So
on his NIGHTMARE through the evening fog
Flits
the squab Fiend o’er fen, and lake, and bog;
Seeks
some love-wilder’d Maid with sleep oppress’d,
Alights,
and grinning fits upon her breast.
55 —Such as of late amid the murky sky
Was
mark’d by FUSELI’S poetic eye;
Whose
daring tints, with SHAKESPEAR’S happiest grace,
Gave
to the airy phantom form and place.—
Back
o’er her pillow sinks her blushing head,
60 Her snow-white limbs hang helpless from the
bed;
While
with quick sighs, and suffocative breath,
Her
interrupted heart-pulse swims in death.
—Then
shrieks of captured towns, and widows’ tears,
Pale
lovers stretch’d upon their blood-stain’d
biers,
65 The headlong precipice that thwarts her flight,
The
trackless desert, the cold starless night,
And
stern-eye’d Murder with his knife behind,
In
dread succession agonize her mind.
O’er
her fair limbs convulsive tremors fleet,
70 Start in her hands, and struggle in her feet;
In
vain to scream with quivering lips she tries,
And
strains in palsy’d lids her tremulous eyes;
In
vain she wills to run, fly, swim, walk, creep;
The
WILL presides not in the bower of SLEEP.
75 —On her fair bosom sits the Demon-Ape
Erect,
and balances his bloated shape;
[The Will presides not. 1. 74. Sleep consists in the abolition of all voluntary power, both over our muscular motions and our ideas; for we neither walk nor reason in sleep. But, at the same time, many of our muscular motions, and many of our ideas, continue to be excited into action in consequence of internal irritations and of internal sensations; for the heart and arteries continue to beat, and we experience variety of passions, and even hunger and thirst in our dreams. Hence I conclude, that our nerves of sense are not torpid or inert during sleep; but that they are only precluded from the perception of external objects, by their external organs being rendered unfit to transmit to them the appulses of external bodies, during the suspension of the power of volition; thus the eye-lids are closed in sleep, and I suppose the tympanum of the car is not stretched, because they are deprived of the voluntary exertions of the muscles appropriated to these purposes; and it is probable something similar happens to the external apparatus of our other organs of sense, which may render them unfit for their office of perception during sleep: for milk put into the mouths of sleeping babes occasions them to swallow and suck; and, if the eye-lid is a little opened in the day-light by the exertions of disturbed sleep, the person dreams of being much dazzled. See first Interlude.]
Rolls
in their marble orbs his Gorgon-eyes,
And
drinks with leathern ears her tender cries.