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The shut rose shall dream of our loves and awake

Full-blown, and such warmth for the

morning take,

The stock-dove shall hatch her soft brace and shall coo,

While I kiss to the melody, aching all through.

VERSES WRITTEN DURING A TOUR IN SCOTLAND

Keats saw his brother George and wife set sail from Liverpool at the end of June, 1818, and then set forth with his friend Charles Armitage Brown on a walking tour through Wordsworth's country and into Scotland. The verses included in this section were all sent in letters, chiefly to his brother Tom. He did not include any in the volume which he published in 1820, and they first saw the light when Lord Houghton included them in the Life, Letters and Literary Remains. The more off-hand and familiar verses written at this time are given in the Appendix.

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VERSES WRITTEN DURING A TOUR IN SCOTLAND 121

All is cold Beauty; pain is never done:
For who has mind to relish, Minos-wise,

The Real of Beauty, free from that dead hue

Sickly imagination and sick pride Cast wan upon it! Burns! with honour due

I oft have honour'd thee. Great shadow, hide

Thy face; I sin against thy native skies.

II

TO AILSA ROCK

The tourists crossed to Ireland for a short trip, and after returning to Scotland, made their way into Ayrshire, entering it a little beyond Cairn. Their walk led them into a long wooded glen. 'At the end,' writes Keats, July 10, 1818, 'we had a gradual ascent and got among the tops of the mountains whence in a little time I descried in the Sea Ailsa Rock, 940 feet high-it was 15 Miles distant and seemed close upon us. The effect of Ailsa with the peculiar perspective of the Sea in connection with the ground we stood on, and the misty rain then falling gave me a complete Idea of a deluge. Ailsa struck me very suddenly - really I was a little alarmed.'

HEARKEN, thou craggy ocean pyramid ! Give answer from thy voice, the seafowls' screams!

When were thy shoulders mantled in huge streams?

When, from the sun, was thy broad forehead hid ?

How long is 't since the mighty power bid

Thee heave to airy sleep from fathom dreams?

Sleep in the lap of thunder or sunbeams, Or when gray clouds are thy cold coverlid. Thou answer'st not; for thou art dead asleep;

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Drown'd wast thou till an earthquake made

thee steep,

Another cannot wake thy giant size.

III

WRITTEN IN THE COTTAGE WHERE BURNS WAS BORN

6

--

From Kingswell's, July 13, 1818, Keats wrote of his experience in visiting Burns's birthplace: The approach to it [Ayr] is extremely fine quite outwent my expectations - richly meadowed, wooded, heathed and rivuleted with a grand Sea view terminated by the black Mountains of the isle of Annan. As soon as I saw them so nearby I said to myself, "How is it they did not beckon Burns to some grand attempt at Epic ?" The bonny Doon is the sweetest river I ever saw - overhung with fine trees as far as we could see

We stood some time on the Brig across it, over which Tam o' Shanter fled - we took a pinch of snuff on the Keystone - then we proceeded to the “auld Kirk Alloway.". As we were looking at it a Farmer pointed the spots where Mungo's Mither hang'd hersel' and "drunken Charlie brake 's neck's bane." Then we proceeded to the Cottage he was born in there was a board to that effect by the door side-it had the same effect as the same sort of memorial at Stratford on Avon. We drank some Toddy to Burns's memory with an old Man who knew Burns - damn him and damn his anecdotes - he was a great bore it was impossible for a Southron to understand above 5 words in a hundred. There was

-

something good in his description of Burns's melancholy the last time he saw him. I was determined to write a sonnet in the Cottage I did - but it was so bad I cannot venture it here.' He wrote in the same strain to Reynolds, saying, 'I wrote a sonnet for the mere sake of writing some lines under the Roof they are so bad I cannot transcribe them... I cannot write about scenery and visitingsFancy is indeed less than a present palpable reality, but it is greater than remembrance. One song of Burns's is of more worth to you than all I could think for a whole year in his native country.'

...

THIS mortal body of a thousand days Now fills, O Burns, a space in thine own room,

Where thou didst dream alone on budded bays,

Happy and thoughtless of thy day of doom!

My pulse is warm with thine old Barleybree,

My head is light with pledging a great soul,

My eyes are wandering, and I cannot see, Fancy is dead and drunken at its goal; Yet can I stamp my foot upon thy floor, Yet can I ope thy window-sash to find The meadow thou hast tramped o'er and o'er,

Yet can I think of thee till thought is

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The verses which follow were first printed in Life, Letters and Literary Remains. They occur in a letter to Tom Keats from Oban, July 26, 1818, and were preceded by this description: 'I am puzzled how to give you an Idea of Staffa. It can only be represented by a first-rate drawing. One may compare the surface of the Island to a roof this roof is supported by grand pillars of basalt standing together as thick as honeycombs. The finest thing is Fingal's cave - it is entirely a hollowing out of Basalt Pillars. Suppose now the Giants who rebelled against Jove had taken a whole Mass of black Columns and bound them together like bunches of matches and then with immense axes had made a cavern in the body of these columns-Of course the roof and floor must be composed of the broken ends of the Columns such is Fingal's cave, except that the Sea has done the work of excavations, and is continually dashing there- - so that we walk along the sides of the cave on the pillars which are left as if for convenient stairs. The

roof is arched somewhat gothic-wise, and the length of some of the entire side-pillars is fifty feet. About the island you might seat an army of men each on a pillar. The length of the Cave is 120 feet, and from its extremity the view into the sea, through the large arch at the entrance the colour of the column is

a sort of black with a lurking gloom of purple therein. For solemnity and grandeur it far surpasses the finest Cathedral. At the extremity of the Cave there is a small perforation into another Cave, at which the waters meeting and buffeting each other there is sometimes produced a report as of a cannon heard as far as Iona, which must be 12 miles. As we approached in the boat, there was such a fine swell of the sea that the pillars appeared rising immediately out of the crystal. But it is impossible to describe it.'

Nor Aladdin magian
Ever such a work began;
Not the wizard of the Dee
Ever such a dream could see;
Not St. John, in Patmos' isle,
In the passion of his toil,
When he saw the churches seven,
Golden aisled, built up in heaven,
Gazed at such a rugged wonder,
As I stood its roofing under.
Lo! I saw one sleeping there,
On the marble cold and bare;
While the surges wash'd his feet,
And his garments white did beat
Drench'd about the sombre rocks;
On his neck his well-grown locks,
Lifted dry above the main,

Were upon the curl again.
'What is this? and what art thou?'
Whisper'd I, and touch'd his brow;
'What art thou? and what is this?'
Whisper'd I, and strove to kiss
The spirit's hand, to wake his eyes;
Up he started in a trice:
'I am Lycidas,' said he,
'Famed in funeral minstrelsy!
This was architectured thus
By the great Oceanus !
Here his mighty waters play

TO A LADY SEEN FOR A FEW MOMENTS AT VAUXHALL 123

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Hollow organs all the day;
Here, by turns, his dolphins all,
Finny palmers, great and small,
Come to pay devotion due,
Each a mouth of pearls must strew!
Many a mortal of these days
Dares to pass our sacred ways;
Dares to touch, audaciously,
This cathedral of the sea!
I have been the pontiff-priest,
Where the waters never rest,
Where a fledgy sea-bird choir
Soars for ever! Holy fire
I have hid from mortal man;
Proteus is my Sacristan!

But the dulled eye of mortal

Hath pass'd beyond the rocky portal;
So for ever will I leave

Such a taint, and soon unweave
All the magic of the place.'
So saying, with a Spirit's glance
He dived!

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TRANSLATION FROM A SONNET OF RONSARD

Published in Life, Letters and Literary Remains in a letter to Reynolds, of which the probable date is September 22, 1818; in a letter to Charles Wentworth Dilke September 21, 1818, Keats quotes the last line with the remark: 'You have passed your Romance, and I never gave in to it, or else I think this line a feast for one of your Lovers.' The text of the sonnet will be found in the Appendix.

NATURE withheld Cassandra in the skies, For more adornment, a full thousand

years;

She took their cream of Beauty's fairest dyes,

And shaped and tinted her above all

Peers:

Meanwhile Love kept her dearly with his wings,

And underneath their shadow fill'd her

eyes

With such a richness that the cloudy Kings

Of high Olympus utter'd slavish sighs. When from the Heavens I saw her first descend,

My heart took fire, and only burning

pains,

They were my pleasures - they my Life's sad end;

Love pour'd her beauty into my warm

veins.

TO A LADY SEEN FOR A FEW MOMENTS AT VAUXHALL

First published in Hood's Magazine for April 1844, and afterward included in Life, Letters and Literary Remains. No date is given, and the poem is placed here from a fancied association with the lady whom Keats saw at Hastings and who started the train of thought in his letter to his brother and sister, October 25, 1818.

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