And suffering virtue claims her late reward.
There may’st thou sit, and far removed from thence
Behold the clouds of passion and of sense:
Smile at the tumults of the world below,
And triumph in the weakness of thy foe.
“And thou,
Ernestus—thou, to whom ’tis given
To bear the tidings of benignant
Heaven,
Aided by me, pursue the watery
road,
And seek Gustavus in his dark
abode.
Where swift Dal-Elbe his wandering
current leads
Thro’ barren mountains
and uncultured meads,
Resign’d to cold despair,
the hero lies,
Nor knows the favour of th’
indulgent skies.
For twenty months unwearied
has he traced
The town, the province, and
the watery waste:
No aiding friend his patriot
labours found;
Fear master’d all, and
all were slaves around.
Each hope of liberty and Sweden
lost,
He now resolves to seek a
foreign coast,
In Albion or in Gaul secure
to rest,
And cling to Freedom’s
warm maternal breast.
Such his intent—Ernestus!
be it thine
To tear the warrior from the
rash design!
Bid him to arms the free-born
peasants move,
Safe in the conduct of the
powers above!
Swift as from hill to hill
the beacon flies,
In every heart the patriot
flame shall rise:
From Wermeland’s hills
the war-cry shall rebound,
And Sudermania echo back the
sound:
The frank Westmanian’s
generous heart shall glow,
And join the sterner Goth
to crush the foe.
Bid him his standard in mid
Sweden rear,
And check th’ oppressor
in his fell career:
Say, that, impatient of unjust
command,
Indignant Denmark spurns him
from her land!
He builds a lofty tower; the
basis stands
Fix’d in the stormy
ocean’s moving sands:
The turrets in unstable grandeur
rise,
The baseless fabric shoots
into the skies,
Soon shall the glories of
the ponderous hall
Come thundering down, to crush
him in their fall!
“Cheer’d
with this hope let gallant Vasa raise
His daring soul, to meet immortal
praise.
Graced with hereditary virtue
shine,
And vindicate the glories
of his line.
From age to age that generous
line shall reign,
‘And sons succeeding
sons the lasting race sustain.’”
The mighty seraph
ceas’d. While thus he said,
Without a sigh, the old man’s
spirit fled.
Ere yet, enfranchis’d,
thro’ the air it past,
On the lov’d youth one
parting look it cast,
And gazed on Sweden, then,
no more confined,
Soar’d thro’ the
clouds, and mingled with the wind.
Th’ angelic power his
sacred arm applied
To push the vessel o’er
the yielding tide,
And swifter than the eagle’s
noon-day flight
It flew: while, melting
from the dazzled sight,
O’er the wide heavens
a radiant line he drew,
The track still glittering
where the glory flew.