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Complete Works of Thomas Love Peacock

Page 136

by Thomas Love Peacock


  Lone Echo from her tangled brake,

  On Pan, or Sylvan Genius, calling,

  Naiad or Nymph, in suppliant song:

  No more by living fountain, falling

  The poplar’s circling bower among,

  Where pious hands have carved of yore

  Bude bason for its lucid store

  And reared the grassy altar nigh,

  The traveller, when the sun rides high,

  For cool refreshment lingering there,

  Pours to the Sister Nymphs his prayer.

  Yet still the green vales smile: the springs

  Gush forth in light: the forest weaves

  Its own wild bowers; the breeze’s wings

  Make music in their rustling leaves;

  But ’tis no spirit’s breath that sighs

  Among their tangled canopies:

  In ocean’s caves no Nereid dwells:

  No Oread walks the mountain-dells:

  The streams no sedge-crowned Genii roll

  Prom bounteous urn: great Pan is dead:

  The life, the intellectual soul

  Of vale, and grove, and stream, has fled

  For ever with the creed sublime

  That nursed the Muse of earlier time.

  The broad moon rose o’er Thespia’s walls,

  And on the light wind’s swells and falls

  Came to Anthemion’s ear the sounds

  Of dance, and song, and festal pleasure,

  As slowly tow’rds the city’s bounds

  He turned, his backward steps to measure.

  But with such sounds his heart confessed

  No sympathy: his mind was pressed

  With thoughts too heavy to endure

  The contrast of a scene so gay;

  And from the walls he turned away,

  To where, in distant moonlight pure,

  Mount Helicon’s conspicuous height

  Bose in the dark-blue vault of night.

  Along the solitary road

  Alone he went; for who but he

  On that fair night would absent be

  Prom Thespia’s joyous revelry?

  The sounds that on the soft air flowed

  By slow degrees in distance died:

  And now he climbed the rock’s steep side.

  Where frowned o’er sterile regions wide

  Neptunian Ascra’s ruined tower:

  Memorial of gigantic power:

  But thoughts more dear and more refined

  Awakening, in the pensive mind,

  Of him, the Muses’ gentlest son,

  The shepherd-hard of Helicon,

  Whose song, to peace and wisdom dear,

  The Aonian Dryads loved to hear.

  By Aganippe’s fountain-wave

  Anthemion passed: the moonbeams fell

  Pale on the darkness of the cave,

  Within whose mossy rock-hewn cell

  The sculptured form of Linus stood,

  Primæval bard. The Nymphs for him

  Through every spring, and mountain flood,

  Green vale, and twilight woodland dim,

  Long wept: all living nature wept

  For Linus; when, in minstrel strife,

  Apollo’s wrath from love and life

  The child of music swept.

  The Muses’ grove is nigh. He treads

  Its sacred precincts. O’er him spreads

  The palm’s aërial canopy,

  That, nurtured by perennial springs,

  Around its summit broad and high

  Its light and branchy foliage flings,

  Arching in graceful symmetry.

  Among the tall stems jagg’d and bare

  Luxuriant laurel interweaves

  An undershade of myriad leaves,

  Here black in rayless masses, there

  In partial moonlight glittering fair;

  And wheresoe’er the barren rock

  Peers through the grassy soil, its roots

  The sweet andrachne strikes, to mock

  Sterility, and profusely shoots

  Its light boughs, rich with ripening fruits.

  The moonbeams, through the chequering shade,

  Upon the silent temple played,

  The Muses’ fane. The nightingale,

  Those consecrated bowers among,

  Poured on the air a warbled tale,

  So sweet, that scarcely from her nest,

  Where Orpheus’ hallowed relics rest,

  She breathes a sweeter song.

  A scene, whose power the maniac sense

  Of passion’s wildest mood might own!

  Anthemion felt its influence:

  His fancy drank the soothing tone

  Of all that tranquil loveliness;

  And health and bloom returned to bless

  His dear Calliroë, and the groves

  And rocks where pastoral Ladon roves

  Bore record of their blissful loves.

  List! there is music on the wind!

  Sweet music! seldom mortal ear

  On sounds so tender, so refined,

  Has dwelt. Perchance some Muse is near,

  Buterpe, or Polymnia bright,

  Or Erato, whose gentle lyre

  Responds to love and young desire!

  It is the central hour of night:

  The time is holy, lone, severe,

  And mortals may not linger here!

  Still on the air those wild notes fling

  Their airy spells of voice and string,

  In sweet accordance, sweeter made

  By response soft from caverned shade.

  He turns to where a lovely glade

  Sleeps in the open moonlight’s smile,

  A natural fane, whose ample bound

  The palm’s columnar stems surround,

  A wild and stately peristyle;

  Save where their interrupted ring

  Bends on the consecrated cave,

  From whose dark arch, with tuneful wave,

  Libethrus issues, sacred spring.

  Beside its gentle murmuring,

  A maiden, on a mossy stone,

  Full in the moonlight, sits alone:

  Her eyes, with humid radiance bright,

  As if a tear had dimmed their light,

  Are fixed upon the moon; her hair

  Flows long and loose in the light soft air;

  A golden lyre her white hands bear;

  Its chords, beneath her fingers fleet,

  To such wild symphonies awake,

  Her sweet lips breathe a song so sweet,

  That the echoes of the cave repeat

  Its closes with as soft a sigh,

  As if they almost feared to break

  The magic of its harmony.

  Oh! there was passion in the sound,

  Intensest passion, strange and deep;

  Wild breathings of a soul, around

  Whose every pulse one hope had bound,

  One burning hope, which might not sleep.

  But hark! that wild and solemn swell!

  And was there in those tones a spell,

  Which none may disobey

  For lo!

  Anthemion from the sylvan shade

  Moves with reluctant steps and slow,

  And in the lonely moonlight glade

  He stands before the radiant maid.

  She ceased her song, and with a smile

  She welcomed him, but nothing said:

  And silently he stood the while, —

  And tow’rds the ground he drooped his head,

  As if he shrunk beneath the light

  Of those dark eyes so dazzling bright.

  At length she spoke:—” The flower was fair

  I bade thee till its fading wear:

  And didst thou scorn the boon,

  Or died the flower so soon?” —

  — “It did not fade,

  Oh radiant maid!

  But Thespia’s rites its use forbade,

&n
bsp; To Love’s vindictive power profane:

  If soothly spoke the reverend seer,

  Whose voice rebuked, with words severe,

  Its beauty’s secret bane.” —

  — “The world, oh youth! deems many wise,

  Who dream at noon with waking eyes,

  While spectral fancy round them flings

  Phantoms of unexisting things;

  Whose truth is lies, whose paths are error,

  Whose gods are fiends, whose heaven is terror;

  And such a slave has been with thee,

  And thou, in thy simplicity,

  Hast deemed his idle sayings truth.

  The flower I gave thee, thankless youth! —

  The harmless flower thy hand rejected,

  Was fair: my native river sees

  Its verdure and its bloom reflected

  Wave in the eddies and the breeze.

  My mother felt its beauty’s claim,

  And gave, in sportive fondness wild,

  Its name to me, her only child.” —

  — “Then RHODODAPHNE is thy name?” —

  Amthemion said: the maiden bent

  Her head in token of assent.

  — “Say once again, if sooth I deem,

  Penëus is thy native stream?” —

  — “Down Pindus’ steep Penëus fells,

  And swift and clear through hill and dale

  It flows, and by Larissa’s walls,

  And through wild Tempe, loveliest vale;

  And on its banks the cypress gloom

  Waves round my father’s lonely tomb.

  My mother’s only child am I:

  ‘Mid Tempe’s sylvan rocks we dwell;

  And from my earliest infancy,

  The darling of our cottage-dell

  For its bright leaves and clusters fair,

  My namesake flower has bound my hair.

  With costly gift and flattering song,

  Youths, rich and valiant, sought my love.

  They moved me not. I shunned the throng

  Of suitors, for the mountain-grove

  Where Sylvan Gods and Oreads rove.

  The Muses, whom I worship here,

  Had breathed their influence on my being,

  Keeping my youthful spirit clear

  From all corrupting thoughts, and freeing

  My footsteps from the crowd, to tread

  Beside the torrent’s echoing bed,

  ‘Mid wind-tost pines, on steeps aerial,

  Where elemental Genii throw

  Effluence of natures more ethereal

  Than vulgar minds can feel or know.

  Oft on those steeps, at earliest dawn,

  The world in mist beneath me lay,

  Whose vapoury curtains, half withdrawn,

  Revealed the flow of Thermal bay,

  Red with the nascent light of day;

  Till full from Athos’ distant height

  The sun poured down his golden beams

  Scattering the mists like morning dreams,

  And rocks and lakes and isles and streams

  Burst, like creation, into light.

  In noontide bowers the bubbling springs,

  In evening vales the winds that sigh

  To eddying rivers murmuring by,

  Have heard to these symphonious strings

  The rocks and caverned glens reply.

  Spirits that love the moonlight hour

  Have met me on the shadowy hill:

  Dream’st thou of Magic? of the power

  That makes the blood of life run chill,

  And shakes the world with daemon skill?

  Beauty is Magic; grace and song;

  Fair form, light motion, airy sound:

  Frail webs! and yet a chain more strong

  They weave the strongest hearts around,

  Than e’er Abides’ arm unbound:

  And such a chain I weave round thee,

  Though but with mortal witchery.” —

  His eyes and ears had drank the charm.

  The damsel rose, and on his arm

  She laid her hand. Through all his frame

  The soft touch thrilled like liquid flame; —

  But on his mind Calliroë came

  All pale and sad, her sweet eyes dim

  With tears which for herself and him

  Fell: by that modest image mild

  Recalled, inspired, Anthemion strove

  Against the charm that now beguiled

  His sense, and cried, in accents wild,

  — “Oh maid! I have another love!” —

  But still she held his arm, and spoke

  Again in accents thrilling sweet:

  — “In Tempe’s vale a lonely oak

  Has felt the storms of ages beat:

  Blasted by the lightning-stroke,

  A hollow, leafless, branchless trunk

  It stands; but in its giant cell

  A mighty sylvan power doth dwell,

  An old and holy oracle.

  Kneeling by that ancient tree,

  I sought the voice of destiny,

  And in my ear these accents sunk:

  ‘Waste not in loneliness thy bloom:

  With flowers the Thespian altar dress:

  The youth whom Love’s mysterious doom

  Assigns to thee, thy sight shall bless

  With no ambiguous loveliness;

  And thou, amid the joyous scene,

  Shalt know him, by his mournful mien,

  And by the paleness of his cheek,

  And by the sadness of his eye,

  And by his withered flowers, and by

  The language thy own heart shall speak.’

  And I did know thee, youth! and thou

  Art mine, and I thy bride must be.

  Another love! the gods allow

  No other love to thee or me!”

  She gathered up her glittering hair,

  And round his neck its tresses threw,

  And twined her arms of beauty rare

  Around him, and the light curls drew

  In closer bands: ethereal dew

  Of love and young desire was swimming

  In her bright eyes, albeit not dimming

  Their starry radiance, rather brightning

  Their beams with passion’s liquid lightning.

  She clasped him to her throbbing breast,

  And on his lips her lips she prest,

  And cried the while

  With joyous smile:

  — “These lips are mine; the spells have won them,

  Which round and round thy soul I twine;

  And be the kiss I print upon them

  Poison to all lips but mine!” —

  Dizzy awhile Anthemion stood,

  With thirst-parched lips and fevered blood,

  In those enchanting ringlets twined:

  The fane, the cave, the moonlight wood,

  The world, and all the world enshrined,

  Seemed melting from his troubled mind:

  But those last words the thought recalled

  Of his Calliroë, and appalled

  His mind with many a nameless fear

  For her, so good, so mild, so dear.

  With sudden start of gentle force

  From Rhododaphne’s arms he sprung,

  And swifter than the torrent’s course

  From rock to rock in tumult flung,

  Adown the steeps of Helicon,

  By spring, and cave, and tower, he fled,

  But turned from Thespia’s walls, and on

  Along the rocky way, that led

  Tow’rds the Corinthian Isthmus, sped,

  Impatient to behold again

  His cottage-home by Ladon’s side,

  And her, for whose dear sake his brain

  Was giddy with foreboding pain,

  Fairest of Ladon’s virgin train,

  His own long-destined bride.

  CANTO IV.

  MAGIC and m
ystery, spells Circæan,

  The Siren voice, that calmed the sea,

  And steeped the soul in dews Lethæan;

  The enchanted chalice, sparkling free

  With wine, amid whose ruby glow

  Love couched, with madness linked and woe;

  Mantle and zone, whose woof beneath

  Lurked wily grace, in subtle wreath

  With blandishment and young desire

  And soft persuasion intertwined,

  Whose touch, with sympathetic fire,

  Could melt at once the sternest mind;

  Have passed away: for vestal Truth

  Young Fancy’s foe, and Reason chill,

  Have chased the dreams that charmed the youth

  Of nature and the world, which still,

  Amid that vestal light severe,

  Our colder spirits leap to hear

  Like echoes from a fairy hill.

  Yet deem not so. The Power of Spells

  Still lingers on the earth, but dwells

  In deeper folds of close disguise,

  That baffle Reason’s searching eyes:

  Nor shall that mystic Power resign

  To Truth’s cold sway his webs of guile,

  Till woman’s eyes have ceased to shine,

  And woman’s lips have ceased to smile,

  And woman’s voice has ceased to be

  The earthly soul of melody.

  A night and day had passed away:

  A second night. A second day

  Had risen. The noon on vale and hill

  Was glowing, and the pensive herds

  In rocky pool and sylvan rill

  The shadowy coolness sought. The birds

  Among their leafy bowers were still,

  Save where the red-breast on the pine,

  In thickest ivy’s sheltering nest,

  Attuned a lonely song divine,

  To soothe old Pan’s meridian rest.

  The stream’s eternal eddies played

  In light and music; on its edge

  The soft light air scarce moved the sedge:

  The bees a pleasant murmuring made

  On thymy bank and flowery hedge:

  From field to field the grasshopper

  Kept up his joyous descant shrill;

  When once again the wanderer,

  With arduous travel faint and pale,

  Beheld his own Arcadian vale.

  From Oryx, down the sylvan way,

  With hurried pace the youth proceeds.

  Sweet Ladon’s waves beside him stray

  In dear companionship: the reeds

  Seem, whispering on the margin clear,

  The doom of Syrinx to rehearse,

  Ladonian Syrinx, name most dear

  To music and Mænalian verse.

  It is the Aphrodisian grove.

  Anthemion’s home is near. He sees

  The light smoke rising from the trees

  That shade the dwelling of his love.

  Sad bodings, shadowy fears of ill,

  Pressed heavier on him, in wild strife

  With many-wandering hope, that still

  Leaves on the darkest clouds of life

 

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