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

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earthly walk;

       Comparing, joyfully, their plenteous stores

       Of happiness, to when upon the moors, Benighted, close they huddled from the cold,

       And shar’d their famish’d scrips. Thus all out-told

       Their fond imaginations,–saving him

       Whose eyelids curtain’d up their jewels dim,

       Endymion: yet hourly had he striven

       To hide the cankering venom, that had riven

       His fainting recollections. Now indeed

       His senses had swoon’d off: he did not heed

       The sudden silence, or the whispers low,

       Or the old eyes dissolving at his woe, Or anxious calls, or close of trembling palms,

       Or maiden’s sigh, that grief itself embalms:

       But in the selfsame fixed trance he kept,

       Like one who on the earth had never slept.

       Aye, even as dead-still as a marble man,

       Frozen in that old tale Arabian.

      Who whispers him so pantingly and close?

       Peona, his sweet sister: of all those,

       His friends, the dearest. Hushing signs she made,

       And breath’d a sister’s sorrow to persuade A yielding up, a cradling on her care.

       Her eloquence did breathe away the curse:

       She led him, like some midnight spirit nurse

       Of happy changes in emphatic dreams,

       Along a path between two little streams,–

       Guarding his forehead, with her round elbow,

       From low-grown branches, and his footsteps slow

       From stumbling over stumps and hillocks small;

       Until they came to where these streamlets fall,

       With mingled bubblings and a gentle rush, Into a river, clear, brimful, and flush

       With crystal mocking of the trees and sky.

       A little shallop, floating there hard by,

       Pointed its beak over the fringed bank;

       And soon it lightly dipt, and rose, and sank,

       And dipt again, with the young couple’s weight,–

       Peona guiding, through the water straight,

       Towards a bowery island opposite;

       Which gaining presently, she steered light

       Into a shady, fresh, and ripply cove, Where nested was an arbour, overwove

       By many a summer’s silent fingering;

       To whose cool bosom she was used to bring

       Her playmates, with their needle broidery,

       And minstrel memories of times gone by.

      So she was gently glad to see him laid

       Under her favourite bower’s quiet shade,

       On her own couch, new made of flower leaves,

       Dried carefully on the cooler side of sheaves

       When last the sun his autumn tresses shook, And the tann’d harvesters rich armfuls took.

       Soon was he quieted to slumbrous rest:

       But, ere it crept upon him, he had prest

       Peona’s busy hand against his lips,

       And still, a sleeping, held her finger-tips

       In tender pressure. And as a willow keeps

       A patient watch over the stream that creeps

       Windingly by it, so the quiet maid

       Held her in peace: so that a whispering blade

       Of grass, a wailful gnat, a bee bustling Down in the bluebells, or a wren light rustling

       Among sere leaves and twigs, might all be heard.

      O magic sleep! O comfortable bird,

       That broodest o’er the troubled sea of the mind

       Till it is hush’d and smooth! O unconfin’d

       Restraint! imprisoned liberty! great key

       To golden palaces, strange minstrelsy,

       Fountains grotesque, new trees, bespangled caves,

       Echoing grottos, full of tumbling waves

       And moonlight; aye, to all the mazy world Of silvery enchantment!–who, upfurl’d

       Beneath thy drowsy wing a triple hour,

       But renovates and lives?–Thus, in the bower,

       Endymion was calm’d to life again.

       Opening his eyelids with a healthier brain,

       He said: “I feel this thine endearing love

       All through my bosom: thou art as a dove

       Trembling its closed eyes and sleeked wings

       About me; and the pearliest dew not brings

       Such morning incense from the fields of May, As do those brighter drops that twinkling stray

       From those kind eyes,–the very home and haunt

       Of sisterly affection. Can I want

       Aught else, aught nearer heaven, than such tears?

       Yet dry them up, in bidding hence all fears

       That, any longer, I will pass my days

       Alone and sad. No, I will once more raise

       My voice upon the mountain-heights; once more

       Make my horn parley from their foreheads hoar:

       Again my trooping hounds their tongues shall loll Around the breathed boar: again I’ll poll

       The fair-grown yew tree, for a chosen bow:

       And, when the pleasant sun is getting low,

       Again I’ll linger in a sloping mead

      

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