Early Poems: The Adieu, Written Under the Impression That the Author Would Soon Die
1.
Adieu, thou Hill! 1 where early joy Spread roses o'er my brow; Where Science seeks each loitering boy With knowledge to endow. Adieu, my youthful friends or foes, Partners of former bliss or woes; No more through Ida's paths we stray; Soon must I share the gloomy cell, Whose ever-slumbering inmates dwell Unconscious of the day.
2.
Adieu, ye hoary Regal Fanes, i Ye spires of Granta's vale, Where Learning robed in sable reigns. And Melancholy pale. Ye comrades of the jovial hour, Ye tenants of the classic bower, On Cama's verdant margin plac'd, Adieu! while memory still is mine, For offerings on Oblivion's shrine, These scenes must be effac'd.
3
Adieu, ye mountains of the clime Where grew my youthful years; Where Loch na Garr in snows sublime His giant summit rears. Why did my childhood wander forth From you, ye regions of the North, With sons of Pride to roam? Why did I quit my Highland cave, Marr's dusky heath, and Dee's clear wave, To seek a Sotheron home?
4
Hall of my Sires! a long farewell - Yet why to thee adieu? Thy vaults will echo back my knell, Thy towers my tomb will view: The faltering tongue which sung thy fall, And former glories of thy Hall, Forgets its wonted simple note - But yet the Lyre retains the strings, And sometimes, on AEolian wings, In dying strains may float.
5.
Fields, which surround yon rustic cot, 2 While yet I linger here, Adieu! you are not now forgot, To retrospection dear. Streamlet! 3 along whose rippling surge My youthful limbs were wont to urge, At noontide heat, their pliant course; Plunging with ardour from the shore, Thy springs will lave these limbs no more, Deprived of active force.
6.
And shall I here forget the scene, Still nearest to my breast? Rocks rise and rivers roll between The spot which passion blest; Yet Mary, 4 all thy beauties seem Fresh as in Love's bewitching dream, To me in smiles display'd; Till slow disease resigns his prey To Death, the parent of decay, Thine image cannot fade.
7.
And thou, my Friend! whose gentle love Yet thrills my bosom's chords, How much thy friendship was above Description's power of words! Still near my breast thy gift 5 I wear ii Which sparkled once with Feeling's tear, Of Love the pure, the sacred gem: Our souls were equal, and our lot In that dear moment quite forgot; Let Pride alone condemn!
8.
All, all is dark and cheerless now! No smile of Love's deceit Can warm my veins with wonted glow, Can bid Life's pulses beat: Not e'en the hope of future fame Can wake my faint, exhausted frame, Or crown with fancied wreaths my head. Mine is a short inglorious race, - To humble in the dust my face, And mingle with the dead.
9.
Oh Fame! thou goddess of my heart; On him who gains thy praise, Pointless must fall the Spectre's dart, Consumed in Glory's blaze; But me she beckons from the earth, My name obscure, unmark'd my birth, My life a short and vulgar dream: Lost in the dull, ignoble crowd, My hopes recline within a shroud, My fate is Lethe's stream.
10.
When I repose beneath the sod, Unheeded in the clay, Where once my playful footsteps trod, Where now my head must lay, 6 The meed of Pity will be shed In dew-drops o'er my narrow bed, By nightly skies, and storms alone; No mortal eye will deign to steep With tears the dark sepulchral deep Which hides a name unknown.
11.
Forget this world, my restless sprite, Turn, turn thy thoughts to Heaven: There must thou soon direct thy flight, If errors are forgiven. To bigots and to sects unknown, Bow down beneath the Almighty's Throne; To Him address thy trembling prayer: He, who is merciful and just, Will not reject a child of dust, Although His meanest care.
12.
Father of Light! to Thee I call; My soul is dark within: Thou who canst mark the sparrow's fall, Avert the death of sin. Thou, who canst guide the wandering star Who calm'st the elemental war, Whose mantle is yon boundless sky, My thoughts, my words, my crimes forgive; And, since I soon must cease to live, Instruct me how to die. iii
1807. First published, 1832.
Footnote 1: Harrow.
Footnote 2: Mrs. Pigot's Cottage.
Footnote 3: The river Grete, at Southwell.
Footnote 4: Mary Chaworth.
Footnote 5: Compare the verses on "The Cornelian," p. 66, and "Pignus Amoris," p. 231.
Footnote 6: See note to "Pignus Amoris," st. 3, l. 3, p. 232.
Footnote i:
' - ye regal Towers'.
'MS. Newstead'.
Footnote ii:
'The gift I wear'.
'MS. Newstead'.
Footnote iii:
'And since I must forbear to live, Instruct me how to die.'
'MS. Newstead'
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- Table of Contents
- Preface to the Poems
- Bibliographical Note to 'Hours of Idleness and Other Early Poems'
- Bibliographical Note to English Bards and Scotch Reviewers
- Early Poems: On Leaving Newstead Abbey
- Early Poems: To E---
- Early Poems: On the Death of a Young Lady, Cousin To the Author, and Very Dear To Him
- Early Poems: To D---
- Early Poems: To Caroline i
- Early Poems: To Caroline 1
- Early Poems: To Emma
- Early Poems: Fragments of School Exercises: From the "Prometheus Vinctus" of Aeschylus
- Early Poems: Lines Written in "Letters of an Italian Nun and an English Gentleman, By J.J. Rousseau, Founded On Facts"
- Early Poems: Answer to the Foregoing, Addressed to Miss ---
- Early Poems: On a Change of Masters At a Great Public School
- Early Poems: Epitaph on a Beloved Friend
- Early Poems: Adrian's Address to His Soul When Dying
- Early Poems: A Fragment
- Early Poems: To Caroline
- Early Poems: To Caroline
- Early Poems: On a Distant View of the Village and School of Harrow On the Hill, 1806
- Early Poems: Thoughts Suggested By a College Examination
- Early Poems: To Mary On Receiving Her Picture
- Early Poems: On the Death of Mr. Fox
- Early Poems: To a Lady Who Presented to the Author a Lock of Hair Braded With His Own, and Appointed a Night in December to Meet Him in the Garden
- Early Poems: To a Beautiful Quaker
- Early Poems: To Lesbia!
- Early Poems: To Woman
- Early Poems: An Occasional Prologue, Delivered By the Author Previous to the Performance of "The Wheel of Fortune" at a Private Theater
- Early Poems: To Eliza
- Early Poems: The Tear
- Early Poems: Reply to Some Verses of J.M.B. Pigot, Esq., On the Cruelty of His Mistress
- Early Poems: Granta. A Medley
- Early Poems: To the Sighing Strephon
- Early Poems: The Cornelian
- Early Poems: To M---
- Early Poems: Lines Addresssed To a Young Lady
- Early Poems: Translation from Catullus "Ad Lesbiam"
- Early Poems: Translation of the Epitaph on Virgil and Tibullus, By Domitius Marsus
- Early Poems: Imitation of Tibullus "Sulpicia Ad Cerinthum"
- Early Poems: Translation From Catullus "Lugete Veneres Cupidinesque (Carm. III)
- Early Poems: Imitated From Catullus - To Ellen
- Early Poems: To M.S.G
- Early Poems: Stanzas To a Lady, With the Poems of Camoens
- Early Poems: To M.S.G. (second poem)
- Early Poems: Translation From Horace
- Early Poems: The First Kiss of Love
- Early Poems: Childish Recollections
- Early Poems: Answer To a Beautiful Poem, Written By Montgomery, Author of "The Wanderer of Switzerland," etc., Entitled "The Common Lot"
- Early Poems: Love's Last Adieu
- Early Poems: Lines Addressed To the Rev. J.T. Becher, On His Advising the Author To Mix More With Society
- Early Poems: Answer To Some Elegant Verses Sent By a Friend To the Author, Complaining That One of His Descriptions Was Rather Too Warmly Drawn
- Early Poems: Elegy On Newstead Abbey
- Early Poems: To George, Earl Delawarr
- Early Poems: Damaetas
- Early Poems: To Marion
- Early Poems: Oscar of Alva
- Early Poems: Translation From Anacreon Ode 1
- Early Poems: Translation From Anacreon Ode 3
- Early Poems: The Episode of Nisus and Euryalus
- Early Poems: Translation From the "Medea" of Euripides L1 627-660
- Early Poems: Lachin Y Gair
- Early Poems: To Romance
- Early Poems: The Death of Calmar and Orla - An Imitation of MacPherson's "Ossian"
- Early Poems: To Edward Noel Long, Esq.
- Early Poems: To a Lady
- Early Poems: When I Roved a Young Highlander
- Early Poems: To the Duke of Dorset
- Early Poems: To the Earl of Clare
- Early Poems: I Would I Were a Careless Child
- Early Poems: Lines Written Beneath an Elm in the Churchyard of Harrow
- Early Poems: Fragment Written Shortly After the Marriage of Miss Chaworth
- Early Poems: Remembrance
- Early Poems: To a Lady Who Presented the Author With the Velvet Band Which Bound Her Tresses
- Early Poems: To a Knot of Ungenerous Critics
- Early Poems: Soliloquy of a Bard in the Country
- Early Poems: L'amitie, Est L'amour Sans Ailes
- Early Poems: The Prayer of Nature
- Early Poems: Translation From Anacreon Ode 5
- Early Poems: Ossian's Address To the Sun in "Carthon"
- Early Poems: Pignus Amoris
- Early Poems: A Woman's Hair
- Early Poems: Stanzas To Jessy
- Early Poems: The Adieu, Written Under the Impression That the Author Would Soon Die
- Early Poems: To ----
- Early Poems: On the Eyes of Miss A--- H---
- Early Poems: To a Vain Lady
- Early Poems: To Anne
- Early Poems: Egotism, a Letter J.T. Becher
- Early Poems: To Anne
- Early Poems: To the Author of a Sonnet Beginning "'Sad Is My Verse,' You Say, 'and Yet No Tear'"
- Early Poems: On Finding a Fan
- Early Poems: Farewell To the Muse
- Early Poems: To an Oak at Newstead
- Early Poems: On Revisiting Harrow
- Early Poems: To My Son
- Early Poems: Queries To Casuists
- Early Poems: Song
- Early Poems: To Harriet
- Early Poems: There Was a Time I Need Not Name
- Early Poems: And Wilt Thou Weep When I Am Low?
- Early Poems: Remind Me Not, Remind Me Not
- Early Poems: To a Youthful Friend
- Early Poems: Lines Inscribed Upon a Cup Formed From a Skull
- Early Poems: Well! Thou Art Happy
- Early Poems: Inscription On the Monument of a Newfoundland Dog
- Early Poems: To a Lady On Being Asked My Reason For Quitting England in the Spring
- Early Poems: Fill the Goblet Again - A Song
- Early Poems: Stanzas to a Lady, On Leaving England
- English Bards and Scotch Reviewers: A Satire
- Hints From Horace
- The Curse of Minerva
- The Waltz
- Sources
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