"What art thou, Mind, that mirror'st things unseen, / Giv'st to the dead the smiles which erst they wore, / And lift'st the veil which fate hath cast between / Thee and the forms which are not, but have been?"

— Elliott, Ebenezer (1781-1849)


Date
1876
Metaphor
"What art thou, Mind, that mirror'st things unseen, / Giv'st to the dead the smiles which erst they wore, / And lift'st the veil which fate hath cast between / Thee and the forms which are not, but have been?"
Metaphor in Context
To that true Christian and Patriot, the Reverend Henry Wrightson, this Poem is dedicated by the Author. Grief, sages tell us, hath a drooping wing, And loves to perch upon the shaken mind, To which she sings notes like the muttering Of wintry rivers in the wintry wind, Till health flies wing'd away and leaves behind Shadows, illusions, dreams, and worse than dreams. But Alfred dreams not--he is wide awake! Light is around him, and the chime of streams; Bees hum o'er sallows yet; and in the brake, Coil'd like a chain of amethyst, the snake Basks on the bank, above the streamlet's flow. Oh, there are beauteous plumes, and many a bill, And life, and love, beneath the ivy's bough! The swallow dips his purple in the rill, The lark sings in the cloud, and from the hill The blackbird's song replies. But Alfred's ear, Nor splashing swallow hears, nor humming bee, Nor warbling lark, nor ivy shaken near By brooding thrush, nor breeze-born melody Of chiming streams. He listens mournfully To accents which the earth shall hear no more! What art thou, Mind, that mirror'st things unseen, Giv'st to the dead the smiles which erst they wore, And lift'st the veil which fate hath cast between Thee and the forms which are not, but have been? What art thou, conscious power, that hear'st the mute, And feel'st th' impalpable? Thy magic brings Back to our hearts the warblings of the lute, Which long had slept with unexisting things! And shall we stand, doubting immortal wings, In presence of the angels? Ask the worm, And she will bid thee doubt; yet she is meek, And wise--for when earth shakes, she shuns thy form, But never saw the morning on thy cheek, The blue heav'n in thine eye, the lightning break In laughter from thy lips. So she denies That colours are, even while the fragrant thorn Blossoms above her! Weight, and shape, and size, She says, are real; but she laughs to scorn The gorgeous rainbow, and the blushing morn, And can disprove the glory of the rose!-- Yet doth she err; our limbless sister errs; For on thy cheek, O Man! the morning glows, And fair is heaven's bright bow. The wayside furze Discredits her; the humblest weed that stirs Its small green leaves, can undemonstrate all Her proofs triumphant, that celestial light Shines not at noon. But though the sunflower tall, And tiniest moss are clad in liveries bright, Never, to her, can'st thou disprove the night, The starless night, in which she hath her home! Then, marvel not, if death-bless'd spirits free Wander, at times, beneath this heavenly dome, On wings too bright for mortal eyes to see; While, unperceived by them, as both by thee, Forms, more seraphic still, around us fly, And stoop to them and thee, with looks of love; Or vainly strain the archangelic eye, To gaze on holier forms above, above, That round the throne of heaven's Almighty move. O look on Alfred!--look! the man is blind! She whom he loved sleeps in her winding-sheet, Yet he beholds her with the eyes of mind! He sees the form which he no more shall meet, But cannot see the primrose at his feet! They mingle tears with tears, and sighs with sighs, And sobs with sobs, but words, long time, have none; She looks her soul into his sightless eyes, And, like a passionate thought, is come and gone, While at his feet, unheard, the bright rill babbles on!
Categories
Provenance
Searching "mind" and "mirror" in HDIS (Poetry)
Date of Entry
10/10/2005

The Mind is a Metaphor is authored by Brad Pasanek, Assistant Professor of English, University of Virginia.