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PAPERS ON LITERATURE AND ART.
With your oaks and pine-trees, ancient brood, |
Spirits rise above the wizard soil, |
And with these I rove amid the wood; |
Man may dream on earth no less than toil. |
Shapes that seem my kindred meet the ken; |
Gods and heroes glimmer through the shade; |
Ages long gone by from haunts of men |
Meet me here in rocky dell and glade. |
There the Muses, touched with gleams of light, |
Warble yet from yonder hill of trees, |
And upon the huge and mist-clad height |
Fancy sage a clear Olympus sees. |
’Mid yon utmost peaks the elder powers |
Still unshaken hold their fixed abode, |
Fates primeval throned in airy towers, |
That with morning sunshine never glowed. |
Deep below, amid a hell of rocks, |
Lies the Cyclops, and the Dragon coils, |
Heaving with the torrent’s weary shocks, |
That round the untrodden region boils. |
But more near to where our thought may climb, |
In a mossy, leaf-clad, Druid ring, |
Three gray shapes, prophetic Lords of Time, |
Homer, Dante, Shakspeare, sit and sing. |
Each in his turn his descant frames aloud, |
Mingling new and old in ceaseless birth, |
While the Destinies hear amid their cloud, |
And accordant mould the flux of earth. |
Oh! ye trees that wave and glisten round, |
Oh! ye waters gurgling down the dell, |
Pulses throb in every sight and sound, |
Living Nature’s more than magic spell. |
Soon amid the vista still and dim, |
Knights, whom youth’s high heart forgetteth not, |
Each with sears and shadowy helmet grim, |
Amadis, Orlando, Launcelot. |