Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.
By The Paint KingWashington Allston (17791842)
F
No damsel could with her compare;
Her charms were the theme of the heart and the tongue,
And bards without number in ecstasies sung,
The beauties of Ellen the fair.
All drill’d by Ovidean art,
And languish’d, and ogled, protested and danced,
Like shadows they came, and like shadows they glanced
From the hard polish’d ice of her heart.
A something that could not be found;
Like a sailor she seem’d on a desolate shore,
With nor house, nor a tree, nor a sound but the roar
Of breakers high dashing around.
Though nothing, alas, could she find;
Like the moon, without atmosphere, brilliant and clear,
Yet doom’d like the moon, with no being to cheer
The bright barren waste of her mind.
When the rain made her mansion a pound,
Up and down would she go, like the sails of a mill,
And pat every stair, like a woodpecker’s bill,
From the tiles of the roof to the ground.
Pass’d the youth with a frame in his hand.
The casement she closed—not the eye of her mind
For, do all she could, no, she could not be blind;
Still before her she saw the youth stand.
“Ah, what with that frame can he do?”
And she knelt to the goddess of secrets and pray’d,
When the youth pass’d again, and again he display’d
The frame and a picture to view.
“I must see thee again or I die.”
Then under her white chin, her bonnet she tied,
And after the youth and the picture she hied,
When the youth, looking back, met her eye.
“This picture I see you admire:
Then take it, I pray you, perhaps ’t will beguile
Some moments of sorrow; (nay, pardon my smile)
Or, at least, keep you home by the fire.”
From the cunning young stripling received.
But she knew not the poison that enter’d her eyes,
When sparkling with rapture they gazed on her prize—
Thus, alas, are fair maidens deceived!
And the sculptor he seem’d of the stone;
Yet he languish’d as though for its beauty he pined,
And gazed as the eyes of the statue so blind
Reflected the beams of his own.
Fair Ellen remember’d and sigh’d;
“Ah, couldst thou but lift from that marble so cold,
Thine eyes too imploring, thy arms should enfold,
And press me this day as thy bride.”
The youth, and he stepp’d from the frame:
With a furious transport his arms did enclose
The love-plighted Ellen: and, clasping, he froze
The blood of the maid with his flame!
“Oh, heaven! cried she, who art thou?”
From the roof to the ground did his fierce answer ring,
As frowning, he thunder’d “I am the Paint-King!
And mine, lovely maid, thou art now!”
The loud-screaming maid like a blast;
And he sped though the air like a meteor swift,
While the clouds, wand’ring by him, did fearfully drift
To the right and the left as he pass’d.
With an eddying whirl he descends;
The air all below him becomes black as night,
And the ground where he treads, as if moved with affright,
Like the surge of the Caspian bends.
At the gates of a mountainous cave;
The gates open flew, as by magic unlock’d,
While the peaks of the mount, reeling to and fro, rock’d
Like an island of ice on the wave.
But the Paint-King, he scoff’d at her pain.
“Prithee, love,” said the monster, “what mean these alarms?”
She hears not, she sees not the terrible charms,
That work her to horror again.
Behold the fair youth she would woo;
Now appears the Paint-King in his natural guise;
His face, like a palette of villainous dies,
Black and white, red, and yellow, and blue.
Sat the fiend, like the grim giant Gog,
While aloft to his mouth a huge pipe he applied,
Twice as big as the Eddystone Lighthouse, descried
As it looms through an easterly fog.
In horrid festoons on the wall,
Legs and arms, heads and bodies emerging between,
Like the drawing-room grim of the Scotch Sawney Beane,
By the Devil dress’d out for a ball.
“Must I hang on these walls to be dried?”
“Oh, no!” said the fiend, while he sprung from his seat,
“A far nobler fortune thy person shall meet;
Into paint will I grind thee, my bride!”
An oil jug, he plung’d her within.
Seven days, seven nights, with the shrieks of despair,
Did Ellen in torment convulse the dun air,
All cover’d with oil to the chin.
Then Ellen, all reeking, he laid;
With a rock for his muller, he crush’d every bone,
But, though ground to jelly, still, still did she groan;
For life had forsook not the maid.
Each tint on its surface he spread;
The blue of her eyes, and the brown of her hair,
And the pearl and the white of her forehead so fair,
And her lips’ and her cheeks’ rosy red.
“Now I brave, cruel fairy, thy scorn!”
When lo! from a chasm wide-yawning there came
A light tiny chariot of rose color’d flame,
By a team of ten glow-worms upborne.
Fair Geraldine sat without peer;
Her robe was a gleam of the first blush of light,
And her mantle the fleece of a noon-cloud white,
And a beam of the moon was her spear.
Like the first gentle language of Eve,
Thus spake from her chariot the fairy so fair:
“I come at thy call, but, oh Paint-King, beware,
Beware if again you deceive.”
Thy portrait I oft have essay’d;
Yet ne’er to the canvas could I with my art
The least of thy wonderful beauties impart;
And my failure with scorn you repaid.
And he tower’d with pride as he spoke,
“If again with these magical colors I fail,
The crater of Etna shall hence be my jail,
And my food shall be sulphur and smoke.
Thy promise with justice I claim,
And thou, queen of fairies, shalt ever be mine,
The bride of my bed; and thy portrait divine
Shall fill all the earth with my fame.”
On the canvas enchantingly glow’d;
His touches—they flew like the leaves in a storm;
And the pure pearly white and the carnation warm
Contending in harmony flow’d.
To the figure of Geraldine fair:
With the same sweet expression did faithfully teem
Each muscle, each feature; in short, not a gleam
Was lost of her beautiful hair.
Still a pupil did ruefully lack;
And who shall describe the terrific surprise
That seized the Paint-King when, behold, he descries
Not a speck of his palette of black!
When, casting his eyes to the ground,
He saw the lost pupils of Ellen with grief
In the jaws of a mouse, and the sly little thief
Whisk away from his sight with a bound.
Then rising the fairy in ire
With a touch of her finger she loosen’d her zone,
(While the limbs on the wall gave a terrible groan,)
And she swell’d to a column of fire.
And sulphur the vault fill’d around;
She smote the grim monster; and now by the hair
High-lifting, she hurl’d him in speechless despair
Down the depths of the chasm profound.
“Come forth!” said the good Geraldine;
When, behold, from the canvass descending, appear
Fair Ellen, in person more lovely than e’er,
With grace more than ever divine!