A Descriptive Ode

By Charlotte Smith

Supposed to have been written under the Ruins of

Rufus's Castle, among the remains of the ancient

Church on the Isle of Portland.

CHAOTIC pile of barren stone,

That Nature's hurrying hand has thrown,

Half finish'd, from the troubled waves;

On whose rude brow the rifted tower

Has frown'd, through many a stormy hour,

On this drear site of tempest-beaten graves.

Sure Desolation loves to shroud

His giant form within the cloud

That hovers round thy rugged head;

And as through broken vaults beneath,

The future storms low-muttering breathe,

Hears the complaining voices of the dead.

Here marks the fiend with eager eyes,

Far out at sea the fogs arise

That dimly shade the beacon'd strand,

And listens the portentous roar

Of sullen waves, as on the shore,

Monotonous, they burst and tell the storm at hand.

Northward the demon's eyes are cast

O'er yonder bare and sterile waste,

Where, born to hew and heave the block,

Man, lost in ignorance and toil,

Becomes associate to the soil,

And his heart hardens like his native rock.

 

On the bleak hills, with flint o'erspread,

No blossoms rear the purple head;

No shrub perfumes the zephyrs' breath,

But o'er the cold and cheerless down

Grim desolation seems to frown,

Blasting the ungrateful soil with partial death.

Here the scathed trees with leaves half-dress'd,

Shade no soft songster's secret nest,

Whose spring-notes soothe the pensive ear;

But high the croaking cormorant flies,

And mews and hawks with clamorous cries

Tire the lone echoes of these caverns drear.

Perchance among the ruins grey

Some widow'd mourner loves to stray,

Marking the melancholy main

Where once, afar she could discern

O'er the white waves his sail return

Who never, never now, returns again!

On these lone tombs, by storms up-torn,

The hopeless wretch may lingering mourn,

Till from the ocean, rising red,

The misty moon with lurid ray

Lights her, reluctant, on her way,

To steep in tears her solitary bed.

Hence the dire spirit oft surveys

The ship, that to the western bays

With favouring gales pursues its course;

Then calls the vapour dark that blinds

The pilot,--calls the felon winds

That heave the billows with resistless force.

Commixing with the blotted skies,

High and more high the wild waves rise,

Till, as impetuous torrents urge,

Driven on yon fatal bank accursed

The vessel's massy timbers burst,

And the crew sinks beneath the infuriate surge.

There find the weak an early grave,

While youthful strength the whelming wave

Repels; and labouring for the land,

 

With shorten'd breath and upturn'd eyes,

Sees the rough shore above him rise,

Nor dreams that rapine meets him on the strand.

And are there then in human form

Monsters more savage than the storm,

Who from the gasping sufferer tear

The dripping weed?--who dare to reap

The inhuman harvest of the deep,

From half-drown'd victims whom the tempests spare?

Ah, yes! by avarice once possess'd,

No pity moves the rustic breast;

Callous he proves--as those who haply wait

Till I (a pilgrim weary worn)

To my own native land return,

With legal toils to drag me to my fate!