Page:Landon in Literary Gazette 1828.pdf/5

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Literary Gazette, 16th February, 1828, Page 107


THE LEGACY OF THE LUTE.

Come, take the lute—the lute I loved,
    'Tis all I have to offer thee;
And may it be less fatal gift
    Than it has ever been to me.

My sigh yet lingers on the strings,
    The strings I have not heart to break:
Wilt thou not, dearest! keep the lute
    For my—for the departed's sake?

But pray thee do not wake that lute;
    Leave it upon the cypress tree:
I would have crushed its charmed chords,
    But they so oft were strung to thee.

The minstrel-lute! oh, touch it not,
    Or weary destiny is thine;
Thy life a twilight's haunted dream—
    Thou, victim at an idol's shrine.

Thy breath but lives on others' lips—
    Thy hope, a thing beyond the grave—
Thy heart, bare to the vulture's beak—
    Thyself, a bound and barter'd slave.

And yet a dangerous charm o'er all,
    A bright but ignis-fatuus flame,
Luring thee with a show of power,
    Dazzling thee with a blaze of fame.

It is to waste on careless hearts
    The throbbing music of thine own;
To speak love's burning words, yet be
    Alone—ay, utterly alone.

I sought to fling my laurel wreath
    Away upon the autumn wind:
In vain,—'twas like those poison'd crowns
    Thou mayst not from the brow unbind.