Samuel Taylor Coleridge
The Blossoming of the Solitary Date-Tree
A LAMENT
Coleridge's published
note
Beneath the blaze of a tropical sun the
mountain peaks are the Thrones of Frost, through the absence of
objects to reflect the rays. `What no one with us shares, seems
scarce our own.' The presence of a ONE,
The best belov'd, who loveth me the best,
is for the heart, what the supporting air from within is for the hollow globe with its
suspended car. Deprive it of this, and all without, that would
have buoyed it aloft even to the seat of the gods, becomes a
burthen and crushes it into flatness.
The finer the sense for the beautiful and
the lovely, and the fairer and lovelier the object presented to the
sense ; the more exquisite the individual's capacity of joy, and
the more ample his means and opportunities of enjoyment, the more
heavily will he feel the ache of solitariness, the more
unsubstantial becomes the feast spread around him. What matters it,
whether in fact the viands and the ministering graces are shadowy
or real, to him who has not hand to grasp nor arms to embrace them
?
Hope, Imagination, honourable Aims,
Free Commune with the choir that cannot die,
Science and Song, delight in little things,
The buoyant child surviving
in the man ;
Fields, forests, ancient mountains, ocean, sky,
With all their voices--O dare I accuse
My earthly lot as guilty of my spleen,
Or call my destiny niggard ! O no ! no !
It is her largeness, and her overflow,
Which being incomplete, disquieteth me so !
IV
For never touch of gladness stirs my heart,
But tim'rously beginning to rejoice
Like a blind Arab, that from sleep doth
start
In lonesome tent, I listen for thy voice.
Belovéd ! 'tis not thine ; thou art not there
!
Then melts the bubble into idle air,
And wishing without hope I restlessly despair.
V
The
mother with anticipated glee
Smiles o'er the child, that, standing by her chair
And flatt'ning its round cheek upon her knee,
Looks up, and doth its rosy lips prepare
To mock the coming sounds. At that sweet sight
She hears her own voice with a new delight ;
And if the babe perchance should lisp the notes aright,
Then is she tenfold gladder than before !
But should disease or chance the darling take,
What then avail those songs, which sweet of yore
Were only sweet for their sweet echo's sake ?
Dear maid ! no prattler at a mother's knee
Was e'er so dearly prized as I prize thee :
Why was I made for Love and Love denied to me ?
1805, published 1828, 1829, 1834
(proofed against E. H. Coleridge's 1927 edition of STC's poems
and a ca. 1898 edition of STC's Poetical Works, ``reprinted
from the early editions'')
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