Page:The poetical works of Matthew Arnold, 1897.djvu/308

270 In his gladdest, airiest song,

To that which of old in his youth

Filled him and made him divine.

Hardly his voice at its best

Gives us a sense of the awe,

The vastness, the grandeur, the gloom,

Of the unlit gulf of himself.

"Ye know not yourselves; and your bards—

The clearest, the best, who have read

Most in themselves—have beheld

Less than they left unrevealed.

Ye express not yourselves: can ye make

With marble, with color, with word,

What charmed you in others re-live?

Can thy pencil, O artist! restore

The figure, the bloom of thy love,

As she was in her morning of spring?

Canst thou paint the ineffable smile

Of her eyes as they rested on thine?

Can the image of life have the glow,

The motion of life itself?

"Yourselves and your fellows ye know not; and me,

The mateless, the one, will ye know?

Will ye scan me, and read me, and tell

Of the thoughts that ferment in my breast,

My longing, my sadness, my joy?

Will ye claim for your great ones the gift

To have rendered the gleam of my skies,

To have echoed the moan of my seas,

Uttered the voice of my hills?

When your great ones depart, will ye say,—

All things have suffered a loss,

Nature is hid in their grave?