Myth and Romance eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 64 pages of information about Myth and Romance.

Myth and Romance eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 64 pages of information about Myth and Romance.

Music

Thou, oh, thou! 
Thou of the chorded shell and golden plectrum! thou
Of the dark eyes and pale pacific brow! 
Music, who by the plangent waves,
Or in the echoing night of labyrinthine caves,
Or on God’s mountains, lonely as the stars,
Touchest reverberant bars
Of immemorial sorrow and amaze;—­
Keeping regret and memory awake,
And all the immortal ache
Of love that leans upon the past’s sweet days
In retrospection!—­now, oh, now,
Interpreter and heart-physician, thou,
Who gazest on the heaven and the hell
Of life, and singest each as well,
Touch with thy all-mellifluous finger-tips,
Or thy melodious lips,
This sickness named my soul,
Making it whole,
As is an echo of a chord,
Or some symphonic word,
Or sweet vibrating sigh,
That deep, resurgent still doth rise and die
On thy voluminous roll;
Part of the beauty and the mystery
That axles Earth with song; and as a slave,
Swings it around and ’round on each sonorous pole,
’Mid spheric harmony,
And choral majesty,
And diapasoning of wind and wave;
And speeds it on its far elliptic way
’Mid vasty anthemings of night and day.—­
O cosmic cry
Of two eternities, wherein we see
The phantasms, Death and Life,
At endless strife
Above the silence of a monster grave.

Jotunheim

I

Beyond the Northern Lights, in regions haunted
Of twilight, where the world is glacier planted,
And pale as Loki in his cavern when
The serpent’s slaver burns him to the bones,
I saw the phantasms of gigantic men,
The prototypes of vastness, quarrying stones;
Great blocks of winter, glittering with the morn’s
And evening’s colors,—­wild prismatic tones
Of boreal beauty.—­Like the three gray Norns,
Silence and solitude and terror loomed
Around them where they labored.  Walls arose,
Vast as the Andes when creation boomed
Insurgent fire; and through the rushing snows
Enormous battlements of tremendous ice,
Bastioned and turreted, I saw arise.

II

But who can sing the workmanship gigantic
  That reared within its coruscating dome
The roaring fountain, hurling an Atlantic
  Of streaming ice that flashed with flame and foam? 
An opal spirit, various and many formed,—­
In whose clear heart reverberant fire stormed,—­
  Seemed its inhabitant; and through pale halls,
      And deep diaphanous walls,
      And corridors of whiteness. 
      Auroral colors swarmed,
      As rosy-flickering stains,
Or lambent green, or gold, or crimson, warmed
The pulsing crystal of the spirit’s veins
      With ever-changing brightness. 
And through the Arctic night there went a voice,
As if the ancient Earth cried out, “Rejoice! 
      My heart is full of lightness!”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Myth and Romance from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.