Perchance that very hand, now pinion'd flat, I need not ask thee if that hand, when arm'd, Thou couldst develope, if that wither'd tongue Might tell us what those sightless orbs have seen, How the world look'd when it was fresh and young, And the great deluge still had left it green!Or was it then so old that history's pages Contain'd no record of its early ages? Still silent!-Incommunicative elf! Art sworn to secrecy? Then keep thy vows! But, prithee, tell us something of thyself,Reveal the secrets of thy prison-house :Since in the world of spirits thou hast slumber'd, What hast thou seen-what strange adventures number'd? Since first thy form was in this box extended, We have, above-ground, seen some strange mutations; The Roman empire has begun and ended, New worlds have risen, we have lost old nations, And countless kings have into dust been humbled, Didst thou not hear the pother o'er thy head, If the tomb's secrets may not be confess'd, A heart hath throbb'd beneath that leathern breast, What was thy name and station, age and race ? Statue of flesh! - Immortal of the dead! Imperishable type of evanescence! Why should this worthless tegument endure, TO THE ALABASTER SARCOPHAGUS, DEPOSITED IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM. THOU alabaster relic! while I hold My hand upon thy sculptured margin thrown, Let me recall the scenes thou couldst unfold, Might'st thou relate the changes thou hast known; For thou wert primitive in thy formation, Launch'd from the Almighty's hand at the creation. Yes-thou wert present when the stars and skies And worlds unnumber'd roll'd into their places; When God from chaos bade the spheres arise, And fix'd the blazing sun upon its basis, And with his finger on the bounds of space Mark'd out each planet's everlasting race. How many thousand ages from thy birth Thou slept'st in darkness it were vain to ask, Till Egypt's sons upheaved thee from the earth, And year by year pursued their patient task, Till thou wert carved and decorated thus, Worthy to be a king's sarcophagus! What time Elijah to the skies ascended, Or David reign'd in holy Palestine, Thebes, from her hundred portals, fill'd the plain, What banners waved, what mighty music swell'd, As armies, priests, and crowds bewail'd in chorus, Their King-their God-their Serapis-their Orus! Thus to thy second quarry did they trust Thee, and the lord of all the nations round, Thus ages roll'd; but their dissolving breath As if it struggled still to be a king; The Persian conqueror o'er Egypt pour'd Music and men of every sound and hue,Priests, archers, eunuchs, concubines, and brutes,Gongs, trumpets, cymbals, dulcimers, and lutes. Then did the fierce Cambyses tear away The ponderous rock that seal'd the sacred tomb; Then did the slowly penetrating ray Redeem thee from long centuries of gloom, And lower'd torches flash'd against thy side, As Asia's king thy blazon'd trophies eyed. Pluck'd from his grave, with sacrilegious taunt, The features of the royal corse they scann'd; Dashing the diadem from his temple gaunt, They tore the sceptre from his graspless hand; And on those fields, where once his will was law, Left him for winds to waste and beasts to gnaw. Some pious Thebans, when the storm was past, But he from whom nor pyramids nor sphynx Can hide its secrecies, Belzoni came; From the tomb's mouth unlink'd the granite links, Gave thee again to light, and life, and fame, And brought thee from the sands and deserts forth, To charm the pallid children of the north! Thou art in London, which, when thou wert new, Was what Thebes is, a wilderness and waste, Where savage beast more savage men pursue; A scene by nature cursed, by man disgraced. Now 'tis the world's metropolis! The high Queen of arms, learning, arts, and luxury! Here, where I hold my hand, 'tis strange to think What other hands, perchance, preceded mine; Others have also stood beside thy brink, And vainly conn'd the moralizing line! Kings, sages, chiefs, that touch'd this stone, like me, Where are ye now ? - Where all must shortly be. All is mutation;-he within this stone Was once the greatest monarch of the hour. His bones are dust, his very name unknown!Go, learn from him the vanity of power; Seek not the frame's corruption to control, But build a lasting mansion for thy soul. MORAL ALCHEMY. THE toils of alchemists, whose vain pursuit Sought to transmute Dross into gold, their secrets and their store Of mystic lore, What to the jibing modern do they seem ? An ignis fatuus chace, a fantasy, a dream! Yet for enlighten'd moral alchemists, There still exists A philosophic stone, whose magic spell Which renovates the soul's decaying health, This secret is reveal'd in every trace Of nature's face, Whose seeming frown invariably tends To smiling ends Transmuting ills into their opposite, And all that shocks the sense to subsequent delight. Secms earth unlovely in her robe of snow ? Then look below, THOMAS MOORE. THOMAS MOORE, who has unquestionably | thread of silk and gold. Much the best of attained to the highest reputation as a lyric poet of all contemporaries, was born in Dublin, on the twenty-eighth of May, 1780, and at the early age of fourteen years, became a student of Trinity College in his native city, where he took his degree in 1799. He then went to London, entered the Middle Temple, and in due time was admitted to the bar. In 1800 he published his translation of "Anacreon," which at once made him famous among the gay and the witty spirits who thronged the court of the Regent. Of this translation it may be said, that while it equals the original in grace and harmony, it unhappily surpasses it in seductiveness and voluptuous license. In the next year it was followed by a volume of amatory poems, under the name of LITTLE, which has been no less celebrated for its lubricity and licentiousness. In 1803 he was appointed Registrar to the Admiralty in Bermuda, and during his absence from England he made a flying visit to the United States, which gave rise to a series of satirical and somewhat bitter Odes and Epistles on society and manners in this country, published on his return to London, in 1806. These were attacked in an article by JEFFREY, and the poet sent the critic a challenge. The parties met, but the police prevented a duel, and the pistols, on examination, were found to contain paper pellets, which the seconds had cautiously substituted for bullets, a circumstance alluded to by BYRON in his "English Bards," in a manner which provoked a remonstrance from Mr. MOORE. The poets however, soon became intimate friends, and continued so till the death of BYRON. In 1811 appeared Mr. MOORE'S "M. P., or the Blue Stocking;" in 1812, "The Twopenny Post Bag, by Thomas Browne the Younger;" in 1813, his "Irish Melodies;" in 1816, his "Sacred Songs," and in the following year, his celebrated oriental romance of "Lalla Rookh," the four tales in which, and the framework which unites them, were compared in the "Edinburgh Review" to four beautiful pearls, joined together by a these tales, and the best of all Mr. MOORE'S longer poems, is "The Fire-Worshippers," which is quoted entire in the following pages. Another volume of humorous sarcasm, entitled "The Fudge Family in Paris," appeared in 1818, and in 1823 his "Loves of the Angels," a poem containing some beautiful passages, but altogether inferior to his earlier productions, and undeserving of comparison with BYRON'S "Heaven and Earth," or CROLY'S "Angel of the World," which are founded on the same subject. Beside these poems, he has written "Fables for the Holy Alliance," "Corruption and Intolerance," "The Skeptic," "The Summer Fete," and others, all of which are included in the edition of his poetical works published by Carey and Hart, in the present year. Mr. MOORE we believe commenced his career as an author with some brilliant but not very powerful political tracts, and he has since produced several prose works, none of which, excepting "The Epicurean," have added to his good reputation. The Life of SHERIDAN is an amusing book; and with such materials as were placed in the hands of his biographer it could not well have been made otherwise. When GEORGE IV, was told that MOORE had murdered SHERIDAN, he exclaimed, "Not so: he only attempted his life." His memoirs of BYRON, which appeared in two quarto volumes in 1830, are alike unworthy the subject and the author; and the burning of some of BYRON's papers, at the request of interested parties, was an act of dishonour toward the great poet, which nothing can justify. The "Life of Captain Rock," and "The Irish Gentleman in Search of Religion," and the "History of Ireland," of which several volumes have been published, would hardly be attributed to the author of "Lalla Rookh," and the "Irish Melodies," were his name not on their title pages. The history of Mr. MOORE is little more than the history of his writings. He is deservedly popular in society for his amiable qualities and fascinating manners; he has epigrammatic turn, which is generally held to excuse some roughness, and to be scarcely compatible with perfect melody of rhythm. shared the intimacy of all the greatest men and writers of an era more prolific in great men and great geniuses than any since that of SHAKSPEARE, and RALEIGH, and SIDNEY; and dividing his time between the quiet charms of domestic ease and the smiles of the most elevated society, he may be pronounced a happy and a fortunate man. As a song writer, he doubtless stands unrivalled. His versification is exquisitely finished, harmonious, and musically toned. The sense is never obviously sacrificed to the sound; on the contrary, In grace, both of thought and diction, in easy fluent wit, in melody, in brilliancy of fancy, in warmth and depth of sentiment, and even in purity and simplicity, when he chooses to be pure and simple, no one is superior to MOORE: but in grandeur of conception, power of thought, and, above all, unity of purpose, and a great aim, he is singularly deficient, and these are necessary to the character, not of a sweet he delights in that species of antithetical and ❘ minstrel, but of a great poet. THE FIRE-WORSHIPPERS. 'T IS moonlight over Oman's sea; Her banks of pearl and palmy isles Bask in the night-beam beauteously, And her blue waters sleep in smiles. 'Tis moonlight in Harmozia's walls, And through her emir's porphyry halls, Where, some hours since, was heard the swell Of trumpet and the clash of zel, Bidding the bright-eyed sun farewell ;The peaceful sun, whom better suits The music of the bulbul's nest, Or the light touch of lover's lutes, To sing him to his golden rest! Nor leaf is stirr'd nor wave is driven ;- Cań hardly win a breath from heaven. To carnage and the Koran given, Engraven on his reeking sword ;- When such a wretch before thee stands Turning the leaves with blood-stain'd hands, And wresting from its page sublime His creed of lust and hate and crime? E'en as those bees of Trebizond, Which, from the sunniest hours that glad With their pure smile the gardens round, Draw venom forth that drives men mad! Never did fierce Arabia send A satrap forth more direly great; Never was Iran doom'd to bend Beneath a yoke of deadlier weight. Her throne had fallen-her pride was crush'dHer sons were willing slaves, nor blush'd In their own land-no more their ownTo crouch beneath a stranger's throne. Her towers, where Mithra once had burn'd, To Moslem shrines-oh shame! were turn'd, Where slaves, converted by the sword, Their mean, apostate worship pour'd, And cursed the faith their sires adored. Yet has she hearts, mid all this ill, O'er all this wreck high buoyant still With hope and vengeance :-hearts that yet, Like gems, in darkness issuing rays To second all such hearts can dare; By the white moonbeam's dazzling power: Should be awake at this sweet hour. And see-where, high above those rocks Upon the turban of a king, Oh what a pure and sacred thing Is beauty, curtain'd from the sight Hid in more chaste obscurity! To lift the veil that shades them o'er!- Beautiful are the maids that glide On summer eves, through Yemen's dales; And brides, as delicate and fair Who, lull'd in cool kiosk or hower, Light as the angel-shapes that bless Where, through some shades of earthly feeling, Religion's soften'd glories shine, Like light through summer foliage stealing, Watching the still and shining deep. In her own land, in happier days. So deem'd at least her thoughtful sire, For pearls, but when the sea's at rest, Hath ever held that pearl the best He finds beneath the stormiest water! Yes-Araby's unrivall'd daughter, Though high that tower, that rock-way rude, There's one who, but to kiss thy cheek, Would climb th' untrodden solitude Of Ararat's tremendous peak, And think its steeps, though dark and dread, Heav'n's path-ways, if to thee they led! E'en now thou seest the flashing spray, That lights his oar's impatient way: E'en now thou hear'st the sudden shock Of his swift bark against the rock, And stretchest down thy arms of snow, As if to lift him from below! Like her to whom, at dead of night, The bridegroom, with his locks of light, Came, in the flush of love and pride, And scaled the terrace of his bride ;When, as she saw him rashly spring, And midway up in danger cling, She flung him down her long black hair, Exclaiming, breathless, "There, love there!" And scarce did manlier nerve uphold The hero Zal in that fond hour, See-light as up their granite steeps And now is in the maiden's chamber. She loves but knows not whom she loves, Alla forbid! 'twas by a moon Some ditty to her soft Kanoon, Alone, at this same watching hour, She first beheld his radiant eyes Gleam through the lattice of the bower, Where nightly now they mix their sighs; And thought some spirit of the air (For what could waft a mortal there?) |