The Complete Works of John Keats: Poems, Plays & Personal Letters. John Keats

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of Dryope, The many that are come to pay their vows

       With leaves about their brows!

      Be still the unimaginable lodge

       For solitary thinkings; such as dodge

       Conception to the very bourne of heaven,

       Then leave the naked brain: be still the leaven,

       That spreading in this dull and clodded earth

       Gives it a touch ethereal–a new birth:

       Be still a symbol of immensity;

       A firmament reflected in a sea; An element filling the space between;

       An unknown–but no more: we humbly screen

       With uplift hands our foreheads, lowly bending,

       And giving out a shout most heaven rending,

       Conjure thee to receive our humble Pæan,

       Upon thy Mount Lycean!

      Even while they brought the burden to a close,

       A shout from the whole multitude arose,

       That lingered in the air like dying rolls

       Of abrupt thunder, when Ionian shoals Of dolphins bob their noses through the brine.

       Meantime, on shady levels, mossy fine,

       Young companies nimbly began dancing

       To the swift treble pipe, and humming string.

       Aye, those fair living forms swam heavenly

       To tunes forgotten–out of memory:

       Fair creatures! whose young childrens’ children bred

       Thermopylæ its heroes–not yet dead,

       But in old marbles ever beautiful.

       High genitors, unconscious did they cull Time’s sweet first-fruits–they danc’d to weariness,

       And then in quiet circles did they press

       The hillock turf, and caught the latter end

       Of some strange history, potent to send

       A young mind from its bodily tenement.

       Or they might watch the quoit-pitchers, intent

       On either side; pitying the sad death

       Of Hyacinthus, when the cruel breath

       Of Zephyr slew him,–Zephyr penitent,

       Who now, ere Phœbus mounts the firmament, Fondles the flower amid the sobbing rain.

       The archers too, upon a wider plain,

       Beside the feathery whizzing of the shaft,

       And the dull twanging bowstring, and the raft

       Branch down sweeping from a tall ash top,

       Call’d up a thousand thoughts to envelope

       Those who would watch. Perhaps, the trembling knee

       And frantic gape of lonely Niobe,

       Poor, lonely Niobe! when her lovely young

       Were dead and gone, and her caressing tongue Lay a lost thing upon her paly lip,

       And very, very deadliness did nip

       Her motherly cheeks. Arous’d from this sad mood

       By one, who at a distance loud halloo’d,

       Uplifting his strong bow into the air,

       Many might after brighter visions stare:

       After the Argonauts, in blind amaze

       Tossing about on Neptune’s restless ways,

       Until, from the horizon’s vaulted side,

       There shot a golden splendour far and wide, Spangling those million poutings of the brine

       With quivering ore: ’twas even an awful shine

       From the exaltation of Apollo’s bow;

       A heavenly beacon in their dreary woe.

       Who thus were ripe for high contemplating,

       Might turn their steps towards the sober ring

       Where sat Endymion and the aged priest

       ‘Mong shepherds gone in eld, whose looks increas’d

       The silvery setting of their mortal star.

       There they discours’d upon the fragile bar That keeps us from our homes ethereal;

       And what our duties there: to nightly call

       Vesper, the beauty-crest of summer weather;

       To summon all the downiest clouds together

       For the sun’s purple couch; to emulate

       In ministring the potent rule of fate

       With speed of fire-tailed exhalations;

       To tint her pallid cheek with bloom, who cons

       Sweet poesy by moonlight: besides these,

       A world of other unguess’d offices. Anon they wander’d, by divine converse,

       Into Elysium; vieing to rehearse

       Each one his own anticipated bliss.

       One felt heart-certain that he could not miss

       His quick gone love, among fair blossom’d boughs,

       Where every zephyr-sigh pouts, and endows

       Her lips with music for the welcoming.

       Another wish’d, mid that eternal spring,

       To meet his rosy child, with feathery sails,

       Sweeping, eye-earnestly, through almond vales: Who, suddenly, should stoop through the smooth wind,

       And with the balmiest leaves his temples bind;

       And, ever after, through those regions be

       His messenger, his little Mercury,

       Some were athirst in soul to see again

       Their fellow huntsmen o’er the wide champaign

       In times long past; to sit with them, and talk

      

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