The Collected Works of Charles Lamb and Mary Lamb. Charles Lamb. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Charles Lamb
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varying and yet the same,

       Substantially express'd.

      But soon my heart,

       Unsatisfied with blissful shadows, felt

       Achings of vacancy, and own'd the throb

       Of undefin'd desire, while lays of love

       Firstling and wild stole to my trem'lous tongue.

       To me thy rites were mock'ry then, thy glee

       Of little worth. More pleas'd I trod the waste

       Sear'd with the sleety wind, and drank its blast;

       Deeming thy dreary shapes most strangely sweet,

       Mist-shrouded winter! in mute loneliness

       I wore away the day which others hail'd

       So cheerily, still usher'd in with chaunt

       Of carol, and the merry ringers' peal,

       Most musical to the good man that wakes

       And praises God in gladness.

      But soon fled

       The dreams of love fantastic! Still the Friend,

       The Friend, the wild roam o'er the drifted snows

       Remain unsung! then when the wintry view

       Objectless, mist-hidden, or in uncouth forms

       Prank'd by the arrowy flake might aptly yield

       New stores to shaping fantasy, I rov'd

       With him my lov'd companion! Oh, 'twas sweet;

       Ye who have known the swell that heaves the breast

       Pregnant with loftiest poesy, declare

       Is aught more soothing to the charmed soul

       Than friendship's glow, the independent dream

       Gathering when all the frivolous shews are fled

       Of artificial life; when the wild step

       Boundeth on wide existence, unbeheld,

       Uncheck'd, and the heart fashioneth its hope

       In Nature's school, while Nature bursts around,

       Nor Man her spoiler meddles in the scene!

       Farewell, dear day, much hath it sooth'd my heart

       To chaunt thy frail memorial.

      Now advance

       The darkening years, and I do sojourn, home!

       From thee afar. Where the broad-bosom'd hills,

       Swept by perpetual clouds, of Scotland, rise,

       Me fate compels to tarry.

       Ditty quaint or custom'd carol, there my vacant ear

      And as I thought, my vexed spirit blam'd

       That austere race, who, mindless of the glee

       Of good old festival, coldly forbade

       Th' observance which of mortal life relieves

       The languid sameness, seeming too to bring

       Sanction from hoar antiquity and years

       Long past!

      III.—BARRON FIELD'S POEMS

       Table of Contents

      (1820)

      "First Fruits of Australian Poetry"

      Sydney, New South Wales. Printed for Private Distribution

      I first adventure; follow me who list;

       And be the second Austral Harmonist.

      "The First Fruits" consist of two poems. The first celebrates the plant epacris grandiflora; but we are no botanists, and perhaps there is too much matter mixed up in it from the Midsummer Night's Dream, to please some readers. The thefts are indeed so open and palpable, that we almost recur to our first surmise, that the author must be some unfortunate wight, sent on his travels for plagiarisms of a more serious complexion. But the old matter and the new blend kindly together; and must, we hope, have proved right acceptable to more than one

      ——Among the Fair

       Of that young land of Shakspeare's tongue.

      We select for our readers the second poem; and are mistaken, if it does not relish of the graceful hyperboles of our elder writers. We can conceive it to have been written by Andrew Marvel, supposing him to have been banished to Botany Bay, as he did, we believe, once meditate a voluntary exile to Bermuda. See his fine poem, "Where the remote Bermudas ride."

      * * * *.

      "The Kangaroo"

      "——mixtumque genus, prolesque biformis."—Virg., Æn., vi.

      Kangaroo, Kangaroo!