Ode to Memory.

Come forth, I charge thee, arise,1
                        
                        Thou of the many tongues, the myriad eyes !2
                        
                        Though comest not with shows of flaunting  
vines3
                        
                        vines3
Unto mine inner eye,4
                        
                        Divinest memory !5
                        
                        Thou wert not nursed by the waterfall,6
                        
                        Which ever sounds and shines7
                        
                        A pillar of white light upon the wall8
                        
                        Of purple cliffs, aloof descried,9
                        
                        Come from the woods that belt the gray  
hillside,10
                        
                        hillside,10
The seven elms, the poplars four11
                        
                        That stand beside my father’s door,12
                        
                        And chiefly from the brook that loves13
                        
                        To purl o’er matted cress and ribbed sand,14
                        
                        Or dimple in the dark of rushy coves,15
                        
                        Drawing into his narrow earthen urn,16
                        
                        
In every elbow and turn,17
                        
                        The filter’d tribute of the rough woodland.18
                        
                        O !  hither lead thy feet !19
                        
                        Pour round mine ears the livelong bleat20
                        
                        Of the thick-fleeced sheep from wattled folds,21
                        
                        Upon the ridged wolds,22
                        
                        When the first matin-song hath waked loud23
                        
                        Over the dark dewy earth forlorn,24
                        
                        What time the amber morn25
                        
                        Forth gushes from beneath a lowhung cloud.26
                        Large doweries doth the raptured eye27
                        
                        To the young spirit present28
                        
                        When first she is wed ;29
                        
                        And like a bride of old30
                        
                        In triumph led,31
                        
                        With music and sweet showers32
                        
                        Of festal flowers,33
                        
                        Unto the dwelling she must sway.34
                        
                        Well hast thou done, great artist Memory,35
                        
                        In setting round thy first experiment36
                        
                        With royal framework of wrought gold ;37
                        
                        Needs must thou dearly love thy first essay,38
                        
                        And foremost in thy various gallery39
                        
                        Place it, where sweetest sunlight falls40
                        
                        Upon the storied walls,41
                        
                        For the discovery42
                        
                        And newness of thine art so pleased thee,43
                        
                        That all which thou hast drawn of fairest44
                        
                        Or boldest since, but lightly weighs45
                        
                        With thee unto the love thou bearest46
                        
                        The firstborn of thy genius. Artist-like,47
                        
                        Ever retiring thou dost gaze48
                        
                        On the prime labour of thine early days :49
                        
                        No matter what the sketch might be ;50
                        
                        Whether the high field on the bushless Pike,51
                        
                        Or even a sandbuilt ridge52
                        
                        Of heaped hills that mound the sea,53
                        
                        Overblown with murmurs harsh,54
                        
                        Or even a lowly cottage, whence we see55
                        
                        Sketch’d wide and wild the waste enormous  
marsh,56
                        
                        marsh,56
Where from the frequent bridge,57
                        
                        Emblems or glimpses of eternity,58
                        
                        The trenched waters run from sky to sky ;59
                        
                        Or a garden bower’d close60
                        
                        With pleached alleys of the trailing rose,61
                        
                        Long alleys falling down to twilight grots,62
                        
                        Or opening upon level plots63
                        
                        Of crowned lilies, standing near64
                        
                        Purplespiked lavender :65
                        
                        Whither in after life retired66
                        
                        From brawling storms,67
                        
                        From weary wind,68
                        
                        With youthful fancy reinspired,69
                        
                        We may hold converse with all forms70
                        
                        Of the many-sided mind,71
                        
                        The few whom passion hath not blinded,72
                        
                        Subtle-thoughted, myriad-minded.73
                        
                        My friend, with thee to live alone,74
                        
                        Methinks were better than to own75
                        
                        A crown, a sceptre, and a throne.76
                        
                        O strengthen me, enlighten me !77
                        
                        I faint in this obscurity,78
                        
                        Thou dewy dawn of memory.79