Letitia Elizabeth Landon (L. E. L.) in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1839 (1838)
by Letitia Elizabeth Landon
Thomas Moore, Esq.
2393113Letitia Elizabeth Landon (L. E. L.) in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1839 — Thomas Moore, Esq.1838Letitia Elizabeth Landon

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THOMAS MOORE, ESQ..




Artist: F. Sieurec - Engraved by: G. H. Adcock


THOMAS MOORE, ESQ.


Moore’s name is a history in itself. Is there a single reader of poetry, to whom "Lalla Rookh" and the "Irish Melodies" are not familiar as household words?


If Titania, just wakened from dreams which the rose,
Flung, coloured and fragrant, around her repose,
Yet, haunted by fancies, should ask for a song,
To bear the soft hours of the noontide along—

'Tis thy lute that should keep the bright fairy from sleeping,
The sea-shell had never such tones in its keeping;
Though in its pale chamber of pearl was the birth
Of the earliest music that breathed over earth.

The falling of fountains—the slight summer rain—
The voice of the dove, were less sweet than thy strain;
Till stirred with delight, would her exquisite wings
Beat time on the west wind, to echo thy strings.

But yet to the ear of the fairy, unknown
Were half the deep music that dwells in thy tone:
The patriot’s hope, and the minstrel’s despair,
To the human heart vibrate—their dwelling is there.

Thy song has its sunshine—perhaps to that sun
It owes half the loveliest wreaths it has won.
It still lofty hopes and sad thoughts has betrayed—
Where on earth is the sunshine that flingeth no shade?

Thou wert not "the wild wind"* that waked for a while
The music and murmur of "Erin's green isle;"
Ah! no: to thy country thy numbers first brought
The burst of strong feeling—the purpose and thought.

From Memnon's dark statue ’twas morning’s glad light
That wakened the melody sleeping through night;
So the soul of thine island arose at thy line,
And to wish for her welfare is wishing for thine.


*"Dear harp of my country, in darkness I found thee,

The cold chain of silence had hung o’er thee long,
When proudly, my own island harp, I unbound thee,
And gave all thy chords to light, freedom, and song.
If the heart of the patriot, soldier, or lover,
Have throbbed at thy song, ’twas thy glory alone;
I was but as the wind passing heedlessly over—

And all the wild sweetness I waked was thine own."