and
Floronia, having violated tlieir vow, the one had been
put to death, according to custom, by living interment
at the gate Collina ; the other had committed suicide.
THE VESTAL.
PART I
Like a fair Sorceress, the black rob'd Night —
Her palHd face, which warms not with its light,
Fair in unearthly loveliness, her zone
Set round with silver stars, — ascends her throne ;
And spell-bound in the light of those wan eyes,
The Earth, beneath, in ghastly beauty lies.
Pure as the chastity which worships there,
That orbed temple lifts its columns fair,
Of stainless marble, o'er the billowy trees ;
Like some bleach'd rock above the dark green seas.
10 THE VESTAL.
Nightly, vvitliin that fane, the Vestal quire
Hymn in their watchings round th' eternal fire.
Listen ! how sweetly rose, how softly fell,
The choir of voices from the inmost cell !
Hark ! now it rises on the wing, once more,
O'er sleeping Rome, and Tiber's winding shore, —
Glides down the calm, clear air, — and finds its rest.
With folded pinion, in the passive breast.
Now it is hush'd for ever — and the Night
Again sleeps sweetly, wrapp'd in silver light.
II.
The latest, ling'ring note, has left the earth
For Heaven : though the lips that gave it birtli
Still vibrate ; and the chord within the breast.
Struck by devotion, trembles into rest.
But lips may speak when hearts are far away :
And one is there, whose fix'd, sad eyes betray
The absence of the spirit ; and the thought
Of worship, with which other breasts are fraught.
THE VEST'Vr.. 1 1
III.
The suns of eighteen summers lent their glow
To the bright hair, which, parted on her brow,
Flow'd o'er her purple mantle, round her face
And bosom, such as Phidias lov'd to trace ;
The Pallas brow ; and eye, large, blue, and clear ;
But not, as in the Warrior Maid, severe :
This, fraught with immortality, revealing
Its heav'nly birth ; — That, mild, with mortal feeling.
Speaking a spirit, whicli, if not all fire
To die, or to obtain each dear desire ;
Yet, never lov'd but once, — and, like the dove
On her dead mate, died on its first— last, love !
IV.
Yes ! still we cherish, love the fragile thing
Who clings to us, like Ivy round the tree :
Whose eyes look up to ours, as to the spring
Of all their hopes — fears — pleasures — misery.
B 2
7
] 2 THE VESTAL.
This! — -this is Woman! Be the counterpart
Of fierce Penthesilea deified. —
Man seeks a pillow for his aching heart :
God knows he needetli nought to prompt his pride !
V.
Yes ! She was from that land, glorious and fair,
The birth-place of Young Art, who's buried there.
Where Mind exalted Form to that Ideal
Our ages deem too perfect to be real.
Where liv'd th' immortal models, which she gave
To Time — the Wise, the Beautiful, the Brave ;
The myrtle, and the sword. — In war, in peace,
The mightiest, and the loveliest, — matchless Greece !
Land of th' immortal Lyre ! could I refrain,
Thinking on thee, this tributary strain !
No I may this heart be still ; these lips be dumb ;
My thoughts, the people of the silent tomb ;
The nightly dream, the daily flame, expire ;
When I refrain — Land of th' immortal Lyre !
THE VlibTAL. 1.'5
VI.
Corinth, her place of birth, — her sire, a chief —
One who sprang forth in arms, to hail the brief,
Bright flame, which, on Achaia's mountains fir'd,
Flash'd forth in Philopoemen — and expir'd.
Companion of that " last of Greeks," he died,
Transfix'd by Grecian javelins, at his side.
And then, she shrunk, as shrinks the timid fawn.
To her lone mother's side. Their bosoms, shorn
Of one strong tie, together closing, clove :
Loving as the bereav'd alone can love.
And that deep, tranquil feeling, till the prime
Of girlhood, fiU'd her heart ; until the time,
The mystic minute, fated to reveal
The unknown world of love her heart could feel.
VII.
Young Timon was of Corinth ; where his sire
Walk'd in the reverence wisdom doth inspire ;
14 THE VESTAL.
The city's hoary guide. From earliest youth
His steps were bent towards the fount of Truth.
For that he did not deem it hard to die,
Ev'n as one had died, calm and joyfully.
But, for the bloody trade of war and strife.
He loath'd it : and condemn'd it by his life.
Yet, when his voice was ask'd, he never gave
One foot of ground to tyrants ; or one slave ;
But sighing, clos'd his book, and quench'd his lamp ;
Then, drew the blade which age's icy cramp
Shook in his grasp ; and they whom once he led
In peaceful wisdom, still before them bled.
From that sire's lips and life, his infancy
Drew its first notions of the great and free :
Follow'd his footsteps, and beneath the eye
Of him who gave him life, learn'd how to die.
A glorious, but a mournful lot, to stand
Alone a Greek, in that degen'rate land !
To emulate the noble and the brave.
Where breathe alone the coward and the slave !
THE VKSTAI,. 15
VIII.
'Tis strange that fiercer natures e'er should seek
For rest on bosoms innocent and meek.
But thus it is, — at least among mankind, —
The Lion consorts with the gentle Hind.
And thus did Timon's wise and gentle sire.
Of Ida's, veil and damp the eager fire.
And when he died, and, from the last red field.
Came, with his dying words, his stainless shield.
Deep did his wife and gentle girl partake
Of loving care ; shed on them for his sake.
IX.
And thus, from infancy, did two hearts grow
Into an union, such alone can know.
Alas ! could few short months, or years, impart
To spell-bound eyes the knowledge of a heart,
Some gentle ones had known a milder fate.
Which since have broke o'er what they learn'd too late !
16 THE VESTAL.
But these, the very breaks, that will appear
In the most perfect natures, dwelling here ;
All known, but serv'd as links, that closer bind,
To the forgiven, the forgiving mind.
Thus grew their twined lives, and thus for ever
Must grow. Those stems no mortal hand can sever
Which have one root. And thus, though they might die,
And in two tombs their parted dust might lie ;
Yet, living, but one home could hold the two.
Their mutual life from mutual breath they drew.
And when he grew a warrior, still more dear
Each seem'd to each, from mutual pride and fear.
She, from each fight more precious saw him come ;
He, fought for Corinth, and his Ida's home.
X.
'Twas when the tide of fierce invasion, near,
Render'd each span of country doubly dear :
And fiercer, at the closing hounds of Rome,
Th' Achaean struck, in dying, for his home.
I'HE VESTAL. 17
The Morn yet struggled with retreatuig Night,
Whose sable army fled her hosts of light ;
Rising from weary dreams, young Ida stray'd
Where the green height, wood, plain, and stream survey'd.
The kiss upon her brow was glowing yet.
His lips had printed when the sun last set ;
His parting words were ringing in her ears,
With which he strove to mock away her fears :
They were not mock'd ; for here she stood alone,
To tread where he had trod, and gaze where he had gone.
And yet, to-morrow's sun would see him come,
Her Hector, to his well-defended home.
And then, when next he parted from her side,
She need not veil the tears of Timon's hride.
Twas but a day ! But, when a day is rife
With all the joy or misery of a life ;
Within that circle gather all the fears,
Into one inky band, of outstretch'd years.
Before, that heart had found it hard to hate
E'en them, the workers of her country's fate ;
18 THK VtSTAI,.
But now, lur mind grew dark againsit tlie foe,
Whose hosts seeni'd only leagu'd to work her woe.
Each falchion's stroke directed at one crest ;
And each spear pointed at the one dear breast.
XI.
Th' yEgean's early wave is brightly dancing ;
Streams and white temples in the morning glancing ;
Greece lifts her dewy veil ; and waking, smiles
Through all her coasts, and all her hundred isles.
But billows danc'd, and morning shone in vain :
Her thoughts were straying far o'er hill and plain.
And saw, beyond the barrier of the siglit,
The tenfold horrors of the fancied fight.
Slowly she turn'd her gushing eye away
From where th' horizon's torturing stillness lay.
From cheek to brow th' indignant colour flew ;
While to the east this wild appeal she threw.
" See'st thou, unfailing God ! thy broken shrine ?
" Thy oracle, no longer deem'd divine ?
THE VESTAL. 10
" And smil'st on them, eternally the same,
" Who smite thy people, and despise thy name ?"
Her eye yet gaz'd upon the orb which shone,
Unmov'd, in still increasing splendour on,
When, winding round the steep, a band of horsr
Sent under night to read the city's force,
Encircled, with a shout, their timid prey.-—
The struggling, shrieking girl, they bore away,
Safe to Messenia's camp. But Ida's doom
Was not the servile labour of the loom.
A proud Patrician of Imperial Rome
Purchas'd the prize ; and bore it to his home. •
For Vesta's holy service set aside ;
An ofF'ring of his piety — or pride.
xri.
By Tyber's wave there is a lonely spot,
A turf-pav'd path, that leads beneath the shade
Of dusky woods, towards a little grot ;
A rustic temple, that rude hands have made
20 THE VESTAL.
Out of the living rock. And grey, of stone,
An uncouth shrine within, by moss o'ergrown :
Forth from whose base, a pure and gelid spring
Doth issue clear, with ceaseless murmuring ;
Then hastes, with fretful bound, to lose its way
Through hoary groves, that hide it from the day.
Thither, with listless step, and downcast eye,
In which sat Rev'rie, brooding mournfully.
Sad Ida turns her steps ; to fill, as wont,
The sacred vase from out the crystal font.
XIII.
It is the middle night — Silence and Sleep
Are in the seven-hill'd city's dwellings : save
The ceaseless laving of the mimic wave.
Where Tyber's plaining waters seek the deep.
Yet cannot this still scene and hour bring peace
To Ida's mind, whose thoughts are on her Greece.
Her land of birth, whose hills and woods are sleeping
Beneath that moon, on which she gazes weeping.
THE VESTA I,, 21
Fair Corinth ; and her home, and playmates dear,
Whose joyous voices ring upon her ear.
And that kind face she never can forget,
Her Mother — does she Hve, and love her yet ?
He, too ; beneath whose kindling eye, her own
First lit with passion until then unknown ;
Slain — or an exile from his native shore —
Or, keenest mis'ry, thinks of her no more.
Thus mournful Fancy conjur'd up the past.
The welling tear-drop gushing big and fast.
As, wrapp'd within her veil, she linger'd, slow,
Down the steep path and through the wood below.
And now her feet have past the forest shade.
And noiseless press the open, moonlit glade,
Where, at one end, upon a rising ground.
The grotto stood ; with woods behind and round.
The cynosure of that sweet solitude.
Where never feet profane their steps intrude.
22 TIIK VKSTAI,.
XIV.
Ami Ida now ascends the gentle hill
Down which, releas'd, bounds light the sacred rill.
When, lo ! beside the cave, upon the steep,
A form is stretch'd, compos'd, as if in sleep.
Startl'd, she stood. Why doth not Ida fly ?
Alas ! the well-known garb hath caught her eye.
Her native garb, that seem'd to her to be
The only vesture of the brave and free.
Too well she knew, in terror had she fled,
He still might sleep, unrous'd — among the dead.
W^ith feet that gave no echo — and with eye
Still fix'd on him who slept — she glideth by —
Deeply he sleeps — one step — and she hath won
The fount — one step — she stands as she were stone !
The vase is on the earth ! her veil is thrown
Back ! quickly back ! and she is stooping down ;
Her timid eyes all eager strain'd, to trace
Each manly feature of that sleeping face !
THE VESTAI,. 23
XV.
Chang'd as it is, yet answers ev'ry part,
Full well, th' unfading image in her heart.
Not Time alone, but wan and haggard Care
Hath written, with his pen of iron, there ;
Upon the brow whose lofty swell once shone.
Smooth, as if chisell'd from the Parian stone.
More threat'ning, too, beneath that alter 'd brow,
Stern thought hath sunk the eye that's veil'd below.
While the clos'd lips compression spake, too sure,
All he'd endured — and could yet endure.
In marble calmness, in the mcon's pale day,
Slept the stern sadness of that head ; which lay
Still as an infant's ; but, the heaving breast
Belied the seeming calmness of his rest.
Never, more fondly, o'er her nestled boy,
The child of her first love ; her mournful joy ;
Breathless, the youthful mother bends to trace
The tracks of fierce convulsion in his face —
2-4 THE VESTAL.
Than Ida bent in joyous, sad amaze,
'Till truth seem'd vision to her wikler'd gaze.
Oh, joy ! to meet him any where ; for whom
Hope long since died : yes — even in the tomb.
But, ah ! that face — how chang'd ! how sad a tale
Of sufF'ring, written in those features pale !
XVI.
And now, beyond control, the hot tears fall
O'er him who slept. — He wakes — but yet the thrall
Of sleep is on him — and his waking grasp
Is on the falchion, ready to his clasp. —
Instead of hostile eyes, he woke to meet
Those of the startled maiden at his feet.
Is this a dream ? He springs to clasp ag-ain
Her whom his dreams had often clasp'd in vain !
It is 710 dream I but living, throbbing, warm,
His arms enfold his Ida's cherish'd form.
Yet, far too wild for speech that strange amaze :
For minutes eye meets eye in silent gaze. —
THE VESTAL. 2")
But chords have each their pitch ; o'erstrained, tliey break.
She gave a short, wild laugh — a stifled shriek —
Then sunk upon his shoulder, with the sigh
And gasping spasm of woman's agony.
Her cry recall'd his wand'ring sense — in haste
He bore her to the rocky grot — there, plac'd
On tlie rude seat, her forehead gently laves
In the cold crystal of the eartli-born waves.
XVI r.
Long shook, the strife of joy and grief, her form,
Whose tender grace seem'd rent beneath the storm.
At length the tempest sank into the calm
Of tears ; which, silent, shed their soothing balm
Upon the breast, where, pillow'd like a child.
Her brain recall'd its thoughts, still straying wild.
" My Ida ! can it be ! I thought that fate
" Had made this life the object of its hate !
" But now, I do believe that happiness
" May yet be mine- — since thou dost live to bless —
26 ' THE VESTAL. *
" Yes — to bless inc. For, albeit tliou art
" Theirs, thou wasl mine, and never more we part!"
" Theirs ! Yes ! I am theirs ! detain me not !
" Yes ! well thou did'st remind — I had forgot —
" This veil — they wait." — She stood — and gather'd round
Her form the fleecy veil which swept the ground.
Then, as he sprung to stay her, with her hand.
And eye, though swimming, threat'ning in command,
Check'd him, and said, — " The dead and living now
" Are not more separate than I and tliou."
She turn'd, and would have gone — but it is past,
The strength delirium gave, too fierce to last- —
And staggering with looks of wild alarm,
Corse-like and cold she sunk upon his arm.
XVIII.
So deeply tangl'd was her thoughts' fair chain.
It seem'd its strength would ne'er return again.
At length, her head slow rais'd, her hands repel
The golden tresses, that dishevell'd fell
THi; VESTAL. 27
O'er her clear features, and her eyes, which, bright
With tears, shed tenderly their mild, blue light
In one long, loving look. " So chang'd I it seems
" Another mock'ry of my happiest dreams !
" And here how cam'st thou ? Yes ! I read too well,
" In that sad face, all that thy tongue will tell.
" Does she yet live ? ah, no ! it cannot be !
" How could / live, my mother ! far from thee !
" And Corinth ? — Yes ! I now remember — here
" There was a triumph — yes ! a triumph — ne'er
" Shall I forget that day — the Roman car
" Heap'd with the spoils, barbarians as they are, —
" Spoils that they could not value — and that train
" Of drooping captives, where I look'd in vain
" For her and thee — ah, no ! — that thou would'st die
" I knew — but not" — she starts ! for from that eye,
In which she gaz'd, leap'd forth the living fire !
Never before on her with aught like ire
Had turn'd that face — which writh'd to keep below
Th' expression of the heart's indignant throe
c 2
28 THE VESTAL.
" Yes ! / too saw, and would, as thou hast said —
" This coward, useless corse, had swell'd the dead
" Who block'd th' invader's path ! I liv'd — but why
" Ask thine own heart — 'twas easier far to die.
" But shrink not, Ida dear ! thou did'st not mean
" To wound me — listen what the cause hath been
" Why I am here. Then, if thou can'st, yet more
" Than now, the blood-stain'd faith of Rome abhor.
•' Yet, not so much that name 1 execrate
" As their' s, who gave us helpless to our fate.
" Oh ! had we been indeed their countrymen,
" W^hose blood made glorious their mountain glen —
" — They triumph not o'er Greeks — the last one fell
" In that Old Man who perish'd in his cell.
XIX.
" 1 cannot tell — no words can speak alone
" My feelings, when I heard that thou wast gone.
*' Fire in the brain, and sickness in the heart —
" A moment, in which mem'ry hath no part.
THK VKSTAL. 29
" Flung on my horse, alone I rav'd to go,
" And tear their captive from the coward foe.
" While sudden rushing from her plunder'd roof,
" And dash'd at length beneath my courser's hoof,
" With hair dishevell'd, and with words as wild,
'' Thy frantic mother ask'd of me her child ! —
" But hands more calm restrain'd me, and with speed
" Each youthful friend equipp'd his fleetest steed.
" Then in a band that would have torn their prey
" From hosts, or died, we dash'd upon our way.
" In vain, in vain, with hopes that still deceive,
" O'er plain and hill we rode from morn till eve.
" Too fleetly mounted, or too well conceal'd,
" No trace of them or thee was e'er revealed.
" At length, benighted on Messenia's plain,
" Our warriors urg'd the bloody spur in vain.
" Unfed, unrested, since the middle day,
"' Each panting steed scarce stagger'd on his way.
" Dismounting there, in haste, I laid aside
" The gallant trappings of the warrior's pride.
30 THE VESTAL.
" With sandali'd feet, and cloak of sober hue,
" 111 wandering cynic's guise, I bade adieu
" To them, my faithful band ; whose earnest pray'r
" Would stay me — 'twas in vain — we parted there.
" 'Twere long, at such a moment, now to tell
" The thousand hopes and perils which befel.
" A year had past; and I had wander'd o'er
" Each plain ; and through each city of our shore.
" Wherever hope seem'd dawning, thither sped
" My eager steps — alas ! it always fled.
" At length, still fed on shadows, hope expir'd.
" The heart that love had warm'd now vengeance fir'd.
" How my cheek burn'd to mark the crafty slave !
" The abject Greek who till'd the Persian's Grave !
" A subtle sophist, now, on freedom's side ;
" Then, proving, for the Roman gold, he lied.
" Proud of their names whose glory was his shame :
'' Vain boaster, and dishonour of their fame.
" Coldly I homeward turn'd my listless pace ;
" Blighted at heart, and blushing for my race.
THE VESTAL. 31
" While, day by day, the circle narrower grew
" Of slaves and tyrants round th' unfetter'd few,
"Despair has not a fear — let him beware,
" Who hunts a patriot to his inmost lair !
" The Latin wolf, whose mountain cave is strown
" With relics of mankind, except her own
" Who brooks no freedom, madden'd, when the steel
" Of freemen taught her, in her tui-n, to feel.
" At last, with such respects as fits the free
" Who commune with the free, and specious pleii,
" Their Senate sent to Corintli, to demand
" A chosen number of the Achaean band
" In Rome's proud Capitol should vindicate
" Their claims to freedom, in a calm debate.
XX.
" Lm'd by the falsehood of the coward slave
" Who wisely steals the sword he fears to brave.
" A thousand of our bravest, from the main,
" Look'd on that land they ne'er shall tread again.
,'32 THE VliS-TAI,.
" Pass'd o'er the sea, and on this perjur'd sliore,
" In exile found the rights the Roman swore.
'* Me they sent not from Rome. My unfledg'd years,
" And arm, though prov'd, alone, mov'd not their fears.
" Then — but thou may'st have guess'd — I loathe to tell
" The tale of bloody treachery — Corinth fell !
" Had I but deem'd that thou had'st been so nigh —
" But see ! that light ! — they seek thee — let us fly !"
He spake, and rose — one' hand was round the maid ;
The other grasp'd his broad and shining blade —
She spake not, nor resisted. To expire.
With hhn, was more than she had dar'd desire.
But, spar'd the terrors of a hopeless flight.
They scarce had left the grot, when, by the light
Of night's high noon, emerging from the shade,
A wall of fierce, dark faces, lin'd the glade.
She started — shrunk — and shriek'd in wild despair,
Too well she knows the fate that waits her there.
Too well she knows what bigot cruelty
Can fire religion's meek and heav'n-ward eye !
THE VESTA J.. '};i
'I'he hard, relentless heart, man's cheated sight
Deems not can lurk beneath the robe of white!
She shrunk — and for a moment ebb'd the tide
Of woman's generous love — then, from his side
She broke — " Fly ! Fly ! 'tis not too late —
" Timon ! thou know'st not — can'st not guess the fate
" That waits us if thou stay'st ! — fear not for me—
" That path — farewell ! — there, flee ! oh ! quickly flee!"
She spake — she wav'd her hand — and she is gone I
Starting with outstretch'd arms he stands alone.
His eye but sees that robe of glittering white
Glance down the hill — then vanish from his siuht.
Then — shall he fly ? and leave her ? while a fate,
Which thus appals, impends ? Alas ! too late
His flight, ev'n had he fled. No ! they who dwell
In the dark mystery of Vesta's cell,
Dwell in the glance of eyes that ever keep,
Go where they will, vigils that never sleep !
And those stern, viewless guardians, through the night,
Had mark'd their meeting — and now check'd their flight.
34 THE VKSTAL.
XXI.
Her vanisli'd tbrm still floated in his mind —
When stern, quick tones spake startling from behind.
" Surrender, Greek" — He starts ! — and, looking round,
At length discerns the toils by which he's bound. —
He bent his mind to die ; but not to hold
His hands in tame submission for the fold
Of bonds : or worse, to feel their pitying scorn,
Hateful for all that he and his have borne.
No ! 'twas but shedding now the blood he ow'd
To Corinth, which, ev'n there, had vainly flow'd.
" Old man, away ! I war not with a priest —
" I fall — but by a warrior's sword at least."
Then, waiting not until they clos'd around,
Through the arm'd ring he broke with one strong bound.
And down where she had pass'd he onward press'd
With vigorous speed — a sword is at his breast !
A fierce, rude veteran of the iron band
Wniich guards the bounds of Dacia's frozen land.
THE VESTAL. .'35
Threw his broad form across the Grecian's path —
And, grimly sniihng, more in scorn than wrath,
" Youth, yield thy sword !" — He little knew the might
Taught that young arm in many a hopeless fight.^ —
A clash — a gleam — a vain attempt to ward —
The Achaean blade is buried to the guard !
Yet Timon bleeds ! but not by him he slew :
A hand unseen the treach'rous javelin threw.
And ere his sword had dealt its mortal wound,
His own best blood was curdling on the ground.
In that last blow was spent his ebbing might :
A misty veil is o'er his failing sight.
His will directs his reeling steps in vain.
He staggers, groans, then falls upon the slain.
PART II.
Oil, world of beauty ! Glorious light of day !
What heart, without regret, can pass away
From your live lustre, to the untried gloom
That veils the frowning portals of the tomb ?
No ! pain, without a pause, of tameless pow'r,
May swell each ling'ring moment to an hour :
And wintry age set in ; cold, dark, and dreary,
Without a hope, or solace to the weary :
And Death, with his deep sleep, should seem a friend
But life, and light, and air, are precious to the end.
How precious, then, in youth's unwither'd spring,
That's rife with love of ev'ry beauteous thing ;
THE VESTAL.
Op'ning, like magic, to the tearless eyes
That live in love, and pleasure, and surprise !
Enjoyment's path before, to Hope's high fane !
Mirth, music, flowers, without the thorns of pain !
And dear companions round, to whom we give
Souls unreserv'd ; and in whose life we live !
How precious ! and, if, in those jocund hours,
A voice should reach thee, in thy myrtle bow'rs.
Congealing into silence ev'ry tone
That fills the air, and syllable alone.
In stern and cold monotony, thy name !
Calling thee forth from love, and friends, and fame ;
And life's gay banquet, ere it half be sped ;
To nameless, distant dwellings of the dead : —
Then — tell me — then, what pang would pierce thy heart ?-
Or, could'st thou calm, without a pang depart t —
38 THE VESTAL.
II.
Shine on thy brightest, thou bright Sun ! thy hght
Will gild to-day a gladsome nuptial rite !
Youth, in whose nostrils swells the lib'ral breath
Of fullest life, the Bride of bony Death !
And smil'st thou not upon the festal train
Of hoary Superstition? — And the chain
Which is her bridal wreath ?— And that cold bed
Where life shall meet th' embraces of the dead ?
III.
Detested! shapeless idol ! in whose eye
Man quails with fears he knows not whence, nor why.
Still sitt'st thou proud and shameless on thy base,
Pale hearted mortals' terror and disgrace,
Dark Superstition ! — Reeking with the gore
Of ages stands thy shrine, and thirsts for more.
Yet eartli doth vomit forth the blood that's shed
For thee. — The populous cities of the dead,
THE VESTAr. 3