As if but yesterday departed, Thou too art gone before; but why, O'er ripe fruit, seasonably gathered, Should frail survivors heave a sigh?
Mourn rather for that holy Spirit, Sweet as the spring, as ocean deep; For Her who, ere her summer faded, Has sunk into a breathless sleep.
No more of old romantic sorrows,
For slaughtered Youth or love-lorn Maid!
With sharper grief is Yarrow smitten,
And Ettrick mourns with her their Poet dead.
ART thou a Statist in the van
Of public conflicts trained and bred? -First learn to love one living man; Then may'st thou think upon the dead.
A Lawyer art thou ?-draw not nigh! Go, carry to some fitter place The keenness of that practised eye, The hardness of that sallow face.
Art thou a Man of purple cheer? A rosy Man, right plump to see? Approach; yet, Doctor, not too near, This grave no cushion is for thee.
Or art thou one of gallant pride,
A Soldier and no man of chaff? Welcome-but lay thy sword aside, And lean upon a peasant's staff.
Physician art thou? one, all eyes, Philosopher! a fingering slave, One that would peep and botanize Upon his mother's grave?
Wrapt closely in thy sensual fleece, O turn aside, and take, I pray, That he below may rest in peace, Thy ever-dwindling soul, away!
A Moralist perchance appears;
Led, Heaven knows how! to this poor
And he has neither eyes nor ears ;
Himself his world, and his own God;
One to whose smooth-rubbed soul can cling Nor form, nor feeling, great or small; A reasoning, self-sufficing thing,
An intellectual All-in-all!
Shut close the door; press down the latch; Sleep in thy intellectual crust;
Nor lose ten tickings of thy watch Near this unprofitable dust.
But who is He, with modest looks, And clad in homely russet brown? He murmurs near the running brooks A music sweeter than their own.
He is retired as noontide dew, Or fountain in a noon-day grove; And you must love him, ere to you He will seem worthy of your love.
The outward shows of sky and earth, Of hill and valley, he has viewed ; And impulses of deeper birth Have come to him in solitude.
In common things that round us lie Some random truths he can impart,— The harvest of a quiet eye
That broods and sleeps on his own heart.
But he is weak; both Man and Boy, Hath been an idler in the land; Contented if he might enjoy
The things which others understand.
-Come hither in thy hour of strength; Come, weak as is a breaking wave! Here stretch thy body at full length; Or build thy house upon this grave.
IN these fair vales hath many a Tree At Wordsworth's suit been spared; And from the builder's hand this Stone, For some rude beauty of its own, Was rescued by the Bard: So let it rest; and time will come When here the tender-hearted May heave a gentle sigh for him, As one of the departed.
I WATCH, and long have watched, with calm regret
Yon slowly-sinking star-immortal Sire
(So might he seem) of all the glittering quire! Blue ether still surrounds him-yet—and yet
But now the horizon's rocky parapet
Is reached, where, forfeiting his bright attire, He burns-transmuted to a dusky fire— Then pays submissively the appointed debt
To the flying moments, and is seen no more. Angels and gods! We struggle with our fate, While health, power, glory, from their height decline,
Depressed; and then extinguished; and our state, In this, how different, lost Star, from thine, That no to-morrow shall our beams restore !
My heart leaps up when I behold A rainbow in the sky:
So was it when my life began ; So is it now I am a man ;
So be it when I shall grow old,
The Child is father of the Man; And I could wish my days to be
Bound each to each by natural piety.
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