Page:Landon in Literary Gazette 1831.pdf/6



Thou, Wind, that, like a gentle song, Scarce stirs the sleeping summer air, How often hast thou borne along The vain reproach of my despair! Fair fount, by whose moss-circled side My eyes have shed their bitter rain, Flow on with an unsullied tide, Thou'lt never see my tears again.

Time was, I loved so many things, The earth I trod, the sky above,— The leaf that falls, the bird that sings; Now there is nothing that I love— And how much sorrow I am spared, By loveless heart and listless eye! Why should the life of love be shared With things that change, or things that die?

Let the rose fall, another rose Will bloom upon the self-same tree; Let the bird die, ere evening close Some other bird will sing for me. It is for the beloved to love, 'Tis for the happy to be kind; Sorrow will more than death remove The associate links affections bind.

My heart hath like a lamp consumed, In one brief blaze, what should have fed For years the sweet life it illumed, And now it lies cold, dark, and dead. 'Tis well such false light is o'ercast, A light that burnt where'er it shone; My eagerness of youth is past, And I am glad that it is gone.

My hopes and feelings, like those flowers, Are withered, on thy altar laid— A dark night falls from my past hours: Still let me dwell beneath its shade, Cold as the winter midnight's air, Calm as the groves around thy shrine— Such, Goddess, is my future's prayer, And my heart answers, "It is mine!" L. E. L.


 * We could wish our readers to visit the beautiful statue which has inspired these exquisitely descriptive, touching, and poetical lines.—Ed. L. G.