Collected Poetical Works of Mary Robinson

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Collected Poetical Works of Mary Robinson Page 17

by Mary Robinson


  The balmy dew of HYBLA flings;

  With partial hand, each charm combin’d,

  To deck THY Form, and grace THY Mind.

  She gave her ROSE, to tint thy cheek,

  Her witching smile, her blushes meek;

  She bade thy ruby lips impart

  The chastest precepts of the heart;

  She taught thy dulcet voice to prove,

  The soothing softness of the DOVE;

  While thro’ each wond’rous beauty stole

  THE PERFECT IMAGE OF THY SOUL.

  MORNING.

  O’ER fallow plains and fertile meads,

  AURORA lifts the torch of day;

  The shad’wy brow of Night recedes,

  Cold dew-drops fall from every spray;

  Now o’er the thistle’s rugged head,

  Thin veils of filmy vapour fly,

  On ev’ry violet’s perfum’d bed

  The sparkling gems of Nature lie.

  The hill’s tall brow is crown’d with gold,

  The Milk-maid trills her jocund lay,

  The Shepherd-boy unpens his fold,

  The Lambs along the meadows play;

  The pilf’ring LARK, with speckled breast,

  From the ripe sheaf’s rich banquet flies;

  And lifting high his plumy crest,

  Soars the proud tenant of the skies.

  The PEASANT steals with timid feet,

  And gently taps the cottage door;

  Or on the green sod takes his seat,

  And chaunts some well-known ditty o’er;

  Wak’d by the strain, the blushing MAID,

  Unpractis’d in Love’s mazy wiles,

  In clean, but homely garb array’d,

  From the small casement peeps — and smiles.

  Proud CHANTICLEER unfolds his wing,

  And flutt’ring struts in plumage gay;

  The glades with vocal echoes ring,

  Soft odours deck the hawthorn spray;

  The SCHOOL-BOY saunters o’er the green,

  With satchel, fill’d with Learning’s store;

  While with dejected, sullen mien,

  He cons his tedious lesson o’er.

  When WINTER spreads her banner chill,

  And sweeps the vale with freezing pow’r;

  And binds in spells the vagrant rill,

  And shrivels ev’ry ling’ring flow’r;

  When NATURE quits her verdant dress,

  And drops to earth her icy tears;

  E’EN THEN thy tardy glance can bless,

  And soft thy weeping eye appears.

  Then at the Horn’s enliv’ning peal,

  Keen Sportsmen for the chase prepare;

  Thro’ the young Copse shrill echoes steal,

  Swift flies the tim’rous, panting hare;

  From ev’ry straw-thatch’d cottage soars

  Blue curling smoke in many a cloud;

  Around the Barn’s expanded doors,

  The feather’d throng impatient crowd.

  Such are thy charms! health-breathing scene!

  Where Nature’s children revel gay;

  Where Plenty smiles with radiant mien,

  And Labour crowns the circling day;

  Where Peace, in conscious Virtue blest,

  Invites the Heart to joy supreme;

  While polish’d Splendour pants for rest

  And pines in Fashion’s fev’rish dream.

  LIFE.

  “What is this world? — thy school, O misery!

  “Our only lesson is to learn to suffer.”

  YOUNG.

  LOVE, thou sportive fickle boy,

  Source of anguish, child of joy,

  Ever wounding — ever smiling,

  Soothing still, and still beguiling;

  What are all thy boasted treasures,

  Tender sorrows, transient pleasures?

  Anxious hopes, and jealous fears,

  LAUGHING HOURS, and MOURNING YEARS.

  What is FRIENDSHIP’S soothing name?

  But a shad’wy, vap’rish flame;

  Fancy’s balm for ev’ry wound,

  Ever sought, but rarely found;

  What is BEAUTY? but a flow’r,

  Blooming, fading in an hour;

  Deck’d with brightest tints at morn,

  At twilight with’ring on a thorn;

  Like the gentle Rose of spring,

  Chill’d by ev’ry zephyr’s wing,

  Ah! how soon its colour flies,

  Blushes, trembles, falls, and dies.

  What is YOUTH? a smiling sorrow,

  Blithe to day, and sad to-morrow;

  Never fix’d, for ever ranging,

  Laughing, weeping, doating, changing;

  Wild, capricious, giddy, vain,

  Cloy’d with pleasure, nurs’d with pain;

  AGE steals on with wint’ry face,

  Ev’ry rapt’rous Hope to chase;

  Like a wither’d, sapless tree,

  Bow’d to chilling Fate’s decree;

  Strip’d of all its foliage gay,

  Drooping at the close of day;

  What of tedious Life remains?

  Keen regrets and cureless pains;

  Till DEATH appears, a welcome friend,

  To bid the scene of sorrow end.

  LINES TO THE MEMORY OF RICHARD BOYLE, ESQ. SON OF MRS. WALSINGHAM.

  “Fate snatch’d him early to the pitying sky.”

  POPE.

  IF WORTH, too early to the grave consign’d,

  Can claim the pitying tear, or touch the mind?

  If manly sentiments unstain’d by art,

  Could waken FRIENDSHIP, or delight the heart?

  Ill-fated youth! to THEE the MUSE shall pay

  The last sad tribute of a mournful lay;

  On thy lone grave shall MAY’S soft dews be shed,

  And fairest flowrets blossom o’er thy head;

  The drooping lily, and the snow-drop pale,

  Mingling their fragrant leaves, shall there recline,

  While CHERUBS hov’ring on th’ ethereal gale,

  Shall chaunt a requiem o’er the hallow’d shrine.

  And if Reflection’s piercing eye should scan

  The trivial frailties of imperfect MAN;

  If in thy generous heart those passions dwelt,

  Which all should own, and all that live have felt;

  Yet was thy polish’d mind so pure, so brave,

  The young admir’d thee, and the old forgave.

  And when stern FATE, with ruthless rancour, press’d

  Thy withering graces to her flinty breast;

  Bright JUSTICE darted from her bless’d abode,

  And bore thy VIRTUES to the throne of GOD;

  While cold OBLIVION stealing o’er thy mind,

  Each youthful folly to the grave consign’d.

  O, if thy purer spirit deigns to know

  Each thought that passes in this vale of woe,

  Accept the incense of a tender tear,

  By PITY wafted on a sigh sincere.

  And if the weeping MUSE a wreath could give

  To grace thy tomb, and bid thy VIRTUES live;

  THEN Wealth should blush the gilded mask to wear,

  And Avarice shrink the victim of Despair.

  While GENIUS bending o’er thy sable bier,

  Should mourn her darling SON with many a tear,

  While in her pensive form the world should view

  The ONLY PARENT that thy SORROWS knew.

  STANZAS TO LOVE.

  TELL ME, LOVE, when I rove o’er some far distant plain,

  Shall I cherish the passion that dwells in my breast?

  Or will ABSENCE subdue the keen rigours of pain,

  And the swift wing of TIME bring the balsam of rest?

  Shall the image of HIM I was born to adore,

  Inshrin’d in my bosom my idol still prove?

  Or seduced by caprice shall fine feeling no more,


  With the incense of TRUTH gem the altar of LOVE?

  When I view the deep tint of the dew-dropping Rose,

  Where the bee sits enamour’d its nectar to sip;

  Then, ah say, will not memory fondly disclose

  The softer vermilion that glow’d on HIS lip?

  Will the SUN when he rolls in his chariot of fire,

  So dazzle my mind with the glare of his rays,

  That my senses one moment shall cease to admire

  The more perfect refulgence that beam’d in HIS lays?

  When the shadows of twilight steal over the plain,

  And the NIGHTINGALE pours its lorn plaint in the grove,

  Ah! will not the fondness that thrills thro’ the strain,

  Then recall to my mind HIS dear accents of Love!

  When I gaze on the STARS that bespangle the sky,

  Ah! will not their mildness some pity inspire;

  Like the soul-touching softness that beam’d in HIS eye,

  When the tear of REGRET chill’d the flame of DESIRE?

  Then spare, thou dear Urchin, thou soother of pain,

  Oh! spare the sweet PICTURE engrav’d on my heart;

  As a record of LOVE let it ever remain;

  My bosom thy tablet — thy pencil A DART.

  “My OBERON, with ev’ry sprite

  “That gilds the vapours of the night,

  “Shall dance and weave the verdant ring

  “With joy that mortals thus can sing;

  “And when thou sigh’st MARIA’S name,

  “And mourn’st to feel a hopeless flame,

  “Eager they’ll catch the tender note

  “Just parting from thy tuneful throat,

  “And bear it to the careless ear

  “Of her who scorn’d a lover’s tear. “

  QUEEN OF THE FARIES TO IL FERITO.

  ORACLE, June 2,

  1790.

  OBERON TO THE QUEEN OF THE FAIRIES.

  SWEET MAB! at thy command I flew

  O’er glittering floods of midnight dew,

  O’er many a silken violet’s head,

  Unpress’d by vulgar mortal tread;

  Eager to execute thy will,

  I mounted on the ZEPHYR’S wing,

  And bid her whisp’ring tongue be still,

  Nor thro’ the air its murmurs fling.

  Cold CYNTHIA hid her silver bow

  Beneath her azure spangled vest;

  No gentle ray my wand’rings blest,

  Save the small night-worm’s twinkling glow.

  Upon the budding thorn I found

  A veil of gossamer, which bound

  My tiny head; — about my waist

  A scarf of magic pow’r I threw,

  With many a crystal dew-drop grac’d,

  And deck’d with leaves of various hue.

  Thus, gaily dress’d, I reach’d the grove,

  Where, like the Paphian Queen of Love

  Upon a bank of lillies fair

  MARIA slept; the am’rous air

  Snatch’d nectar from her balmy lips,

  Sweeter than haughty JUNO sips,

  When GANYMEDE her goblet fills

  With juice, the citron bud distills.

  Her breast was whiter than the down

  That on the RING-DOVE’S bosom grows;

  Her cheek, more blushing than the rose

  That blooms on FLORA’S May-day crown!

  Beneath her dark and “fringed lid,”

  I spy’d LOVE’S glittering arrows hid;

  I listen’d to the dulcet song

  That trembled on her tuneful tongue;

  And, “IL FERITO †” was the sound

  The babbling echo whisper’d round:

  The blissful moment swift I caught,

  And to the maiden’s slumb’ring thought

  Pictur’d the graces of his mind,

  His taste, his eloquence refin’d!

  His polish’d manners sweetly mild!

  His soft poetic warblings wild!

  His warm impassion’d verse, that fills

  The soul with Love’s extatic thrills.

  I mark’d the blush upon her cheek,

  Her spotless bosom’s language speak;

  I mark’d the tear of pity roll,

  Sweet emblem of her feeling soul:

  I heard the sympathetic sigh

  Upon her lips vermilion die.

  When busy LOVE too eager sped

  His light steps near the charmer’s bed;

  His pinions rustling thro’ the air

  Awoke the trembling spotless fair;

  Swiftly her radiant eyes unclose,

  When, on my filmy wing I rose

  Sweet MAB the rapt’rous tale to bear,

  TO “IL FERITO’S” GRATEFUL EAR.

  ORACLE, June 3,

  1790.

  † Della Crusca.

  LINES WRITTEN BY THE SIDE OF A RIVER.

  FLOW soft RIVER, gently stray,

  Still a silent waving tide

  O’er thy glitt’ring carpet glide,

  While I chaunt my ROUNDELAY,

  As I gather from thy bank,

  Shelter’d by the poplar dank,

  King-cups, deck’d in golden pride,

  Harebells sweet, and daisies pied;

  While beneath the evening sky,

  Soft the western breezes fly.

  Gentle RIVER, should’st thou be

  Touch’d with mournful sympathy,

  When reflection tells my soul,

  Winter’s icy breath shall quell

  Thy sweet bosom’s graceful swell,

  And thy dimpling course controul;

  Should a crystal tear of mine,

  Fall upon thy lucid breast,

  Oh receive the trembling guest,

  For ’tis PITY’S drop divine!

  GENTLE ZEPHYR, softly play,

  Shake thy dewy wings around,

  Sprinkle odours o’er the ground,

  While I chaunt my ROUNDELAY.

  While the woodbine’s mingling shade,

  Veils my pensive, drooping head;

  Fan, oh fan, the busy gale,

  That rudely wantons round my cheek,

  Where the tear of suff’rance meek,

  Glitters on the LILY pale:

  Ah! no more the damask ROSE,

  There in crimson lustre glows;

  Thirsty fevers from my lip

  Dare the ruddy drops to sip;

  Deep within my burning heart,

  Sorrow plants an icy dart;

  From whose point the soft tears flow,

  Melting in the vivid glow;

  Gentle Zephyr, should’st thou be

  Touch’d with tender sympathy;

  When reflection calls to mind,

  The bleak and desolating wind,

  That soon thy silken wing shall tear,

  And waft it on the freezing air;

  Zephyr, should a tender sigh

  To thy balmy bosom fly,

  Oh! receive the flutt’ring thing,

  Place it on thy filmy wing,

  Bear it to its native sky,

  For ’tis PITY’S softest sigh.

  O’er the golden lids of day

  Steals a veil of sober grey;

  Now the flow’rets sink to rest,

  On the moist earth’s glitt’ring breast;

  Homeward now I’ll bend my way,

  AND CHAUNT MY PLAINTIVE ROUNDELAY.

  “Yes, LAURA, yes, pure as the virgin snow’s

  “That on the bosom of the whirlwind move,,

  “For thee my faithful endless passion glows.”

  LEONARDO † TO LAURA.

  TO LEONARDO.

  COLD blows the wind upon the mountain’s brow;

  In murmuring cadence wave the leafless woods;

  The feath’ry tribe mope on the frozen bough,

  And icy fetters hold the silent floods;

  But endless spring the POET’S breast
shall prove,

  Whose GENIUS kindles at the torch of LOVE.

  For HIM, unfading, blooms the fertile mind,

  The current of the heart for ever flows;

  Fearless His bosom braves the wintry wind,

  While thro’ each nerve, eternal summer glows;

  In vain would chilling apathy controul,

  The lambent fire that warms the lib’ral soul!

  To me the limped brook, the painted mead,

  The crimson dawn, the twilight’s purple close;

  The mirthful dance, the shepherd’s tuneful reed,

  The musky fragrance of the opening rose;

  To me, alas! all pleasures senseless prove,

  Save the sweet converse of the FRIEND I love.

  † Della Crusca.

  THE BEE AND THE BUTTERFLY.

  A FABLE.

  UPON a garden’s perfum’d bed

  With various gaudy colours spread,

  Beneath the shelter of a ROSE

  A BUTTERFLY had sought repose;

  Faint, with the sultry beams of day,

  Supine the beauteous insect lay.

  A BEE, impatient to devour

  The nectar sweets of ev’ry flow’r,

  Returning to her golden store,

  A weight of fragrant treasure bore;

  With envious eye, she mark’d the shade,

  Where the poor BUTTERFLY was laid,

  And resting on the bending spray,

  Thus murmur’d forth her drony lay:—

  “Thou empty thing, whose merit lies

  In the vain boast of orient dies;

  Whose glittering form the slightest breath

  Robs of its gloss, and fades to death;

  Who idly rov’st the summer day,

  Flutt’ring a transient life away,

  Unmindful of the chilling hour,

  The nipping frost, the drenching show’r;

  Who heedless of “to-morrow’s fare,”

  Mak’st present bliss thy only care;

  Is it for THEE, the damask ROSE

  With such transcendent lustre glows?

  Is it for such a giddy thing

  Nature unveils the blushing spring?

  Hence, from thy lurking place, and know,

  ’Tis not for THEE her beauties glow.”

  The BUTTERFLY, with decent pride,

  In gentle accents, thus reply’d:

  “’Tis true, I flutter life away

  In pastime, innocent and gay;

  The SUN that decks the blushing spring

  Gives lustre to my painted wing;

  ’Tis NATURE bids each colour vie,

  With rainbow tints of varying die;

  I boast no skill, no subtle pow’r

  To steal the balm from ev’ry flow’r;

 

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