.. -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- .. meta:: :PG.Id: 49631 :PG.Title: Cosmos :PG.Released: 2015-08-06 :PG.Rights: Public Domain :PG.Producer: Al Haines :DC.Creator: Ernest McGaffey :DC.Title: Cosmos :DC.Language: en :DC.Created: 1903 :coverpage: images/img-cover.jpg ====== COSMOS ====== .. clearpage:: .. pgheader:: .. container:: frontispiece .. vspace:: 4 .. figure:: images/img-front.jpg :figclass: white-space-pre-line :align: center :alt: Ernest McGaffey Ernest McGaffey .. vspace:: 4 .. container:: titlepage center white-space-pre-line .. class:: xx-large bold COSMOS .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: large bold By ERNEST McGAFFEY .. vspace:: 3 .. class:: large The Philosopher Press Wausau Wisconsin .. vspace:: 4 .. container:: verso center white-space-pre-line .. class:: small COPYRIGHTED 1903 BY ERNEST McGAFFEY .. vspace:: 4 .. container:: dedication center white-space-pre-line .. class:: medium DEDICATED TO CARTER \H. HARRISON OF CHICAGO .. vspace:: 4 .. _`ONE`: .. class:: center x-large bold COSMOS .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: center large bold ONE .. vspace:: 2 .. | I | Go search the æons an you will | Where withered leaves of Doubt are whirled, | And who hath solved this riddle, Life, | Or Death—that moves with sails unfurled, | Beyond the straining eyes of man | Marooned upon an unknown world. | II | Nor tongue hath told, nor vision caught | That paradox, Primeval Cause; | Each age has had some parable | Each age succeeding marked the flaws; | While shifted, with the calendar, | What men have termed generic laws. | III | Creed after creed behold them now | Like Etna on Vesuvius piled; | Till, scaled to earth by drifting sands | They lie in later days reviled, | And pushed aside by Time's rough hand | As toys are, by a peevish child. | IV | For Priest-made doctrine reads grotesque. | And earthly worship is but dross; | Whether it be your Brahm of Ind | Or squat and hideous Chinese Joss; | Or Jove, aloft on cloud-capped throne | Or the pale Christ upon his cross. | V | Why question still the blindfold graves | Or pluck the veil of Isis dread? | Over Death's icy mystery | A pall immutable is spread; | And never tear-wrung agony | Shall move the lips we loved—once dead. | VI | Why grope in labyrinthian maze? | Why palter thus with doubt and fear? | The Past is but the mollusc print | The Future looms, a barrier sheer; | The Present centers in To-day | The hope for men is Now, and Here. | VII | Believe no scientific cant | That man descended from the ape; | Gorilla-like once beat his breast | And grew at last to human shape, | To watch the flocks, and till the fields, | Harry the seas and bruise the grape. | VIII | For though enrobed in savage skins | And though his forehead backward ran, | The brute was not all-dominant | Some spark revealed a Primal plan; | His brain was coupled with his will | The hairy mammal still was man. | IX | And ever as the cycles waned | He came and went, he rose and fell, | At times transformed, as butterflies | That rise from chrysalis in the cell; | And oft through hate and ignorance | Sunk downward deep as fabled Hell. | X | But through it all, and with it all | How-e'er the upward trending veers, | He fought his fight against great odds | He peopled ice-bound hemispheres, | Endured the sweltering Torrid Zones | And stamped his impress on the years. .. vspace:: 4 .. _`TWO`: .. class:: center large bold TWO .. vspace:: 2 .. | I | What romance hast thy childhood known | Of God-made world in seven days? | Of woven sands and swaying grass | And bird and beast in forest ways, | Of panoramas vast unrolled | Before a stern Creator's gaze? | II | Of rivers ribboning the vales; | Of plains that stretched in smoothness down, | And unborn seasons yet to be | Spring's violet banks, and Autumn's brown; | Bright Summer, mistress of the sun, | And grey-beard Winter's boreal crown. | III | And when at length the scheme complete | Unfolded to the Maker's sight, | How He, Almighty and divine | Said in his power, "Let there be light!" | Gave sun and moon, and sowed the stars | Along the furrows of the night! | IV | Lo! every nation has its tale | And every people, how they be; | Whether where Southern zephyrs loose | The blooms from off the tamarind tree, | Or where the six-month seasons bide | Around the cloistered Polar sea. | V | And Science with unyielding scales | Weighs each and all of varied styles; | And like a Goddess molds decrees | Oblivious both to tears or smiles; | Points out the error, reads the rule | And God with Nature reconciles. | VI | But who shall sift the false and true? | What Oracle the rule enforce? | Not man-made creed, nor man-learned law | Is wise to fathom Nature's course; | No sea is deeper than its bed | No stream is higher than its source. | VII | Vain hope to solve the Infinite! | Mere words to babble, when they say | "Thus Science teaches,"—"thus our God"— | Thus this or that—what of it, pray? | The marvel overlapping all— | Go ask the Sphynx of Yesterday. | VIII | We know the All, and nothing know; | The great we ken as well as least; | But sum it all when we have said | That man is different from the beast; | And spite of all Theology | The Pagan's equal to the Priest. | IX | And globes will lapse, and suns expire; | As stars have fallen, worlds can change; | Forever shall the centuries roll | And roving planets tireless range; | And Life be masked in secrecy | With Death, as ever, passing strange. | X | And trow not, Mortal, in thy pride | That where yon beetling column stands | Rests Permanence; 'twill disappear | To sink in marsh or barren lands, | Where bitterns boom, or sunlight stares | Across the immemorial sands. .. vspace:: 4 .. _`THREE`: .. class:: center large bold THREE .. vspace:: 2 .. | I | Of old when man to being came | He fashioned Gods of brittle bone; | Bowed down to wooden fetiches | Or worshipped idols carved from stone; | And, locked in Superstition's grasp | For sacrifice made lives atone. | II | And Fear was then the Higher Law | And fleshly joys the aftermath; | He knew no screed of Righteousness | And trod no straight and narrow path; | His Deity a terror was | A Demon winged with might and wrath. | III | And then where Nilus dipped his feet | By Egypt sands, rose temples tall | To Isis and Osiris—Ptah— | And many a God foredoomed to fall; | Where sank the shades of Pharaoh's reign? | Whence have they vanished, one and all? | IV | But whiles to other years advanced | And now by cosmic marvels won, | Men sought remote Pelagian shores | Where breeze and spray their tapestry spun, | To wait the coming of the day | And there adore the rising sun. | V | This passed; the Gods of Greece and Rome | In splendor thronged the earth and skies; | Jove, with the thunders in his hand | Apollo of the star-lit eyes, | Aurora, Priestess of the Dawn | And Pan of haunting melodies,— | VI | And countless more; their temples fair | Where reverent Pagans curved the knee, | Mid sweet, perpetual summer stood | While murmured as the murmuring bee, | The lulling sweep of listless brine | Beside the green Ægean sea. | VII | And merged in island-wooded calms | By towering groves of ancient oak, | where Triton's charging cavalry | Against the cliffs of Britain broke, | With horrid rite of human blood | The Celtic Druids moved and spoke. | VIII | Still wheeled the cycles; still did men | With new religions make them wise; | Mahomet rose magnificent | As rainbow in the eastern skies; | With Seven Heavens of Koran taught | And Houris with the sloe-black eyes. | IX | Brahm, Baal, Dagon, Moloch, Thor, | And legions more had long sufficed; | Heavens in turn with bliss diverse | And Hells with ebon glaciers iced; | And latest on celestial scrolls | The prophets wrote the name of Christ. | X | We need them not; No! each and all | Will load Tradition's dusty shelf; | As shattered Idols, put away | To lie forgot like broken delf; | Humanity is over all! | And Man's redemption in himself. .. vspace:: 4 .. _`FOUR`: .. class:: center large bold FOUR .. vspace:: 2 .. | I | The morning stars together sang | So runs the story, in that time, | When groves were loud with melody | And ripples danced to liquid rhyme; | Far in the embryonic spheres | Before the earth was in her prime. | II | Then first the feline-padded gales | Unleashed and prowling journeyed free, | To purr amid the cowering grass | Or roar in stormy jubilee, | Or, joining in with Ocean, growl | A hoarse duet of wind and sea. | III | And where by meadowy rushes dank | The yellow sunbeams thick were sown, | And brooks flowed down through April ways | O'er pebbled bar and shingly stone, | There first welled up in gurgling strain | The lisping current's monotone. | IV | And oft was heard, in forest aisles | Where rocking trees of leaves were thinned, | And drear November wandered lorn | With wild wide eyes and hair unpinned, | A wailing harp of minor chords | Struck by the strong hands of the wind. | V | And Man, through imitative art, | With clumsy tool and method crude, | Copied these echoes as he might | To soothe him in his solitude; | And when that other sound was dumb | His reed-notes quavered music rude. | VI | And as the gentler graces came | To vivify barbaric night, | So Poesy, with singing Lyre, | Descended from Parnassian height, | With constellations aureoled | Her raiment wove of flowing light. | VII | And in Man's heart a thrill leaped up; | His eye was lit by prophet gleams; | He sought the truth of When and How | He voiced the lyrics of the streams; | His beard was tossed, his locks were gray | His soul beneath the spell of dreams. | VIII | Thus numbers came; and Poets lived | To chant the glories of the Race; | Their rhyme on limp papyrus roll | Or etched on crumbling pillar's base, | Has long outlived the Kings they sung | And conquered even Time and Space. | IX | Aye! vain the vaunt of Heroes; vain | The deeds that once were thought sublime; | And vain your Monarchs, briefly staged | In tinselled royal pantomime; | Their House was builded on the sands | And they unworth a random rhyme. | X | Vain are the works of man; most vain | His bubbled Glory, Aye! or Fame; | More fragile than a last-year's leaf | Unnoticed of the sunset's flame; | And naught endures unless it stands | Linked with a deathless Poet's name. .. vspace:: 4 .. _`FIVE`: .. class:: center large bold FIVE .. vspace:: 2 .. | I | How flourished then the lesser arts | As man to manhood slowly grew? | With blackened stick from ruddy fires | That on his cave reflections threw, | He scrawled the rock which sheltered him | And thus the first rude picture drew. | II | And catching hints from Nature's lore | He squeezed his colors from the clay; | Steeped leaf and bark, and dyed the skins | That round about his dwelling lay; | And, urged by vanity, his cheeks | Were daubed with dash of pigments gay. | III | So, ever as the seasons died | His mind expanded with his will; | He saw the dry leaves touched with gold | And grass grow tawny on the hill; | Found etchings on the ruffled streams | And marked the sunset's hectic thrill. | IV | And dreaming thus, with defter skill | He fast employed his nights and days, | Spun magic webs of chequered lights | And limned October's purple haze; | While women's faces from his brush | Fired, like wine, the se'er's gaze. | V | Until at last was handed down | Beyond the treasure-trove of Greece, | Beyond the strain that Sappho sung | And reveries of the Golden Fleece, | The art of Titian, Rubens, Thal, | And Tintoretto's masterpiece. | VI | Thus, too, as man with curious eye | Had noted outline, curve, and form, | In toppling surge or lofty crag | In woman's bosom beating warm, | In cloudy shapes revealed on high | Intaglios of the wind and storm,— | VII | He modelled from the plastic loam; | On shell and boulder graved a sign; | Chiselled the stately obelisks | With hieroglyphics, line on line; | Colossal wrought his haughty Kings | Or metal-traced the clambering vine. | VIII | And many an image was his work | And many a statuette and bust; | Some that remain, but most that lie | As shards to outer darkness thrust; | These buried under coral sands | Those cloaked beneath forgotten dust. | IX | Upon the lonely washes that stretch | Where the Egyptian rivers croon, | And floats above the Pyramids | On tropic nights the lifeless moon, | The mightiest waits,—the brooding Sphynx— | Half-lion and half Daemon hewn. | X | So Sculpture, pierced in mountain sides | Or dragged from Mythologic seas, | Still holds a sway; and worlds will bow | In homage yet to such as these— | The noble bronze by Phidias wrought, | The marbles of Praxiteles. .. vspace:: 4 .. _`SIX`: .. class:: center large bold SIX .. vspace:: 2 .. | I | To those who for their country bleed | To those who die for freedom's sake, | All Hail! for them the Immortal dawns | In waves of lilied silver break; | For them in dusky-templed night | The eternal stars a halo make. | II | In History's tome their chronicle | An ever-living page shall be; | The souls who flashed like sabers drawn | The men who died to make men free; | Their flag in every land has flown | Their sails have whitened every sea. | III | On gallows high they met their doom | Or breasted straight the serried spears | Of Tyranny; in dungeons damp | Scarred on the stones their name appears; | For them the flower of Memory | Shall blossom, watered by our tears. | IV | But Conquest, Glory, transient Fame, | What baubles these to struggle for, | When draped in sulphurous films uprise | The cannon-throated fiends of War! | What childish trumpery cheap as this— | The trophies of a Conqueror? | V | How many an army marches forth | With bugle-note or battle-hymn, | To drench the soil in human gore | And multiply Golgothas grim; | And all for what? a Ruler's pique | Religion's call, or Harlot's whim. | VI | And ghastliest far among them all | Where torn and stained the thirsty sod | With carnage reeks—where standards fly, | And horses gallop, iron-shod, | Are those remorseless mockeries | The wars they wage in name of God. | VIII | Vague, dim and vague, and noiselessly, | The Warrior's triumphs fade like haze; | And building winds have heaped the sands | O'er monuments of martial days; | While Legend throws a flickering gleam | Where the tall Trojan towers blaze. | VIII | Yea! whether sought for Woman's face | Or, Conquest-seeking, seaward poured, | Or at the beck of Holy Church | War still shall be the thing abhorred; | And they who by the sword would live | Shall surely perish by the sword. | IX | Yet whether at Thermopylæ | Where battled the intrepid Greek, | Or Waterloo—their quarry still | The red-eyed ravening vultures seek; | Where prowl the jackal and the fox | And the swart raven whets his beak. | X | And somewhere, though by Alien seas | The tide of Hate unceasing frets; | For dawn to dusk, and dusk to dawn | The red sun rises, no, nor sets, | Save where the wraith of War is seen | Above her glittering bayonets. .. vspace:: 4 .. _`SEVEN`: .. class:: center large bold SEVEN .. vspace:: 2 .. | I | How fared the body when the soul | In olden days had taken flight? | Had passed as through a shutter slips | A trembling shaft of summer light! | And all that once was Life's warm glow | Had sudden changed to dreadful night! | II | How fared the mourners; how the Priest; | How spoken his funereal theme? | What dirges for the Heroic dead | What flowers to soften death's extreme? | Was Life to them a wayside Inn | Death the beginning of a dream? | III | We cannot know; except by tales | Caught in the traveller's flying loom, | Or carven granite friezes found | Or parchment penned in convent gloom; | Or here and there, defying Time | Some long-dead Emperor's giant tomb. | IV | Where tower the steep Egyptian cones | By couriers of the storm bestrid, | Wrapped in his blackening cerements | Sahura lies in shadow hid, | While billowy sand-curves rise and dash | Like surf, against his Pyramid. | V | And on the bald Norweyan shores | When Odin for the Viking came, | A ship was launched, and on it placed | With solemn state, the Hero's frame; | The torch applied, and sent to sea, | A double burial,—wave and flame. | VI | And when the Hindu Prince lay prone— | In final consecration dire | His Hindu Princess followed on | And climbed the blazing funeral pyre, | To stand in living sacrifice | Transfigured in her robes of fire. | VII | Where the red Indian of the Plains | To the Great Spirit bowed his head, | On pole-built scaffold, Eagle-plumed, | The painted warrior laid his dead; | Beneath, the favorite charger slain | And by the Chief his weapons spread. | VIII | We clothe our dead in modish dress | Dust unto dust the Preacher saith, | The church-bells toll, the organ peals, | And mourners wait with ebbing breath; | Oh! grave, this is thy mockery, | The weird farce-comedy of Death. | IX | Nay! burn the shell with simplest rites; | Scatter its ashes to the skies; | And on the stairways of the clouds | In winding spirals let it rise; | What needs the soul of mortal garb | Whether in Hell or Paradise? | X | Aye! lost and gone; what cares the corse | When Death unfolds his sable wings, | Whether it rest in wind-swept tree | Or where the deep-sea echo rings? | Be laid to sleep in Potter's Field | Or lone Iona's cairn of Kings? .. vspace:: 4 .. _`EIGHT`: .. class:: center large bold EIGHT .. vspace:: 2 .. | I | Above unsightly city roofs | Where smoky serpents trail the sky, | Broods Commerce; in her factories | A million clacking shuttles fly; | Where, choked with lint, in sickly air | The little children droop and die. | II | The rattling clash of jarring wheels | Against the windows echoing beats; | And when the pallid gas-jets flare | Where sombre night with twilight meets, | Like flotsam on the stream of Fate | The toiler's myriads crowd the streets. | III | With hiving tumult to and fro | Trade's devotees, a hurrying mass, | Through the long corridor of years | In due procession rise and pass; | To earn their wage, to seek their goal | And melt, like dew-drops on the grass. | IV | And here, within the age of Gain | Our forest-masted harbors shine | With shimmering fleets; and we go on | To climes afar of palm and vine, | And in the warp of Traffic weave | A sinister and base design, | V | Of mild and hapless Islanders | Who fall before our soldiers' aim; | Of broken faith—of sophistries— | Of sin, of blood-shed, and of shame; | Oh! Commerce, Commerce, who shall tell | The crimes committed in thy name. | VI | Turn, turn my Fancy, inland borne | Where Nature's solace shall not fail | To ease the heart; view skyey seas | Where cloud armadas, sail on sail, | Manned by the winds go warping down | Below the far horizon's trail. | VII | And as the budding willows blow | When March comes whirling past the lanes, | With bird-note wild, and fifing winds | And undertone of sibilant rains, | On slopes where Winter's garment melts | Blue as the sea are violet stains. | VIII | Where cattle seek the shaded pools | And silence folds the sun-burned lands, | Her auburn tresses backward flung | Mid-Summer, like to Ceres stands, | Beside the fields of waving grain | With harvest-apples in her hands. | IX | And stealthily through winnowing dusk | I see the curling smoke ascend, | Where lie the farms; and evermore | Where hope, and health, and manhood blend; | While stubble shorn and pastures bare | Proclaim the waning season's end. | X | And as beyond the naked hills | The chill November sunset dies, | And cloudward now a phalanx swims | Where guttural honking fills the skies, | Black-sculptured on approaching night | And southward bound, the wild-goose flies. .. vspace:: 4 .. _`NINE`: .. class:: center large bold NINE .. vspace:: 2 .. | I | Behold the kindred human types | Tribe, Sept, and class, Race, Caste, and Clan; | Red, Black and Yellow; White and Brown; | Processions of Primordial Man | That wax apace, and stream across | In one unending caravan. | II | The Fisher-People with their shells | And dwellers of the Age of Stone; | The Kirghiz of the Western Steppes | The Greek, the Turk, the Mongol shown, | The Goth, the Frank,—I see them pass | Like flash-lights by a mirror thrown. | III | So, too, the Arab, burnoose clad | Who braves the stifling Simoon dry, | Adrift upon Saharan tides | His awkward camels lurching high, | Long, lank, uncouth, but staunch as Death, | Ships of the Desert, sailing by. | IV | Note the Caucasian in his pride | Who prates of moldy pedigrees; | A mushroom he, compared in Eld | To the impassive, sly Chinese; | Their records co-extant with Time | And swarming by the sundown seas. | V | Each comes and goes; as came and went | Rameses' millions; in their day | What boast was made of Egypt's Kings | How God-like seemed their valorous play; | But cynic years dispersed their line | Swift hurried with the winds away. | VI | Aye! even as motes they had their grace | For a brief moment, son and sire; | Then passed; as foam that sinks at sea | Or chords which flee the Minstrel's lyre; | Where rot the walls by Sidon raised? | And where the long-lost hulls of Tyre? | VII | And all men listen in their turn | To the same Sirens; greed of Gain— | Love—Hate—Revenge—the lust of Power— | And craze o'er fellow-man to reign— | Ambition's lure—these intertwine | Like links that form an endless chain. | VIII | Since Power is but the instant's clutch | And naught so trivial as a Name, | What crucial proof shall fix men's worth | On lasting tablets write their claim; | So that their memories may fill | A niche within the walls of Fame? | IX | The test is not of Birth nor Race | Since each is worthy of his hire; | It rests in what men do for men | Uplifted by the soul's desire, | To tread Life's fiery furnaces | And save their brothers from the fire. | X | And ranging far and searching deep | However though the annals be, | We find but one nigh faultless man | There was none other such as He; | The Jew who taught and practiced Love | The man who walked by Galilee. .. vspace:: 4 .. _`TEN`: .. class:: center large bold TEN .. vspace:: 2 .. | I | Enough my Muse; thy message cast | As stone from out a sling is hurled, | Let drop to night; or re-appear | Where morning's gathering grey is pearled, | And the bent sun, like Sisyphus, | Toils laboring up the underworld. | II | Let be; thy wisdom knoweth well | The just degrees of right and wrong; | Although mayhap unmarked by men | Shall fall the echoes of thy song; | Unheeded by the pilgrim years | Unrecked of, by the heedless throng. | III | And yet before the highways part | And thou and I in darkness dwell, | Do thou thy swiftest Herald send | And this as final warning tell; | 'Banish all hope of gilded Heaven | And laugh to scorn the fires of Hell'. | IV | Phantasmal dance those dual sprites | Mere witch-craft mummeries of the brain; | The lying sorcery of the Priests | A worldly influence to retain; | Where shalt thou go? What quest is thine? | Where falls the single drop of rain? | V | But Courage, Faith, and Constancy, | The cardinal virtues as I deem, | May well be worshipped, as indeed | The lilies of the soul they seem; | Undying in their fragrance rare | And glassed upon a sacred stream. | VI | Know thou, the Ideal Harmony | That fills all space, below, above, | Is not in Creed, nor Form, nor Rite | Nor in those things thou dreamest of; | But holds within its breadth and scope | The sole and only note of Love. | VII | Reject all Creeds; and yet in each | Seek such material as thou can, | With here a tenet, there a thought | Whether it sprang from Christ or Pan; | And make the key-stone of thy arch | The common brotherhood of Man. | VIII | And striving thus, a happier creed | In time to come shall burst its bud, | The pure air cleared of battle-smoke | And war no more by field and flood; | Where men can lift up guiltless hands | Uncrimsoned by a brother's blood. | IX | When nevermore in calm or storm | Shall hawk-like hover on the seas, | The canvas of opposing ships | Their pennants floating to the breeze; | And golden hopes will supersede | The apples of Hesperides. | X | When man-emancipated man | Through loftier purpose wins control; | With Justice as his only God | To reign supreme o'er heart and soul; | And Love, sun-like, illuminates | The one, the true, the perfect whole. .. vspace:: 4 .. _`NOTES TO COSMOS`: .. class:: center large bold NOTES TO COSMOS .. vspace:: 3 .. class:: center Notes to Cosmos .. vspace:: 2 Certain stanzas once intended for the original are here given. They are set down according to the chapters in which they were to have appeared. .. vspace:: 2 .. | Chapter Two | Of trees that stirred in early Spring | The slow sap moving in their veins; | Of flowers that dyed the woodland slopes | The primrose pale, and daisy-chains; | Sun-kissed betimes, or overmourned | By shimmery tears of sobbing rains. .. vspace:: 2 .. | Chapter Four | And all night long the restless sea | Against its barriers rose and fell, | Till grey-eyed Dawn, by lonely sands | Saw flash and fade the last broad swell, | Before her there the ebb-tide's gleam | And at her feet a murmuring shell. | And then were heard the Elder Bards | In full, Prophetic tone sublime, | Their eyes ablaze with ecstacy | And on their lips the living rhyme; | King-honored in an age of Kings | And on their beards the frosts of Time. .. vspace:: 2 .. | Chapter Eight | And when a-down the bare brown lanes | Pattered the swift, white feet of Spring, | I saw the velvet-golden flash | That marked the yellow-hammer's wing | A-curve on high; and later heard | The robin, and the blue-bird sing. | Far seaward on unnumbered isles | Mid scent of spice and drowsy balm, | The lotos-eating Islanders | Lay soothed to sleep by utter calm; | Low at their feet the pulsing tides | And o'er their heads the tufted palm. .. vspace:: 2 .. | Chapter Nine | Stark warriors of the Age of Stone | With pristine valor all elate, | Who sought and slew the great Cave Bear | And robbed the tigress of her mate; | And, weaponed with the ax and spear, | Defied the towering mammoth's hate. | And slant-eyed Mongols, yellow-skinned, | Who traversed Western Steppes afar, | Drank mare's milk, and observed their flocks | White-clustered 'neath the Morning Star; | Or, sallying forth with lance and bow | Engaged in fierce Nomadic war. | On vine-clad hills was found the Gaul; | Above him glistened Alpine snows: | And lower down where valleys lay | Loved of the lily and the rose, | By moon-light tranced, the nightingale | Sang silvery-sweet adagios. .. vspace:: 6 .. pgfooter::