Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Asia: Vols. XXI–XXIII. 1876–79.
The Awakening of Endymion
By Letitia Elizabeth Landon (18021838)L
Lone upon a mountain the Grecian youth is laid;
Sleep, mystic sleep, for many a year has bound him,
Yet his beauty, like a statue’s, pale and fair, is undecayed.
When will he awaken?
Night after night, and the cry has been in vain;
Winds, woods, and waves found echoes for replying,
But the tones of the beloved ones were never heard again.
When will he awaken?
Asked the midnight’s silver queen.
Parents, kindred, comrades, have mourned for him as dead;
By day the gathered clouds have had him in their keeping,
And at night the solemn shadows round his rest are shed.
When will he awaken?
Long has Hope been watching with soft eyes fixed above;
When will the Fates, the life of life restoring,
Own themselves vanquished by much-enduring Love?
When will he awaken?
Asks the midnight’s weary queen.
Lighted up with visions from yonder radiant sky,
Full of an immortal’s glorious inspiring,
Softened by a woman’s meek and loving sigh.
When will he awaken?
And the poet’s world has entered in his soul;
He has grown conscious of life’s ancestral glories,
When sages and when kings first upheld the mind’s control.
When will he awaken?
Asks the midnight’s stately queen.
It is Endymion’s planet that rises on the air;
How long, how tenderly his goddess Love has waited,
Waited with a love too mighty for despair!
Soon he will awaken.
Tones that seem the lute’s from the breathing flowers depart;
Not a wind that wanders o’er Mount Latmos but is bringing
Music that is murmured from Nature’s inmost heart.
Soon he will awaken
To his and midnight’s queen!
Starry are the heavens, lit with eternal joy;
Light like their own is dawning sweet and slowly
O’er the fair and sculptured forehead of that yet dreaming boy.
Soon he will awaken!
Warms the youth’s lip to the watcher’s near his own;
While the dark eyes open, bright, intense, and burning
With a life more glorious than, ere they closed, was known.
Yes, he has awakened
For the midnight’s happy queen!
How true love still conquers by the deep strength of truth,—
How all the impulses, whose native home is heaven,
Sanctify the visions of hope and faith and youth?
’T is for such they waken!
Comes the starry midnight, felt by life’s gifted few;
Then will the spirit from its earthly sleep awaken
To a being more intense, more spiritual, and true.
So doth the soul awaken,
Like that youth to night’s fair queen!