Page:Papers on Literature and Art (Fuller).djvu/145

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THE MODERN DRAMA.
129

8.
For Dædalus breathed in them his spirit;
 In them their sire his beauty sees;
We too, a younger brood, inherit
 The gifts and blessing bestowed on these.
9.
But ah! their wise and graceful seeming
 Recalls the more that the sage is gone;
Weeping we wake from deceitful dreaming,
 And find our voiceless chamber lone.
10.
Dædalus, thou from the twilight fleest,
 Which thou with visions hast made so bright;
And when no more those shapes thou seest,
 Wanting thine eye they lose their light.
11.
E’en in the noblest of Man’s creations,
 Those fresh worlds round this old of ours,
When the seer is gone, the orphaned nations
 See but the tombs of perished powers.
12.
Wail for Dædalus, Earth and Ocean!
 Stars and Sun, lament for him!
Ages, quake in strange commotion!
 All ye realms of life be dim!
13.
Wail for Dædalus, awful voices,
 From earth’s deep centre Mankind appall!
Seldom ye sound, and then Death rejoices,
 For he knows that then the mightiest fall.

Also the following, whose measure seems borrowed from Goethe, and is worthy of its source. We insert a part it.

THE WOODED MOUNTAINS.
Woodland mountains in your leafy walks,
 Shadows of the Past and Future blend;
’Mid your verdant windings flits or stalks
 Many a loved and disembodied friend.