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THE QUADROON.

17

Live not the stars and mountains? Are the waves
Without a spirit? Are the dropping caves
Without a feeling in their silent tears?

No, no; they woo and clasp us to their spheres,
Dissolve this clog and clod of clay before

Its hour, and merge our soul in the great shore.
Strip off this fond and false identity !—
Who thinks of self, when gazing on the sky?
And who, though gazing lower, ever thought,
In the young moments ere the heart is taught
Time's lesson, of man's baseness or his own?
All nature is his realm, and love his throne.

Lord Byron.

THE QUADROON.

SAY they that all beauty lies
In the paler maiden's hue ?
Say they that all softness flies,

Save from eyes of April blue?
Arise thou, like a night in June,

Beautiful Quadroon !

O

18

THE QUADROON.

Come, all dark and bright, as skies
With the tender starlight hung!
Loose the love from out thine eyes!
Loose the angel from thy tongue!
Let them hear heaven's own sweet tune,
Beautiful Quadroon!

Tell them-Beauty (born above)
From no shade nor hue doth fly:
All she asks is mind, is love;
And both upon thine aspect lie
(Like the light upon the moon),
Beautiful Quadroon !

Barry Cornwall.

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Lo, we are side by side!-one dark arm furls
Around me like a serpent warm and bare ;
The other, lifted 'mid a gleam of pearls,
Holds a full golden goblet in the air:
Her face is shining through her cloudy curls
With light that makes me drunken unaware,
And with my chin upon my breast I smile
Upon her, darkening inward all the while.

And thro' the chamber curtains, backward roll'd
By spicy winds that fan my fever'd head,
I see a sandy flat slope yellow as gold

To the brown banks of Nilus wrinkling red In the slow sunset; and mine eyes behold

The West, low down beyond the river's bed Grow sullen, ribb'd with many a brazen bar Under the white smile of the Cyprian star.

20

ANTONY IN ARMS.

A bitter Roman vision floateth black

Before me, in my dizzy brain's despite ; The Roman armour brindles on my back,

My swelling nostrils drink the fumes of fight: But then, she smiles upon me !—and I lack The warrior will that frowns on lewd delight, And, passionately proud and desolate,

I smile an answer to the joy I hate.

Joy coming uninvoked, asleep, awake,

Makes sunshine on the grave of buried powers; Ofttimes I wholly loathe her for the sake

Of manhood slipt away in easeful hours :
But from her lips mild words and kisses break,
Till I am like a ruin mock'd with flowers;
I think of Honour's face-then turn to hers-
Dark, like the splendid shame that she confers.

Lo, how her dark arm holds me !—I am bound
By the soft touch of fingers light as leaves :
I drag my face aside, but at the sound

Of her low voice I turn-and she perceives
The cloud of Rome upon my face, and round

My neck she twines her odorous arms and grieves, Shedding upon a heart as soft as they

Tears 'tis a hero's task to kiss away.

ANTONY IN ARMS.

21

And then she loosens from me, trembling still
Like a bright throbbing robe, and bids me "go"!—
When pearly tears her drooping eyelids fill,
And her swart beauty whitens into snow;
And lost to use of life and hope and will,

I gaze upon her with a warrior's woe,
And turn, and watch her sidelong in annoy-
Then snatch her to me, flush'd with shame and joy !

Once more, O Rome! I would be son of thine-
This constant prayer my chain'd soul ever saith—
I thirst for honourable end-I pine

Not thus to kiss away my mortal breath.
But comfort such as this may not be mine-
I cannot even die a Roman death.
I seek a Roman's grave, a Roman's rest-
But, dying I would die upon her breast!

Robert Buchanan.

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