Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Alciphron: A Fragment. Letter I. by Thomas Moore
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Alciphron: A Fragment. Letter I.

    By Thomas Moore



    FROM ALCIPHRON AT ALEXANDRIA TO CLEON AT ATHENS.


    Well may you wonder at my flight
        From those fair Gardens in whose bowers
    Lingers whate'er of wise and bright,
    Of Beauty's smile or Wisdom's light,
        Is left to grace this world of ours.
    Well may my comrades as they roam
        On such sweet eyes as this inquire
    Why I have left that happy home
        Where all is found that all desire,
        And Time hath wings that never tire:
    Where bliss in all the countless shapes
        That Fancy's self to bliss hath given
    Comes clustering round like roadside grapes
        That woo the traveller's lip at even;
    Where Wisdom flings not joy away--
    As Pallas in the stream they say
    Once flung her flute--but smiling owns
    That woman's lip can send forth tones
    Worth all the music of those spheres
    So many dream of but none hears;
    Where Virtue's self puts on so well
        Her sister Pleasure's smile that, loath
    From either nymph apart to dwell,
        We finish by embracing both.
    Yes, such the place of bliss, I own
    From all whose charms I just have flown;
    And even while thus to thee I write,
        And by the Nile's dark flood recline,
    Fondly, in thought I wing my flight
    Back to those groves and gardens bright,
    And often think by this sweet light
        How lovelily they all must shine;
    Can see that graceful temple throw
        Down the green slope its lengthened shade,
    While on the marble steps below
        There sits some fair Athenian maid,
    Over some favorite volume bending;
        And by her side a youthful sage
    Holds back the ringlets that descending
        Would else o'ershadow all the page.
    But hence such thoughts!--nor let me grieve
    O'er scenes of joy that I but leave,
    As the bird quits awhile its nest
    To come again with livelier zest.

    And now to tell thee--what I fear
    Thou'lt gravely smile at--why I'm here
    Tho' thro' my life's short, sunny dream,
        I've floated without pain or care
    Like a light leaf down pleasure's stream,
        Caught in each sparkling eddy there;
    Tho' never Mirth awaked a strain
    That my heart echoed not again;
    Yet have I felt, when even most gay,
        Sad thoughts--I knew not whence or why--
        Suddenly o'er my spirit fly,
    Like clouds that ere we've time to say
        "How bright the sky is!" shade the sky.
    Sometimes so vague, so undefined
    Were these strange darkenings of my mind--
    "While naught but joy around me beamed
        So causelessly they've come and flown,
    That not of life or earth they seemed,
        But shadows from some world unknown.
    More oft, however, 'twas the thought
        How soon that scene with all its play
        Of life and gladness must decay--
    Those lips I prest, the hands I caught--
    Myself--the crowd that mirth had brought
    Around me--swept like weeds away!

    This thought it was that came to shed
        O'er rapture's hour its worst alloys;
    And close as shade with sunshine wed
        Its sadness with my happiest joys.
    Oh, but for this disheartening voice
        Stealing amid our mirth to say
    That all in which we most rejoice
        Ere night may be the earthworm's prey--
    But for this bitter--only this--
    Full as the world is brimmed with bliss,
    And capable as feels my soul
    Of draining to its dregs the whole,
    I should turn earth to heaven and be,
    If bliss made Gods, a Deity?

    Thou know'st that night--the very last
    That 'mong my Garden friends I past--
    When the School held its feast of mirth
    To celebrate our founder's birth.
    And all that He in dreams but saw
        When he set Pleasure on the throne
    Of this bright world and wrote her law
        In human hearts was felt and known--
    Not in unreal dreams but true,
    Substantial joy as pulse e'er knew--
    By hearts and bosoms, that each felt
    Itself the realm where Pleasure dwelt.

    That night when all our mirth was o'er,
        The minstrels silent, and the feet
    Of the young maidens heard no more--
        So stilly was the time, so sweet,
    And such a calm came o'er that scene,
    Where life and revel late had been--
    Lone as the quiet of some bay
    From which the sea hath ebbed away--
    That still I lingered, lost in thought,
        Gazing upon the stars of night,
    Sad and intent as if I sought
        Some mournful secret in their light;
    And asked them mid that silence why
    Man, glorious man, alone must die
    While they, less wonderful than he,
    Shine on thro' all eternity.

    That night--thou haply may'st forget
        Its loveliness--but 'twas a night
    To make earth's meanest slave regret
        Leaving a world so soft and bright.
    On one side in the dark blue sky
    Lonely and radiant was the eye
    Of Jove himself, while on the other,
    'Mong stars that came out one by one,
    The young moon--like the Roman mother
        Among her living jewels--shone.
    "Oh that from yonder orbs," I thought,
        "Pure and eternal as they are,
    "There could to earth some power be brought,
    "Some charm with their own essence fraught
        "To make man deathless as a star,
    "And open to his vast desires
        "A course, as boundless and sublime
    "As that which waits those comet-fires,
        "That burn and roam throughout all time!"

    While thoughts like these absorbed my mind,
        That weariness which earthly bliss
    However sweet still leaves behind,
        As if to show how earthly 'tis,
    Came lulling o'er me and I laid
        My limbs at that fair statue's base--
    That miracle, which Art hath made
        Of all the choice of Nature's grace--
    To which so oft I've knelt and sworn.
        That could a living maid like her
    Unto this wondering world be born,
        I would myself turn worshipper.

    Sleep came then o'er me--and I seemed
        To be transported far away
    To a bleak desert plain where gleamed
        One single, melancholy ray.
    Throughout that darkness dimly shed
        From a small taper in the hand
    Of one who pale as are the dead
        Before me took his spectral stand,
    And said while awfully a smile
        Came o'er the wanness of his cheek--
    "Go and beside the sacred Nile
        "You'll find the Eternal Life you seek."

    Soon as he spoke these words the hue
    Of death o'er all his features grew
    Like the pale morning when o'er night
    She gains the victory full of light;
    While the small torch he held became
    A glory in his hand whose flame
    Brightened the desert suddenly,
        Even to the far horizon's line--
    Along whose level I could see
        Gardens and groves that seemed to shine
    As if then o'er them freshly played
    A vernal rainbow's rich cascade;
    And music floated every where,
    Circling, as 'twere itself the air,
    And spirits on whose wings the hue
    Of heaven still lingered round me flew,
    Till from all sides such splendors broke,
    That with the excess of light I woke!

    Such was my dream;--and I confess
        Tho' none of all our creedless school
    E'er conned, believed, or reverenced less
        The fables of the priest-led fool
    Who tells us of a soul, a mind,
    Separate and pure within us shrined,
    Which is to live--ah, hope too bright!--
    For ever in yon fields of light;
    Who fondly thinks the guardian eyes
        Of Gods are on him--as if blest
    And blooming in their own blue skies
    The eternal Gods were not too wise
        To let weak man disturb their rest!--
    Tho' thinking of such creeds as thou
        And all our Garden sages think,
    Yet is there something, I allow,
        In dreams like this--a sort of link
    With worlds unseen which from the hour
        I first could lisp my thoughts till now
    Hath mastered me with spell-like power.

    And who can tell, as we're combined
    Of various atoms--some refined,
    Like those that scintillate and play
    In the fixt stars--some gross as they
    That frown in clouds or sleep in clay--
    Who can be sure but 'tis the best
        And brightest atoms of our frame,
        Those most akin to stellar flame,
    That shine out thus, when we're at rest;--
    Even as the stars themselves whose light
    Comes out but in the silent night.
    Or is it that there lurks indeed
    Some truth in Man's prevailing creed
    And that our Guardians from on high
        Come in that pause from toil and sin
    To put the senses' curtain by
        And on the wakeful soul look in!

    Vain thought!--but yet, howe'er it be,
    Dreams more than once have proved to me
    Oracles, truer far than Oak
    Or Dove or Tripod ever spoke.
    And 'twas the words--thou'lt hear and smile--
        The words that phantom seemed to speak--
    "Go and beside the sacred Nile
        "You'll find the Eternal Life you seek"--
    That haunting me by night, by day,
        At length as with the unseen hand
    Of Fate itself urged me away
        From Athens to this Holy Land;
    Where 'mong the secrets still untaught,
        The mysteries that as yet nor sun
    Nor eye hath reached--oh, blessed thought!--
        May sleep this everlasting one.

    Farewell--when to our Garden friends
    Thou talk'st of the wild dream that sends
    The gayest of their school thus far,
    Wandering beneath Canopus' star,
    Tell them that wander where he will
        Or howsoe'er they now condemn
    His vague and vain pursuit he still
        Is worthy of the School and them;--
    Still all their own--nor e'er forgets
        Even while his heart and soul pursue
    The Eternal Light which never sets,
        The many meteor joys that do,
    But seeks them, hails them with delight
    Where'er they meet his longing sight.
    And if his life must wane away
    Like other lives at least the day,
    The hour it lasts shall like a fire
    With incense fed in sweets expire.



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