Читать книгу Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Volume 1, No. 2, July, 1850. - Various - Страница 7

THE RAILWAY STATION

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They judge not well, who deem that once among us

A Spirit moved that now from earth has fled;

Who say that at the busy sounds which throng us,

Its shining wings forevermore have sped.


Not all the turmoil of the Age of Iron

Can scare that Spirit hence; like some sweet bird

That loud harsh voices in its cage environ,

It sings above them all, and will be heard!


Not, for the noise of axes or of hammers,

Will that sweet bird forsake her chosen nest;

Her warblings pierce through all those deafening clamors

But surer to their echoes in the breast.


And not the Past alone, with all its guerdon

Of twilight sounds and shadows, bids them rise;

But soft, above the noontide heat and burden

Of the stern present, float those melodies.


Not with the baron bold, the minstrel tender,

Not with the ringing sound of shield and lance,

Not with the Field of Gold in all its splendor,

Died out the generous flame of old Romance.


Still, on a nobler strife than tilt or tourney,

Rides forth the errant knight, with brow elate;

Still patient pilgrims take, in hope, their journey;

Still meek and cloistered spirits "stand and wait."


Still hath the living, moving world around us,

Its legends, fair with honor, bright with truth;

Still, as in tales that in our childhood bound us,

Love holds the fond traditions of its youth.


We need not linger o'er the fading traces

Of lost divinities; or seek to hold

Their serious converse 'mid Earth's green waste-places,

Or by her lonely fountains, as of old:


For, far remote from Nature's fair creations,

Within the busy mart, the crowded street,

With sudden, sweet, unlooked-for revelations

Of a bright presence we may chance to meet;


E'en now, beside a restless tide's commotion,

I stand and hear, in broken music, swell

Above the ebb and flow of Life's great ocean,

An under-song of greeting and farewell.


For here are meetings: moments that inherit

The hopes and wishes, that through months and years

Have held such anxious converse with the spirit,

That now its joy can only speak in tears;


And here are partings: hands that soon must sever,

Yet clasp the firmer; heart, that unto heart,

Was ne'er so closely bound before, nor ever

So near the other as when now they part;


And here Time holds his steady pace unbroken,

For all that crowds within his narrow scope;

For all the language, uttered and unspoken,

That will return when Memory comforts Hope!


One short and hurried moment, and forever

Flies, like a dream, its sweetness and its pain,

And, for the hearts that love, the hands that sever,

Who knows what meetings are in store again?


They who are left, unto their homes returning,

With musing step, trace o'er each by-gone scene;

And they upon their journey – doth no yearning,

No backward glance, revert to what hath been?


Yes! for awhile, perchance, a tear-drop starting,

Dims the bright scenes that greet the eye and mind;

But here – as ever in life's cup of parting —

Theirs is the bitterness who stay behind!


So in life's sternest, last farewell, may waken

A yearning thought, a backward glance be thrown

By them who leave: but oh! how blest the token,

To those who stay behind when THEY are gone!


Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Volume 1, No. 2, July, 1850.

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