Past, while she looked at him with meaning meek, Detaining him, her fingers lank and weak Played with their hold; then, letting him depart, "Mourn not for her; for what hath life to give That should detain her ready spirit here? "She hath passed away, and on her lips a smile The reason, who believed that she had sight When, lifting up her dying arms, she said, 'I come,' a ray from heaven upon her face was shed?" I might exhibit yet another phase of Southey's poetry in his humorous pieces. No man has better shown that one trait of genius, the carrying forward the feelings of childhood into the powers of manhood: "My days have been the days of joy, And all my paths are paths of pleasantness; Doth never know an ebb of cheerfulness. Time, which matures the intellectual part, Hath tinged my hairs with grey, but left untouched my heart." This natural and cultivated cheerfulness 'has vented itself in his playful poetry, to relieve his own exuberant feelings and to gladden his happy household group. There is something exceedingly fine in hearing him at one time uttering strains that sound from Arabia, or Gothic Spain, or the wilds of America, or from the magic supernatural caverns under the night of the ocean, -at another time sounding one of those tremendous imprecations on the head of Bonaparte,—and then to find him writing, from the fulness of a father's heart, poetic stories for his children. This he deemed part of his vocation; for, as he sings in one of his sportive lyrics: "I am laureate No man ever clung with deeper or manlier devotion to his household gods. For his children's sake, and for the sake of his own moral nature, he ever kept the young heart alive within him. There was wisdom in this, as he has shown in the plea that he has appended to one of his wild ballads : "I told my tale of the Holy Thumb, That split the dragon asunder; And my daughters made great eyes as they heard, "With listening lips and looks intent, There sate an eager boy, Who shouted sometimes and clapt his hands, And could not sit still for joy. "But when I looked at my mistress' face, It was all too grave the while, And when I ceased, methought there was more Of reproof than of praise in her smile. That smile I read aright, for thus, Reprovingly, said she : 'Such tales are meet for youthful ears, From thee far rather would I hear "Nay, mistress mine,' I made reply; 'The autumn hath its flowers, Nor ever is the sky more gay Than in its evening hours. That sense which held me back in youth Nor marvel you if I prefer Of playful themes to sing: The October grove hath brighter tints Why should I seek to call forth tears? "Enough of foresight sad, too much Of retrospect, have I; And well for me that I sometimes Can put those feelings by. "From public ills and thoughts that else That I can gain some intervals For healthful, hopeful mirth."" It only remains for me to show that that spirit of mirth was healthful,—a help to his moral strength, and consistent with a profound spirit of meditation. Let us turn, therefore, to the sublime closing strains of the most spiritual of his lyrical poems,—the noble ode on the portrait of Bishop Heber. They had been friends; and, when India's saintly bishop was no longer upon the earth, Southey's heart was strongly stirred as he gazed upon his portrait : "Hadst thou revisited thy native land, Mortality, and Time, And Change, must needs have made Our meeting mournful. Happy he Hath chilled his faculties Or sorrow reached him in his heart of hearts! Most happy if he leave in his good name "Yes, to the Christian, to the heathen world, Heber, thou art not dead,-thou canst not die Nor can I think of thee as lost. A little portion of this little isle At first divided us; then half the globe: The rending of a veil ! Oh, when that leaf shall fall, That shell be burst, that veil be rent, may then My spirit be with thine!" |