Continental Monthly, Vol. III, No IV, April 1863 / Devoted to Literature and National Policy
Every nation has its legend of a 'golden age'—when all was young and fresh and fair—' comme les couleurs primitives de la nature '—even before the existence of this gaunt shadow of Sorrow— the shadow of ourselves —that ever stalks in company with us;—an epoch of Saturnian rule, when gods held sweet converse with men, and man primeval bounded with all the elasticity of god-given juvenility:
('Ah! remember, This—all this—was in the olden Time long ago.')
And even now, in spite of our atheism and our apathism, amid all the overwhelming world-influences of this great 'living Present'—the ghost of the dead Past will come rushing back upon us with its solemn voices and its infinite wailings of pity: but soft and faint it comes; for the wild jarrings of the Now almost prevent us from hearing its still, small voices. It
'Is but a dim-remembered story Of the old time entombed.'
Besides, what is History but the story of the bygone? The elegy, too, comes to us as the last lamenting, sadly solemn swan-song of that glorious golden time. And, indeed, are not all poesies but various notes of that mighty diapason of Thought and Feeling, that has, through the ages, been singing itself in jubilee and wail?
So it is in the individual—(for is not the individual ever the rudimental, formula-like expression of that awful problem which nations and humanity itself are slowly and painfully working out?): in the 'moonlight of memory' these sorrowful mementos revisit every one of us; and
——'But I am not now That which I have been '—
and vanitas vanitatum! are not only the satisfied croakings of blasé Childe Harolds, but our universal experience; while from childhood's gushing glee even unto manhood's sad satiety, we feel that all are nought but the phantasmagoria
'of a creature Moving about in worlds not realized .'
Listen now to a snatch of melody:
'The rainbow comes and goes, And lovely is the rose, The moon doth with delight Look round her when the heavens are bare; Waters on a starry night Are beautiful and fair; The sunshine is a glorious birth; But yet I know, wherever I go, That there hath passed away a glory from the earth!'
Various
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CONTINENTAL MONTHLY:
DEVOTED TO
Literature and National Policy.
Vol. III.—APRIL, 1863.—No. IV.
CONTENTS
'WE JOURNEY.
'THE GRANDMOTHER.
'THE CELL PRISON.
'SALA.
FITZ FASHION'S WIFE.
CHAPTER XIX.
CHAPTER XX.
CHAPTER XXI.
[J. G. PERCIVAL.]
VI.
FLAG OF OUR UNION.
[BURNS.]
ADDRESSED TO THE PEOPLE OF ALL POLITICAL PARTIES.
FROM THE GERMAN OF HEINE.
THE EVERLASTING OLD JEW.
LOVE-LIFE.
WAR-WAIFS.
DEVOTED TO
Literature and National Policy.
FOOTNOTES: