The Universe of things seem’d swelling
The panting heart to burst
its bound,
And wandering Fancy found a dwelling
In every shape, thought, deed,
and sound.
Germ’d in the mystic buds, reposing,
A whole creation slumbered
mute,
Alas, when from the buds unclosing,
How scant and blighted sprung
the fruit!
How happy in his dreaming error,
His own gay valor for his
wing,
Of not one care as yet in terror
Did Youth upon his journey
spring;
Till floods of balm, through air’s
dominion,
Bore upward to the faintest
star—
For never aught to that bright pinion
Could dwell too high, or spread
too far.
Though laden with delight, how lightly
The wanderer heavenward still
could soar,
And aye the ways of life how brightly
The airy Pageant danced before!
Love, showering gifts (life’s sweetest)
down,
Fortune, with golden garlands
gay,
And Fame, with starbeams for a crown,
And Truth, whose dwelling
is the Day.
Ah! midway soon lost evermore,
Afar the blithe companions
stray;
In vain their faithless steps explore,
As one by one, they glide
away.
Fleet Fortune was the first escaper—
The thirst for wisdom linger’d
yet;
But doubts with many a gloomy vapor
The sun-shape of the Truth
beset!
The holy crown which Fame was wreathing,
Behold! the mean man’s
temples wore,
And, but for one short spring-day breathing,
Bloom’d Love—the
Beautiful—no more!
And ever stiller yet, and ever
The barren path more lonely
lay,
Till scarce from waning Hope could quiver
A glance along the gloomy
way.
Who, loving, lingered yet to guide me,
When all her boon companions
fled,
Who stands consoling yet beside me,
And follows to the House of
Dread?
Thine FRIENDSHIP—thine the
hand so tender,
Thine the balm dropping on
the wound,
Thy task the load more lightly to render—
O! earliest sought and soonest
found!
And Thou, so pleased, with her uniting,
To charm the soul-storm into
peace,
Sweet TOIL, in toil itself delighting,
That more it labored, less
could cease;
Tho’ but by grains thou aid’st
the pile
The vast Eternity uprears,
At least thou strik’st from Time
the while
Life’s debt—the
minutes, days and years.[3]
* * * * *
THE VEILED IMAGE AT SAIS (1795)
A youth, whom wisdom’s warm desire
had lured
To learn the secret lore of Egypt’s
priests,
To Sais came. And soon, from step
to step
Of upward mystery, swept his rapid soul!
Still ever sped the glorious Hope along,
Nor could the parch’d Impatience
halt, appeased
By the calm answer of the Hierophant—
“What have I, if I have not all,”