| Elegiac sonnets. Volume 1 of 2
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[Note:] ELEGY. This elegy is written on the supposition that an indigent young woman had been address by the son of a wealthy yeoman, who resenting his attachment, had driven him from home, and compelled him to have recourse for subsistence to the occupation of a pilot, in which, in attempting to save a vessel in distress, he perished. The father dying, a tomb is supposed to be erected to his memory in the church-yard mentioned in Sonnet the 44th. And while a test is gathering, the unfortunate young woman comes thither; and courting the same death as had robbed her of her lover, she awaits its violence, and is at length overwhelmed by the waves. |
'DARK gathering clouds involve the threatening skies,
'The sea heaves conscious of the impending gloom,
'Deep, hollow murmurs from the cliffs arise;
'They come the Spirits of the Tempest come!
'Oh! may such terrors mark the approaching night
'As reign'd on that these streaming eyes deplore!
'Flash, ye red fires of heaven, with fatal light,
'And with conflicting winds, ye waters roar!
'Loud and more loud, ye foaming billows, burst!
'Ye warring element, more fiercely rave!
'Till the wide waves o'erwhelm the spot accurst,
"Where ruthless Avarice finds a quiet grave!"
64
Thus with clasp'd hands, wild looks, and streaming hair,
While shrieks of horror broke her trembling speech,
A wretched maid the victim of despair,
Survey'd the threatening storm and desart beech:
Then to the tomb where now the father slept
Whose rugged nature bade her sorrows flow,
Frantic she turn'd and beat her breast and wept,
Invoking vengeance on the dust below.
'Lo! rising there above each humbler heap,
'Yon cypher'd stones his son remorseless to the deep,
'While I, his living victim, curse my fate.
'Oh! my lost love! no tomb is plac'd for thee,
'That may to strangers eyes thy worth impart;
'Thou hast no grave, but in the stormy sea,
'And no memorial but this breaking heart.
65
'Forth to the world, a widow'd wanderer driven,
'I pour to winds and waves the unheeded tear,
'Try with vain effort to submit to heaven,
'And fruitless call on him "who cannot hear." [Note:] ELEGY. VERSE 8. LINE 4. "And fruitless calls on him who cannot hear." "I fruitless mourn to him who cannot hear, "And weep the more because I weep in vain." Gray's exquisite Sonnet; in reading which it is impossible to regret that he wrote only one.
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'Oh! might I fondly clasp him once again,
'While o'er my head the infuriate billows pour,
'Forget in death this agonizing pain,
'And feel his father's cruelty no more!
'Part, raging waters part, and shew beneath,
'In your dread caves, his pale and mangled form;
'Now, while the demons of despair and death
'Ride on the blast, and urge the howling storm!
'Lo! by the lightning's momentary blaze,
'I see him rise the whitening waves above,
'No longer such as when in happier days
'He gave the enchanted hours to me and love.
66
'Such, as when daring the enchased sea,
'And courting dangerous toil, he often said,
'That every peril, one soft smile from me,
'One sigh of speehless tenderness o'erpaid.
'But dead, disfigu'rd, while between the roar
'Of the loud waves his accents pierce mine ear,
'And seem to say Ah! wretch, delay no more,
But come, unhappy mourner meet me here.
'Yet, powerful fancy, bid the phantom stay,
'Still let me hear him! 'Tis already past;
'Along the waves his shadow glides away,
'I lose his voice amid the deafening blast.
'Ah! wild illusion, born of frantic pain!
'He hears not, comes not from his watery bed;
'My tears, my anguish, my despair are vain,
'The insatiate ocean gives not up its dead.
67
' 'Tis not his voice! Hark! the deep thunders roll;
'Upheaves the ground; the rocky barriers fail;
'Approach, ye horrors that delight my soul,
'Despair, and Death, and Desolation, hail!'
The ocean hears The embodied water come
Rise o'er the land, and with resistless sweep
Tear from its base the proud aggressor's tomb,
And bear the injur'd to eternal sleep!
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