Observe ye not yon high cliffs brow,
Up which a wanderer clambers slow,
T is by a hoary ruin crownd,
Which rocks when shrill winds whistle round;
That is an ancient knightly hold,
Alas! it droops, deserted, cold;
And sad and cheerless seems to gaze,
Back, back, to yon heroic days,
When youthful Kemps, completely armd,
And lovely maids around it swarmd.
You, in the tower, a hole may see;
A window there has ceasd to be.
From that once leand a damsel bright,
In evenings red and fading light,
And stard intently down the way,
Up which should come her lover gay:
But, time it flies on rapid wing
Far off a church is towering,
Within it stand two marble stones,
That rest above the lovers bones.
But see, the wanderer, with pain,
Has reachd the pile he wishd to gain;
Whilst Sol, behind the ruind walls,
Down into sacred nature falls.
See, there, two hostile nobles fight,
With tiger-rage and giant-might.
Theres seen no smoke, theres heard no shot,
For guns and powder yet were not.
T was custom then, when foemen warrd,
To win or lose with spear and sword:
A wild heroic song they yell,
And each the other seeks to fell.
Oft, oft, her ownself to destroy,
Her own hand nature does employ.
There casts the hill up fire-flakes,
And Earths gigantic body quakes:
There, lightnings through the high blue flash,
And oceans billows wildly dash:
There, men gainst men their muscles strain,
And deal out death, and wounds, and pain.
O Nature! to thyself show less
Of hate, and more of tenderness.
How dusky is the air around;
We are no more above the ground;
But, down we wend within the hill,
Whose springs our ears with hissings fill.
See, there, how rich the ruddy gold
Winds snakeways, midst the clammy mould
And hard green stone. By torches ray,
The harvest there men mow away.
But, see ye not yon gathring cloud,
Which gainst them cometh paley proud;
That holds the spirit of the hill,
Who brings death in its hand so chill:
If down they do not quickly fall,
Most certainly t will slay them all;
For sorely wrathful is its mood,
Because they break its solitude:
Because its treasure off they bear,
And fling light oer its gloomy lair.
T is white, and Kobbold is the name
Which it from oldest days does claim.
Now, back at once into time we go,
For many a hundred years, I trow.
A gothic chamber salutes your sight:
A taper gleams feebly through the night;
A ghostly man by the board you see,
With his hand to his temples muses he:
Parchments, with age discolourd and dun;
Ancient shields all written upon;
Tree-bark, bearing ciphers half defacd;
Stones with Runes and characters gracd;
Things of more worth than ye are aware,
On the mighty table are pild up there.
He gazes now in exstatic trance
Through the casement, out into natures expanse.
Wheneer we sit at the lone midnight,
And stare out into the dubious light,
Whilst the pallid moon is peering oer
Ruind cloister and crumbling tower,
Feelings so wondrous strange come oer us;
The past, and the future, arise before us;
The present fadeth, unmarkd, away
In the garb of insignificancy.
He gazes up into natures height,
The noble man with his eye so bright;
He gazes up to the starry skies,
Whither, sooner or later, we hope to rise;
And now he takes in haste the pen,
And the spirit of Oldom flows from it amain;
The scatterd Goth-songs he changes unto
An Epic which maketh each bosom to glow.
Thanks to the old Monk, toiling thus
They call him Saxo Grammaticus.
An open field before you lies,
A wind-burst oer its bosom sighs,
Now all is still, all seems asleep;
Midst of the field there stands a heap,
Upon the heap stand Runic stones,
Thereunder rest gigantic bones.
From Arilds time, that heap stands there,
But now t is tilld with utmost care,
In order that its owner may
Thereoff reap golden corn one day.
Oft has he tried, the niggard soul,
The mighty stones away to roll,
As useless burdens of his ground;
But they for that too big were found.
See, see! the moon through cloud and rack
Looks down upon the letters black:
And when the ghost its form uprears
He shines upon its bursting tears
For oh! the moons an ancient man,
Describe him, mortal tongue neer can,
He shines alike, serene and bright,
At midmost hour of witching night,
Upon the spot of love and glee,
And on the gloomy gallows-tree.
Upon each Rune behold him stare,
While off he hastes through fields of air;
He understands those signs, Ill gage,
Whose meaning lies in sunken age;
And if he were in speaking state,
No doubt the old man could relate
Strange things that have on earth occurrd,
Of which fame neer has said a word;
But since with look, with look alone,
He cannot those events make known,
He waketh from his height sublime
Mere longing for the dark gone time.