THE
LOVES
OF THE
PLANTS.
CANTO III.
And
now the Goddess founds her silver shell,
And
shakes with deeper tones the inchanted dell;
Pale,
round her grassy throne, bedew’d with tears,
Flit
the thin forms of Sorrows, and of Fears;
5 Soft Sighs responsive whisper to the chords,
And
Indignations half-unsheath their swords.
“Thrice
round the grave CIRCAEA prints her tread,
And
chaunts the numbers, which disturb the dead;
Shakes
o’er the holy earth her sable plume,
10 Waves her dread wand, and strikes the echoing
tomb!
—Pale
shoot the stars across the troubled night,
The
timorous moon withholds her conscious light;
Shrill
scream the famish’d bats, and shivering owls,
And
loud and long the dog of midnight howls!—
[Circaea. l. 7. Enchanter’s Nightshade. Two males, one female. It was much celebrated in the mysteries of witchcraft, and for the purpose of raising the devil, as its name imports. It grows amid the mouldering bones and decayed coffins in the ruinous vaults of Sleaford-church in Lincolnshire. The superstitious ceremonies or histories belonging to some vegetables have been truly ridiculous; thus the Druids are said to have cropped the Misletoe with a golden axe or sickle; and the Bryony, or Mandrake, was said to utter a scream when its root was drawn from the ground; and that the animal which drew it up became diseased and soon died: on which account, when it was wanted for the purposes of medicine, it was usual to loosen and remove the earth about the root, and then to tie it by means of a cord to a dog’s tail, who was whipped to pull it up, and was then supposed to suffer for the impiety of the action. And even at this day bits of dried root of Peony are rubbed smooth, and strung, and sold under the name of Anodyne necklaces, and tied round the necks of children, to facilitate the growth of their teeth! add to this, that in Price’s History of Cornwall, a book published about ten years ago, the Virga Divinatoria, or Divining Rod, has a degree of credit given to it. This rod is of hazle, or other light wood, and held horizontally in the hand, and is said to bow towards the ore whenever the Conjurer walks over a mine. A very few years ago, in France, and even in England, another kind of divining rod has been used to discover springs of water in a similar manner, and gained some credit. And in the very last year, there were many in France, and some in England, who underwent an enchantment without any divining rod at all, and believed themselves to be affected by an invisible agent, which the Enchanter called Animal Magnetism!]