Page images
PDF
EPUB

Tam. The sounds I mean

Floated like mournful music round my head,
From unseen fingers.

Had. When?

Tam. Now, as thou camest.

Had. 'Tis but thy fancy, wrought
To ecstasy; or else thy grandsire's harp
Resounding from his tower at eventide.
I've lingered to enjoy its solemn tones,
Till the broad moon, that rose o'er Olivet,
Stood listening in the zenith; yea, have deemed
Viols and heavenly voices answered him.
Tam. But these-

Had. Were we in Syria, I might say
The naiad of the fount, or some sweet nymph,
The goddess of these shades, rejoiced in thee,
And gave thee salutations; but I fear

Judah would call me infidel to Moses.

Tam. How like my fancy! When these strains precede Thy steps, as oft they do, I love to think

Some gentle being, who delights in us,

Is hovering near, and warns me of thy coming;

But they are dirge-like.

Had. Youthful fantasy,

Attuned to sadness, makes them seem so, lady.
So evening's charming voices, welcomed ever,
As signs of rest and peace ;--the watchman's call,
The closing gates, the Levite's mellow trump
Announcing the returning moon, the pipe
Of swains, the bleat, the bark, the housing-bell,
Send melancholy to a drooping soul.

Tam. But how delicious are the pensive dreams

That steal upon the fancy at their call!

Had. Delicious to behold the world at rest.

Meek Labor wipes his brow, and intermits

The curse, to clasp the younglings of his cot;

Herdsmen and shepherds fold their flocks-and, hark'
What merry strains they send from Olivet!

The jar of life is still; the city speaks

In gentle murmurs; voices chime with lutes
Waked in the streets and gardens; loving pairs
Eye the red west in one another's arms;

And nature, breathing dew and fragrance, yields
A glimpse of happiness, which He, who formed
Earth and the stars, had power to make eternal.

Tam. Ah, Hadad, meanest thou to reproach the Friend Who gave so much, because he gave not all?

Had. Perfect benevolence, methinks, had willed
Unceasing happiness, and peace, and joy;
Filled the whole universe of human hearts

With pleasure, like a flowing spring of life.

Tam. Our Prophet teaches so, till man rebelled.
Had. Mighty rebellion! Had he 'leagured heaven
With beings powerful, numberless, and dreadful,
Strong as the enginery that rocks the world
When all its pillars tremble; mixed the fires
Of onset with annihilating bolts

Defensive volleyed from the throne; this, this
Had been rebellion worthy of the name,
Worthy of punishment. But what did man?
Tasted an apple! and the fragile scene,
Eden, and innocence, and human bliss,
The nectar-flowing streams, life-giving fruits,
Celestial shades, and amaranthine flowers,
Vanish; and sorrow, toil, and pain, and death,
Cleave to him by an everlasting curse.

Tam. Ah! talk not thus.

Had. Is this benevolence ?

Nay, loveliest, these things sometimes trouble me;
For I was tutored in a brighter faith.

Our Syrians deem each lucid fount, and stream,
Forest, and mountain, glade, and bosky dell,
Peopled with kind divinities, the friends

Of man,

a spiritual race, allied

To him by many sympathies, who seek

His happiness, inspire him with gay thoughts,
Cool with their waves, and fan him with their airs.

O'er them, the Spirit of the Universe,

Or Soul of Nature. circumfuses all

With mild, benevolent, and sun-like radiance;
Pervading, warming, vivifying earth,

As spirit does the body, till green herbs,

And beauteous flowers, and branchy cedars, rise;
And shooting stellar influence through her caves,
Whence minerals and gems imbibe their lustre.
Tam. Dreams, Hadad, empty dreams.

Had. These deities

They invocate with cheerful, gentle rites,
Hang garlands on their altars, heap their shrines

With Nature's bounties, fruits, and fragrant flowers.
Not like yon gory mount that ever reeks-

Tam. Cast not reproach upon the holy altar.

Had. Nay, sweet.-Having enjoyed all pleasures here That Nature prompts, but chiefly blissful love,

At death, the happy Syrian maiden deems

Her immaterial nies into the fields,

Or circumambient clouds, or crystal brooks,
And dwells, a Deity, with those she worshipped,
Till time, or fate, return her in its course
To quaff, once more, the cup of human joy.
Tam. But thou believ'st not this.

Had. I almost wish

Thou didst; for I have feared, my gentle Tamar,
Thy spirit is too tender for a law

Announced in terrors, coupled with the threats
Of an inflexible and dreadful Being,

Whose word annihilates, whose awful voice
Thunderз the doom of nations, who can check
The sun in heaven, and shake the loosened stars,
Like wind-tossed fruit, to earth, whose fiery step
The earthquake follows, whose tempestuous breath
Divides the sea, whose anger never dies,
Never remits, but everlasting burns,

Burns unextinguished in the deeps of hell.
Jealous, implacable-

Tam. Peace! impious! peace!

Had. Ha! says not Moses so?

The Lord is jealous.

Tam. Jealous of our faith,

Our love, our true obedience, justly his;
And a poor recompense for all his favors.
Implacable he is not; contrite man
Ne'er found him so.

Had. But others have,

If oracles be true.

Tam. Little we know

Of them; and nothing of their dire offence

Had. I meant not to displease, love; but my soul
Sometimes revolts, because I think thy nature
Shudders at him and yonder bloody rites.

How dreadful! when the world awakes to light,
And life, and gladness, and the jocund tide
Bounds in the veins of every happy creature,
Morning is ushered by a murdered victim,

Whose wasting members reek upon the air,
Polluting the pure firmament; the shades
Of evening scent of death; almost, the shrine
O'ershadowed by the holy cherubim;

And where the clotted current from the altar
Mixes with Kedron, all its waves are gore.
Nay, nay, I grieve thee-'tis not for myself,
But that I fear these gloomy things oppress
Thy soul, and cloud its native sunshine.

Tam. (in tears, clasping her hands.)
Witness, ye heavens! Eternal Father, witness!
Best God of Jacob! Maker! Friend! Preserver!
That, with my heart, my undivided soul,
I love, adore, and praise thy glorious name
Confess thee Lord of all, believe thy laws
Wise, just, and merciful, as they are true.
O Hadad, Hadad! you misconstrue much
The sadness that usurps me: 'tis for thee

I grieve for hopes that fade-for your lost soul,
And my lost happiness.

Had. O say not so,

Feloved princess. Why distrust my faith?

Tam. Thou know'st, alas! my weakness; but remember,

I never, never will be thine, although

1 he feast, the blessing, and the song were past,

1 hough Absalom and David called me bride,

Till sure thou own'st, with truth and love sincere,

The Lord Jehovah.

Roman Catholic Chaunt. From "Percy's Masque."HILLHOUSE.

O, HOLY VIRGIN, call thy child;
Her spirit longs to be with thee;

For, threatening, lower those skies so mild,
Whose faithless day-star dawned for me.

From tears released to speedy rest,

From youthful dreams which all beguiled,

To quiet slumber on thy breast,

O, holy Virgin, call thy child.

Joy from my darkling soul is fled,

And haggard phantoms haunt me wild;
Despair assails, and Hope is dead:
O, holy Virgin, call thy child.

Song.-FROM THE TALISMAN.

WHEN the firmament quivers with daylight's young beam,
And the woodlands, awaking, burst into a hymn,

And the glow of the sky blazes back from the stream,—
How the bright ones of heaven in the brightness grow dim!

Oh, tis sad, in that moment of glory and song,

To see, while the hill-tops are waiting the sun,
The glittering host, that kept watch all night long
O'er Love and o'er Slumber, go out one by one ;-

Till the circle of ether, deep, rosy and vast,

Scarce glimmers with one of the train that were there; And their leader, the day-star, the brightest and last, Twinkles faintly, and fades in that desert of air.

Thus Oblivion, from midst of whose shadow we came,
Steals o'er us again when life's moment is gone;
And the crowd of bright names in the heaven of fame
Grow pale and are quenched as the years hasten on.

Let them fade-but we'll pray that the age, in whose flight
Of ourselves and our friends the remembrance shall die,
May rise o'er the world, with the gladness and light
Of the dawn that effaces the stars from the sky.

September.-CARLOS WILCOX.

THE sultry summer past, September comes,
Soft twilight of the slow-declining year;—
All mildness, soothing loneliness and peace;
The fading season ere the falling come,
More sober than the buxom blooming May,
And therefore less the favorite of the world,
But dearest month of all to pensive minds.

« PreviousContinue »