O Spring! of hope and love and youth and gladness Wind-winged emblem! brightest, best, and fairest ! Whence comest thou, when, with dark Winter's sadness The tears that fade in sunny smiles thou sharest ; Sister of joy, thou art the child who wearest Thy mother's dying smile, tender and sweet Thy mother Autumn, for whose grave thou bearest Fresh flowers, and beams like flowers, with gentle feet Disturbing not the leaves which are her winding-sheet. Revolt of Islam, Canto ix. SPRING. 'TWAS at the season when the Earth upsprings Stands up before its mother bright and mild, To see it rise thus joyous from its dreams, The grass in the warm sun did start and move, Loves then the shade of his own soul, half seen How many a spirit then puts on the pinions Sweeps in his dream-drawn chariot, far and fast, More fleet than storms-the wide world shrinks below, When winter and despondency are past. Prince Athanase. 1817. JUNE. IT was the azure time of June When the skies are deep in the stainless noon, The very breath we did respire A liquid element, whereon Our spirits, like delighted things Mid the warm winds of the sunny day. Above the curve of the new-bent moon, Did the Earth's breathless sleep attune. SUMMER AND WINTER. It was a bright and cheerful afternoon, All things rejoiced beneath the sun; the weeds, It was a winter such as when birds die In the deep forests; and the fishes lie AUTUMN. A DIRGE. THE warm sun is failing, the bleak wind is wailing, The bare boughs are sighing, the pale flowers are dying, And the year On the earth her death-bed, in a shroud of leaves dead, Is lying. Come, months, come away, From November to May Of the dead cold year, And like dim shadows watch by her sepulchre. The chill rain is falling, the nipt worm is crawling, The rivers are swelling, the thunder is knelling For the year; The blithe swallows are flown, and the lizards each gone To his dwelling; Come, months, come away; Ye, follow the bier Of the dead cold year, And make her grave green with tear on tear. When one, like them, but mightier far than they, The Anarch of thine own bewildered powers Rose armies mingled in obscure array, Like clouds with clouds, darkening the sacred bowers Of serene heaven. He, by the past pursued, Rests with those dead, but unforgotten hours, Whose ghosts scare victor kings in their ancestral towers. England yet sleeps: was she not called of old? Spain calls her now, as with its thrilling thunder Vesuvius wakens Ætna, and the cold Snow-crags by its reply are cloven in sunder: O'er the lit waves every Æolian isle From Pithecusa to Pelorus Howls, and leaps, and glares in chorus: They cry, Be dim; ye lamps of heaven suspended o'er us. Her chains are threads of gold, she need but smile And they dissolve; but Spain's were links of steel, Till bit to dust by virtue's keenest file. Twins of a single destiny! appeal To the eternal years enthroned before us, In the dim West; impress us from a seal, All ye have thought and done! Time cannot dare conceal. Tomb of Arminius! render up thy dead, Till, like a standard from a watch-tower's staff, Wild Bacchanal of truth's mysterious wine, |