The cataract’s catapult shakes the crag Where the dead pine stands like the antlered stag. One broad billow it boldly hurls; And, shocked to its centre, the water whirls Wild into madness of foam, and springs Forward in chaos of frantic wrath;— Ever upsoaring on misty wings, White with the torment that whelms its path. Cataract, bounding so fierce and free! Sternness, not beauty, is fittest for thee! Not where the Saranac nightingale weaves Webs of soft song to the red of the west Should the grand roar of thy anthem arise! But where the shriek of the black eagle cleaves Wildly the gorge from some pinnacle-crest, Where a weird darkness haunts ever the skies! Not where the summer day glitters in splendor, Or, sweet and tender, the moon lights the dome! But where the swift burning zigzag of lightning Darts crimson brightening, to kindle thy foam! Not where the deer drinks at dawn from the dingle Where richly mingle the dark and the bright! But where the wolf, from his cliff-cavern prowling, Fills with wild howling the storm of the night! Not where blue violets nod over the emerald sod; Not where the golden-rod, vase-like, outspreads; But where the cedar dark lifts its rough, seamy bark, Where scarce a sunny spark sunny joy sheds. Fierce bounding cataract! thus should it be! Sternness and gloom, not grace, beauty, for thee! |