IN THE FRITH OF CLYDE, AILSA CRAG.
(DURING AN ECLIPSE OF THE SUN, JULY, 17.)
SINCE risen from ocean, ocean to defy, Appeared the Crag of Ailsa, ne'er did morn With gleaming lights more gracefully adorn His sides, or wreathe with mist his forehead high : Now, faintly darkening with the sun's eclipse, Still is he seen, in lone sublimity,
Towering above the sea and little ships; For dwarfs the tallest seem while sailing by, Each for her haven; with her freight of Care. Pleasure, or Grief, and Toil that seldom looks Into the secret of to-morrow's fare;
Though poor, yet rich, without the wealth of books, Or aught that watchful Love to Nature owes
For her mute Powers, fix'd Forms, or transient Shows.
ARRAN! a single-crested Teneriffe,
A St. Helena next-in shape and hue. Varying her crowded peaks and ridges blue: Who but must covet a cloud-seat, or skiff Built for the air, or wingèd Hippogriff? That he might fly, where no one could pursue, From this dull Monster and her sooty crew; And, as a God, light on thy topmost cliff. Impotent wish! which reason would despise If the mind knew no union of extremes,
No natural bond between the boldest schemes Ambition frames, and heart-humilities. Beneath stern mountains many a soft vale lies. And lofty springs give birth to lowly streams.
ON REVISITING DUNOLLY CASTLE.
[See former series, p. 157.]
THE captive Bird was gone ;-to cliff or moor Perchance had flown, delivered by the storm; Or he had pined, and sunk to feed the worm: Him found we not: but, climbing a tall tower, There saw, impaved with rude fidelity
Of art mosaic, in a roofless floor,
An Eagle with stretched wings, but beamless eye- An Eagle that could neither wail nor soar. Effigy of the Vanished-(shall I dare
To call thee so?) or symbol of fierce deeds And of the towering courage which past times Rejoiced in-take, whate'er thou be, a share, Not undeserved, of the memorial rhymes That animate my way where'er it leads!
NOT to the clouds, not to the cliff, he flew ; But when a storm, on sea or mountain bred, Came and delivered him, alone he sped Into the castle-dungeon's darkest mew. Now, near his master's house in open view He dwells, and hears indignant tempests howl, Kennelled and chained. Ye tame domestic fowl, Beware of him! Thou, saucy cockatoo,
Look to thy plumage and thy life!—The roe, Fleet as the west wind, is for him no quarry; Balanced in ether he will never tarry,
Eyeing the sea's blue depths. Poor Bird! even so Doth man of brother man a creature make
That clings to slavery for its own sad sake.
WE saw, but surely, in the motley crowd, Not One of us has felt the far-famed sight; How could we feel it? each the other's blight, Hurried and hurrying, volatile and loud. O for those motions only that invite The Ghost of Fingal to his tuneful Cave By the breeze entered, and wave after wave Softly embosoming the timid light!
And by one Votary who at will might stand Gazing and take into his mind and heart, With undistracted reverence, the effect Of those proportions where the almighty hand That made the worlds, the sovereign Architect, Has deigned to work as if with human Art!
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