Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
America: Vols. XXV–XXIX. 1876–79.
Lake George
By George Stillman Hillard (18081879)H
How oft in noonday dreaming,
I ’ve seen, fair lake, thy forest wave,—
Have seen thy waters gleaming;
Have heard the blowing of the winds
That sweep along thy highlands,
And the light laughter of the waves
That dance around thine islands.
With forms and hues ideal,
But still those hues and forms appeared
More lovely than aught real.
I feared to see the breathing scene,
And brooded o’er the vision,
Lest the hard touch of truth should mar
A picture so Elysian.
Whose spells so long had bound me;
The shadows of the night are past,—
The morning shines around me.
And in the sober light of day,
I see, with eyes enchanted,
The glorious vision that so long
My day and night dreams haunted.
The purest of earth’s fountains;
I see the many-winding shore,—
The double range of mountains:
One, neighbor to the flying clouds,
And crowned with leaf and blossom,
And one, more lovely, borne within
The lake’s unruffled bosom.
Some self-reproach is blended,
At the long years that died before
The sight of scene so splendid.
The mind has pictures of its own,
Fair trees and waters flowing—
But not a magic whole like this,
So living, breathing, glowing;
A grand, primeval nature,
And beauty mirrored in the lake,
A gentler, softer feature;
A perfect union,—where no want
Upon the soul is pressing;
Like manly power and female grace
Made one by bridal blessing.
Its sweet, secluded treasures,
Where hearts that shun the crowd may find
Their own exclusive pleasures;
Deep chasms of shade for pensive thought,
The hours to wear away in;
And vaulted aisles of whispering pine,
For lovers’ feet to stray in;
A course of sunless shadow;
Isles all unfurrowed by the plough,
And strips of fertile meadow;
And rounded coves of silver sand,
Where moonlight plays and glances,—
A sheltered hall for elfin horns,
A floor for elfin dances.
But beauty ever changing;
With clouds, and shadows of the clouds,
And mists the hillsides ranging.
Where morning’s gold, and noon’s hot sun,
Their changing glories render;
Pour round the shores a varying light,
Now glowing and now tender.
By liberal sunshine given,
Is the deep spirit of that hour,—
An effluence breathed from Heaven;
When the unclouded, yellow moon
Hangs o’er the eastern ridges,
And the long shaft of trembling gold,
The trembling crystal bridges.
Along thy banks for straying;
But not farewell what memory takes,—
An image undecaying.
I hold secure beyond all change
One lovely recollection,
To cheer the hours of lonely toil,
And chase away dejection.