Continental Monthly , Vol. 5, No. 6, June, 1864. Various

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Continental Monthly , Vol. 5, No. 6, June, 1864 - Various

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ever-lessening circles, near me came;

      With whirring sound of fluttering wings, she passed

      Into the cursed and stifling, haunted room,

      Where sat the Raven with his voice of doom—

      His ceaseless cry from the Plutonian shore:

      'Lenore! Lenore! ah! never—nevermore!'

      The waving of the whirring, snowy wings,

      Cooled the hot air, diffusing mystic calm.

      Again I shuddered as I marked the glare

      Which shot from the fell Raven's fiendish eye,

      The while he measured where his pall-like swoop

      Might seize the Dove as Death had seized Lenore:

      'Lenore!' he shrieked, 'ah, never—nevermore!'

      Hovered the Dove around an antique cross,

      Which long had stood afront the pallid bust

      Of haughty Pallas o'er my chamber door:

      Neglected it had been through all the storm

      Of maddening doubts born from the demon cry

      Reëchoing from the night's Plutonian shore:

      'Lenore! Lenore! ah! never—nevermore!'

      I loved all heathen, antique, classic lore,

      And thus the cross had paled before the brow

      Of Pallas, radiant type of Reason's power.

      But human reason fails in hours of woe,

      And wisdom's goddess ne'er reopes the grave.

      What knows chill Pallas of corruption's doom?

      Upon her massive, rounded, glittering brow

      The Bird of Doubt had chos'n a fitting place

      To knell into my heart forever more:

      'Ah I never, nevermore! Lenore! Lenore!'

      The Raven's plumage, in the kindling rays,

      Shone with metallic lustre, sombre fire;

      His fiendish eye, so blue, and fierce, and cold,

      Froze like th' hyena's when she tears the dead.

      The sculptured beauty of the marble brow

      Of Pallas glittered, as though diamond-strewn:

      Haughty and dazzling, yet no voice of peace,

      But words of dull negation darkly fell

      From Reason's goddess in her brilliant sheen!

      No secret bears she from the silent grave;

      She stands appalled before its dark abyss,

      And shudders at its gloom with all her lore,

      All powerless to ope its grass-grown door.

      Can Pallas e'er the loved and lost restore?

      Hear her wild Raven shriek: 'Lenore! no more!'

      With gloomy thoughts and thronging dreams oppressed,

      I sank upon the 'violet velvet chair,

      Which she shall press, ah, never, nevermore!'

      And gazed, I know not why, upon the cross,

      On which the Dove was resting its soft wings,

      Glowing and rosy in the morn's warm light.

      I cannot tell how long I dreaming lay,

      When (as from some old picture, shadowy forms

      Loom from a distant background as we gaze,

      So bright they gleam, so soft they melt away,

      We scarcely know whether 'tis fancy's play

      Or artist's skill that wins them to the day)

      There grew a band of angels on my sight,

      Wreathing in love around the slighted cross.

      One swung a censer, hung with bell-like flowers,

      Whence tones and perfumes mingling charmed the air;

      Thick clouds of incense veiled their shadowy forms,

      Yet could I see their wings of rainbow light,

      The wavings of their white arms, soft and bright.

      Then she who swung the censer nearer drew—

      The perfumed tones were silent—lowly bent

      (The long curls pouring gold adown the wings),

      She knelt in prayer before the crucifix.

      Her eyes were deep as midnight's mystic stars,

      Freighted with love they trembling gazed above,

      As pleading for some mortal's bitter pain:

      When answered—soft untwined the clasping hands,

      The bright wings furled—my heart stood still to hear

      'The footfalls tinkle on the tufted floor'—

      The eyes met mine—O God! my lost Lenore!

      Too deeply awed to clasp her to my heart,

      I knelt and gasped—'Lenore! my lost Lenore!

      Is there a home for Love beyond the skies?

      In pity answer!—shall we meet again?'

      Her eyes in rapture floated; solemn, calm,

      Then softest music from her lips of balm

      Fell, as she joined the angels in the air!

      Her words forever charmed away despair!

      'Above all pain,

      We meet again!

      'Kneel and worship humbly

      Round the slighted cross!

      Death is only seeming—

      Love is never loss!

      In the hour of sorrow

      Calmly look above!

      Trust the Holy Victim—

      Heaven is in His love!

      'Above all pain,

      We meet again!

      'Never heed the Raven—

      Doubt was born in hell!

      How can heathen Pallas

      Faith of Christian tell?

      With the faith of angels,

      Led by Holy Dove,

      Kneel and pray before Him—

      Heaven is in His love!

      'Above all pain,

      We meet again!'

      Then clouds of incense veiled the floating forms;

      I only saw the gleams of starry wings,

      The flash from lustrous eyes, the glittering hair,

      As chanting still the Sanctus of the skies,

      Clear o'er the Misereres of earth's graves,

      Enveloped in the mist of perfumed haze,

      In music's spell they faded from my gaze.

      Gone—gone the vision! from my sight it bore

      My lost, my found, my ever loved Lenore!

      Forgotten scenes of happy infant years,

      My mother's hymns around my cradle-bed,

      Memories of vesper bell and matin chimes,

      Of priests and incensed altars, dimly waked.

      The fierce eye of the Raven

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