DISENCHANTMENT.
I.Glides the shadow round the dial,Youth and Hope have almost flown,Vainly fade my days like water,On the sandy desert thrown.On the Tree of Life the verdure,Leaf by leaf decaying, dies;And a low prophetic murmurIn its waving branches sighs.At its roots the Nornas sitting,Chant, by turns, their solemn hymn;In its shadow dreams are brooding,As at old Dodona dim.II.Once like trodden vintage foaming,Through my veins the life-blood rolled,Fiery visions flashed around me,Such as blinded prophets old.Cold and dark the golden mountains,Which of yore environed me;From the star its sheen has faded,From the blossom and the tree.Gazing westward in the sunset,I no longer can descryTents of Paladins, in clusters,Pitched against the darkening sky.III.They have furled their gorgeous banners,And their oriflammes uprolled,They have struck their far pavilions,Rich with purple and with gold.In the galley of UlyssesI no more at random sail,On each tenth returning sunriseSure some stranger port to hail.Now the regions of the LotosO’er the waters disappear;Now the meadows of the SirensStarred with blossoms glitter near;IV.Now the golden ether leaving,We to lampless glooms descend,Where the Shadows of the WearyThrough the umbered spaces wend.With “the blind old man” I wanderedOn the soft Ionian shore,Danced at harvest feasts in autumn,While the oak tree arched me o’er;Through the streets of Asian cities,Lit with nuptial tapers trod,Where in star-light flamed the altarsOf the yellow-buskined god.V.All the dark-eyed tribes of HellasI could visit, one by one,In theiragoraiI gossippedWith the idlers in the sun;At the school of old CrotonaHeard the Samian recite,How the eternal Monad flowersInto blossoms infinite;How from shape to shape foreverSilent, serpent-like it glides,On a starred, unresting circle,In its pilgrimages rides.VI.At the city of Glaucopis,’Neath the olive trees I lay,While the bird of Itys warbledThrough the livelong summer day,And at moon-rise, decked with garlands,Lay reclined in that alcove,Where harangued the Man-SilenusOn the genesis of Love.Fast the wine and wit were flowing,Mid the banquet’s joyous din;At the door, the son of Clinias,Crowned and drunken, gazing in.VII.Or at morning, in somestoa,Heard the Sage, as in his toilsHe immeshed the wordy sophistsCome to dazzle from the Isles.In the house of Thespis sitting,On upæthric seats of stone,Saw the tribes of birds collectedIn a kingdom of their own;In a quaint ethereal city,Full of many-tinted plumes,Which in mid-air interceptedJove’s refection, altar-fumes.VIII.But the portals of AthenæI no longer wander through,To her Owl and to herBemaI have bid a long adieu.Cities thronged with breathing beings—Not the pavements of the dead—For the future I must frequent,For the future I must tread.Though their streets have not the glory,Which the towns of Hellas wore,In them I must toil and battle,Till the fret and din are o’er.IX.Till the clamor of the PresentIn the eternal silence dies,And my frame, but dust and ruin,In its final chamber lies,With the vanished and forgotten,With the lovely and the brave,Who have sunken through the Ages,To the quiet of the grave.There the eye of love shall vainlyThrough the red earth seek to pry,There the grass and night winds onlyTrue to sorrow ever sigh.
I.Glides the shadow round the dial,Youth and Hope have almost flown,Vainly fade my days like water,On the sandy desert thrown.On the Tree of Life the verdure,Leaf by leaf decaying, dies;And a low prophetic murmurIn its waving branches sighs.At its roots the Nornas sitting,Chant, by turns, their solemn hymn;In its shadow dreams are brooding,As at old Dodona dim.II.Once like trodden vintage foaming,Through my veins the life-blood rolled,Fiery visions flashed around me,Such as blinded prophets old.Cold and dark the golden mountains,Which of yore environed me;From the star its sheen has faded,From the blossom and the tree.Gazing westward in the sunset,I no longer can descryTents of Paladins, in clusters,Pitched against the darkening sky.III.They have furled their gorgeous banners,And their oriflammes uprolled,They have struck their far pavilions,Rich with purple and with gold.In the galley of UlyssesI no more at random sail,On each tenth returning sunriseSure some stranger port to hail.Now the regions of the LotosO’er the waters disappear;Now the meadows of the SirensStarred with blossoms glitter near;IV.Now the golden ether leaving,We to lampless glooms descend,Where the Shadows of the WearyThrough the umbered spaces wend.With “the blind old man” I wanderedOn the soft Ionian shore,Danced at harvest feasts in autumn,While the oak tree arched me o’er;Through the streets of Asian cities,Lit with nuptial tapers trod,Where in star-light flamed the altarsOf the yellow-buskined god.V.All the dark-eyed tribes of HellasI could visit, one by one,In theiragoraiI gossippedWith the idlers in the sun;At the school of old CrotonaHeard the Samian recite,How the eternal Monad flowersInto blossoms infinite;How from shape to shape foreverSilent, serpent-like it glides,On a starred, unresting circle,In its pilgrimages rides.VI.At the city of Glaucopis,’Neath the olive trees I lay,While the bird of Itys warbledThrough the livelong summer day,And at moon-rise, decked with garlands,Lay reclined in that alcove,Where harangued the Man-SilenusOn the genesis of Love.Fast the wine and wit were flowing,Mid the banquet’s joyous din;At the door, the son of Clinias,Crowned and drunken, gazing in.VII.Or at morning, in somestoa,Heard the Sage, as in his toilsHe immeshed the wordy sophistsCome to dazzle from the Isles.In the house of Thespis sitting,On upæthric seats of stone,Saw the tribes of birds collectedIn a kingdom of their own;In a quaint ethereal city,Full of many-tinted plumes,Which in mid-air interceptedJove’s refection, altar-fumes.VIII.But the portals of AthenæI no longer wander through,To her Owl and to herBemaI have bid a long adieu.Cities thronged with breathing beings—Not the pavements of the dead—For the future I must frequent,For the future I must tread.Though their streets have not the glory,Which the towns of Hellas wore,In them I must toil and battle,Till the fret and din are o’er.IX.Till the clamor of the PresentIn the eternal silence dies,And my frame, but dust and ruin,In its final chamber lies,With the vanished and forgotten,With the lovely and the brave,Who have sunken through the Ages,To the quiet of the grave.There the eye of love shall vainlyThrough the red earth seek to pry,There the grass and night winds onlyTrue to sorrow ever sigh.
I.Glides the shadow round the dial,Youth and Hope have almost flown,Vainly fade my days like water,On the sandy desert thrown.On the Tree of Life the verdure,Leaf by leaf decaying, dies;And a low prophetic murmurIn its waving branches sighs.At its roots the Nornas sitting,Chant, by turns, their solemn hymn;In its shadow dreams are brooding,As at old Dodona dim.
I.
Glides the shadow round the dial,
Youth and Hope have almost flown,
Vainly fade my days like water,
On the sandy desert thrown.
On the Tree of Life the verdure,
Leaf by leaf decaying, dies;
And a low prophetic murmur
In its waving branches sighs.
At its roots the Nornas sitting,
Chant, by turns, their solemn hymn;
In its shadow dreams are brooding,
As at old Dodona dim.
II.Once like trodden vintage foaming,Through my veins the life-blood rolled,Fiery visions flashed around me,Such as blinded prophets old.Cold and dark the golden mountains,Which of yore environed me;From the star its sheen has faded,From the blossom and the tree.Gazing westward in the sunset,I no longer can descryTents of Paladins, in clusters,Pitched against the darkening sky.
II.
Once like trodden vintage foaming,
Through my veins the life-blood rolled,
Fiery visions flashed around me,
Such as blinded prophets old.
Cold and dark the golden mountains,
Which of yore environed me;
From the star its sheen has faded,
From the blossom and the tree.
Gazing westward in the sunset,
I no longer can descry
Tents of Paladins, in clusters,
Pitched against the darkening sky.
III.They have furled their gorgeous banners,And their oriflammes uprolled,They have struck their far pavilions,Rich with purple and with gold.In the galley of UlyssesI no more at random sail,On each tenth returning sunriseSure some stranger port to hail.Now the regions of the LotosO’er the waters disappear;Now the meadows of the SirensStarred with blossoms glitter near;
III.
They have furled their gorgeous banners,
And their oriflammes uprolled,
They have struck their far pavilions,
Rich with purple and with gold.
In the galley of Ulysses
I no more at random sail,
On each tenth returning sunrise
Sure some stranger port to hail.
Now the regions of the Lotos
O’er the waters disappear;
Now the meadows of the Sirens
Starred with blossoms glitter near;
IV.Now the golden ether leaving,We to lampless glooms descend,Where the Shadows of the WearyThrough the umbered spaces wend.With “the blind old man” I wanderedOn the soft Ionian shore,Danced at harvest feasts in autumn,While the oak tree arched me o’er;Through the streets of Asian cities,Lit with nuptial tapers trod,Where in star-light flamed the altarsOf the yellow-buskined god.
IV.
Now the golden ether leaving,
We to lampless glooms descend,
Where the Shadows of the Weary
Through the umbered spaces wend.
With “the blind old man” I wandered
On the soft Ionian shore,
Danced at harvest feasts in autumn,
While the oak tree arched me o’er;
Through the streets of Asian cities,
Lit with nuptial tapers trod,
Where in star-light flamed the altars
Of the yellow-buskined god.
V.All the dark-eyed tribes of HellasI could visit, one by one,In theiragoraiI gossippedWith the idlers in the sun;At the school of old CrotonaHeard the Samian recite,How the eternal Monad flowersInto blossoms infinite;How from shape to shape foreverSilent, serpent-like it glides,On a starred, unresting circle,In its pilgrimages rides.
V.
All the dark-eyed tribes of Hellas
I could visit, one by one,
In theiragoraiI gossipped
With the idlers in the sun;
At the school of old Crotona
Heard the Samian recite,
How the eternal Monad flowers
Into blossoms infinite;
How from shape to shape forever
Silent, serpent-like it glides,
On a starred, unresting circle,
In its pilgrimages rides.
VI.At the city of Glaucopis,’Neath the olive trees I lay,While the bird of Itys warbledThrough the livelong summer day,And at moon-rise, decked with garlands,Lay reclined in that alcove,Where harangued the Man-SilenusOn the genesis of Love.Fast the wine and wit were flowing,Mid the banquet’s joyous din;At the door, the son of Clinias,Crowned and drunken, gazing in.
VI.
At the city of Glaucopis,
’Neath the olive trees I lay,
While the bird of Itys warbled
Through the livelong summer day,
And at moon-rise, decked with garlands,
Lay reclined in that alcove,
Where harangued the Man-Silenus
On the genesis of Love.
Fast the wine and wit were flowing,
Mid the banquet’s joyous din;
At the door, the son of Clinias,
Crowned and drunken, gazing in.
VII.Or at morning, in somestoa,Heard the Sage, as in his toilsHe immeshed the wordy sophistsCome to dazzle from the Isles.In the house of Thespis sitting,On upæthric seats of stone,Saw the tribes of birds collectedIn a kingdom of their own;In a quaint ethereal city,Full of many-tinted plumes,Which in mid-air interceptedJove’s refection, altar-fumes.
VII.
Or at morning, in somestoa,
Heard the Sage, as in his toils
He immeshed the wordy sophists
Come to dazzle from the Isles.
In the house of Thespis sitting,
On upæthric seats of stone,
Saw the tribes of birds collected
In a kingdom of their own;
In a quaint ethereal city,
Full of many-tinted plumes,
Which in mid-air intercepted
Jove’s refection, altar-fumes.
VIII.But the portals of AthenæI no longer wander through,To her Owl and to herBemaI have bid a long adieu.Cities thronged with breathing beings—Not the pavements of the dead—For the future I must frequent,For the future I must tread.Though their streets have not the glory,Which the towns of Hellas wore,In them I must toil and battle,Till the fret and din are o’er.
VIII.
But the portals of Athenæ
I no longer wander through,
To her Owl and to herBema
I have bid a long adieu.
Cities thronged with breathing beings—
Not the pavements of the dead—
For the future I must frequent,
For the future I must tread.
Though their streets have not the glory,
Which the towns of Hellas wore,
In them I must toil and battle,
Till the fret and din are o’er.
IX.Till the clamor of the PresentIn the eternal silence dies,And my frame, but dust and ruin,In its final chamber lies,With the vanished and forgotten,With the lovely and the brave,Who have sunken through the Ages,To the quiet of the grave.There the eye of love shall vainlyThrough the red earth seek to pry,There the grass and night winds onlyTrue to sorrow ever sigh.
IX.
Till the clamor of the Present
In the eternal silence dies,
And my frame, but dust and ruin,
In its final chamber lies,
With the vanished and forgotten,
With the lovely and the brave,
Who have sunken through the Ages,
To the quiet of the grave.
There the eye of love shall vainly
Through the red earth seek to pry,
There the grass and night winds only
True to sorrow ever sigh.