Jump to content

Poems (Campbell)/The Death of Leander

From Wikisource
4690912Poems — The Death of LeanderDorothea Primrose Campbell

THE DEATH OF LEANDER.
Leander in the bloom of youthWas deck'd with ev'ry grace,For honour, worth, and spotless truth,Were beaming in his face.
But ye who all the soul would know,And search its inmost part—Say, did those matchless virtues glowAs brightly in his heart?
'Mid flow'ry lawns, and gardens trim,His stately mansion stood;Where many a fountain's sparkling brimWas fring'd with waving wood.
And all that charms the ear and eye,From earth, or sea, or air—That art could frame, or wealth supply,To please the sense—was there.
His hours in one continued roundOf mirth and pleasure flew;And ev'ry want and wish was crown'd—If want or wish he knew.
No wand'ring beggar sought in vain.His hospitable door,And injur'd virtue told its pain,To feel that pain no more.
Still to his slightest promise true;A friend sincere and kind;A lover firm, and tender too,And just to all mankind—
Accomplish'd, learned, great and wise,—Was not Leander bless'd?Oh! yes, he was—to mortal eyes—But pause, and hear the rest.
Leander, though so highly rais'dAbove the sons of earth,Nor bow'd, nor worshipp'd, thank'd, nor prais'd,From whence those gifts had birth.
Oh! say, can such a creature be,Nor gratitude hath warm'd?A soul from vice so seeming free,And yet so much deform'd!
Ah, me! I fear that many suchThe stage of life have trod;Who seem to worship virtue much,But worship not their God.
'Tis heav'n's own ray that falls in vainAround their stubborn soul—So cheerless stand amid the main,The ice-rocks of the pole!
So glitter in the sunny lightWith many a frozen wreath—The surface all is dazzling bright,But all is cold beneath!
At length, while yet his pulse was high,And pleasure danc'd around,Disease, with poison'd dart, came by,And gave the fatal wound.
Alas! how chang'd the brilliant sceneThat late Leander view'd!Forlorn he lies in racking pain,With anguish-drops bedew'd.
Ah? tell me, what avails it now,That he was great and wise?—Can greatness smooth that ruffled brow,Or check those lab'ring sighs?
Can all the aid that man may give,The failing pulse restore;Or bid the wretched sinner liveFor one short moment more!
He would attempt—but all in vain—To lift his hopes on high!Repentance weeps in fruitless pain,And judgment threatens nigh.
Now conscience wakes the ling'ring smart,And bids delusion cease;Remorse and terror rend his heart,And agonize his peace.
The world, and all he trusted there,Is fading from his sight;And closing fast in dread despair,His eyes are dim with night.
The stubborn knees, that would not bowIn pray'r before his God,Are stiff, and cold as marble now,Beneath the silent sod.
Ah! what avails it, that his formWas deck'd with ev'ry grace—That truth, and love, and friendship warm,Glow'd in his manly face?
Alas! they glow'd not in his soul;—But, as a fleeting shade,Across his darken'd path they stole,And no impression made.
Oh! come, ye young and thoughtless! comeView where Leander lies—Pause o'er the wretched sinner's doom,And pausing, yet be wise!