Page:Papers on Literature and Art (Fuller).djvu/146

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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.