What I’m reading: Ominous advice to young poets

From The Knicker­bocker New-​​York Monthly Mag­a­zine, 1837, this piece of Poe-​​ish and Coleridgean scary beauty:

The Poet

Thou dark-​​eyed, pen­sive, pas­sion­ate child of song!

Enthu­si­ast! dreamer! wor­ship­per of things

By the world’s crowd unno­ticed, ’mid the throng

Of beau­ti­ful cre­ations, Nature flings

The sun­light of exis­tence o’er!

The wings

Of the rude tem­pest are not half so strong

As thy proud hopes—thy wild imaginings:

Stop! ere their bold and sac­ri­le­gious flight

Reach a too-​​dazzling height!

Ven­tur­ing sun­ward, till the flash­ing eye

Of rea­son, grown deliri­ously bright,

Kin­dle to mad­ness, and to idiocy;

And, from exces­sive light

To hideous blind­ness fall, and ten­fold night!

Stop! melan­choly youth!

Though bright and sparkling be the tide of song,

And many a sun­beam o’er its waters dance

Mean­der­ingly along—

Though it be heaven to quaff of—yet, in truth,

A dead­lier venom taints its gay expanse,

More deep, more strong,

Than to the sub­tlest poi­son doth belong!

A very demon haunts its fœtid air,

Infat­u­at­ing with its ser­pent glance

The wan­derer there;

And, with a sad but most bewitch­ing smile,

Lur­ing the cred­u­lous one to its desire:

Stir­ring new feel­ings, pas­sions, hopes awhile,

And burn­ing thoughts, whose mad, unholy fire,

With its own strength illumes its own fune­real pyre!

Stop, if thou’dst live!—or hath life left for thee

No charms, that thou its last ter­rific scene

Shouldst with such pas­sion wor­ship? Can it be,

That the world noth­ing hath thou’dst care to win?

No gem, no flower, no love­li­ness, unseen?

No won­der unex­plored? no mystery,

Still unde­vel­oped to the eagle eye

Of Genius, or of Poësy?

Where are the depths of the dark, bil­lowy sea?

Its peo­pling millions—its gigan­tic chain

Of gor­geous, glit­ter­ing waters—wild as free?

Where the big-orb’d sun—the blue-​​veiled sky?

And its mag­nif­i­cent, diamond-​​glittering mine

Of ever-​​burning stars? Oh! can it be,

(Thou fond idol­ater at every shrine

Where beauty lingers,) can it be that thou

Hast trea­sured up earth’s glo­ri­ous things, till now

Thou deem’st it use­less­ness to turn.

Some unfa­mil­iar object to discern,

And so

Her loveli­est fea­tures unre­garded go?

Away, vain thought! such phrenzy ne’er were thine!

Since, in the hum­blest, home­li­est flower that grows—

Thy very life-​​breath, as it comes and goes—

There are a thou­sand things, whose origin,

Whose secret springs, and impulses divine,

No human art nor wis­dom can disclose!

Stop, then, sad youth! for life is not all care,

But, hath its hours of rosy-​​lipped delight;

While the cold grave hath lit­tle save despair,

The weary, world-​​worn spirit to invite.

Stop! I con­jure thee I bid the muse away!

Her fatal gifts relin­quish or resign;

Her haughty man­dates heed not nor obey:

E’en now thy brow hath sorrow’s pal­lid sign—

Thine eye, though bright, is like the flick­er­ing ray

Of a ‘stray sun­beam, o’er some ruin’d shrine,’

Light­ing up ves­tiges almost divine,

In sad, yet, dimly-​​beautiful decay!

Thy cheek is sunken, and the fickle play

Of the faint smile that curls thy parted lip

Hath some­thing fear­ful in it, though so gay!

A some­thing treach­er­ously calm, and deep,

Such as on sunny waters seems to sleep,

When hid beneath some pass­ing shad­ows gray,

The sub­tle storm-​​fiend watches for his prey.

Stop! ere thine hour of dal­liance be over;

Ere Health aban­don thee, and quench her light

In the dark stream of death, (the faith­less rover!)

Ere Hope her­self take flight

Down to the depths of that dark-​​flowing river,

Whose som­bre shores are clothed in end­less night;

Ere thou be wrested from us—and for ever!

Blot­ted, like some loved planet, from our sight!

And, save the ties

That not e’en Des­tiny itself can sever,

A fee­ble rem­i­nis­cence or a name

Be all thou leav’st us of thee ’neath the skies—

Or some rude stone, per­chance, to greet our eyes,

And, with its speech­less elo­quence proclaim:

Here lies

Another vic­tim to thy love, O Fame!’

Philadel­phia, 1837.
J. S. D. S.

Spe­cial thanks to my lovely wife, who helped with formatting.God, doesn’t CSS suck?