No VII.
Midnight Wanderings.

Blue is the vault of heaven—the gems, 1
                        
                        The thousand flaming diadems, 2
                        
                        That deck the midnight throne of June, 3
                        
                        Are glittering silently—the moon, 4
                        
                        To silver o’er the eastern wave,5
                        
                        Leaves not her interlunar cave— 6
                        
                        All, all is still—no wandering breeze7
                        
                        Disturbs the air, or stirs the trees ; 8
                        
                        The wings of silence overspread9
                        
                        Alike the living and the dead, 10
                        
                        And darkness o’er the land and sea11
                        
                        Hangs down her shadows gloomily.12
                        Yes, there are times when thoughts of rest13
                        
                        Are banished, and the vacant breast, 14
                        
                        To meditation prone, instils15
                        
                        A heavier sense of mortal ills ; 16
                        
                        When couches cannot yield repose ; 17
                        
                        When slumber cannot mantle woes ; 18
                        
                        When o’er the agonized brain19
                        
                        Comes Memory, with her busy train20
                        
                        Of hopes and visions, cherish’d long— 21
                        
                        A look—a thought—a word—a song— 22
                        
                        That conjures up the past, can make23
                        
                        A fire, that water cannot slake ; 24
                        
                        A tempest fierce to roar and roll ; 25
                        
                        A wild volcano of the soul : 26
                        
                        Yea, in a dream, this very night, 27
                        
                        Hath Recollection held her light, 28
                        
                        Her flaming torch, above the past, 29
                        
                        Years fled-—joys vanished—hopes o’ercast— 30
                        
                        Affections blighted—seasons lost— 31
                        
                        And earth itself a desart coast !32
                        Nor easier do I breathe, though now33
                        
                        The chill of night salutes my brow. 34
                        
                        ’Tis sweet, beneath the cataract35
                        
                        To sit, and watch the drizzly rack36
                        
                        That reascends, and then renews37
                        
                        Its mazy fall in trickling dews ; 38
                        
                        To see the waters flash and foam39
                        
                        In darkness, to their central dome, 40
                        
                        Amid the sable rocks, which frown41
                        
                        Like genii o’er the waters brown ; 42
                        
                        To hear them roar, with mighty crash, 43
                        
                        And onwards rush, and downwards dash, 44
                        
                        Beneath the hazel trees, that throw45
                        
                        Their shadows o’er the chasms below—46
                        
                        
’Tis sweet to gaze upon the sky, 47
                        
                        And turn a fond and wistful eye48
                        
                        Upon the stars of twinkling ray, 49
                        
                        Upon the lucid milky way, 50
                        
                        Upon the long, long vistas, through51
                        
                        The trackless paths of placid blue— 52
                        
                        And why? ’Tis Fancy rules the brain, 53
                        
                        And draws the thoughts from present pain, 54
                        
                        And leads us to a lonely spot55
                        
                        Where Passion’s voice awakens not.56
                        Dim hang the shadowy forests round, 57
                        
                        Their canopies without a sound, 58
                        
                        Gigantic—towering—shadowy—drear— 59
                        
                        Along whose paths quick stalking Fear, 60
                        
                        With indrawn breath all trembling steals, 61
                        
                        And dreams Destruction at his heels. 62
                        
                        The lofty elm its giant boughs63
                        
                        Of leafy darkness o’er me throws, 64
                        
                        And at its base I lay me down, 65
                        
                        Upon the furze of golden brown, 66
                        
                        Until returning light shall bring67
                        
                        My quiet, and the morning spring.68