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He call'd philosophy, and with his heart
Reason'd. He call'd religion, too, but call'd
Reluctantly, and therefore was not heard.
Ashamed to be o'ermatch'd by earthly woes,
He sought, and sought, with eye that dimm'd apace,
To find some avenue to light, some place

On which to rest a hope; but sought in vain.
Darker and darker still the darkness grew.
At length he sunk, and Disappointment stood
His only comforter, and mournfully

Told all was past.

His interest in life,

In being, ceased: and now he seem'd to feel,
And shudder'd as he felt, his powers of mind
Decaying in the spring-time of his day.
The vigorous, weak became; the clear, obscure;
Memory gave up her charge; Decision reel'd;
And from her flight, Fancy return'd, return'd
Because she found no nourishment abroad.
The blue heavens wither'd, and the moon, and sun,
And all the stars, and the green earth, and morn
And evening, wither'd; and the eyes, and smiles,
And faces of all men and women, wither'd,
Wither'd to him; and all the universe,

Like something which had been, appear'd, but now
Was dead and mouldering fast away. He tried
No more to hope, wish'd to forget his vow,
Wish'd to forget his harp; then ceased to wish.
That was his last: enjoyment now was done.
He had no hope, no wish, and scarce a fear.
Of being sensible, and sensible

Of loss, he as some atom seem'd, which God
Had made superfluously, and needed not
To build creation with; but back again
To nothing threw, and left it in the void,
With everlasting sense that once it was.

Oh! who can tell what days, what nights he spent,
Of tideless, waveless, sailless, shoreless woe!
And who can tell how many, glorious once,
To others and themselves of promise full,
Conducted to this pass of human thought,
This wilderness of intellectual death,
Wasted and pined, and vanish'd from the earth,
Leaving no vestige of memorial there!

It was not so with him. When thus he lay, Forlorn of heart, wither'd and desolate,

As leaf of autumn, which the wolfish winds,
Selecting from its falling sisters, chase,
Far from its native grove, to lifeless wastes,
And leave it there alone, to be forgotten
Eternally, God pass'd in mercy by-

His praise be ever new!-and on him breathed,
And bade him live, and put into his hands
A holy harp, into his lips a song,

That roll'd its numbers down the tide of time:
Ambitious now but little, to be praised

Of men alone; ambitious most, to be
Approved of God, the Judge of all; and have
His name recorded in the book of life.

Such things were Disappointment and Remorse;
And oft united both, as friends severe,
To teach men wisdom; but the fool, untaught,
Was foolish still. His ear he stopp'd, his eyes
He shut, and blindly, deafly obstinate,
Forced desperately his way from woe to woe.

One place, one only place, there was on earth,
Where no man e'er was fool, however mad.
"Men may live fools, but fools they cannot die."
Ah! 'twas a truth most true; and sung in time,
And to the sons of men, by one well known
On earth for lofty verse and lofty sense.

THE DUELLIST AND THE SUICIDE.

With groans that made no pause, lamenting there Were seen the duellist and suicide.

This thought, but thought amiss, that of himself
He was entire proprietor; and so,

When he was tired of time, with his own hand,
He open'd the portals of eternity,

And sooner than the devils hoped, arrived
In hell. The other, of resentment quick,
And, for a word, a look, a gesture, deem'd
Not scrupulously exact in all respect,
Prompt to revenge, went to the cited field,
For double murder arm'd, his own, and his
That as himself he was ordain'd to love.
The first in pagan books of early times,

Was heroism pronounced, and greatly praised.
In fashion's glossary of later days,

The last was honour call'd, and spirit high.
Alas! 'twas mortal spirit, honour which
Forgot to wake at the last trumpet's voice,
Bearing the signature of Time alone,
Uncurrent in Eternity, and base.

Wise men suspected this before; for they
Could never understand what honour meant,
Or why that should be honour term'd, which made
Man murder man, and broke the laws of God,
Most wantonly. Sometimes, indeed, the grave,
And those of Christian creed, imagined, spoke
Admiringly of honour, lauding much
The noble youth, who, after many rounds
Of boxing, died; or, to the pistol shot
His breast exposed, his soul to endless pain.
But they who most admired, and understood
This honour best, and on its altar laid

Their lives, most obviously were fools; and what
Fools only, and the wicked, understood,
The wise agreed was some delusive shade,
That with the mist of Time should disappear.

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THE LAST DAY.

No sign of change appear'd: to every man
That day seem'd as the past. From noontide path
The sun look'd gloriously on earth, and all
Her scenes of giddy folly smiled secure,
When suddenly, alas, fair Earth! the sun
Was wrapp'd in darkness, and his beams return'd
Up to the throne of God, and over all

The earth came night, moonless and starless night!
Nature stood still. The seas and rivers stood,
And all the winds, and every living thing.
The cataract, that like a giant wroth,
Rush'd down impetuously, as seized, at once,
By sudden frost with all his hoary locks,

Stood still and beasts of every kind stood still.
A deep and dreadful silence reign'd alone!

Hope died in every breast, and on all men

Came fear and trembling. None to his neighbour spoke. Husband thought not of wife, nor of her child

The mother, nor friend of friend, nor foe of foe.

In horrible suspense all mortals stood;

And, as they stood and listen'd, chariots were heard
Rolling in heaven. Reveal'd in flaming fire,

The angel of God appear'd in stature vast,
Blazing, and lifting up his hand on high,
By Him that lives for ever, swore, that Time
Should be no more. Throughout, creation heard
And sigh'd; all rivers, lakes, and seas, and woods,
Desponding waste, and cultivated vale,

Wild cave, and ancient hill, and every rock,
Sigh'd. Earth, arrested in her wonted path,
As ox struck by the lifted axe, when nought
Was fear'd, in all her entrails deeply groan'd.
A universal crash was heard, as if

The ribs of nature broke, and all her dark
Foundations fail'd: and deadly paleness sat
On every face of man, and every heart
Grew chill, and every knee his fellow smote.
None spoke, none stirr'd, none wept; for horror held
All motionless, and fetter'd every tongue.

Again, o'er all the nations silence fell:
And, in the heavens, robed in excessive light,
That drove the thick of darkness far aside,
And walk'd with penetration keen, through all

The abodes of men, another angel stood,
And blew the trump of God: Awake, ye dead!
Be changed, ye living, and put on the garb
Of immortality! Awake! arise!-

The God of Judgment comes! This said the voice,
And Silence, from eternity that slept

Beyond the sphere of the creating word,

And all the noise of Time, awaken'd, heard.
Heaven heard, and earth, and farthest hell through all
Her regions of despair; the ear of Death
Heard, and the sleep that for so long a night
Press'd on his leaden eyelids, fled; and all
The dead awoke, and all the living changed.

LOVE.

Mysterious, infinite, exhaustless Love
On earth mysterious, and mysterious still
In heaven! sweet chord, that harmonizes all
The harps of Paradise! the spring, the well,
That fills the bowl and banquet of the sky!

But why should I to thee of Love divine?
Who happy, and not eloquent of Love?
Who holy, and, as thou art, pure, and not
A temple where her glory ever dwells,
Where burn her fires, and beams her perfect eye?

Kindred to this, part of this holy flame,
Was youthful love-the sweetest boon of earth.
Hail, Love! first Love, thou word that sums all bliss!
The sparkling cream of all Time's blessedness,
The silken down of happiness complete!
Discerner of the ripest grapes of joy,

She gather'd, and selected with her hand,
All finest relishes, all fairest sights,

All rarest odours, all divinest sounds,

All thoughts, all feelings dearest to the soul;

And brought the holy mixture home, and fill'd

The heart with all superlatives of bliss.

But, who would that expound, which words transcends, Must talk in vain. Behold a meeting scene

Of early love, and thence infer its worth.

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