The Complete Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Illustrated Edition). Samuel Taylor Coleridge
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Elate of Heart and confident of Fame,
From vales where Avon sports, the Minstrel came, 25
Gay as the Poet hastes along
He meditates the future song,
How Ælla battled with his country’s foes,
And whilst Fancy in the air
Paints him many a vision fair 30
His eyes dance rapture and his bosom glows.
With generous joy he views th’ ideal gold:
He listens to many a Widow’s prayers,
And many an Orphan’s thanks he hears;
He soothes to peace the care-worn breast, 35
He bids the Debtor’s eyes know rest,
And Liberty and Bliss behold:
And now he punishes the heart of steel,
And her own iron rod he makes Oppression feel.
Fated to heave sad Disappointment’s sigh, 40
To feel the Hope now rais’d, and now deprest,
To feel the burnings of an injur’d breast,
From all thy Fate’s deep sorrow keen
In vain, O Youth, I turn th’ affrighted eye;
For powerful Fancy evernigh 45
The hateful picture forces on my sight.
There, Death of every dear delight,
Frowns Poverty of Giant mien!
In vain I seek the charms of youthful grace,
Thy sunken eye, thy haggard cheeks it shews, 50
The quick emotions struggling in the Face
Faint index of thy mental Throes,
When each strong Passion spurn’d controll,
And not a Friend was nigh to calm thy stormy soul.
Such was the sad and gloomy hour 55
When anguish’d Care of sullen brow
Prepared the Poison’s death-cold power.
Already to thy lips was rais’d the bowl,
When filial Pity stood thee by,
Thy fixéd eyes she bade thee roll 60
On scenes that well might melt thy soul —
Thy native cot she held to view,
Thy native cot, where Peace ere long
Had listen’d to thy evening song;
Thy sister’s shrieks she bade thee hear, 65
And mark thy mother’s thrilling tear,
She made thee feel her deep-drawn sigh,
And all her silent agony of Woe.
And from thy Fate shall such distress ensue?
Ah! dash the poison’d chalice from thy hand! 70
And thou had’st dash’d it at her soft command;
But that Despair and Indignation rose,
And told again the story of thy Woes,
Told the keen insult of th’ unfeeling Heart,
The dread dependence on the low-born mind, 75
Told every Woe, for which thy breast might smart,
Neglect and grinning scorn and Want combin’d —
Recoiling back, thou sent’st the friend of Pain
To roll a tide of Death thro’ every freezing vein.
O Spirit blest! 80
Whether th’ eternal Throne around,
Amidst the blaze of Cherubim,
Thou pourest forth the grateful hymn,
Or, soaring through the blest Domain,
Enraptur’st Angels with thy strain, — 85
Grant me, like thee, the lyre to sound,
Like thee, with fire divine to glow —
But ah! when rage the Waves of Woe,
Grant me with firmer breast t’oppose their hate,
And soar beyond the storms with upright eye elate! 90
AN INVOCATION
Sweet Muse! companion of my every hour!
Voice of my Joy! Sure soother of the sigh!
Now plume thy pinions, now exert each power,
And fly to him who owns the candid eye.
And if a smile of Praise thy labour hail 5
(Well shall thy labours then my mind employ)
Fly fleetly back, sweet Muse! and with the tale
O’erspread my Features with a flush of Joy!
ANNA AND HARLAND
Within these wilds was Anna wont to rove
While Harland told his love in many a sigh,
But stern on Harland roll’d her brother’s eye,
They fought, they fell — her brother and her love!
To Death’s dark house did grief-worn Anna haste, 5
Yet here her pensive ghost delights to stay;
Oft pouring on the winds the broken lay —
And hark, I hear her—’twas the passing blast.
I love to sit upon her tomb’s dark grass,
Then Memory backward rolls Time’s shadowy tide; 10
The tales of other days before me glide:
With eager thought I seize them as they pass;
For