Invocation, To the Genius of Slumber Written Oct. 1787

Spirit of Dreams, that when the dark hours steep
In the soft dews of life-embalming sleep,
Our busy senses, canst restore the lost,
The loved, the mourn'd, from Death's mysterious coast,
Propitious lately to my votive lay,
And the lone musing of the joyless day,
From 'whelming years, and from sepulchral night,
Thou gav'st H ONORA to my slumbering sight:
Deck'd in those varied graces that array'd
In youth's first bloom, the fair ingenuous maid;
In all those pure affections gladd'ning powers,
That wing'd with joy the animated hours,
Alike when her sweet converse welcome made
Morn's rising light, and Evening's stealthy shade;
The months with flowers adorn'd, with radiance warm
The vernal day, and e'en the wintry storm.
She look'd, as in those golden years foregone,
Spoke, as when love attuned each melting tone;
When, by my side, her cautious steps she moved,
Watching the friend solicitously loved,
Whose youthful strength, in one disastrous day,
Had fall'n to luckless accident a prey,
And needed much, to save from future harm,
The eye attentive, the supporting arm.
Remember'd looks, ye rays of Friendship's flame,
Long my soul's light, and guardians of my frame!

Why, visionary Power, so seldom kind
To the deprived, the life-retracing mind;
Withholding oft, 'mid thy obtrusive swarm,
My day-dream's idol, fair H ONORA'S form?
O! when thou giv'st it, then, and only then,
Lost to my woes, I live with her again.
Again on me those soft'ning eye-balls shine!
I hear her speak! I feel her arm on mine!
Real as fair, the tender pleasures glow,
Sweet, as the past was potent to bestow,
Freed from that sense which shrouds with dire controul
Volition's image in a cypress stole;
That tells me, searching wide creation o'er,
My dear H ONORA I shall find no more;
That on her lonely grave, and mouldering form,
Six dreary winters poured the ruthless storm,
Violent and dark as my soul's primal woe
When first I found that beauteous head laid low.
On that unshrined, yet ever-sacred spot,
By faithless Love deserted and forgot,
Six bloomy springs their crystal light have show'd,
Their sun-gilt rains in fragrant silence flow'd,
Mild as my sorrows (calm'd by passing years)
Time-soften'd sighs, and time-assuaged tears.

Once, as the taper's steady light convey'd
Upon the white expanse the graceful shade
Of sweet H ONORA'S face, the traces fair
My anxious hand pursued, and fixed them there;
To throw, in spite of Fate's remorseless crimes,
Soft soothing magic o'er succeeding times.
For this dear purpose, near my couch I placed
The shade, by Love assiduously traced;
And, while no sullen curtain drops between,
The image consecrates the sombrous scene;
Serenely sweet it stands, — at morn, at eve,
The first, last object these fond eyes perceive
And still my heart, and oft my lips address
The shadowy form of her who lived to bless.

Now strikes the midnight clock; — the taper gleams
With the faint flash of half-expiring beams,
And soon that lovely semblance shall recede,
And Sleep's dim veils its thrilling powers impede.
I feel their balmy, kind, resistless charms
Creep o'er my closing eyes, — I fold my arms,
Breathing in murmurs thro' the paly gloom,
" Come to my dreams, my lost H ONORA , come!
Back as the waves of Time benignly roll,
Shew thy bright face to my enchanted soul! "
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