The Fountain (AN INTRODUCTION TO THE SONNETS) Hush, let the fountain murmur dim Melodious secrets; stir no limb, But lie along the marge and wait, Till deep and pregnant as with fate, Fine as a star-beam, crystal-clear, Each ripple grows upon the ear. This is that fountain seldom seen By mortal wanderer,--Hippocrene,-- Where the virgins three times three, Thy singing brood, Mnemosyne, Loosen’d the girdle, and with grave Pure joy their faultless bodies gave To sacred pleasure of the wave. Listen! the lapsing waters tell The urgence uncontrollable Which makes the trouble of their breast, And bears them onward with no rest To ampler skies and some grey plain Sad with the tumbling of the main. But see, a sidelong eddy slips Back into the soft eclipse Of day, while careless fate allows, Darkling beneath still olive boughs; Then with chuckle liquid sweet Coils within its shy retreat; This is mine, no wave of might, But pure and live with glimmering light; I dare not follow that broad flood Of Poesy, whose lustihood Nourishes mighty lands, and makes Resounding music for their sakes; I lie beside the well-head clear With musing joy, with tender fear, And choose for half a day to lean Thus on my elbow where the green Margin-grass and silver-white Starry buds, the wind’s delight, Thirsting steer, nor goat-hoof rude Of the branch-sundering Satyr brood Has ever pashed; now, now, I stoop, And in hand-hollow dare to scoop This scantling from the delicate stream; It lies as quiet as a dream, And lustrous in my curvèd hand. Were it a crime if this were drain’d By lips which met the noonday blue Fiery and emptied of its dew? Crown me with small white marish-flowers! To the good Dæmon, and the Powers Of this fair haunt I offer up In unprofanèd lily-cup Libations; still remains for me A bird’s drink of clear Poesy; Yet not as light bird comes and dips A pert bill, but with reverent lips I drain this slender trembling tide; O sweet the coolness at my side, And, lying back, to slowly pry For spaces of the upper sky Radiant ’twixt woven olive leaves; And, last, while some fair show deceives The closing eyes, to find a sleep As full of healing and as deep As on toil-worn Odysseus lay Surge-swept to his Ionian bay. |
English Poetry - http://eng-poetry.ru/english/index.php. E-mail eng-poetry.ru@yandex.ru |