EVENING THOUGHTS.
77
Traveller. |
Oh rather, father, let me ask of thee |
What is it I do seek, what thing I lack? |
These many days I've left my father's hall, |
Forth driven by insatiable desire, |
That, like the wind, now gently murmuring, |
Enticed me forward with its own sweet voice |
Through many-leaved woods, and valleys deep, |
Yet ever fled before me. Then with sound |
Stronger than hurrying tempest, seizing me, |
Forced me to fly its power. Forward still, |
Bound by enchanted ties, I seek its source. |
Sometimes it is a something I have lost, |
Known long since, before I bent my steps |
Toward this beautiful broad plane of earth. |
Sometimes it is a spirit yet unknown, |
In whose dim-imaged features seem to smile |
The dear delight of these high-mansioned thoughts, |
That sometimes visit me. Like unto mine |
Her lineaments appear, but beautiful, |
As of a sister in a far-off world, |
Waiting to welcome me. And when I think |
To reach and clasp the figure, it is gone, |
And some ill-omened ghastly vision comes |
To bid beware, and not too curiously |
Demand the secrets of that distant world, |
Whose shadow haunts me. — On the waves below |
But now I gazed, warmed with the setting sun, |
Who sent his golden streamers to my feet, |
It seemed a pathway to a world beyond, |
And I looked round, if that my spirit beckoned |
That I might follow it. |
Solitary. |
Dreams all, my son. Yes, even so I dreamed, |