Poetry Explorer- Classic Contemporary Poetry, NOON, by ANNE BATTEN CRISTALL



Poetry Explorer

Classic and Contemporary Poetry

NOON, by                    
First Line: The sun had thrown its noontide ray
Last Line: Bright blossom of a future ripening flame!
Subject(s): Noon


LYSANDER.



THE sun had thrown its noontide ray
Amid the flowers, and scorched the plains,
Which panted for refreshing rains;
While gaudy flies their golden wings display,
And bees culled sweets to chear a wintry day:
Each beam that darted down
Chased lingering shades,
Through the thick umbrage of the trees pervades,
And universal splendour shed around:
The slippery grass, burnt brown with heat,
Unkindly scorched the traveller's feet.


And now, oppressed,
While every creature languid hied to rest,
Amid the blaze LYSANDER bounds along,
Bold as a lion, scorched by many a clime;
Far off was heard the echoes of his song,
Responsive to his clear and artless rhyme:
He seeks no shade, nor grotto's cool retreat,
But on, amidst the furzy heath, he pressed;
The heart's warm passions through his pulses beat,
And native fire inspires his manly breast.
He seeks the craggy shore which ocean laves,
And, seated on a rock, surveys the swelling waves:
The eminence th' horizon's scope commands,
The plains surrounding, and the burning strands.
O'er the wild scene he threw a happy look,
Compares the present pleasure with the past;
Gladly he turns each page of Nature's book,
And prays the freedom of his soul may last.
He rolled his eyes
Across the seas;
Now glancing o'er the glassy waves,
Now mounting to the skies,
The immortal prize
Of valiant souls who find deep watery graves.


Thus as he sat, by strong reflection bound,
Up the rough rock ascends a sound,
Which piercingly pervades his ears;
It seemed the frantic cry of woe,
Which struggling groaned, without the aid of tears.
The sounds like lightening reached his heart; and flushed
With quick alarm he made no longer stay,
Ardently down the craggy steep he rushed,
Rough heights he leaped, impatient of delay,
And towards the sufferer bent his eager way;
Till by the sea he reached some rocky caves,
Lashed by the loud-resounding waves.


There a wild female rent her golden hair,
With raging passions blind;
Her sad young bosom bare,
And frantic seemed her stormy mind.
Swift towards the sea she flies,
With direful cries;
Driven on by fierce despair,
Mid oozy waves to drown remaining sense of care.


Touched by each generous thought,
By strong humanity impressed,
The damsel in his arms he caught,
And held her, struggling, to his breast.
"Why trembles thus thy soul, O wretched maid!
"O agony! too piercing agony!
"Is through thy miserable frame pourtrayed.
"O could my breast relieve thy misery!
"Just heaven! if thou hast pity, ease her pain!
"Her heart will burst! she faints within my arms!-
"Upon my bosom she reclines her charms;
"My falling tears bedew her cheeks in vain!"


He stretched her on the shore-
He fetched cool water from the seas,
And sprinkled her all o'er,
And fanning her with leaves collects the breeze:
Till on the heavens she oped her azure eyes,
And, with returning thought and grief, looked up-
"Ah, wretched me!" she cryed, with bursting sighs,
"I've plenteous drank at sorrow's bitter cup!
"To GOD I fly; no help on earth I find,
"And from my soul would tear the mortal part;
"Such sad disorders fill the human mind,
"Such deep afflictions rive my guilty heart.


"I far in vice have strayed;
"And, too severe,
"The parents who adored the maid,
"No sighs from my repentant heart would hear:
"Till, raging in despair,
"I franticly resolved to die-
"Rather than (sad alternative!) to lie
"Amid the streets, and common insults share."


Stung to the heart, she rose;
Tears streamed from her fair eyes;
Shame in her cheeks revived the damask rose,
And poignant sorrow burst in bitter sighs:
She wept all silently:
LYSANDER scarce could speak,
Though sometimes, "Cruelty! O cruelty!"
Forth from his lips would break.


With generous passions swelled his noble breast;
Passions too strong and deep to be expressed;
Pity and rage with equal strivings beat,
And sympathy, wrought high by nat'ral heat:
"By my true soul!" at length he cried,
"As Nature's my director and my guide,
"My heart, chained by thy woe,
"Shall neither joy nor comfort know,
"Till I've revenged thy wrongs, and giv'n thee ease,
"And, by my love, have set thy troubled soul at peace.
"O! let not misery o'erwhelm thy heart,
"Nor the fair path of life and joy decline;
"Vengeance shall find the authors of thy smart-
"O! fearless rest thy drooping soul on mine,
"Which, like the oak, round which the ivy strays,
"With blessings yet may store thy future days."


The damsel's sorrow, like a furious storm,
Racked her celestial system with its rage;
Dire elements in her bosom war did wage,
And the mild radiance of her charms deform.
At length the vivid fires rushed to her heart,
Tingled in ev'ry vein, blazed from her eyes,
While sudden joys before her spirits rise,
And o'er her cheeks warm transient colours dart:
Fired by his zeal,
Extatic feelings tinge her frame;
Whose glow the passions of her breast reveal
Bright blossom of a future ripening flame!





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