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C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Ariel: In Memory of Percy Bysshe Shelley

By Edmund Clarence Stedman (1833–1908)

Born on the Fourth of August, A.D. 1792

WERT thou on earth to-day, immortal one,

How wouldst thou, in the starlight of thine eld,

The likeness of that morntide look upon

Which men beheld?

How might it move thee, imaged in time’s glass,

As when the tomb has kept

Unchanged the face of one who slept

Too soon, yet molders not, though seasons come and pass?

Has Death a wont to stay the soul no less?

And art thou still what SHELLEY was erewhile?—

A feeling born of music’s restlessness—

A child’s swift smile

Between its sobs—a wandering mist that rose

At dawn—a cloud that hung

The Euganéan hills among;

Thy voice, a wind-harp’s strain in some enchanted close?

Thyself the wild west wind, O boy divine,

Thou fain wouldst be—the spirit which in its breath

Wooes yet the seaward ilex and the pine

That wept thy death?

Or art thou still the incarnate child of song

Who gazed, as if astray

From some uncharted stellar way,

With eyes of wonder at our world of grief and wrong?

Yet thou wast Nature’s prodigal; the last

Unto whose lips her beauteous mouth she bent

An instant, ere thy kinsmen, fading fast,

Their lorn way went.

What though the faun and oread had fled?

A tenantry thine own,

Peopling their leafy coverts lone,

With thee still dwelt as when sweet Fancy was not dead;

Not dead as now, when we the visionless,

In Nature’s alchemy more woeful wise,

Say that no thought of us her depths possess,—

No love, her skies.

Not ours to parley with the whispering June,

The genii of the wood,

The shapes that lurk in solitude,

The cloud, the mounting lark, the wan and waning moon.

For thee the last time Hellas tipped her hills

With beauty; India breathed her midnight moan,

Her sigh, her ecstasy of passion’s thrills,

To thee alone.

Such rapture thine, and the supremer gift

Which can the minstrel raise

Above the myrtle and the bays,

To watch the sea of pain whereon our galleys drift.

Therefrom arose with thee that lyric cry,

Sad cadence of the disillusioned soul

That asks of heaven and earth its destiny,—

Or joy or dole.

Wild requiem of the heart whose vibratings,

With laughter fraught, and tears,

Beat through the century’s dying years,

While for one more dark round the old Earth plumes her wings.

No answer came to thee; from ether fell

No voice, no radiant beam: and in thy youth

How were it else, when still the oracle

Withholds its truth?

We sit in judgment; we above thy page

Judge thee and such as thee,—

Pale heralds, sped too soon to see

The marvels of our late yet unanointed age!

The slaves of air and light obeyed afar

Thy summons, Ariel; their elf-horns wound

Strange notes which all uncapturable are

Of broken sound.

That music thou alone couldst rightly hear

(O rare impressionist!)

And mimic. Therefore still we list

To its ethereal fall in this thy cyclic year.

Be then the poet’s poet still! for none

Of them whose minstrelsy the stars have blessed

Has from expression’s wonderland so won

The unexpressed,—

So wrought the charm of its elusive note

On us, who yearn in vain

To mock the pæan and the plain

Of tides that rise and fall with sweet mysterious rote.

Was it not well that the prophetic few,

So long inheritors of that high verse,

Dwelt in the mount alone, and haply knew

What stars rehearse?

But now with foolish cry the multitude

Awards at last the throne,

And claims thy cloudland for its own

With voices all untuned to thy melodious mood.

What joy it was to haunt some antique shade

Lone as thine echo, and to wreak my youth

Upon thy song,—to feel the throbs which made

Thy bliss, thy ruth,—

And thrill I knew not why, and dare to feel

Myself an heir unknown

To lands the poet treads alone

Ere to his soul the gods their presence quite reveal!

Even then, like thee, I vowed to dedicate

My powers to beauty; ay, but thou didst keep

The vow, whilst I knew not the afterweight

That poets weep,

The burthen under which one needs must bow,

The rude years envying

My voice the notes it fain would sing

For men belike to hear, as still they hear thee now.

Oh, the swift wind, the unrelenting sea!

They loved thee, yet they lured thee unaware

To be their spoil, lest alien skies to thee

Should seem more fair;

They had their will of thee, yet aye forlorn

Mourned the lithe soul’s escape,

And gave the strand thy mortal shape

To be resolved in flame whereof its life was born.

Afloat on tropic waves, I yield once more

In age that heart of youth unto thy spell.

The century wanes,—thy voice thrills as of yore

When first it fell.

Would that I too, so had I sung a lay

The least upborne of thine,

Had shared thy pain! Not so divine

Our light, as faith to chant the far auroral day.