THE WOLF.(4)A Fragment.

THE WOLF.(4)A Fragment.'Tisevening,—one of those rich eves in June,That look as bright, and feel as warm as noon;The setting sun its parting ray has thrownItalia's smiling groves and bowers upon:Amid the balm of meadow, vale, and hill,Where all is beautiful, and all is still;A bard would deem, 'neath such a tranquil sky,He heard the stream of time while rushing by:'Tis the soft hour, to love that doth belong,To village pastime, and to village song:But why do happy peasants meet no more?The village song, the village dance is o'er:Why is the tabor silent on the plain?Why does the mountain-pipe refuse its strain?Where is the lover fond, the trusting maid?They shun each other, and desert the shade.IsthisItalia's sky, so calm, so fair?Where are its joyous sons, its laughing daughters where?· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·Hark! 'tis a wild, a solitary cry,Unheard till now beneath Italia's sky;And well Italia's sons may shrink to hearA cry, that fills all who have heard with fear,—It is the Alpine wolf's terrific bay,Roaming abroad ferocious for its prey:Soon as the sun of earth its farewell takes,The Alpine wolf his solitude forsakes,And, like a demon, rushing to the plain,Scatters the flock, and panic-strikes the swain.One summer eve, a monster of the kind,Hungry for prey, had left his troop behind;Ranging alone, he spread dismay where'erHis bay was heard, as if a host were there:Beneath his tusk of steel, his breath of flame,Italia's bowers a wilderness became:Grain for a while and sheep he stole away,But, quitting these, he sought a nobler prey,—The tender babe, even in its mother's view,He bore to crags, where no one dared pursue:Until the province, late the happiest oneThat brightens 'neath Italia's gorgeous sun,Became, throughout, all desolate and lone,For there the fell destroyer forth had gone.· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·Lo! like a pageant, slowly up the vale,A band advances, clad in glittering mail;While, in the front, a knight of noble mien,And lofty plume, above the rest is seen:The peasants from their huts look forth with fear,But dare not quit them, lest the wolf be near;And then the chief, advancing from the rest,At sound of trump, the peasants thus addressed,—"A purse of gold, and his own diamond ring,As a reward, are offered by the king,To him who slays the wolf!" The trumpet's blastRe-echoed loud, as that gay pageant passed.Meanwhile, each swain, in hope to gain the prize,Shouldering his gun, to kill the monster tries;But home returning oft without his prey,All left the task to Giulio to essay,—For Giulio was the best, the bravest youthWithin the province, or the realm, in sooth:Kind to his mates, and to his mistress true,Foremost in pastime and in peril too;Whene'er the river overflowed its bounds,And the wild flood o'erswept the pleasant grounds,Bearing away, in its retiring course,The helpless flocks, too feeble for its force,Giulio was first among the village brave,To stretch the hand to succour and to save;He was a marksman too, and well could hitThe target's eye, when all fell wide of it:Him, therefore, did they fix upon to beTheir champion—their meadows rich to freeFrom the destroyer—each resigned his claimTo the reward,—Let Giulio win the same!And Giulio ranged afar from morn till eve,But still no wolf could Giulio perceive;He searched each wood, explored each copse and cave,As a fierce gnome invades the quiet grave;Still did he hear his roar, his ravage see.But, still unseen himself, the wolf continued free.Three days had sped, and Giulio had not tracedThe monster out, although he tracked his waste;And standing on a mountain's rugged brow,Giulio, despairing, breathed to Heaven a vow,That he would bring the wolf in triumph slain,Or never see his native home again,And Giulio's vow was kept—the monster fell,But not by him—a sadder tale I tell!One eve—it was the fourth—he threw him down,Fatigued and foot-sore, on the mountain brown;No wolf as yet had crossed his anxious way,Although, where'er he roamed, he heard his bay;Loth to return until the wolf he slew,Yet, ah! his heart, to love, to feeling, true,Led him to where his lover's hut arose,As if her vicinage could soothe his woes.There for awhile he lingered, and he weptThe tear of fond remembrance—slumber creptUpon his eyes, for he was overspent,Wasted for want of needful nourishment:Before him in the moonlight rolled a stream,Whose murmur lulled him to a blissful dream:A dream of love, of happiness and pride,—He thought he slew the wolf, and won his blushing bride.Beyond the river, to its very edgeAlong the bank, there grew a bushy hedge,Where oft alone, beneath the twilight dim,The lovely maid would steal to think of him;—A stir!—a motion!—it was not the breezeThat shook the hedge,—for why waved not the trees?He started and awoke—again it shook,—His gun was in his hand—one hurried look,One rapid touch—the fatal ball was sped,—A long wild shriek was heard, and Giulio's dream was read.In triumph now, he thought of home again,—The prize was his, the wolf at length was slain—Swift as the ball that from his rifle flew,He reached the river, and swam gaily through:The corpse lay there before him in the light!—Why breaks that mournful shriek upon the night?Why motionless stands Giulio gazing there,A form of stone, a statue of despair?At length he spoke—"Isthisthe wolf I've soughtIn glen, and mount, and precipice remote?Its skin is soft, its eyes are bright and fair,And still they smile on me,—the wolf's should glare;But sweet though sad, still do they charm my view,Like my fair bride's, the beautiful, the blue—The wolf!—ah, horror! 'tis herself I've slain!I feel it, like a fire within my brain,And on my heart—no tear is in mine eye—For her alone I lived,—with her I die."The stream is near, he lifts her as a child,While from his o'erpressed heart there bursts a wildAnd fiendish laugh,—the peasants wondering hear,And in a crowd assemble, half in fear:In the broad moonlight then, as in a dream,A figure rushed before them to the stream;That form did bear another—on the brinkHe pauses not—one plunge—they sink! they sink!'Twas Giulio and his bride!—they rise no more,—And onward rolls the stream as smoothly as before.

'Tisevening,—one of those rich eves in June,That look as bright, and feel as warm as noon;The setting sun its parting ray has thrownItalia's smiling groves and bowers upon:Amid the balm of meadow, vale, and hill,Where all is beautiful, and all is still;A bard would deem, 'neath such a tranquil sky,He heard the stream of time while rushing by:'Tis the soft hour, to love that doth belong,To village pastime, and to village song:But why do happy peasants meet no more?The village song, the village dance is o'er:Why is the tabor silent on the plain?Why does the mountain-pipe refuse its strain?Where is the lover fond, the trusting maid?They shun each other, and desert the shade.IsthisItalia's sky, so calm, so fair?Where are its joyous sons, its laughing daughters where?· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·Hark! 'tis a wild, a solitary cry,Unheard till now beneath Italia's sky;And well Italia's sons may shrink to hearA cry, that fills all who have heard with fear,—It is the Alpine wolf's terrific bay,Roaming abroad ferocious for its prey:Soon as the sun of earth its farewell takes,The Alpine wolf his solitude forsakes,And, like a demon, rushing to the plain,Scatters the flock, and panic-strikes the swain.One summer eve, a monster of the kind,Hungry for prey, had left his troop behind;Ranging alone, he spread dismay where'erHis bay was heard, as if a host were there:Beneath his tusk of steel, his breath of flame,Italia's bowers a wilderness became:Grain for a while and sheep he stole away,But, quitting these, he sought a nobler prey,—The tender babe, even in its mother's view,He bore to crags, where no one dared pursue:Until the province, late the happiest oneThat brightens 'neath Italia's gorgeous sun,Became, throughout, all desolate and lone,For there the fell destroyer forth had gone.· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·Lo! like a pageant, slowly up the vale,A band advances, clad in glittering mail;While, in the front, a knight of noble mien,And lofty plume, above the rest is seen:The peasants from their huts look forth with fear,But dare not quit them, lest the wolf be near;And then the chief, advancing from the rest,At sound of trump, the peasants thus addressed,—"A purse of gold, and his own diamond ring,As a reward, are offered by the king,To him who slays the wolf!" The trumpet's blastRe-echoed loud, as that gay pageant passed.Meanwhile, each swain, in hope to gain the prize,Shouldering his gun, to kill the monster tries;But home returning oft without his prey,All left the task to Giulio to essay,—For Giulio was the best, the bravest youthWithin the province, or the realm, in sooth:Kind to his mates, and to his mistress true,Foremost in pastime and in peril too;Whene'er the river overflowed its bounds,And the wild flood o'erswept the pleasant grounds,Bearing away, in its retiring course,The helpless flocks, too feeble for its force,Giulio was first among the village brave,To stretch the hand to succour and to save;He was a marksman too, and well could hitThe target's eye, when all fell wide of it:Him, therefore, did they fix upon to beTheir champion—their meadows rich to freeFrom the destroyer—each resigned his claimTo the reward,—Let Giulio win the same!And Giulio ranged afar from morn till eve,But still no wolf could Giulio perceive;He searched each wood, explored each copse and cave,As a fierce gnome invades the quiet grave;Still did he hear his roar, his ravage see.But, still unseen himself, the wolf continued free.Three days had sped, and Giulio had not tracedThe monster out, although he tracked his waste;And standing on a mountain's rugged brow,Giulio, despairing, breathed to Heaven a vow,That he would bring the wolf in triumph slain,Or never see his native home again,And Giulio's vow was kept—the monster fell,But not by him—a sadder tale I tell!One eve—it was the fourth—he threw him down,Fatigued and foot-sore, on the mountain brown;No wolf as yet had crossed his anxious way,Although, where'er he roamed, he heard his bay;Loth to return until the wolf he slew,Yet, ah! his heart, to love, to feeling, true,Led him to where his lover's hut arose,As if her vicinage could soothe his woes.There for awhile he lingered, and he weptThe tear of fond remembrance—slumber creptUpon his eyes, for he was overspent,Wasted for want of needful nourishment:Before him in the moonlight rolled a stream,Whose murmur lulled him to a blissful dream:A dream of love, of happiness and pride,—He thought he slew the wolf, and won his blushing bride.Beyond the river, to its very edgeAlong the bank, there grew a bushy hedge,Where oft alone, beneath the twilight dim,The lovely maid would steal to think of him;—A stir!—a motion!—it was not the breezeThat shook the hedge,—for why waved not the trees?He started and awoke—again it shook,—His gun was in his hand—one hurried look,One rapid touch—the fatal ball was sped,—A long wild shriek was heard, and Giulio's dream was read.In triumph now, he thought of home again,—The prize was his, the wolf at length was slain—Swift as the ball that from his rifle flew,He reached the river, and swam gaily through:The corpse lay there before him in the light!—Why breaks that mournful shriek upon the night?Why motionless stands Giulio gazing there,A form of stone, a statue of despair?At length he spoke—"Isthisthe wolf I've soughtIn glen, and mount, and precipice remote?Its skin is soft, its eyes are bright and fair,And still they smile on me,—the wolf's should glare;But sweet though sad, still do they charm my view,Like my fair bride's, the beautiful, the blue—The wolf!—ah, horror! 'tis herself I've slain!I feel it, like a fire within my brain,And on my heart—no tear is in mine eye—For her alone I lived,—with her I die."The stream is near, he lifts her as a child,While from his o'erpressed heart there bursts a wildAnd fiendish laugh,—the peasants wondering hear,And in a crowd assemble, half in fear:In the broad moonlight then, as in a dream,A figure rushed before them to the stream;That form did bear another—on the brinkHe pauses not—one plunge—they sink! they sink!'Twas Giulio and his bride!—they rise no more,—And onward rolls the stream as smoothly as before.

'Tisevening,—one of those rich eves in June,That look as bright, and feel as warm as noon;The setting sun its parting ray has thrownItalia's smiling groves and bowers upon:Amid the balm of meadow, vale, and hill,Where all is beautiful, and all is still;A bard would deem, 'neath such a tranquil sky,He heard the stream of time while rushing by:'Tis the soft hour, to love that doth belong,To village pastime, and to village song:But why do happy peasants meet no more?The village song, the village dance is o'er:Why is the tabor silent on the plain?Why does the mountain-pipe refuse its strain?Where is the lover fond, the trusting maid?They shun each other, and desert the shade.IsthisItalia's sky, so calm, so fair?Where are its joyous sons, its laughing daughters where?· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·Hark! 'tis a wild, a solitary cry,Unheard till now beneath Italia's sky;And well Italia's sons may shrink to hearA cry, that fills all who have heard with fear,—It is the Alpine wolf's terrific bay,Roaming abroad ferocious for its prey:Soon as the sun of earth its farewell takes,The Alpine wolf his solitude forsakes,And, like a demon, rushing to the plain,Scatters the flock, and panic-strikes the swain.One summer eve, a monster of the kind,Hungry for prey, had left his troop behind;Ranging alone, he spread dismay where'erHis bay was heard, as if a host were there:Beneath his tusk of steel, his breath of flame,Italia's bowers a wilderness became:Grain for a while and sheep he stole away,But, quitting these, he sought a nobler prey,—The tender babe, even in its mother's view,He bore to crags, where no one dared pursue:Until the province, late the happiest oneThat brightens 'neath Italia's gorgeous sun,Became, throughout, all desolate and lone,For there the fell destroyer forth had gone.· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·Lo! like a pageant, slowly up the vale,A band advances, clad in glittering mail;While, in the front, a knight of noble mien,And lofty plume, above the rest is seen:The peasants from their huts look forth with fear,But dare not quit them, lest the wolf be near;And then the chief, advancing from the rest,At sound of trump, the peasants thus addressed,—"A purse of gold, and his own diamond ring,As a reward, are offered by the king,To him who slays the wolf!" The trumpet's blastRe-echoed loud, as that gay pageant passed.Meanwhile, each swain, in hope to gain the prize,Shouldering his gun, to kill the monster tries;But home returning oft without his prey,All left the task to Giulio to essay,—For Giulio was the best, the bravest youthWithin the province, or the realm, in sooth:Kind to his mates, and to his mistress true,Foremost in pastime and in peril too;Whene'er the river overflowed its bounds,And the wild flood o'erswept the pleasant grounds,Bearing away, in its retiring course,The helpless flocks, too feeble for its force,Giulio was first among the village brave,To stretch the hand to succour and to save;He was a marksman too, and well could hitThe target's eye, when all fell wide of it:Him, therefore, did they fix upon to beTheir champion—their meadows rich to freeFrom the destroyer—each resigned his claimTo the reward,—Let Giulio win the same!And Giulio ranged afar from morn till eve,But still no wolf could Giulio perceive;He searched each wood, explored each copse and cave,As a fierce gnome invades the quiet grave;Still did he hear his roar, his ravage see.But, still unseen himself, the wolf continued free.Three days had sped, and Giulio had not tracedThe monster out, although he tracked his waste;And standing on a mountain's rugged brow,Giulio, despairing, breathed to Heaven a vow,That he would bring the wolf in triumph slain,Or never see his native home again,And Giulio's vow was kept—the monster fell,But not by him—a sadder tale I tell!One eve—it was the fourth—he threw him down,Fatigued and foot-sore, on the mountain brown;No wolf as yet had crossed his anxious way,Although, where'er he roamed, he heard his bay;Loth to return until the wolf he slew,Yet, ah! his heart, to love, to feeling, true,Led him to where his lover's hut arose,As if her vicinage could soothe his woes.There for awhile he lingered, and he weptThe tear of fond remembrance—slumber creptUpon his eyes, for he was overspent,Wasted for want of needful nourishment:Before him in the moonlight rolled a stream,Whose murmur lulled him to a blissful dream:A dream of love, of happiness and pride,—He thought he slew the wolf, and won his blushing bride.Beyond the river, to its very edgeAlong the bank, there grew a bushy hedge,Where oft alone, beneath the twilight dim,The lovely maid would steal to think of him;—A stir!—a motion!—it was not the breezeThat shook the hedge,—for why waved not the trees?He started and awoke—again it shook,—His gun was in his hand—one hurried look,One rapid touch—the fatal ball was sped,—A long wild shriek was heard, and Giulio's dream was read.In triumph now, he thought of home again,—The prize was his, the wolf at length was slain—Swift as the ball that from his rifle flew,He reached the river, and swam gaily through:The corpse lay there before him in the light!—Why breaks that mournful shriek upon the night?Why motionless stands Giulio gazing there,A form of stone, a statue of despair?At length he spoke—"Isthisthe wolf I've soughtIn glen, and mount, and precipice remote?Its skin is soft, its eyes are bright and fair,And still they smile on me,—the wolf's should glare;But sweet though sad, still do they charm my view,Like my fair bride's, the beautiful, the blue—The wolf!—ah, horror! 'tis herself I've slain!I feel it, like a fire within my brain,And on my heart—no tear is in mine eye—For her alone I lived,—with her I die."The stream is near, he lifts her as a child,While from his o'erpressed heart there bursts a wildAnd fiendish laugh,—the peasants wondering hear,And in a crowd assemble, half in fear:In the broad moonlight then, as in a dream,A figure rushed before them to the stream;That form did bear another—on the brinkHe pauses not—one plunge—they sink! they sink!'Twas Giulio and his bride!—they rise no more,—And onward rolls the stream as smoothly as before.

'Tisevening,—one of those rich eves in June,That look as bright, and feel as warm as noon;The setting sun its parting ray has thrownItalia's smiling groves and bowers upon:Amid the balm of meadow, vale, and hill,Where all is beautiful, and all is still;A bard would deem, 'neath such a tranquil sky,He heard the stream of time while rushing by:'Tis the soft hour, to love that doth belong,To village pastime, and to village song:But why do happy peasants meet no more?The village song, the village dance is o'er:Why is the tabor silent on the plain?Why does the mountain-pipe refuse its strain?Where is the lover fond, the trusting maid?They shun each other, and desert the shade.IsthisItalia's sky, so calm, so fair?Where are its joyous sons, its laughing daughters where?· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

'Tisevening,—one of those rich eves in June,

That look as bright, and feel as warm as noon;

The setting sun its parting ray has thrown

Italia's smiling groves and bowers upon:

Amid the balm of meadow, vale, and hill,

Where all is beautiful, and all is still;

A bard would deem, 'neath such a tranquil sky,

He heard the stream of time while rushing by:

'Tis the soft hour, to love that doth belong,

To village pastime, and to village song:

But why do happy peasants meet no more?

The village song, the village dance is o'er:

Why is the tabor silent on the plain?

Why does the mountain-pipe refuse its strain?

Where is the lover fond, the trusting maid?

They shun each other, and desert the shade.

IsthisItalia's sky, so calm, so fair?

Where are its joyous sons, its laughing daughters where?

· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

Hark! 'tis a wild, a solitary cry,Unheard till now beneath Italia's sky;And well Italia's sons may shrink to hearA cry, that fills all who have heard with fear,—It is the Alpine wolf's terrific bay,Roaming abroad ferocious for its prey:Soon as the sun of earth its farewell takes,The Alpine wolf his solitude forsakes,And, like a demon, rushing to the plain,Scatters the flock, and panic-strikes the swain.

Hark! 'tis a wild, a solitary cry,

Unheard till now beneath Italia's sky;

And well Italia's sons may shrink to hear

A cry, that fills all who have heard with fear,—

It is the Alpine wolf's terrific bay,

Roaming abroad ferocious for its prey:

Soon as the sun of earth its farewell takes,

The Alpine wolf his solitude forsakes,

And, like a demon, rushing to the plain,

Scatters the flock, and panic-strikes the swain.

One summer eve, a monster of the kind,Hungry for prey, had left his troop behind;Ranging alone, he spread dismay where'erHis bay was heard, as if a host were there:Beneath his tusk of steel, his breath of flame,Italia's bowers a wilderness became:Grain for a while and sheep he stole away,But, quitting these, he sought a nobler prey,—The tender babe, even in its mother's view,He bore to crags, where no one dared pursue:Until the province, late the happiest oneThat brightens 'neath Italia's gorgeous sun,Became, throughout, all desolate and lone,For there the fell destroyer forth had gone.· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

One summer eve, a monster of the kind,

Hungry for prey, had left his troop behind;

Ranging alone, he spread dismay where'er

His bay was heard, as if a host were there:

Beneath his tusk of steel, his breath of flame,

Italia's bowers a wilderness became:

Grain for a while and sheep he stole away,

But, quitting these, he sought a nobler prey,—

The tender babe, even in its mother's view,

He bore to crags, where no one dared pursue:

Until the province, late the happiest one

That brightens 'neath Italia's gorgeous sun,

Became, throughout, all desolate and lone,

For there the fell destroyer forth had gone.

· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

Lo! like a pageant, slowly up the vale,A band advances, clad in glittering mail;While, in the front, a knight of noble mien,And lofty plume, above the rest is seen:The peasants from their huts look forth with fear,But dare not quit them, lest the wolf be near;And then the chief, advancing from the rest,At sound of trump, the peasants thus addressed,—"A purse of gold, and his own diamond ring,As a reward, are offered by the king,To him who slays the wolf!" The trumpet's blastRe-echoed loud, as that gay pageant passed.

Lo! like a pageant, slowly up the vale,

A band advances, clad in glittering mail;

While, in the front, a knight of noble mien,

And lofty plume, above the rest is seen:

The peasants from their huts look forth with fear,

But dare not quit them, lest the wolf be near;

And then the chief, advancing from the rest,

At sound of trump, the peasants thus addressed,—

"A purse of gold, and his own diamond ring,

As a reward, are offered by the king,

To him who slays the wolf!" The trumpet's blast

Re-echoed loud, as that gay pageant passed.

Meanwhile, each swain, in hope to gain the prize,Shouldering his gun, to kill the monster tries;But home returning oft without his prey,All left the task to Giulio to essay,—For Giulio was the best, the bravest youthWithin the province, or the realm, in sooth:Kind to his mates, and to his mistress true,Foremost in pastime and in peril too;Whene'er the river overflowed its bounds,And the wild flood o'erswept the pleasant grounds,Bearing away, in its retiring course,The helpless flocks, too feeble for its force,Giulio was first among the village brave,To stretch the hand to succour and to save;He was a marksman too, and well could hitThe target's eye, when all fell wide of it:Him, therefore, did they fix upon to beTheir champion—their meadows rich to freeFrom the destroyer—each resigned his claimTo the reward,—Let Giulio win the same!

Meanwhile, each swain, in hope to gain the prize,

Shouldering his gun, to kill the monster tries;

But home returning oft without his prey,

All left the task to Giulio to essay,—

For Giulio was the best, the bravest youth

Within the province, or the realm, in sooth:

Kind to his mates, and to his mistress true,

Foremost in pastime and in peril too;

Whene'er the river overflowed its bounds,

And the wild flood o'erswept the pleasant grounds,

Bearing away, in its retiring course,

The helpless flocks, too feeble for its force,

Giulio was first among the village brave,

To stretch the hand to succour and to save;

He was a marksman too, and well could hit

The target's eye, when all fell wide of it:

Him, therefore, did they fix upon to be

Their champion—their meadows rich to free

From the destroyer—each resigned his claim

To the reward,—Let Giulio win the same!

And Giulio ranged afar from morn till eve,But still no wolf could Giulio perceive;He searched each wood, explored each copse and cave,As a fierce gnome invades the quiet grave;Still did he hear his roar, his ravage see.But, still unseen himself, the wolf continued free.

And Giulio ranged afar from morn till eve,

But still no wolf could Giulio perceive;

He searched each wood, explored each copse and cave,

As a fierce gnome invades the quiet grave;

Still did he hear his roar, his ravage see.

But, still unseen himself, the wolf continued free.

Three days had sped, and Giulio had not tracedThe monster out, although he tracked his waste;And standing on a mountain's rugged brow,Giulio, despairing, breathed to Heaven a vow,That he would bring the wolf in triumph slain,Or never see his native home again,And Giulio's vow was kept—the monster fell,But not by him—a sadder tale I tell!

Three days had sped, and Giulio had not traced

The monster out, although he tracked his waste;

And standing on a mountain's rugged brow,

Giulio, despairing, breathed to Heaven a vow,

That he would bring the wolf in triumph slain,

Or never see his native home again,

And Giulio's vow was kept—the monster fell,

But not by him—a sadder tale I tell!

One eve—it was the fourth—he threw him down,Fatigued and foot-sore, on the mountain brown;No wolf as yet had crossed his anxious way,Although, where'er he roamed, he heard his bay;Loth to return until the wolf he slew,Yet, ah! his heart, to love, to feeling, true,Led him to where his lover's hut arose,As if her vicinage could soothe his woes.There for awhile he lingered, and he weptThe tear of fond remembrance—slumber creptUpon his eyes, for he was overspent,Wasted for want of needful nourishment:Before him in the moonlight rolled a stream,Whose murmur lulled him to a blissful dream:A dream of love, of happiness and pride,—He thought he slew the wolf, and won his blushing bride.

One eve—it was the fourth—he threw him down,

Fatigued and foot-sore, on the mountain brown;

No wolf as yet had crossed his anxious way,

Although, where'er he roamed, he heard his bay;

Loth to return until the wolf he slew,

Yet, ah! his heart, to love, to feeling, true,

Led him to where his lover's hut arose,

As if her vicinage could soothe his woes.

There for awhile he lingered, and he wept

The tear of fond remembrance—slumber crept

Upon his eyes, for he was overspent,

Wasted for want of needful nourishment:

Before him in the moonlight rolled a stream,

Whose murmur lulled him to a blissful dream:

A dream of love, of happiness and pride,—

He thought he slew the wolf, and won his blushing bride.

Beyond the river, to its very edgeAlong the bank, there grew a bushy hedge,Where oft alone, beneath the twilight dim,The lovely maid would steal to think of him;—A stir!—a motion!—it was not the breezeThat shook the hedge,—for why waved not the trees?He started and awoke—again it shook,—His gun was in his hand—one hurried look,One rapid touch—the fatal ball was sped,—A long wild shriek was heard, and Giulio's dream was read.

Beyond the river, to its very edge

Along the bank, there grew a bushy hedge,

Where oft alone, beneath the twilight dim,

The lovely maid would steal to think of him;—

A stir!—a motion!—it was not the breeze

That shook the hedge,—for why waved not the trees?

He started and awoke—again it shook,—

His gun was in his hand—one hurried look,

One rapid touch—the fatal ball was sped,—

A long wild shriek was heard, and Giulio's dream was read.

In triumph now, he thought of home again,—The prize was his, the wolf at length was slain—Swift as the ball that from his rifle flew,He reached the river, and swam gaily through:The corpse lay there before him in the light!—Why breaks that mournful shriek upon the night?Why motionless stands Giulio gazing there,A form of stone, a statue of despair?At length he spoke—"Isthisthe wolf I've soughtIn glen, and mount, and precipice remote?Its skin is soft, its eyes are bright and fair,And still they smile on me,—the wolf's should glare;But sweet though sad, still do they charm my view,Like my fair bride's, the beautiful, the blue—The wolf!—ah, horror! 'tis herself I've slain!I feel it, like a fire within my brain,And on my heart—no tear is in mine eye—For her alone I lived,—with her I die."The stream is near, he lifts her as a child,While from his o'erpressed heart there bursts a wildAnd fiendish laugh,—the peasants wondering hear,And in a crowd assemble, half in fear:In the broad moonlight then, as in a dream,A figure rushed before them to the stream;That form did bear another—on the brinkHe pauses not—one plunge—they sink! they sink!'Twas Giulio and his bride!—they rise no more,—And onward rolls the stream as smoothly as before.

In triumph now, he thought of home again,—

The prize was his, the wolf at length was slain—

Swift as the ball that from his rifle flew,

He reached the river, and swam gaily through:

The corpse lay there before him in the light!—

Why breaks that mournful shriek upon the night?

Why motionless stands Giulio gazing there,

A form of stone, a statue of despair?

At length he spoke—"Isthisthe wolf I've sought

In glen, and mount, and precipice remote?

Its skin is soft, its eyes are bright and fair,

And still they smile on me,—the wolf's should glare;

But sweet though sad, still do they charm my view,

Like my fair bride's, the beautiful, the blue—

The wolf!—ah, horror! 'tis herself I've slain!

I feel it, like a fire within my brain,

And on my heart—no tear is in mine eye—

For her alone I lived,—with her I die."

The stream is near, he lifts her as a child,

While from his o'erpressed heart there bursts a wild

And fiendish laugh,—the peasants wondering hear,

And in a crowd assemble, half in fear:

In the broad moonlight then, as in a dream,

A figure rushed before them to the stream;

That form did bear another—on the brink

He pauses not—one plunge—they sink! they sink!

'Twas Giulio and his bride!—they rise no more,—

And onward rolls the stream as smoothly as before.


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