Page:Landon in Literary Gazette 1827.pdf/29

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The Literary Gazette, 29th December 1827, page 846


ORIGINAL POETRY.

THE WANDERER.

Float on, float on, thou lonely bark,
    Across the weary brine;
I know not why I load thee with
    Such cheerless freight as mine.

I know not why I wander forth,
    Nor what I wish to see;
For Hope, the child of Morn and Mist,
    Has long been veiled from me.

Little reck I for ruined towers—
    They may be very fair—
Let poet or let painter rave,
    I see but ruin there.

I think upon the waste above,
    And on the dead below;
I see but human vanity—
    I see but human wo.

And cities in their hour of pomp,
    The peopled and the proud—
What are they? mighty sepulchres
    To gulf a wretched crowd:

Where wealth and want are both secured
    Each one the worst to bear;
Where every heart and house are barred
    With the same sordid care.

And fairer scenes—the vine-wreathed hill
    A gold and ruby mine,
Grapes, nature's jewels, richly wrought
    Around the autumn's shrine;

The corn-fields' fairy armory,
    Where every lance is gold,
And poppies fling upon the wind
    Their banner's crimson gold:

The moon, sweet shadow of the sun,
    On the lake's tranquil breast,—
Too much these gentle scenes contrast
    My spirit's own unrest.