IV.
And now, their rustic1 banquet done, And sheltered from the noontide sun By the old willow's pleasant shade, The guest and host the scene surveyed; Marked how the mountain's mighty2 base The valley's course was seen to trace; Marked how its graceful3 azure4 crest5 Against the sky's blue arch was pressed, And how its long and rocky chain Was parted suddenly in twain, Where through a chasm6, wide and deep, Potomac's rapid waters sweep, While rocks that press the mountain's brow, Nod o'er his waves far, far below;() Marked how those waves, in one broad blaze, Threw back the sun's meridian7 rays, And, flashing as they rolled along, Seemed all alive with light and song; Marked how green bower8 and garden showed Where rose the husbandman's abode9, And how the village walls were seen To glimmer10 with a silvery sheen, Such as the Spaniard saw, of yore, Hang over Tenuchtitlan's walls, When maddened with the lust11 of gore12, He came to desecrate13 her halls; To fire her temples, towers, and thrones, And turn her songs of peace to groans14.
They gazed, till from the hermit15's eye A tear stole slow and silently; A tear, which Memory's hand had taken From a deep fountain long congealed16; A tear, which showed how strongly shaken The heart must be, which thus revealed, Through time's dim shadows, gathering17 fast, Its recollections of the past; Then, as a sigh escaped his breast, Thus spake the hermit to his guest.