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Landon in The Improvisatrice; and Other Poems/Leades

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2263693The ImprovisatriceLeades and Cydippe1824Letitia Elizabeth Landon

 
And lays which only told of love
       In all its varied sorrowing,
The echoes of the broken heart,
       Were all the songs I now could sing.

Legends of olden times in Greece,
When not a flower but had its tale;
When spirits haunted each green oak;
       When voices spoke in every gale;
When not a star shone in the sky
       Without its own love history.
Amid its many songs was one
       That suited well with my sick mind.
I sang it when the breath of flowers
       Came sweet upon the midnight wind.


LEADES AND CYDIPPE.


She sat her in her twilight bower,
A temple formed of leaf and flower;
Rose and myrtle framed the roof,
To a shower of April proof;

And primroses, pale gems of Spring,
Lay on the green turf glistening,
Close by the violet, whose breath
Is so sweet in a dewy wreath.
      And oh, that myrtle! how green it grew!
With flowers as white as the pearls of dew
That shone beside: and the glorious rose
Lay, like a beauty in warm repose,
Blushing in slumber. The air was bright
With the spirit and glow of its crimson light.
 
      Cydippe had turned from her columned hall,
Where, the queen of the feast, she was worshipped by all;
Where the vases were burning with spices and flowers,
And the odorous waters were playing in showers;

And lamps were blazing—those lamps of perfume
Which shed such a charm of light over the bloom
Of woman, when Pleasure a spell has thrown
Over one night hour and made it her own.
And the ruby wine-cup shone with a ray,
As the gems of the East had there melted away;
And the bards were singing those songs of fire,
That bright eyes and the goblet so well inspire;—
While she, the glory and pride of the hour,
Sat silent and sad in her secret bower!
 
        There is a grief that wastes the heart,
              Like mildew on a tulip's dyes,—
        When hope, deferred but to depart,
              Loses its smiles, but keeps its sighs;

    When love's bark, with its anchor gone,
    Clings to a straw, and still trusts on.
    Oh, more than all!—methinks that Love
          Should pray that it might ever be
    Beside the burning shrine which had
          Its young heart's fond idolatry.
    Oh, absence is the night of love!
          Lovers are very children then;
    Fancying ten thousand feverish shapes,
          Until their light returns again.
    A look, a word, is then recalled,
          And thought upon until it wears,
    What is, perhaps, a very shade,
          The tone and aspect of our fears.
    And this was what was withering now
    The radiance of Cydippe's brow.

    She watched until her cheek grew pale;
    The green wave bore no bounding sail:
    Her sight grew dim; 'mid the blue air
    No snowy dove came floating there,
    The dear scroll hid beneath his wing,
    With plume and soft eye glistening,
    To seek again, in leafy dome,
    The nest of its accustomed home!
    Still far away, o'er land and seas,
    Lingered the faithless Leades.
 
      She thought on the spring days, when she had been
Lonely and lovely, a maiden queen;
When passion to her was a storm at sea,
Heard 'mid the green land's tranquillity.

But a stately warrior came from afar;
He bore on his bosom the glorious scar,
So worshipped by women—the death-seal of war.
And the maiden's heart was an easy prize,
When valour and faith were her sacrifice.
 
      Methinks, might that sweet season last,
In which our first love-dream is past;
Ere doubts and cares, and jealous pain,
Are flaws in the heart's diamond-chain;—
Men might forget to think on Heaven,
And yet have the sweet sin forgiven.
 
But ere the marriage feast was spread,
      Leades said that he must brook

To part awhile from that best light,
      Those eyes which fixed his every look.
Just press again his native shore,
And then he would that shore resign
For her dear sake, who was to him
His household-god!—his spirit's shrine!
 
      He came not! Then the heart's decay
Wasted her silently away:—
A sweet fount, which the mid-day sun
Has all too hotly looked upon!
 
       It is most sad to watch the fall
Of autumn leaves!—but worst of all
It is to watch the flower of spring
Faded in its fresh blossoming!

To see the once so clear blue orb
      Its summer light and warmth forget;
Darkening, beneath its tearful lid,
      Like a rain-beaten violet!
To watch the banner-rose of health
      Pass from the cheek!—to mark how plain,
Upon the wan and sunken brow,
      Become the wanderings of each vein!
The shadowy hand, so thin, so pale!
      The languid step!—the drooping head!
The long wreaths of neglected hair!
      The lip, whence red and smile are fled!
And having watched thus, day by day,
Light, life, and colour, pass away!
To see, at length, the glassy eye
Fix dull in dread mortality;

Mark the last ray, catch the last breath,
Till the grave sets its sign of death!
 
      This was Cydippe's fate!—They laid
The maiden underneath the shade
Of a green cypress,—and that hour
      The tree was withered, and stood bare!
The spring brought leaves to other trees,
      But never other leaf grew there!
It stood, 'mid others flourishing,
A blighted, solitary thing.
 
      The summer sun shone on that tree,
When shot a vessel o'er the sea—
When sprang a warrior from the prow—
Leades! by the stately brow.

Forgotten toil, forgotten care,
All his worn heart has had to bear.
That heart is full! He hears the sigh
That breathed 'Farewell!' so tenderly.
If even then it was most sweet,
What will it be that now they meet?
Alas! alas! Hope's fair deceit!
He spurred o'er land, has cut the wave,
To look but on Cydippe's grave.
 
It has blossomed in beauty, that lone tree,
      Leades' kiss restored its bloom;
For wild he kissed the withered stem—
It grew upon Cydippe's tomb!
And there he dwelt. The hottest ray,
Still dew upon the branches lay

Like constant tears. The winter came;
But still the green tree stood the same.
And it was said, at evening's close,
A sound of whispered music rose;
That 'twas the trace of viewless feet
Made the flowers more than flowers sweet.
At length Leades died. That day,
Bark and green foliage past away
From the lone tree,—again a thing
Of wonder and of perishing!