[Page 170]

THE VISIONARY BOY.

1 Oh! lend that lute, sweet Archimage, to me!
2 Enough of care and heaviness
3 The weary lids of life depress,
4 And doubly blest that gentle heart shall be,
5 That wooes of poesy the visions bland,
6 And strays forgetful o'er enchanted land!
7 Oh! lend that lute, sweet Archimage, to me!
8 So spoke, with ardent look, yet eyebrow sad,
9 When he had passed o'er many a mountain rude,
10 And many a wild and weary solitude,
11 'Mid a green vale, a wandering minstrel-lad.
12 With eyes that shone in softened flame,
13 With wings and wand, young Fancy came;
14 And as she touched a trembling lute,
15 The lone enthusiast stood entranced and mute. [Page 171]
16 It was a sound that made his soul forego
17 All thoughts of sadness in a world of woe.
18 Oh, lend that lute! he cried: Hope, Pity, Love,
19 Shall listen; and each valley, rock, and grove,
20 Shall witness, as with deep delight,
21 From orient morn to dewy-stealing night.
22 My spirit, rapt in trance of sweetness high,
23 Shall drink the heartfelt sound with tears of ecstasy!
24 As thus he spoke, soft voices seemed to say,
25 Come away, come away;
26 Where shall the heart-sick minstrel stray,
27 But (viewing all things like a dream)
28 By haunted wood, or wizard stream?
29 That, like a hermit weeping,
30 Amid the gray stones creeping;
31 With voice distinct, yet faint,
32 Calls on Repose herself to hear its soothing plaint.
33 For him, romantic Solitude
34 Shall pile sublime her mountains rude;
35 For him, with shades more soft impressed,
36 The lucid lake's transparent breast
37 Shall show the banks, the woods, the hill,
38 More clear, more beautiful, more still.
39 For him more musical shall wave
40 The pines o'er Echo's moonlit cave;
41 While sounds as of a fairy lyre
42 Amid the shadowy cliffs expire!
43 This valley where the raptured minstrel stood
44 Was shaded with a circling slope of wood,
45 And rich in beauty, with that valley vied,
46 Thessalian Tempe, crowned with verdant bay,
47 Where smooth and clear Peneus winds his way;
48 And Ossa and Olympus, on each side,
49 Rise dark with woods; or that Sicilian plain[Page 172]
50 Which Arethusa's clearest waters lave,
51 By many a haunt of Pan, and wood-nymph's cave,
52 Lingering and listening to the Doric strain
53 Of him,
100 Theocritus.
the bard whose music might succeed
54 To the wild melodies of Pan's own reed!
55 This scene the mistress of the valley held,
56 Fancy, a magic maid; and at her will,
57 Aërial castles crowned the gleaming hill,
58 Or forests rose, or lapse of water welled.
59 Sometimes she sat with lifted eye,
60 And marked the dark storm in the western sky;
61 Sometimes she looked, and scarce her breath would draw,
62 As fearful things, not to be told, she saw;
63 And sometimes, like a vision of the air,
64 On wings of shifting light she floated here and there.
65 In the breeze her garments flew,
66 Of the brightest skiey blue,
67 Lucid as the tints of morn,
68 When Summer trills his pipe of corn:
69 Her tresses to each wing descending fall,
70 Or, lifted by the wind,
71 Stream loose and unconfined,
72 Like golden threads, beneath her myrtle coronal.
73 The listening passions stood aloof and mute,
74 As oft the west wind touched her trembling lute.
75 But when its sounds the youthful minstrel heard,
76 Strange mingled feelings, not to be expressed,
77 Rose undefined, yet blissful, on his breast,
78 And all the softened scene in sweeter light appeared.
79 Then Fancy waved her wand, and lo!
80 An airy troop went beckoning by:
81 Come, from toil and worldly woe;
82 Come, live with us in vales remote! they cry. [Page 173]
83 These are the flitting phantasies; the dreams
84 That lead the heart through all that elfin land,
85 Where half-seen shapes entice with whispers bland.
86 Meantime the clouds, impressed with livelier beams,
87 Roll, in the lucid track of air,
88 Arrayed in coloured brede, with semblances more fair.
89 The airy troop, as on they sail,
90 Thus the pensive stranger hail:
91 In the pure and argent sky,
92 There our distant chambers lie;
93 The bed is strewed with blushing roses,
94 When Quietude at eve reposes,
95 Oft trembling lest her bowers should fade,
96 In the cold earth's humid shade.
97 Come, rest with us! evanishing, they cried
98 Come, rest with us! the lonely vale replied.
99 Then Fancy beckoned, and with smiling mien,
100 A radiant form arose, like the fair Queen
101 Of Beauty: from her eye divinely bright,
102 A richer lustre shot, a more attractive light.
103 She said: With fairer tints I can adorn
104 The living landscape, fairer than the morn.
105 The summer clouds in shapes romantic rolled,
106 And those they edge the fading west, like gold;
107 The lake that sleeps in sunlight, yet impressed
108 With shades more sweet than real on its breast;
109 'Mid baffling stones, beneath a partial ray,
110 The small brook huddling its uneven way;
111 The blue far distant hills, the silvery sea,
112 And every scene of summer speaks of me:
113 But most I wake the sweetest wishes warm,
114 Where the fond gaze is turned on woman's breathing form.
115 So passing silent through a myrtle grove,
116 Beauty first led him to the bower of Love. [Page 174]
117 A mellow light through the dim covert strayed,
118 And opening roses canopied the shade.
119 Why does the hurrying pulse unbidden leap!
120 Behold, in yonder glade that nymph asleep!
121 The heart-struck minstrel hangs, with lingering gaze,
122 O'er every charm his eye impassioned strays!
123 An edge of white is seen, and scarcely seen,
124 As soft she breathes, her coral lips between;
125 A lambent ray steals from her half-closed eye,
126 As her breast heaves a short imperfect sigh.
127 Sleep, winds of summer, o'er the leafy bower,
128 Nor move the light bells of the nodding flower;
129 Lest but a sound of stirring leaves might seem
130 To break the charm of her delicious dream!
131 And ye, fond, rising, throbbing thoughts, away,
132 Lest syren Pleasure all the soul betray!
133 Oh! turn, and listen to the ditty
134 From the lowly cave of Pity.
135 On slaughter's plain, while Valour grieves,
136 There he sunk to rest,
137 And the ring-dove scattered leaves
138 Upon his bleeding breast!
139 Her face was hid, while her pale arms enfold
140 What seemed an urn of alabaster cold;
141 To this she pressed her heaving bosom bare:
142 The drops that gathered in the dank abode
143 Fell dripping, on her long dishevelled hair;
144 And still her tears, renewed, and silent, flowed:
145 And when the winds of autumn ceased to swell,
146 At times was heard a slow and melancholy knell!
147 'Twas in the twilight of the deepest wood,
148 Beneath whose boughs like sad Cocytus, famed
149 Through fabling Greece, from lamentation named
101 "From lamentation named, and loud lament. " Milton.
[Page 175]
150 A river dark and silent flowed, there stood
151 A pale and melancholy man, intent
152 His look upon that drowsy stream he bent,
153 As ever counting, when the fitful breeze
154 With strange and hollow sound sung through the trees,
155 Counting the sallow leaves, that down the current went.
156 He saw them not:
157 Earth seemed to him one universal blot.
158 Sometimes, as most distempered, to and fro
159 He paced; and sometimes fixed his chilling look
160 Upon a dreadful book,
161 Inscribed with secret characters of woe;
162 While gibbering imps, as mocking him, appeared,
163 And airy laughter 'mid the dusk was heard.
164 Then Fancy waved her wand again,
165 And all that valley that so lovely smiled
166 Was changed to a bare champaign, waste and wild.
167 "What pale and phantom-horseman rides amain?"
168 'Tis Terror; all the plain, far on, is spread
169 With skulls and bones, and relics of the dead!
170 From his black trump he blew a louder blast,
171 And earthquakes muttered as the giant passed.
172 Then said that magic maid, with aspect bland,
173 'Tis thine to seize his phantom spear,
174 'Tis thine his sable trumpet to command,
175 And thrill the inmost heart with shuddering fear.
176 But hark! to Music's softer sound,
177 New scenes and fairer views accordant rise:
178 Above, around,
179 The mingled measure swells in air, and dies.
180 Music, in thy charmed shell,
181 What sounds of holy magic dwell!
182 Oft when that shell was to the ear applied,
183 Confusion of rich harmonies,[Page 176]
184 All swelling rose,
185 That came, as with a gently-swelling tide:
186 Then at the close,
187 Angelic voices seemed, aloft,
188 To answer as it died the cadence soft.
189 Now, like the hum of distant ocean's stream,
190 The murmurs of the wond'rous concave seem;
191 And now exultingly their tones prolong
192 The chorded pæans of the choral song,
193 Then Music, with a voice more wildly sweet
194 Than winds that pipe on the forsaken shore,
195 When the last rain-drops of the west are o'er,
196 Warbled: Oh, welcome to my blest retreat,
197 And give my sounds to the responsive lyre:
198 With me to these melodious groves retire,
199 And such pure feelings share,
200 As, far from noise and folly, soothe thee there.
201 Here Fancy, as the prize were won,
202 And now she hailed her favourite son,
203 With energy impatient cried:
204 The weary world is dark and wide,
205 Lo! I am with thee still to comfort and to guide.
102 I have placed Music last, as I think a perfect musical ear implies the highest degree of cultivation.
206 Nor fear, if, grim before thine eyes,
207 Pale worldly Want, a spectre, lowers;
208 What is a world of vanities
209 To a world as sweet as ours!
210 When thy heart is sad and lone,
211 And loves to dwell on pleasures flown,
212 When that heart no more shall bound
213 At some kind voice's well-known sound,
214 My spells thy drooping languor shall relieve,
215 And airy spirits touch thy lonely harp at eve. [Page 177]
216 Look! Delight and Hope advancing,
217 Music joins her thrilling notes,
218 O'er the level lea come dancing;
219 Seize the vision as it floats,
220 Bright-eyed Rapture hovers o'er them,
221 Waving light his seraph wings,
222 Youth exulting flies before them,
223 Scattering cowslips as he sings!
224 Come now, my car pursue,
225 The wayward Fairy cried;
226 And high amid the fields of air,
227 Above the clouds, together we will ride,
228 And posting on the viewless winds,
229 So leave the cares of earth and all its thoughts behind.
230 I can sail, and I can fly,
231 To all regions of the sky,
232 On the shooting meteor's course,
233 On a winged griffin-horse!
234 She spoke: when Wisdom's self drew nigh,
235 A noble sternness in her searching eye;
236 Like Pallas helmed, and in her hand a spear,
237 As not in idle warfare bent, but still,
238 As resolute, to cope with every earthly ill.
239 In youthful dignity severe,
240 She stood: And shall the aspiring mind,
241 To Fancy be alone resigned!
242 Alas! she cried, her witching lay
243 Too often leads the heart astray!
244 Still, weak minstrel, wouldst thou rove,
245 Drooping in the distant grove,
246 Forgetful of all ties that bind
247 Thee, a brother, to mankind?
248 Has Fancy's feeble voice defied
249 The ills to poor humanity allied? [Page 178]
250 Can she, like Wisdom, bid thy soul sustain
251 Its post of duty in a life of pain!
252 Can she, like meek Religion, bid thee bear
253 Contempt and hardship in a world of care!
254 Yet let not my rebuke decry,
255 In all, her blameless witchery,
256 Or from the languid bosom tear
257 Each sweet illusion nourished there.
258 With dignity and truth, combined,
259 Still may she rule the manly mind;
260 Her sweetest magic still impart
261 To soften, not subdue, the heart:
262 Still may she warm the chosen breast,
263 Not as the sovereign, but the guest.
264 Then shall she lead the blameless Muse
265 Through all her fairest, wildest views;
266 To mark amid the flowers of morn,
267 The bee go forth with early horn;
268 Or when the moon, a softer light
269 Sheds on the rocks and seas of night,
270 To hear the circling fairy bands
271 Sing, Come unto these yellow sands!
272 Sweeter is our light than day,
273 Fond enthusiast, come away!
274 Then Chivalry again shall call
275 The champions to her bannered hall!
276 The pipe, and song, with many a mingled shout,
277 Ring through the forest, as the satyr-rout,
278 Dance round the dragon-chariot of Romance;
279 Forth pricks the errant knight with rested lance;
280 Imps, demons, fays, in antic train succeed,
281 The wandering maiden, and the winged steed!
282 The muttering wizard turns, with haggard look,
283 The bloody leaves of the accursed book,[Page 179]
284 Whilst giants, from the gloomy castle tower,
285 With lifted bats of steel, more dreadful lower!
286 At times, the magic shall prevail
287 Of the wild and wonderous tale;
288 At times, high rapture shall prolong
289 The deep, enthusiastic song.
290 Hence, at midnight, thou shalt stray,
291 Where dark ocean flings its spray,
292 To hear o'er heaven's resounding arch
293 The Thunder-Lord begin his march!
294 Or mark the flashes, that present
295 Some far-off shattered monument;
296 Whilst along the rocky vale,
297 Red fires, mingled with the hail,
298 Run along upon the ground,
299 And the thunders deeper sound!
300 The loftier Muse, with awful mien,
301 Upon a lonely rock is seen:
302 Full is the eye that speaks the dauntless soul;
303 She seems to hear the gathering tempest roll
304 Beneath her feet; she bids an eagle fly,
305 Breasting the whirlwind, through the dark-red sky;
306 Or, with elated look, lifts high the spear,
307 As sounds of distant battles roll more near.
308 Now deep-hushed in holy trance,
309 She sees the powers of Heaven advance,
310 And wheels, instinct with spirit, bear
311 God's living chariot through the air;
312 Now on the wings of morn she seems to rise,
313 And join the strain of more than mortal harmonies.
314 Thy heart shall beat exulting as she sings,
315 And thou shalt cry: Give me an angel's wings!
316 With sadder sound, o'er Pity's cave,
317 The willow in the wind shall wave;[Page 180]
318 And all the listening passions stand,
319 Obedient to thy great command.
320 With Poesy's sweet charm impressed,
321 Fancy thus shall warm thy breast;
322 Still her smiling train be thine,
323 Still her lovely visions shine,
324 To cheer, beyond my boasted power,
325 A sad or solitary hour.
326 Thus let them soothe a while thy heart,
327 "Come like shadows, so depart;"
328 But never may the witching lay
329 Lead each sense from life astray;
330 For vain the poet's muse of fire,
331 Vain the magic of his lyre,
332 Unless the touch subdued impart
333 Truth and wisdom to the heart!

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Title (in Source Edition): THE VISIONARY BOY.
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Bowles, William Lisle, 1762-1850. The Poetical Works of William Lisle Bowles, Vol. I. With Memoir, Critical Dissertation, and Explanatory Notes by George Gilfillan. Edinburgh: James Nichol, 9 North Bank Street..., 1855, pp. 170-180.  (Page images digitized from a copy held at the University of California Libraries.)

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