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Digitized by the Internet Archive 
 
 in 2007 with funding from 
 
 IVIicrosoft Corporation 
 
 http://www.archive.org/details/franklinotherpoeOOpocorich 
 
FRANKLIN and Other Poems 
 
 BY 
 
 I. J. INNES POCOCK 
 
 PRIVATELY PRINTED 
 
 LONDON 
 SPOTTISWOODE & CO.. PRINTERS, NEW-STREET SQUARE 
 
 1872 
 
DEDICATION. 
 
 These idle rJiyines demand no sacred bays ; 
 Forget to censure and forbear to praise. 
 Nor praise nor censure please a Poefs ear , 
 One may seem harsli^ the other insincere. 
 Then, if the giver you would best content. 
 hi silence take the gift, in silence sent. 
 
CONTENTS. 
 
 PAUF. 
 
 FRANKLIN I 
 
 PLAY '3 
 
 THE ROSES . . . . . . -I? 
 
 A JEWEL 20 
 
 AN ENIGMA (fROM A LATIN EPIGRAM) . .21 
 
 ARIADNE ....•*.• 22 
 
 TO A FAMOUS SINGER 3 2 
 
 THE DESERTED GARDEN 34 
 
 WINTER . 35 
 
 MOONSHINE 39 
 
VI 
 
 Contents. 
 
 SPRING 
 
 CEYX AND ALCYONE .... 
 
 THE CASTLE AND THE COTTAGE. 
 
 THE ORGAN BOYS . * . 
 
 THE SWALLOWS 
 
 THE HARTLEY COLLIERY ACCIDENT (1864) 
 
 OH ! NEVER DEEM 
 
 GOOD NIGHT ! . 
 
 PEACE .... 
 
 IHE WIND AND THE SQUIRREL 
 
 WAITING .... 
 
 'i IS LONG TO MAY 
 
 A HUNTING SONG 
 
 THE DANCING BEAR . 
 
 THE WALK ON THE MOOR 
 
 SLEEP .... 
 
Contents, 
 
 Vll 
 
 PAGI 
 
 THE MINSTREL (GOETHe) 95 
 
 THE BLIND KING (uHLAND) . , . .98 
 
 THE WALK BY MIDNIGHT (hERVEGH) . . I03 
 
 THE KING AND THE SHEPHERDESS (UHLAND) . I06 
 
 THE ranger's DAUGHTER (gEIBEL) . . . I20 
 
 THE minstrel's RETURN (uHLAND) . . 124 
 
 THE KING ON THE TOWER (uHLAND) , . 1 26 
 
 THE ANCESTRAL TOMBS (UHLAND) . . . 1 28 
 
 THE LOST CHURCH (UHLAND) . . , -ISO 
 
FRANKLIN. 
 
 As precious seeds by wandering breezes sown 
 
 In desert places unregarded fall, 
 Yet in due season to perfection grown 
 
 Make fairest show in Nature's festival, 
 So noble deeds, though hid from present praise, 
 
 Die not unfruitfulon the rocks of Time, 
 But blossom richly after many days, 
 
 With golden buds adorning many a clime, 
 And multiply in beauty and in worth. 
 With fair example filling all the earth. 
 
 B 
 
2 Fra7iklin, 
 
 Nor deem we theirs unprofitable death 
 
 Who give their hves for their dear fatherland, 
 Whether on battle plains they yield their breath, 
 
 Or tossed by tempests on some lonely strand. 
 And if in years long past, when Elsinore 
 
 Frowned on the wrecks of Copenhagen's day, 
 Or when the nations heard the battle roar 
 
 Of navies locked in famed Trafalgar's Bay, 
 Franklin had fallen beside his chieftain slain. 
 He had not died unhonoured nor in vain — 
 
 Yet had not shone conspicuous in the band 
 
 Of those best champions who with brows serene, 
 Starred by fair gems of patient valour, stand 
 
 On ramparts won, and o'er the bridge between 
 Across the gulfs of Death such lustre fling 
 
 That men may choose the master they should serve, 
 And having chosen him their Lord and King, 
 
 From this best, noblest service may not swerve, 
 But bear his banner evermore unfurled, 
 Though seas shall rage and tempests shake the world. 
 
Franklin. 3 
 
 For such was he, our country's pride and grief, 
 
 Through youth and manhood steadfast and the same, 
 Now calm and hopeful on the dangerous reef, 
 
 Now in the front of battle hot for fame. 
 All men were brothers 'neath his kindly sway ; 
 
 Enough that Franklin ruled, they asked no more ; 
 And so a Christian knight he held his way, 
 
 And Honour's chaplet ever stainless wore : 
 Wracked by rough winds and rimed with Arctic frost, 
 No bud was blighted, not a leaf was lost. 
 
 And so to him 'twas given the path to find. 
 
 And thread the labyrinth of that frozen clime. 
 Coil after coil the serpent folds unwind, 
 
 And drag the secret from reluctant Time, 
 Until beyond the confines of the flood, 
 
 Where blunted falls the daylight's golden spear, 
 Upon the threshold of the night he stood, 
 
 And looked beyond upon the causeway drear, 
 Where sternly met ocean by ocean stands ; 
 Cold friends they seem that clasp unwilling hands. 
 
 62 
 
^ Franklin. 
 
 O fearful mysteries of ice and snow, 
 
 O solemn secrets of the regions dead, 
 Where Winter sits enthroned; with pallid brow 
 
 He sees his drear dominions round him spread, 
 The earth lies palsied 'neath his iron hand, 
 
 No dainty courtiers grace his awful state, 
 The frozen winds before his footstool stand, 
 
 Breathless they seem his bidding to await, 
 The frozen seas his royal mantle gem, 
 And the red northern fnes burn round his Diadem. 
 
 Who dares withdraw the curtains of his gloom, 
 
 Or in his spacious palaces intrude ? 
 Rash guests are they, and heedless of their doom, 
 
 Who break the slumber of his solitude. 
 Onward and ever onward they may roam, 
 
 But hands unseen the noiseless barriers close ; 
 Farewell to all return, to love and home ; 
 
 Around, behind, the desolation grows ; 
 In vain they turn to that unclouded sky, 
 That smihng mocks them, while it bids them die. 
 
Fraiikliii. 5 
 
 Yet o'er this waste, through famine and distress, • 
 
 When first he led his faint and weary band, 
 They perished not, but in their hopelessness 
 
 Still hopeful clung to one Almighty hand. 
 Oft told the tale, by many an English hearth, 
 
 Of long endurance, hunger, toil, and woe, 
 How one foul heart, hard as the frozen earth. 
 
 With murder stained the yet uncrimsoned snow, 
 Yet he returned on England's shores to tell 
 To wondering ears the work performed so well. 
 
 But now why come they not to claim the meed 
 
 And wear the wreath % Lo ! where Britannia stands 
 With arms outstretched to praise the glorious deed, 
 
 She bears a crown of laurel in her hands, 
 Her fondest looks, her kindest smiles prepares ; 
 
 The Winter comes, they will return ere long ; 
 His last bare wreath departing Autumn wears ; 
 
 Why do they tarry % asks each anxious tongue : 
 Behold ! Orion in the East hath set 
 His shining signals ! but they come not yet. 
 
6 Franklin. 
 
 They come not yet : now melt the frosts away, 
 
 And Spring prepares anew his hawthorn bowers ; 
 Now vaunting Summer leads the lingering day 
 
 Through all his treasured wealth of fruits and flowers. 
 Our ports are thronged with many a foreign sail, 
 
 From North and South they come, and East and West, 
 Yet to our shores there wafts no friendly gale 
 
 Those whom we long for most, and love the best; 
 And see, the swallows are together met, 
 They hasten homeward — Franklin comes not yet. 
 
 Year treads on year, a generation dies, 
 
 Youth grows to age, but they no more return ; 
 E'en Hope is dumb, while with beseeching eyes 
 
 Pale Sorrow sits beside her empty urn. 
 Will none go forth to seek ? perchance to save ? 
 
 Straightway new bands of heroes England sent; 
 Our brothers too beyond the Western wave 
 
 Their willing hearts and hands to help us lent ; 
 France gave her son, and dried her tears for pride, 
 To see how England wept when Bellot died. 
 
Franklin. 7 
 
 Strange tales they bring from seas unploughed before, 
 
 Of dying men with hunger weak and loil, 
 Like spectres wandering on the wintry shore, 
 
 Of lonely graves upon the barren isle. 
 But many a bitter prayer was heard in Heaven, 
 
 Closed many a sleepless night on weary day, 
 Ere unto truthful wedded love 'twas given 
 
 To lead the Nation where her children lay — 
 Ere those cold lips their stony silence broke, 
 And, moved by woman's tears, grim Winter spoke. 
 
 Honour to her, that Lady true and brave, 
 
 Who, strong alike in purpose as in love, 
 Earth's joys and treasures unregretting gave 
 
 Through doubt and death Affection's might to prove. 
 What though her tears bedew no sunny sward, 
 
 Where flowers may spring to thank Love's labour spent? 
 Her work is crowned, she loseth not reward. 
 
 While memory lives and conscience brings content, 
 Nor heeds, secure of his renown, that she 
 Hath share in all with just posterity. 
 
8 Franklin, 
 
 Nor be their names forgot, the gallant crew, 
 
 Whose little bark those Arctic perils dared ; 
 All praise to them, the brave, adventurous few, 
 
 Who by M'Clintock's side his honours shared. 
 W^e read the seaman's tale so simply told, 
 
 With him each creek and island we explore, 
 Partake the toils, those stirring lines unfold, 
 
 And while we weep for them we greet no more. 
 With English hearts and English cheers we come 
 To bid the gallant ' Fox ' a welcome home. 
 
 ^ For now the veil is lifted, and we gaze 
 
 Where dimly seen, as in some magic glass, 
 While the clouds break, and melts the misty haze, 
 
 Shade after shade the long-lost wanderers pass. 
 From that sad landing in Cape Victory's bay, 
 
 Where the rude cairn the scanty record gave, 
 Awhile we watch them journeying day by day 
 
 Along the margin of the icebound wave, 
 And then — in vain our eager eyes we strain ; 
 The mists close round, and all is dark again. 
 
Frajiklin. . 9 
 
 How high their hopes when, that first winter o'er, 
 
 They hailed again the sun's returning smile ! 
 With hearts unshaken hoisted sail once more, 
 
 And bid farewell to Beechey's friendly isle, 
 And southward soon with prospering winds they steer, 
 
 And Boothia's shores bay after bay are past, 
 And now King William's northern point they near; 
 
 The prize long sought must crowm their toil at last : 
 Long ere yon sun shall set their course they'll shape 
 Where flow the narrowing seas round Herschel's cape. 
 
 But now with sluggish pace the vessels glide. 
 
 And scarce advance against the gathering floes ; 
 Still southward moves the slow but ceaseless tide, 
 
 And southward ever crawl th' increasing foes. 
 For winter's armies hosts on hosts are met, 
 
 To bar the way; on every side increase 
 The ponderous masses, every path beset, 
 
 Deny all progress, and forbid release, 
 Till shield by shield encamp, and helm by helm. 
 The frozen giants of the Arctic realm. 
 
lo Franklin. 
 
 So two long winters held their ships beset 
 
 In that wild haven mid the waste of snows ; 
 Twice spring returned ; but unreceding yet 
 
 Against the eastern sky Cape Felix rose ; 
 And day by day their scanty store grew less, 
 
 And sickness came to thin their feeble crew, 
 And ever lonelier seemed the loneliness, 
 
 And the waste widened and the darkness grew ; 
 Then went they forth a hunger- stricken band 
 From the unpitying sea to the more cruel land. 
 
 Eleven long winters 'neath the crag concealed 
 
 The record lay those dying fingers penned ; 
 At length the page of sorrow stands revealed, 
 
 And vain conjecture ponders o'er the end. 
 Not mine the task, nor meet for idle verse 
 
 To shape the tale those dubious words suggest ; 
 Their labours past a few short lines rehearse, 
 
 No fears they speak, but leave to God the rest : 
 Nor ours to lift the veil ; by Him alone 
 Their deeds were chronicled, their sufferings known. 
 
Franklin. 1 1 
 
 Ah ! could they speak, those fleshless forms that keep 
 
 Their lonely watch, where, by the mouldering keel, 
 The ready triggers guard the useless heap, 
 
 Unprized by death what tales could they reveal ? 
 Or ask of him, the bleached and ghastly form, 
 
 That lies mute witness of the triumph won, 
 Unscathed by tooth of wolf, or breath of storm, 
 
 What woes were suffered, and what deeds were done, 
 Ere came at last those pilgrims faint and sore 
 To that Great River on the happier shore. 
 
 But he their chief? When June's returning sun 
 
 With melting icedrops streaked the idle mast, 
 Long months ere yet that hopeless march begun 
 
 His gentle spirit to its rest had past. 
 Peace to the brave, the just, the wise, the good, 
 
 Of all that mourned that day their leader's fate, 
 And followed sadly o'er the frozen flood 
 
 All mute ! not one the story to relate ; 
 And yet enough : he reached the goal and died, 
 His fame survives him and his deeds abide. 
 
T 2 Franklin. 
 
 Peace to the brave ! Ah ! wherefore should we weep ? 
 
 In honour perfect, not unripe in years, 
 He calmly rests, and sleeps a quiet sleep; 
 
 We will not dim his glory with our tears. 
 No proud cathedral holds its honoured dead. 
 
 But the tall icebergs lift their silvery spires ; 
 No torches burn, but high above his head 
 
 The meteor lights flash their eternal fires : 
 What though nor organ peal, nor anthem swell ? 
 There calm-eyed Silence sits, and guards his chamber well. 
 
 And so we give his body to the deep, 
 
 There to abide the coming of the day 
 When the fierce flame from pole to pole shall sweep, 
 
 And ice and frost for ever melt away. 
 We blindly grope, and seek with darkened eyes ; 
 
 But long ago his vessel touched the shore. 
 High up the golden sands secure she lies. 
 
 Where never sea shall shake her bulwarks more. 
 Where Night and Winter can no shadow fling, 
 But suns unsetting roll, and flowers eternal spring. 
 
PLAY. 
 
 I. 
 
 Sweet hawthorn bring, 
 
 Fresh violets fling, 
 Scatter with snowdrops the pathway of Spring ; 
 i^'he hoar frosts are mehed, the swallows are come, 
 They twitter and chirp to the welcome of home, 
 An<J merry the chime of the schoolboy's glee 
 As he mocks the brown cuckoo that sits on the tree. 
 
 A carol they sing 
 
 To the glorious Spring, 
 Fanning the hills with his purple wing. 
 The school is all over, the books put away, 
 The boys and the girls are out and at play. 
 
14 Play. 
 
 II. 
 
 O kind warm June, art thou come so soon, 
 With tlie fragrant morning and glowing noon, 
 While the still white clouds in the azure sky- 
 Like ships on a distant ocean lie. 
 Till tender night, like the shadow of day, 
 Follows her sister the twilight gray ? 
 
 O balmy June, 
 
 Fly not so soon, 
 We love the light of thy patient moon, 
 That shines unwearied o'er lawn and grove 
 While we dance to the music of youth and love 
 
Play. 15 
 
 III. 
 
 Autumn is here : 
 
 Yellow and sere 
 The dead leaves drop on the glistening mere ; 
 The horses feed by the empty wain, 
 That rocked 'neath the load of the gathered grain ; 
 The fields are silent, the gleaners are gone, 
 The tired earth rests, her work is done. 
 
 O tarry awhile, 
 
 With thy golden smile, 
 With sleep for sorrow, repose for toil ; 
 A little while let her children play, 
 For this is Nature's holyday. 
 
t6 Play, 
 
 IV. 
 
 Heigh ho ! winter and snow ! 
 
 The white flakes falling silent and slow ; 
 
 I draw my chair to the freezing pane, 
 
 And watch the children that play in the lane 
 
 The shouts and laughter I fain would hear, 
 
 But sounds fall dead on an old man's ear. 
 
 Heigh ho ! 
 
 The night and the snow, 
 The windows darken, the fire burns low. 
 The night is coming to end the day, 
 There's no more time for work or play. 
 
17 
 
 THE ROSES. 
 
 Twin roses in my garden grow, 
 
 Twin roses red and white, 
 I know not which shall fairest show, 
 
 And most my love delight. 
 
 ' O sweet red rose, red rose,' I cried ; 
 
 ' Fair is thy crimson flush, 
 As bright and radiant as my bride, 
 
 Soft as her tender blush.' 
 
 ' O sweet white rose, white rose, in thee. 
 
 No meaner charms I find ; 
 Thou seemest true and pure as she. 
 
 And stainless as her mind.' 
 c 
 
1 8 The Roses. 
 
 The red rose, gathered from its place, 
 
 Unto my love I bare ; 
 She took it with an angel grace, 
 
 And twined it in her hair. 
 
 Amidst her tresses, like a gem, 
 It shone, and seemed to grow 
 
 More beauteous there, than on the stem. 
 Where first I marked it blow. 
 
 But when the evening shadows came, 
 And lengthened down the glade. 
 
 And all the sky seemed filled with flame, 
 The rose began to fade. 
 
 And when the fires that reddened o'er 
 The Western clouds were fled, 
 
 The darkness came, that went no more. 
 My love, my life was dead. 
 
/ The Roses. \ 9 
 
 I plucked the white rose, pure and true, 
 
 And laid it on her breast • 
 * O sweet white rose, thy constant hue 
 
 Became her beauty best.' 
 
 The roses in my garden grow, 
 
 The roses white and red, 
 I heed them not, how fair they show. 
 
 My love, my life is dead. 
 
 c 2 
 
JO 
 
 A [EWEL. 
 
 They say you are a jewel, and I own 
 You well are likened to some precious stone, 
 Polished, and bright, and pure, but hard and cold, 
 And only fit for wear when set in gold. 
 
21 
 
 AlV ENIGMA. 
 
 FROM A LATIX EPIGRAM. 
 
 To me Parrhasius and Apelles yield, 
 More true my colours diougli my art 's concealed 
 My form, like Proteus, every shape displays : 
 Like Paris, e'en on goddesses I gaze. 
 Not Cato's self was Censor so severe, 
 Speechless I am, yet all my judgments fear: 
 By many questioned, nought but truth I tell. 
 And yet a falsehood oft would please as well. 
 Look on yourself, if me you fain would know ; 
 For showing others, I myself must show. 
 
22 
 
 ARIADNE, 
 
 Wherefore, maiden, art thou lying 
 On the lonely Naxian shore ; 
 
 Stars are fading, night is flying, 
 Ariadne ! sleep no more. 
 
 Now the moon her watch is ending. 
 That did vigil o'er thee keep ; 
 
 And the golden wheels ascending, 
 Rim with light the Eastern deep. 
 
 On her bed, beside the billow. 
 Dreamily the maiden turns, 
 
 Where the sea-sand made her pillow. 
 Heaped like gold from ocean's urns. 
 
Ariadjie. 23 
 
 Slowly she her night-black tresses, 
 From the pale earth lifting, still 
 
 Waking woos the fond caresses 
 That her shadowy slumbers fill. 
 
 Turns those eyes where love should meet her. 
 
 Turns to him that bosom fair, 
 But no lover's kisses greet her. 
 
 And her arms embrace but air. 
 
 ^ Theseus ! wherefore hast thou left me ? 
 
 From her couch in haste she springs; 
 ^ Theseus I who hath thus bereft me ! ' 
 
 Loud her lamentation rings. 
 
 And the wild waves answer ' Theseus ! ' 
 Shoreward rolling from the main ; 
 
 And the caverns answer ' Theseus ! ' 
 To the roaring seas again. 
 
24 Ariadne. 
 
 ' Theseus ! let the echoes carry 
 
 Forth thy name where thou hast strayed 
 
 Theseus ! wherefore dost thou tarry ? 
 Ah ! what woe were I betrayed. 
 
 ' Thou hast wandered forth to hsten 
 To the sighing of the waves, 
 
 Where the dying moonbeams gHsten 
 O'er the crystal cornered caves. 
 
 • Gathering all the pearly treasures 
 Scattered from the Nereids' hair, 
 
 While they danced their nightly measures, 
 For thy bride a chaplet fair. 
 
 ' Or, perchance, some creek of ocean, 
 Whose clear depths the W^est wind warms, 
 
 Murmuring with soft emotion, 
 
 Clasps thee round with loving arms. 
 
Ariadne. 25 
 
 ' Ah 1 but I am idly dreaming, 
 
 Would that sight and sense might fail I 
 
 O'er the dusky waters gleaming, 
 I behold thy flying sail. 
 
 ' Thou wilt banquet crowned with glory, 
 In the halls that Cecrops trod. 
 
 Where the bards that sing thy story, 
 Hail thee, Hero ! hail thee, God ! 
 
 ' Far beyond yon waste of waters 
 Thou wilt find a fairer bride ; 
 
 Kinglike sons and queenlike daughters 
 Grow in beauty at thy side. 
 
 ' But my night no morn shall brighten. 
 
 None shall stretch a hand to save, 
 Where my tombless bones shall whiten, 
 
 By the lone Egean wave. 
 
26 Ariadne. 
 
 ' From their cloud-begirt dominions, 
 At the coming of the day, 
 
 Downward borne on shining pinions 
 Swoop the sea-birds on their prey. 
 
 ' Maidens there shall none be keeping 
 Watch beside me where I lie ; 
 
 Mother there shall none be weeping 
 In my chamber while I die. 
 
 ' Now, perchance, she sits lamenting ; 
 
 Mother love bestowed in vain ; 
 Bitter waking ! vain repenting ! 
 
 Cruel Eros, loose thy chain ! 
 
 ' I will hasten ere the morning, 
 Growing into perfect day, 
 
 Light the monstrous brood returning 
 Seaward from their nightly prey. 
 
Ariadne. 27 
 
 ' I will hasten ere they rend me, 
 
 Ere the greedy troop be met ; 
 Though nor sky nor earth defend me, 
 
 I shall find a refuge yet. 
 
 ' Ocean, father Ocean ! hear me ; 
 
 Clasp me to thy bosom cold. 
 Ocean, father Ocean ! bear me 
 
 In thy mantle's purple fold. 
 
 ' Take me to thy silent dwelling ; 
 
 Hide me in thy secret cells ; 
 Where the billows, downward welling. 
 
 Sink upon their couch of shells. 
 
 ' O to slumber there were better 
 
 Than some pirate's bride to be, 
 Bound in worse than Slavery's fetter, 
 
 I, thy child, Pasiphae ! 
 
28 Ariadne. 
 
 ' I, great Minos ! I, thy daughter, 
 Nurtured at thy kingly feet, 
 
 Far beyond yon world of water, 
 In thy hundred-citied Crete. 
 
 ' Wherefore am I idly speaking ? 
 
 What are land or sire to me ? 
 Chains there are that know no breaking 
 
 " Theseus ! I was wed to thee." 
 
 ' Wed to thee, though seas divide us 
 Thou my bridegroom, I thy bride. 
 
 Evermore till black Cocytus 
 Roll between his ghastly tide. 
 
 • Hades ! guide me to thy portal ; ' 
 But the billows hushed their roar, 
 
 And there spake a voice immortal, 
 ' Ariadne ! weep no more. 
 
Ariadne. 29 
 
 ' Weep no wrong that Earth may do thee, 
 Thou shalt wed a mightier King ; 
 
 Great Lyasus comes to woo thee; 
 Hark ! the silver clarions ring. 
 
 ' Hark ! the clashing cymbal sounding 
 With the hymn of triumph peals ; 
 
 Nymphs and Fauns the God surrounding, 
 Dance before his chariot wheels. 
 
 ' High the leafy Thyrsus waving 
 Flash their vine-empurpled hands ; 
 
 Shouting, singing, wildly raving, 
 Come the Bacchanalian bands. 
 
 ' They who guard his glittering porches, 
 They who haunt his shadowy glades, 
 
 With flowing hair and flaming torches 
 Come the Mimallonian Maids. 
 
30 Ariadne. 
 
 ' Evoe ! Evoe ! shouting, never 
 Does the echoing chorus fail ; 
 
 Evoe ! Evoe ! hail for ever ! 
 Chosen bride of Bacchus, hail ! 
 
 ' 'Mid the starry constellations 
 Soon a goddess thou shalt rise ; 
 
 While, from every shore, the nations 
 Heavenward gaze with wondering eyes. 
 
 ' Where the gleaming javelin bearing, 
 Great Bootes guards thy throne j 
 
 And the lion-trophies wearing 
 Shines Alcmena's mighty son. 
 
 * Oft ere dawn the shepherd, dreaming 
 
 On the dark Idaean height. 
 Shall behold thy glory streaming 
 
 Round the lingering steps of night. 
 
Ariadne. 31 
 
 ' Oft the seaman, homeward steering, 
 
 Furl the sail and rest the oar, 
 Till thy Cretan crown appearing 
 
 Guide his vessel to the shore.' 
 
6- 
 
 TO A FAMOUS SINGER. 
 
 No more thy thronging votaries come, 
 The fire is quenched, the altar cold, 
 
 The garlands dead, the priestess dumb, 
 Nay e'en the Goddess has grown old. 
 
 Lost is the glorious gift of song, 
 That, like a river, deep and wide, 
 
 With flood melodious swept along 
 Our hearts on its resistless tide. 
 
 But we who worshipped, worship still ; 
 
 The music lingers in our ears ; 
 The magic tones our senses thrill, 
 
 With echoes borne from distant Nears, 
 
To a Famo2is Singer. 33 
 
 A\'ith jealous eyes we watch the throne, 
 Still vacant in the gorgeous scene ; 
 
 And deem the sceptre still thy own, 
 Till Song shall c^own as great a queen. 
 
34 
 
 THE DESERTED GARDEN. 
 
 Ye roses, wherefore do ye bloom so fair 
 
 To wither on the icy heart of earth ; 
 There comes no hand to pluck your blossoms rare, 
 
 Nor eye to see, nor tongue to praise your worth ; 
 In these dull paths, by no steps visited, 
 The swift hours slumber, Time and Life seem dead. 
 
 But every flower more crimson seemed to flush, 
 The heavy air a softer fragrance filled, 
 
 And through the silent garden's burning hush, 
 A whisper went, that all my being thrilled : 
 
 ' We breathe and bloom in our appointed spot, 
 And wait Love's coming, though he heed us not.' 
 
35 
 
 WINTER. 
 
 The world grew fairer still, but he 
 
 Was feebler day by day ; 
 Old Winter looked, and sighed to see 
 
 His kingdom pass away. 
 
 The rivers glided from his grasp ; 
 
 The fields forsook his thrall ; 
 The winds his palace gates unclasp, 
 
 And loose his bondsmen all. 
 
 No vain lament he made to show 
 The loss of friends and throne, 
 
 And yield derision to his foe, 
 But wandered forth alone. 
 
 D 2 
 
36 Winter, 
 
 And Summer came, with vauntful heart 
 He hastened, well content 
 
 To see the grey old King depart, 
 And jeered him as he went. 
 
 He summoned all his comrades gay, 
 They came, a merry throng ; 
 
 They feasted all the lengthening day, 
 With mirth, and dance, and son^^. 
 
 They plucked the fruits, they quaffed the wine 
 In chambers strewn with flowers, 
 
 'Neath suns that never ceased to shine 
 Through all the cloudless hours. 
 
 And flushed with triumph Summer spake, 
 
 ' A glorious land I sway ; 
 Here will I sit enthroned, and make 
 
 Eternal hoUday.' 
 
Winter. 
 
 What means the darkness gathering round ? 
 
 Why did the forest sigh ? 
 The crisp leaves tremble to the ground, 
 
 The gardens droop and die? 
 
 And rougher \\dnds begin to blow, 
 
 The whitening waves rejoice, 
 For in the tempest's muttering low 
 
 They hear their master's voice. 
 
 Once weak and old he tottered out, 
 
 But now with lance and helm 
 He comes again, a champion stout. 
 
 To claim his ancient realm. 
 
 As night came down, new stars were met, 
 And, when the morning rose, 
 
 Along the crimson peaks were set 
 His sentinels— the snows. 
 
 0/ 
 
38 Winter. 
 
 The black north-wind his banner hfts 
 
 Behind the hills of pine ; 
 Between the frosty mountain rifts 
 
 The spears of silver shine. 
 
 From rock to rock, from ridge to ridge, 
 The conquering armies come; 
 
 Before their tramp was on the bridge, 
 The stream beneath was dumb. 
 
 Earth hears her ancient lord's command, 
 Nor dares disown his reign; 
 
 For Winter stetches out his hand, 
 And makes us slaves acrain. 
 
3Q 
 
 MOONSHIAE. 
 
 A QUIET village hidden lies 
 
 Among the breezy Wiltshire downs, 
 Where Nature looks with kindly eyes 
 
 On simple maids and witless clowns. 
 
 Where dwelt their sires, they live at peace, 
 Content with one unchanging scene, 
 
 And little wiser than their geese 
 That cackle on the village green. 
 
 Strange tales the country gossips tell, 
 Of those rude sires that slumber all, 
 
 Where the low churchyard hillocks swell, 
 And the broad chestnut shadows fall. 
 
40 Moonshine. 
 
 How in old days, with trouble great, 
 They saw those stately trees arise, 
 
 While the loved tower ne'er changed his state, 
 Nor mounted nearer to the skies. 
 
 How Hodge and Giles in counsel met, 
 And after sage discourse and long, 
 
 From the farmyard the straw would get, 
 And spread it well with spade and prong. 
 
 The ancient walls they dug around, 
 The deep foundations covered o'er, 
 
 Then watched, and wondered when they found 
 The tower no taller than before. 
 
 But Robin Flinthead oft had seen. 
 Reflected in the village pond. 
 
 The full round moon, whose silver sheen, 
 Lit all the vale and hills beyond ; 
 
Moonshine. 
 
 And pondered ere he went to sleep, 
 ' What priceless treasure this must be, 
 
 That shines so bright, though sunk so deep, 
 Lost to my village mates and me. 
 
 ' 'Tis pity that it thus should He, 
 
 'Twould gladden many a heavy soul. 
 
 To fish it up 'twere best to try. 
 
 What joy to win that golden bowl' 
 
 And so the foolish crew began, 
 
 Each clodpole with his rake in hand, 
 
 To stir the pond : O lucky man, 
 Who brings the golden fish to land! 
 
 They raked and raked, but nought they found, 
 Till night gave way to reddening morn, 
 
 While the still moonlight shone around. 
 And laughed their silly pains to scorn. 
 
42 Moonshine. 
 
 The glassy pool grew foul and thick, 
 
 The grassy banks with mud were smeared, 
 
 And when the moon went down, how quick 
 The golden treasure disappeared 1 
 
 But far and wide the story went, 
 
 And still the neighbours one and all, 
 
 Those swains of wisdom innocent, 
 The moonrakers of Canning call. 
 
 An idle tale, that helps to-night 
 
 To string my rhymes, my verse to fill ; 
 
 Yet we may mock, or read aright, 
 And learn a moral, if we will. 
 
 We trouble oft Life's lucid streams. 
 With longings vain ; our eager eyes 
 
 Search all its depths for stars that gleam, 
 Reflected only from the skies; 
 
Moons/iuic. 43 
 
 To many a foolish purpose hold. 
 And grope and stumble till we fall, 
 
 And find that what we sought as gold, 
 Was only Moonshine after all. 
 
44 
 
 SFJ^ING. 
 I. 
 
 We hear no more 
 
 The winter hoar, 
 His icy fetters clink, 
 
 The royal Spring 
 
 Comes Hke a king, 
 With banners white and pink. 
 
 The mill-wheel goes, 
 
 The river flows, 
 Bubbling over the brink. 
 
 There are odours rare. 
 
 And songs in the air. 
 The cuckoo's come, I think, I think 
 The cuckoo's come, I think. 
 
spring. 45 
 
 II. 
 
 Dear Lucy's eyes, 
 From yonder skies, 
 
 A deeper violet drink : 
 O ! Love lies deep, 
 Yet seems to peep, 
 
 Like sunshine through a chink. 
 Ah 1 cold as snow, 
 But who can know 
 
 What rosy chains may link 
 Our hearts to-day, 
 Then, blushing May, 
 
 ril ask again, I think, I think ; 
 
 I'll ask again, I think. 
 
46 
 
 CEYX AND ALCYONE. 
 
 1 HE incense rises, at the shrine she kneels, 
 
 Alcyone, the true and gentle queen : 
 Slow rolls the night on her celestial wheels, 
 
 O'er silent shores and ocean gulphs between, 
 Till the sad Hyads close their weeping eyes, 
 
 And cold Arcturus fades in brighter air. 
 Still on the temple's marble floor she hes ; 
 
 And still she pours her unavailing prayer, 
 ' O guard my Ceyx o'er yon treacherous wave, 
 O hear me, mighty Juno ! hear and save. 
 
Ceyx and Alcyone. 47 
 
 •Great Ocean lies as in eternal sleep, 
 
 But I have listened to his angry roar, 
 And watched with awe the seething billows sweep, 
 
 And thunder on the black Trachynian shore, 
 And seen the broken planks bestrew the strand, 
 
 And read their names upon the empty stone. 
 That far away from friends and native land 
 
 Unburied lie, or rock in floods unknown. 
 Great is the Clarian God, and proud his fane, 
 But long the way and terrible the main. 
 
 ' What though he calls on Lucifer his sire, 
 
 Yet Horror lurks along the pathless way. 
 And clouds and darkness hide the Star-god's fire. 
 
 And all the winds are greedy for their prey. 
 ]\Iy father keeps them in th' CEolian cave, 
 
 Pent round with rocks, and girt with many a chain. 
 Of old I trembled when I heard them rave, 
 
 And now, if they should break their bonds again ! 
 Eurus and Notus, well their might I know, 
 And the broad wings of blustering Aquilo. 
 
48 Ceyx and Alcyone. 
 
 ' Ere Luna thrice her narrowing horns should fill, 
 
 The ships should come \ I watched wdth sleepless 
 eyes, 
 And lo ! to-night, on CEta's pine-clad hill, 
 
 I saw the silver orb completed rise ; 
 The wine is poured, the softest couch is spread, 
 
 The baths prepared his weary Hmbs to lave. 
 And love to smooth the pillow for his head. 
 
 And yet he comes not ; Juno, guard and save 
 My Ceyx tossed on yonder terrible seal 
 O mighty Juno ! bring my lord to me.' 
 
 Vain supplications ! unavailing tears ! 
 
 Th' inexorable Gods are hard to move ; 
 Stern Orcus weeps not, heeds not if he hears 
 
 The bitterest sorrows and the truest love. 
 And lo ! beneath the golden domes of dawm, 
 
 Where the dumb waves in stately measure glide. 
 With ghastly pomp a crownless king is borne. 
 
 Stretched on the lingering chariot of the tide. 
 A crownless, lifeless king the conqueror sea 
 Gives back thy lord beloved, Alcyone. 
 
Ceyx and Alcyone. 49 
 
 * Thus art thou come ? and all my vows in vain, 
 
 Thus pale and cold, O spouse ! beloved,' she cries ; 
 
 * But pale and cold I kiss thy cheek again, 
 
 And mine the couch where'er my Ceyx lies.' 
 Too late relenting Juno heeds her woe. 
 
 And Hades, half-reluctant, yields his right; 
 Yet downward still th' eternal rivers flow, 
 
 Nor Jove can all undo their grievous plight. 
 Yet what they may, the Gods in pity give, 
 Through life to mourn, yet mourning still to live. 
 
 They live, but changed in form, twin birds they rove 
 
 The wintry seas, their former state forgot. 
 And so prolong their sorrows and their love. 
 
 In such content as fits their meaner lot. 
 Now OEolus subdues the vexing gale, 
 
 While she securely tends her feathered brood ; 
 Pleased at the sight the shipman hoists his sail, 
 
 Fearless of harm, and knows the omen good. 
 Nor heeds that ever tale so sad could be 
 As this of Ceyx and Alcyone. 
 
50 
 
 THE CASTLE AND THE COTTAGE. 
 
 In the great Bohemian forest the giant Arber stands, 
 And casts his dusky shadow far o'er the broad German 
 
 lands ; 
 The roaming winds with wreaths of cloud his wrinkled 
 
 , forehead crown; 
 A thousand streams through shrouds of mist from crag 
 
 to crag leap down ; 
 They roar along his rocky slopes, until at last they 
 
 meet, 
 Lost in the lake that, deep and broad, lies stretched 
 
 before his feet ; 
 And there, far up the steep, of old a stately castle 
 
 stood, 
 Men still may mark the crumbling stones, who pierce 
 
 the frowning wood ; 
 
The Castle and the Cottage. 5 1 
 
 But never hunter loves to roam those gloomy ruins 
 
 near, 
 In hottest chase he slacks his pace though hard upon 
 
 the deer \ 
 No woodman loves to lift the axe, though straight the 
 
 pines and tall. 
 Within the horror-haunted shade of that grim castle 
 
 wall; 
 The boatman on the lake beneath more quickly plies 
 
 the oar, 
 With holy sign and muttered prayer to shun the 
 
 dreaded shore. 
 Proud was that stately castle once, the sunset's crimson 
 
 glow -, 
 Burned from its battlemented front for many a league 
 
 below ; 
 And broad and straight the terraced walks, and gay 
 
 the garden bowers. 
 Mingling their hues with rainbow gleams shed from 
 
 the fleeting showers. 
 
52 The Castle and the Cottage. 
 
 There nestling, at the mountain's feet, a fisher's cottage 
 
 lay, 
 Where the calm waves crept jound the point and 
 
 curved the pebbly bay ; 
 And there, as closed the summer days, their nours of 
 
 labour done, 
 Before the threshold oft would sit the fisher and his 
 
 son — 
 A tender child, and yet with strength to share his 
 
 father's toil, 
 Whose little life had calmly flowed unstained by sin or 
 
 guile. 
 The father reckons up his gains as o'er their task they 
 
 bend, 
 And spread the straining nets to dry, or broken row- 
 lock mend ; 
 And when they end their work at last, and hills and 
 
 lake grow dim, 
 There rises with the curling mists the fisher's evening 
 
 hymn. 
 
The Castle and the Cottage. 53 
 
 So summer went, but wilder sounds /and sights the 
 
 winter brought, 
 For then the Baron with his train that ancient castle 
 
 sought ; 
 With hound and horse and groom and page a joyous 
 
 troop they came. 
 And many a lordly reveller, and many a merry 
 
 dame. 
 Day after day those comrades gay ranged the wide 
 
 forest o'er, 
 And loosed the couples at the stag, and speared the 
 
 angry boar. 
 At night around the board they met, a wild and reckless 
 
 throng. 
 While fled the hours with godless jests and many a 
 
 ribald song ; 
 No Sabbath mom arose to claim its meet observance 
 
 there. 
 No solemn bell with warning voice proclaimed the 
 
 hour of prayer. 
 
54 The Castle aiid the Cottage. 
 
 The chaplain in the Baron's train he was a scurvy 
 
 priest, 
 And ever foremost in the brawl, and latest at the 
 
 feast. 
 So when December's nights were rough, and all the 
 
 lake rolled in 
 In hoary waves, the riot rose above the tempest's 
 
 din. 
 The pious fisher heard in awe, and, closer to his 
 
 breast, 
 He clasped the child, and longer prayed, though past 
 
 the hour for rest. 
 For oft he deemed, o'er lake and hill as rung the 
 
 devilish rout, 
 Strange voices mingled with the breeze, and yelled 
 
 the chorus out ; 
 And demon shouts and laughter wild the tumult helped 
 
 to swell, 
 Mingling with man's unholy mirth the revelry of 
 
 Hell 
 
The Castle and the Cottage. 5 5 
 
 It was the sacred Christmas time, before the castle 
 
 gate, 
 His well-filled basket by his side the boy untroubled 
 
 sate, 
 Of trout and perch and carp and tench he brought a 
 
 glittering store, 
 And waited for his hard-won meed before the wicket 
 
 door ; 
 For such the pious sire's command, no foot to set 
 
 within 
 Those godless gates, lest he perchance partake the 
 
 shame and sin. 
 Forth came a serving-man in haste, and when the boy 
 
 he spied, 
 ' Now quick unto the village speed and take this purse,' 
 
 he cried; 
 * For many a lamp we have to fill, and many a taper 
 
 bright 
 Must burn to light the royal feast in yonder halls to- 
 night.' 
 
56 The Castle and the Cottage. 
 
 The boy he sped, the sun glowed red, the trees were 
 
 rough with rime, 
 The ice shafts cracked beneath his feet, it was a merrj' 
 
 time ; 
 The boy he sped, the village reached, his errand soon 
 
 was done, 
 ' Yet stay,' the master said, for well he knew the 
 
 fisher's son, 
 ' Now take, my boy, these tapers three,' the master 
 
 said and smiled, 
 ' And burn them on this sacred night before the Holy 
 
 Child.' 
 The sun has set, the streaks of gold have faded from 
 
 the steep, 
 Along the rugged mountain's side the twilight shadows 
 
 creep, 
 More purple grows the sky above, more dim the lake 
 
 below, 
 Where quivering on the rippling flood the lights re- 
 flected glow. 
 
The Castle and the Cottage. 
 
 D/ 
 
 For, in the lattice window placed, there burned the 
 
 tapers three, 
 And son and sire together bowed with suppliant hand 
 
 and knee ; 
 With welcome to the Child Divine the solemn hymn 
 
 they pour, 
 And read with awe the sacred page as comes th' ex- 
 pected hour. 
 That night the Fiend roamed o'er the earth, his soul 
 
 was filled with spleen, 
 Where'er he turned some altar burned, some pious 
 
 work was seen ; 
 Through the church windows bright he gazed, in 
 
 anger and despair. 
 For every voice was tuned to praise, each hand was 
 
 clasped in prayer. 
 Then flashed his eye with joy, I ween, and loud his 
 
 laughter rung. 
 When, on that castle proud, his gaze the arch deceiver 
 
 flung : 
 
58 The Castle and the Cottage. 
 
 * Cower as ye will, ye mumming slaves, O ! here's a 
 
 braver show. 
 How full they fill the goblets up, how bright the 
 
 torches glow ! 
 There's not a lamp in yonder hall but sheds for me 
 
 its blaze, 
 There's not a song at yonder board but celebrates my 
 
 praise.' 
 Meantime the huntsman Walter thought (a thirsty 
 
 knave was he) 
 Beneath the castle vaults to pry and search what there 
 
 might be ; 
 For he had heard that choicest wines were stored 
 
 those caves within, 
 What better night than this to try the long-forbidden 
 
 bin? 
 Old Hugo, careless of his trust, in drunken slumber 
 
 lay; 
 'Twas easy to his side to creep and steal the keys 
 
 away ; 
 
The Castle and the Cottage. 59 
 
 Bright blazed the torch, he bores the cask, no purple 
 
 juice doth pour, 
 A black thin powder slowly runs across the cellar 
 
 floor. 
 No wine is here, those barrels grim a mightier power 
 
 contain. 
 And purple shall the vintage be pressed from that 
 
 gloomy grain. 
 Nor long the pause ! a crash more loud than thunder 
 
 rends the sky. 
 The rocks are rent, the trees are bent, and tossed Uke 
 
 stalks on high; 
 The quiet lake, roused from its depths, as by an earth- 
 quake's shock, 
 Leaps up; the startled fisher's barks with sudden 
 
 tempest rock ; 
 Tossed high in air, like fans of flame, the crackling 
 
 fragments tower. 
 Then scattered far, o'er land and lake, falls back the 
 
 fiery shower. 
 
6o The Castle and the Cottage. 
 
 O Heaven ! protect the cottage now ; and lo ! an angel 
 
 stands, 
 His glittering spear he waves around with high uplifted 
 
 hands ; 
 P^ar flash across the glooms of night the splendours of 
 
 his wings, 
 As o'er that lowly fisher's roof their shining shield he 
 
 flings ; 
 For his the heaven-appointed task to guard that pure 
 
 abode, 
 The lowliest shrine can shelter find -within the shade 
 
 of God. 
 The storm has ceased ; the echoes die that rolled 
 
 from hill to hill ; 
 The waters of the lake subside ; the woods lie green 
 
 and still ; 
 All silent ! all ! as though no sound had marred the 
 
 night's repose ; 
 Yet still, where burned those tapers three, the light re- 
 flected shows, 
 
 I 
 
The Castle and the Cottage, 6 1 
 
 And there unharmed, amid the wreck repose in slumber 
 mild, 
 
 Their sleep with heavenly visions filled, the fisher and 
 his child. 
 
 Where is that lofty castle now? Where are those 
 revellers all 
 
 Who sate around the glittering feast in that gay ban- 
 quet hall ? 
 
 Ask of the forest and the lake, ask of the distant dell ; 
 
 They saw and heard, they felt and knew, they keep 
 their secret well. 
 
 A blackened, tottering ruin lies where rose those 
 turrets proud. 
 
 Rimmed by the ghastly moon that sets through hollow 
 rifts of cloud ; 
 
 While far beyond the snowy peaks tinged by the 
 reddening dawn. 
 
 Like white-robed priests in holy awe await the Christ- 
 mas morn. 
 
62 
 
 THE ORGAN BOYS. 
 
 Once as I roamed in the sunshine gay, 
 Strange webs of nonsense knitting, 
 
 I chanced to see, by the dusty way, 
 Two Uttle Italians sitting. 
 
 Never, in all my life, had I 
 Beheld such anxious faces ; 
 
 I knew not whether to laugh or cry. 
 So sad were their grimaces. 
 
 Not like gentlemen, grave and wise, 
 
 Meeting in consultation. 
 But legs, and arms, and lips, and eyes. 
 
 In wild gesticulation. 
 
The Organ Boys. 63 
 
 A trusty friend between them lies, 
 
 Now deaf to every greeting, 
 He only utters groans and sighs, 
 
 In spite of their entreating. 
 
 Sudden and swift the blow it fell, 
 
 Never a note of warning, 
 But yesterday so blythe and well, 
 
 So silent and sad this morning. 
 
 And many a bitter tear they'll shed, 
 
 If he should ne'er recover. 
 The friend that brings their daily breads 
 
 More true than wife or lover. 
 
 Heavily on the dusty road, 
 They'll journey on to-morrow, 
 
 Bearing the dumb and useless load, 
 In poverty, w^ant, and sorrow. 
 
64 The Organ Boys. 
 
 Tap his chest, and feel each bone. 
 The pulse must be inspected, 
 
 'Tis clear there is a want of tone, 
 And the nerves may be affected. 
 
 Boldly at once to their work they go, 
 
 Begin their examination ; 
 Not like practitioners, I know, 
 
 In doubt and hesitation. 
 
 They open his chest, to find his heart, 
 
 His strange anatomy showing, 
 Shut it again with a shake and a start, 
 
 To set the pulses going. 
 
 And all at once he began to pour 
 
 An oft-repeated ditty. 
 He had sung it a thousand times and more, 
 
 Through village and town and city. 
 
The Orga?i Boys. 65 
 
 And the little Italians grinned for joy, 
 
 For he needed no physician ; 
 It was no deadly malady, 
 
 But a slight indisposition. 
 
 And my heart seemed lighter than before, 
 
 When I heard the organ speaking, 
 Though I'd given the boys, at my own house-door, 
 
 A shilling to stop its squeaking. 
 
66 
 
 THE SWALLOWS. 
 
 The swallows, the busy swallows, 
 See how they dip and glide, 
 
 Under the grey old castle, 
 Over the glistening tide. 
 
 Soaring and circling ever, 
 
 In many a mazy ring. 
 Betwixt the sky and the river, 
 
 What do the swallows sing ? 
 
 They sing of Spring and of Summer, 
 Of the golden days that are past ; 
 
 They sing of the dying Autumn, 
 And the Winter that comes so fast ; 
 
The Swallows. 67 
 
 Of all things fair that have vanished 
 From grove, and garden, and dell ; 
 
 Of the flowers that bloomed and perished ; 
 Of the fruits that ripened and fell. 
 
 Of many a sweet voice silent, 
 And bright hues faded away, 
 
 Ere the twilight shades came closer, 
 To darken the narrow day. 
 
 O ! earth was young and lovely 
 
 In the days that are gone, they say ; 
 
 There were garlands in all the thickets, 
 A song upon every spray. 
 
 Alas ! for the beauty perished, 
 The melodies hushed and gone; 
 
 The roses are dead, and the singers 
 Are silent every one. 
 
68 The Swallows. 
 
 'Tis time ; we must not tarry, 
 For here we cannot dwell ; 
 
 The sky grows darker and darker ; 
 Farewell, sad earth, farewell ! 
 
 Beyond the shining ocean. 
 O'er many a spacious plain, 
 
 We know the distant valleys. 
 
 Where our joys shall bloom again. 
 
 Alas ! for ye, weary workers, 
 Tied to the dreary earth, 
 
 Ye cannot journey with us, 
 Ye may not share our mirth. 
 
 We hear the Winter moaning. 
 
 Through the forest pines afar. 
 That girdle his ice-clad mountain, 
 Under the frosty star. 
 
The Swallows, 69 
 
 The verdure pales before him, 
 
 As he crawls from hill to hill ; 
 The freezing rivers tarry, 
 
 Touched by his fingers chill. 
 
 And ye must wait and serve him, 
 In darkness, and cold, and dearth; 
 
 Alas ! for ye, weary workers, 
 Tied to the dreary earth. 
 
 But we will away to the southward ; 
 
 We must not linger long ; 
 He can fetter the fleetest pinion, 
 
 And hush the sweetest song. 
 
yo 
 
 THE HARTLEY COLLIERY ACCIDENT, 
 1864. 
 
 No dungeon wall their flight forbade, 
 
 No fetter held them bound, 
 No tyrant's will a watch had made 
 
 To hem their prison round. 
 
 But wealth and strength their aid have given, 
 
 Those workers to release ; 
 And prayers of anguish cry to heaven. 
 
 To bid their bondage cease. 
 
 Alive ! but tombed beneath the soil, 
 
 Deep hidden from the day. 
 Two hundred patient sons of toil, 
 
 In that dark dwelling lay. 
 
The Hartley Colliery Accident, 71 
 
 They hear the stir of life above, 
 
 Hope lingering with despair ; 
 The feeble pulses slowly move, 
 
 In that empoisoned air. 
 
 The mattock's stroke, the long, long pause, 
 
 The work resumed once more ; 
 Their sense, long skilled, divines the cause, 
 
 And counts the chances o'er. 
 
 And still their brothers laboured on, 
 
 But days on days went past. 
 While foot by foot the way was won, 
 
 To lead them forth at last. 
 
 'Tis ended now; but all too late 
 
 Man's succour comes ; for see 
 An Angel's hand has touched the gate. 
 
 And set the prisoners free. 
 
72 
 
 OH! NEVER DEEM. 
 
 Oh ! never deem thy tears are shed 
 
 At Pity's voice in vain j 
 They sink on sorrowing hearts, as sinks 
 
 On earth the mellow rain. 
 
 For every genial shower that falls, 
 New flowers to life are given ; 
 
 For every tear, perchance, there blooms 
 Some joy for thee in heaven. 
 
73 
 
 GOOD NIGHT! 
 
 Good Night ! the sun was hid to-day ; 
 
 But see, the gloom is breaking, 
 And every cloud will melt away. 
 
 Long, long before his waking. 
 The holly bush, 'neath Winter's snow, 
 
 Still wears his branches greenly ; 
 And Time hath chills for us, we know, 
 
 We'll bear them, love, serenely. 
 
 Our troubles follow us, and stray 
 In paths where we have led them ; 
 
 Dur tears we'll treasure, till the day 
 When we shall need to shed them. 
 
74 Good Night ! 
 
 And though to-night thy cheek is wet, 
 We'll laugh to-morrow gladly 
 
 And wonder why we ever met. 
 To say Good Night ! so sadly. 
 
75 
 
 PEACE. 
 
 The hens sate cackling on the bough 
 As proud as they could be ; 
 
 Sir Reynard came and stood below, 
 A courteous knave was he. 
 
 The tears were standing in his eyes, 
 And some ran down his cheek, 
 
 ' My heart, it is so full,' he cries, 
 ' For joy I scarce can speak.' 
 
 * A peace, an universal peace, 
 Has been proclaimed at last ; 
 
 All angry passions now must cease, 
 All treacherous wiles are past. 
 
76 Peace, 
 
 ' The Hawk and Wren walk arm in arm, 
 The Mouse has kissed the Cat, 
 
 The Wolf and Sheep have hired a farm, 
 And the Dog dines with the Rat. 
 
 ' And I, to bring the glorious news, 
 Have hurried from the wood ; 
 
 Come down, dear friends, and don't refuse 
 To hail the tidings good.' 
 
 The Cock stretched out his neck and said, 
 
 'Hey! Cock-a-doodle-doo! 
 'Tis strange how soon reports are spread, 
 
 I hope the news is true. 
 
 * What means that scarlet on the lea 1 
 What mean those merry sounds 
 
 O ! 'tis a jovial sight to see, 
 
 The huntsmen and the hounds ! ' 
 
Peace, "JJ 
 
 ' What's that you say ? I must away/ 
 
 Rephed that artful fox ; 
 " Oh ! do not go ; 'tis peace you know/ 
 
 Sung out the hens and cocks. 
 
 ■ Nay ! ' Reynard cried, and licked his chaps, 
 
 '■ My flight abrupt excuse, 
 I'll call another day; perhaps 
 
 They have not heard the news.' 
 
78 
 
 THE WIND AND THE SQUIRREL. 
 
 ' Ho ! Mr. Wind, how cold you blow, 
 
 I must stop up the doonvay down below, 
 And make another one overhead.' 
 
 ' I shall blow through that too,' the Wind he said. 
 ' Very well ! ' said the Squirrel, ' we'll close it so. 
 
 And now you must blow outside, you know.' 
 The Wind he made a sulky face, 
 
 But the Squirrel sate in a snug warm place. 
 The Wind he came, and shook the tree, 
 
 But the Squirrel could neither hear nor see ; 
 He let him storm, for the doors were shut, 
 
 And 'he cocked his ear, and he cracked a nut. 
 
79 
 
 WAITING. 
 
 Return, beloved, for I fade and fade, 
 Like yonder lonely star that fades and dies, 
 Though gladness flushes all the Eastern skies, 
 
 He melts in light, but I in deepest shade. 
 
 And heavily I draw this painful breath, 
 
 And wait and wait expecting still thy smile 
 That never comes ; but yet a little while, 
 
 Ah ! who shall first embrace me, thou or death ? 
 
 When weary watchers sink at last to sleep, 
 And sit with folded palms beside my bed, 
 In dreams beyond the hills and seas I tread, 
 
 That far from thee my days imprisoned keep. 
 
8o Watting, 
 
 I wander on through all the tented line, 
 
 The still white ghastly rows are drear to see"; 
 
 I search through all the hosts where thou shouldst be, 
 
 And many plumes are waving, but not thine. 
 
 Now slowly through the guarded gates I pass, 
 No watchful sentry's challenge bids me stay ; 
 Adown the gloomy vale I take my way, 
 
 'Mid hillocks low that shade the frosty grass. 
 
 For many slumber here aloof from strife, 
 
 The dumb earth makes no mention, and the wind 
 Mourns equally for all ; I cannot find 
 
 Thy place, beloved, nor in death nor life. 
 
 I wake and weep, but all my pain is past ; 
 
 Still is the aching brow, the throbbing heart ; 
 
 I must arise, 'tis time that I depart, 
 O love, long sought, long lost, but found at last ! 
 
8i 
 
 'TIS LONG TO MAY. 
 
 The iron roads are hard and white, 
 
 The sky is ashen gray, 
 The sun is up, yet scarce can light 
 
 The dull December day ; 
 The world is but a dreary sight ; 
 
 And oh ! 'tis long to May. 
 
 No rushes ripple on the stream, 
 Where late we loved to float \ 
 
 No silver water-lilies gleam 
 Above the stagnant moat ; 
 
 Yon fishermen like spectres seem, 
 That guard a phantom boat. 
 G 
 
82 'Tis Long to May. 
 
 The ragged nests are hanging high 
 
 Upon the leafless bough, 
 Once shut so close from earth and sky 
 
 Their secrets none might know ; 
 Now, like men's deeds, revealed they lie 
 
 To all the winds that blow. 
 
 There lay the eggs, grey, green, and white 
 There perched the singers gay. 
 
 But now the house is empty quite. 
 The tenants flown away. 
 
 An empty nest's a dreary sight, 
 And oh ! 'tis long to May. 
 
83 
 
 A HUNTING SONG. 
 
 I KNOW no better pastime, 
 When winter clouds the year, 
 
 Than o'er the vale or moorland 
 To hunt the fox or deer. 
 
 I ne'er did love the city, 
 For all its pleasures gay ; 
 
 To me a wet November 
 Is dearer than the May. 
 
 For oh ! what joy delightful, 
 By spinny copse or gorse, 
 
 To meet each merry sportsman, 
 And mark each gallant horse. 
 
A Hunting Song. 
 
 To scan the speckled beauties 
 We've scanned so oft before, 
 
 For, every time we see them, 
 We love them more and more. 
 
 And then, when first they find him, 
 
 What joy it is to know, 
 If you will only let him, 
 
 Your horse can jump and go. 
 
 Though the lands are deep and holding, 
 And you ride good fourteen stun', 
 
 If you'll only treat him fairly, 
 You're sure to see the fun. 
 
 When the hounds begin to settle. 
 And the crowd can do no harm, 
 
 The jumps are stiff and plenty. 
 But your blood begins to warm : 
 
A HiLnting Song. 8 5 
 
 And if you come to water, 
 
 A ducking may betide, 
 But all you've got to think of 
 
 Is to land the other side. 
 
 And when the pack are puzzled, 
 For all their noses fine, 
 
 I love to see them steady, 
 And plodding on the line. 
 
 When they begin to race him 
 Across the grass, why ! then, 
 
 I'll try to keep my place, sirs, 
 Among the foremost men. 
 
 When I get old and shaky, 
 And my nerve begins to fail, 
 
 Then I shall be content, sirs, 
 To ride among the tail. 
 
86 A Htintmg Song. 
 
 When I can ride no longer, 
 Why then at home I'll stay ; 
 
 But now I'll go a hunting, 
 Upon a hunting day. 
 
THE DANCING BEAR. 
 
 A DANCING bear once broke his chain, 
 And hurried to the woods again, 
 There on his hinder legs he stood 
 Before the shaggy brotherhood ; 
 And as, Wx'&i love of art he warmed, 
 A wondrous masterpiece performed. 
 'Behold ! ' he cried with exultation, 
 ' These are the fruits of education. 
 x\ttempt that " pas " now, he who dare.' 
 ' Peace, fool,' growled out an aged bear, 
 ' This art of thine, it doth proclaim 
 Only thy slavery and thy shame.' 
 
88 
 
 2HE WALK OX THE MOOR. 
 
 I ROAMED on the baiTen moorland, 
 
 The wind went wailing by, 
 And the clouds, like a troop of mourners, 
 
 Paced darkly down the sky ; 
 
 And the rain from the murky distance, 
 
 Like one in tears and haste. 
 Bringing some grievous tidings, 
 
 Came rushing over the waste. 
 
 The lark lay low in the stubble. 
 
 The bittern screamed on the marsh, 
 
 The black cold river hurried 
 With a murmur A\ild and harsh. 
 
The Walk on the Moor. 89 
 
 And ever amid die pauses 
 
 Of die winds, as they rose and fell, 
 I heard from the distant village 
 
 The toll of the funeral bell. 
 
 For whom is that hireHng mourner 
 Singing the dirge to-day ? 
 
 The heart and tongue of iron 
 That mourn for a shape of clay. 
 
 Doth the tender maid to the altar 
 With her icy bridegroom go ? 
 
 Doth the weary grandsire pillow 
 On earth his locks of snow ? 
 
 Perchance some tender blossom, 
 That perished ere its spring, 
 
 For Heaven at last to ripen, 
 With trust and tears they bring. 
 
90 The Walk on the Moor. 
 
 O nigh forgotten voices ! 
 
 My eyes are dimmed again 
 With the shade of a long-lost sorrow, 
 
 And the dream of a distant pain. 
 
 And far o'er the barren moorland, 
 I roam 'neath the fading light, 
 
 And the clouds and the grey horizon 
 Are purpling into night. 
 
 And the rain comes beating o'er me, 
 And the winds they fall and swell ; 
 
 But I hear, amid the pauses, 
 The toll of the distant bell. 
 
91 
 
 SLEEP ! 
 
 Sleep ! the last words are spoken, Dust to dust ! 
 
 Ashes to ashes ! Sleep ! 
 No sculptured tomb shall rise, nor graven bust, 
 
 To tell th' unheeding world for whom we weep; 
 But on thy sacred turf the tears shall fall, 
 And thy sweet memory live, urned in the hearts of all. 
 
 Alas ! that memory now remains alone, 
 No time can e'er what we have lost restore, 
 
 In vain the stifled sob, the secret moan ; 
 Oh ! never more 
 Shall that dear voice be heard whose accents blessed 
 The happy hearth in sunny days of yore ; 
 Thou hast thy rest. 
 
92 Sleep! 
 
 They say, 'tis sin to mourn; 
 But hearts will ache, and tears will flow, when they 
 Who made the path of Hfe a pleasant way 
 
 Have reached the bourne ; 
 They bathe their limbs in heavenly streams, but we 
 Must journey ever onward wearily ; 
 As yet our grief is young ! 
 So young, alas ! 
 Yet all things do remind us of despair. 
 
 And Nature's self doth find a silent tongue 
 To bid us mourn anew. The tender grass, 
 Unscorched by Summer's heat, doth greenly bear 
 The impress of thy feet where thou didst pass ; 
 And still the breeze. 
 That waved but late the tresses of thy hair 
 Amid the silence of the leafless trees, 
 
 Doth wander long. 
 And makes lament for thee the solemn groves among. 
 So Sorrow thinks they grieve who never know 
 A pang of grief. 
 
Sleep ! 93 
 
 Behold ! the tender flowers, 
 O'er whom^ when Spring w^as young, we saw thee bow- 
 To guard from biting frost and crushing showers, 
 Are faded now; 
 Each tender stalk is bent, withered each leaf. 
 They, in the desolation of thy bowers, 
 Earthward do lean their head, 
 They should have decked thee living, therefore now^ 
 
 They mourn thee dead. 
 Some on thy breast w^e cast, some on thy brow 
 
 So white and cold ; 
 Awhile they bloomed, then withered as didst thou ; 
 
 Dim grew their eyes of gold, 
 And their faint odours on the sorrowful air 
 Expired, for Death was there. 
 But we could sit and gaze with tearless eyes. 
 
 And watch beside our treasure, though we knew 
 That grave w^ould come so soon to claim his prize. 
 And so w^e dwelt with sorrow till we grew 
 Contented with despair ; then came the last 
 
94 Sleep ! 
 
 Dark hours of watch and wail, then sad and slow, 
 Through the wet paths we saw the mourners go. 
 
 Now all is past. 
 
 Woe ! bitter woe ! 
 The last sad words are spoken, 
 The silver cord is loosed, the golden bowl is broken. 
 
95 
 
 THE MINSTREL. 
 
 ' What strains are these that ring so clear, 
 
 O'er drawbridge and o'er wall ? 
 The song, that at our gates we hear. 
 
 Shall sound within our hall' 
 The monarch spake, the pages ran, 
 The portal oped, the aged man 
 
 Unto the king they call. 
 
 * I greet ye ! knights renowned afar ; 
 
 I greet ye ! lovely dames ; 
 O heaven of beauty 1 star by star ! 
 
 What tongue shall tell your names ? 
 These halls, what royal splendours light ! 
 Close, close, mine eyes, your wondering sight, 
 
 Th' unwonted glory shames.' 
 
96 The Minstrel. 
 
 He closed his eyes, he swept the wires, 
 The flood melodious rolled ; 
 
 Each warrior burned with fiercer fires, 
 No fair one's heart was cold. 
 
 The king, enraptured, praised the bard, 
 
 And o'er his neck, the song's reward, 
 He flung a chain of gold. 
 
 ' The golden chain I may not wear, 
 It best beseems the knight, 
 
 Against whose shield the foeman's spear, 
 Has shivered in the fight 
 
 Or let thy chancellor, who bears 
 
 The burthen of thy kingdom's cares, 
 This burthen bear to-night. 
 
 ' I sing, as sing the birds, among 
 The forest boughs that dwell ; 
 
 And, while the numbers flow, the song 
 Repays the singer well. 
 
 But if some guerdon may be mine, 
 
 A golden goblet filled with wine, 
 Shall best your favour tell' 
 
The Mmstrel, 97 
 
 They filled the cup, the cup was brought ; 
 
 *■ O juice of joy divine ! 
 Thrice blest the house that holds it nought 
 
 To pay the song with wine. 
 In hours like these, remember me, 
 With thanks to God, like mine to ye, 
 
 From hearts as warm as mine.' 
 
 H 
 
98 
 
 THE BLIND KING. 
 
 Why throng the northern chiefs to-day 
 
 On yonder craggy steep? 
 What doth the monarch, bhnd and grey 
 
 Beside the roaring deep ? 
 
 He cries aloud in bitter pain, 
 Propped on his staff the while; 
 
 The hollow echoes ring again 
 From yonder rocky isle. 
 
 ' Thou robber ! from thy cruel thrall, 
 Give back my child, my own ; 
 
 Her harp, her song, so sweet were all. 
 The joy mine age hath known. 
 
The Blind King. 99 
 
 ' She danced upon the level sand, 
 
 The fairest 'mid the fair, 
 O deed of shame ! O ruthless hand 
 
 That snatched my jewel rare ! ' 
 
 Then strode the robber, fierce and wild, 
 
 Forth from his rocky lair ; 
 He smote upon the giant shield, 
 
 And swanig the sword in air. 
 
 ' Ho ! thou hast many a warrior there ! 
 
 Why suffer they this wrong? 
 Is none wall fight for one so fair, 
 
 Of all that valiant throng ? ' 
 
 Dumb stood the knights ; nor voice nor sound, 
 
 And risk the strife will none ; 
 The blind old king turned sadly round, 
 
 ' And stand I then alone ? ' 
 
lOO The Blind King. 
 
 Then came his youngest son, with fire 
 He grasped his father's hand : 
 
 ' My arm is strong ; let me, my sire, 
 This robber base withstand.' 
 
 ' O son ! gigantic is the foe ; 
 
 None ere withstood his might; 
 Yet, 'tis a hero's hand, I know, 
 
 That grasps my own so tight. 
 
 'Take then the sword, the true, the tried, 
 
 Renowned in many a lay ; 
 If thou dost fall, yon rolling tide 
 
 Shall be my grave to-day.' 
 
 But hark ! the plash of keel and oar, 
 
 A boat is on the main ; 
 The king stood listening on the shore, 
 
 Till all was hushed again. 
 
The Blind King. i o i 
 
 Till o'er the sea there thundered out, 
 
 The clash of shield and sword ; 
 The tumult and the battle-shout 
 
 Were echoed all abroad. 
 
 Then cried the king, 'twixt joy and fear, 
 
 ' How doth the battle go ? 
 My sword, its ringing chime I hear, 
 
 Its merry voice I know.' 
 
 ' The robber hes beside the wave, 
 His guilt its meed hath won ; 
 
 Hail to the bravest of the brave ! 
 Hail to thy warrior son ! ' 
 
 And all was calm, and hushed again, 
 He listened from the shore ; 
 
 "' What sounds are those upon the main, 
 The plash of keel and oar ? ' 
 
I o 2 The Blmd Kiup: 
 
 s 
 
 ' We see them come, the royal pair, 
 Thy son with sword and shield ; 
 
 And her, the maid with golden hair. 
 Thy daughter fair, Gimild.' 
 
 ' Now welcome! ' cried the blind old king, 
 * Thrice welcome to the brave ! 
 
 Around my age new joys shall spring, 
 And honour gnard my grave. 
 
 ' My son shall place upon my breast 
 The sword that rung so clear; 
 
 And she shall sing me to my rest, 
 Gunildj my daughter dear.' 
 
THE WALK BY MIDNIGHT. 
 
 HERVEGH, 
 
 I WANDERED, with the spirit of the Night, 
 
 The broad and silent city to and fro ; 
 All hushed I and yet what anguish, what delight 
 
 Were waking here a little hour ago. 
 Mirth, like a flower, is withered and is gone ; 
 
 The wildest goblets now forget to gleam ; 
 E'en Sorrow parted with the parting sun ; 
 
 The world is worn and weary, let it dream- 
 How every angry feeling melts and dies. 
 
 While rising through the storms that dimmed the 
 day; 
 The Moon with soothing radiance fills the skies. 
 
 E'en the dead rose leaves bloom where falls her ray. 
 
I04 The Walk by Midnight. 
 
 Light as a sound, and silent as a star, 
 
 My soul goes forth beneath those solemn beams; 
 Through all her world of fancy wanders far, 
 
 'Mid human hearts, and mingles with their dreams. 
 
 My shadow, like a spy, doth near me stand ; 
 
 And now I pause before the prison gates, 
 ^Vhere thy too faithful son, my fatherland. 
 
 His love for thee and Freedom expiates. 
 He sleeps, nor recks of man's injustice now ; 
 
 He wanders 'mid his forest oaks, that seem 
 To wreath triumphal garlands for his brow ; 
 
 ' O thou, the god of Freedom ! let him dream.' 
 
 A cottage near a stream, a humble home, 
 
 A bed where innocence and want repose, 
 Yet dreams of heaven unto the peasant come, 
 
 With blest oblivion from life's daily throes. 
 With every grain the God of Slumber sows, 
 
 More gorgeous grows the golden harvest's gleam ; 
 His hut expanding to a palace grows; 
 
 ' God of the poor man 1 let the peasant dream.' 
 
The IValk by Midnight. 105 
 
 By the last house, upon the bench of stone 
 
 I rest awhile, and breathe a blessing there ; 
 I love thee well, dear maid, but not alone. 
 
 For thou with Freedom must my longing share ; 
 Twin doves, with silver wings, before thee shine ; 
 
 I only see the charging squadrons stream ; 
 Thy dreams are butterflies, but eagles mine ; 
 
 ' God of all love, O let my darling dream ! ' 
 
 Thou Star i like Fortune, struggling from the cloud, 
 
 Thou Night ! enthroned in purple depths of space, 
 Let me yet not behold the waking crowd. 
 
 And read the anguish in each stricken face. 
 The Sun must rise to look again on tears, 
 
 While Freedom flies before his earliest beam ; 
 And Tyranny once more the falchion rears, 
 
 * O God of pity ! leave us all to dream.' 
 
To6 
 
 THE KING AND THE SHEPHERDESS. 
 
 UHLAND, 
 
 Here in the happy May time, 
 Here on the grassy plain, 
 
 Under the golden sunlight, 
 How shall I pour my strain 
 
 The azure streams are gliding. 
 The golden clouds they sail, 
 
 The knights in their pride are riding 
 Adown the flowery vale. 
 
 The forest boughs are waving, 
 The paths with wild-flowers glow. 
 
 The shepherdesses wander 
 In the valley to and fro. 
 
The King and the Shepherdess. 107 
 
 Lord Goldmar rode right proudly, 
 
 His knightly host before ; 
 He wore a crimson mantle, 
 
 And a crown of gold he bore. 
 
 Then from his charger lightly 
 To earth the monarch leapt, 
 
 And he tied the rein to the linden, 
 The warriors onward swept. 
 
 A fountain cool was bubbling 
 Beneath the thicket's shade ', 
 
 The birds they sang so sweetly, 
 The flowers a carpet made. 
 
 Why sang the birds so sweetly ? 
 
 Why were the flowers so rare ? 
 A Shepherdess sate by the fountain, 
 
 The fairest of the fair. 
 
io8 The King and the Shepherdess. 
 
 Lord Goldmar brake through the thicket, 
 
 That rustled as he sped ; 
 The lambs in sudden terror 
 
 Unto the Shepherdess fled. 
 
 ' Now welcome, and thrice welcome, 
 Thou maiden, wondrous fair ! 
 
 That I should e'er affright thee, 
 A bitter grief it were.' 
 
 ' Nay ! but I am not frightened. 
 
 As I may swear to thee ; 
 I thought that a bird had fluttered 
 
 Out of the hnden tree.' 
 
 ^ Ah ! might I drink of the pitcher 
 That by thy side I see ; 
 
 The gift in my heart I'd cherish 
 As a tender boon from thee.' 
 
The King and the Shepherdess. 1 09 
 
 ' Now thou shalt drink from the pitcher, 
 
 I hold it a Uttle thing, 
 I would draw from the well for any, 
 
 E'en though there came a king.' 
 
 She stooped, and drew from the fountain, 
 And she bids him drink at last ; 
 
 Tenderly looks he on her, 
 Yet holds she the pitcher fast. 
 
 And he cries with passion melting, 
 * Thou queen of the forest bowers, 
 
 Well might I deem thee sister 
 To the other beauteous flowers. 
 
 ' Yet is thy speech so gracious, 
 
 So royal is thy mien. 
 Rather I deem thee nurtured 
 
 On the bosom of a queen !' 
 
I o The King and the Shepherdess. 
 
 ' Ask of my father the shepherd, 
 
 If crown he e'er put on ? 
 And the shepherdess, my mother, 
 
 When sate she on the throne?' 
 
 But he laid his silken mantle, 
 Upon her neck so fair ; 
 
 The crown of gold he placed it 
 Over her nut-brown hair. 
 
 The Shepherdess, she looked proudly, 
 And cried with a merry call, 
 
 * Bend to me, trees and flow'rets ; 
 Bow to me, lambkins all' 
 
 And she gave him again the mantle. 
 And light her laughter rung ; 
 
 But the golden crown. Lord Goldmar 
 Into the fountain flunpj. 
 
The King and the Shepherdess. 1 1 1 
 
 * This gift shall be a token, 
 
 My crown a pledge I yield. 
 Till I shall come to claim it, 
 
 From many a foughten field. 
 
 'A king in the gloomy dungeon, 
 
 For twice eight years hath lain : 
 The hand of the foe is heavy 
 
 On city and on plain. \ 
 
 ' His kingdom to deliver, 
 
 I haste with my knightly train ; 
 To break his chains and bid him, 
 
 Look on the spring again. 
 
 ' I go to my first of battles, 
 
 Under the burning sun, 
 Wilt thou give me a draught from the fountain 
 
 After the fight be done ?' 
 
1 1 2 The King mid the Shepherdess. 
 
 * Yea ! I will draw from the fountain, 
 
 So long as draw I may ; 
 And the crown again thou shalt have it. 
 
 As stainless as to-day.' 
 
 My first song I have sung it, 
 
 My second anon I'll sing ; 
 A bird hath spread his pinion, 
 
 Where will he fold his wing ? 
 
The King and the Shepherdess. 1 1 
 
 ir. 
 
 I SHOULD be singing and rhyming 
 Of the drum and the trumpet loud ; 
 
 But I hear the lute's sweet chiming, 
 And the lark's voice in the cloud, 
 
 I should be rhyming and telling 
 Of wars and of deeds of death ; 
 
 But I see the young buds swelling, 
 And I drink the wild-flowers' breath. 
 
 My tale 'tis of Goldmar only; 
 
 Ye had not deemed, perchance, 
 A knight so soft in parley 
 
 Could aim so stout a lance. 
 
 I 
 
J 1 4 The King and the Shepherdess. 
 
 He stormed the robber's castle, 
 His banner crowned the steep, 
 
 Then came the aged monarch 
 Forth from the dungeon keep. 
 
 ' Thou sun and ye lordly mountains, 
 Ye field and ye forests, say, 
 
 Why are ye young and lovely, 
 While I am old and grey ? ' 
 
 With pomp and mirth and music 
 
 Began the royal feast ; 
 But how shall I tell ye of it, 
 
 Who sate not there a guest. 
 
 And e'en though I had feasted 
 Among those courtiers fine. 
 
 Perchance I had heeded little, 
 Except the noble wine. 
 
The King and the Shephei^dess, 1 1 5 
 
 And now unto Lord Goldmar, 
 
 The royal sire, he cries, 
 * To-day I hold a tourney, 
 
 And thou shalt name the prize.' 
 
 ' Sir King, now give, I pray thee, 
 
 To the victor in the fight, 
 Nor golden spurs, nor helmet, 
 
 But a crook and a lamb snow-white. 
 
 So the prize for which lowly Shepherds 
 
 Race o'er the daisied field, 
 Is a meed for warriors meeting 
 
 With lance and helm and shield. 
 
 Before the spear of Goldmar, 
 
 Unhorsed fell every knight, 
 And the trumpets clanged as they bare him 
 
 The crook and the lamb snow-white. 
 
1 1 6 The King and the Shepherdess. 
 
 And again to all the people, 
 
 The aged monarch cries, 
 ' I'll hold another tourney, 
 
 And for a nobler prize. 
 
 ' I'll give no empty bauble, 
 
 No trifle vain as sand; 
 My crown shall be the guerdon. 
 
 And a royal maiden's hand.' 
 
 How burned those eager warriors 
 At the trumpet's ringing call ; 
 
 Each knight he bore him bravely, 
 But Goldmar vanquished all. 
 
 Then stood the King encircled 
 By lords and ladies rare : 
 
 And he bade tliem call Lord Goldmar, 
 Of knights the flower and star. 
 
The King and the Shephe^^dess. 1 1 7 
 
 Then came the victor proudly, 
 
 The crook was in his hand, 
 The snow-white lamb beside him, 
 
 Led with a crimson band 
 
 Then cried the King, ' I give thee, 
 
 No trifle light as sand ; 
 My crown I give and kingdom, 
 
 From a royal maiden's hand.' 
 
 '■ No queen that lives to win me, 
 
 Nor diadem may avail; 
 My heart is constant ever. 
 
 To the Shepherdess in the vale. 
 
 '- Unto her feet I carry 
 
 This crook and lamb snow-white ; 
 Heaven guard ye, lords and ladies, 
 
 I seek the vale to-night' 
 
1 1 8 The King and the Shepherdess, 
 
 And then a sweet voice answered, 
 And it seemed to him as though 
 
 The birds around were singing, 
 And he saw the wild-flowers blow. 
 
 And when his eyes he lifted, 
 He saw the Shepherdess stand, 
 
 A royal robe around her, 
 
 A golden crown in her hand. 
 
 * Now welcome, thou knight ungentie 
 In my father's halls well met ; 
 
 Say, and must thou be going 
 Unto the valley yet ? 
 
 ' First take the crown thou gavest, 
 Thy pledge I yield again ; 
 
 Twofold I thus restore it, 
 
 Two kingdoms own thy reign.' 
 
The King and the Shepherdess, 1 19 
 
 Not long apart they tarried, 
 
 What farther there befell, 
 When the knight stood by the maiden, 
 
 Would ye that I should tell ? 
 
 Now if a maid should ask me, 
 
 My story soon were said, 
 Might I clasp her waist and kiss her 
 
 On her lips so rosy red 
 
I20 
 
 THE RANGERS DAUGHTER. 
 
 E. GEIBEL. 
 
 It Stands in the forest, the forest deep, 
 
 The ranger's cottage lone, 
 The icicles hang from the frozen roof, 
 
 And there's snow on the threshold stone. 
 
 The maiden sits by the hearth and spins 
 
 A veil for the bridal morn ; 
 She hears in the chimney the whistling wind, 
 
 As the sparks are upward borne. 
 
 I'he hag of the forest came hobbling in ; 
 
 No good her visits bring; 
 '- (jood evening, my dainty daughter, fine, 
 
 A merry song I'll sing.' 
 
The Ranger s Daughter. 121 
 
 ' I have no mind your song to hear, 
 
 My love he soon will come ; 
 There's bread to eat, and ale to drink, 
 
 Take them, and get thee home.' 
 
 The hag she spoke, ' We've time, good truth. 
 
 He Cometh not to-day, 
 The wood is deep, the road is long. 
 
 He'll take another way.' 
 
 ' Why fright me thus with idle tales ? 
 
 My love will come, I know ; 
 He swore to love me, till the rose 
 
 Was blooming through the snow.' 
 
 The maiden spoke with a heavy heart. 
 The wind piped higher and higher ; 
 
 The hag she sate, the hag she crooned 
 Her dull song to the fire. 
 
1 2 2 The Ranger's Daughter. 
 
 ' And as I went adown the vale, 
 
 Three wolves leapt out of the wood ; 
 
 They howled for lucky sport, I wot ; 
 Their tongues, they dripped with blood. 
 
 ' And when unto the firs I came, 
 
 I heard three ravens cry. 
 They cried, " To-night the ravens young, 
 
 Shall banquet merrily." 
 
 * And when I came to the frozen lake, 
 
 A dainty youth I found ; 
 His blood streamed out on the frozen snow, 
 
 From many a gaping wound. 
 
 * The red rose blossoms in the snow, 
 My tale now take it home \ 
 
 The wood is deep, the way is long, 
 Thy love will never come.' 
 
The Ranger s Daughter. 123 
 
 The song was sung, the hag was gone, 
 
 The hearth was black as night ; 
 The maiden sate, and spake no word. 
 
 Her cheeks were deadly white. 
 
 And louder ever piped the wind, 
 
 And screamed the ravens wild; 
 Three days went past, and in the grave 
 
 The ranger laid his child. 
 
124 
 
 THE MINSTRELS RETURN. 
 
 UHLAND, 
 
 The Minstrel lies upon the bier ; 
 
 From those pale lips no numbers flow ; 
 The yellow laurel's garland sere 
 
 Entwines his temples, pulseless now, 
 
 In dainty scrolls, upon his breast, 
 They lay the songs, the last he sung; 
 
 And closely to his arm is pressed 
 The lyre that once so sweetly rung. 
 
 So sleeps he on, a dreamless sleep ; 
 
 Still thrills in every ear his lay ; 
 But they that praise, can only weep 
 
 The glorious Singer passed away. 
 
The Minstrel's Return. 125 
 
 And months and years have slowly fled, 
 The cypress o'er his grave hath grown 
 
 And they who mourned the Minstrel dead, 
 Have each his own sepulchral stone. 
 
 But as the Spring, with strength renewed, 
 And beauty fresh, returns to earth ; 
 
 E'en so, with youth and grace endued, 
 The Singer comes from darkness forth. 
 
 Unto the living newly wed, 
 
 No traces of the tombs remain ; 
 The very past, that mourned him dead, 
 
 Lives in his verse, and breathes again. 
 
126 
 
 THE KING ON THE TOWER. 
 
 UHLAND. 
 
 I SEE them lying in slumber soft, 
 Grey hills and misty vales below; 
 
 Peace rests upon them, the breezes waft 
 To my ear no sound of woe. 
 
 For all I have thought, for all I have striven, 
 In sadness I drank of the sparkling bowl; 
 
 The night is come, there is calm in Heaven ; 
 Now take thy rest, my soul. 
 
 Mine eyes are dim, my hair is grey, "^ 
 My weapons hang in the bannered hall; 
 
 I have served thee, Justice, by night and day, 
 When shall I rest for all ? 
 
The King on the Tower. 1 2 7 
 
 Thou golden page, on the starry dome, 
 Thy lore to me hath been ever dear ; 
 
 Ye wondrous chimes, from afar that come, 
 How sweetly ye fall on my ear. 
 
 Oh ! sacred peace, my heart's desire; 
 
 Oh ! holy night, thou dost tarry long ; 
 When the stars shall shine with a purer fire, 
 
 And the spheres have a fuller song! 
 
128 
 
 THE ANCESTRAL TOMBS, 
 
 UHLAND. 
 
 He went, arrayed in armour, 
 
 An old and feeble sire, 
 Unto the ancient chapel, 
 
 And he stood in the gloomy choir. 
 
 The coffins of his fathers 
 
 Were ranged the walls along ; 
 
 And there rose from the hollow caverns 
 
 A wild and solemn sound. Qcrr^a 
 
 S 
 
 ' Yea ! I have heard your voices, 
 
 Ye souls of deathless fame, 
 I come to join'your numbers, 
 
 Unstained by deed of shame.' 
 
The Ancestral Tombs. 129 
 
 There lies an empty coffin, 
 
 And there shall be his bed ; 
 He lays him down, and pillows 
 
 Upon the shield his head. 
 
 Upon his sword he foldeth 
 
 His arms, and sinks to sleep ; 
 Hushed are the Spirit Voices, 
 
 And break not his slumber deep. 
 
i^o 
 
 THE LOST CHURCH. 
 
 Oft on the forest's distant bound, 
 
 There clangs in air a solemn bell, 
 Vet no man knows whence comes the sound, 
 
 Tradition scarce the spot can tell. 
 From some forgotten church, they say, 
 
 Those echoes float upon the wind. 
 Once bands of pilgrims thronged the way. 
 
 Now lives there none the path can find. 
 
 Once in the forest depths I strayed, 
 
 'Mid wilds where man had seldom trod; 
 
 And from the ills the world had made, 
 I turned my longing thoughts to God 
 
The Lost CJmrch. i 
 
 Then through the silence, lone and still, 
 I heard those wondrous sounds again : 
 
 They seemed my every pulse to thrill, 
 As nearer, fuller, swelled the strain. 
 
 My soul, in new and wondrous change, 
 
 Was wafted on those tones divine, 
 Yet knew not what enchantment strange, 
 
 Could make such heavenly transports mine 
 I thought a hundred years and more 
 
 In dreamlike trance had passed away, 
 When through the mists that floated o'er, 
 
 A wide expanse before me lay. 
 
 A deeper purple filled the air, 
 
 The sun appeared more broad and bright. 
 And I beheld a minster fair. 
 
 Wrapped in a veil of golden light. 
 On lucid clouds, like shining wings, 
 
 Upborne it seemed to soar on high ; 
 The arrowy spire, through curling rings 
 
 Of glory, vanished in the sky. 
 
J The L OS I Ch u rch . 
 
 The clashing bells, with joyous time, 
 
 High ill the trembling turret swung; 
 No mortal hands awoke their chime. 
 
 By heavenly hosts the peal was rung. 
 It seemed the self-same power was lent, 
 
 To wake my bosom's answering beat ; 
 And so unto the dome I went, 
 
 \\\\\\ fearful joy and trembling feet. 
 
 What glorious visions blessed my sight, 
 
 My faltering speech can never paint; 
 The windows shone in sombre light. 
 
 With forms of many a martyre(_l saint. 
 Hie pictured shapes, with life endowed, 
 
 And haloed with celestial rays, 
 "With holy maids, Christ's champions proud. 
 
 In troops triumphant met m) gaze. 
 
 I kneeled before the shrine; with love 
 And tears of joy, my eyes were dimmed; 
 
 Upon the canopy above, 
 
 The glories of the heavens were linuied. 
 
The Lost Church. 13,; 
 
 My heart with eager longing sighed : 
 And lo ! the dome was rent in twain : 
 
 The gates of God were opened wide, 
 Nor veil nor curtain did remain. 
 
 What scenes that glorious vision then 
 
 Did to my raptured gaze unfold 1 
 What harmonies, unheard by men, 
 
 More grand than trump, or organ rolled ! 
 Nor eye hath seen, nor tongue can tell; 
 
 Yet who such holy longing feels, 
 Let him go listen to the bell 
 
 That through the lonely forest peals. 
 
 LONDON : PRINTED BY 
 
 KPOTTISWOODIi AND CO., NEW-STREET SQl'ARK 
 
 AND PAKI.IAMEXT STKEET 
 
// 
 
91692b 
 
 THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA UBRARY