Complete Poetical Works of Robert Southey

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Complete Poetical Works of Robert Southey Page 169

by Robert Southey


  Gray alders here and bushy hazels hid

  The mossy side; their wreath’d and knotted feet,

  Bared by the current, now against its force

  Repaying the support they found, upheld

  The bank secure. Here, bending to the stream,

  The birch fantastic stretch’d its rugged trunk,

  Tall and erect from whence, as from their base,

  Each like a tree, its silver branches grew.

  The cherry here hung, for the birds of heaven,

  Its rosy fruit on high. The elder there

  Its purple berries o’er the water bent,

  Heavily hanging. Here, amid the brook,

  Gray as the stone to which it clung, half root,

  Half trunk, the young ash rises from the rock;

  And there its parent lifts a lofty head,

  And spreads its graceful boughs; the passing wind

  With twinkling motion lifts the silent leaves,

  And shakes its rattling tufts.

  Soon had the Prince

  Behind him left the farthest dwelling-place

  Of man; no fields of waving corn were here,

  Nor wicker storehouse for the autumnal grain,

  Vineyard, nor bowery fig, nor fruitful grove;

  Only the rocky vale, the mountain stream,

  Incumbent crags, and lulls that over hills

  Arose on either hand, here hung with woods,

  Here rich with heath, that o’er some smooth ascent

  Its purple glory spread, or golden gorse;

  Bare here, and striated with many a hue,

  Scored by the wintry rain; by torrents here

  Riven, and with overhanging rocks abrupt.

  Pelayo upward as he cast his eyes

  Where crags loose-hanging o’er the narrow pass

  Impended, there beheld his country’s strength

  Insuperable, and in his heart rejoiced.

  Oh that the Mussulman were here, he cried,

  With all his myriads! While thy day endures,

  Moor! thou mayst lord it in the plains; but here

  Hath nature, for the free and brave, prepared

  A sanctuary, where no oppressor’s power,

  No might of human tyranny, can pierce

  The tears which started then sprang not alone

  From lofty thoughts of elevating joy;

  For love and admiration had their part,

  And virtuous pride. Here then thou hast retired,

  My Gaudiosa! in his heart he said;

  Excellent woman! ne’er was richer boon

  By fate benign to favor’d man indulged,

  Than when thou wert, before the face of Heaven,

  Given me to be my children’s mother, brave

  And virtuous as thou art! Here thou hast fled,

  Thou, who wert nursed in palaces, to dwell

  In rocks and mountain caves! — The thought was proud,

  Yet not without a sense of inmost pain;

  For never had Pelayo, till that hour,

  So deeply felt the force of solitude.

  High over head, the eagle soar’d serene,

  And the gray lizard, on the rocks below,

  Bask’d in the sun: no living creature else,

  In this remotest wilderness, was seen;

  Nor living voice was there, — only the flow

  Of Deva, and the rushing of its springs,

  Long in the distance heard, which nearer now,

  With endless repercussion deep and loud,

  Throbb’d on the dizzy sense.

  The ascending vale,

  Long straiten’d by the narrowing mountains, here

  Was closed. In front, a rock, abrupt and bare,

  Stood eminent, in height exceeding far

  All edifice of human power, by King,

  Or Caliph, or barbaric Sultan rear’d,

  Or mightier tyrants of the world of old,

  Assyrian or Egyptian, in their pride;

  Yet, far above, beyond the reach of sight,

  Swell after swell, the heathery mountain rose

  Here, in two sources, from the living rock

  The everlasting springs of Deva gush’d.

  Upon a smooth and grassy plat below,

  By nature there, as for an altar, dress d,

  They join’d their sister stream, which from the earth

  Well’d silently. In such a scene, rude man,

  With pardonable error, might have knelt,

  Feeling a present Deity, and made

  His offering to the fountain Nymph devout

  The arching rock disclosed, above the springs,

  A cave, where hugest son of giant birth,

  That e’er of old in forest of romance

  ‘Gainst knights and ladies waged discourteous war,

  Erect within the portal, might have stood.

  The broken stone allow’d for hand and loot

  No dillicult ascent, above the base

  In height a tall man’s stature, measured thrice.

  No holier spot than Covadonga Spain

  Boasts in her wide extent, though all her realms

  Be with the noblest blood of martyrdom,

  In elder or in later days, enrich’d,

  And glorified with tales of heavenly aid

  By many a miracle made manifest;

  Nor in the heroic annals of her fame

  Doth she show forth a scene of more renown.

  Then, save the hunter, drawn in keen pursuit

  Beyond his wonted haunts, or shepherd’s boy,

  Following the pleasure of his straggling flock,

  None knew the place.

  Pelayo, when he saw

  Those glittering sources and their sacred cave,

  Took from his side the bugle, silver-tipt,

  And with a breath long drawn, and slow expired,

  Sent forth that strain, which, echoing from the walls

  Of Cangas, wont to tell his glad return

  When from the chase he came. At the first sound

  Favila started in the cave, and cried,

  My father’s horn! — A sudden flush suffused

  Hermesind’s cheek, and she with quicken’d eye

  Look’d eager to her mother silently;

  But Gaudiosa trembled and grew pale,

  Doubting her sense deceived. A second time

  The bugle breathed its well-known notes abroad;

  And Hermesind around her mother’s neck

  Threw her white arms, and earnestly exclaim’d,

  ’Tis he! — But when a third and broader blast

  Rung in the echoing archway, ne’er did wand,

  With magic power endued, call up a sight

  So strange, as sure in that wild solitude

  It seem’d, when from the bowels of the rock

  The mother and her children hastened forth;

  She in the sober charms and dignity

  Of womanhood mature, nor verging yet

  Upon decay; in gesture like a Queen,

  Such inborn and habitual majesty

  Ennobled all her steps — or Priestess, chosen

  Because within such faultless work of Heaven

  Inspiring Deity might seem to make

  Its habitation known, — Favila such

  In form and stature as the Sea Nymph’s son,

  When that wise Centaur from his cave well pleased

  Beheld the boy divine his growing strength

  Against some shaggy lionet essay,

  And fixing in the half-grown mane his hands,

  Roll with him in fierce dalliance intertwined.

  But like a creature of some higher sphere

  His sister came; she scarcely touch’d the rock,

  So light was Hermesind’s aerial speed.

  Beauty, and grace, and innocence in her

  In heavenly union shone. One who had held

  The faith of elder Greece, would sure have thought


  She was some glorious nymph of seed divine,

  Oread or Dryad, of Diana’s train

  The youngest and the loveliest: yea, she seem’d

  Angel, or soul beatified, from realms

  Of bliss, on errand of parental love,

  To earth re-sent, — if tears and trembling limbs

  With such celestial natures might consist.

  Embraced by all, in turn embracing each,

  The husband and the father for a while

  Forgot his country and all things beside:

  Life hath few moments of such pure delight,

  Such foretaste of the perfect joy of Heaven.

  And when the thought recurr’d of sufferings past,

  Perils which threaten’d still, and arduous toil

  Yet to be undergone, remember’d griefs

  Heighten’d the present happiness; and hope

  Upon the shadows of futurity

  Shone like the sun upon the morning mists,

  When driven before his rising rays they roll,

  And melt, and leave the prospect bright and clear.

  When now Pelayo’s eyes had drank their fill

  Of love from those dear faces, he went up

  To view the hiding-place. Spacious it was

  As that Sicilian cavern in the hill,

  Wherein earth-shaking Neptune’s giant son

  Duly at eve was wont to fold his flock,

  Ere the wise Ithacan, over that brute force

  By wiles prevailing, for a life-long night

  Seel’d his broad eye. The healthful air had here

  Free entrance, and the cheerful light of heaven;

  But at the end, an opening in the floor

  Of rock disclosed a wider vault below,

  Which never sunbeam visited, nor breath

  Of vivifying morning came to cheer.

  No light was there but that which from above

  In dim reflection fell, or found its way,

  Broken and quivering, through the glassy stream,

  Where through the rock it gush’d. That shadowy light

  Sufficed to show, where from their secret bed

  The waters issued; with whose rapid course,

  And with whose everlasting cataracts

  Such motion to the chill, damp atmosphere

  Was given, as if the solid walls of rock

  Were shaken with the sound.

  Glad to respire

  The upper air, Pelayo hasten’d back

  From that drear den. Look! Hermesind exclaim’d,

  Taking her father’s hand; thou hast not seen

  My chamber: — See! — did ever ringdove choose

  In so secure a nook her hiding-place,

  Or build a warmer nest. ’Tis fragrant too,

  As warm, and not more sweet than soft; for thyme

  And myrtle with the elastic heath are laid,

  And, over all, this dry and pillowy moss,

  Smiling she spake. Pelayo kiss’d the child,

  And, sighing, said within himself, I trust

  In Heaven, whene’er thy May of life is come,

  Sweet bird, that thou shalt have a blither bower!

  Fithier, he thought, such chamber might beseem

  Some hermit of Hilarion’s school austere,

  Or old Antonius, he who from the hell

  Of his bewilder’d phantasy saw fiends

  In actual vision, a foul throng grotesque

  Of all horrific shapes and forms obscene

  Crowd in broad day before his open eyes.

  That feeling east a momentary shade

  Of sadness o’er his soul. But deeper thoughts,

  If he might have foreseen the things to come,

  Would there have fill’d him; lor within that cave

  His own remains were one day doom’d to find

  Their final place of rest; and in that spot,

  Where that dear child with innocent delight

  Had spread her mossy couch, the sepulchre

  Shall in the consecrated roek be hewn,

  Where with Alphonso, her beloved lord,

  Laid side by side, must Hermesind partake

  The everlasting marriage-bed, when he,

  Leaving a name perdurable on earth,

  Hath changed his earthly for a heavenly crown.

  Dear child, upon that fated spot she stood,

  In all the beauty of her opening youth,

  In health’s rich bloom, in virgin innocence,

  While her eyes sparkled and her heart o’erflow’d

  With pure and perfect joy of filial love.

  Many a slow century since that day hath fill’d

  Its course, and countless multitudes have trod

  With pilgrim feet that consecrated cave;

  Yet not in all those ages, amid all

  The untold concourse, hath one breast been swollen

  With such emotions as Pelayo felt

  That hour. O Gaudiosa, he exclaim’d,

  And thou couldst seek for shelter here, amid

  This awful solitude, in mountain caves!

  Thou noble spirit! Oh, when hearts like thine

  Grow on this sacred soil, would it not be

  In me, thy husband, double infamy,

  And tenfold guilt, if I despair’d of Spain?

  In all her visitations, favoring Heaven

  Hath left her still the unconquerable mind;

  And thus being worthy of redemption, sure

  Is she to be redeem’d.

  Beholding her

  Through tears he spake, and press’d upon her lips

  A kiss of deepest love. Think ever thus,

  She answer’d, and that faith will give the power

  In which it trusts. When to this mountain hold

  These children, thy dear images, I brought,

  I said within myself, Where should they fly

  But to the bosom of their native hills?

  I brought them here as to a sanctuary,

  Where, for the temple’s sake, the indwelling God

  Would guard his supplicants. O my dear Lord,

  Proud as I was to know that they were thine,

  Was it a sin if I almost believed,

  That Spain, her destiny being link’d with theirs,

  Must save the precious charge?

  So let us think,

  The chief replied, so feel, and teach, and act.

  Spain is our common parent: let the sons

  Be to the parent true, and in her strength

  And Heaven, their sure deliverance they will find.

  XVII. RODERICK AND SIVERIAN.

  O holiest Mary, Maid and Mother! thou

  In Covadonga, at thy roeky shrine,

  Hast witness’d whatsoe’er of human bliss

  Heart can conceive most perfeet! Faithful love,

  Long cross’d by envious stars, hath there attain’d

  Its crown, in endless matrimony given;

  The youthful mother there hath to the font

  Her first-born borne, and there, with deeper sense

  Of gratitude for that dear babe redeem’d

  From threatening death, return’d to pay her vows.

  But ne’er on nuptial, nor baptismal day,

  Nor from their grateful pilgrimage discharged,

  Did happier group their way down Deva’s vale

  Rejoicing hold, than this blest family,

  O’er whom the mighty Spirit of the Land

  Spread his protecting wings. The children, free

  In youthheads happy season from all cares

  That might disturb the hour, yet capable

  Of that intense and unalloyed delight

  Which childhood feels when it enjoys again

  The dear parental presence long deprived;

  Nor were the parents now less bless’d than they,

  Even to the height of human happiness;

  For Gaudiosa and her Lord that hour<
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  Let no misgiving thoughts intrude: she fix’d

  Her hopes on him, and his were fix’d on Heaven,

  And hope in that courageous heart derived

  Such rooted strength and confidence assured

  In righteousness, that ’twas to him like faith —

  An everlasting sunshine of the soul,

  Illumining and quickening all its powers.

  But on Pionia’s side meantime a heart

  As generous, and as full of noble thoughts,

  Lay stricken with the deadliest bolts of grief.

  Upon a smooth gray stone sat Roderick there;

  The wind above him stirr’d the hazel boughs,

  And murmuring at his feet the river ran.

  He sat with folded arms and head declined

  Upon his breast, feeding on bitter thoughts,

  Till nature gave him in the exhausted sense

  Of woe a respite something like repose;

  And then the quiet sound of gentle winds

  And waters with their lulling consonance

  Beguiled him of himself. Of all within

  Oblivious there he sat, sentient alone

  Of outward nature, — of the whispering leaves

  That soothed his ear, — the genial breath of Heaven

  That fann’d his cheek, — the stream’s perpetual flow,

  That, with its shadows and its glancing lights,

  Dimples and thread-like motions infinite,

  Forever varying and yet still the same,

  Like time toward eternity, ran by.

  Resting his head upon his master’s knees,

  Upon the bank beside him Theron lay.

  What matters change of state and circumstance.

  Or lapse of years, with all their dread events,

  To him? What matters it that Roderick wears

  The crown no longer, nor the sceptre wields?

  It is the dear-loved hand, whose friendly touch

  Had flatter’d him so oft; it is the voice,

  At whose glad summons to the field so oft

  From slumber he had started, shaking off

  Dreams of the chase, to share the actual joy;

  The eye, whose recognition he was wont

  To watch and welcome with exultant tongue

  A coming step, unheard by Roderick, roused

  His watchful ear, and turning he beheld

  Siverian. Father, said the good old man,

  As Theron rose and fawn’d about his knees,

  Hast thou some charm, which draws about thee thus

  The hearts of all our house, — even to the beast

  That lacks discourse of reason, but too oft,

  With uncorrupted feeling and dumb faith,

  Puts lordly man to shame? — The king replied,

 

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