Thomas Moore- Collected Poetical Works

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Thomas Moore- Collected Poetical Works Page 15

by Thomas Moore


  One feeling, which I called my own.

  Oh blest! though but in fancy blest,

  How did I ask of Pity’s care,

  To shield and strengthen, in thy breast,

  The nursling I had cradled there.

  And, many an hour, beguiled by pleasure,

  And many an hour of sorrow numbering,

  I ne’er forgot the new-born treasure,

  I left within thy bosom slumbering.

  Perhaps, indifference has not chilled it,

  Haply, it yet a throb may give —

  Yet, no — perhaps, a doubt has killed it;

  Say, dearest — does the feeling live?

  TO CARA, ON THE DAWNING OF A NEW YEAR’S DAY.

  When midnight came to close the year,

  We sighed to think it thus should take

  The hours it gave us — hours as dear

  As sympathy and love could make

  Their blessed moments, — every sun

  Saw us, my love, more closely one.

  But, Cara, when the dawn was nigh

  Which came a new year’s light to shed,

  That smile we caught from eye to eye

  Told us, those moments were not fled:

  Oh, no, — we felt, some future sun

  Should see us still more closely one.

  Thus may we ever, side by side,

  From happy years to happier glide;

  And still thus may the passing sigh

  We give to hours, that vanish o’er us,

  Be followed by the smiling eye,

  That Hope shall shed on scenes before us!

  TO —— , 1801.

  To be the theme of every hour

  The heart devotes to Fancy’s power,

  When her prompt magic fills the mind

  With friends and joys we’ve left behind,

  And joys return and friends are near,

  And all are welcomed with a tear: —

  In the mind’s purest seat to dwell,

  To be remembered oft and well

  By one whose heart, though vain and wild,

  By passion led, by youth beguiled,

  Can proudly still aspire to be

  All that may yet win smiles from thee: —

  If thus to live in every part

  Of a lone, weary wanderer’s heart;

  If thus to be its sole employ

  Can give thee one faint gleam of joy,

  Believe it. Mary, — oh! believe

  A tongue that never can deceive,

  Though, erring, it too oft betray

  Even more than Love should dare to say, —

  In Pleasure’s dream or Sorrow’s hour,

  In crowded hall or lonely bower,

  The business of my life shall be,

  For ever to remember thee.

  And though that heart be dead to mine,

  Since Love is life and wakes not thine,

  I’ll take thy image, as the form

  Of one whom Love had failed to warm,

  Which, though it yield no answering thrill,

  Is not less dear, is worshipt still —

  I’ll take it, wheresoe’er I stray,

  The bright, cold burden of my way.

  To keep this semblance fresh in bloom,

  My heart shall be its lasting tomb,

  And Memory, with embalming care,

  Shall keep it fresh and fadeless there.

  THE GENIUS OF HARMONY.

  AN IRREGULAR ODE.

  Ad harmoniam canere mundum.

  CICERO “de Nat. Deor.” lib. iii.

  There lies a shell beneath the waves,

  In many a hollow winding wreathed,

  Such as of old

  Echoed the breath that warbling sea-maids breathed;

  This magic shell,

  From the white bosom of a syren fell,

  As once she wandered by the tide that laves

  Sicilia’s sands of gold.

  It bears

  Upon its shining side the mystic notes

  Of those entrancing airs,1

  The genii of the deep were wont to swell,

  When heaven’s eternal orbs their midnight music rolled!

  Oh! seek it, wheresoe’er it floats;

  And, if the power

  Of thrilling numbers to thy soul be dear,

  Go, bring the bright shell to my bower,

  And I will fold thee in such downy dreams

  As lap the Spirit of the Seventh Sphere,

  When Luna’s distant tone falls faintly on his ear!2

  And thou shalt own,

  That, through the circle of creation’s zone,

  Where matter slumbers or where spirit beams;

  From the pellucid tides,3 that whirl

  The planets through their maze of song,

  To the small rill, that weeps along

  Murmuring o’er beds of pearl;

  From the rich sigh

  Of the sun’s arrow through an evening sky,4

  To the faint breath the tuneful osier yields

  On Afric’s burning fields;5

  Thou’lt wondering own this universe divine

  Is mine!

  That I respire in all and all in me,

  One mighty mingled soul of boundless harmony.

  Welcome, welcome, mystic shell!

  Many a star has ceased to burn,6

  Many a tear has Saturn’s urn

  O’er the cold bosom of the ocean wept,

  Since thy aerial spell

  Hath in the waters slept.

  Now blest I’ll fly

  With the bright treasure to my choral sky,

  Where she, who waked its early swell,

  The Syren of the heavenly choir.

  Walks o’er the great string of my Orphic Lyre;

  Or guides around the burning pole

  The winged chariot of some blissful soul:

  While thou —

  Oh son of earth, what dreams shall rise for thee!

  Beneath Hispania’s sun,

  Thou’ll see a streamlet run,

  Which I’ve imbued with breathing melody;7

  And there, when night-winds down the current die,

  Thou’lt hear how like a harp its waters sigh:

  A liquid chord is every wave that flows,

  An airy plectrum every breeze that blows.

  There, by that wondrous stream,

  Go, lay thy languid brow,

  And I will send thee such a godlike dream,

  As never blest the slumbers even of him,8

  Who, many a night, with his primordial lyre,

  Sate on the chill Pangaean mount,9

  And, looking to the orient dim,

  Watched the first flowing of that sacred fount,

  From which his soul had drunk its fire.

  Oh think what visions, in that lonely hour,

  Stole o’er his musing breast;

  What pious ecstasy

  Wafted his prayer to that eternal Power,

  Whose seal upon this new-born world imprest

  The various forms of bright divinity!

  Or, dost thou know what dreams I wove,

  Mid the deep horror of that silent bower,10

  Where the rapt Samian slept his holy slumber?

  When, free

  From every earthly chain,

  From wreaths of pleasure and from bonds of pain,

  His spirit flew through fields above,

  Drank at the source of nature’s fontal number,

  And saw, in mystic choir, around him move

  The stars of song, Heaven’s burning minstrelsy!

  Such dreams, so heavenly bright,

  I swear

  By the great diadem that twines my hair,

  And by the seven gems that sparkle there,

  Mingling their beams

  In a soft iris of harmonious light,

  Oh, mortal! such shall be thy radiant dreams.

  * * * * *

  I
found her not — the chamber seemed

  Like some divinely haunted place

  Where fairy forms had lately beamed,

  And left behind their odorous trace!

  It felt as if her lips had shed

  A sigh around her, ere she fled,

  Which hung, as on a melting lute,

  When all the silver chords are mute,

  There lingers still a trembling breath

  After the note’s luxurious death,

  A shade of song, a spirit air

  Of melodies which had been there.

  I saw the veil, which, all the day,

  Had floated o’er her cheek of rose;

  I saw the couch, where late she lay

  In languor of divine repose;

  And I could trace the hallowed print

  Her limbs had left, as pure and warm,

  As if ‘twere done in rapture’s mint,

  And Love himself had stamped the form.

  Oh my sweet mistress, where wert thou?

  In pity fly not thus from me;

  Thou art my life, my essence now,

  And my soul dies of wanting thee.

  1 In the “Histoire Naturelle des Antilles,” there is an account of some curious shells, found at Curaçoa, on the back of which were lines, filled with musical characters so distinct and perfect, that the writer assures us a very charming trio was sung from one of them. The author adds, a poet might imagine that these shells were used by the syrens at their concerts.

  2 According to Cicero, and his commentator, Macrobius, the lunar tone is the gravest and faintest on the planetary heptachord.

  3 Leucippus, the atomist, imagined a kind of vortices in the heavens, which he borrowed from Anaxagoras, and possibly suggested to Descartes.

  4 Heraclides, upon the allegories of Homer, conjectures that the idea of the harmony of the spheres originated with this poet, who, in representing the solar beams as arrows, supposes them to emit a peculiar sound in the air.

  5 In the account of Africa which D’Ablancourt has translated, there is mention of a tree in that country, whose branches, when shaken by the hand produce very sweet sounds.

  6 Alluding to the extinction, or at least the disappearance, of some of those fixed stars, which we are taught to consider as suns, attended each by its system. Descartes thought that our earth might formerly have been a sun, which became obscured by a thick incrustation over its surface. This probably suggested the idea of a central fire.

  7 This musical river is mentioned in the romance of Achilles Tatius.

  8 Orpheus.

  9 Eratosthenes, in mentioning the extreme veneration of Orpheus for Apollo, says that he was accustomed to go to the Pangaean mountain at daybreak, and there wait the rising of the sun, that he might be the first to hail its beams.

  10 Alluding to the cave near Samos, where Pythagoras devoted the greater part of his days and nights to meditation and the mysteries of his philosophy.

  TO MRS. HENRY TIGHE, ON READING HER “PSYCHE.”

  Tell me the witching tale again,

  For never has my heart or ear

  Hung on so sweet, so pure a strain,

  So pure to feel, so sweet to hear.

  Say, Love, in all thy prime of fame,

  When the high heaven itself was thine;

  When piety confest the flame,

  And even thy errors were divine;

  Did ever Muse’s hand, so fair,

  A glory round thy temple spread?

  Did ever lip’s ambrosial air

  Such fragrance o’er thy altars shed?

  One maid there was, who round her lyre

  The mystic myrtle wildly wreathed; —

  But all her sighs were sighs of fire,

  The myrtle withered as she breathed.

  Oh! you that love’s celestial dream,

  In all its purity, would know,

  Let not the senses’ ardent beam

  Too strongly through the vision glow.

  Love safest lies, concealed in night,

  The night where heaven has bid him lie;

  Oh! shed not there unhallowed light,

  Or, Psyche knows, the boy will fly.

  Sweet Psyche, many a charmed hour,

  Through many a wild and magic waste,

  To the fair fount and blissful bower

  Have I, in dreams, thy light foot traced!

  Where’er thy joys are numbered now,

  Beneath whatever shades of rest,

  The Genius of the starry brow

  Hath bound thee to thy Cupid’s breast;

  Whether above the horizon dim,

  Along whose verge our spirits stray, —

  Half sunk beneath the shadowy rim,

  Half brightened by the upper ray,1 —

  Thou dwellest in a world, all light,

  Or, lingering here, doth love to be,

  To other souls, the guardian bright

  That Love was, through this gloom, to thee;

  Still be the song to Psyche dear,

  The song, whose gentle voice was given

  To be, on earth, to mortal ear,

  An echo of her own, in heaven.

  1 By this image the Platonists expressed the middle state of the soul between sensible and intellectual existence.

  FROM THE HIGH PRIEST OF APOLLO TO A VIRGIN OF DELPHI.1

  Cum digno digna…..

  SULPICIA.

  “Who is the maid, with golden hair,

  “With eye of fire, and foot of air,

  “Whose harp around my altar swells,

  “The sweetest of a thousand shells?”

  ’Twas thus the deity, who treads

  The arch of heaven, and proudly sheds

  Day from his eyelids — thus he spoke,

  As through my cell his glories broke.

  Aphelia is the Delphic fair2

  With eyes of fire and golden hair,

  Aphelia’s are the airy feet.

  And hers the harp divinely sweet;

  For foot so light has never trod

  The laurelled caverns of the god.

  Nor harp so soft hath ever given

  A sigh to earth or hymn to heaven.

  “Then tell the virgin to unfold,

  “In looser pomp, her locks of gold,

  “And bid those eyes more fondly shine

  “To welcome down a Spouse Divine;

  “Since He, who lights the path of years —

  “Even from the fount of morning’s tears

  “To where his setting splendors burn

  “Upon the western sea-maid’s urn —

  “Doth not, in all his course, behold

  “Such eyes of fire, such hair of gold.

  “Tell her, he comes, in blissful pride,

  “His lip yet sparkling with the tide

  “That mantles in Olympian bowls, —

  “The nectar of eternal souls!

  “For her, for her he quits the skies,

  “And to her kiss from nectar flies.

  “Oh, he would quit his star-throned height,

  “And leave the world to pine for light,

  “Might he but pass the hours of shade,

  “Beside his peerless Delphic maid,

  “She, more than earthly woman blest,

  “He, more than god on woman’s breast!”

  There is a cave beneath the steep,3

  Where living rills of crystal weep

  O’er herbage of the loveliest hue

  That ever spring begemmed with dew:

  There oft the greensward’s glossy tint

  Is brightened by the recent print

  Of many a faun and naiad’s feet, —

  Scarce touching earth, their step so fleet, —

  That there, by moonlight’s ray, had trod,

  In light dance, o’er the verdant sod.

  “There, there,” the god, impassioned, said,

  “Soon as the twilight tinge is fled,

  “And the d
im orb of lunar souls

  “Along its shadowy pathway rolls —

  “There shall we meet, — and not even He,

  “The God who reigns immortally,

  “Where Babel’s turrets paint their pride

  “Upon the Euphrates’ shining tide,4 —

  “Not even when to his midnight loves

  “In mystic majesty he moves,

  “Lighted by many an odorous fire,

  “And hymned by all Chaldaea’s choir, —

  “E’er yet, o’er mortal brow, let shine

  “Such effluence of Love Divine,

  “As shall to-night, blest maid, o’er thine.”

  Happy the maid, whom heaven allows

  To break for heaven her virgin vows!

  Happy the maid! — her robe of shame

  Is whitened by a heavenly flame,

  Whose glory, with a lingering trace,

  Shines through and deifies her race!

  1 This poem, as well as a few others in the following volume, formed part of a work which I had early projected, and even announced to the public, but which, luckily, perhaps, for myself, had been interrupted by my visit to America in the year 1803.

  2 In the 9th Pythic of Pindar, where Apollo, in the same manner, requires of Chiron some information respecting the fair Cyrene, the Centaur, in obeying, very gravely apologizes for telling the God what his omniscience must know so perfectly already.

  3 The Corycian Cave, which Pausanias mentions. The inhabitants of Parnassus held it sacred to the Corycian nymphs, who were children of the river Plistus.

  4 The temple of Jupiter Belus, at Babylon; in one of whose towers there was a large chapel set apart for these celestial assignations. “No man is allowed to sleep here,” says Herodotus; “but the apartment is appropriated to a female, whom, if we believe the Chaldaean priests, the deity selects from the women of the country, as his favorite.”

  FRAGMENT.

  Pity me, love! I’ll pity thee,

  If thou indeed hast felt like me.

  All, all my bosom’s peace is o’er!

  At night, which was my hour of calm,

  When from the page of classic lore,

  From the pure fount of ancient lay

  My soul has drawn the placid balm,

  Which charmed its every grief away,

  Ah! there I find that balm no more.

  Those spells, which make us oft forget

  The fleeting troubles of the day,

  In deeper sorrows only whet

  The stings they cannot tear away.

  When to my pillow racked I fly,

  With weary sense and wakeful eye.

  While my brain maddens, where, oh, where

  Is that serene consoling prayer,

 

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