Landon in The New Monthly 1833/Stanzas

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For works with similar titles, see Stanzas (Letitia Elizabeth Landon).
Landon in The New Monthly 1833 (1833)
by Letitia Elizabeth Landon
Stanzas
2396432Landon in The New Monthly 1833 — Stanzas1833Letitia Elizabeth Landon


STANZAS.

I know it is not made to last, 
    The dream which haunts my soul; 
The shadow even now is cast 
    Which soon will wrap the whole. 

Ah! waking dreams that mock the day 
    Have other end than those, 
Which come beneath the moonlight ray, 
    And charm the eyes they close. 

The vision colouring the night 
    ‘Mid bloom and brightness wakes, 
Banished by morning's cheerful light, 
    Which gladdens while it breaks.

But dreams which fix the waking eye 
    With deeper spells than sleep, 
When hours unnoted pass us by, 
    From such we wake and weep. 

We wake,—but not to sleep again; 
    The heart has lost its youth,— 
The morning light which wakes us then, 
    Calm, cold, and stern, is Truth. 

I know all this, and yet I yield 
    My spirit to the snare, 
And gather flowers upon the field, 
    Though Woe and Fate are there. 

The maid divine, who bound her wreath 
    On Etna's fatal plain, 
Knew not the foe that lurked beneath 
    The summer-clad domain. 


But I—I read my doom aright, 
    I snatched a few glad hours, 
Then where will be the past delight— 
    And where my gathered flowers? 

Gone—gone for ever! let them go; 
    The present is my meed— 
Aye, let me worship, ere I know 
    The falsehood of my creed. 

The time may come—they say it must— 
    When thou, my idol now, 
Like all we treasure and we trust, 
    Will mock the votive vow. 

And when the temple's on the ground— 
    The altar overthrown— 
Too late the bitter moral's found,— 
    The folly was our own.

It matters not, my heart is full 
    With present hopes and fears, 
The future cannot quite annul— 
    Let them be bought by tears. 

Though sorrow, disbelief, and blame 
    May load the fallen shrine; 
To think that once it bore thy name 
    Will make it still divine. 

And such it was—for it was love's; 
    And love its heaven brings, 
And from life's daily path removes 
    All other meaner things; 

And calls from out the common heart 
    Its music, and its fire; 
Like that the early hours impart 
    To Memnon's sculptured lyre. 

A touch of light—a tone of song— 
    The sweet enchantment's o'er; 
The thrilling heart and lute ere long 
    Confess the spell no more. 

The music from the heart is gone; 
    The light has left the sky; 
And time again flows calmly on, 
    The haunted hour past by. 

And thus with love the charmed earth 
    Grows actual, cold, and drear; 
But that sweet phantasy was worth 
    All else most precious here. 

'Mid the dark web that life must weave, 
    'Twill linger in the mind 
As angels spread their wings, yet leave 
    The trace of heaven behind.

Ah! let the heart that worships thee 
    By every change be proved: 
Its dearest memory will be 
    To know that once it loved.L. E. L.