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Lines on His Twenty-Third Birthday

Topics: classic

Last evening's huge lax clouds of turbid white     Grew dark and louring, burthened with the rain     Which that long wind monotonous all night     Swept clashing loud through Dreamland's still domain,     Until my spirit in fatigue's despite     Was driven to weary wakefulness again:     With such wild dirge and ceaseless streaming tears     Died out the last of all my ill-used years.     The morn his risen pure and fresh and keen;     Its perfect vault of bright blue heaven spreads bare     Above the earth's wide laughter twinkling green.     The sun, long climbing up with lurid glare     Athwart the storm-rack's rent and hurrying screen,     Leapt forth at dawn to breathe this stainless air;     The strong west wind still streams on full and high,     Inspiring fresher life through earth and sky.     Yon hazeless river flashes silver signs     Of where it flows; how delicate and clear     The distant hills curve far their grey-blue lines,     Steadfast amidst the rushing atmosphere,     With every blade distinct the green grass shines,     Untouched by frost; those old trees dark or sere,     Swaying and soughing in the lifeful dawn,     Have every leaf and twig distinctly drawn.     This day my own particular year has birth;     The general year is very old to-day:     Yet, with what healthful life o'er heaven and earth     The death-bound monarch holdeth steadfast sway!     Not too austere for much of hearty mirth     And energetic pleasure, nor so grey     But that he still can deck himself with flowers;     Would that like his could be my dying hours!     Still dew-pearled fuchsias shine like pendent gems,     While some lie purely on the deep-dark mould     Beneath their glossy leaves and ruddy stems;     The thick chrysanthemums range white and cold;     Of all its wealth of marvellous anadems,     That gleamed amidst their fruits of orange gold     Glowing red-hearted in the Autumn sun,     The passion-flower has still for me kept one.     I pace the garden in this genial morn,     And meditate the dirge of my dead year,-     With even less of grief than sharp self-scorn.     The retrospect in truth brings little cheer;     As if of one long-tired, who stares forlorn     Across flat marshland, barren, gloomy, drear;     Where fields, nor home, nor church, his vision greet     Which he has toiled through with unsteady feet.     He turns; before him, as behind, all round     The pathless waste outstretches flat and bare;     From sullen pools amidst the dark heath-ground     Frogs jar their croakings through the murky air,     Which up that vault of solid sky stone-bound     Heaves huge dense glooms to shut on his despair.     Let him crawl on as he has crawled all day,     Till Night comes down upon his homeless way.     My golden morning hours, which should have brought     Strength, wisdom, faith and love, or hope of all,     Have sunk and dribbled while I heeded not     Into the slush of sloth beyond recall.     O nerveless hands, 0 brain of aimless thought,     O slow dim eyes that never marked their fall     Absorbed in dreams both waking and asleep     Our golden hours for ever lost, now weep.     All lost for ever! and the hours to come,     Poor refuse! but our sole remaining wealth,     So much the likelier thence to share doom!     The brain unused to mark insidious stealth,     Short-sighted eyes long filled with mist and gloom,     Lax hands uncustomed to the grasp of health,     That lost the fight in their best youth, shall these     Victorious prove in languor and disease?     Oh, for the flushed excitement of keen strife!     For mountains, gulfs and torrents in my way,     With peril, anguish, fear and strugglings rife!     For friends and foes, for love and hate in fray,     And not this lone base flat of torpid life!     I fret 'neath gnat-stings, an ignoble prey,     While others with a sword-hilt in their grasp     Have warm rich blood to feed their latest gasp.     Wrathful and dangerous, restless, free, profound,     With fair green islands shining o'er its verge,     The Sea of Life there heaves and roars around.     To pierce its depths, to throb against its surge,     Breasting to gain the Happy Isles! if drowned,     The loser pays; he fought his game; no dirge!     But to be whelmed in torpor at the last,     As one with this dead crag which holds me fast!     Flushed grapes, full-charged with life's delirious wine,     Brush my wan temples, hanging thick about:     Chained fast I cannot reach them, while I pine     To press their very inmost rapture out,     Flooding with fire these dust-dry lips of mine;     Better, wild drunkenness than hectic drought:     And torture breeds new tortures, in the dread     That ere they fall my power to drink be dead.     The prisoner loses other years than yearn     Within the lifeless dungeon crusht and pent:     Late freedom frees dead ashes from their urn;     His torture has become his element.     This Bride of Life for whom I waiting burn     May grow a withered hag ere she relent,     Herself refused then; or our worn-out eld     In bridal chimings have its funeral kneeled.     O pure West wind, strong life-breath of the day,     Inspire my wasted heart with strength and hope!     Sweep thou its grievous doubts and fears away,     Who swept far-scattering down the eastern slope     The brooding rain-clouds massed in dense array     Till this green earth shone laughing to the cope     Of this pure heaven, whose naked form austere     Yet genial glows with sunshine warm and clear.     I hope, I feel that I can yet break free     From this accursed cage wherein I pine;     There comes a vision of the sounding sea,     The all-sustaining, all-intombing brine:     Through want and peril, wretchedness and glee,     Wrestling with lives more coarse and strong than mine,     I yet may woo its love and dare its strife;     By self-dependence earning careless life.     And so attaining strength! The crazy ship,     Frigate or bumboat, slaver, mission ark,     Shall surely in the first squall heel and dip;     The strong may hope to sail its voyage: and, mark,     What of the ends, means, issues of its trip     Knows holy vessel or Brazilian barque?     Through storm and calm it does its best to float;     For what? He knows who steers and rules the boat.     So much more strength, so much more life, I say;     So much more love and thought, more soul and sense: I     We pare our members bit by bit away,     Because they're damning us with foul offence:     Cowards! be strong and force them to obey!     Is virtue but a eunuch's continence?     Napoleon, ev'n, seems nobler than such saint     As eighteen centuries have learned to paint.     Thus Hope is born, pale birth of grim Despair.     Whether the Father Shall his child devour,     Or this poor Babe, maturing strong and fair,     Shall dispossess the parent of his power,     I know not: yet I think that I could dare     A death-stern struggle with the fiercest hour,     Would foolish Wisdom's whirls of dreary thought     But leave my doubt-vexed spirit undistraught.     Meanwhile, then, let me wait and hope, and learn     To curb with galling steel and ruthless hand     These strong and passionate impulses that burn     To sweep me from my post of self-command,     Into the battle raging thick and stern,     Into the desert's freedom vast and grand:     That horseman proves full strength, firm skill indeed,     Who holdeth statue-calm his savage steed.

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"Last evening's huge lax clouds of turbid white..."

"Lines on His Twenty-Third Birthday" is a quintessential example of James Thomson - (Bysshe Vanolis)'s signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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