Poems by Victor Hugo (mobi ebook reader txt) đ
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That columnâs lofty heightâ Pillar, in whose dread majesty, In double immortality,
Glory and bronze unite! Aye, when he built it that, some day, Discord or war their course might stay,
Or here might break their car; And in our streets to put to shame Pigmies that bear the heroâs name
Of Greek and Roman war. It was a glorious sight; the world His hosts had trod, with flags unfurled,
In veteran array; Kings fled before him, forced to yield, He, conqueror on each battlefield,
Their cannon bore away. Then, with his victors back he came; All France with booty teemed, her name
Was writ on sculptured stone; And Paris cried with joy, as when The parent bird comes home again
To thâ eaglets left alone. Into the furnace flame, so fast, Were heaps of war-won metal cast,
The future monument! His thought had formed the giant mould, And piles of brass in the fire he rolled,
From hostile cannon rent. When to the battlefield he came, He grasped the guns spite tongues of flame,
And bore the spoil away. This bronze to Franceâs Rome he brought, And to the founder said, âIs aught
Wanting for our array?â And when, beneath a radiant sun, That man, his noble purpose done,
With calm and tranquil mien, Disclosed to view this glorious fane, And did with peaceful hand contain
The warlike eagleâs sheen. Round thee, when hundred thousands placed, As some great Romanâs triumph graced,
The little Romans all; We boys hung on the processionâs flanks, Seeking some father in thy ranks,
And loud thy praise did call. Who that surveyed thee, when that day Thou deemed that future glory ray
Would here be ever bright; Feared that, ere long, all France thy grave From pettifoggers vain would crave
Beneath that columnâs height?
Author of âCritical Essays.â
CHARITY.
(âJe suis la CharitĂ©.â)
[February, 1837.]
âLo! I am Charity,â she cries,
âWho waketh up before the day; While yet asleep all nature lies,
God bids me rise and go my way.â
How fair her glorious features shine,
Whereon the hand of God hath set An angelâs attributes divine,
With all a womanâs sweetness met.
Above the old manâs couch of woe
She bows her forehead, pure and even. Thereâs nothing fairer here below,
Thereâs nothing grander up in heaven,
Than when caressingly she stands
(The cold hearts wakening âgain their beat), And holds within her holy hands
The little childrenâs naked feet.
To every den of want and toil
She goes, and leaves the poorest fed; Leaves wine and bread, and genial oil,
And hopes that blossom in her tread,
And fire, too, beautiful bright fire,
That mocks the glowing dawn begun, Where, having set the blind old sire,
He dreams heâs sitting in the sun.
Then, over all the earth she runs,
And seeks, in the cold mists of life, Those poor forsaken little ones
Who droop and weary in the strife.
Ah, most her heart is stirred for them,
Whose foreheads, wrapped in mists obscure, Still wear a triple diademâ
The young, the innocent, the poor.
And they are better far than we,
And she bestows a worthier meed; For, with the loaf of charity,
She gives the kiss that children need.
She gives, and while they wondering eat
The tear-steeped bread by love supplied, She stretches round them in the street
Her arm that passers push aside.
If, with raised head and step alert,
She sees the rich man stalking by, She touches his embroidered skirt,
And gently shows them where they lie.
She begs for them of careless crowd,
Of earnest brows and narrow hearts, That when it hears her cry aloud,
Turns like the ebb-tide and departs.
O miserable he who sings
Some strain impure, whose numbers fall Along the cruel wind that brings
Death to some child beneath his wall.
O strange and sad and fatal thing,
When, in the rich manâs gorgeous hall, The huge fire on the hearth doth fling
A light on some great festival,
To see the drunkard smile in state,
In purple wrapt, with myrtle crowned, While Jesus lieth at the gate
With only rags to wrap him round.
Dublin University Magazine
SWEET SISTER.
(âVous qui ne savez pas combien lâenfance est belle.â)
Sweet sister, if you knew, like me, The charms of guileless infancy, No more youâd envy riper years, Or smiles, more bitter than your tears.
But childhood passes in an hour, As perfume from a faded flower; The joyous voice of early glee Flies, like the Halcyon, oâer the sea.
Enjoy your morn of early Spring; Soon time maturer thoughts must bring; Those hours, like flowers that interclimb, Should not be withered ere their time.
Too soon youâll weep, as we do now, Oâer faithless friend, or broken vow, And hopeless sorrows, which our pride In pleasureâs whirl would vainly hide.
Laugh on! unconscious of thy doom, All innocence and opening bloom; Laugh on! while yet thine azure eye Mirrors the peace that reigns on high.
MRS. B. SOMERS.
THE PITY OF THE ANGELS.
(âUn Ange vit un jour.â)
[LA PITIĂ SUPREME VIII., 1881.]
When an angel of kindness
Saw, doomed to the dark, Men framed in his likeness,
He sought for a sparkâ Stray gem of Godâs glory
That shines so sereneâ
And, falling like lark, To brighten our story,
Pure Pity was seen.
THE SOWER.
Sitting in a porchway cool,
Fades the ruddy sunlight fast, Twilight hastens on to ruleâ
Working hours are wellnigh past
Shadows shoot across the lands;
But one sower lingers still, Old, in rags, he patient stands,â
Looking on, I feel a thrill.
Black and high his silhouette
Dominates the furrows deep! Now to sow the task is set,
Soon shall come a time to reap.
Marches he along the plain,
To and fro, and scatters wide From his hands the precious grain;
Moody, I, to see him stride.
Darkness deepens. Gone the light.
Now his gestures to mine eyes Are august; and strangeâhis height
Seems to touch the starry skies.
TORU DUTT.
OH, WHY NOT BE HAPPY?[1]
(âA quoi bon entendre les oiseaux?â)
[RUY BLAS, Act II.]
Oh, why not be happy this bright summer day, âMid perfume of roses and newly-mown hay? Great Nature is smilingâthe birds in the air Sing love-lays together, and all is most fair.
Then why not be happy
This bright summer day,
âMid perfume of roses
And newly-mown hay?
The streamlets they wander through meadows so fleet, Their music enticing fond lovers to meet; The violets are blooming and nestling their heads In richest profusion on moss-coated beds.
Then why not be happy
This bright summer day,
When Nature is fairest
And all is so gay?
LEOPOLD WRAY.
[Footnote 1: Music composed by Elizabeth Philip.]
FREEDOM AND THE WORLD.
[Inscription under a Statue of the Virgin and Child, at Guernsey.âThe poet sees in the emblem a modern Atlas, i.e., Freedom supporting the World.]
(âLe peuple est petit.â)
Weak is the Peopleâbut will grow beyond all otherâ Within thy holy arms, thou fruitful victor-mother! O Liberty, whose conquering flag is never furledâ Thou bearest Him in whom is centred all the World.
SERENADE.
(âQuand tu chantes.â)
When the voice of thy lute at the eve
Charmeth the ear, In the hour of enchantment believe
What I murmur near. That the tune can the Age of Gold
With its magic restore. Play on, play on, my fair one,
Play on for evermore.
When thy laugh like the song of the dawn
Riseth so gay That the shadows of Night are withdrawn
And melt away, I remember my years of care
And misgiving no more. Laugh on, laugh on, my fair one,
Laugh on for evermore.
When thy sleep like the moonlight above
Lulling the sea, Doth enwind thee in visions of love,
Perchance, of me! I can watch so in dream that enthralled me,
Never before! Sleep on, sleep on, my fair one!
Sleep on for evermore.
HENRY F. CHORLEY.
AN AUTUMNAL SIMILE.
(âLes feuilles qui gisaient.â)
The leaves that in the lonely walks were spread, Starting from off the ground beneath the tread,
Coursed oâer the garden-plain; Thus, sometimes, âmid the soulâs deep sorrowings, Our soul a moment mounts on wounded wings,
Then, swiftly, falls again.
TO CRUEL OCEAN.
Where are the hapless shipmen?âdisappeared,
Gone down, where witness none, save Night, hath been, Ye deep, deep waves, of kneeling mothers feared,
What dismal tales know ye of things unseen?
Tales that ye tell your whispering selves between
The while in clouds to the flood-tide ye pour;
And this it is that gives you, as I ween,
Those mournful voices, mournful evermore,
When ye come in at eve to us who dwell on shore.
ESMERALDA IN PRISON.
(âPhoebus, nâest-il sur la terre?â)
[OPERA OF âESMERALDA,â ACT IV., 1836.]
Phoebus, is there not this side the grave,
Power to save Those whoâre loving? Magic balm That will restore to me my former calm? Is there nothing tearful eye Can eâer dry, or hush the sigh? I pray Heaven day and night, As I lay me down in fright, To retake my life, or give All again for which Iâd live! Phoebus, hasten from the shining sphere
To me here! Hither hasten, bring me Death; then Love May let our spirits rise, ever-linked, above!
LOVERâS SONG.
(âMon Ăąme Ă ton coeur sâest donnĂ©e.â)
[ANGELO, Act II., May, 1835.]
My soul unto thy heart is given,
In mystic fold do they entwine, So bound in one that, were they riven,
Apart my soul would life resign. Thou art my song and I the lyre; Thou art the breeze and I the brier; The altar I, and thou the fire;
Mine the deep love, the beauty thine! As fleets away the rapid hour
While weepingâmay
My sorrowing lay Touch thee, sweet flower.
ERNEST OSWALD COE.
A FLEETING GLIMPSE OF A VILLAGE.
(âTout vit! et se pose avec grĂące.â)
How graceful the picture! the life, the repose!
The sunbeam that plays on the porchstone wide; And the shadow that fleets oâer the stream that flows,
And the soft blue sky with the hillâs green side.
Fraserâs Magazine.
LORD ROCHESTERâS SONG.
(âUn soldat au dur visage.â)
[CROMWELL, ACT I.]
âHold, little blue-eyed page!â
So cried the watchers surly, Stern to his pretty rage
And golden hair so curlyâ âMethinks your satin cloak
Masks something bulky under; I take this as no jokeâ
Oh, thief with stolen plunder!â
âI am of high repute,
And famed among the truthful: This silver-handled lute
Is meet for one still youthful Who goes to keep a tryst
With her who is his dearest. I charge you to desist;
My cause is of the clearest.â
But guardsmen are so sharp,
Their eyes are as the lynxâs: âThatâs neither lute nor harpâ
Your mark is not the minxes. Your loving we disputeâ
That string of steel so cruel For music does not suitâ
You go to fight a duel!â
THE BEGGARâS QUATRAIN.
(âAveugle comme HomĂšre.â)
[Improvised at the Café de Paris.]
Blind, as was Homer; as Belisarius, blind,
But one weak child to guide his vision dim. The hand which dealt him bread, in pity kindâ
Heâll never see; God sees it, though, for him.
H.L.C., âLondon Society.â
THE QUIET RURAL CHURCH.
It was a humble church, with arches low,
The church we entered there, Where many a weary soul since long ago
Had past with plaint or prayer.
Mournful and still it was at dayâs decline,
The day we entered there; As in a loveless heart, at the lone shrine,
The fires extinguished were.
Scarcely was heard to float some gentlest sound,
Scarcely some low breathed
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