Complete Poetical Works of Robert Southey

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Complete Poetical Works of Robert Southey Page 129

by Robert Southey


  Inflict redoubled blows, and blindly tear

  The cheeks, indenting bloody furrows there,

  The deep-traced signs indelible of woe;

  Then to some crag, or bank abrupt, repair,

  And giving grief its scope infuriate, throw

  The impatient body thence upon the earth below.

  VIII.

  Devices these by poor weak nature taught,

  Which thus a change of suffering would obtain;

  And flying from intolerable thought

  And piercing recollections, would full fain

  Distract itself by sense of fleshly pain

  From anguish that the soul must else endure.

  Easier all outward torments to sustain.

  Than those heart-wounds which only time can cure,

  And He in whom alone the hopes of man are sure.

  IX.

  None sorrow’d here; the sense of woe was sear’d,

  When every one endured his own sore ill.

  The prostrate sufferers neither hoped nor fear’d;

  The body labour’d, but the heart was still: —

  So let the conquering malady fulfil

  Its fatal course, rest cometh at the end!

  Passive they lay with neither wish nor will

  For aught but this; nor did they long attend

  That welcome boon from death, the never-failing friend.

  X.

  Who is there to make ready now the pit,

  The house that will content from this day forth

  Its easy tenant? Who in vestments fit

  Shall swathe the sleeper for his bed of earth,

  Now tractable as when a babe at birth?

  Who now the ample funeral urn shall knead,

  And burying it beneath his proper hearth

  Deposit there with careful hands the dead,

  And lightly then relay the floor above his head?

  XI.

  Unwept, unshrouded, and unsepulchred,

  The hammock where they hang, for winding sheet

  And grave suffices the deserted dead:

  There from the armadillo’s searching feet

  Safer than if within the tomb’s retreat.

  The carrion birds obscene in vain essay

  To find that quarry: round and round they beat

  The air, but fear to enter for their prey.

  And from the silent door the jaguar turns away.

  XII.

  But nature for her universal law

  Hath other surer instruments in store,

  Whom from the haunts of men no wonted awe

  Withholds as with a spell. In swarms they pour

  From wood and swamp: and when their work is o’er

  On the white bones the mouldering roof will fall;

  Seeds will take root, and spring in sun and shower;

  And Mother Earth ere long with her green pall,

  Resuming to herself the wreck, will cover all.

  XIII.

  Oh! better thus with earth to have their part,

  Than in Egyptian catacombs to lie,

  Age after age preserved by horrid art.

  In ghastly image of humanity!

  Strange pride that with corruption thus would vie!

  And strange delusion that would thus maintain

  The fleshly form, till cycles shall pass by,

  And in the series of the eternal chain.

  The spirit come to seek its old abode again.

  XIV.

  One pair alone survived the general fate;

  Left in such drear and mournful solitude,

  That death might seem a preferable state.

  Not more deprest the Arkite patriarch stood,

  When landing first on Ararat he view’d,

  Where all around the mountain summits lay,

  Like islands seen amid the boundless flood!

  Nor our first parents more forlorn than they.

  Thro’ Eden when they took their solitary way.

  XV.

  Alike to them, it seem’d in their despair.

  Whither they wander’d from the infected spot.

  Chance might direct their steps: they took no care;

  Come well or ill to them, it matter’d not!

  Left as they were in that unhappy lot,

  The sole survivors they of all their race.

  They reck’d not when their fate, nor where, nor what.

  In this resignment to their hopeless case.

  Indifferent to all choice or circumstance of place.

  XVI.

  That palsying stupor past away ere long,

  And as the spring of health resumed its power,

  They felt that life was dear, and hope was strong.

  What marvel! ’Twas with them the morning hour,

  When bliss appears to be the natural dower

  Of all the creatures of this joyous earth;

  And sorrow fleeting like a vernal shower

  Scarce interrupts the current of our mirth;

  Such is the happy heart we bring with us at birth.

  XVII.

  Tho’ of his nature and his boundless love

  Erring, yet tutor’d by instinctive sense.

  They rightly deem’d the Power who rules above

  Had saved them from the wasting pestilence.

  That favouring power would still be their defence:

  Thus were they by their late deliverance taught

  To place a child-like trust in Providence,

  And in their state forlorn they found this thought

  Of natural faith with hope and consolation fraught.

  XVIII.

  And now they built themselves a leafy bower,

  Amid a glade, slow Mondai’s stream beside,

  Screen’d from the southern blast of piercing power:

  Not like their native dwelling, long and wide,

  By skilful toil of numbers edified,

  The common home of all, their human nest.

  Where threescore hammocks pendant side by side

  Were ranged, and on the ground the fires were drest;

  Alas that populous hive hath now no living guest!

  XIX.

  A few firm stakes they planted in the ground,

  Circling a norrow space, yet large enow;

  These strongly interknit they closed around

  With basket-work of many a pliant bough.

  The roof was like the sides; the door was low,

  And rude the hut, and trimm’d with little care,

  For little heart had they to dress it now;

  Yet was the humble structure fresh and fair,

  And soon its inmates found that Love might sojourn there.

  XX.

  Quiara could recall to mind the course

  Of twenty summers; perfectly he knew

  Whate’er his fathers taught of skill or force.

  Right to the mark his whizzing lance he threw,

  And from his bow the unerring arrow flew

  With fatal aim: and when the laden bee

  Buzz’d by him in its flight, he could pursue

  Its path with certain ken, and follow free

  Until he traced the hive in hidden bank or tree.

  XXI.

  Of answering years was Monnema, nor less

  Expert in all her sex’s household ways.

  The Indian weed she skilfully could dress;

  And in what depth to drop the yellow maize

  She knew, and when around its stem to raise

  The lighten’d soil; and well could she prepare

  Its ripen’d seed for food, her proper praise;

  Or in the embers turn with frequent care

  Its succulent head yet green, sometimes for daintier fare.

  XXII.

  And how to macerate the bark she knew,

  And draw apart its beaten fibres fine,

  And bleaching them in sun, and air, and dew;

  From dry a
nd glossy filaments entwine

  With rapid twirl of hand the lengthening line;

  Next interknitting well the twisted thread,

  In many an even mesh its knots combine,

  And shape in tapering length the pensile bed,

  Light hammock there to hang beneath the leafy shed.

  XXIII.

  Time had been when expert in works of clay

  She lent her hands the swelling urn to mould,

  And fill’d it for the appointed festal day

  With the beloved beverage which the bold

  Quaff’d in their triumph and their joy of old:

  The fruitful cause of many an uproar rude,

  When in their drunken bravery uncontroll’d,

  Some bitter jest awoke the dormant feud,

  And wrath and rage and strife and wounds and death ensued.

  XXIV.

  These occupations were gone by: the skill

  Was useless now, which once had been her pride.

  Content were they, when thirst impell’d, to fill

  The dry and hollow gourd from Mondai’s side;

  The river from its sluggish bed supplied

  A draught for repetition all unmeet;

  Howbeit the bodily want was satisfied;

  No feverish pulse ensued, nor ireful heat,

  Their days were undisturb’d, their natural sleep was sweet.

  XXV.

  She too had learnt in youth how best to trim

  The honoured Chief for his triumphal day,

  And covering with soft gums the obedient limb

  And body, then with feathers overlay,

  In regular hues disposed, a rich display.

  Well-pleased the glorious savage stood and eyed

  The growing work; then vain of his array

  Look’d with complacent frown from side to side,

  Stalk’d with elater step, and swell’d with statelier pride.

  XXVI.

  Feasts and carousals, vanity and strife,

  Could have no place with them in solitude

  To break the tenor of their even life.

  Quiara day by day his game pursued,

  Searching the air, the water, and the wood,

  With hawk-like eye, and arrow sure as fate;

  And Monnema prepared the hunter’s food:

  Cast with him here in this forlorn estate,

  In all things for the man was she a fitting mate.

  XXVII.

  The Moon had gather’d oft her monthly store

  Of light, and oft in darkness left the sky,

  Since Monnema a growing burthen bore

  Of life and hope. The appointed weeks go by;

  And now her hour is come, and none is nigh

  To help: but human help she needed none.

  A few short throes endured with scarce a cry,

  Upon the bank she laid her new-born son.

  Then slid into the stream, and bathed, and all was done.

  XXVIII.

  Might old observances have there been kept,

  Then should the husband to that pensile bed,

  Like one exhausted with the birth have crept,

  And laying down in feeble guise his head,

  For many a day been nursed and dieted

  With tender care, to childing mothers due.

  Certes a custom strange, and yet far spread

  Thro’ many a savage tribe, howe’er it grew,

  And once in the old world known as widely as the new.

  XXIX.

  This could not then be done; he might not lay

  The bow and those unerring shafts aside;

  Nor thro’ the appointed weeks forego the prey,

  Still to be sought amid those regions wide,

  None being there who should the while provide

  That lonely household with their needful food:

  So still Quiara thro’ the forest plied

  His daily task, and in the thickest wood

  Still laid his snares for birds, and still the chace pursued.

  XXX.

  But seldom may such thoughts of mingled joy

  A father’s agitated breast dilate,

  As when he first beheld that infant boy.

  Who hath not prov’d it, ill can estimate

  The feeling of that stirring hour, — the weight

  Of that new sense, the thoughtful, pensive bliss.

  In all the changes of our changeful state,

  Even from the cradle to the grave, I wis,

  The heart doth undergo no change so great as this.

  XXXI.

  A deeper and unwonted feeling fill’d

  These parents, gazing on their new born son.

  Already in their busy hopes they build

  On this frail sand. Now let the seasons run,

  And let the natural work of time be done

  With them, — for unto them a child is born:

  And when the hand of Death may reach the one,

  The other will not now be left to mourn

  A solitary wretch, all utterly forlorn.

  XXXII.

  Thus Monnema and thus Quiara thought,

  Tho’ each the melancholy thought represt;

  They could not chuse but feel, yet uttered not

  The human feeling, which in hours of rest

  Often would rise, and fill the boding breast

  With a dread foretaste of that mournful day,

  When, at the inexorable Power’s behest,

  The unwilling spirit, called perforce away,

  Must leave, for ever leave its dear connatural clay.

  XXXIII.

  Link’d as they were, where each to each was all,

  How might the poor survivor hope to bear

  That heaviest loss which one day must befall,

  Nor sink beneath the weight of his despair.

  Scarce could the heart even for a moment dare

  That miserable time to contemplate,

  When the dread Messenger should find them there,

  From whom is no escape, — and reckless Fate,

  Whom it had bound so close, for ever separate.

  XXXIV.

  Lighter that burthen lay upon the heart

  When this dear babe was born to share their lot;

  They could endure to think that they must part.

  Then too a glad consolatory thought

  Arose, while gazing on the child they sought

  With hope their dreary prospect to delude,

  Till they almost believed, as fancy taught,

  How that from them a tribe should spring renew’d,

  To people and possess that ample solitude.

  XXXV.

  Such hope they felt, but felt that whatsoe’er

  The undiscoverable to come might prove,

  Unwise it were to let that bootless care

  Disturb the present hours of peace and love.

  For they had gain’d a happiness above

  The state which in their native horde was known:

  No outward causes were there here to move

  Discord and alien thoughts; being thus alone

  From all mankind, their hearts and their desires were one.

  XXXVI.

  Different their love in kind and in degree

  From what their poor depraved forefathers knew,

  With whom degenerate instincts were left free

  To take their course, and blindly to pursue,

  Unheeding they the ills that must ensue,

  The bent of brute desire. No moral tie

  Bound the hard husband to his servile crew

  Of wives; and they the chance of change might try,

  All love destroy’d by such preposterous liberty.

  XXXVII.

  Far other tie this solitary pair

  Indissolubly bound; true helpmates they,

  In joy or grief, in weal or woe to share,

  In sickness or in health, thro�
� life’s long day;

  And reassuming in their hearts her sway

  Benignant Nature made the burthen light.

  It was the Woman’s pleasure to obey,

  The Man’s to ease her toil in all he might,

  So each in serving each obtain’d the best delight.

  XXXVIII.

  And as connubial, so parental love

  Obey’d unerring Nature’s order here,

  For now no force of impious custom strove

  Against her law; — such as was wont to sear

  The unhappy heart with usages severe,

  Till harden’d mothers in the grave could lay

  Their living babes with no compunctious tear,

  So monstrous men become, when from the way

  Of primal light they turn thro’ heathen paths astray.

  XXXIX.

  Deliver’d from this yoke, in them henceforth

  The springs of natural love may freely flow:

  New joys, new virtues with that happy birth

  Are born, and with the growing infant grow.

  Source of our purest happiness below

  Is that benignant law which hath entwined

  Dearest delight with strongest duty so

  That in the healthy heart and righteous mind

  Ever they co-exist, inseparably combined.

  XL.

  Oh! bliss for them when in that infant face

  They now the unfolding faculties descry,

  And fondly gazing, trace — or think they trace

  The first faint speculation in that eye,

  Which hitherto hath roll’d in vacancy!

  Oh! bliss in that soft countenance to seek

  Some mark of recognition, and espy

  The quiet smile which in the innocent cheek

  Of kindness and of kind its consciousness doth speak!

  XLI.

  For him, if born among their native tribe,

  Some haughty name his parents had thought good,

 

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