Landon in The Literary Gazette 1827/Wanderer

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
For works with similar titles, see The Wanderer.

26

The Literary Gazette, 29th December 1827, page 846


ORIGINAL POETRY.

THE WANDERER.

Float on, float on, thou lonely bark,
    Across the weary brine;
I know not why I load thee with
    Such cheerless freight as mine.

I know not why I wander forth,
    Nor what I wish to see;
For Hope, the child of Morn and Mist,
    Has long been veiled from me.

Little reck I for ruined towers—
    They may be very fair—
Let poet or let painter rave,
    I see but ruin there.

I think upon the waste above,
    And on the dead below;
I see but human vanity—
    I see but human wo.

And cities in their hour of pomp,
    The peopled and the proud—
What are they? mighty sepulchres
    To gulf a wretched crowd:

Where wealth and want are both secured
    Each one the worst to bear;
Where every heart and house are barred
    With the same sordid care.

And fairer scenes—the vine-wreathed hill
    A gold and ruby mine,
Grapes, nature's jewels, richly wrought
    Around the autumn's shrine;

The corn-fields' fairy armory,
    Where every lance is gold,
And poppies fling upon the wind
    Their banner's crimson gold:

The moon, sweet shadow of the sun,
    On the lake's tranquil breast,—
Too much these gentle scenes contrast
    My spirit's own unrest.


And I must be what I have been,
    And not what I am now,
Ere these could call a smile, or chase
    One shadow from my brow.

I must lay in some nameless sea
    The ghosts of hopes long fled;
Efface dark memory's scroll, and leave
    A shining page instead.

I must forget youth's bloom is fled,
    Ere its own measured hours;
I must forget that summer dies,
    Even amid its flowers.

And give me more than pleasure's task
    Belief that they can be;
Then every spreading sail were slow
    To bear me on the sea.

But now I care not for their course;
    Wherever I may roam,
I bear about the weariness
    That haunted me at home.

I may see all around me changed,
    Beneath a foreign sky;
I may fly scenes, and friends, and foes—
    Myself I cannot fly.L. E. L.