Eye’s Witness to Sin, The
The soul within, breathing in sinful flesh
The dungeon air of uncongenial vice,
Fades, sickening, from the eyes that, pure and fresh,
Betrays too well at what a fearful price
Ye buy low pleasure of the extortioner, Sin;
And, as it fades, yet other souls begin
To peep and chatter o’er the prison bars,—
Demon, or ghoul, or imp with idiot grin!
For, as among the stars
Prince Uriel guards the sun,
Standing alone amid its orbèd splendor;
And Queen Astartè, beautiful and tender
Leans out from Hesperus; or, lost to her,
Morn sees it burn round rebel Lucifer:
So looks from every eye some unseen one,—
Angel of love and light, or darker sprit,
Fallen from God, of those whom evil merit
Sent wandering, to find an alien home
In tortured bosoms, and with souls undone,
Roaming to find, and finding, still who roam!
The beautiful beings, who on earth inherit
The kingdom and the crown already come,
Keep, through the stir and care of evil days,
The eye’s pure rest and childhood’s sinless gaze,
Clear as a soul refined by martyrdom.
But, ah! how soon an altered glance betrays
The usurping spirit,—dead and fired by turns,
As passion-quenched or passion lit it burns!
When from her throne the angel soul retires,
Slowly she faces; and ever and anon
A sad smile trembles through the wasteful fires,
Ere the last gleam of purity has gone.
Then the all-dimmed or evil-gleaming eye,
With wicked gloating or a leaden stare,
Through the dull ashes of its idiotcy [sic]
Mocks with an equal ruin the clear glance
Of visible godhood, once incarnate there,
Where a white soul flashed out the silent dance
Of more than speech in musical radiance,
Teaching her twin orbs in their deeper zones
To match Orion’s burning adamants
Or starry-eyed Arcturus and his sons.
Now, seethed in feverous sin’s envenomed cup,
Stare out the dull orbs, godless and opaque.
Dead virtue’s reeking pestilence steams up,
And blurs their crystals, until death could take
No trophy there, nor his insatiate son,
Corruption, find wherewith to revel on.
- Title
- Eye’s Witness to Sin, The
- Alternative Title
- The Soul within, breathing in sinful flesh
- Creator
-
George Shepard Burleigh
- Bibliographic Citation
- George S. Burleigh Papers, 1825-1902. John Hay Library, Brown University. Large Scrapbook 183
- Date
- 1841
- In the Large Scrapbook, George Shepard Burleigh notes "1841 (?)"
- Subject
- Sin
- Temperance
- Human Destiny
- Myth
- note
- This very early poem shows the hallmarks of a young poet, trying out fancy allusions and some advanced rhyming schemes. It also betrays an overly simplistic morality. He is clearly working on his technique.
- Media
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The Eye's Witness to Sin