Before the Curfew | Page 2

Oliver Wendell Holmes
degrees there crept?A torpor over me,--in short, I slept.
Loosed from its chain, along the wreck-strown track?Of the dead years my soul goes travelling back;?My ghosts take on their robes of flesh; it seems?Dreaming is life; nay, life less life than dreams,?So real are the shapes that meet my eyes.?They bring no sense of wonder, no surprise,?No hint of other than an earth-born source;?All seems plain daylight, everything of course.
How dim the colors are, how poor and faint?This palette of weak words with which I paint!?Here sit my friends; if I could fix them so?As to my eyes they seem, my page would glow?Like a queen's missal, warm as if the brush?Of Titian or Velasquez brought the flush?Of life into their features. Ay de mi!?If syllables were pigments, you should see?Such breathing portraitures as never man?Found in the Pitti or the Vatican.
Here sits our POET, Laureate, if you will.?Long has he worn the wreath, and wears it still.?Dead? Nay, not so; and yet they say his bust?Looks down on marbles covering royal dust,?Kings by the Grace of God, or Nature's grace;?Dead! No! Alive! I see him in his place,?Full-featured, with the bloom that heaven denies?Her children, pinched by cold New England skies,?Too often, while the nursery's happier few?Win from a summer cloud its roseate hue.?Kind, soft-voiced, gentle, in his eye there shines?The ray serene that filled Evangeline's.?Modest he seems, not shy; content to wait?Amid the noisy clamor of debate?The looked-for moment when a peaceful word?Smooths the rough ripples louder tongues have stirred.?In every tone I mark his tender grace?And all his poems hinted in his face;?What tranquil joy his friendly presence gives!?How could. I think him dead? He lives! He lives!
There, at the table's further end I see?In his old place our Poet's vis-a-vis,?The great PROFESSOR, strong, broad-shouldered, square,?In life's rich noontide, joyous, debonair.?His social hour no leaden care alloys,?His laugh rings loud and mirthful as a boy's,--?That lusty laugh the Puritan forgot,--?What ear has heard it and remembers not??How often, halting at some wide crevasse?Amid the windings of his Alpine pass,?High up the cliffs, the climbing mountaineer,?Listening the far-off avalanche to hear,?Silent, and leaning on his steel-shod staff,?Has heard that cheery voice, that ringing laugh,?From the rude cabin whose nomadic walls?Creep with the moving glacier as it crawls?How does vast Nature lead her living train?In ordered sequence through that spacious brain,?As in the primal hour when Adam named?The new-born tribes that young creation claimed!--?How will her realm be darkened, losing thee,?Her darling, whom we call our AGASSIZ!
But who is he whose massive frame belies?The maiden shyness of his downcast eyes??Who broods in silence till, by questions pressed,?Some answer struggles from his laboring breast??An artist Nature meant to dwell apart,?Locked in his studio with a human heart,?Tracking its eaverned passions to their lair,?And all its throbbing mysteries laying bare.?Count it no marvel that he broods alone?Over the heart he studies,--'t is his own;?So in his page, whatever shape it wear,?The Essex wizard's shadowed self is there,--?The great ROMANCER, hid beneath his veil?Like the stern preacher of his sombre tale;?Virile in strength, yet bashful as a girl,?Prouder than Hester, sensitive as Pearl.
From his mild throng of worshippers released,?Our Concord Delphi sends its chosen priest,?Prophet or poet, mystic, sage, or seer,?By every title always welcome here.?Why that ethereal spirit's frame describe??You know the race-marks of the Brahmin tribe,?The spare, slight form, the sloping shoulders' droop,?The calm, scholastic mien, the clerkly stoop,?The lines of thought the sharpened features wear,?Carved by the edge of keen New England air.?List! for he speaks! As when a king would choose?The jewels for his bride, he might refuse?This diamond for its flaw,--find that less bright?Than those, its fellows, and a pearl less white?Than fits her snowy neck, and yet at last,?The fairest gems are chosen, and made fast?In golden fetters; so, with light delays?He seeks the fittest word to fill his phrase;?Nor vain nor idle his fastidious quest,?His chosen word is sure to prove the best.?Where in the realm of thought, whose air is song,?Does he, the Buddha of the West, belong??He seems a winged Franklin, sweetly wise,?Born to unlock the secrets of the skies;?And which the nobler calling,--if 't is fair?Terrestrial with celestial to compare,--?To guide the storm-cloud's elemental flame,?Or walk the chambers whence the lightning came,?Amidst the sources of its subtile fire,?And steal their effluence for his lips and lyre??If lost at times in vague aerial flights,?None treads with firmer footstep when he lights;?A soaring nature, ballasted with sense,?Wisdom without her wrinkles or pretence,?In every Bible he has faith to read,?And every altar helps to shape his creed.?Ask you what name this prisoned spirit bears?While with ourselves this fleeting breath it shares??Till angels greet him with a sweeter one?In heaven, on earth we call him EMERSON.
I start; I wake; the vision is withdrawn;?Its figures fading like the
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