Poems of Letitia Elizabeth Landon (L. E. L.) in The Keepsake, 1829/Altered River

For other versions of this work, see The Altered River.
Poems of Letitia Elizabeth Landon (L. E. L.) in The Keepsake, 1829
by Letitia Elizabeth Landon
The Altered River
2413775Poems of Letitia Elizabeth Landon (L. E. L.) in The Keepsake, 1829 — The Altered RiverLetitia Elizabeth Landon


THE ALTERED RIVER.


Thou lovely river, thou art now
    As fair as fair can be,
Pale flowers wreathe upon thy brow,
    The rose bends over thee.
Only the morning sun hath leave
    To turn thy waves to light,
Cool shade the willow branches weave
    When noon becomes too bright.
The lilies are the only boats
    Upon thy diamond plain,
The swan alone in silence floats
    Around thy charm'd domain.
The moss bank's fresh embroiderie,
    With fairy favours starr'd,
Seems made the summer haunt to be
    Of melancholy bard.
Fair as thou art, thou wilt be food
    For many a thought of pain;
For who can gaze upon thy flood,
    Nor wish it to remain
The same pure and unsullied thing
    Where heaven's face is as clear
Mirror'd in thy blue wandering
    As heaven's face can be here.
Flowers fling their sweet bonds on thy breast,
    The willows woo thy stay,
In vain,—thy waters may not rest,
    Their course must be away.
In yon wide world, what wilt thou find?
    What all find—toil and care:

Your flowers you have left behind
    Far other weight to bear.
The heavy bridge confines your stream,
    Through which the barges toil,
Smoke has shut out the sun's glad beam,
    Thy waves have caught the soil.
On—on—though weariness it be,
    By shoal and barrier cross'd,
Till thou hast reach'd the mighty sea,
    And there art wholly lost.
Bend thou, young poet, o'er the stream—
    Such fate will be thine own;
Thy lute's hope is a morning dream,
    And when have dreams not flown?
L. E. L.