On a Falling Group in the Last Judgment of Mr. CHAEL ANGELO, in the Cappella Sistina.
How vast, how dread, o'erwhelming is the thought space interminable! to the soul
A circling weight that crushes into nought Her mighty faculties! a wond'rous whole, Without or parts, beginning, or an end ! How fearful then on desp❜rate wings to send The fancy e'en amid the waste profound! Yet, born as if all daring to astound, Thy giant hand, oh Angelo, hath hurl'd
E'en human forms, with all their mortal weight, Down the dread void-fall endless as their fate! Already now they seem from world to world For ages thrown; yet doom'd, another past, Another still to reach, nor e'er to reach the last!
On the Group of the Three Angels before the Tent of Abraham, by RAFFAELLE, in the Vatican.
OH, now I feel as though another sense From Heaven descending had inform'd my soul; I feel the pleasurable, full control
Of Grace, harmonious, boundless, and intense. In thee, celestial Group, embodied lives The subtle mystery; that speaking gives Itself resolv'd: the essences combin'd Of Motion ceaseless, Unity complete.
Borne like a leaf by some soft eddying wind, Mine eyes, impell'd as by enchantment sweet, From part to part with circling motion rove, Yet seem unconscious of the power to move; From line to line through endless changes run, O'er countless shapes, yet seem to gaze on One.
On seeing the Picture of Eolus by PELIGRINO TIBALDI, in the Institute at Bologna.
FULL well, Tibaldi, did thy kindred mind The mighty spell of Bonaroti own.
Like one who, reading magick words, receives The gift of intercourse with worlds unknown, "Twas thine, decyph'ring Nature's mystick leaves, To hold strange converse with the viewless wind; To see the Spirits, in embodied forms,
Of gales and whirlwinds, hurricanes and storms. For, lo! obedient to thy bidding, teems Fierce into shape their stern relentless Lord: His form of motion ever-restless seems;
Or, if to rest inclin'd his turbid soul,
On Hecla's top to stretch, and give the word To subject Winds that sweep the desert pole.
On REMBRANT; occasioned by his Picture of Jacob's Dream.
As in that twilight, superstitious age
When all beyond the narrow grasp of mind Seem'd fraught with meanings of supernal kind, When e'en the learned philosophick sage,
Wont with the stars thro' boundless space to range, Listen'd with rev'rence to the changeling's tale; E'en so, thou strangest of all beings strange!
E'en so thy visionary scenes I hail;
That like the rambling of an idiot's speech,
No image giving of a thing on earth,
Nor thought significant in Reason's reach,
Yet in their random shadowings give birth
To thoughts and things from other worlds that come,
And fill the soul, and strike the reason dumb.
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.
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