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Fragment II

The light of day was fading in the west,  The smoke no more from village chimneys curled,  Nor voice of man, nor bark of dog was heard;  When she, obedient to Love's rendezvous,  Had reached the middle of a plain, than which  No other more bewitching could be found.  The moon on every side her lustre shed,  And all in robes of silver light arrayed  The trees with which the place was garlanded.  The rustling boughs were murmuring to the wind,  And, blending with the plaintive nightingale,  A rivulet poured forth its sweet lament.  The sea shone in the distance, and the fields  And groves; and slowly rising, one by one,  The summits of the mountains were revealed.  In quiet shade the sombre valley lay,  While all the little hills around were clothed  With the soft lustre of the dewy moon.  The maiden kept the silent, lonely path,  And gently passing o'er her face, she felt  The motion of the perfume-laden breeze.  If she were happy, it were vain to ask;  The scene delighted her, and the delight  Her heart was promising, was greater still.  How swift your flight,

O lovely hours serene!  No other pleasure here below endures,  Or lingers with us long, save hope alone.  The night began to change, and dark became  The face of heaven, that was so beautiful,  And all her pleasure now was turned to fear.  An angry cloud, precursor of the storm,  Behind the mountains rose, and still increased,  Till moon or star no longer could be seen.  She saw it spreading upon every side,  And by degrees ascending through the air,  And now with its black mantle covering all.  The scanty light more faint and faint became;  The wind, meanwhile, was rising in the grove,  That on the farther side the spot enclosed;  And, every moment, was more boisterous;  Till every bird, awaking in its fright,  Amidst the trembling leaves was fluttering.  The cloud, increasing still, unto the coast  Descended, so that one extremity  The mountains touched, the other touched the sea.  And now from out its black and hollow womb,  The pattering rain-drops, falling fast, were heard,  The sound increasing as the cloud drew near.  And round her now the glancing lightning flashed  In fearful mood, and made her shut her eyes;  The ground was black, the air a mass of flame.  Her trembling knees could scarce her weight sustain;  The thunder roared with a continuous sound,  Like torrent, plunging headlong from the cliff.  At times she paused, the dismal scene to view,  In blank dismay; then on she ran again,  Her hair and clothes all streaming in the wind.  The cruel wind beat hard against her breast,  And rushing fiercely, with its angry breath,  The cold drops dashed, remorseless, in her face.  The thunder, like a beast, assaulted her,  With terrible, unintermitting roar;  And more and more the rain and tempest raged.  And from all sides in wild confusion flew  The dust and leaves, the branches and the stones,  With hideous tumult, inconceivable.  Her weary, blinded eyes now covering,  And folding close her clothes against her breast,  She through the storm her fearful path pursued.  But now the lightning glared so in her face,  That, overcome by fright at last, she went  No farther, and her heart within her sank;  And back she turned.

And, even as she turned,  The lightning ceased to flash, the air was dark,  The thunder's voice was hushed, the wind stood still,  And all was silent round, and she,--at rest!

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Count Giacomo Leopardi

Giacomo Taldegardo Francesco di Sales Saverio Pietro Leopardi (29 June 1798 – 14 June 1837) was an Italian philosopher, poet, essayist, and phil…

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