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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
INEZ, by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: Alas that clouds should ever steal Last Line: Of inez on her juan's breast. Alternate Author Name(s): L. E. L.; Maclean, Letitia | |||
Alas that clouds should ever steal O'er Love's delicious sky; That ever Love's sweet lip should feel Aught but the gentlest sigh! Love is a pearl of purest hue, But stormy waves are round it; And dearly may a woman rue The hour that first she found it. THE lips that breathed this song were fair As those the rose-touch'd Houries wear, And dimpled by a smile, whose spell Not even sighs could quite dispel; And eyes of that dark azure light Seen only at the deep midnight; A cheek, whose crimson hues seem'd caught From the first tint by April brought To the peach-bud; and clouds of curl Over a brow of blue-vein'd pearl, Falling like sunlight, just one shade Of chestnut on its golden braid, Is she not all too fair to weep? Those young eyes should be closed in sleep, Dreaming those dreams the moonlight brings, When the dew falls and the nightingale sings: Dreams of a word, of a look, of a sigh, Till the cheek burns and the heart beats high, But INEZ sits and weeps in her bower, Pale as the gleam on the white orange-flower, And counting the wearying moments o'er For his return, who returns no more! There was a time -- a time of bliss, -- When to have met his INEZ' kiss, To but look in her deep blue eye, To breathe the air sweet with her sigh, Young JUAN would have urged his steed With the lightning of a lover's speed, -- Ere she should have shed one single tear, He had courted danger, and smiled at fear; But he had parted in high disdain, And sworn to dash from his heart the chain Of one who, he said, was too light to be Holy and pure in her constancy. Alas! that woman, not content With her peculiar element Of gentle love, should ever try The meteor spells of vanity! Her world should be of love alone. Of one fond heart, and only one. For heartless flattery, and sighs And looks false as the rainbow's dyes, Are very worthless. And that morn Had JUAN from his INEZ borne All woman's prettiness of scorn; Had watch'd for her averted eye In vain, -- had seen a rival nigh And smiled upon: he wildly swore To look on the false one no more, Who thus could trifle, thus could break A fond heart for the triumph's sake. -- And yet she loved him, -- oh! how well, Let woman's own fond spirit tell. When the warriors met in their high career, Went not her heart along with his spear? The dance seem'd sad, and the festival dim, If her hand was unclaim'd by him; Waked she her lute if it breathed not his name? Lay she in dreams, but some thought of him came? No flowers, no smiles, were on life's dull tide, When JUAN was not by his INEZ' side. And yet they parted! Still there clings An earth-stain to the fairest things; And love, that most delicious gift Upon life's shrine of sorrow left, Has its own share of suffering: A shade falls from its radiant wing, A spot steals o'er its sunny brow, Fades the rose-lip's witching glow. 'Tis well, -- for earth were too like heaven, If length of life to love were given. He has left the land of the chestnut and lime For the cedar and rose of a southern clime, With a pilgrim's vow and a soldier's brand, To fight in the wars of the Holy Land. No colours are placed on his helm beside, No lady's scarf o'er his neck is tied, A dark plume alone does young JUAN wear: -- Look where warriors are thickest, that plume will be there. But what has fame to do with one Whose light and hope of fame are gone? Oh, fame is as the moon above, Whose sun of light and life is love. There is more in the smile of one gentle eye Than the thousand pages of history; There is more in the spell of one slight gaze, Than the loudest plaudits the crowd can raise. Take the gems in glory's coronal, And one smile of beauty is worth them all. He was not lonely quite, -- a shade, A dream, a fancy, round him play'd; Sometimes low, at the twilight hour, He heard a voice like that whose power Was on his heart: it sang a strain Of those whose love was fond, yet vain: Sweet like a dream, -- yet none might say Whose was the voice, or whose the lay And once, when worn with toil and care, All that the soldier has to bear, With none to soothe and none to bless His hour of sickly loneliness. When, waked to consciousness again, The fire gone from his heart and brain, He could remember some fair thing Around his pillow hovering; Of white arms in whose clasp he slept; Of young blue eyes that o'er him wept; How, when on the parch'd lip and brow Burnt the red fever's hottest glow, Some one had brought dew of the spring, With woman's own kind solacing, And he had heard a voice, whose thrill Was echoed by his bosom still. It was not hers -- it could but be A dream, the fever's fantasie.... Deadly has been the fight to-day; But now the infidels give way, And cimetar and turban'd band Scatter before the foeman's hand; And in the rear, with sword and spur, Follows the Christian conqueror. And one dark chief rides first of all -- A warrior at his festival -- Chasing his prey, till none are near To aid the single soldier's spear, Save one slight boy. Of those who flew, Three turn, the combat to renew: They fly, but death is on the field -- That page's breast was JUAN'S shield. He bore the boy where, in the shade Of the green palm, a fountain made Its pleasant music; tenderly He laid his head upon his knee, And from the dented helm unroll'd The blood-stain'd curls of summer gold. Knew he not then those deep-blue eyes, That lip of rose, and smiles, and sighs? His INEZ! -- his! -- could this be her, -- Thus for his sake a wanderer! -- He spoke not -- moved not -- but sate there, A statue in his cold despair, Watching the lip and cheek decay, As faded life's last hue away, While she lay sweet and motionless, As only faint with happiness. At length she spoke, in that sweet tone Woman and love have for their own: "This is what I have pray'd might be -- Has death not seal'd my truth to thee?" ... A cypress springs by yonder grave, And music from the fountain wave Sings its low dirge to the pale rose That, near, in lonely beauty blows. Two lovers sleep beneath. Oh, sweet, Even in the grave, it is to meet; Sweet even the death-couch of stone, When shared with some beloved one; And sweeter than life the silent rest Of INEZ on her JUAN'S breast. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...FELICIA HEMANS by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON THE CASTLE OF CHILLON by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON THE FACTORY; 'TIS AN ACCURSED THING! by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON THE FEMALE CONVICT by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON THE MARRIAGE VOW by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON A CHILD SCREENING A DOVE FROM A HAWK, BY STEWARDSON by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON A COMPARISON by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON A GIRL AT HER DEVOTIONS, BY NEWTON by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON A HISTORY OF THE LYRE by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON A LADY'S BEAUTY by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON |
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