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FEELINGS EXCITED BY SOME MILITARY MANOEUVRES AT VERONA.

WHAT is the lesson I have brought away,
After the moment's palpitating glee?
What has this pomp of men, this strong array
Of thousands and ten thousands been to me?
Did I find nothing but the vision gay,
The mere phenomenon that all could see?
Did I feel nothing but the brute display
Of Power,-the show of centred energy?
Trembling and humbled, I was taught how hard
It is for our strait minds at once to scan
The might of banded numbers, and regard
The individual soul, the living Man;
To use mechanic multitudes, and yet
Our common human feelings not forget!

MEDITATIVE FRAGMENTS, ON VENICE.

I.

"The ruler of the Adriatic, who never was infant nor stripling, whom God took by the right hand and taught to walk by himself the first hour."-LANdor.

WALK in St. Mark's, the time the ample space
Lies in the freshness of the evening shade,
When, on each side, with gravely darkened face,
The masses rise above the light arcade ;
Walk down the midst with slowly-tuned pace,

But gay withal, for there is high parade
Of fair attire and fairer forms, which pass
Like varying groups on a magician's glass.

From broad-illumined chambers far within,
Or under curtains daintily outspread,
Music, and laugh, and talk, the motley din
Of all who from sad thought or toil are sped,
Here a chance hour of social joy to win,
Gush forth, but I love best, above my head
To feel nor arch nor tent, nor anything
But that pure Heaven's eternal covering.

It is one broad Saloon, one gorgeous Hall;
A chamber, where a multitude, all Kings,
May hold full audience, splendid festival,
Or Piety's most pompous ministerings ;
Thus be its height unmarred, thus be it all
One mighty room, whose form direct upsprings
To the o'er-arching sky;-it is right good,
When Art and Nature keep such brotherhood.

For where, upon the firmest sodden land,
Has ever Monarch's power and toil of slaves
Equalled the works of that self-governed band,
Who fixed the Delos of the Adrian waves ;
Planting upon these strips of yielding sand
A Temple of the Beautiful, which braves
The jealous strokes of ocean, nor yet fears
The far more perilous sea, "whose waves are years

Walk in St. Mark's again, some few hours after,
When a bright sleep is on each storied pile,-
When fitful music, and inconstant laughter,
Give place to Nature's silent moonlight smile :
Now Fancy wants no faery gale to waft her
To Magian haunt, or charm-engirded isle,
All too content, in passive bliss, to see
This show divine of visible Poetry:

G

?"

On such a night as this impassionedly
The old Venetian sung those verses rare,
"That Venice must of needs eternal be,

For Heaven had looked through the pellucid air,
And cast its reflex in the crystal sea,

And Venice was the image pictured there*;"
I hear them now, and tremble, for I seem
As treading on an unsubstantial dream.

Who talks of vanished glory, of dead power,
Of things that were, and are not? Is he here ?
Can he take in the glory of this hour,
And call it all the decking of a bier ?

No, surely as on that Titanic tower t

The Guardian Angel stands in æther clear,
With the moon's silver tempering his gold wing,

So Venice lives, as lives no other thing :

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That strange Cathedral! exquisitely strange,-
That front, on whose bright varied tints the eye
Rests as of gems,-those arches, whose high range
Gives its rich-broidered border to the sky,-

«Ich hörte einen blinden Sänger in Chioggia, der sang, Venedig sey eine ewige Stadt; der Himmel hätte sich im Meer gespiegelt und sein Widerschein wäre Venedig.”—PLATEN.

The Campanile.

Those ever-prancing steeds !-My friend, whom change
Of restless will has led to lands that lie
Deep in the East, does not thy fancy set
Above those domes an airy minaret ?

Dost thou not feel, that in this scene are blent
Wide distances of the estrangèd earth,

Far thoughts, far faiths, beseeming her who bent
The spacious Orient to her simple worth,
Who, in her own young freedom eminent,
Scorning the slaves that shamed their ancient birth,
And feeling what the West could be, had been,
Went out a Traveller, and returned a Queen ?

II.

THE Golden Book*

Is now unwritten in, and stands unmoved,
Save when the curious traveller takes down
A random volume, from the dusty shelf,
To trace the progress of a bruited name;
The Bucentaur

Is shattered, and of its resplendent form
There is no remnant, but some splintered morsel,

* The Libro d'Oro, the Venetian "Peerage."

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