The Complete Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Illustrated Edition). Samuel Taylor Coleridge

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And all the while” said he “to know

       That we were in a world of woe.

       On such an earth as this!”

      And then he sometimes interwove

       Dear thoughts about a Father’s love,

       ”For there,” said he, “are spun

       Around the heart such tender ties

       That our own children to our eyes

       Are dearer than the sun.”

      Sweet Ruth! and could you go with me

       My helpmate in the woods to be,

       Our shed at night to rear;

       Or run, my own adopted bride,

       A sylvan huntress at my side

       And drive the flying deer.

      ”Beloved Ruth!” No more he said

       Sweet Ruth alone at midnight shed

       A solitary tear,

       She thought again — and did agree

       With him to sail across the sea,

       And drive the flying deer.

      ”And now, as fitting is and right,

       We in the Church our faith will plight,

       A Husband and a Wife.”

       Even so they did; and I may say

       That to sweet Ruth that happy day

       Was more than human life.

      Through dream and vision did she sink,

       Delighted all the while to think

       That on those lonesome floods

       And green Savannahs she should share

       His board with lawful joy, and bear

       His name in the wild woods.

      But, as you have before been told,

       This Stripling, sportive gay and bold,

       And, with his dancing crest,

       So beautiful, through savage lands

       Had roam’d about with vagrant bands

       Of Indians in the West.

      The wind, the tempest roaring high,

       The tumult of a tropic sky

       Might well be dangerous food.

       For him, a Youth to whom was given

       So much of earth so much of Heaven,

       And such impetuous blood.

      Whatever in those climes he found

       Irregular in sight or sound

       Did to his mind impart

       A kindred impulse, seem’d allied

       To his own powers, and justified

       The workings of his heart.

      Nor less to feed voluptuous thought

       The beauteous forms of Nature wrought,

       Fair trees and lovely flowers;

       The breezes their own languor lent,

       The stars had feelings which they sent

       Into those magic bowers.

      Yet, in his worst pursuits, I ween,

       That sometimes there did intervene

       Pure hopes of high intent:

       For passions link’d to forms so fair

       And stately, needs must have their share

       Of noble sentiment.

      But ill he liv’d, much evil saw

       With men to whom no better law

       Nor better life was known;

       Deliberately and undeceiv’d

       Those wild men’s vices he receiv’d,

       And gave them back his own.

      His genius and his moral frame

       Were thus impair’d, and he became

       The slave of low desires;

       A man who without self-controul

       Would seek what the degraded soul

       Unworthily admires.

      And yet he with no feign’d delight

       Had woo’d the Maiden, day and night

       Had luv’d her, night and morn;

       What could he less than love a Maid

       Whose heart with so much nature play’d

       So kind and so forlorn?

      But now the pleasant dream was gone,

       No hope, no wish remain’d, not one,

       They stirr’d him now no more,

       New objects did new pleasure give,

       And once again he wish’d to live

       As lawless as before.

      Meanwhile as thus with him it fared.

       They for the voyage were prepared

       And went to the seashore,

       But, when they thither came, the Youth

       Deserted his poor Bride, and Ruth

       Could never find him more.

      ”God help thee Ruth!” — Such pains she had

       That she in half a year was mad

       And in a prison hous’d,

       And there, exulting in her wrongs,

       Among the music of her songs

       She fearfully carouz’d.

      Yet

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