Speranza
BERRATHON.
ARGUMENT.
Fingal, in his voyage to Lochlin, whither he had been
invited by Starno, the father of Agandecca, touches at Berrathon an island of
Scandinavia, where he is kindly entertained by Larthmor, the petty king of the
place, who was a vassal of the supreme kings of Lochlin.
The hospitality of
Larthmor gains him Fingal's friendship, which Fingla manifested, after the
imprisonment of Larthmor by his own son, by sending Ossian and Toscar, the
father of Malvina, so often mentioned, to rescue Larthmor, and to punish the
unnatural behaviour of Uthal.
Uthal was handsome, and, by the ladies, much
admired.
Nina-thoma, the beautiful daughter of Tor-thoma, a neighbouring prince,
fell in love and fled with him.
He proved inconstant; for another lady, whose
name is not mentioned, gaining his affections.
Uthal confines Nina-thoma to a
desert island, near the coast of Berrathon.
Nina-thoma is relieved by Ossian, who, in
company with Toscar, landing on the isle of Berrathon, defeat the forces of Uthal, and
kill him in single combat.
Nina-thoma, whose love not all the bad behaviour of
Uthal could erase, hearing of his death, died of grief.
In the meantime,
Larthmor is restored, and Ossian and Toscar return in triumph to Fingal.
The
poem -- or Song of BERRATHON" opens with an elegy on the death of Malvina, the daughter of Toscar, and
closes with the presages of Ossian's death.
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THE TEXT.
ARIA DI TENORE.
BEND thy blue course,
O stream!
round the narrow plain of Lutha.
Let the green woods hang over it, from their
hills;
the sun look on it at noon.
The thistle is there on its rock, and shakes
its beard to the wind.
The flower hangs its heavy head, waving, at times, to the
gale.
"Why dost thou awake me, O gale?" it seems to say:
"I am covered with the
drops of heaven.
The time of my fading is near,
the blast that shall scatter my
leaves.
Tomorrow shall the traveller come;
he that saw me in my beauty shall
come.
His eyes will search the field,
but they will not find me."
So shall they
search in vain for the voice of Cona,
after it has failed in the field.
The hunter shall come forth in the morning,
and thee vote a of my
harp shall not be heard.
"Where is the son of car-borne Fingal?"
The tear will
be on his cheek!
Then come thou, O Malvina!
with all thy music, come!
Lay Ossian
in the plain of Lutha:
let his tomb rise in the lovely field.
Malvina! where
art thou, with thy songs;
with the soft sound of thy steps?
Son of Alpin, art
thou near?
where is the daughter of Toscar?
"I passed, O son of Fingal, by
Torlutha's mossy walls.
The smoke of the hall was ceased. Silence was among the
trees of the hill. The voice of the chase was over. I saw the daughters of the
bow. I asked about Malvina, but they answered not. They turned their faces away:
thin darkness covered their beauty. They were like stars, on a rainy hill, by
night, each looking faintly through the mist!"
Pleasant be thy rest, O lovely
beam! soon hast thou set on our hills! The steps of thy departure were stately,
like the moon, on the blue-trembling wave. But thou hast left us in darkness,
first of the maids of Lutha! We sit, at the rock, and there is no voice; no
light but the meteor of fire! Soon hast thou set, O Malvina, daughter of
generous Toscar! But thou risest, like the beam of the east, among the spirits
of thy friends, where they sit, in their stormy halls, the chambers of the
thunder! A cloud hovers over Cona. Its blue curling sides are high. The winds
are beneath it, with their wings. Within it is the dwelling of Fingal. There the
hero sits in darkness. His airy spear is in his hand. His shield, half covered
with clouds, is like the darkened moon; when one half still remains in the wave,
and the other looks sickly on the field!
His friends sit round the king, on
mist! They hear the songs of Ullin; he strikes the half-viewless harp. He raises
the feeble voice. The lesser heroes, with a
thousand meteors, light
the airy hall. Malvina rises in the midst: a blush is on her cheek. She beholds
the unknown faces of her fathers. She turns aside her humid eyes. "An thou come
so soon," said Fingal, "daughter of generous Toscar! Sadness dwells in the halls
of Lutha. My aged son is sad! I hear the breeze of Cona, that was wont to lift
thy heavy locks. It comes to the hall, but thou art not there. Its voice is
mournful among the arms of thy fathers! Go, with thy rustling wing, O breeze!
sigh on Malvina's tomb. It rises yonder beneath the rock, at the blue stream of
Lutha. The maids 1 are departed to their place. Thou alone, O breeze, mournest
there!"
But who comes from the dusky west, supported on a cloud? A smile is
on his gray, watery face. His locks of mist fly on wind. He bends forward on his
airy spear. It is thy father, Malvina! "Why shinest thou, so soon, on our
clouds," he says, "O lovely light of Lutha? But thou wert sad, my daughter. Thy
friends had passed away. The sons of little men were in the hail. None remained
of the heroes, but Ossian, king of spears!"
And dost thou remember Ossian,
car-borne Toscar, son of Conloch? The battles of our youth were many. Our swords
went together to the field. They saw us coming like two falling rocks. The sons
of the stranger fled. "There come the warriors of Cona!" they said. "Their steps
are in the paths of the flying!" Draw near, son of Alpin, to the song of the
aged. The deeds of other times are in my soul. My memory beams on the days that
are past: on the days of mighty Toscar, when our path was in the deep. Draw
near, son of Alpin, to the last sound of the voice of Cona!
The king of
Morven commanded. I raised my sails to the wind. Toscar, chief of
Lutha, stood at my side: I rose on the dark-blue wave. Our course was to
sea-surrounded Berrathon, the isle of many storms. There dwelt, with his locks
of age, the stately strength of Larthmor. Larthmor, who spread the feast of
shells to Fingal, when he went to Starno's halls, in the days of Agandecca. But
when the chief was old, the pride of his son arose; the pride of fair-haired
Uthal, the love of a thousand maids. He bound the aged Larthmor, and dwelt in
his sounding halls!
Long pined the king in his cave, beside his rolling sea.
Day did not come to his dwelling: nor the burning oak by night. But the wind of
ocean was there, and the parting beam of the moon. The red star looked on the
king, when it trembled on the western wave. Snitho came to Selma's hall; Snitho,
the friend of Larthmor's youth. He told of the king of Berrathon: the wrath of
Fingal arose. Thrice he assumed the spear, resolved to stretch his hand to
Uthal. But the memory of his deeds rose before the king. He sent his son and
Toscar. Our joy was great on the rolling sea. We often half unsheathed our
swords. For never before had we fought alone, in battles of the spear.
Night
came down on the ocean. The winds departed on their wings. Cold and pale is the
moon. The red stars lift their heads on high. Our course is slow along the coast
of Berrathon. The white waves tumble on the rocks. "What voice is that," said
Toscar, "which comes between the sounds of the waves? It is soft hut mournful,
like the voice of departed bards. But I behold a maid. She sits on the rock
alone. Her head bends on her arms of snow. Her dark hair is in the wind. Hear,
son of Fingal, her song; it is smooth as the gliding stream. We came to the
silent bay, and heard the maid of night.
"How long will ye roll
round me, blue-tumbling waters of ocean? My dwelling was not always in caves,
nor beneath the whistling tree. The feast was spread in Tor-thoma's hall. My
father delighted in my voice. The youths beheld me in the steps of my
loveliness. They blessed the dark-haired Nina-thoma. It was then thou didst
come, O Uthal! like the sun of heaven! The souls of the virgins are thine, son
of generous Larthmor! But why dost thou leave me alone, in the midst of roaring
waters? Was my soul dark with thy death? Did my while hand lift the sword? Why
then hast thou left me alone, king of high Fin-thormo?"
The tear started from
my eye, when I heard the voice of the maid. I stood before her in my arms. I
spoke the words of peace! "Lovely dweller of the cave! what sigh is in thy
breast? Shall Ossian lift his sword in thy presence, the destruction of thy
foes? Daughter of Tor-thoma, rise! I have heard the words of thy grief. The race
of Morven are around thee, who never injured the weak. Come to our dark bosomed
ship, thou brighter than the setting moon! Our course is to the rocky Berrathon,
to the echoing walls of Fin-thormo." She came in her beauty; she came with all
her lovely steps. Silent joy brightened in her face; as when the shadows fly
from the field of spring; the blue stream is rolling in brightness, and the
green bush bends over its course!
The morning rose with its beams. We came to
Rothma's bay. A boar rushed from the wood: my spear pierced his side, and he
fell. I rejoiced over the blood. I foresaw my growing fame. But now the sound of
Uthal's train came, from the high Fin-thormo. They spread over the heath to the
chase of the boar. Himself comes slowly on, in the pride of his strength. He
lifts two pointed spears. On his side is the hero's
sword. Three
youths carry his polished bows. The bounding of five dogs is before him. His
heroes move on, at a distance, admiring the steps of the king. Stately was the
son of Larthmor! but his soul was dark! Dark as the troubled face of the moon,
when it foretells the storms.
We rose on the heath before the king. He
stopped in the midst of his course. His heroes gathered around. A gray-haired
bard advanced. "Whence are the sons of the strangers?" began the bard of song.
"The children of the unhappy come to Berrathon: to the sword of car-borne Uthal.
He spreads no feast in his hall. The blood of strangers is on his streams. If
from Selma's walls ye come, from the mossy walls of Fingal, choose three youths
to go to your king to tell of the fall of his people. Perhaps the hero may come
and pour his blood on Uthal's sword. So shall the fame of Fin-thormo arise; like
the growing tree of the vale!"
"Never, will it rise, O bard!" I said, in the
pride of my wrath. "He would shrink from the presence of Fingal, whose eyes are
the flames of death. The son of Comhal comes, and kings vanish before him. They
are rolled together, like mist, by the breath of his rage. Shall three tell to
Fingal, that his people fell? Yes! they may tell it, bard! but his people shall
fall with fame!"
I stood in the darkness of my strength. Toscar drew his
sword at my side. The foe came on like a stream. The mingled sound of death
arose. Man took man; shield met shield; steel mixed its beams with steel. Darts
hiss through air. Spears ring on mails. Swords on broken bucklers bound. All the
noise of an aged grove beneath the roaring wind, when a thousand ghosts break
the trees by night, such was the din of arms! But Uthal fell beneath my
sword.
The sons of Berrathon fled. It was
then I saw him in his beauty, and the tear hung in my eye! "Thou art fallen,
young tree, I said, with all thy beauty round thee. Thou art fallen on thy
plains, and the field is bare. The winds come from the desert! there is no sound
in thy leaves! Lovely art thou in death, son of car-borne
Larthmor"
Nina-thoma sat on the shore. She heard the sound of battle. She
turned her red eyes on Lethmal, the gray-haired bard of Selma. He alone had
remained on the coast with the daughter of Tor-thoma. "Son of the times of old!"
she said, "I hear the noise of death. Thy friends have met with Uthal, and the
chief is low! O that I had remained on the rock, enclosed with the tumbling
waves? Then would my soul be sad, but his death would not reach my ear. Art thou
fallen on the heath, O son of high Fin-thormo? Thou didst leave me on a rock,
but my soul was full of thee. Son of high Fin-thormo! art thou fallen on thy
heath?"
She rose pale in her tears. She saw the bloody shield of Uthal. She
saw it in Ossian's hand. Her steps were distracted on the heath. She flew. She
found him. She fell. Her soul came forth in a sigh. Her hair is spread on her
face. My bursting tears descend. A tomb arose on the unhappy. My song of wo was
heard. "Rest, hapless children of youth! Rest at the noise of that mossy stream!
The virgins will see your tomb, at the chase, and turn away their weeping eyes.
Your fame will be in song. The voice of the harp will be heard in your praise.
The daughters of Selma shall hear it: your renown shall be in other lands. Rest,
children of youth, at the noise of the mossy stream!"
Two days we remained on
the coast. The heroes of Berrathon convened. We brought Larthmor to his halls.
The feast of shells is spread. The joy of the
aged was great. He
looked to the arms of his fathers; the arms which he left in his hall, when the
pride of Uthal rose. We were renowned before Larthmor. He blessed the chiefs of
Morven. He knew not that his son was low, the stately strength of Uthal! They
had told, that he had retired to the woods, with the tears of grief. They had
told it, but he was silent in the tomb of Rothma's heath.
On the fourth day
we raised our sails, to the roar of the northern wind. Larthmor came to the
coast. His bards exalted the song. The joy of the king was great; he looked to
Rothma's gloomy heath. He saw the tomb of his son. The memory of Uthal rose.
"Who of my heroes," he said, "lies there? he seems to have been of the kings of
men. Was he renowned in my halls before the pride of Uthal rose? Ye are silent,
sons of Berrathon! is the king of heroes low? My heart melts for thee, O Uthal!
though thy hand was against thy father. O that I had remained in the cave! that
my son had dwelt in Fin-thormo! I might have heard the tread of his feet, when
he went to the chase of the boar. I might have heard his voice on the blast of
my cave. Then would my soul be glad; but now darkness dwells in my
halls."
Such were my deeds, son of Alpin, when the arm of my youth was
strong. Such the actions of Toscar, the car-borne son of Conloch. But Toscar is
on his flying cloud. I am alone at Lutha. My voice is like the last sound of the
wind, when it forsakes the woods. But Ossian shall not be long alone. He sees
the mist that shall receive his ghost. He beholds the mist that shall form his
robe, when he appears on his hills. The Sons of feeble men shall behold me, and
admire the stature of the chiefs of old. They shall creep to their caves. They
shall look to the sky with fear: for my steps shall be in the clouds. Darkness
shall roll on my side.
Lead, son of Alpin, lead the aged to his
woods. The winds begin to rise. The dark wave of the lake resounds. Bends there
not a tree from Mora with its branches bare? It bends, son of Alpin, in the
rustling blast. My harp hangs on a blasted branch. The sound of its strings is
mournful. Does the wind touch thee, O harp, or is it some passing ghost? It is
the hand of Malvina! Bring me the harp, son of Alpin. Another song shall rise.
My soul shall depart in the sound. My fathers shall hear it in their airy hail.
Their dim faces shall hang, with joy, from their clouds; and their hands receive
their son. The aged oak bends over the stream. It sighs with all its moss. The
withered fern whistles near, and mixes, as it waves, with Ossian's
hair.
"Strike the harp, and raise the song: be near, with all your wings, ye
winds. Bear the mournful sound away to Fingal's airy hail. Bear it to Fingal's
hall, that he may hear the voice of his son: the voice of him that praised the
mighty!
"The blast of north opens thy gates, O king! I behold thee sitting on
mist dimly gleaming in all thine arms. Thy form now is not the terror of the
valiant. It is like a watery cloud, when we see the stars behind it with their
weeping eyes. Thy shield is the aged moon: thy sword a vapor half kindled with
fire. Dim and feeble is the chief who travelled in brightness be fore! But thy
steps are on the winds of the desert. The storms are darkening in thy hand. Thou
takest the sun in thy wrath, and hidest him in thy clouds. The sons of little
men are afraid. A thousand showers descend. But when thou comest forth in thy
mildness, the gale of the morning is near thy course. The sun laughs in his blue
fields. The gray stream winds in its vale. The bushes shake their green heads in
the wind. The roes bound towards the desert.
"There is a murmur in the heath!
the stormy winds abate! I hear the voice of Fingal. Long has it
been absent from mine ear! 'Come, Ossian, come away, he says. Fingal has
received his fame. We passed away, like flames that have shone for a season. Our
departure was in renown. Though the plains of our battles are dark and silent;
our fame is in the four gray stones. The voice of Ossian has been heard. The
harp has been strung in Selma. 'Come, Ossian, come away,' he says; 'come, fly
with thy fathers on clouds.' I come, I come, thou king of men! The life of
Ossian fails. I begin to vanish on Cona. My steps are not seen in Selma. Beside
the stone of Mora I shall fall asleep. The winds whistling in my gray hair,
shall not awaken me. Depart on thy wings, O wind, thou canst not disturb the
rest of the bard. The night is long, but his eyes are heavy. Depart, thou
rustling blast.
"But why art thou sad, son of Fingal? Why grows the cloud of
thy soul? The chiefs of other times are departed. They have gone without their
fame. The sons of future years shall pass away. Another race shall arise. The
people are like the waves of ocean; like the leaves of woody Morven, they pass
away in the rustling blast, and other leaves lift their green heads on
high.
"Did thy beauty last, O Ryno? Stood the strength of car-borne Oscar!
Fingal himself departed! The hails of his fathers forgot his steps. Shalt thou
then remain, thou aged bard? when the mighty have failed? But my fame shall
remain, and grow like the oak of Morven; which lifts its broad head to the
storm, and rejoices in the course of the
wind?"
Footnotes
485:1 The maids: that is, the young virgins
who sung the funeral elegy over her tomb.
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