The Poetical Works of Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton, Bart. M.P. Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton

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quaintly piled,

       Betray'd the man's fierce memory of the child—

       And litter'd books, in mystic scrolls enshrined

       The solemn Sibyl of the elder Ind.

       The girl treads fearful on the dismal floors,

       And with amazèd eye the gloomy lair explores;

       Thus, as some Peri strays where, couch'd in cells

       With gods dethroned, the brooding Afrite dwells,

       From room to room her fairy footsteps glide,

       Till, lo! she starts to see him by her side.—

       With crimson cheek, and downcast eyes, that quail

       Beneath his own, she hurries the glad tale,

       Then turns to part—but as she turns, still round

       She looks—and lingers on the magic ground,

       And eyes each antique relic with the wild

       Half-pleased, half-timorous, wonder of a child;

       And as a child's the lonely inmate saw,

       And smiled to see the pleasure and the awe;

       And soften'd into kindness his deep tone,

       And drew her hand, half-shrinking, in his own,

       And said, "Nay, pause and task the showman's skill,

       What moves thee most?—come, question me at will."

      Listening she linger'd, and she knew not why

       Time's wing so swiftly never seem'd to fly;

       Never before unto her gaze reveal'd

       The Eastern fire, the Eastern calm conceal'd:

       Child of the sun, and native of the waste,

       Cramp'd in the formal chains it had embraced,

       His heart leapt back to its old haunts afar,

       As leaps the lion from the captive bar;

       And, as each token flash'd upon the mind,

       Back the bold deeds that life had left behind,

       The dark eye blazed, the rich words roll'd along,

       Vivid as light, and eloquent as song;

       At length, with sudden pause, he check'd the stream,

       And his soul darken'd from the gorgeous dream.

       "So," with sad voice he said, "my youth went by,

       Fresh was the wave, if fitful was the sky;

       What is my manhood?—curl'd and congeal'd,

       A stagnant water in a barren field:

       Gall'd with strange customs—in the crowd alone;

       And courting bloodless hearts that freeze my own.

       In the far lands, where first I breathed the air—

       Smile if thou wilt—this rugged form was fair,

       For the swift foot, strong arm, bold heart give grace

       To man, when danger girds man's dwelling-place—

       Thou seest the daughter of my mother, now,

       Shrinks from the outcast branded on my brow;

       My boyhood tamed the panther in his den,

       The wild beast feels man's kindness more than men.

       Like with its like, they say, will intertwine—

       I have not tamed one human heart to mine!"—

       He paused abruptly. Thrice his listener sought

       To shape consoling speech from soothing thought,

       But thrice she fail'd, and thrice the colour came

       And went, as tenderness was check'd by shame!

       At length her dove-like eyes to his she raised,

       And all the comfort words forbade, she gazed;

       Moved by her childlike pity, but too dark

       In hopeless thought than pity more to mark;

       "Infant," he murmur'd, "not for others flow

       The tears the wise, how hard soe'er, must know;

       As yet, the Eden of a guileless breast,

       Opes a frank home to every angel guest;

       Soft Eve, look round!—The world in which thou art

       Distrusts the angel, nor unlocks the heart—

       Thy time will come!"—

      He spoke, and from her side

       Was gone—the heart his wisdom wrong'd replied!

       Table of Contents

       I.

      London, I take thee to a Poet's heart!

       For those who seek, a Helicon thou art.

       Let schoolboy Strephons bleat of flocks and fields,

       Each street of thine a loftier Idyl yields;

       Fed by all life, and fann'd by every wind,

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