Book Read Free

Thomas Moore- Collected Poetical Works

Page 55

by Thomas Moore


  Thro’ the white fingers flushing came.

  But oh! the light, the unhoped-for light,

  That now illumed this morning’s heaven!

  Up sprung Iänthe at the sight,

  Tho’ — hark! — the clocks but strike eleven,

  And rarely did the nymph surprise

  Mankind so early with her eyes.

  Who now will say that England’s sun

  (Like England’s self, these spendthrift days)

  His stock of wealth hath near outrun,

  And must retrench his golden rays —

  Pay for the pride of sunbeams past,

  And to mere moonshine come at last?

  “Calumnious thought!” Iänthe cries,

  While coming mirth lit up each glance,

  And, prescient of the ball, her eyes

  Already had begun to dance:

  For brighter sun than that which now

  Sparkled o’er London’s spires and towers,

  Had never bent from heaven his brow

  To kiss Firenze’s City of Flowers.

  What must it be — if thus so fair.

  Mid the smoked groves of Grosvenor Square —

  What must it be where Thames is seen

  Gliding between his banks of green,

  While rival villas, on each side,

  Peep from their bowers to woo his tide,

  And, like a Turk between two rows

  Of Harem beauties, on he goes —

  A lover, loved for even the grace

  With which he slides from their embrace.

  In one of those enchanted domes,

  One, the most flowery, cool, and bright

  Of all by which that river roams,

  The Fête is to be held to-night —

  That Fête already linked to fame,

  Whose cards, in many a fair one’s sight

  (When looked for long, at last they came,)

  Seemed circled with a fairy light; —

  That Fête to which the cull, the flower

  Of England’s beauty, rank and power,

  From the young spinster, just come out,

  To the old Premier, too long in —

  From legs of far descended gout,

  To the last new-mustachioed chin —

  All were convoked by Fashion’s spells

  To the small circle where she dwells,

  Collecting nightly, to allure us,

  Live atoms, which, together hurled,

  She, like another Epicurus,

  Sets dancing thus, and calls “the World.”

  Behold how busy in those bowers

  (Like May-flies in and out of flowers.)

  The countless menials, swarming run,

  To furnish forth ere set of sun

  The banquet-table richly laid

  Beneath yon awning’s lengthened shade,

  Where fruits shall tempt and wines entice,

  And Luxury’s self, at Gunter’s call,

  Breathe from her summer-throne of ice

  A spirit of coolness over all.

  And now the important hour drew nigh,

  When, ‘neath the flush of evening’s sky,

  The west-end “world” for mirth let loose,

  And moved, as he of Syracuse1

  Ne’er dreamt of moving worlds, by force

  Of four horse power, had all combined

  Thro’ Grosvenor Gate to speed their course,

  Leaving that portion of mankind,

  Whom they call “Nobody,” behind;

  No star for London’s feasts to-day,

  No moon of beauty, new this May,

  To lend the night her crescent ray; —

  Nothing, in short, for ear or eye,

  But veteran belles and wits gone by,

  The relics of a past beau-monde,

  A world like Cuvier’s, long dethroned!

  Even Parliament this evening nods

  Beneath the harangues of minor Gods,

  On half its usual opiate’s share;

  The great dispensers of repose,

  The first-rate furnishers of prose

  Being all called to — prose elsewhere.

  Soon as thro’ Grosvenor’s lordly square —

  That last impregnable redoubt,

  Where, guarded with Patrician care,

  Primeval Error still holds out —

  Where never gleam of gas must dare

  ‘Gainst ancient Darkness to revolt,

  Nor smooth Macadam hope to spare

  The dowagers one single jolt; —

  Where, far too stately and sublime

  To profit by the lights of time,

  Let Intellect march how it will,

  They stick to oil and watchman still: —

  Soon as thro’ that illustrious square

  The first epistolary bell.

  Sounding by fits upon the air,

  Of parting pennies rung the knell;

  Warned by that tell-tale of the hours,

  And by the day-light’s westering beam,

  The young Iänthe, who, with flowers

  Half crowned, had sat in idle dream

  Before her glass, scarce knowing where

  Her fingers roved thro’ that bright hair,

  While, all capriciously, she now

  Dislodged some curl from her white brow,

  And now again replaced it there: —

  As tho’ her task was meant to be

  One endless change of ministry —

  A routing-up of Loves and Graces,

  But to plant others in their places.

  Meanwhile — what strain is that which floats

  Thro’ the small boudoir near — like notes

  Of some young bird, its task repeating

  For the next linnet music-meeting?

  A voice it was, whose gentle sounds

  Still kept a modest octave’s bounds,

  Nor yet had ventured to exalt

  Its rash ambition to B alt,

  That point towards which when ladies rise,

  The wise man takes his hat and — flies.

  Tones of a harp, too, gently played,

  Came with this youthful voice communing;

  Tones true, for once, without the aid

  Of that inflictive process, tuning —

  A process which must oft have given

  Poor Milton’s ears a deadly wound;

  So pleased, among the joys of Heaven,

  He specifies “harps ever tuned.”

  She who now sung this gentle strain

  Was our young nymph’s still younger sister —

  Scarce ready yet for Fashion’s train

  In their light legions to enlist her,

  But counted on, as sure to bring

  Her force into the field next spring.

  The song she thus, like Jubal’s shell,

  Gave forth “so sweetly and so well,”

  Was one in Morning Post much famed,

  From a divine collection, named,

  “Songs of the Toilet” — every Lay

  Taking for subject of its Muse,

  Some branch of feminine array,

  Some item, with full scope, to choose,

  From diamonds down to dancing shoes;

  From the last hat that Herbault’s hands

  Bequeathed to an admiring world,

  Down to the latest flounce that stands

  Like Jacob’s Ladder — or expands

  Far forth, tempestuously unfurled.

  Speaking of one of these new Lays,

  The Morning Post thus sweetly says: —

  “Not all that breathes from Bishop’s lyre,

  “That Barnett dreams, or Cooke conceives,

  “Can match for sweetness, strength, or fire,

  “This fine Cantata upon Sleeves.

  “The very notes themselves reveal

  “The cut of each new sleeve so well;

  “A flat betrays the Imbécilles,2
/>
  “Light fugues the flying lappets tell;

  “While rich cathedral chords awake

  ‘Our homage for the Manches d’Évêque.”

  ’Twas the first opening song the Lay

  Of all least deep in toilet-lore,

  That the young nymph, to while away

  The tiring-hour, thus warbled o’er: —

  SONG. ARRAY THEE, LOVE, ARRAY THEE, LOVE,

  Array thee, love, array thee, love,

  In all thy best array thee;

  The sun’s below — the moon’s above —

  And Night and Bliss obey thee.

  Put on thee all that’s bright and rare,

  The zone, the wreath, the gem,

  Not so much gracing charms so fair,

  As borrowing grace from them.

  Array thee, love, array thee, love,

  In all that’s bright array thee;

  The sun’s below — the moon’s above —

  And Night and Bliss obey thee.

  Put on the plumes thy lover gave.

  The plumes, that, proudly dancing,

  Proclaim to all, where’er they wave,

  Victorious eyes advancing.

  Bring forth the robe whose hue of heaven

  From thee derives such light,

  That Iris would give all her seven

  To boast but one so bright.

  Array thee, love, array thee, love, etc.

  Now hie thee, love, now hie thee, love,

  Thro’ Pleasure’s circles hie thee.

  And hearts, where’er thy footsteps move,

  Will beat when they come nigh thee.

  Thy every word shall be a spell,

  Thy every look a ray,

  And tracks of wondering eyes shall tell

  The glory of thy way!

  Now hie thee, love, now hie thee, love,

  Thro’ Pleasure’s circles hie thee,

  And hearts, where’er thy footsteps move,

  Shall beat when they come nigh thee.

  * * * * *

  Now in his Palace of the West,

  Sinking to slumber, the bright Day,

  Like a tired monarch fanned to rest,

  Mid the cool airs of Evening lay;

  While round his couch’s golden rim

  The gaudy clouds, like courtiers, crept —

  Struggling each other’s light to dim,

  And catch his last smile e’er he slept.

  How gay, as o’er the gliding Thames

  The golden eve its lustre poured,

  Shone out the high-born knights and dames

  Now grouped around that festal board;

  A living mass of plumes and flowers.

  As tho’ they’d robbed both birds and bowers —

  A peopled rainbow, swarming thro’

  With habitants of every hue;

  While, as the sparkling juice of France

  High in the crystal brimmers flowed,

  Each sunset ray that mixt by chance

  With the wine’s sparkles, showed

  How sunbeams may be taught to dance.

  If not in written form exprest,

  ’Twas known at least to every guest,

  That, tho’ not bidden to parade

  Their scenic powers in masquerade,

  (A pastime little found to thrive

  In the bleak fog of England’s skies,

  Where wit’s the thing we best contrive,

  As masqueraders, to disguise,)

  It yet was hoped-and well that hope

  Was answered by the young and gay —

  That in the toilet’s task to-day

  Fancy should take her wildest scope; —

  That the rapt milliner should be

  Let loose thro fields of poesy,

  The tailor, in inventive trance,

  Up to the heights of Epic clamber,

  And all the regions of Romance

  Be ransackt by the femme de chambre.

  Accordingly, with gay Sultanas,

  Rebeccas, Sapphos, Roxalanas —

  Circassian slaves whom Love would pay

  Half his maternal realms to ransom; —

  Young nuns, whose chief religion lay

  In looking most profanely handsome; —

  Muses in muslin-pastoral maids

  With hats from the Arcade-ian shades,

  And fortune-tellers, rich, ’twas plain,

  As fortune-hunters formed their train.

  With these and more such female groups,

  Were mixt no less fantastic troops

  Of male exhibitors — all willing

  To look even more than usual killing; —

  Beau tyrants, smock-faced braggadocios,

  And brigands, charmingly ferocious: —

  M.P.’s turned Turks, good Moslems then,

  Who, last night, voted for the Greeks;

  And Friars, stanch No-Popery men,

  In close confab with Whig Caciques.

  But where is she — the nymph whom late

  We left before her glass delaying

  Like Eve, when by the lake she sate,

  In the clear wave her charms surveying,

  And saw in that first glassy mirror

  The first fair face that lured to error.

  “Where is she,” ask’st thou? — watch all looks

  As centring to one point they bear,

  Like sun-flowers by the sides of brooks,

  Turned to the sun — and she is there.

  Even in disguise, oh never doubt

  By her own light you’d track her out:

  As when the moon, close shawled in fog,

  Steals as she thinks, thro’ heaven incog.,

  Tho’ hid herself, some sidelong ray

  At every step, detects her way.

  But not in dark disguise to-night

  Hath our young heroine veiled her light; —

  For see, she walks the earth, Love’s own.

  His wedded bride, by holiest vow

  Pledged in Olympus, and made known

  To mortals by the type which now

  Hangs glittering on her snowy brow,

  That butterfly, mysterious trinket,

  Which means the Soul (tho’ few would think it),

  And sparkling thus on brow so white,

  Tells us we’ve Psyche here tonight!

  But hark! some song hath caught her ears —

  And, lo, how pleased, as tho’ she’d ne’er

  Heard the Grand Opera of the Spheres,

  Her goddess-ship approves the air;

  And to a mere terrestrial strain,

  Inspired by naught but pink champagne,

  Her butterfly as gayly nods

  As tho’ she sate with all her train

  At some great Concert of the Gods,

  With Phoebus, leader — Jove, director,

  And half the audience drunk with nectar.

  From the male group the carol came —

  A few gay youths whom round the board

  The last-tried flask’s superior fame

  Had lured to taste the tide it poured;

  And one who from his youth and lyre

  Seemed grandson to the Teian-sire,

  Thus gayly sung, while, to his song,

  Replied in chorus the gay throng: —

  SONG. SOME MORTALS THERE MAY BE, SO WISE, OR SO FINE

  Some mortals there may be, so wise, or so fine,

  As in evenings like this no enjoyment to see;

  But, as I’m not particular — wit, love, and wine,

  Are for one night’s amusement sufficient for me.

  Nay — humble and strange as my tastes may appear —

  If driven to the worst, I could manage, thank Heaven,

  To put up with eyes such as beam round me here,

  And such wine as we’re sipping, six days out of seven.

  So pledge me a bumper — your sages profound

  May be blest, if they will, on their
own patent plan:

  But as we are not sages, why — send the cup round —

  We must only be happy the best way we can.

  A reward by some king was once offered, we’re told,

  To whoe’er could invent a new bliss for mankind;

  But talk of new pleasures! — give me but the old,

  And I’ll leave your inventors all new ones they find.

  Or should I, in quest of fresh realms of bliss,

  Set sail in the pinnace of Fancy some day,

  Let the rich rosy sea I embark on be this,

  And such eyes as we’ve here be the stars of my way!

  In the mean time, a bumper — your Angels, on high,

  May have pleasures unknown to life’s limited span;

  But, as we are not Angels, why — let the flask fly —

  We must be happy all ways that we can.

  * * * * *

  Now nearly fled was sunset’s light,

  Leaving but so much of its beam

  As gave to objects, late so blight,

  The coloring of a shadowy dream;

  And there was still where Day had set

  A flush that spoke him loath to die —

  A last link of his glory yet,

  Binding together earth and sky.

  Say, why is it that twilight best

  Becomes even brows the loveliest?

  That dimness with its softening Touch

  Can bring out grace unfelt before,

  And charms we ne’er can see too much,

  When seen but half enchant the more?

  Alas, it is that every joy

  In fulness finds its worst alloy,

  And half a bliss, but hoped or guessed,

  Is sweeter than the whole possest; —

  That Beauty, when least shone upon,

  A creature most ideal grows;

  And there’s no light from moon or sun

  Like that Imagination throws; —

  It is, alas, that Fancy shrinks

  Even from a bright reality,

  And turning inly, feels and thinks

  For heavenlier things than e’er will be.

  Such was the effect of twilight’s hour

  On the fair groups that, round and round,

  From glade to grot, from bank to bower,

  Now wandered thro’ this fairy ground;

  And thus did Fancy — and champagne —

  Work on the sight their dazzling spells,

  Till nymphs that looked at noonday plain,

  Now brightened in the gloom to belles;

  And the brief interval of time,

  ‘Twixt after dinner and before,

  To dowagers brought back their prime,

  And shed a halo round two-score.

  Meanwhile, new pastimes for the eye,

  The ear, the fancy, quick succeed;

  And now along the waters fly

  Light gondoles, of Venetian breed,

  With knights and dames who, calm reclined,

 

‹ Prev