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

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but tasted to destroy!’

      THE OUTCAST

      Pale Roamer through the night! thou poor Forlorn!

      Remorse that man on his deathbed possess,

      Who in the credulous hour of tenderness

      Betrayed, then cast thee forth to Want and Scorn!

      The world is pitiless: the chaste one’s pride 5

      Mimic of Virtue scowls on thy distress:

      Thy Loves and they that envied thee deride:

      And Vice alone will shelter Wretchedness!

      O! I could weep to think that there should be

       Cold-bosom’d lewd ones, who endure to place 10

      Foul offerings on the shrine of Misery,

      And force from Famine the caress of Love;

      May He shed healing on the sore disgrace,

      He, the great Comforter that rules above!

      DOMESTIC PEACE

      FROM ‘THE FALL OF ROBESPIERRE’, ACT I, L. 210

      Tell me, on what holy ground

      May Domestic Peace be found?

      Halcyon daughter of the skies,

      Far on fearful wings she flies,

      From the pomp of Sceptered State, 5

      From the Rebel’s noisy hate.

      In a cottag’d vale She dwells,

      Listening to the Sabbath bells!

      Still around her steps are seen

      Spotless Honour’s meeker mien, 10

      Love, the sire of pleasing fears,

      Sorrow smiling through her tears,

      And conscious of the past employ

      Memory, bosom-spring of joy.

      ON A DISCOVERY MADE TOO LATE

      Thou bleedest, my poor Heart! and thy distress

      Reasoning I ponder with a scornful smile

      And probe thy sore wound sternly, though the while

      Swoln be mine eye and dim with heaviness.

      Why didst thou listen to Hope’s whisper bland? 5

      Or, listening, why forget the healing tale,

      When Jealousy with feverous fancies pale

      Jarr’d thy fine fibres with a maniac’s hand?

      Faint was that Hope, and rayless! — Yet ‘twas fair

      And sooth’d with many a dream the hour of rest: 10

      Thou should’st have lov’d it most, when most opprest,

      And nurs’d it with an agony of care,

      Even as a mother her sweet infant heir

      That wan and sickly droops upon her breast!

      TO THE AUTHOR OF ‘THE ROBBERS’

      Schiller! that hour I would have wish’d to die,

      If thro’ the shuddering midnight I had sent

      From the dark dungeon of the Tower timerent

      That fearful voice, a famish’d Father’s cry —

      Lest in some after moment aught more mean 5

      Might stamp me mortal! A triumphant shout

      Black Horror scream’d, and all her goblin rout

      Diminish’d shrunk from the more withering scene!

      Ah! Bard tremendous in sublimity!

      Could I behold thee in thy loftier mood 10

      Wandering at eve with finely-frenzied eye

      Beneath some vast old tempest-swinging wood!

      Awhile with mute awe gazing I would brood:

      Then weep aloud in a wild ecstasy!

      MELANCHOLY

      A FRAGMENT

      Stretch’d on a moulder’d Abbey’s broadest wall,

       Where ruining ivies propp’d the ruins steep —

      Her folded arms wrapping her tatter’d pall, The fern was press’d beneath her hair,

       The dark green Adder’s Tongue was there;

      And still as pass’d the flagging sea-gale weak,

      The long lank leaf bow’d fluttering o’er her cheek.

      That pallid cheek was flush’d: her eager look

       Beam’d eloquent in slumber! Inly wrought, 10

       Imperfect sounds her moving lips forsook,

       And her bent forehead work’d with troubled thought.

       Strange was the dream ——

      TO A YOUNG ASS: ITS MOTHER BEING TETHERED NEAR IT

      Poor little Foal of an oppresséd race!

      I love the languid patience of thy face:

      And oft with gentle hand I give thee bread,

      And clap thy ragged coat, and pat thy head.

      But what thy dulled spirits hath dismay’d, 5

      That never thou dost sport along the glade?

      And (most unlike the nature of things young)

      That earthward still thy moveless head is hung?

      Do thy prophetic fears anticipate,

      Meek Child of Misery! thy future fate? 10

      The starving meal, and all the thousand aches

      ‘Which patient Merit of the Unworthy takes’?

      Or is thy sad heart thrill’d with filial pain

      To see thy wretched

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