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TO A BRIDE

FEBRUARY 17, 1846 1

A STILL, Serene, soft day; enough of sun To wreathe the cottage smoke like pinetree snow,

Whiter than those white flowers the bride-maids wore;

Upon the silent boughs the lissom air Rested; and, only when it went, they moved,

Nor more than under linnet springing off. Such was the wedding morn: the joyous Year

Leapt over March and April up to May.
Regent of rising and of ebbing hearts,
Thyself borne on in cool serenity,
All heaven around and bending over
thee,

All earth below and watchful of thy course!

Well hast thou chosen, after long demur To aspirations from more realms than

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Adding as true ones, not untold before, That incense must have fire for its as cent,

Else 'tis inert and can not reach the idol. Youth is the sole equivalent of youth. Enjoy it while it lasts; and last it will; Love can prolong it in despite of Years. 1846.

LYRICS

"Do you remember me? or are you proud?"

Lightly advancing thro' her star-trimm'd crowd,

Ianthe said, and looked into my eyes. "A yes, a yes, to both: for Memory Where you but once have been must ever be,

And at your voice Pride from his throne must rise."

No, my own love of other years!
No, it must never be.

Much rests with you that yet endears,
Alas! but what with me?
Could those bright years o'er me revolve
So gay, o'er you so fair,
The pearl of life we would dissolve

And each the cup might share.
You show that truth can ne'er decay,
Whatever fate befalls;

I, that the myrtle and the bay
Shoot fresh on ruin'd walls.

ONE year ago my path was green,
My footstep light, my brow serene;
Alas! and could it have been so
One year ago?

There is a love that is to last
When the hot days of youth are past:
Such love did a sweet maid bestow
One year ago.

I took a leaflet from her braid
And gave it to another maid.
Love! broken should have been thy bov
One year ago.

YES; I write verses now and then, But blunt and flaccid is my pen, No longer talked of by young men As rather clever :

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Therefore on him no speech! and brief for thee,

Browning! Since Chaucer was alive and hale,

No man hath walked along our roads with step

So active, so inquiring eye, or tongue So varied in discourse. But warmer climes

Give brighter plumage, stronger wing: the breeze

Of Alpine heights thou playest with, borne on

Beyond Sorrento and Amalfi, where The Siren waits thee, singing song for song. 1846.

ON THE HELLENICS1

COME back, ye wandering Muses, come back home,

Ye seem to have forgotten where it lies: Come, let us walk upon the silent sands Of Simois, where deep footmarks show long strides;

Thence we may mount, perhaps, to higher ground,

Where Aphrodite from Athenè won
The golden apple, and from Here too,
And happy Ares shouted far below.

Or would ye rather choose the grassy vale

Where flows Anapos thro' anemones, Hyacinths, and narcissuses, that bend To show their rival beauty in the stream?

Bring with you each her lyre, and each in turn

Temper a graver with a lighter song.

1847.

THRASYMEDES AND EUNOE

WHO will away to Athens with me? who

Loves choral songs and maidens crown'd with flowers,

Unenvious? mount the pinnace; hoist the sail.

I promise ye, as many as are here,

1 Prefixed to the second edition of Landor's Hellenics, 1817. It is here given slightly out of the exact chronological order, that it may stand as an introduction to the chief poems from the Hellenics, those of 1816 as well as those of 1847.

Other poems of Landor's, such as The Death of Artemidora, Cleone to Aspasia, The Shades of Agamemnon and Iphigeneia, etc., though originally published in other collections, and therefore not given here with the Hellenics, were ul timately included by Landor among them.

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From unrinsed barrel the diluted wine Of a low vineyard or a plant ill-pruned, But such as anciently the Ægean isles Pour'd in libation at their solemn feasts: And the same goblets shall ye grasp, embossed

With no vile figures of loose languid boors,

But such as gods have lived with and have led.

The sea smiles bright before us. What white sail

Plays yonder? What pursues it? Like two hawks

Away they fly. Let us away in time To overtake them. Are they menaces We hear? And shall the strong repulse the weak,

Enraged at her defender? Hippias! Art thou the man? "Twas Hippias. He had found

His sister borne from the Cecropian port By Thrasymedes. And reluctantly? Ask, ask the maiden; I have no reply. "Brother! O brother Hippias! O, if love,

If pity, ever touch'd thy breast. forbear! Strike not the brave, the gentle, the be loved,

My Thrasymedes, with his cloak alone Protecting his own head and mine from harm."

"Didst thou not once before," cried Hippias,

Regardless of his sister, hoarse with wrath

At Thrasymedes, “didst not thou, dogeyed,

Dare, as she walk'd up to the Parthenon,
On the most holy of all holy days,
In sight of all the city, dare to kiss
Her maiden cheek?"

"Ay, before all the gods,
Ay, before Pallas, before Artemis,
Ay, before Aphroditè, before Herè,
I dared; and dare again.

Arise, my

spouse! Arise! and let my lips quaff purity From thy fair open brow." The sword was up, And yet he kiss'd her twice. Some God withheld

The arm of Hippias; his proud blood

seeth'd slower

And smote his breast less angrily; he laid [spake thus: His hand on the white shoulder, and

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Piraeus they re-entered, and their ship Drove up the little waves against the quay,

Whence was thrown out a rope from one above,

And Hippias caught it. From the virgin's waist

Her lover dropped his arm, and blushed to think

He had retain'd it there in sight of rude Irreverent men: he led her forth, nor spake.

Hippias walked silent too, until they reached

The mansion of Peisistratos her sire. Serenely in his sternness did the prince Look on them both awhile: they saw not him,

For both had cast their eyes upon the ground.

"Are these the pirates thou hast taken, son ?"

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Pirate of virgin and of princely hearts! Before the people and before the Goddess Thou hadst evinced the madness of thy passion,

And now wouldst bear from home and plenteousness

To poverty and exile this my child." Then shuddered Thrasymedes, and exclaim'd,

"I see my crime; I saw it not before. The daughter of Peisistratos was born Neither for exile nor for poverty, Ah! nor for me!" He would have wept. but one

Might see him, and weep worse. The prince unmoved

Strode on, and said, "To-morrow shall the people,

All who beheld thy trespasses, behold
The justice of Peisistratos, the love

He bears his daughter, and the reverence
In which he holds the highest law of
God."

He spake; and on the morrow they 1846.

were one.

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