Skip to content
Linespedia

The Lord of the Castle of Indolence

Topics: classic

I.     Nor did we lack our own right royal king,     The glory of our peaceful realm and race.     By no long years of restless travailing,     By no fierce wars or intrigues bland and base,     Did he attain his superlofty place;     But one fair day he lounging to the throne     Reclined thereon with such possessing grace     That all could see it was in sooth his own,     That it for him was fit and he for it alone. II.     He there reclined as lilies on a river,     All cool in sunfire, float in buoyant rest;     He stirred as flowers that in the sweet south quiver;     He moved as swans move on a lakes calm breast,     Or clouds slow gliding in the golden west;     He thought as birds may think when mid the trees     Their joy showers music oer the brood-filled nest;     He swayed us all with ever placid ease     As sways the throned moon her world-wide wandering seas. III.     Look, as within some fair and princely hall     The marble statue of a god may rest,     Admired in silent reverence by all;     Soothing the weary brain and anguished breast,     By lifes sore burthens all-too-much oppressed,     With visions of tranquillity supreme;     So, self-sufficing, grand and bland and blest,     He dwelt enthroned, and whoso gazed did seem     Endowed with death-calm life in long unwistful dream. IV.     While others fumed and schemed and toiled in vain     To mould the world according to their mood,     He did by might of perfect faith refrain     From any part in such disturbance rude.     The world, he said, indeed is very good,     Its Maker surely wiser far than we;     Feed soul and flesh upon its bounteous food,     Nor fret because of ill; All-good is He,     And worketh not in years but in Eternity. V.     How men will strain to row against the tide,     Which yet must sweep them down in its career!     Or if some win their way and crown their pride,     What do they win? the desert wild and drear,     The savage rocks, the icy wastes austere,     Wherefrom the rivers turbid rills downflow     But he upon the waters broad and clear,     In harmony with all the winds that blow,     Mid cities, fields and farms, went drifting to and fro. VI.     The king with constant heed must rule his realm,     The soldier faint and starve in marches long,     The sailor guide with sleepless care his helm,     The poet from sick languors soar in song:     But he alone amidst the troubled throng     In restful ease diffused beneficence;     Most like a mid-year noontide rich and strong,     That fills the earth with fruitful life intense,     And yet doth trance it all in sweetest indolence. VII.     When summer reigns the joyous leaves and flowers     Steal imperceptibly upon the tree;     So stole upon him all his bounteous hours,     So passive to their influence seemed he,     So clothed they him with joy and majesty;     Basking in ripest summer all his time,     We blessed his shade and sang him songs of glee;     The dew and sunbeams fed his perfect prime,     And rooted broad and deep he broadly towered sublime. VIII.     Thus could he laugh those great and generous laughs     Which made us love ourselves, the world, and him;     And while they rang we felt as one who quaffs     Some potent wine-cup dowered to the brim,     And straightway all things seem to reel and swim,     Suns, moons, earth, stars sweep through the vast profound,     Wrapt in a golden mist-light warm and dim,     Rolled in a volume of triumphant sound;     So in that laughters joy the whole world carolled round. IX.     The sea, the sky, wood, mountain, stream and plain,     Our whole fair world did serve him and adorn,     Most like some casual robe which he might deign     To use when kinglier vesture was not worn.     Was all its being by his soul upborne,     That it should render homage so complete?     The day and night, the even and the morn,     Seemed ever circling grateful round his feet,     With Thee, through Thee we live this rich life pure and sweet! X.     For while he loved our broad world beautiful,     His placid wisdom penetrated it,     And found the lovely words but poor and dull     Beside the secret splendours they transmit,     The Heavenly things in earthly symbols writ:     He knew the blood-red sweetness of the vine,     Yet did not therefore at the revel sit;     But straining out the very wine of wine,     Lived calm and pure and glad in drunkenness divine. XI.     Without an effort the imperial sun     With ever ample life of light doth feed     The spheres revolving round it every one:     So all his heart and soul and thought and deed     Flowed freely forth for every brothers need;     He knew no difference between good and ill,     But as the sun doth nourish flower and weed     With self-same bounty, he too ever still     Lived blessing all alike with equal loving will. XII.     The all-bestowing sun is clothed with splendour,     The all-supporting sun doth reign supreme;     So must eternal justice ever render     Each unsought payment to its last extreme:     Thus he most rich in others joy did seem,     And reigned by servitude all-effortless;     For heaven and earth must vanish like a dream     Ere such a soul divine can know distress,     Whom all the laws of Life conspire to love and bless.

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"I...."

Exploring the themes of classic, James Thomson - (Bysshe Vanolis) delivers a powerful performance in "The Lord of the Castle of Indolence"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

Classified Tags

Related lines

"I saw thee once, I see thee now;     Thy pure young face, thy noble mien,     Thy truthful eyes, thy radiant brow;     All childlike, lovely, a"

"Last evening's huge lax clouds of turbid white     Grew dark and louring, burthened with the rain     Which that long wind monotonous all night"

"I.     What precious thing are you making fast     In all these silken lines?     And where and to whom will it go at last?     Such subtle knots"

"Sleepless himself to give to others sleep.     He giveth His beloved sleep.     I heard the sounding of the midnight hour;     The others one"

"Here morning in the ploughman's songs is met     Ere yet one footstep shows in all the sky,     And twilight in the east, a doubt as yet,     S"

"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Continue Reading

"I saw thee once, I see thee now;     Thy pure youn..."

Weekly Poetic Insight

Join our literary Sanctuary

Get the most inspiring lines, poetic analysis, and secret shayaris delivered to your inbox every Sunday.