XXI. THE CONTRAST. THE PARROT AND THE WREN. I. WITHIN her gilded cage confined A Parrot of that famous kind Like beads of glossy jet her eyes; Her plumy mantle's living hues, Outshine the splendour that imbues 5 10 And, sooth to say, an apter Mate Did never tempt the choice Of feathered Thing most delicate 15 But, exiled from Australian bowers, She trills her song with tutored powers, No more of pity for regrets With which she may have striven! Or spite, if cause be given; 20 Arch, volatile, a sportive bird II. THIS moss-lined shed, green, soft, and dry, 25 30 Strange places, coverts unendeared, 35 To the bleak winds she sometimes gives Say, Dora! tell me, by yon placid moon, 45 XXII. THE DANISH BOY. A FRAGMENT. I. BETWEEN two sister moorland rills dell And in this smooth and open A thing no storm can e'er destroy, II. In clouds above, the lark is heard, No beast, no bird, hath here his home; Pass high above those fragrant bells The Danish Boy walks here alone : III. A Spirit of noon-day is he; Yet seems a form of flesh and blood; 5 10 15 20 Nor piping shepherd shall he be, 25 It fears not rain, nor wind, nor dew; A harp is from his shoulder slung; He suits its melody. Of flocks upon the neighbouring hill And often, when no cause appears, While in the dell he sings alone 35 40 And happy in his flowery cove: 50 From bloody deeds his thoughts are far; And yet he warbles songs of war, That seem like songs of love, 55 XXIII. SONG FOR THE WANDERING JEW. THOUGH the torrents from their fountains Yet they find among the mountains Clouds that love through air to hasten, Ere the storm its fury stills, What if through the frozen centre And the Sea-horse, though the ocean Slumbers without sense of motion, Yield him no domestic cave, Couched upon the rocking wave. 5 10 15 If on windy days the Raven The fleet Ostrich, till day closes, When chill night that care demands. 20 |