II.—3.
Woods that wave o’er
Delphi’s steep,
Isles that crown the AEgean
deep,
Fields that cool
Ilissus laves,
Or where Meander’s
amber waves
In lingering labyrinths creep,
I
How do your tuneful echoes
languish,
Mute but to the voice of Anguish?
Where each old poetic mountain
Inspiration breathed
around;
Every shade and hallow’d
fountain
Murmur’d
deep a solemn sound,
Till the sad Nine, in Greece’s
evil hour,
Left their Parnassus
for the Latian plains:
Alike they scorn the pomp
of tyrant Power
And coward Vice,
that revels in her chains.
When Latium had her lofty
spirit lost,
They sought, O Albion! next thy sea-encircled
coast.
III.—1.
Far from the sun and summer-gale,
In thy green lap
was Nature’s darling laid,
What time, where
lucid Avon stray’d,
To him the mighty Mother did
unveil
Her awful face; the dauntless
child
Stretch’d forth his
little arms, and smiled.
This pencil take (she said)
whose colours clear
Richly paint the vernal year;
Thine, too, these golden keys,
immortal Boy!
This can unlock the gates
of Joy,
Of Horror that, and thrilling
Pears,
Or ope the sacred source of sympathetic
Tears.
III.—2.
Nor second He that rode sublime
Upon the seraph-wings
of Ecstasy;
The secrets of
the abyss to spy,
He pass’d the flaming
bounds of place and time:
The living throne, the sapphire-blaze,
Where angels tremble while
they gaze,
He saw; but, blasted with
excess of light,
Closed his eyes in endless
night.
Behold where Dryden’s
less presumptuous car
Wide o’er the fields
of glory bear
Two coursers[1] of ethereal
race,
With necks in thunder clothed and long-resounding
pace.
III.—3.
Hark! his hands the lyre explore!
Bright-eyed Fancy, hovering
o’er,
Scatters from
her pictured urn
Thoughts that
breathe and words that burn;
But ah! ’tis heard no
more.
O lyre divine! what dying
spirit[2]
Wakes thee now? though he
inherit
Nor the pride nor ample pinion
That the Theban
eagle[3] bear,
Sailing with supreme dominion
Through the azure
deep of air,
Yet oft before his infant
eyes would run
Such forms as
glitter in the Muse’s ray
With orient hues, unborrow’d
of the sun;
Yet shall he mount,
and keep his distant way
Beyond the limits of a vulgar
fate,
Beneath the good how far—but
far above the great.
[Footnote 1: ‘Coursers:’ the heroic rhymes.]
[Footnote 2: ‘Dying spirit:’ Cowley.]
[Footnote 3: ‘Theban eagle:’ Pindar.]
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