Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE SLEEPER, by BAYARD TAYLOR Poet's Biography First Line: The glen was fair as some arcadian dell Last Line: Forget, like sleep; and then forgive, like death! Alternate Author Name(s): Taylor, James Bayard Subject(s): Death; Life; Nature; Peace; Sleep; Dead, The | ||||||||
THE glen was fair as some Arcadian dell, All shadow, coolness, and the rush of streams, Save where the sprinkled blaze of noonday fell Like stars within its under-sky of dreams. Rich leaf and blossomed grape and ferntuft made Odors of life and slumber through the shade. "O peaceful heart of Nature!" was my sigh; "How dost thou shame, in thine unconscious bliss, Thy sure accordance with the changing sky, O quiet heart, the restless beat of this! Take thou the place false friends have vacant left, And bring thy bounty to repair the theft!" So sighing, weary with the unsoothed pain From insect-stings of women and of men, Uneasy heart and ever-baffled brain, I breathed the lonely beauty of the glen, And from the fragrant shadows where she stood Evoked the shyest Dryad of the wood Lo! on a slanting rock, outstretched at length, A woodman lay in slumber, fair as death, His limbs relaxed in all their supple strength, His lips half parted with his easy breath, And by one gleam of hovering light caressed His bare brown arm and white uncovered breast. "Why comes he here?" I whispered, treading soft The hushing moss beside his flinty bed; "Sweet are the haycocks in yon clover-croft. -- The meadow turf were light beneath his head: Could he not slumber by the orchard-tree, And leave this quiet unprofaned for me?" But something held my step. I bent, and scanned (As one might view a veiny agate-stone) The hard, half-open fingers of his hand, Strong cords of wrist, knit round the jointed bone, And sunburnt muscles, firm and full of power, But harmless now as petals of a flower. There lay the unconscious Life, but, ah! more fair Than ever blindly stirred in leaf and bark, -- Warmth, beauty, passion, mystery everywhere, Beyond the Dryad's feebly burning spark Of cold poetic being: who could say If here the angel or the wild beast lay? Then I looked up, and read his helpless face: Peace touched the temples and the eyelids, slept On drooping lashes, made itself a place In smiles that slowly to the corners crept Of parting lips, and came and went, to show The happy freedom of the heart below. A holy rest! wherein the man became Man's interceding representative: In Sleep's white realm fell off his mask of blame, And he was sacred, for that he did live. His presence marred no more the quiet deep, But all the glen became a shrine of Sleep! And then I mused: how lovely this repose! How the shut sense its dwelling consecrates! Sleep guards itself against the hands of foes; Its breath disarms the Envies and the Hates Which haunt our lives: were this mine enemy, My stealthy watch could not less reverent be! So hang their hands, that would have done me wrong; So sweet their breathing, whose unkindly spite Provoked the bitter measures of my song; So might they slumber, sacred in my sight, Or I in theirs: -- why waste contentious breath? Forget, like Sleep; and then forgive, like Death! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A FRIEND KILLED IN THE WAR by ANTHONY HECHT FOR JAMES MERRILL: AN ADIEU by ANTHONY HECHT TARANTULA: OR THE DANCE OF DEATH by ANTHONY HECHT CHAMPS D?ÇÖHONNEUR by ERNEST HEMINGWAY NOTE TO REALITY by TONY HOAGLAND BEDOUIN [LOVE] SONG by BAYARD TAYLOR NATIONAL ODE; INDEPENDENCE SQUARE, PHILADELPHIA by BAYARD TAYLOR |
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