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TALES, AND MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.

ROSALIE.

"Tis a wild tale-and sad, too, as the sigh That young lips breathe when Love's first dreamings fly;

When blights and cankerworms, and chilling showers,

flowers.

Come withering o'er the warm heart's passionLove! gentlest spirit! I do tell of thee,

Of all thy thousand hopes, thy many fears, Thy morning blushes, and thy evening tears; What thou hast ever been, and still will be,Life's best, but most betraying witchery!

It is a night of summer, and the sea Sleeps, like a child, in mute tranquillity. Soft o'er the deep-blue wave the moonlight breaks; Gleaming, from out the white clouds of its zone, Like beauty's changeful smile, when that it seeks Some face it loves, yet fears to dwell upon. The waves are motionless, save where the oar, Light as Love's anger, and as quickly gone, Has broken in upon their azure sleep.

Odours are on the air-the gale has been Wandering in groves where the rich roses weep,Where orange, citron, and the soft lime-flowers Shed forth their fragrance to night's dewy hours. Afar the distant city meets the gaze,

Where tower and turret in the pale light shine, Seen like the monuments of other daysMonuments Time half shadows, half displays. And there are many, who, with witching song And wild guitar's soul-thrilling melody, Or the lute's melting music, float along O'er the blue waters, still and silently. That night had Naples sent her best display Of young and gallant, beautiful and gay.

There was a bark a little way apart
From all the rest, and there two lovers leant :-
One with a blushing cheek and beating heart,
And bashful glance, upon the sea-wave bent;
She might not meet the gaze the other sent
Upon her beauty ;-but the half-breathed sighs
The deepening colour, timid smiling eyes,
Told that she listen'd Love's sweet flatteries.
Then they were silent:-words are little aid
To love, whose deepest vows are ever made
By the heart's beat alone. O, silence is
Love's own peculiar eloquence of bliss !-

Music swept past:-it was a simple tone;

But it has waken'd heartfelt sympathies ;It has brought into life things past and gone; Has waken'd all those secret memories, That may be smother'd, but that still will be Present within thy soul, young ROSALIE! The notes had roused an answering chord within:In other days, that song her vesper hymn had

been.

Her alter'd look is pale: -that dewy eye

Almost belies the smile her rich lips wear;That smile is mock'd by a scarce-breathing sigh, Which tells of silent and suppress'd careTells that the life is withering with despair, More irksome from its unsunned silentnessA festering wound the spirit pines to bear; A galling chain, whose pressure will intrude, Fettering Mirth's step, and Pleasure's lightest mood.

Where are her thoughts thus wandering?-A spot,

Now distant far, is pictured on her mind,A chestnut shadowing a low white cot,

With rose and jasmine round the casement twined,

Mix'd with the myrtle-tree's luxuriant blind. Alone, (O! should such solitude be here?) An aged form beneath the shade reclined, Whose eye glanced round the scene; and then

a tear

Told that she miss'd one in her heart enshrined!

Then came remembrances of other times, When eve oped her rich bowers for the pale day;

When the faint, distant tones of convent chimes Were answer'd by the lute and vesper lay ;When the fond mother blest her gentle child, And for her welfare pray'd the Virgin mild.

And she has left the aged one to steep

Her nightly couch with tears for that lost child,

The ROSALIE, -who left her age to weep, When that the tempter flatter'd her and wiled Her steps away, from her own home beguiled. She started up in agony:-her eye

Met MANFREDI'S. Softly he spoke, and smiled Memory is past, and thought and feeling lie Lost in one dream all thrown on one wild die.

They floated o'er the waters, till the moon
Look'd from the blue sky in her zenith noon,-
Till each glad bark at length had sought the
shore,

And the waves echo'd to the lute no more;
Then sought their gay palazzo, where the ray
Of lamps shed light only less bright than day;
And there they feasted till the morn did fling
Her blushes o'er their mirth and revelling.
And life was as a tale of faërie,-

As when some Eastern genie rears bright bowers,
And spreads the green turf and the colour'd

flowers;

And calls upon the earth, the sea, the sky, To yield their treasures for some gentle queen, Whose reign is over the enchanted scene. And ROSALIE had pledged a magic cup

The maddening cup of pleasure and of love! There was for her one only dream on earth! There was for her one only star above!She bent in passionate idolatry Before her heart's sole idol-MANFREDI!

II.

'Tis night again a soft and summer night; -
A deep blue-heaven, white clouds, moon and star-
light;-

So calm, so beautiful, that human eye
Might weep to look on such a tranquil sky:-
A night just form'd for Hope's first dream of
bliss,

Or for Love's yet more perfect happiness!

The moon is o'er a grove of cypress trees, Weeping, like mourners, in the plaining breeze; Echoing the music of a rill, whose song Glided so sweetly, but so sad, along.

There is a little chapel in the shade, Where many a pilgrim has knelt down and pray'd

To the sweet saint, whose portrait, o'er the shrine,
The painter's skill has made all but divine.
It was a pale, a melancholy face,-

A cheek which bore the trace of frequent tears, And worn by grief,-though grief might not

efface

It was the image of the maid who wept

Those precious tears that heal and purify. Love yet upon her lip his station kept, But heaven and heavenly thoughts were in her

eye.

One knelt before the shrine, with cheek as pale
As was the cold white marble. Can this be
The young-the loved the happy ROSALIE ?
Alas! alas! hers is a common tale :-
She trusted, as youth ever has believed ;-
She heard Love's vows-confided was deceived !

Oh, Love! thy essence is thy purity!
Breathe one unhallow'd breath upon thy flame,
And it is gone forever, and but leaves

A sullied vase-its pure light lost in shame!

And ROSALIE was loved, not with that pure
And holy passion which can age endure;
But loved with wild and self-consuming fires,-
A torch which glares and scorches--and ex-
pires.

A little while her dream of bliss remain'd,-
A little while Love's wings were left unchain'd.
But change came o'er the trusted MANFREDI:
His heart forgot its vow'd idolatry;
And his forgotten love was left to brood
O'er wrongs and ruin in her solitude!

How very desolate that breast must be,
Whose only joyance is in memory!
And what must woman suffer, thus betray'd!-
Her heart's most warm and precious feelings made
But things wherewith to wound: that heart-so
weak,

So soft-laid open to the vulture's beak!
Its sweet revealings given up to scorn

It burns to bear, and yet that must be borne!
And, sorer still, that bitterer emotion,

To know the shrine which had our soul's devotion
Is that of a false deity!--to look

Upon the eyes we worshipp'd, and brook
Their cold reply! Yet these are all for her!-
The rude world's outcast, and love's wanderer !
Alas! that love, which is so sweet a thing,
Should ever cause guilt, grief, or suffering!
Yet she upon whose face the sunbeams fall-
That dark-eyed girl-had felt their bitterest thrall!

The seal that beauty set in happier years;
And such a smile as on the brow appears
Of one whose earthly thoughts, long since sub- It had been all a madness and a dream,

She thought upon her love; and there was not
In passion's record one green sunny spot-

dued

Past this life's joys and sorrows, hopes and fearsThe worldly dreams o'er which the many brood.

The heart-beat hush'd in mild and chasten'd mood.

The shadow of a flower on the stream,
Which seems, but is not; and then memory turn'd
To her lone mother. How her bosom burn'd
With sweet and bitter thoughts! There might be

rest

The wounded dove will fice into her nest

That mother's arms might fold her child again,
The cold world scorn, the cruel smite in vain,
And falsehood be remember'd no more,
In that calm shelter:-and she might weep o'er
Her faults and find forgiveness. Had not she

To whom she knelt found pardon in the eyes
Of Heaven, in offering for sacrifice
A broken heart? And might not pardon be
Also for her? She look'd up to the face

Of that pale saint; and in that gentle brow, Which seem'd to hold communion with her thought,

There was a smile which gave hope energy. She pray'd one deep, wild prayer, that she might gain

But how felt ROSALIE? -The very air

Seem'd as it brought reproach! there was no eye

To look delighted, welcome none was there!
She felt as feels an outcast wandering by
Where every door is closed! She look'd around!-
She heard some voices' sweet familiar sound.
There were some changed, and some remember'd
things;

There were girls, whom she left in their first springs,

Now blush'd into full beauty. There was one
Whom she loved tenderly in days now gone!
She was not dancing gayly with the rest;
A rose-cheek'd child within her arms was prest;

The home she hoped; then sought that home And it had twined its small hands in the hair

again.

A flush of beauty is upon the skyEve's last warm blushes-like the crimson dye The maiden wears, when first her dark eyes

meet

The graceful lover's sighing at her feet.
And there were sounds of music on the breeze,
And perfume shaken from the citron trees;
While the dark chestnuts caught a golden ray
On their green leaves, the last bright gift of day;
And peasants dancing gayly in the shade
To the soft mandolin, whose light notes made
An echo fit to the glad voices singing.
The twilight spirit his sweet urn is flinging
Of dew upon the lime and orange stems,
And giving to the rose pearl diadems.

There is a pilgrim by that old gray tree,
With head upon her hand bent mournfully;
And looking round upon each lovely thing,
And breathing the sweet air, as they could bring
To her no beauty and no solacing.
'Tis ROSALIE! Her prayer was not in vain,
The truant-child has sought her home again!

It must be worth a life of toil and care,Worth those dark chains the wearied one must

bear

Who toils up fortune's steep,-all that can wring
The worn-out bosom with lone suffering,-
Worth restlessness, oppression, goading fears,
And long-deferr'd hopes of many years,-
To reach again that little quiet spot,

So well loved once, and never quite forgot;-
To trace again the steps of infancy,

And catch their freshness from their memory!
And it is triumph, sure, when fortune's sun
Has shone upon us, and our task is done,
To show our harvest to the eyes which were
Once all the world to us! Perhaps there are
Some who had presaged kindly of our youth;
Feel we not proud their prophecy was sooth?

That cluster'd o'er its mother's brow: as fair
As buds in spring. She gave her laughing dove
To one who clasp'd it with a father's love;
And if a painter's eye had sought a scene

Of love in its most perfect loveliness-
Of childhood, and of wedded happiness,-
He would have painted the sweet MADELINE!
But ROSALIE shrank from them, and she stray'd
Through a small grove of cypresses, whose shade
Hung o'er a burying-ground, where the low stone
And the gray cross recorded those now gone!
There was a grave just closed. Not one seem'd

near,

To pay the tribute of one long-last tear!
How very desolate must that one be
Whose more than grave has not a memory!

Then ROSALIE thought on her mother's age,-
Just such her end would be with her away:
No child the last cold death-pang to assuage-
No child by her neglected tomb to pray!
She ask'd-and like a hope from heaven it
came!-

To hear them answer with a stranger's name.

She reach'd her mother's cottage; by that gate
She thought how her once lover wont to wait
To tell her honey'd tales; and then she thought
On all the utter ruin he had wrought!
The moon shone brightly, as it used to do

Ere youth, and hope, and love, had been untrue;
But it shone o'er the desolate! The flowers
Were dead; the faded jessamine, unbound,
Trail'd, like a heavy weed, upon the ground;
And fell the moonlight vainly over trees,
Which had not even one rose, although the

breeze,

Almost as if in mockery, had brought
Sweet tones it from the nightingale had caught!

She enter'd in the cottage. None were there! The hearth was dark, the walls look'd cold and

bare!

✓ All-all spoke poverty and suffering!
All-all was changed! and but one only thing
Kept its old place! ROSALIE'S mandolin
Hung on the wall, where it had ever been.
There was one other room, and ROSALIE
Sought for her mother there. A heavy flame
Gleam'd from a dying lamp; a cold air came

The waves, all bright with sunshine, like the gloom

Adversity throws on the heart's young gladness. |

I saw the river on a summer eve: The sun was setting over fields of corn,'Twas like a golden sea; and on the left

Damp from the broken casement. There one lay, Were vineyards, whence the grapes shone forth Like marble seen but by the moonlight ray!

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WHERE, like a courser starting from the spur,
Rushes the deep-blue current of the Rhine,
A little island rests; green cypresses
Are its chief growth, bending their heavy boughs
O'er gray stones marking long-forgotten graves.
A convent once stood here; and yet remain
Relics of other times, pillars and walls,
Worn away and discolour'd, yet so hung
With wreaths of ivy that the work of ruin
Is scarcely visible. How like this is
To the so false exterior of the world!
Outside all looks so fresh and beautiful;
But mildew, rot, and worm, work on beneath,
Until the heart is utterly decay'd.
There is one grave distinguish'd from the rest,
But only by a natural monument :-
A thousand deep-blue violets have grown
Over the sod.-I do love violets:

They tell the history of woman's love,
They open with the earliest breath of spring;
Lead a sweet life of perfume, dew, and light;
And, if they perish, perish with a sigh
Delicious as that life. On the hot June
They shed no perfume: the flowers may remain,
But the rich breathing of their leaves is past;-
Like woman, they have lost their loveliest gift,
When yielding to the fiery hour of passion:
The violet breath of love is purity.

On the shore opposite, a tower stands In ruins, with a mourning-robe of moss

like gems,

Rubies, and lighted amber; and thence spread
A wide heath cover'd with thick furze, whose
flowers,

So bright, are like the pleasures of this world,
Beautiful in the distance, but, once gain'd,
Little worth, piercing through the thorns which

grow

Around them ever. Wilder and more steep
The banks upon the river's other side:
Tall pines rose up like warriors; the wild rose
Was there in all its luxury of bloom,
Sown by the wind, nursed by the dew and sun :
And on the steeps were crosses gray and old,
Which told the fate of some poor traveller.
The dells were fill'd with dwarfed oaks and firs;
And on the heights, which master'd all the rest,
Were castles, tenented now by the owl,
The spider's garrison: there is not one
Without some strange old legend of the days
When love was life and death, when lady's
glove

Or sunny curl were banners of the battle.-
My history is of the tower which looks
Upon the little island.

LORD HERBERT sat him in his hall: the hearth Was blazing as it mock'd the storm without With its red cheerfulness: the dark hounds lay Around the fire; and the old knight had doff'd His hunting-cloak, and listen'd to the lute And song of the fair girl who at his knee Was seated. In the April hour of life, When showers are led by rainbows, and the heart Is all bloom and green leaves, was ISABELLE: A band of pearls, white like the brow o'er which They past, kept the bright curls from off the fore

head; thence

They wander'd to her feet-a golden shower.
She had that changing colour on the cheek
Which speaks the heart so well; those deep-blue

eyes,

Like summer's darkest sky, but not so glad-
They were too passionate for happiness.
Light was within her eyes, bloom on her cheek,
Her song had raised the spirit of her race
Upon her eloquent brow. She had just told
Of the young ROLAND's deeds,-how he had stood

Hung on the gray and shatter'd walls, which fling Against a host and conquer'd; when there came
A shadow on the waters; it comes o'er

A pilgrim to the hall-and never yet

C

Had stranger ask'd for shelter and in vain !
But where is he who said that he would ride
The board was spread, the Rhenish flask was At his right hand to battle?-ROLAND! where-

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And makes all beautiful. The morning looks
Its very loveliest, when the fresh air

Has tinged the cheek we love with its glad red;
And the hot noon flits by most rapidly,
When dearest eyes gaze with us on the page
Bearing the poet's words of love: and then
The twilight walk, when the link'd arms can feel
The beating of the heart; upon the air
There is a music never heard but once,-
A light the eyes can never see again;
Each star has its own prophecy of hope,
And every song and tale that breathe of love
Seem echoes of the heart.

O! Where is ROLAND?

ISABELLE has watch'd

Day after day, night after night, in vain,
Till she has wept in hopelessness, and thought
Upon old histories, and said with them,
"There is hope in man's fidelity !"
ISABELLE stood upon her lonely tower;
And, as the evening star rose up, she saw
An arm'd train bearing her father's banner
In triumph to the castle. Down she flew
To greet the victors:-they had reach'd the hall
Before herself. What saw the maiden there?
A bier! her father laid upon that bier!
ROLAND was kneeling by the side, his face
Bow'd on his hands and hid; -but ISABELLE
Knew the dark curling hair and stately form,
And threw her on his breast. He shrank away
As she were death, or sickness, or despair.
"ISABELLE! it was I who slew thy father!"
She fell almost a corpse upon the body.
It was too true! With all a lover's speed,
ROLAND had sought the thickest of the fight;
He gain'd the field just as the crush began ;-
Unwitting of his colours, he had slain
The father of his worshipp'd ISABELLE!

They met once more; and ISABELLE was
changed

As much as if a lapse of years had past:
She was so thin, so pale, and her dim eye
Had wept away its luxury of blue.
She had cut off her sunny hair, and wore
A robe of black, with a white crucifix :-
It told her destiny-her youth was vow'd
To heaven. And in the convent of the isle
That day she was to enter, ROLAND stood
Like marble, cold, and pale, and motionless:
The heavy sweat upon his brow was all
His sign of life. At length he snatch'd the scarf
That ISABELLE had tied around his neck,

And time past by- And gave it her, and pray'd that she would wave

As time will ever pass, when Love has lent
His rainbow plumes to aid his flight-and spring
Had wedded with the summer, when a steed
Stood at LORD HERBERT's gate, and ISABELLE
Had wept farewell to ROLAND, and had given
Her blue scarf for his colours. He was gone
To raise his vassals, for LORD HERBERT'S towers
Were menaced with a siege; and he had sworn
By ISABELLE'S white hand that he would claim
Its beauty only as a conqueror's prize.
Autumn was on the woods, when the blue Rhine
Grew red with blood:--LORD HERBERT'S banner
flies,

And gallant is the bearing of his ranks.

Its white folds from the lattice of her cell
At each pale rising of the evening star,
That he might know she lived. They parted--

never

Those lovers met again! But ROLAND built
A tower beside the Rhine, and there he dwelt.
And every evening saw the white scarf waved,
And heard the vesper hymn of ISABELLE
Float in deep sweetness o'er the silent river.
One evening, and he did not see the scarf,-
He watch'd and watch'd in vain; at length his
hope

Grew desperate, and he pray'd his ISABELLE
Might have forgotten him:-but midnight came,

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