[Page 38]
TO THE NIGHTINGALE.
Child of the melancholy song!
O yet that tender strain prolong!
1 Her lengthen'd shade when Ev'ning flings,
2 From mountain-cliffs, and forests green,
3 And sailing slow on silent wings,
4 Along the glimm'ring West is seen;
5 I love o'er pathless hills to stray,
6 Or trace the winding vale remote,
7 And pause, sweet Bird! to hear thy lay,
8 While moon-beams on the thin clouds float;
9 'Till o'er the Mountain's dewy head
10 Pale Midnight steals to wake the dead.
[Page 39]11 Far through the Heav'ns' ætherial blue,
12 Wafted on Spring's light airs you come,
13 With blooms, and flow'rs, and genial dew,
14 From climes where Summer joys to roam,
15 O! welcome to your long lost home!
16 "Child of the melancholy song!"
17 Who lov'st the lonely woodland-glade
18 To mourn, unseen, the boughs among,
19 When Twilight spreads her pensive shade,
20 Again thy dulcet voice I hail!
21 O! pour again the liquid note
22 That dies upon the ev'ning gale!
23 For Fancy loves the kindred tone;
24 Her griefs the plaintive accents own.
25 She loves to hear thy music float
[Page 40]26 At solemn midnight's stillest hour,
27 And think on friends for ever lost,
28 On joys by disappointment crost,
29 And weep anew Love's charmful pow'r!
30 Then Memory wakes the magic smile,
31 Th' impassion'd voice, the melting eye,
32 That won't the trusting heart beguile,
33 And wakes again the hopeless sigh!
34 Her skill the glowing tints revive
35 Of scenes that Time had bade decay:
36 She bids the soften'd Passions live —
37 The Passions urge again their sway.
38 Yet o'er the long-regretted scene,
39 Thy song the grace of sorrow throws;
40 A melancholy charm serene,
41 More rare than all that mirth bestows.
42 Then hail, sweet Bird! and hail thy pensive tear!
43 To Taste, to Fancy, and to Virtue dear!
Source edition
Radcliffe, Ann Ward, 1764-1823. The Poems of Mrs. Ann Radcliffe. London: printed by and for J. Smith, Princes Street, 1816, pp. 38-40. 118p. [Radcliffe's poems only, pp. 1-95] (Page images digitized from a copy held at the National Library of the Netherlands.)
Editorial principles
Typography, spelling, capitalization, and punctuation have been cautiously modernized. The source of the text is given and all significant editorial interventions have been recorded in textual notes. This ECPA text has been edited to conform to the recommendations found in Level 5 of the Best Practices for TEI in Libraries version 4.0.0.
Other works by Ann Radcliffe (née Ward)
- AIR. [Now, at Moonlight's fairy hour] ()
- THE BUTTER-FLY TO HIS LOVE. ()
- THE FIRST HOUR OF MORNING. ()
- THE GLOW-WORM. ()
- THE MARINER. ()
- MORNING, ON THE SEA-SHORE. ()
- NIGHT. ()
- NIGHT. ()
- THE PIEDMONTESE. ()
- THE PILGRIM. ()
- RONDEAU. [Soft as yon silver ray, that sleeps] ()
- THE SEA-NYMPH. ()
- SHIPWRECK. ()
- SONG OF A SPIRIT. ()
- SONG OF THE EVENING HOUR. ()
- SONG. [Life's a varied, bright illusion] ()
- SONG. [The rose that weeps with morning dew] ()
- SONNET, TO THE LILLY. ()
- SONNET. [How sweet is Love's first gentle sway] ()
- SONNET. [Morn's beaming eyes at length unclose] ()
- SONNET. [Now the bat circles on the breeze of eve] ()
- STANZAS. [How smooth that lake expands its ample breast!] ()
- STANZAS. [O'er Ilion's plains, where once the warrior bled] ()
- STORIED SONNET. ()
- SUN-RISE: A SONNET. ()
- SUN-SET. ()
- TITANIA TO HER LOVE. ()
- TO A SEA-NYMPH. ()
- TO AUTUMN. ()
- TO MELANCHOLY. ()
- TO THE BAT. ()
- TO THE VISIONS OF FANCY. ()
- TO THE WINDS. ()