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The Sylphs of the Season with Other Poems cover

The Sylphs of the Season with Other Poems

Chapter 21: Sonnet
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About This Book

A varied assemblage of lyrical and narrative poems that move between visionary fable and intimate lyric, focusing on encounters with nature, seasonal moods, and the creative impulse. A long dream-poem personifies the seasons as ethereal sylphs who shape the poet’s sensibility, while compact sonnets respond to paintings and sculptural groups with reflections on artistic vision. Ballads and occasional pieces explore love, melancholy, eccentric characters, and the temperament of the painter, alternating vivid landscape imagery with meditations on creativity, transience, and the relations between feeling and art.

Sonnet

On the Luxembourg Gallery.

There is a Charm no vulgar mind can reach.
No critick thwart, no mighty master teach;
A Charm how mingled of the good and ill!
Yet still so mingled that the mystick whole
Shall captive hold the struggling Gazer's will,
'Till vanquish'd reason own its full control.
And such, oh Rubens, thy mysterious art,
The charm that vexes, yet enslaves the heart!
Thy lawless style, from timid systems free,
Impetuous rolling like a troubled sea,
High o'er the rocks of reason's lofty verge
Impending hangs; yet, ere the foaming surge
Breaks o'er the bound, the refluent ebb of taste
Back from the shore impels the wat'ry waste.