Collected Poetical Works of Mary Robinson

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Collected Poetical Works of Mary Robinson Page 20

by Mary Robinson


  Madd’ning I see thy glitt’ring phantom rise,

  Spring from the steep, and hover ‘midst the skies.

  I rave, I howl, from point to point I start,

  While hell’s worst torments riot in my heart;

  I court the fiends my rending pangs to share,

  And prove the PROUDEST TRANSPORTS OF DESPAIR,

  When first to these calm shades I bent my way,

  Led by the light of intellectual ray;

  I mark’d soft peace her gentlest balm diffuse,

  To sooth the hapless HERMIT OF VAUCLUSE!

  Where ‘midst the foliage of my laurel † bow’rs,

  The MUSE had sprinkled never-fading flow’rs;

  Where mild PHILOSOPHY unveil’d her shrine,

  Each care to solace, and each wish refine;

  Whole years my studious eye intent explor’d

  The treasur’d gems by hoary wisdom stor’d!

  Each truth sublime by ancient sages taught,

  Grac’d with the glossy charm of polish’d thought:

  And oft the sickly taper’s feeble rays

  Shrunk from the splendours of the solar blaze,

  While o’er the classic page absorb’d I hung,

  Where HOMER breath’d, or tuneful VIRGIL sung!

  When all was rapture, all was peace, my breast

  No pang endur’d, no wayward thought confess’d!

  Swiftly thy beauty gleam’d across my sight,

  Dim’d the bright flame of transitory light,

  Spurn’d each weak barrier trembling Reason gave,

  And plung’d me vanquish’d in affliction’s wave.

  Yet, yet once more, my aching bosom sought

  A lenient pause from agonizing thought;

  I left these bow’rs o’er foreign realms to stray,

  LOVE lit his torch to guide my thorny way!

  Mournful I journey’d o’er ITALIA’S lands,

  And moisten’d with my tears SICILIAN sands,

  Where the proud DANUBE’S rushing waters roll,

  I pour’d the madd’ning anguish of my soul.

  O’er ALPINE hills in solitary woe,

  I wept and wander’d ‘midst eternal snow.

  Oft did I mark the RHONE’S impetuous stream

  By the faint lustre of pale Cynthia’s beam;

  And as the foamy current curl’d along,

  Heard the rocks echo with my frantic song!

  Where ROME’S majestic ruins tott’ring stand

  The hourly victims of Time’s mould’ring hand;

  Whole nights I’ve trod the tessellated stone,

  While scarce a glimm’ring star in pity shone;

  And starting ‘midst th’ impenetrable gloom,

  Grasp’d the cold fragment of some MARTYR’S tomb,

  And tore the crawling ivy from its bed,

  To weave a pillow for my burning head:

  Then rais’d my eyes to GOD in fervent pray’r,

  To end my BEING and my SORROWS there.

  For O! eternal MARTYRDOM I prove,

  Heav’n’s doom’d APOSTATE — my fell tyrant, LOVE!

  When ROME her proud applause exulting gave,

  And round my car her laurels stoop’d to wave!

  When borne triumphant o’er the sacred ground,

  By holy hands with flow’ry chaplets crown’d!

  While clanking cymbals echo’d thro’ the sky;

  And rosy infants bade the censers † fly!

  When nation’s throng’d THY POET’S Fame to share,

  And shouts of rapture fill’d the perfum’d air!

  No flush’d delight from adulation caught,

  No selfish joy with false ambition fraught

  Could draw my prostrate soul from LOVE and THEE;

  Still at THY shrine I bent the trembling knee!

  For who but THEE, transcendent Angel! taught

  The flame to live, which kindled every thought?

  For who, like THEE, could heavenly themes inspire,

  Or touch the sensate mind with hallow’d fire,

  Mingling with mortal dust the spark divine,

  That bade my verse with deathless glories shine.

  In yon cool grot emboss’d with shells and flow’rs,

  Where the hot stream of noon-day light scarce pours;

  Where silence reigns, save when the shallow rill

  With gurgling sound steals o’er the mossy sill;

  While ‘midst the shadows of the twilight gleam,

  I tun’d my LYRE — thy FATAL CHARMS my theme;

  O’er my chill’d form sleep’s sable curtain hung,

  Veil’d my sad eyes, and chain’d my fault’ring tongue.

  Each sense absorb’d, yet my fond SOUL was free,

  Its thoughts, its faculties, all dwelt with thee;

  Celestial visions hover’d o’er my breast,

  And rose lip’d Angels sooth’d my pangs to rest.

  Their silver harps hung pendant on the sky,

  Bound with unfading wreaths of em’rald die,

  While the wing’d choristers inscrib’d thy name

  On Heav’n’s blue tablet with etherial flame.

  In the bland portal of the rosy East

  AURORA sat in golden mantle drest;

  The silent air in crystal fetters bound,

  Slept on the folded clouds that glisten’d round;

  When to my ravish’d sight thy form was shown,

  The guardian spirit of the sphery throne!

  A crown of orient pearls thy brow compress’d,

  A zone of myrtle clasp’d thy iv’ry breast!

  The tear of PITY trembled in thine eye

  Like a bright PLANET in the morning sky!

  The blush of HEBE mantled o’er thy cheek,

  When thus thy voice seraphic seem’d to speak:

  “Freed from the goading chain of mortal care,

  I rove a bless’d inhabitant of air;

  Yet, in delicious extacy I wait,

  Till my lov’d PETRARCH shall partake my fate:

  Death’s but a messenger that brings relief

  To the last pang of sublunary grief.

  THE SOUL, once purified, awaits on those

  Who toil amidst a wilderness of woes:

  It guards the partners of its mortal hours,

  When anguish threatens, or despair devours,

  Shields the frail bosom with a cherub’s wing,

  And robs thy tyrant DEATH of EV’RY STING.

  But see the ruddy dawn’s advancing blaze,

  Tears my fond shadow from thy eager gaze;

  I leave thee in life’s wild’ring vale to rove,

  The mourning victim of disast’rous love:

  Farewell, thy LAURA’S last fond hope is this,

  To meet her PETRARCH in the realms of bliss.”

  The vision vanish’d, while my frantic mind

  “Awoke to all the griefs it left behind!”

  Now driven from each vain hope, each fond delight,

  My SUN of glory saddens into night;

  My once bright laurels doom’d, alas! to fade

  On the pale forehead of a ling’ring shade.

  A living spectre drooping and forlorn,

  A star obscur’d of all its lustre shorn:

  I count my midnight beads, and kneeling, rave,

  On the damp sod my PALLET and my GRAVE.

  Toiling thro’ tedious years unseen, unblest,

  Eternal thorns corroding in my breast;

  I fast, I pray, and yet no comfort find;

  Heaven on my lips, but hell within my mind!

  I feel THEE ever on my heated brain;

  I weep, I sigh, I supplicate in vain!

  Or, if by chance one pitying ray of rest

  Warms the sad inmate of my throbbing breast;

  ’Tis but a gleam of INTELLECTUAL light

  That feebly glances o’er my MENTAL sight,

  And for a moment dissipates the
gloom,

  To point my weary footsteps TO THE TOMB.

  † “Petrarch first beheld Laura at Matins on the sixth of April, 1327, in the church of St. Clair at Avignon.”

  See Mrs. Dobson’s Life of Petrarch.

  † “Laura wished to be beloved by Petrarch, but with such refinement, that he should never speak of his love: whenever he attempted the most distant expression of this kind, she treated him with excessive rigour; but when she saw him in despair, his countenance languishing, and his spirits drooping, she then re-animated him by some trifling kindness.”

  See Mrs. Dobson’s Life of Petrarch, Vol. I. Page 116.

  † Petrarch dedicated this Tree to his beloved Laura.

  † Small Vases suspended by silver or gold chains, and filled with burning incense; they are generally carried by children at religious ceremonies in Catholic countries.

  As a Tribute of Esteem and Admiration this Poem is inscribed to ROBERT MERRY, Esq. A. M. Member of the Royal Academy at Florence, and Author of the Laurel of Liberty, and the Della Crusca Poems.

  AINSI VA LE MONDE.

  O THOU, to whom superior worth’s allied,

  Thy Country’s honour — and the MUSES’ pride;

  Whose pen gives polish to the varying line

  That blends instruction with the song divine;

  Whose fancy, glancing o’er the hostile plain,

  Plants a fond trophy o’er the mighty slain; †

  Or to the daisied lawn directs its way,

  Blithe as the songstress of returning day;

  Who deign’d to rove where twinkling glow-worms lead

  The tiny legions o’er the glitt’ring mead;

  Whose liquid notes in sweet meand’rings flow,

  Mild as the murmurs of the Bird of Woe;

  Who gave to Sympathy its softest pow’r,

  The charm to wing Affliction’s sable hour;

  Who in Italia’s groves, with thrilling song,

  Call’d mute attention from the minstrel throng;

  Gave proud distinction to the Poet’s name,

  And claim’d, by modest worth, the wreath of fame —

  Accept the Verse thy magic harp inspires,

  Nor scorn the Muse that kindles at its fires.

  O, justly gifted with the Sacred Lyre,

  Whose sounds can more than mortal thoughts inspire,

  Whether its strings HEROIC measures move,

  Or lyric numbers charm the soul to love;

  Whether thy fancy “pours the varying verse”

  In bow’rs of bliss, or o’er the plumed hearse;

  Whether of patriot zeal, or past’ral sports,

  The peace of hamlets, or the pride of courts:

  Still Nature glows in ev’ry classic line —

  Still Genius dictates — still the verse is thine.

  Too long the Muse, in ancient garb array’d,

  Has pin’d neglected in oblivion’s shade;

  Driv’n from the sun-shine of poetic fame,

  Stripp’d of each charm she scarcely boasts a name:

  Her voice no more can please the vapid throng,

  No more loud Pæans consecrate her song,

  Cold, faint, and sullen, to the grove she flies,

  A faded garland veils her radiant eyes:

  A with’ring laurel on her breast she wears,

  Fann’d by her sighs, and spangled with her tears;

  From her each fond associate early fled,

  She mourn’d a MILTON lost, a SHAKSPERE dead:

  Her eye beheld a CHATTERTON oppress’d,

  A famish’d OTWAY — ravish’d from her breast;

  Now in their place a flutt’ring form appears,

  Mocks her fall’n pow’r, and triumphs in her tears:

  A flippant, senseless, aëry thing, whose eye

  Glares wanton mirth, and fulsome ribaldry.

  While motley mumm’ry holds her tinsel reign,

  SHAKSPERE might write, and GARRICK act in vain:

  True Wit recedes, when blushing Reason views

  This spurious offspring of the banish’d Muse.

  The task be thine to check the daring hand

  That leads fantastic folly o’er the land;

  The task be thine with witching spells to bind

  The feath’ry shadows of the fickle mind;

  To strew with deathless flow’rs the dreary waste;

  To pluck the weeds of vitiated taste;

  To cheer with smiles the Muse’s glorious toil,

  And plant perfection on her native soil:

  The Arts, that thro’ dark centuries have pin’d,

  Toil’d without fame, in sordid chains confin’d,

  Burst into light with renovated fire,

  Bid Envy shrink, and Ignorance expire.

  No more prim KNELLER’S simp’ring beauties vie,

  Or LELY’S genius droops with languid eye:

  No more prepost’rous figures pain the view,

  Aliens to Nature, yet to Fancy true,

  The wild chimeras of capricious thought,

  Deform’d in fashion, and with errors fraught;

  The gothic phantoms sick’ning fade away,

  And native Genius rushes into day.

  REYNOLDS, ’tis thine with magic skill to trace

  The perfect semblance of exterior grace;

  Thy hand, by Nature guided, marks the line

  That stamps perfection on the form divine.

  ’Tis thine to tint the lip with rosy die,

  To paint the softness of the melting eye;

  With auburn curls luxuriantly display’d,

  The ivory shoulders polish’d fall to shade;

  To deck the well-turn’d arm with matchless grace,

  To mark the dimpled smile on Beauty’s face:

  The task is thine, with cunning hand to throw

  The veil transparent on the breast of snow:

  The Statesman’s thought, the Infant’s cherub mien,

  The Poet’s fire, the Matron’s eye serene,

  Alike with animated lustre shine

  Beneath thy polish’d pencil’s touch divine.

  As BRITAIN’S Genius glories in thy Art,

  Adores thy virtues, and reveres thy heart,

  Nations unborn shall celebrate thy name,

  And waft thy mem’ry on the wings of Fame.

  Oft when the mind, with sick’ning pangs oppress’d,

  Flies to the Muse, and courts the balm of rest,

  When Reason, sated with life’s weary woes,

  Turns to itself — and finds a blest repose,

  A gen’rous pride that scorns each petty art,

  That feels no envy rankling in the heart,

  No mean deceit that wings its shaft at Fame,

  Or gives to pamper’d Vice a pompous Name;

  Then, calm reflection shuns the sordid crowd,

  The senseless chaos of the little proud,

  Then, indignation stealing through the breast,

  Spurns the pert tribe in flimsy greatness drest;

  Who, to their native nothingness consign’d,

  Sink in contempt — nor leave a trace behind.

  Then Fancy paints, in visionary gloom,

  The sainted shadows of the laurel’d tomb,

  The Star of Virtue glist’ning on each breast,

  Divine insignia of the spirit blest!

  Then MILTON smiles serene, a beauteous shade,

  In worth august — in lust’rous fires array’d.

  Immortal SHAKSPERE gleams across the sight,

  Rob’d in ethereal vest of radiant light.

  Wing’d Ages picture to the dazzled view

  Each mark’d perfection — of the sacred few,

  POPE, DRYDEN, SPENSER, all that Fame shall raise,

  From CHAUCER’S gloom — till MERRY’S lucid days:

  Then emulation kindles fancy’s fire,

  The glorious throng poetic flights inspire;

  Each se
nsate bosom feels the god-like flame,

  The cherish’d harbinger of future fame.

  Yet timid genius, oft in conscious ease,

  Steals from the world, content the few to please:

  Obscur’d in shades, the modest Muse retires,

  While sparkling vapours emulate her fires.

  The proud enthusiast shuns promiscuous praise,

  The Idiot’s smile condemns the Poet’s lays.

  Perfection wisely courts the lib’ral few,

  The voice of kindred genius must be true.

  But empty witlings sate the public eye

  With puny jest and low buffoonery,

  The buzzing hornets swarm about the great,

  The poor appendages of pamper’d state;

  The trifling, flutt’ring insects of a day,

  Flit near the sun, and glitter in its ray;

  Whose subtle fires with charms magnetic burn,

  Where every servile fool may have his turn.

  Lull’d in the lap of indolence, they boast

  Who best can fawn — and who can flatter most;

  While with a cunning arrogance they blend

  Sound without sense — and wit that stabs a friend;

  Slanders oblique — that check ambition’s toil,

  The pois’nous weeds, that mark the barren soil.

  So the sweet blossoms of salubrious spring

  Thro the lone wood their spicy odours fling;

  Shrink from the sun, and bow their beauteous heads

  To scatter incense o’er their native beds,

  While coarser flow’rs expand with gaudy ray,

  Brave the rude wind, and mock the burning day.

  Ah! gentle Muse, from trivial follies turn,

  Where Patriot souls with god-like passions burn;

  Again to MERRY dedicate the line,

  So shall the envied boast of taste be thine;

  So shall thy song to glorious themes aspire,

  “Warm’d with a spark” of his transcendent fire.

  Thro’ all the scenes of Nature’s varying plan,

  Celestial Freedom warms the breast of man;

  Led by her daring hand, what pow’r can bind

  The boundless efforts of the lab’ring mind.

  The god-like fervour, thrilling thro’ the heart,

  Gives new creation to each vital part;

  Throbs rapture thro’ each palpitating vein,

  Wings the rapt thought, and warms the fertile brain;

  To her the noblest attributes of Heav’n,

  Ambition, valour, eloquence, are giv’n.

  She binds the soldier’s brow with wreaths sublime,

  From her, expanding reason learns to climb,

  To her the sounds of melody belong,

  She wakes the raptures of the Poet’s song;

  ’Tis god-like Freedom bids each passion live,

 

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