Plays o'er the higher keys, and bears aloft The peal of bursting thunder, and then calls By mellow touches, from the softer tubes, Voices of melting tenderness, that blend With pure and gentle musings, till the soul, Commingling with the melody, is borne, Rapt, and dissolved in ecstasy, to Heaven.
'Tis not the chime and flow of words, that move In measured file, and metrical array; "Tis not the union of returning sounds, Nor all the pleasing artifice of rhyme, And quantity, and accent, that can give This all pervading spirit to the ear,
Or blend it with the movings of the soul. "Tis a mysterious feeling, which combines Man with the world around him, in a chain Woven of flowers, and dipp'd in sweetness, till He tastes the high communion of his thoughts, With all existences, in earth and heaven, That meet him in the charm of grace and power. 'Tis not the noisy babbler, who displays, In studied phrase, and ornate epithet, And rounded period, poor and vapid thoughts, Which peep from out the cumbrous ornaments That overload their littleness. Its words Are few, but deep and solemn; and they break Fresh from the fount of feeling, and are full Of all that passion, which, on Carmel, fired The holy prophet, when his lips were coals, His language wing'd with terror, as when bolts Leap from the brooding tempest, armed with wrath, Commission'd to affright us, and destroy.
AT THE TEMPLE OF BELUS.
THIS spacious mausoleum holds
Proud dust in many a worship'd shrine; Yon massive golden urn enfolds The Founder of our line.
In gloomy grandeur, here are laid The gods our regal race have made.
Yes, here are sleeping side by side The gods Assyrian queens have borne: Warriors by madmen deified,
And tyrants overthrown.
Why, since my sires are all divine, Am I, their son, denied a shrine?
I have unto my people been
A father, brother, and a friend! Go to the Western Islandmen
Go eastward to mine empire's end; If there be one hath wrong of me, Him, fourfold recompense shall see.
I loved the glittering javelin not- I did not love war's bloody suit; I left the field where nations fought, To listen to the lute;
I pass'd the prancing war-horse by, To gaze at beauty's melting eye.
I never crush'd Assyria's sons. To build Colossal temples high; I bade the sire his little ones
Watch with a parent's eye.
Throughout the land no vassal strives. With a hard lord, nor wears his gyves.
I bade my subjects plant the vine Throughout the realms my sceptre sways; I bade them quaff the generous wine, And feast away their days. Sardanapalus thence hath lost His golden shrine and holocaust.
For had I made the rivers dance
With waves of blood from prostrate foes; And couch'd a warrior's murdering lance, And broke my land's repose;
Then had my glory walk'd abroad And I had been enshrined a god.
What else but wide-spread carnage made The founder of our line a god? A man, whose dark ambition bade Earth be a crimson'd sod;
A bloody hunter, yet behold! His shrine is of thrice beaten gold.
And she, the queen of Belus' son, Who built this sanctuary high, And plann'd it-proud presuming one! With roof-tree laid against the sky; Because she loved war,-when she died Wide realms her queenship deified.
But I, because my regal day
Hath been array'd in pleasure's dress; Because I courted music's lay
And beauty's dear caress; Because I women loved, and wine, Am thence to be denied a shrine.
BY PROFESSOR WILSON.
ART thou a thing of mortal birth, Whose happy home is on our earth? Does human blood with life embue Those wandering veins of heavenly blue, That stray along thy forehead fair, Lost 'mid a gleam of golden hair? Oh! can that light and airy breath Steal from a being doom'd to death; Those features to the grave be sent In sleep thus mutely eloquent; Or, art thou, what thy form would seem, The phantom of a blessed dream?
A human shape I feel thou art, I feel it at my beating heart, Those tremors both of soul and sense Awoke by infant innocence !
Though dear the forms by fancy wove, We love them with a transient love, Thoughts from the living world intrude Even on her deepest solitude: But, lovely child! thy magic stole At once into my inmost soul, With feelings as thy beauty fair, And left no other vision there.
To me thy parents are unknown; Glad would they be their child to own! And well they must have loved before, If since thy birth they loved not more. Thou art a branch of noble stem, And, seeing thee, I figure them.
TO A SLEEPING CHILD.
What many a childless one would give, If thou in their still home would'st live! Though in thy face no family line
Might sweetly say, "This babe is mine!" In time thou would'st become the same As their own child,—all but the name!
How happy must thy parents be Who daily live in sight of thee! Whose hearts no greater pleasure seek Than see thee smile, and hear thee speak, And feel all natural griefs beguiled
By thee, their fond, their duteous child. What joy must in their souls have stirr'd When thy first broken words were heard, Words, that, inspired by Heaven, express'd The transports dancing in thy breast! And for thy smile!-thy lip, cheek, brow, Even while I gaze, are kindling now.
I called thee duteous; am I wrong? No! truth, I feel, is in my song: Duteous thy heart's still beatings move To God, to Nature, and to Love! To God!-for thou a harmless child Hast kept his temple undefiled: To Nature !-for thy tears and sighs Obey alone her mysteries:
To Love!-for fiends of hate might see Thou dwell'st in love, and love in thee! What wonder then, though in thy dreams Thy face with mystic meaning beams!
Oh! that my spirit's eye could see Whence burst those gleams of ecstasy! That light of dreaming soul appears To play from thoughts above thy years.
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