Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 54, No. 338, December 1843. Various

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Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 54, No. 338, December 1843 - Various

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still a cloud is on his brow—where is the promised smile?

      And yet he sits a sceptred king—in his own dear native isle.

X

      Oh! Samos dear, my native land! I tread thy courts again—

      But where are they, thy gallant sons? I gaze upon the slain—

      "A dreary kingdom mine, I ween," the mournful monarch said,

      "Where are my subjects good and true? I reign but o'er the dead!

XI

      "Ah! woe is me—I would that I had ne'er to Susa gone,

      To ask that fatal boon of thee, Hystaspes' generous son.

      Oh, deadly fight! oh, woeful sight! to greet a monarch's eyes!

      All desolate—my native land, reft of her children, lies!"

XII

      Thus mourn'd the chief—and no relief his regal state could bring.

      O'er such a drear unpeopled waste, oh! who would be a king?

      And still, when desolate a land, and her sons all swept away,

      "The waste domain of Syloson," 'tis call'd unto this day!

      LOVE AND DEATH

      O strong as the Eagle,

          O mild as the Dove!

      How like, and how unlike,

          O Death and O Love!

      Knitting Earth to the Heaven,

          The Near to the Far—

      With the step on the dust,

          And the eyes on the star!

      Interweaving, commingling,

           Both rays from God's light!

      Now in sun, now in shadow,

          Ye shift to the sight!

      Ever changing the sceptres

          Ye bear—as in play;

      Now Love as Death rules us,

          Now Death has Love's sway!

      Why wails so the New-born?

          Love gave it the breath.

      The soul sees Love's brother—

          Life enters on Death!

      Why that smile the wan lips

          Of the dead man above?

      The soul sees Death changing

          Its shape into Love.

      So confused and so blending

          Each twin with its brother,

      The frown of one melts

          In the smile of the other.

      Love warms where Death withers,

          Death blights where Love blooms;

      Death sits by our cradles,

          Love stands by our tombs!

Edward Lytton Bulwer. Nov. 9, 1843.

      THE BRIDGE OVER THE THUR

      FROM THE GERMAN.—GUSTAV SCHWAB

      Spurning the loud Thur's headlong march,

      Who hath stretcht the stony arch?

      That the wayfarer blesses his path!

      That the storming river wastes his wrath!

      Was it a puissant prince, in quelling

      This watery vassal, oft rebelling?—

      Or earthly Mars, the bar o'erleaping,

      That wrong'd his war of its onward sweeping?

      Did yon high-nesting Castellan

      Lead the brave Street, for horse and man?

      And, the whiles his House creeps under the grass,

      The Road, that he built, lies fair to pass?

      Nay! not for the Bridge, which ye look upon,

      Manly hest knit stone with stone.

      The loved word of a woman's mouth

      Bound the thundering chasm with a rocky growth.

      She, in turret, who sitteth lone,

      Listing the broad stream's heavier groan,

      Kenning the flow, from his loosen'd fountains,

      From the clouds, that have wash'd a score of mountains.

      A skiff she notes, by the shelvy marge,

      Wont deftly across to speed its charge;

      Now jumping and twisting, like leaf on a lynn,

      Wo! if a foot list cradle therein!

      Sooner, than hath she thought her feeling,

      With travellers twain is the light plank reeling.

      Who are they?... Marble watcher! Who?

      Thy beautiful, youthful, only two!

      Coming, glad, from the greenwood slaughter,

      They reach the suddenly-swollen water;

      But the nimble, strong, and young,

      Boldly into the bark have sprung.

      The game in the forest fall, stricken and bleeding;

      Those river-waves are of other breeding!

      And the shriek of the mother helpeth not,

      At seeing turn upwards the keel of the boat.

      Whilst her living pulses languish,

      As she taketh in her anguish,

      By the roar, her soul which stuns,

      On the corses of her sons.

      Needs must she upon the mothers think,

      Who yet may stand beholding sink,

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