Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT: 6, by JAMES THOMSON (1834-1882) Poet's Biography First Line: I sat forlornly by the river-side Last Line: Let us without delay our search begin. Alternate Author Name(s): B. V.; Bysshe Vanolis | ||||||||
I sat forlornly by the river-side, And watched the bridge-lamps glow like golden stars Above the blackness of the swelling tide, Down which they struck rough gold in ruddier bars; And heard the heave and plashing of the flow Against the wall a dozen feet below. Large elm-trees stood along that river-walk; And under one, a few steps from my seat, I heard strange voices join in stranger talk, Although I had not heard approaching feet: These bodiless voices in my waking dream Flowed dark words blending with sombre stream:-- And you have after all come back; come back. I was about to follow on your track. And you have failed: our spark of hope is black. That I have failed is proved by my return: The spark is quenched, nor ever more will burn, But listen; and the story you shall learn. I reached the portal common spirits fear, And read the words above it, dark yet clear, "Leave hope behind, all ye who enter here:" And would have passed in, gratified to gain That positive eternity of pain Instead of this insufferable inane. A demon warder clutched me, Not so fast; First leave your hopes behind!--But years have passed Since I left all behind me, to the last: You cannot count for hope, with all your wit, This bleak despair that drives me to the Pit: How could I seek to enter void of it? He snarled, What thing is this which apes a soul, And would find entrance to our gulf of dole Without the payment of the settled toll? Outside the gate he showed an open chest: Here pay their entrance fees the souls unblest; Cast in some hope, you enter with the rest. This is Pandora's box; whose lid shall shut, And Hell-gate too, when hopes have filled it; but They are so thin that it will never glut. I stood a few steps backwards, desolate; And watched the spirits pass me to their fate, And fling off hope, and enter at the gate. When one casts off a load he springs upright, Squares back his shoulders, breathes will all his might, And briskly paces forward strong and light: But these, as if they took some burden, bowed; The whole frame sank; however strong and proud Before, they crept in quite infirm and cowed. And as they passed me, earnestly from each A morsel of his hope I did beseech, To pay my entrance; but all mocked my speech. No one would cede a little of his store, Though knowing that in instants three or four He must resign the whole for evermore. So I returned. Our destiny is fell; For in this Limbo we must ever dwell, Shut out alike from heaven and Earth and Hell. The other sighed back, Yea; but if we grope With care through all this Limbo's dreary scope, We yet may pick up some minute lost hope; And sharing it between us, entrance win, In spite of fiends so jealous for gross sin: Let us without delay our search begin. | Other Poems of Interest...SUNDAY UP THE RIVER: 15 by JAMES THOMSON (1834-1882) THE CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT: 21 by JAMES THOMSON (1834-1882) HE HEARD HER SING, SELECTION by JAMES THOMSON (1834-1882) LAPLAND by JAMES THOMSON (1834-1882) LIFE'S HEBE by JAMES THOMSON (1834-1882) ON A BROKEN PIPE by JAMES THOMSON (1834-1882) SIBERIA by JAMES THOMSON (1834-1882) SUNDAY AT HAMPSTEAD: 10 by JAMES THOMSON (1834-1882) SUNDAY UP THE RIVER: 1 by JAMES THOMSON (1834-1882) SUNDAY UP THE RIVER: 12 by JAMES THOMSON (1834-1882) |
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