THE SCULPTOR.
The dream fell on him one calm summer night,
Stealing amid the waving of the corn,
That waited, golden, for the harvest morn—
The dream fell on him through the still moonlight.
The land lay silent, and the new mown hay
Rested upon it like a dreamy sleep;
And stealing softly o’er each yellow
heap,
The night-breeze bore sweet incense-breath away.
The dew lay thick upon the unstirr’d leaves;
The glow-worm glisten’d brightly
as he pass’d;
The thrush still chaunted, but the swallows
fast
Hied to their home beneath lone cottage eaves.
He had been straying through the land that day,
Dreaming of beauty as some dream of love;
And all the earth beneath, the heaven
above,
In mirror’d glory on his spirit lay.
And, as he went, from every sight and sound,
From silence, from the sweetness in the
air,
From earth, from heaven, from nature everywhere,
Gleam’d forth a deep dim thought and clasp’d
him round.
The thought oppress’d him with a weary joy,
Seeking for ever for its perfect shape,
That from his eager eyes would still escape,
Flatter him onward—then his hopes destroy.
He sought it in the bosom of the hills;
He sought it in the silence of the woods,
Their sunny nooks and shady solitudes;
He sought it in the fountains and the rills.
He watch’d the stars come faintly through the
skies;
And on his upturn’d brow the clear
moon shone,
Flooding his heart like pale Endymion;
But still the thought hid dimly from his eyes;
Its voice came to him on the evening breeze,
That flutter’d faintly through his
summer dreams—
He heard it through the flowing of the
streams;
He heard it softly rustling through the trees.
Yet still the thought that murmur’d through
his heart,
He found not anywhere about the land;
Ne’er saw its spirit shape before
him stand,
Though from all nature it seem’d prone to start.
And thus he wander’d homeward, dreaming still
Of all the beauty that had haunted him,
With mystic meanings shadowy and dim,
By woodland, and by meadow, vale and hill:
He wander’d homeward, and in musing mood
Stay’d his slow steps beside a marble
block,
Hewn from some far unstain’d Italian
rock,
That for his shaping chisel waiting stood.
Then his heart spoke out to him, “Not alone
This thought divine hides in the streams
and woods,
Seeking expression through their solitudes,
Perchance e’en lies it in this unhewn stone.
It may be that the soul which fills all space,
And speaks up to us from each thing we
see,
In words that are for ever mystery,
Within this Parian, too, hath resting-place.”
He gazed on, dreaming through the dim twilight,
And to his inner sight the marble grew
Clear and translucent, so that, gazing
through,
A mystic shape form’d to his wondering sight,