Book Read Free

Thomas Hood- Collected Poetical Works

Page 110

by Thomas Hood

I would thou wert away!

  Mercutius.

  Why dost thou sit then

  I’ the middle of a whirlpool drawing me unto thee;

  My brain is dizzy and my heart is sick,

  With the circles I have made round thee and round thee!

  Till I dash into thy arms! —

  Lamia.

  There shalt thou never!

  Go! desperate man; — away! — and fear thy Gods,

  Or else the hot indignation in my eyes

  Will blast thee. O, beware! I have within me

  A dangerous nature, which if thou provoke,

  Acts cruelly. Ne’er chafe me; thou had’st better

  Ruffle a scorpion than the thing I am! —

  Away!

  Or I’ll bind thy bones till they crack! —

  Mercutius.

  Ha! ha! dost threaten?

  Why then come ruin, anguishes, or death, —

  Being goaded onward by my headlong fate

  I’ll clasp thee! —

  Though there be sugar’d venom on thy lips

  I’ll drink it to the dregs — though there be plagues

  In thy contagious touch — or in thy breath

  Putrid infections — though thou be more cruel

  Than lean-ribb’d tigers — thirsty and open-fang’d,

  I will be as fierce a monster for thy sake,

  And grapple thee.

  Lamia.

  Would Lycius were here!

  Mercutius.

  Ha! would’st thou have him gash’d and torn in strips

  As I would scatter him? then so say I

  “Would Lycius were here!” I have oft clench’d

  My teeth in that very spite.

  Lamia.

  Thou ruthless devil!

  To hear him so bloody a will! — Why then, come hither,

  We are a fit pair.

  [Mercutius embracing her, she stabs him in the back with a small dagger

  Mercutius (falling).

  O thou false witch!

  Thou hast prick’d me to the heart! Ha! what a film

  Falls from my eyes! — or have the righteous Gods

  Transform’d me a beast for this! Thou crawling spite,

  Thou hideous — venemous — [Dies.

  Lamia.

  Let the word choke thee!

  I know what I am. Thou wilful desperate fool

  To charge upon the spikes! — thy death be upon thee! —

  Why would’st thou have me sting? Heaven knows I had spared thee,

  But for thy menace of a dearer life.

  O! Lycius! Lycius!

  I have been both woman and serpent for thy sake —

  Perchance to be scorn’d in each: — I have but gored

  This ill-starr’d man in vain! — hush, methought he stirr’d;

  I’ll give him another thrust (stabs the body); there — lie thou quiet.

  What a frown he hath upon his face!

  May the Gods ne’er mention it

  In their thunders, nor set the red stain of his blood

  For a sign of wrath in the sky I — O thou poor wretch!

  Not thee dull clod! — but for myself I weep —

  The sport of such malicious destinies!

  Why was I heiress of these mortal gifts

  Perishing all whether I love or hate?

  Nay, come out of sight [To the body.

  With thy dismal puckering look,— ‘twill fright the world

  Out of its happiness. [She drags the body aside, and covers it with drapery.

  Would I could throw

  A thicker curtain on thee — but I see thee

  All through and through, as though I had

  The eyes of a God within; alas, I fear

  I am here all human, and have that fierce thing

  They call a conscience! [Exit.

  JUVENILIA

  THE BANDIT

  (?1815-17)

  CANTO FIRST

  ‘WHILE the red glaring torches illumine the cave,

  Bring the wine that was bought by the blood of the brave!

  No coward’s pale lip

  Of the liquor shall sip

  While we drink to our comrades that lie in the grave!

  ‘We gained it in strife, and in danger we won;

  But we merrily drink now the battle is done!

  And the goblet we quaff

  While we merrily laugh,

  Nor to fill it anew the same danger we’ll shun.

  ‘Then fill the bright goblets — replenish the whole!

  Pour, pour the rich liquor that gladdens the soul;

  For remorse we defy

  When the goblet is by,

  And conscience and care are soon drowned in the bowl.’

  Thus sung the bandit crew, and as they sung,

  Wildly their harsh, discordant voices rung;

  And jarring echoes filled the vaulted cave

  As each harsh voice joined rudely in the stave;

  And when they ceased, the scoffing jest gave birth

  To sounds of laughter — loud and boisterous mirth;

  Or all was hushed in silence round while one

  Triumphant told of deeds of horror done;

  Or boasting speech and bitter mockings rose

  To angry words, and threatenings to blows

  And bloody contest, till the din swells high

  With shouts of fury, pain, and blasphemy.

  But instant sunk the tumult and the din,

  As suddenly the Chieftain came within;

  His tall, majestic, and commanding form

  Had been depressed beneath misfortune’s storm;

  And on his brow care’s lineaments uncouth

  Belie his age and rob him of his youth.

  And, save when all convulsed, his features show

  He strives within for mastery with woe;

  While half his agitated frame reveals

  The inward agony his pride conceals;

  His face and form assume the settled air

  And wonted attitude of calm despair.

  He was not formed by Nature for the part

  That he now played — once foreign to his heart.

  He had been formed to love; but ’twas his fate

  To meet with none but who deserved his hate.

  He had been mild, but injuries had fired,

  And with a savage sullenness inspired;

  Repeated wrongs had turned his breast to steel,

  And all but these he had forgot to feel.

  Apart from all, within a dark recess,

  He sat him down in gloomy silentness,

  Where he was wont to sit in gloomy thought

  O’er dark designs with woe and fury fraught,

  And his wild brain each frenzied plan revolved,

  Or acts of daring enterprise resolved;

  Even now, thus darkly did he meditate

  One last sad act to signalize his hate —

  One deed of retribution to be hurled

  To’venge the wrongs he suffered from the world.

  Nor oft the robbers ventured to intrude

  By careless noise upon his thoughtful mood;

  And fewer still e’er strive by curious speech

  The secret purport of his plans to reach.

  One look — one word — the intrusive speech repressed,

  And the inquiry hushed, ere scarce expressed;

  So was he ever feared and held in awe —

  They crouched to him who spurned at every law!

  Wolf only to address the Chieftain dared,

  Nor for repulses oft repeated cared.

  Next to the Chief they feared and hated him

  Whose joy was blood and cruelty his whim.

  His sheathless blade was never known to rust,

  Nor the fresh gore e’er suffered to encrust;

  Peace he abhorred, and endless warfare waged,

  In jarring strife, eternal broils engaged.

&
nbsp; Ambitious, too, — impatient of control, —

  Subjection grated on his haughty soul,

  And made him — spurning at his leader’s sway —

  First to rebel and latest to obey.

  And now, with angry tone the Bandit spoke,

  And on the Chieftain’s reverie thus broke —

  ‘Say, do you scorn us, that you shun our feast,

  For that invites not your contempt at least;

  Our wine is good, and even Dacre’s Lord

  Scarce sees such venison smoke upon his board.

  Such is our feast — would it were never worse,

  Nor more deserving your contempt than us.’

  Up rose the Chief in haste, but not a word

  Implied the discontented speech was heard.

  ‘To arms,’ he cried, ‘to arms with speed prepare,

  This night our final enterprise to share,

  And then we part, for ‘mid these wilds I see

  No firm security remains for me.’

  He spoke — they lingered still, and some expressed

  Their discontent in murmurs half repressed —

  ‘ When steals our wearied limbs repose from toil,

  While we make merry o’er our hard-earned spoil,

  This very night we fondly hoped at last

  To rest and revel after labours past;

  And, as I live, a feast, Twas our belief,

  Would celebrate the accession of our Chief.’

  ‘A feast! a banquet! rather let it show

  In my life’s calendar a day of woe!

  A day that rose in gloom is lowering yet,

  And soon, I fear, as gloomily will set;

  And for your calling, think you I have prized

  Your avocation, nor yourselves despised?

  Have I your savage, brutal deeds admired,

  Nor cursed the sordid motives that inspired?

  No! I have viewed ye as a scourge designed —

  A plague — a curse — to chasten humankind.

  As such, as instruments I chose you, then,

  To wreak my vengeance on ungrateful men!

  ‘And in your banquets did I ever sip?

  Your food untasted ever pass my lip?

  No! I will eat wild berries and wild fruit,

  Drink of the stream and famish on a root,

  Couch in a cave and lodge me where I can,

  Ere I will now hold anything of man!

  And, hear this truth, — the plainest morsel now,

  By honest labour, earned with sweating brow,

  Were dearer, sweeter far, to me at least,

  Than all the viands in your guilty feast!

  Enough of this. Time hurries on! Draw near;

  For once my plan and all its purport hear,

  That, known more fully, you may judge aright,

  You join or not my enterprise to-night!’

  In deep attention, — hushed without a sound, —

  With wondering eagerness they circle round;

  Ne’er had he- deigned before one word to hold

  In converse with them or his plans had told;

  But now he speaks, for once without command,

  And the mute robbers, listening, round him stand.

  ‘Who has not heard the Earl Glenallan’s name,

  And been familiar with his warlike fame?

  Who, by his king ungratefully repaid,

  Left courts and kings and sought the rural shade,

  Till roused from happy indolence he heard

  The plaint his bondagèd countrymen preferred,

  And heard the summons to his patriot hand

  To burst the fetters that enslaved his land;

  ’Twas then reluctantly he drew his sword

  Against the king for whom his blood had poured,

  But poured, alas, in vain; — who does not know

  His combats, victories, and overthrow?

  Though all his perils, both by land and sea,

  And sorrows since, are only known to me.

  ‘Defeated and deserted — under ban —

  Chased like a tiger by the hate of man;

  By day through lonely wilds he urged his flight,

  And couched beneath Heaven’s canopy at night.

  Alone he fled — his tenantry’s goodwill

  And wishes for his welfare followed still;

  But more they dared not — till, by happy chance,

  Two boldly aided his escape to France.

  ‘But ere he went he bade a long adieu

  To one, the last, the only friend he knew;

  To him confided his intended wife —

  His love, his hope, his all, and more than life;

  And then he hurried from the ingrate strand,

  But first bequeathed his blessing to his land.

  ‘In France he covered all his deeds with shame,

  And, first, for aye resigned the patriot’s name.

  Cursed be the day — the era of his fall —

  He gave his hand in friendship to the Gaul;

  Ne’er might his foes so well exult till then,

  Nor he deserved thus of his countrymen;

  Ne’er had he raised before his traitor hand

  Against the welfare of his native land;

  His deeds were blasted and his shame was sealed.

  There first he fought and first was known to greet

  A joyful feeling in his own defeat;

  Oft had he sighed to join in fight once more

  With those he led to victory before;

  But, they victorious, ‘twere a coward’s deed!

  He sighed, and left it for the day of need.

  It came. He marked the Gaul’s superior force —

  Resistless, bursting its triumphant course.

  He left the conquerors in joyful haste,

  And fought when ruin and defeat menaced.

  Again he conquered, and returned once more

  With hopes rekindled to his native shore,

  And fondly thought this service might recall

  His country’s love and make amends for all.

  In vain! His service they remembered not,

  But all, except his many faults, forgot,

  And drove him into solitude to find

  A refuge with the vilest of his kind.

  And now, to fill the measure of his woe,

  His friend must strike the last inhuman blow.

  This night — save we avert the guilty deed,

  Or his cold heart, like that he tortures, bleed —

  He weds the hand and heart he basely stole,

  And whelms keen anguish o’er Glenallan’s soul!

  Love, friendless, poor — yet while my arm is strong,

  And my blade keen, I can avenge the wrong.

  Till now I’ve righted others’ cause alone,

  But now Glenallan shall avenge his own!’

  Awhile the robbers paused in deep amaze,

  And on the Chieftain turned their earnest gaze,

  Not that they pondered aught unusual now

  In the dark workings of his gloomy brow;

  But ne’er before they heard his lofty name,

  Nor knew they had a Chieftain of such fame.

  He spoke again: ‘Your guilty hands are red,

  And blush with blood too often they have shed.

  Many perchance may feel in after times

  The woe, the misery that tracked your crimes;

  But can remorse or conscience now recall

  One deed as black as this among them all?

  If so, remain, unworthy of the care

  To speed the chastening you ought to share.

  Speak! What so sacred to a Highland breast

  As is the claim of safety for his guest,

  And far more sacred if he be distrest?

  ’Twas thus we hailed the Stuart when he fled,

  And spurned the gold that hung upon his head:

  Was there a
wretch, a traitor so accurst,

  A seeming friend who dared betray his trust?

  ‘Lead on! — We go! The traitor’s heart shall bleed,

  Our hands shall aid our tongues approve the deed.

  Long live our Chieftain, and all traitors die! ‘

  They cried — one only joined not in the cry.

  ’Twas Wolf!— ‘I say not so,’ with scornful smile

  He said, and gazed upon his brand the while.

  ‘ Could this relate the deeds its edge had done, —

  Lost in amaze ye would forget that one,

  As each succeeding each you found them still

  All brighter far, or blacker, if you will,’ —

  And o’er his haggard features as he spoke

  A scornful smile of exultation broke.

  All have some passion, pride, or ruling will,

  And his to be in all superior still;

  And now he gloried o’er the blood he spilt,

  That made him paramount, though but in guilt.

  And now the sign, the bustle, and the din

  Of preparation reigns without — within;

  Loud ring the arms, and loud the bugle strain,

  Recalls the stragglers to the cave again.

  They came in weary groups, but gaily bring

  Fresh game and booty for the banqueting,

  But, lo! deserted is the festive board,

  And each girds on his armour and his sword,

  While all their converse and their words imply

  Some daring enterprise and booty nigh.

  They marvel and inquire the Chief’s intent,

  And rather give submission than consent.

  They arm — the order given — the route is known, —

  They hurry out, and Wolf is left alone.

  The sun, still lingering in the golden west,

  Slow sinks behind the purple mountain’s crest

  That rears its head sublime; and far below

  The lake’s calm bosom sparkles in the glow,

  Save where is seen an undulating shade

  By frowning rocks and woods and forests made;

  Or the tall vessel gently seems to glide

  In silent majesty along the tide,

  Her white sails wooing the soft zephyr’s breath,

  Scarce rippling in the dancing wave beneath

 

‹ Prev