Delphi Complete Works of William Wordsworth

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Delphi Complete Works of William Wordsworth Page 285

by William Wordsworth


  When toward the altar from her bower

  King Arthur led the Egyptian Maid,

  And Angels carolled these far-echoed verses;—

  Who shrinks not from alliance

  Of evil with good Powers,

  To God proclaims defiance,

  And mocks whom he adores.

  A Ship to Christ devoted

  From the Land of Nile did go; 360

  Alas! the bright Ship floated,

  An Idol at her prow.

  By magic domination,

  The Heaven-permitted vent

  Of purblind mortal passion,

  Was wrought her punishment.

  The Flower the Form within it,

  What served they in her need?

  Her port she could not win it,

  Nor from mishap be freed. 370

  The tempest overcame her,

  And she was seen no more;

  But gently, gently blame her—

  She cast a Pearl ashore.

  The Maid to Jesu hearkened,

  And kept to him her faith,

  Till sense in death was darkened,

  Or sleep akin to death.

  But Angels round her pillow

  Kept watch, a viewless band; 380

  And, billow favouring billow,

  She reached the destined strand.

  Blest Pair! whate’er befall you,

  Your faith in Him approve

  Who from frail earth can call you

  To bowers of endless love!

  1830.

  THE POET AND THE CAGED TURTLEDOVE

  AS often as I murmur here

  My half-formed melodies,

  Straight from her osier mansion near,

  The Turtledove replies:

  Though silent as a leaf before,

  The captive promptly coos;

  Is it to teach her own soft lore,

  Or second my weak Muse?

  I rather think, the gentle Dove

  Is murmuring a reproof, 10

  Displeased that I from lays of love

  Have dared to keep aloof;

  That I, a Bard of hill and dale,

  Have carolled, fancy free,

  As if nor dove nor nightingale,

  Had heart or voice for me.

  If such thy meaning, O forbear,

  Sweet Bird! to do me wrong;

  Love, blessed Love, is everywhere

  The spirit of my song: 20

  ‘Mid grove, and by the calm fireside,

  Love animates my lyre—

  That coo again!—’tis not to chide,

  I feel, but to inspire.

  1830.

  PRESENTIMENTS

  PRESENTIMENTS! they judge not right

  Who deem that ye from open light

  Retire in fear of shame;

  All ‘heaven-born’ Instincts shun the touch

  Of vulgar sense,—and, being such,

  Such privilege ye claim.

  The tear whose source I could not guess,

  The deep sigh that seemed fatherless,

  Were mine in early days;

  And now, unforced by time to part 10

  With fancy, I obey my heart,

  And venture on your praise.

  What though some busy foes to good,

  Too potent over nerve and blood,

  Lurk near you—and combine

  To taint the health which ye infuse;

  This hides not from the moral Muse

  Your origin divine.

  How oft from you, derided Powers!

  Comes Faith that in auspicious hours 20

  Builds castles, not of air:

  Bodings unsanctioned by the will

  Flow from your visionary skill,

  And teach us to beware.

  The bosom-weight, your stubborn gift,

  That no philosophy can lift,

  Shall vanish, if ye please,

  Like morning mist: and, where it lay,

  The spirits at your bidding play

  In gaiety and ease. 30

  Star-guided contemplations move

  Through space, though calm, not raised above

  Prognostics that ye rule;

  The naked Indian of the wild,

  And haply, too, the cradled Child,

  Are pupils of your school.

  But who can fathom your intents,

  Number their signs or instruments?

  A rainbow, a sunbeam,

  A subtle smell that Spring unbinds, 40

  Dead pause abrupt of midnight winds,

  An echo, or a dream.

  The laughter of the Christmas hearth

  With sighs of self-exhausted mirth

  Ye feelingly reprove;

  And daily, in the conscious breast,

  Your visitations are a test

  And exercise of love.

  When some great change gives boundless scope

  To an exulting Nation’s hope, 50

  Oft, startled and made wise

  By your low-breathed interpretings,

  The simply-meek foretaste the springs

  Of bitter contraries.

  Ye daunt the proud array of war,

  Pervade the lonely ocean far

  As sail hath been unfurled;

  For dancers in the festive hall

  What ghastly partners hath your call

  Fetched from the shadowy world. 60

  ‘Tis said, that warnings ye dispense,

  Emboldened by a keener sense;

  That men have lived for whom,

  With dread precision, ye made clear

  The hour that in a distant year

  Should knell them to the tomb.

  Unwelcome insight! Yet there are,

  Blest times when mystery is laid bare,

  Truth shows a glorious face,

  While on that isthmus which commands 70

  The councils of both worlds, she stands,

  Sage Spirits! by your grace.

  God, who instructs the brutes to scent

  All changes of the element,

  Whose wisdom fixed the scale

  Of natures, for our wants provides

  By higher, sometimes humbler, guides,

  When lights of reason fail.

  1830.

  IN THESE FAIR VALES HATH MANY A TREE

  IN these fair vales hath many a Tree

  At Wordsworth’s suit been spared;

  And from the builder’s hand this Stone,

  For some rude beauty of its own,

  Was rescued by the Bard:

  So let it rest; and time will come

  When here the tender-hearted

  May heave a gentle sigh for him,

  As one of the departed.

  1830.

  ELEGIAC MUSINGS IN THE GROUNDS OF COLEORTON HALL, THE SEAT OF THE LATE SIR G. H. BEAUMONT, BART.

  WITH copious eulogy in prose or rhyme

  Graven on the tomb we struggle against Time,

  Alas, how feebly! but our feelings rise

  And still we struggle when a good man dies:

  Such offering BEAUMONT dreaded and forbade,

  A spirit meek in self-abasement clad.

  Yet ‘here’ at least—though few have numbered days

  That shunned so modestly the light of praise—

  His graceful manners, and the temperate ray

  Of that arch fancy which would round him play, 10

  Brightening a converse never known to swerve

  From courtesy and delicate reserve;

  That sense, the bland philosophy of life,

  Which checked discussion ere it warmed to strife—

  Those rare accomplishments, and varied powers,

  Might have their record among sylvan bowers.

  Oh, fled for ever! vanished like a blast

  That shook the leaves in myriads as it passed;—

  Gone from this world of earth, air, sea, and sky,

  From all its spirit-moving imagery, 20


  Intensely studied with a painter’s eye,

  A poet’s heart; and, for congenial view,

  Portrayed with happiest pencil, not untrue

  To common recognitions while the line

  Flowed in a course of sympathy divine;—

  Oh! severed, too abruptly, from delights

  That all the seasons shared with equal rights;—

  Rapt in the grace of undismantled age,

  From soul-felt music, and the treasured page

  Lit by that evening lamp which loved to shed 30

  Its mellow lustre round thy honoured head;

  While Friends beheld thee give with eye, voice, mien,

  More than theatric force to Shakspeare’s scene;—

  If thou hast heard me—if thy Spirit know

  Aught of these bowers and whence their pleasures flow;

  If things in our remembrance held so dear,

  And thoughts and projects fondly cherished here,

  To thy exalted nature only seem

  Time’s vanities, light fragments of earth’s dream—

  Rebuke us not!—The mandate is obeyed 40

  That said, “Let praise be mute where I am laid;”

  The holier deprecation, given in trust

  To the cold marble, waits upon thy dust;

  Yet have we found how slowly genuine grief

  From ‘silent’ admiration wins relief.

  Too long abashed thy Name is like a rose

  That doth “within itself its sweetness close;”

  A drooping daisy changed into a cup

  In which her bright-eyed beauty is shut up.

  Within these groves, where still are flitting by 50

  Shades of the Past, oft noticed with a sigh,

  Shall stand a votive Tablet, haply free,

  When towers and temples fall, to speak of Thee!

  If sculptured emblems of our mortal doom

  Recall not there the wisdom of the Tomb,

  Green ivy risen from out the cheerful earth,

  Will fringe the lettered stone; and herbs spring forth,

  Whose fragrance, by soft dews and rain unbound,

  Shall penetrate the heart without a wound;

  While truth and love their purposes fulfil, 60

  Commemorating genius, talent, skill,

  That could not lie concealed where Thou wert known;

  Thy virtues ‘He’ must judge, and He alone,

  The God upon whose mercy they are thrown.

  Nov. 1830.

  CHATSWORTH! THY STATELY MANSION, AND THE PRIDE

  CHATSWORTH! thy stately mansion, and the pride

  Of thy domain, strange contrast do present

  To house and home in many a craggy rent

  Of the wild Peak; where new-born waters glide

  Through fields whose thrifty occupants abide

  As in a dear and chosen banishment,

  With every semblance of entire content;

  So kind is simple Nature, fairly tried!

  Yet He whose heart in childhood gave her troth

  To pastoral dales, thin-set with modest farms, 10

  May learn, if judgment strengthen with his growth,

  That, not for Fancy only, pomp hath charms;

  And, strenuous to protect from lawless harms

  The extremes of favoured life, may honour both.

  1830.

  TO THE AUTHOR’S PORTRAIT

  GO, faithful Portrait! and where long hath knelt

  Margaret, the Saintly Foundress, take thy place;

  And, if Time spare the colours for the grace

  Which to the work surpassing skill hath dealt,

  Thou, on thy rock reclined, though kingdoms melt

  And states be torn up by the roots, wilt seem

  To breathe in rural peace, to hear the stream,

  And think and feel as once the Poet felt.

  Whate’er thy fate, those features have not grown

  Unrecognised through many a household tear 10

  More prompt, more glad, to fall than drops of dew

  By morning shed around a flower half-blown;

  Tears of delight, that testified how true

  To life thou art, and, in thy truth, how dear!

  1830.

  THE PRIMROSE OF THE ROCK

  A ROCK there is whose homely front

  The passing traveller slights;

  Yet there the glow-worms hang their lamps,

  Like stars, at various heights;

  And one coy Primrose to that Rock

  The vernal breeze invites.

  What hideous warfare hath been waged,

  What kingdoms overthrown,

  Since first I spied that Primrose-tuft

  And marked it for my own; 10

  A lasting link in Nature’s chain

  From highest heaven let down!

  The flowers, still faithful to the stems,

  Their fellowship renew;

  The stems are faithful to the root,

  That worketh out of view;

  And to the rock the root adheres

  In every fibre true.

  Close clings to earth the living rock,

  Though threatening still to fall; 20

  The earth is constant to her sphere;

  And God upholds them all:

  So blooms this lonely Plant, nor dreads

  Her annual funeral.

  ****

  Here closed the meditative strain;

  But air breathed soft that day,

  The hoary mountain-heights were cheered,

  The sunny vale looked gay;

  And to the Primrose of the Rock

  I gave this after-lay. 30

  I sang—Let myriads of bright flowers,

  Like Thee, in field and grove

  Revive unenvied;—mightier far,

  Than tremblings that reprove

  Our vernal tendencies to hope,

  Is God’s redeeming love;

  That love which changed—for wan disease,

  For sorrow that had bent

  O’er hopeless dust, for withered age—

  Their moral element, 40

  And turned the thistles of a curse

  To types beneficent.

  Sin-blighted though we are, we too,

  The reasoning Sons of Men,

  From one oblivious winter called

  Shall rise, and breathe again;

  And in eternal summer lose

  Our threescore years and ten.

  To humbleness of heart descends

  This prescience from on high, 50

  The faith that elevates the just,

  Before and when they die;

  And makes each soul a separate heaven,

  A court for Deity.

  1831.

  YARROW REVISITED, AND OTHER POEMS

  COMPOSED (TWO EXCEPTED) DURING A TOUR IN SCOTLAND AND ON THE ENGLISH BORDER, IN THE AUTUMN OF 1831

  I

  THE gallant Youth, who may have gained,

  Or seeks, a “winsome Marrow,”

  Was but an Infant in the lap

  When first I looked on Yarrow;

  Once more, by Newark’s Castle-gate

  Long left without a warder,

  I stood, looked, listened, and with Thee,

  Great Minstrel of the Border!

  Grave thoughts ruled wide on that sweet day,

  Their dignity installing 10

  In gentle bosoms, while sere leaves

  Were on the bough, or falling;

  But breezes played, and sunshine gleamed—

  The forest to embolden;

  Reddened the fiery hues, and shot

  Transparence through the golden.

  For busy thoughts the Stream flowed on

  In foamy agitation;

  And slept in many a crystal pool

  For quiet contemplation:20

  No public and no private care

  The freeborn mind enthralling,

  We m
ade a day of happy hours,

  Our happy days recalling.

  Brisk Youth appeared, the Morn of youth,

  With freaks of graceful folly,—

  Life’s temperate Noon, her sober Eve,

  Her Night not melancholy;

  Past, present, future, all appeared

  In harmony united, 30

  Like guests that meet, and some from far,

  By cordial love invited.

  And if, as Yarrow, through the woods

  And down the meadow ranging,

  Did meet us with unaltered face,

  Though we were changed and changing;

  If, ‘then’, some natural shadows spread

  Our inward prospect over,

  The soul’s deep valley was not slow

  Its brightness to recover. 40

  Eternal blessings on the Muse,

  And her divine employment!

  The blameless Muse, who trains her Sons

  For hope and calm enjoyment;

  Albeit sickness, lingering yet,

  Has o’er their pillow brooded;

  And Care waylays their steps—a Sprite

  Not easily eluded.

  For thee, O SCOTT! compelled to change

  Green Eildon-hill and Cheviot 50

  For warm Vesuvio’s vine-clad slopes;

  And leave thy Tweed and Tiviot

  For mild Sorento’s breezy waves;

  May classic Fancy, linking

  With native Fancy her fresh aid,

  Preserve thy heart from sinking!

  Oh! while they minister to thee,

  Each vying with the other,

  May Health return to mellow Age

  With Strength, her venturous brother; 60

  And Tiber, and each brook and rill

  Renowned in song and story,

  With unimagined beauty shine,

  Nor lose one ray of glory!

  For Thou, upon a hundred streams,

  By tales of love and sorrow,

  Of faithful love, undaunted truth,

  Hast shed the power of Yarrow;

  And streams unknown, hills yet unseen,

  Wherever they invite Thee, 70

  At parent Nature’s grateful call,

  With gladness must requite Thee.

  A gracious welcome shall be thine,

  Such looks of love and honour

  As thy own Yarrow gave to me

  When first I gazed upon her;

  Beheld what I had feared to see,

  Unwilling to surrender

  Dreams treasured up from early days,

  The holy and the tender. 80

  And what, for this frail world, were all

  That mortals do or suffer,

  Did no responsive harp, no pen,

  Memorial tribute offer?

  Yea, what were mighty Nature’s self?

  Her features, could they win us,

 

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