IN MEMORIAMWHOM would ye choose? for, lo, the chief is dead, Who latest swayed the realm of English hearts; He whose revered and silver-crownËd head Lies peaceful midst the thunder of your marts; Your Alfred of the calm and lofty mien, His fingers clasping Shakespere's Cymbeline. Buried in the bowels of that ancient crypt, Amidst the dust of your illustrious great, He rests, the gracious-hearted, honey-lipped, Peer of the grandest of your race and state; Yea, prince of more than kingdoms, age or clime— A monarch whose dead sceptre conquers time! For, even while the trembling hand of age Dwelt on the strings, no harsh, uncertain sound Smote false your hearts; the venerable Mage, The Master-minstrel all your being found; Revived your souls to the rich bloom of youth, And charmed with music the high paths to truth. Ah, ye may dew with tears the burial-stone, And strew your tributes o'er his stainless hearse; Voice the far echo of his Godlike tone; Embalm his memory in your fragrant verse; All, all in vain—no Star of Song doth rise Above the grave where your great Laureate lies. The laurel wreath of Spencer should not grace A front less high than this majestic brow, The stamp imperial graved upon the face, Fervently lighted with the poet's vow; And with the outgrowth of a fertile heart Blooming and fruiting in the close of art. That hand which might have grasped yon silent lyre, And struck its fateful strings with strenuous might, Joined yester-year the pure-toned English choir, Who wear their amaranths in the halls of light; Ruder the touch, yet from those fingers ran Strains that could rouse or sink the heart of man. But now, the Arthur of your poet realm, Both Lancelot and Galahad of rhyme, Whom will ye find to wear his wingËd helm Or ride his charger down the lists of time? The new Pendragon—where can such be found? Alas, not one of all your Table Round! Let none the storied chords of that clear harp Restrike in service dissonant and vain; Ye will but cause the world to mock and carp; Ye will but sound a void of grief and pain; Hang up the shining wires above his head And leave your laureate's wreath upon the dead. THE heart of Merrie England sang in thee, Dan Chaucer, blithest of the sons of morn! How, from that dim and mellow distance borne, Come floating down thy measures pure and free, Thou prime old minnesinger! Pageantry, And Revel, blowing from his drinking-horn The froth of malt, and Love that dwells forlorn— Though England perish, these will live in thee! Thine is the jocund springtime—winsome May, Crowned with her daisies, wooed thee, clerkly wight; The breath of freeland fields is in thy lay, And in thy graver verse thy nation's might; O Pan-pipe, blown at England's break of day, Still echo through her noon thy clear delight! BEHOLD the foe of Grub Street's lettered fools, The Richard Crookback of the kings of rhyme, Forging his couplets of heroic chime, And beating all his masters at their rules; With what an arsenal of shining tools He wrought to shape his fanciful sublime, Flouting each proud MÆcenas of the time, And shoving all the dunces from their stools. And you'd deny him greatness? Would to-day Your acrobatic bards could fill his place! He lacked variety? But who can sway More forceful measures in a narrow place? Yield him, O Fame, brightest three-leaved bay. Mind, manners, men, the Horace of his race! |