And softly thus replied: Armida, cease; Lull'd be the tempest of thy soul to peace. On thee no insult, scorn, dishonour, wait; My aid shall give thee back thy kingly state; In me a friend, a pledged protector know, Thy champion and thy servant, not thy foe. If to believe my tongue thy heart denies, Look up, and read Truth's language in mine eyes. That crown which glitter'd on thy father's brow, I swear, is thine: And oh! would Heaven allow Its saving grace, and with some kindly ray Purge from thine eye the Pagan mist away! Then in all Asia's realms no female name Should match thy princely splendour or thy fame.' So spoke the youth; and with entreaties kind, Tears such as heroes weep, and sighs, he join'd. As yields the flaky snow, and melts away, Warm'd by the tepid breeze, or solar ray, So ceased Armida's wrath, at once repress'd, And softer passions woke within her breast. 'Behold thy slave; thy will my law shall be,' She said; I rest my destinies on thee.'
FROM THE ITALIAN OF TASSO.
DAMES, that in the dazzling glow Of your youth and beauty go; Ye who, in your strength, defy Love with all his archery; Ye who stand unconquer'd still, Conquering others as ye will—
Ye shall bend at last before The iron sceptre of my power.
Mine shall be your glories then,
Mine the triumphs of your train, Mine the trophy and the crown, Mine the hearts which ye have won; And your beauty's waning ray Shall wax feeble and decay;
And your souls too proudly soaring, To see the prostrate world adoring. Time, imperial Time, am I;
Time, your lord and enemy,
Time, whose passing wing can blight, With the shadow of its flight,
More than Love in all his pride,
With his thousands by his side.
While I speak the moments fly, And my spirit silently
Creeps into your sparkling eyes, And amidst your tresses lies- Here the wreathed knots untwining, There bedimming beauty's shining, Blunting all the piercing darts Which the amorous eye imparts, And wearing loveliness away To crumble with its kindred clay.
On I fly; I speed away,
On for ever and for aye- But, alas! ye take no heed To the swiftness of my speed, Bearing like a mighty river, In its downward course for ever,
All your gay and glittering throng, Honours, titles, names along, Mortal hopes and mortal pride, With the stillness of its tide.
Soon shall come that fatal hour When, beneath my arm of power, Lowly shall ye bend the knee. Soon shall Love the palace flee, Where he sits enthroned on high In the lustre of your eye; And their victor standard there Age and chill Reserve shall rear.
Soon, like captives, shall ye learn Ways less wild and laws more stern; Gone shall be your smiling glances, Hush'd your carols and your dances; And your golden robes of pride All too soon be laid aside,
For the vesture gray and sere, Which my humbled captives wear.
And I now proclaim your fate, That reflecting ere too late, How when youthful years are gone, Hoary ills come hasting on, Ye may stoop your pride of soul, Holding earth in strong control, Deeming that the world contains None deserving of your chains. Bend ye then to Reason's sway, Go where Pity points the way; While with wing unflagging 1 Keep my course eternally.
Days and nights, and years, and ye, My swift-winged family,
Whom the All-creating Hand
Framed ere earth itself was plann'd,- Up, and still untiring hold
Your triumphant course of old; And still your rapid cars be driven
O'er the boundless paths of heaven.
ODE TO THE FOUNTAIN OF VALCHIUSA.
FROM THE ITALIAN OF PETRARCH.
YE clear and sparkling streams! (Warm'd by the sunny beams)
Through whose transparent crystal Laura play'd; Ye boughs, that deck the grove,
Where Spring her chaplets wove, While Laura lay beneath the quivering shade;
Sweet herbs! and blushing flowers!
That crown yon vernal bowers,
For ever fatal, yet for ever dear; And ye, that heard my sighs When first she charm'd my eyes, Soft-breathing gales! my dying accents hear.
If Heaven has fix'd my doom, That Love must quite consume
My bursting heart, and close my eyes in death; Ah! grant this slight request-
That here my urn may rest,
When to its mansion flies my vital breath.
This pleasing hope will smooth My anxious mind, and soothe The pangs of that inevitable hour; My spirit will not grieve
Her mortal veil to leave
In these calm shades, and this enchanting bower.
Haply the guilty maid,
Through yon accustomed glade,
To my sad tomb will take her lonely way; Where first her beauty's light
O'erpower'd my dazzled sight, When love on this fair border bade me stray.
There, sorrowing, shall she see Beneath an aged tree,
Her true but hapless lover's lowly bier; Too late her tender sighs
Shall melt the pitying skies,
And her soft veil shall hide the gushing tear.
O well remember'd day,
When on yon bank she lay, Meek in her pride and in her rigour mild; The young and blooming flowers,
Falling in fragrant showers,
Shone on her neck and on her bosom smiled:
Some on her mantle hung,
Some in her locks were strung, Like orient gems in rings of flaming gold; Some, in a spicy cloud
Descending, call'd aloud,
'Here Love and Youth the reins of empire hold.'
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