And ye Winds that rave, Till the sands thereunder Tinge the sullen wave--
Winds, that like a Demon, Howl with horrid note Round the toiling Seaman, In his tossing boat--
From his humble dwelling, On the shingly shore, Where the billows swelling, Keep such hollow roar--
From that weeping Woman, Seeking with her cries Succor superhuman From the frowning skies--
From the Urchin pining For his Father's knee-- From the lattice shining-- Drive him out to sea!
Let broad leagues dissever Him from yonder foam-- Oh, God! to think Man ever Comes too near his Home!
SONNET.
The world is with me, and its many cares, Its woes--its wants--the anxious hopes and fears That wait on all terrestrial affairs-- The shades of former and of future years-- Foreboding fancies, and prophetic tears, Quelling a spirit that was once elate:-- Heavens! what a wilderness the earth appears, Where Youth, and Mirth, and Health are out of date!
But no--a laugh of innocence and joy Resounds, like music of the fairy race, And gladly turning from the world's annoy I gaze upon a little radiant face, And bless, internally, the merry boy Who "makes a _son-shine_ in a shady-place."
THE ELM TREE.
A DREAM IN THE WOODS.
"And this our life, exempt from public haunt, Finds tongues in trees."--_As You Like It_.
'Twas in a shady Avenue, Where lofty Elms abound-- And from a Tree There came to me A sad and solemn sound, That sometimes murmur'd overhead, And sometimes underground.
Amongst the leaves it seem'd to sigh, Amid the boughs to moan; It mutter'd in the stem, and then The roots took up the tone; As if beneath the dewy grass The dead began to groan.
No breeze there was to stir the leaves; No bolts that tempests launch, To rend the trunk or rugged bark; No gale to bend the branch; No quake of earth to heave the roots, That stood so stiff and staunch.
No bird was preening up aloft, To rustle with its wing; No squirrel, in its sport or fear.
From bough to bough to spring.
The solid bole Had ne'er a hole To hide a living thing!
No scooping hollow cell to lodge A furtive beast or fowl, The martin, bat, Or forest cat That nightly loves to prowl, Nor ivy nooks so apt to shroud The moping, snoring owl.
But still the sound was in my ear, A sad and solemn sound, That sometimes murmur'd overhead, And sometimes underground-- 'Twas in a shady Avenue Where lofty Elms abound.
Oh hath the Dryad still a tongue In this ungenial clime?
Have Sylvan Spirits still a voice As in the classic prime-- To make the forest voluble, As in the olden time?
The olden time is dead and gone; Its years have fill'd their sum-- And e'en in Greece--her native Greece-- The Sylvan Nymph is dumb-- From ash, and beech, and aged oak, No classic whispers come,
From Poplar, Pine, and drooping Birch, And fragrant Linden Trees; No living sound E'er hovers round, Unless the vagrant breeze, The music of the merry bird, Or hum of busy bees.
But busy bees forsake the Elm That bears no bloom aloft-- The Finch was in the hawthorn-bush, The Blackbird in the croft; And among the firs the brooding Dove, That else might murmur soft.
Yet still I heard that solemn sound, And sad it was to boot, From ev'ry overhanging bough, And each minuter shoot; From rugged trunk and mossy rind, And from the twisted root.
From these,--a melancholy moan; From those,--a dreary sigh; As if the boughs were wintry bare, And wild winds sweeping by-- Whereas the smallest fleecy cloud Was steadfast in the sky.
No sign or touch of stirring air Could either sense observe-- The zephyr had not breath enough The thistle-down to swerve, Or force the filmy gossamers To take another curve.
In still and silent slumber hush'd All Nature seem'd to be: From heaven above, or earth beneath, No whisper came to me-- Except the solemn sound and sad From that MYSTERIOUS TREE!
A hollow, hollow, hollow, sound, As is that dreamy roar When distant billows boil and bound Along a shingly shore-- But the ocean brim was far aloof, A hundred miles or more.
No murmur of the gusty sea, No tumult of the beach, However they may foam and fret, The bounded sense could reach-- Methought the trees in mystic tongue Were talking each to each!--
Mayhap, rehearsing ancient tales Of greenwood love or guilt, Of whisper'd vows Beneath their boughs; Or blood obscurely spilt, Or of that near-hand Mansion House A royal Tudor built.
Perchance, of booty won or shared Beneath the starry cope-- Or where the suicidal wretch Hung up the fatal rope; Or Beauty kept an evil tryste, Insnared by Love and Hope.
Of graves, perchance, untimely scoop'd At midnight dark and dank-- And what is underneath the sod Whereon the grass is rank-- Of old intrigues, And privy leagues, Tradition leaves in blank.
Of traitor lips that mutter'd plots-- Of Kin who fought and fell-- God knows the undiscovered schemes, The arts and acts of Hell, Perform'd long generations since, If trees had tongues to tell!
With wary eyes, and ears alert, As one who walks afraid, I wander'd down the dappled path Of mingled light and shade-- How sweetly gleam'd that arch of blue Beyond the green arcade!
How cheerily shone the glimpse of Heav'n Beyond that verdant aisle!
All overarch'd with lofty elms, That quench'd the light, the while, As dim and chill As serves to fill Some old Cathedral pile!
And many a gnarled trunk was there, That ages long had stood, Till Time had wrought them into shapes Like Pan's fantastic brood; Or still more foul and hideous forms That Pagans carve in wood!
A crouching Satyr lurking here-- And there a Goblin grim-- As staring full of demon life As Gothic sculptor's whim-- A marvel it had scarcely been To hear a voice from him!
Some whisper from that horrid mouth Of strange, unearthly tone; Or wild infernal laugh, to chill One's marrow in the bone.
But no--it grins like rigid Death, And silent as a stone!
As silent as its fellows be, For all is mute with them-- The branch that climbs the leafy roof-- The rough and mossy stem-- The crooked root, And tender shoot, Where hangs the dewy gem.
One mystic Tree alone there is, Of sad and solemn sound-- That sometimes murmurs overhead, And sometimes underground-- In all that shady Avenue, Where lofty Elms abound.
PART II.
The Scene is changed! No green Arcade, No Trees all ranged a-row-- But scatter'd like a beaten host, Dispersing to and fro; With here and there a sylvan corse, That fell before the foe.
The Foe that down in yonder dell Pursues his daily toil; As witness many a prostrate trunk, Bereft of leafy spoil, Hard by its wooden stump, whereon The adder loves to coil.
Alone he works--his ringing blows Have banish'd bird and beast; The Hind and Fawn have canter'd off A hundred yards at least; And on the maple's lofty top The linnet's song has ceased.
No eye his labor overlooks, Or when he takes his rest, Except the timid thrush that peeps Above her secret nest, Forbid by love to leave the young Beneath her speckled breast.