16. Monks
for another small Album
|
{48}
(With lines on hinges to fit
it.) |
WHY dear Cousin, |
why |
Ask for verses, |
when a poet's |
fount of song is |
dry? |
Or, if aught be |
there, |
Harsh and chill, it |
ill may touch the |
hand of lady |
fair. |
Who can perfumed waters |
bring |
From a convent |
spring? {49} |
"Monks in the olden |
time, |
"They were rhymesters?"— |
they were rhymesters, |
but in Latin |
rhyme. |
Monks in the days of |
old |
Lived in secret, |
in the Church's |
kindly-sheltering |
fold. |
No bland meditators |
they |
Of a courtly |
lay. |
"They had visions |
bright?"— |
they had visions, |
yet not sent in |
slumbers soft and |
light. {50} |
No! a lesson |
stern |
First by vigils, |
fast, and penance |
theirs it was to |
learn. |
This their soul-ennobling |
gain, |
Joys wrought out by |
pain. |
"When from home they |
stirr'd, |
"Sweet their voices?"— |
still, a blessing |
closed their merriest |
word; |
And their gayest |
smile |
Told of musings |
solitary, |
and the hallow'd |
aisle. {51} |
"Songsters?"—hark! they answer! |
round |
Plaintive chantings |
sound! |
Grey his cowlèd |
vest, |
Whose strong heart has |
pledged his service |
to the cloister |
blest. |
Duly garb'd is |
he, |
As the frost-work |
gems the branches |
of yon stately |
tree. |
'Tis a danger-thwarting |
spell, |
And it fits me |
well! |
Oxford.
December, 1829. |
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