Sleeping
Beauty
by George Augustus Baker
(b. 1849)
A Parable.
You remember the nursery-legend
We heard in the early days,
Ere we knew of the worlds deception
Or walked in its dusty ways,
And dwelt in a land of the fairies
Where the air was golden haze
Of the maid, oer
whom the Summers
Of youth passed, like a swell
Of melody all unbroken,
Till evil wrought its spell,
And dream-embroidered curtains
Of slumber round her fell.
The wood grew up round
her castle,
The centuries oer it rolled,
Wrapping its slumbrous turrets
In clinging robes of mould,
And her name became a legend
By Winter fire-sides told.
Till the Prince came
over the mountains,
In the morning-glow of youth;
The forest sank before him
Like wrong before the truth,
And he passed the dim old portal,
With its warders so uncouth,
Woke with a kiss the
Princess,
And broke enchantments chain,
The sleepy old castle wondered,
In its cobweb-cumbered brain,
At the tide of life and pleasure
That poured through each stony vein.
And so love conquered
an evil
Centuries old in might,
Scattering drowsy glamour,
Piercing the murky night,
Leading from thrall and darkness
Beauty, and joy, and light.
Baker, George Augustus. "Sleeping Beauty." Point-Lace and
Diamonds [George A. Baker, Jr.]. New York: R. Worthington, 1882.