Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Obermann by Matthew Arnold
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Obermann

    By Matthew Arnold



    In front the awful Alpine track
    Crawls up its rocky stair;
    The autumn storm-winds drive the rack
    Close o’er it, in the air.

    Behind are the abandon’d baths
    Mute in their meadows lone;
    The leaves are on the valley paths;
    The mists are on the Rhone,

    The white mists rolling like a sea.
    I hear the torrents roar.
    Yes, Obermann, all speaks of thee!
    I feel thee near once more.

    I turn thy leaves: I feel their breath
    Once more upon me roll;
    That air of languor, cold, and death,
    Which brooded o’er thy soul.

    Fly hence, poor Wretch, whoe’er thou art,
    Condemn’d to cast about,
    All shipwreck in thy own weak heart,
    For comfort from without:

    A fever in these pages burns
    Beneath the calm they feign;
    A wounded human spirit turns
    Here, on its bed of pain.

    Yes, though the virgin mountain air
    Fresh through these pages blows,
    Though to these leaves the glaciers spare
    The soul of their white snows,

    Though here a mountain murmur swells
    Of many a dark-bough’d pine,
    Though, as you read, you hear the bells
    Of the high-pasturing kine,

    Yet, through the hum of torrent lone,
    And brooding mountain bee,
    There sobs I know not what ground tone
    Of human agony.

    Is it for this, because the sound
    Is fraught too deep with pain,
    That, Obermann! the world around
    So little loves thy strain?

    Some secrets may the poet tell,
    For the world loves new ways.
    To tell too deep ones is not well;
    It knows not what he says.

    Yet of the spirits who have reign’d
    In this our troubled day,
    I know but two, who have attain’d,
    Save thee, to see their way.

    By England’s lakes, in grey old age,
    His quiet home one keeps;
    And one, the strong much-toiling Sage,
    In German Weimar sleeps.

    But Wordsworth’s eyes avert their ken
    From half of human fate;
    And Goethe’s course few sons of men
    May think to emulate.

    For he pursued a lonely road,
    His eyes on Nature’s plan;
    Neither made man too much a God,
    Nor God too much a man.

    Strong was he, with a spirit free
    From mists, and sane, and clear;
    Clearer, how much! than ours: yet we
    Have a worse course to steer.

    For though his manhood bore the blast
    Of Europe’s stormiest time,
    Yet in a tranquil world was pass’d
    His tenderer youthful prime.

    But we, brought forth and rear’d in hours
    Of change, alarm, surprise,
    What shelter to grow ripe is ours?
    What leisure to grow wise’?

    Like children bathing on the shore,
    Buried a wave beneath,
    The second wave succeeds, before
    We have had time to breathe.

    Too fast we live, too much are tried,
    Too harass’d, to attain
    Wordsworth’s sweet calm, or Goethe’s wide
    And luminous view to gain.

    And then we turn, thou sadder Sage!
    To thee: we feel thy spell.
    The hopeless tangle of our age,
    Thou too hast scann’d it well.

    Immovable thou sittest; still
    As death; compos’d to bear.
    Thy head is clear, thy feeling chill,
    And icy thy despair.

    Yes, as the Son of Thetis said,
    One hears thee saying now,
    Greater by far than thou are dead:
    Strive not: die also thou.,

    Ah! Two desires toss about
    The poet’s feverish blood.
    One drives him to the world without,
    And one to solitude.

    The glow, he cries, the thrill of life,
    Where, where do these abound?
    Not in the world, not in the strife
    Of men, shall they be found.

    He who hath watch’d, not shar’d, the strife,
    Knows how the day hath gone;
    He only lives with the world’s life
    Who hath renounc’d his own.

    To thee we come, then. Clouds are roll’d
    Where thou, O Seer, art set;
    Thy realm of thought is drear and cold,
    The world is colder yet!

    And thou hast pleasures too to share
    With those who come to thee:
    Balms floating on thy mountain air,
    And healing sights to see.

    How often, where the slopes are green
    On Jaman, hast thou sate
    By some high chalet door, and seen
    The summer day grow late,

    And darkness steal o’er the wet grass
    With the pale crocus starr’d,
    And reach that glimmering sheet of glass
    Beneath the piny sward,

    Lake Leman’s waters, far below:
    And watch’d the rosy light
    Fade from the distant peaks of snow:
    And on the air of night

    Heard accents of the eternal tongue
    Through the pine branches play:
    Listen’d. and felt thyself grow young;
    Listen’d, and wept Away!

    Away the dreams that but deceive
    And thou, sad Guide, adieu!
    I go; Fate drives me: but I leave
    Half of my life with you.

    We, in some unknown Power’s employ,
    Move on a rigorous line:
    Can neither, when we will, enjoy;
    Nor, when we will, resign.

    I in the world must live: but thou,
    Thou melancholy Shade!
    Wilt not, if thou canst see me now,
    Condemn me, nor upbraid.

    For thou art gone away from earth,
    And place with those dost claim,
    The Children of the Second Birth
    Whom the world could not tame;

    And with that small transfigur’d Band,
    Whom many a different way
    Conducted to their common land,
    Thou learn’st to think as they.

    Christian and pagan, king and slave,
    Soldier and anchorite,
    Distinctions we esteem so grave,
    Are nothing in their sight.

    They do not ask, who pin’d unseen,
    Who was on action hurl’d,
    Whose one bond is that all have been
    Unspotted by the world.

    There without anger thou wilt see
    Him who obeys thy spell
    No more, so he but rest, like thee,
    Unsoil’d:, and so, Farewell

    Farewell!, Whether thou now liest near
    That much-lov’d inland sea,
    The ripples of whose blue waves cheer
    Vevey and Meillerie,

    And in that gracious region bland,
    Where with clear-rustling wave
    The scented pines of Switzerland
    Stand dark round thy green grave,

    Between the dusty vineyard walls
    Issuing on that green place
    The early peasant still recalls
    The pensive stranger’s face,

    And stoops to clear thy moss-grown date
    Ere he plods on again;
    Or whether, by maligner Fate,
    Among the swarms of men,

    Where between granite terraces
    The blue Seine rolls her wave,
    The Capital of Pleasure sees
    Thy hardly-heard-of grave,

    Farewell! Under the sky we part,
    In this stern Alpine dell.
    O unstrung will! O broken heart!
    A last, a last farewell!



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