MELROSE ABBEY.

By John Wilson

It was not when the Sun through the glittering sky,

In summer's joyful majesty,

Look'd from his cloudless height;—

It was not when the Sun was sinking down,

And tinging the ruin's mossy brown

With gleams of ruddy light;—

Nor yet when the Moon, like a pilgrim fair,

‘ Mid star and planet journeyed slow,

And, mellowing the stillness of the air,

Smiled on the world below;—

That, MELROSE!‘ mid thy mouldering pride,

All breathless and alone,

I grasped the dreams to day denied,

High dreams of ages gone!—

Had unshrieved guilt for one moment been there,

His heart had turn'd to stone!

For oft, though felt no moving gale,

Like restless ghost in glimmering shroud,

Through lofty Oriel opening pale

Was seen the hurrying cloud;

And, at doubtful distance, each broken wall

Frown'd black as bier's mysterious pall

From mountain-cave beheld by ghastly seer;

It seem'd as if sound had ceased to be;

Nor dust from arch, nor leaf from tree,

Relieved the noiseless ear.

The owl had sailed from her silent tower,

Tweed hush'd his weary wave,

The time was midnight's moonless hour,

My seat a dreaded Douglas’ grave!

My being was sublimed by joy,

My heart was big, yet I could not weep;

I felt that God would ne'er destroy

The mighty in their tranced sleep.

Within the pile no common dead

Lay blended with their kindred mould;

Theirs were the hearts that pray'd, or bled,

In cloister dim, on death-plain red,

The pious and the bold.

There slept the saint whose holy strains

Brought seraphs round the dying bed;

And there the warrior, who to chains

Ne'er stoop'd his crested head.

I felt my spirit sink or swell

With patriot rage or lowly fear,

As battle-trump, or convent-bell,

Rung in my tranced ear.

But dreams prevail'd of loftier mood,

When stern beneath the chancel high

My country's spectre-monarch stood,

All sheath'd in glittering panoply;

Then I thought with pride what noble blood

Had flow'd for the hills of liberty.

High the resolves that fill the brain

With transports trembling upon pain,

When the veil of time is rent in twain,

That hides the glory past!

The scene may fade that gave them birth,

But they perish not with the perishing earth,

For ever shall they last.

And higher, I ween, is that mystic might

That comes to the soul from the silent night,

When she walks, like a disembodied spirit,

Through realms her sister shades inherit,

And soft as the breath of those blessed flowers

That smile in Heaven's unfading bowers,

With love and awe, a voice she hears

Murmuring assurance of immortal years.

In hours of loneliness and woe

Which even the best and wisest know,

How leaps the lighten'd heart to seize

On the bliss that comes with dreams like these!

As fair before the mental eye

The pomp and beauty of the dream return,

Dejected virtue calms her sigh,

And leans resign'd on memory's urn.

She feels how weak is mortal pain,

When each thought that starts to life again,

Tells that she hath not lived in vain.

For Solitude, by Wisdom woo'd,

Is ever mistress of delight,

And even in gloom or tumult view'd,

She sanctifies their living blood

Who learn her lore aright.

The dreams her awful face imparts,

Unhallowed mirth destroy;

Her griefs bestow on noble hearts

A nobler power of joy.

While hope and faith the soul thus fill,

We smile at chance distress,

And drink the cup of human ill

In stately happiness.

Thus even where death his empire keeps

Life holds the pageant vain,

And where the lofty spirit sleeps,

There lofty visions reign.

Yea, often to night-wandering man

A pow'r fate's dim decrees to scan,

In lonely trance by bliss is given;

And midnight's starless silence rolls

A giant vigour through our souls,

That stamps us sons of Heaven.

Then, MELROSE! Tomb of heroes old!

Blest be the hour I dwelt with thee;

The visions that can ne'er be told

That only poets in their joy can see,

The glory born above the sky

The deep-felt weight of sanctity!

Thy massy towers I view no more

Through brooding darkness rising hoar,

Like a broad line of light dim seen

Some sable mountain-cleft between!

Since that dread hour, hath human thought

A thousand gay creations brought

Before my earthly eye;

I to the world have lent an ear,

Delighted all the while to hear

The voice of poor mortality.

Yet, not the less doth there abide

Deep in my soul a holy pride,

That knows by whom it was bestowed,

Lofty to man, but low to God;

Such pride as hymning angels cherish,

Blest in the blaze where man would perish.