The Fountain Of Youth

By James Russell Lowell

I

'Tis a woodland enchanted!

By no sadder spirit

Than blackbirds and thrushes,

That whistle to cheer it

All day in the bushes.

This woodland is haunted:

And in a small clearing,

Beyond sight or hearing

Of human annoyance,

The little fount gushes,         

First smoothly, then dashes

And gurgles and flashes,

To the maples and ashes

Confiding its joyance;

Unconscious confiding,

Then, silent and glossy,

Slips winding and hiding

Through alder-stems mossy,

Through gossamer roots

Fine as nerves,                       

That tremble, as shoots

Through their magnetized curves

The allurement delicious

Of the water's capricious

Thrills, gushes, and swerves.

II

'Tis a woodland enchanted!

I am writing no fiction;

And this fount, its sole daughter,

To the woodland was granted

To pour holy water                   

And win benediction;

In summer-noon flushes,

When all the wood hushes,

Blue dragon-flies knitting

To and fro in the sun,

With sidelong jerk flitting

Sink down on the rashes,

And, motionless sitting,

Hear it bubble and run,

Hear its low inward singing,         

With level wings swinging

On green tasselled rushes,

To dream in the sun.

III

'Tis a woodland enchanted!

The great August noonlight!

Through myriad rifts slanted,

Leaf and bole thickly sprinkles

With flickering gold;

There, in warm August gloaming,

With quick, silent brightenings,     

From meadow-lands roaming,

The firefly twinkles

His fitful heat-lightnings;

There the magical moonlight

With meek, saintly glory

Steeps summit and wold;

There whippoorwills plain in the solitudes hoary

With lone cries that wander

Now hither, now yonder,

Like souls doomed of old             

To a mild purgatory;

But through noonlight and moonlight

The little fount tinkles

Its silver saints'-bells,

That no sprite ill-boding

May make his abode in

Those innocent dells.

IV

'Tis a woodland enchanted!

When the phebe scarce whistles

Once an hour to his fellow.           

And, where red lilies flaunted,

Balloons from the thistles

Tell summer's disasters,

The butterflies yellow,

As caught in an eddy

Of air's silent ocean,

Sink, waver, and steady

O'er goats'-beard and asters,

Like souls of dead flowers,

With aimless emotion                 

Still lingering unready

To leave their old bowers;

And the fount is no dumber,

But still gleams and flashes,

And gurgles and plashes,

To the measure of summer;

The butterflies hear it,

And spell-bound are holden,

Still balancing near it

O'er the goats' beard so golden.     

V

'Tis a woodland enchanted!

A vast silver willow,

I know not how planted,

(This wood is enchanted,

And full of surprises.)

Stands stemming a billow,

A motionless billow

Of ankle-deep mosses;

Two great roots it crosses

To make a round basin.               

And there the Fount rises;

Ah, too pure a mirror

For one sick of error

To see his sad face in!

No dew-drop is stiller

In its lupin-leaf setting

Than this water moss-bounded;

But a tiny sand-pillar

From the bottom keeps jetting,

And mermaid ne'er sounded             

Through the wreaths of a shell,

Down amid crimson dulses

In some cavern of ocean,

A melody sweeter

Than the delicate pulses,

The soft, noiseless metre,

The pause and the swell

Of that musical motion:

I recall it, not see it;

Could vision be clearer?             

Half I'm fain to draw nearer

Half tempted to flee it;

The sleeping Past wake not,

Beware!

One forward step take not,

Ah! break not

That quietude rare!

By my step unaffrighted

A thrush hops before it,

And o'er it                           

A birch hangs delighted,

Dipping, dipping, dipping its tremulous hair;

Pure as the fountain, once

I came to the place,

(How dare I draw nearer?)

I bent o'er its mirror,

And saw a child's face

Mid locks of bright gold in it;

Yes, pure as this fountain once,--

Since, bow much error!               

Too holy a mirror

For the man to behold in it

His harsh, bearded countenance!

VI

'Tis a woodland enchanted!

Ah, fly unreturning!

Yet stay;--

'Tis a woodland enchanted,

Where wonderful chances

Have sway;

Luck flees from the cold one,         

But leaps to the bold one

Half-way;

Why should I be daunted?

Still the smooth mirror glances,

Still the amber sand dances,

One look,--then away!

O magical glass!

Canst keep in thy bosom

Shades of leaf and of blossom

When summer days pass,               

So that when thy wave hardens

It shapes as it pleases,

Unharmed by the breezes,

Its fine hanging gardens?

Hast those in thy keeping.

And canst not uncover,

Enchantedly sleeping,

The old shade of thy lover?

It is there! I have found it!

He wakes, the long sleeper!           

The pool is grown deeper,

The sand dance is ending,

The white floor sinks, blending

With skies that below me

Are deepening and bending,

And a child's face alone

That seems not to know me,

With hair that fades golden

In the heaven-glow round it,

Looks up at my own;                   

Ah, glimpse through the portal

That leads to the throne,

That opes the child's olden

Regions Elysian!

Ah, too holy vision

For thy skirts to be holden

By soiled hand of mortal!

It wavers, it scatters,

'Tis gone past recalling!

A tear's sudden falling               

The magic cup shatters,

Breaks the spell of the waters,

And the sand cone once more,

With a ceaseless renewing,

Its dance is pursuing

On the silvery floor,

O'er and o'er,

With a noiseless and ceaseless renewing.

VII

'Tis a woodland enchanted!

If you ask me, _Where is it?_   

I can but make answer,

''Tis past my disclosing;'

Not to choice is it granted

By sure paths to visit

The still pool enclosing

Its blithe little dancer;

But in some day, the rarest

Of many Septembers,

When the pulses of air rest,

And all things lie dreaming           

In drowsy haze steaming

From the wood's glowing embers,

Then, sometimes, unheeding,

And asking not whither,

By a sweet inward leading

My feet are drawn thither,

And, looking with awe in the magical mirror,

I see through my tears,

Half doubtful of seeing,

The face unperverted,                 

The warm golden being

Of a child of five years;

And spite of the mists and the error.

And the days overcast,

Can feel that I walk undeserted,

But forever attended

By the glad heavens that bended

O'er the innocent past;

Toward fancy or truth

Doth the sweet vision win me?         

Dare I think that I cast

In the fountain of youth

The fleeting reflection

Of some bygone perfection

That still lingers in me?