O slumberon, untaught to feelThe weight of care and sorrow's blight.Here have I often loved to stealAnd o'er thee breathe a soft “good night.”And gentle as thy beauty's rayBe all the visions of thy dreams,Thy years be joyous as to-day,And life be always what it seems.Ah, may it ne'er be thine to knowThe sleepless eye, the tossing head;May He above ordain it so,And guardian angels shield thy bed.Now o'er thy cheek the smile betraysSome sweetness in thy dreaming eye,Alas that thou must wake and gazeOn things that cause thy breast a sigh!So placid is thy pillow here,'Tis sweet, indeed, to know thy peace,To smoothe thy locks and drop a tear,To clasp a hand I must release.Ah, dost thou dream of me! we partWhile summer tints thy childhood's light,I leave thee with an aching heartWhile angels sing “Good night, Good night.”
O slumberon, untaught to feelThe weight of care and sorrow's blight.Here have I often loved to stealAnd o'er thee breathe a soft “good night.”
And gentle as thy beauty's rayBe all the visions of thy dreams,Thy years be joyous as to-day,And life be always what it seems.
Ah, may it ne'er be thine to knowThe sleepless eye, the tossing head;May He above ordain it so,And guardian angels shield thy bed.
Now o'er thy cheek the smile betraysSome sweetness in thy dreaming eye,Alas that thou must wake and gazeOn things that cause thy breast a sigh!
So placid is thy pillow here,'Tis sweet, indeed, to know thy peace,To smoothe thy locks and drop a tear,To clasp a hand I must release.
Ah, dost thou dream of me! we partWhile summer tints thy childhood's light,I leave thee with an aching heartWhile angels sing “Good night, Good night.”
Wewere friends, and the warmest of friends, he and I,Each glance was a language that broke from the heart,No cloudlet swept over the realm of the sky,And beneath it we swore that we never would part.Our fingers were clasped with the clasp of a friend,Each bosom rebounded with youthful delight,We were foremost to honour and strong to defend,And Heaven, beholding, was charmed at the sight.Around us the pine-crested mountains were piled,The sward in the vale was as down to the feet,The far-rolling woodlands were pathless and wild,And Nature was garbed in a grandeur complete.Said he, “We are here side by side and alone,Let us thus in the shade for a little remain,For we may not return here ere boyhood is flown,It may be we never shall meet so again.Come, friend, and record on this reverend oakThy name by my own, they shall stand side by side”And I hastened to do so with glee as he spoke,And I gazed on the names with a feeling of pride.Traced deep on the bark they were goodly to see—What traced by the finger of Friendship is not?Together they smiled on the trunk of the treeAnd as brothers we stood on that sanctified spot.But alas for a murmur that swept through the trees,For the sound was a sound as of something sad,Like a wail that awakes in a breast ill at ease,'Twas strange it should be so when all was so glad.And often since then have I roamed through the vale,My way have I bent to my favourite tree,But its branches resound with the self-same wailWhich seems to repeat “Where ishe, where ishe?”And again and again have I loved to beholdAnd fashion the storm-beaten letters anew,While lingering there as in summers of old,That spot—it is sweet, it is dear to me too!Our steps—ah! how fond was our intercourse then—Like the leaves of the autumn have drifted apart,And the voices that moan in that overgrown glenNow melt into weeping the sorrowful heart.
Wewere friends, and the warmest of friends, he and I,Each glance was a language that broke from the heart,No cloudlet swept over the realm of the sky,And beneath it we swore that we never would part.
Our fingers were clasped with the clasp of a friend,Each bosom rebounded with youthful delight,We were foremost to honour and strong to defend,And Heaven, beholding, was charmed at the sight.
Around us the pine-crested mountains were piled,The sward in the vale was as down to the feet,The far-rolling woodlands were pathless and wild,And Nature was garbed in a grandeur complete.
Said he, “We are here side by side and alone,Let us thus in the shade for a little remain,For we may not return here ere boyhood is flown,It may be we never shall meet so again.
Come, friend, and record on this reverend oakThy name by my own, they shall stand side by side”And I hastened to do so with glee as he spoke,And I gazed on the names with a feeling of pride.
Traced deep on the bark they were goodly to see—What traced by the finger of Friendship is not?Together they smiled on the trunk of the treeAnd as brothers we stood on that sanctified spot.
But alas for a murmur that swept through the trees,For the sound was a sound as of something sad,Like a wail that awakes in a breast ill at ease,'Twas strange it should be so when all was so glad.
And often since then have I roamed through the vale,My way have I bent to my favourite tree,But its branches resound with the self-same wailWhich seems to repeat “Where ishe, where ishe?”
And again and again have I loved to beholdAnd fashion the storm-beaten letters anew,While lingering there as in summers of old,That spot—it is sweet, it is dear to me too!
Our steps—ah! how fond was our intercourse then—Like the leaves of the autumn have drifted apart,And the voices that moan in that overgrown glenNow melt into weeping the sorrowful heart.
I sawon a hedge that was flourishing byA rose that was stirred by the breath of the morn,So smiling and fragrant it looked there, that IWas tempted to seize it, forgetting the thorn.I eagerly plucked it but found to my pain'Twas scentless and in it an insect was curled,So I flung it away to the hedgerow againAnd I thought of the joys of this troublesome world.
I sawon a hedge that was flourishing byA rose that was stirred by the breath of the morn,So smiling and fragrant it looked there, that IWas tempted to seize it, forgetting the thorn.
I eagerly plucked it but found to my pain'Twas scentless and in it an insect was curled,So I flung it away to the hedgerow againAnd I thought of the joys of this troublesome world.
There'sa face that beclouds like a shadow my pathway at morn and eve,There's a form that glides before me which my eyes can never leave,When I pore above the hearth and heavy thoughts my bosom fill,I start like a sleeper from dreaming, for it's standing beside me still.When I stroll in the gloom of the evening is that figure before me castWith its strange and measured footfall, like the shadow of something past,All through my summer wandering does it darken the light of the sun,And it sits like a phantom to mock me when the work of the day is done.It is ever present with me like an overhanging blight,Thro' the heaviness of morning and the wakefulness of night,When I bend within my chamber in the attitude of prayer—With a look of wrapt devotion is it kneeling—kneeling there.There's a strangeness in its features, there's a horror in its eye,There's a sadness in its visage like the tremour of a sigh,And as silently as ever it precedes me thro' the dayWhile I long for the hush of midnight ere its hours have passed away.Oh when shall that figure leave me, are its terrors to haunt me stillLike the ever deepening twilight in the valley o'er the hill?And its wild and ill forebodings—must they—can they never cease?When its shadow rests above me, is there none to whisper peace?Is there no one that can soothe me? Is there no one that can save?No, that figure still must haunt me and shall haunt me to my grave,From my cradle to my coffin is that vision doomed to beA scare of Hell and darkness—a thing of terror unto me!
There'sa face that beclouds like a shadow my pathway at morn and eve,There's a form that glides before me which my eyes can never leave,When I pore above the hearth and heavy thoughts my bosom fill,I start like a sleeper from dreaming, for it's standing beside me still.
When I stroll in the gloom of the evening is that figure before me castWith its strange and measured footfall, like the shadow of something past,All through my summer wandering does it darken the light of the sun,And it sits like a phantom to mock me when the work of the day is done.
It is ever present with me like an overhanging blight,Thro' the heaviness of morning and the wakefulness of night,When I bend within my chamber in the attitude of prayer—With a look of wrapt devotion is it kneeling—kneeling there.
There's a strangeness in its features, there's a horror in its eye,There's a sadness in its visage like the tremour of a sigh,And as silently as ever it precedes me thro' the dayWhile I long for the hush of midnight ere its hours have passed away.
Oh when shall that figure leave me, are its terrors to haunt me stillLike the ever deepening twilight in the valley o'er the hill?And its wild and ill forebodings—must they—can they never cease?When its shadow rests above me, is there none to whisper peace?
Is there no one that can soothe me? Is there no one that can save?No, that figure still must haunt me and shall haunt me to my grave,From my cradle to my coffin is that vision doomed to beA scare of Hell and darkness—a thing of terror unto me!
Alonein my chamber, forsaken, unsought,My spirit's enveloped in shadows of night,Is there no one to give me a smile or a thought?Is there none to restore to me faded delight?The zephyrs disport with a light-bosomed song,And the joy-laden songsters flit over the lea—Yet the hours of the spring as they hurry alongBring nothing but sadness and sighing to me!There were friends—but their love is departed and dead,And alone must the tear-drop disconsolate start,All the beauty of Life, all its sweetness is fled,Oh, who shall unburden this weight at my heart!
Alonein my chamber, forsaken, unsought,My spirit's enveloped in shadows of night,Is there no one to give me a smile or a thought?Is there none to restore to me faded delight?
The zephyrs disport with a light-bosomed song,And the joy-laden songsters flit over the lea—Yet the hours of the spring as they hurry alongBring nothing but sadness and sighing to me!
There were friends—but their love is departed and dead,And alone must the tear-drop disconsolate start,All the beauty of Life, all its sweetness is fled,Oh, who shall unburden this weight at my heart!
I.
AnEnglish village, a summer scene,A homely cottage, a garden green,An opening vista, a cloudless sky,A bee that hums as it passes by;A babe that chuckles among the flowers,A smile that enlivens the mid-day hours,A wife that is fair as the sunny day,A peace that the world cannot take away,A hope that is humble and daily bread,A thankful soul that is comforted,A cosy cot and a slumbering child,A life and a love that are undefiled,A thought that is silent, an earnest prayer,The noiseless step of a phantom there!
AnEnglish village, a summer scene,A homely cottage, a garden green,An opening vista, a cloudless sky,A bee that hums as it passes by;A babe that chuckles among the flowers,A smile that enlivens the mid-day hours,A wife that is fair as the sunny day,A peace that the world cannot take away,A hope that is humble and daily bread,A thankful soul that is comforted,A cosy cot and a slumbering child,A life and a love that are undefiled,A thought that is silent, an earnest prayer,The noiseless step of a phantom there!
II.
A drunken husband, a wailing wife;Oh, a weary way is the way of life!A heartless threat and a cruel blowAnd grief that the world can never know;A tongue obscene and a will perverse,A horrid oath and a muttered curse,A winter drear and a scanty meal,A heart so hard, oh, a heart of steel!A wizened look and an infant's cry,The cold, cold clutch of Poverty,A withered hand and a blanchëd cheek,Alone, and, ah, no friend to seek!A chilly hearth and a ragged dress,A home that is all heaviness!
A drunken husband, a wailing wife;Oh, a weary way is the way of life!A heartless threat and a cruel blowAnd grief that the world can never know;A tongue obscene and a will perverse,A horrid oath and a muttered curse,A winter drear and a scanty meal,A heart so hard, oh, a heart of steel!A wizened look and an infant's cry,The cold, cold clutch of Poverty,A withered hand and a blanchëd cheek,Alone, and, ah, no friend to seek!A chilly hearth and a ragged dress,A home that is all heaviness!
III.
A grim grey court in a City's gloom,A frantic fear of eternal doom,A wretch besotted and depravedAnd cries that cursed the curse they craved,Pollution all, no light! no light!“Oh, where shall be my drink, to-night!”A wretched garret, a straw-strewn bed,A husband stretched in a corner—dead.A shriek of anguish, a choking sigh,“Oh let me perish, let me die!”An agony of dire despair,A picture of torn and dishevelled hair,And none to succour, none to save,A pauper's hearse and an early grave.A voiceless widow, a wringing of hands,A long, long wish for some far off sands,A staring eye and a vacant mood,“Oh Father, teach me to be good”A strengthless effort, a feverish start,A prostrate form and—a broken heart.
A grim grey court in a City's gloom,A frantic fear of eternal doom,A wretch besotted and depravedAnd cries that cursed the curse they craved,Pollution all, no light! no light!“Oh, where shall be my drink, to-night!”A wretched garret, a straw-strewn bed,A husband stretched in a corner—dead.A shriek of anguish, a choking sigh,“Oh let me perish, let me die!”An agony of dire despair,A picture of torn and dishevelled hair,And none to succour, none to save,A pauper's hearse and an early grave.A voiceless widow, a wringing of hands,A long, long wish for some far off sands,A staring eye and a vacant mood,“Oh Father, teach me to be good”A strengthless effort, a feverish start,A prostrate form and—a broken heart.
IV.
A dismal eve and a howling dog,A ghostly silence, a river fog,A byway deserted, a dingy street,A glimmer to light life's feeble feet.A trembling step and a beaded brow,“Oh where, oh where, shall I hasten now?”No eye hath seen nor ever shall,On, on in the gloom, to the still canal;Hush, hush, a murmur—a fearful pause—A footfall—oh horror; a slam of doors—A sinking down to former repose,“Oh darkness come and end my woes.”Away like a phantom, down far to the East,“Oh when shall the weary and sad be released?”An alley, a prayer, a soundless wharf,A biting wind and a graveyard cough,A heap of rags and a starving child,Alas, alas for the undefiled!A heavy tide and a moon obscured,A shapeless mass of barges moored,Nor light, nor sound and a flood that gapes,A frowning pile of horrid shapes.All darkness, blackness, deep despair,“My burden is greater than I can bear!”A rolling river, the dead of night,A form all palsied with affright,Alone, yes, alone, yet so afraid,A hurried stride from that inky shade;On over the barges away from the shore,One breathless clasp, one long clasp more—A heavy plunge and a gurgling groan,Two clammy corpses cold as stone,A brow distorted, a clenchëd fist,A babe the Lord Himself has kissed.
A dismal eve and a howling dog,A ghostly silence, a river fog,A byway deserted, a dingy street,A glimmer to light life's feeble feet.A trembling step and a beaded brow,“Oh where, oh where, shall I hasten now?”No eye hath seen nor ever shall,On, on in the gloom, to the still canal;Hush, hush, a murmur—a fearful pause—A footfall—oh horror; a slam of doors—A sinking down to former repose,“Oh darkness come and end my woes.”Away like a phantom, down far to the East,“Oh when shall the weary and sad be released?”An alley, a prayer, a soundless wharf,A biting wind and a graveyard cough,A heap of rags and a starving child,Alas, alas for the undefiled!A heavy tide and a moon obscured,A shapeless mass of barges moored,Nor light, nor sound and a flood that gapes,A frowning pile of horrid shapes.All darkness, blackness, deep despair,“My burden is greater than I can bear!”A rolling river, the dead of night,A form all palsied with affright,Alone, yes, alone, yet so afraid,A hurried stride from that inky shade;On over the barges away from the shore,One breathless clasp, one long clasp more—A heavy plunge and a gurgling groan,Two clammy corpses cold as stone,A brow distorted, a clenchëd fist,A babe the Lord Himself has kissed.
Thou'rtgone like the meteor that blazed in the sky,And the spot thou hast smiled upon knows thee no more,Is there no one that heaves o'er thy ashes a sigh?Is there none to regret? Is there none to deplore?Thy note—it is silent, thy song—it is hushed,No more shall thy music entrance or enthral,The music that like the blue rivulet gushed,A finger of terror has silenced it all.When far through the cloisters the anthem was stealing,Thy heart was ablaze with a heavenly ray—When thy organ was softly and tenderly pealing,Or the bass of thy bourdon was rolling away.Thy vespers were sweet and thy exquisite numbersSwelled gently and hung on the tremulous air,And, light as the prayer before infancy's slumbers,Ascended on high—thou hast followed them there.And like the dim eve was thy spirit's repose,When loftily o'er thee, while musing alone,Within the cathedral thine echoes aroseAnd melted to feeling the passionless stone.While sculptured recess and immortalized shrineAnd far-stretching arches were bathed in the floodOf the lingering sunset, whose beauties were thine,And the motionless figures were blazoned in blood.But an undertone rose thro' the chords like a wail,'Twas thy elegy mourning thee deep in the sound,Soon, soon did that something of sadness prevail,And the minors commingled and fell to the ground.Rest peacefully, Minstrel, He took thee who gave,That passion is still that once swelled in thy lay,Thy notes are departed, thy fame is thy grave,For the angels descended and bore thee away.
Thou'rtgone like the meteor that blazed in the sky,And the spot thou hast smiled upon knows thee no more,Is there no one that heaves o'er thy ashes a sigh?Is there none to regret? Is there none to deplore?
Thy note—it is silent, thy song—it is hushed,No more shall thy music entrance or enthral,The music that like the blue rivulet gushed,A finger of terror has silenced it all.
When far through the cloisters the anthem was stealing,Thy heart was ablaze with a heavenly ray—When thy organ was softly and tenderly pealing,Or the bass of thy bourdon was rolling away.
Thy vespers were sweet and thy exquisite numbersSwelled gently and hung on the tremulous air,And, light as the prayer before infancy's slumbers,Ascended on high—thou hast followed them there.
And like the dim eve was thy spirit's repose,When loftily o'er thee, while musing alone,Within the cathedral thine echoes aroseAnd melted to feeling the passionless stone.
While sculptured recess and immortalized shrineAnd far-stretching arches were bathed in the floodOf the lingering sunset, whose beauties were thine,And the motionless figures were blazoned in blood.
But an undertone rose thro' the chords like a wail,'Twas thy elegy mourning thee deep in the sound,Soon, soon did that something of sadness prevail,And the minors commingled and fell to the ground.
Rest peacefully, Minstrel, He took thee who gave,That passion is still that once swelled in thy lay,Thy notes are departed, thy fame is thy grave,For the angels descended and bore thee away.
[1]The late John Amott, for over thirty years Organist of Gloucester Cathedral, wings of a dove, for then would I flee away and be at rest.”
[1]The late John Amott, for over thirty years Organist of Gloucester Cathedral, wings of a dove, for then would I flee away and be at rest.”
Theeve is still and silent and above the tinted plainThe passing clouds are driving gentle showers of summer rain,And the scent of hay-strewn meadows and the fresh-besprinkled groundIs mingling with the perfume of the flowers that bloom around.Off I wander and I stroke the gleeful spaniel at my side,And, delighted with each other, do we ramble far and wide,While a ditty is the tribute to the joy that gives it birth,And the leaves, refreshed, are pouring their cool nectar to the earth.Oh let me gaze again upon the moisture-laden sky,Let me see the rolling masses, let me hear the plover's cry,While enveloping the distant mountain-summits like a shroud,Like a head bent down and hoary, hangs a heavy wreath of cloud.Let me gaze upon the sunshine as it breaks upon the mist,As it bathes the stony mountains that the clouds have lately kissed,As it tips the dripping leaflet with a scintillating gem,Like the far-resplendent treasure in a monarch's diadem.Let me tread the shining pasture-lands, the greenest of the green,Let me quaff the luscious perfume of the smiling, glistering scene,While beautified and golden stands the ripe and waving grain,And all Nature sings for gladness now that sunshine follows rain.
Theeve is still and silent and above the tinted plainThe passing clouds are driving gentle showers of summer rain,And the scent of hay-strewn meadows and the fresh-besprinkled groundIs mingling with the perfume of the flowers that bloom around.
Off I wander and I stroke the gleeful spaniel at my side,And, delighted with each other, do we ramble far and wide,While a ditty is the tribute to the joy that gives it birth,And the leaves, refreshed, are pouring their cool nectar to the earth.
Oh let me gaze again upon the moisture-laden sky,Let me see the rolling masses, let me hear the plover's cry,While enveloping the distant mountain-summits like a shroud,Like a head bent down and hoary, hangs a heavy wreath of cloud.
Let me gaze upon the sunshine as it breaks upon the mist,As it bathes the stony mountains that the clouds have lately kissed,As it tips the dripping leaflet with a scintillating gem,Like the far-resplendent treasure in a monarch's diadem.
Let me tread the shining pasture-lands, the greenest of the green,Let me quaff the luscious perfume of the smiling, glistering scene,While beautified and golden stands the ripe and waving grain,And all Nature sings for gladness now that sunshine follows rain.
Whenthe twilight shadows deepen and the far-off lands are dim,And the vesper dirge is stealing like the chant of cherubim,There's a prayer within my bosom that's responsive to the sound,There's a thought that springs within me—but 'tis sad and silence-bound.There's a sorrow in those shadows as they lengthen on the lawn,For the joy of life has vanished and its sweetness—all is gone,And the purple mists of even as they hover o'er the gladeSeem to hush in voiceless gloom the deep recesses of the shade.Oh thou beyond those heathery hills, beyond those woodlands blue,Which, as they meet the eastern sky, receive its azure hue,Ah, must I lonely linger here, where nought but griefs await,Where life is but one long, long sigh, and all disconsolate?I'm weeping, yes I'm weeping, with the sun of youth gone down,With the blossoms of the summer-time all withering and brown,Thou can'st not know that rending pain, those sobs thou can'st not hear,Thou can'st not feel those burning throbs whence wells the sparkling tear.Oh say thou wilt not turn away, oh say we must not part,Thou would'st not spurn this aching breast, nor crush this breaking heart,Without thee, what is Life?—a name—in which no life can be,Oh give me back thy smile, thy tear—'tis all the world to me.
Whenthe twilight shadows deepen and the far-off lands are dim,And the vesper dirge is stealing like the chant of cherubim,There's a prayer within my bosom that's responsive to the sound,There's a thought that springs within me—but 'tis sad and silence-bound.
There's a sorrow in those shadows as they lengthen on the lawn,For the joy of life has vanished and its sweetness—all is gone,And the purple mists of even as they hover o'er the gladeSeem to hush in voiceless gloom the deep recesses of the shade.
Oh thou beyond those heathery hills, beyond those woodlands blue,Which, as they meet the eastern sky, receive its azure hue,Ah, must I lonely linger here, where nought but griefs await,Where life is but one long, long sigh, and all disconsolate?
I'm weeping, yes I'm weeping, with the sun of youth gone down,With the blossoms of the summer-time all withering and brown,Thou can'st not know that rending pain, those sobs thou can'st not hear,Thou can'st not feel those burning throbs whence wells the sparkling tear.
Oh say thou wilt not turn away, oh say we must not part,Thou would'st not spurn this aching breast, nor crush this breaking heart,Without thee, what is Life?—a name—in which no life can be,Oh give me back thy smile, thy tear—'tis all the world to me.
Farncombe & Co., Printers, Lewes.