Page:Once a Week Volume 7.djvu/718

 712 He stood like one forlorn and weary grown, Who listens alway, but who never hears; And yet he weeps not, lest the precious tone Be quench’d in drowning tears.

At last came one from a far northern sea, Who said, “O dreamer, listen to my word; At Limerick, on the Shannon, tarried we, And there thy bells are heard.”

Sadly he lifted up his head of snow, And looked across the sea and on the sky; To Limerick, on the Shannon, did they go; Then thitherward will I.”

It was a springtide evening when his bark On the broad river-bosom lay at rest: One latest cloud, half golden and half dark, Was slumbering in the west.

Birds were at roost, and all stray winds asleep; The busy uproar of the town was still; Scarcely they heard the distant feeding sheep Upon the shaded hill.

The kindly-thoughted mariners did not wait, But manned a little boat with rowers four: Therein the silent Founding-master sate, And gazed towards the shore.

Anon the dreaming quiet everywhere So wrought upon the men that, with one will, They rested, and amid the tranquil air The little boat stood still.

With that there came a music from the shore,— It was the tolling of the minster bells: It stirr’d each musing rower’s lazy oar And broke their sleepy spells.

Onward they rowed; but even as they moved, The ancient Founder’s spirit loos’d its band Upborne upon the music which he loved, And passed to his own land;

His own, and yet another; for he knew The very heaven of the bells’ old tale; The happy meadows and the woods he knew, And seraphs gliding pale.

And lo! the rowers turn’d; and on his seat They found him, while as yet the bells were tolled; His face toward the minster; but his feet, And hands, and heart were cold. .