Quotations.ch
  Directory : Men Who March Away
GUIDE SUPPORT US BLOG
  • The Project Gutenberg eBook, Satires of Circumstance, by Thomas Hardy
  • This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
  • other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
  • whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
  • the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
  • www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
  • to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
  • Title: Satires of Circumstance
  • Lyrics and Reveries with Miscellaneous Pieces
  • Author: Thomas Hardy
  • Release Date: January 23, 2015 [eBook #2863]
  • [This file was first posted on August 29, 2000]
  • Language: English
  • Character set encoding: UTF-8
  • ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SATIRES OF CIRCUMSTANCE***
  • Transcribed from the 1919 Macmillan and Co. edition by David Price, email
  • ccx074@pglaf.org
  • [Picture: Book cover]
  • SATIRES
  • OF CIRCUMSTANCE
  • LYRICS AND REVERIES
  • WITH MISCELLANEOUS PIECES
  • * * * * *
  • BY
  • THOMAS HARDY
  • * * * * *
  • * * * * *
  • * * * * *
  • MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
  • ST. MARTIN’S STREET, LONDON
  • 1919
  • * * * * *
  • COPYRIGHT
  • _First Edition_ 1914
  • _Reprinted_ 1915, 1919
  • _Pocket Edition_ 1919
  • * * * * *
  • CONTENTS
  • LYRICS AND REVERIES— PAGE
  • In Front of the Landscape 3
  • Channel Firing 7
  • The Convergence of the Twain 9
  • The Ghost of the Past 12
  • After the Visit 14
  • To Meet, or Otherwise 16
  • The Difference 18
  • The Sun on the Bookcase 19
  • “When I set out for Lyonnesse” 20
  • A Thunderstorm in Town 21
  • The Torn Letter 22
  • Beyond the Last Lamp 25
  • The Face at the Casement 27
  • Lost Love 30
  • “My spirit will not haunt the mound” 31
  • Wessex Heights 32
  • In Death divided 35
  • The Place on the Map 37
  • Where the Picnic was 39
  • The Schreckhorn 41
  • A Singer asleep 42
  • A Plaint to Man 45
  • God’s Funeral 47
  • Spectres that grieve 52
  • “Ah, are you digging on my grave?” 54
  • SATIRES OF CIRCUMSTANCE—
  • I. At Tea 59
  • II. In Church 60
  • III. By her Aunt’s Grave 61
  • IV. In the Room of the Bride-elect 62
  • V. At the Watering-place 63
  • VI. In the Cemetery 64
  • VII. Outside the Window 65
  • VIII. In the Study 66
  • IX. At the Altar-rail 67
  • X. In the Nuptial Chamber 68
  • XI. In the Restaurant 69
  • XII. At the Draper’s 70
  • XIII. On the Death-bed 71
  • XIV. Over the Coffin 72
  • XV. In the Moonlight 73
  • LYRICS AND REVERIES (_continued_)—
  • Self-unconscious 77
  • The Discovery 80
  • Tolerance 81
  • Before and after Summer 82
  • At Day-close in November 83
  • The Year’s Awakening 84
  • Under the Waterfall 85
  • The Spell of the Rose 88
  • St. Launce’s revisited 90
  • POEMS OF 1912–13–
  • The Going 95
  • Your Last Drive 97
  • The Walk 99
  • Rain on a Grace 100
  • “I found her out there” 102
  • Without Ceremony 104
  • Lament 105
  • The Haunter 107
  • The Voice 109
  • His Visitor 110
  • A Circular 112
  • A Dream or No 113
  • After a Journey 115
  • A Death-ray recalled 117
  • Beeny Cliff 119
  • At Castle Boterel 121
  • Places 123
  • The Phantom Horsewoman 125
  • MISCELLANEOUS PIECES—
  • The Wistful Lady 129
  • The Woman in the Rye 131
  • The Cheval-Glass 132
  • The Re-enactment 134
  • Her Secret 140
  • “She charged me” 141
  • The Newcomer’s Wife 142
  • A Conversation at Dawn 143
  • A King’s Soliloquy 152
  • The Coronation 154
  • Aquae Sulis 157
  • Seventy-four and Twenty 160
  • The Elopement 161
  • “I rose up as my custom is” 163
  • A Week 165
  • Had you wept 167
  • Bereft, she thinks she dreams 169
  • In the British Museum 170
  • In the Servants’ Quarters 172
  • The Obliterate Tomb 175
  • “Regret not me” 183
  • The Recalcitrants 185
  • Starlings on the Roof 186
  • The Moon looks in 187
  • The Sweet Hussy 188
  • The Telegram 189
  • The Moth-signal 191
  • Seen by the Waits 193
  • The Two Soldiers 194
  • The Death of Regret 195
  • In the Days of Crinoline 197
  • The Roman Gravemounds 199
  • The Workbox 201
  • The Sacrilege 203
  • The Abbey Mason 210
  • The Jubilee of a Magazine 222
  • The Satin Shoes 224
  • Exeunt Omnes 227
  • A Poet 228
  • POSTSCRIPT—
  • “Men who march away” 229
  • LYRICS AND REVERIES
  • IN FRONT OF THE LANDSCAPE
  • PLUNGING and labouring on in a tide of visions,
  • Dolorous and dear,
  • Forward I pushed my way as amid waste waters
  • Stretching around,
  • Through whose eddies there glimmered the customed landscape
  • Yonder and near,
  • Blotted to feeble mist. And the coomb and the upland
  • Foliage-crowned,
  • Ancient chalk-pit, milestone, rills in the grass-flat
  • Stroked by the light,
  • Seemed but a ghost-like gauze, and no substantial
  • Meadow or mound.
  • What were the infinite spectacles bulking foremost
  • Under my sight,
  • Hindering me to discern my paced advancement
  • Lengthening to miles;
  • What were the re-creations killing the daytime
  • As by the night?
  • O they were speechful faces, gazing insistent,
  • Some as with smiles,
  • Some as with slow-born tears that brinily trundled
  • Over the wrecked
  • Cheeks that were fair in their flush-time, ash now with anguish,
  • Harrowed by wiles.
  • Yes, I could see them, feel them, hear them, address them—
  • Halo-bedecked—
  • And, alas, onwards, shaken by fierce unreason,
  • Rigid in hate,
  • Smitten by years-long wryness born of misprision,
  • Dreaded, suspect.
  • Then there would breast me shining sights, sweet seasons
  • Further in date;
  • Instruments of strings with the tenderest passion
  • Vibrant, beside
  • Lamps long extinguished, robes, cheeks, eyes with the earth’s crust
  • Now corporate.
  • Also there rose a headland of hoary aspect
  • Gnawed by the tide,
  • Frilled by the nimb of the morning as two friends stood there
  • Guilelessly glad—
  • Wherefore they knew not—touched by the fringe of an ecstasy
  • Scantly descried.
  • Later images too did the day unfurl me,
  • Shadowed and sad,
  • Clay cadavers of those who had shared in the dramas,
  • Laid now at ease,
  • Passions all spent, chiefest the one of the broad brow
  • Sepulture-clad.
  • So did beset me scenes miscalled of the bygone,
  • Over the leaze,
  • Past the clump, and down to where lay the beheld ones;
  • —Yea, as the rhyme
  • Sung by the sea-swell, so in their pleading dumbness
  • Captured me these.
  • For, their lost revisiting manifestations
  • In their own time
  • Much had I slighted, caring not for their purport,
  • Seeing behind
  • Things more coveted, reckoned the better worth calling
  • Sweet, sad, sublime.
  • Thus do they now show hourly before the intenser
  • Stare of the mind
  • As they were ghosts avenging their slights by my bypast
  • Body-borne eyes,
  • Show, too, with fuller translation than rested upon them
  • As living kind.
  • Hence wag the tongues of the passing people, saying
  • In their surmise,
  • “Ah—whose is this dull form that perambulates, seeing nought
  • Round him that looms
  • Whithersoever his footsteps turn in his farings,
  • Save a few tombs?”
  • CHANNEL FIRING
  • THAT night your great guns, unawares,
  • Shook all our coffins as we lay,
  • And broke the chancel window-squares,
  • We thought it was the Judgment-day
  • And sat upright. While drearisome
  • Arose the howl of wakened hounds:
  • The mouse let fall the altar-crumb,
  • The worms drew back into the mounds,
  • The glebe cow drooled. Till God called, “No;
  • It’s gunnery practice out at sea
  • Just as before you went below;
  • The world is as it used to be:
  • “All nations striving strong to make
  • Red war yet redder. Mad as hatters
  • They do no more for Christés sake
  • Than you who are helpless in such matters.
  • “That this is not the judgment-hour
  • For some of them’s a blessed thing,
  • For if it were they’d have to scour
  • Hell’s floor for so much threatening . . .
  • “Ha, ha. It will be warmer when
  • I blow the trumpet (if indeed
  • I ever do; for you are men,
  • And rest eternal sorely need).”
  • So down we lay again. “I wonder,
  • Will the world ever saner be,”
  • Said one, “than when He sent us under
  • In our indifferent century!”
  • And many a skeleton shook his head.
  • “Instead of preaching forty year,”
  • My neighbour Parson Thirdly said,
  • “I wish I had stuck to pipes and beer.”
  • Again the guns disturbed the hour,
  • Roaring their readiness to avenge,
  • As far inland as Stourton Tower,
  • And Camelot, and starlit Stonehenge.
  • _April_ 1914.
  • THE CONVERGENCE OF THE TWAIN
  • (_Lines on the loss of the_ “_Titanic_”)
  • I
  • IN a solitude of the sea
  • Deep from human vanity,
  • And the Pride of Life that planned her, stilly couches she.
  • II
  • Steel chambers, late the pyres
  • Of her salamandrine fires,
  • Cold currents thrid, and turn to rhythmic tidal lyres.
  • III
  • Over the mirrors meant
  • To glass the opulent
  • The sea-worm crawls—grotesque, slimed, dumb, indifferent.
  • IV
  • Jewels in joy designed
  • To ravish the sensuous mind
  • Lie lightless, all their sparkles bleared and black and blind.
  • V
  • Dim moon-eyed fishes near
  • Gaze at the gilded gear
  • And query: “What does this vaingloriousness down here?” . . .
  • VI
  • Well: while was fashioning
  • This creature of cleaving wing,
  • The Immanent Will that stirs and urges everything
  • VII
  • Prepared a sinister mate
  • For her—so gaily great—
  • A Shape of Ice, for the time far and dissociate.
  • VIII
  • And as the smart ship grew
  • In stature, grace, and hue,
  • In shadowy silent distance grew the Iceberg too.
  • IX
  • Alien they seemed to be:
  • No mortal eye could see
  • The intimate welding of their later history,
  • X
  • Or sign that they were bent
  • By paths coincident
  • On being anon twin halves of one august event,
  • XI
  • Till the Spinner of the Years
  • Said “Now!” And each one hears,
  • And consummation comes, and jars two hemispheres.
  • THE GHOST OF THE PAST
  • WE two kept house, the Past and I,
  • The Past and I;
  • I tended while it hovered nigh,
  • Leaving me never alone.
  • It was a spectral housekeeping
  • Where fell no jarring tone,
  • As strange, as still a housekeeping
  • As ever has been known.
  • As daily I went up the stair
  • And down the stair,
  • I did not mind the Bygone there—
  • The Present once to me;
  • Its moving meek companionship
  • I wished might ever be,
  • There was in that companionship
  • Something of ecstasy.
  • It dwelt with me just as it was,
  • Just as it was
  • When first its prospects gave me pause
  • In wayward wanderings,
  • Before the years had torn old troths
  • As they tear all sweet things,
  • Before gaunt griefs had torn old troths
  • And dulled old rapturings.
  • And then its form began to fade,
  • Began to fade,
  • Its gentle echoes faintlier played
  • At eves upon my ear
  • Than when the autumn’s look embrowned
  • The lonely chambers here,
  • The autumn’s settling shades embrowned
  • Nooks that it haunted near.
  • And so with time my vision less,
  • Yea, less and less
  • Makes of that Past my housemistress,
  • It dwindles in my eye;
  • It looms a far-off skeleton
  • And not a comrade nigh,
  • A fitful far-off skeleton
  • Dimming as days draw by.
  • AFTER THE VISIT
  • (_To F. E. D._)
  • COME again to the place
  • Where your presence was as a leaf that skims
  • Down a drouthy way whose ascent bedims
  • The bloom on the farer’s face.
  • Come again, with the feet
  • That were light on the green as a thistledown ball,
  • And those mute ministrations to one and to all
  • Beyond a man’s saying sweet.
  • Until then the faint scent
  • Of the bordering flowers swam unheeded away,
  • And I marked not the charm in the changes of day
  • As the cloud-colours came and went.
  • Through the dark corridors
  • Your walk was so soundless I did not know
  • Your form from a phantom’s of long ago
  • Said to pass on the ancient floors,
  • Till you drew from the shade,
  • And I saw the large luminous living eyes
  • Regard me in fixed inquiring-wise
  • As those of a soul that weighed,
  • Scarce consciously,
  • The eternal question of what Life was,
  • And why we were there, and by whose strange laws
  • That which mattered most could not be.
  • TO MEET, OR OTHERWISE
  • WHETHER to sally and see thee, girl of my dreams,
  • Or whether to stay
  • And see thee not! How vast the difference seems
  • Of Yea from Nay
  • Just now. Yet this same sun will slant its beams
  • At no far day
  • On our two mounds, and then what will the difference weigh!
  • Yet I will see thee, maiden dear, and make
  • The most I can
  • Of what remains to us amid this brake Cimmerian
  • Through which we grope, and from whose thorns we ache,
  • While still we scan
  • Round our frail faltering progress for some path or plan.
  • By briefest meeting something sure is won;
  • It will have been:
  • Nor God nor Daemon can undo the done,
  • Unsight the seen,
  • Make muted music be as unbegun,
  • Though things terrene
  • Groan in their bondage till oblivion supervene.
  • So, to the one long-sweeping symphony
  • From times remote
  • Till now, of human tenderness, shall we
  • Supply one note,
  • Small and untraced, yet that will ever be
  • Somewhere afloat
  • Amid the spheres, as part of sick Life’s antidote.
  • THE DIFFERENCE
  • I
  • SINKING down by the gate I discern the thin moon,
  • And a blackbird tries over old airs in the pine,
  • But the moon is a sorry one, sad the bird’s tune,
  • For this spot is unknown to that Heartmate of mine.
  • II
  • Did my Heartmate but haunt here at times such as now,
  • The song would be joyous and cheerful the moon;
  • But she will see never this gate, path, or bough,
  • Nor I find a joy in the scene or the tune.
  • THE SUN ON THE BOOKCASE
  • (_Student’s Love-song_)
  • ONCE more the cauldron of the sun
  • Smears the bookcase with winy red,
  • And here my page is, and there my bed,
  • And the apple-tree shadows travel along.
  • Soon their intangible track will be run,
  • And dusk grow strong
  • And they be fled.
  • Yes: now the boiling ball is gone,
  • And I have wasted another day . . .
  • But wasted—_wasted_, do I say?
  • Is it a waste to have imaged one
  • Beyond the hills there, who, anon,
  • My great deeds done
  • Will be mine alway?
  • “WHEN I SET OUT FOR LYONNESSE”
  • WHEN I set out for Lyonnesse,
  • A hundred miles away,
  • The rime was on the spray,
  • And starlight lit my lonesomeness
  • When I set out for Lyonnesse
  • A hundred miles away.
  • What would bechance at Lyonnesse
  • While I should sojourn there
  • No prophet durst declare,
  • Nor did the wisest wizard guess
  • What would bechance at Lyonnesse
  • While I should sojourn there.
  • When I came back from Lyonnesse
  • With magic in my eyes,
  • None managed to surmise
  • What meant my godlike gloriousness,
  • When I came back from Lyonnesse
  • With magic in my eyes.
  • A THUNDERSTORM IN TOWN
  • (_A Reminiscence_)
  • SHE wore a new “terra-cotta” dress,
  • And we stayed, because of the pelting storm,
  • Within the hansom’s dry recess,
  • Though the horse had stopped; yea, motionless
  • We sat on, snug and warm.
  • Then the downpour ceased, to my sharp sad pain,
  • And the glass that had screened our forms before
  • Flew up, and out she sprang to her door:
  • I should have kissed her if the rain
  • Had lasted a minute more.
  • THE TORN LETTER
  • I
  • I tore your letter into strips
  • No bigger than the airy feathers
  • That ducks preen out in changing weathers
  • Upon the shifting ripple-tips.
  • II
  • In darkness on my bed alone
  • I seemed to see you in a vision,
  • And hear you say: “Why this derision
  • Of one drawn to you, though unknown?”
  • III
  • Yes, eve’s quick mood had run its course,
  • The night had cooled my hasty madness;
  • I suffered a regretful sadness
  • Which deepened into real remorse.
  • IV
  • I thought what pensive patient days
  • A soul must know of grain so tender,
  • How much of good must grace the sender
  • Of such sweet words in such bright phrase.
  • V
  • Uprising then, as things unpriced
  • I sought each fragment, patched and mended;
  • The midnight whitened ere I had ended
  • And gathered words I had sacrificed.
  • VI
  • But some, alas, of those I threw
  • Were past my search, destroyed for ever:
  • They were your name and place; and never
  • Did I regain those clues to you.
  • VII
  • I learnt I had missed, by rash unheed,
  • My track; that, so the Will decided,
  • In life, death, we should be divided,
  • And at the sense I ached indeed.
  • VIII
  • That ache for you, born long ago,
  • Throbs on; I never could outgrow it.
  • What a revenge, did you but know it!
  • But that, thank God, you do not know.
  • BEYOND THE LAST LAMP
  • (Near Tooting Common)
  • I
  • WHILE rain, with eve in partnership,
  • Descended darkly, drip, drip, drip,
  • Beyond the last lone lamp I passed
  • Walking slowly, whispering sadly,
  • Two linked loiterers, wan, downcast:
  • Some heavy thought constrained each face,
  • And blinded them to time and place.
  • II
  • The pair seemed lovers, yet absorbed
  • In mental scenes no longer orbed
  • By love’s young rays. Each countenance
  • As it slowly, as it sadly
  • Caught the lamplight’s yellow glance
  • Held in suspense a misery
  • At things which had been or might be.
  • III
  • When I retrod that watery way
  • Some hours beyond the droop of day,
  • Still I found pacing there the twain
  • Just as slowly, just as sadly,
  • Heedless of the night and rain.
  • One could but wonder who they were
  • And what wild woe detained them there.
  • IV
  • Though thirty years of blur and blot
  • Have slid since I beheld that spot,
  • And saw in curious converse there
  • Moving slowly, moving sadly
  • That mysterious tragic pair,
  • Its olden look may linger on—
  • All but the couple; they have gone.
  • V
  • Whither? Who knows, indeed . . . And yet
  • To me, when nights are weird and wet,
  • Without those comrades there at tryst
  • Creeping slowly, creeping sadly,
  • That lone lane does not exist.
  • There they seem brooding on their pain,
  • And will, while such a lane remain.
  • THE FACE AT THE CASEMENT
  • IF ever joy leave
  • An abiding sting of sorrow,
  • So befell it on the morrow
  • Of that May eve . . .
  • The travelled sun dropped
  • To the north-west, low and lower,
  • The pony’s trot grew slower,
  • And then we stopped.
  • “This cosy house just by
  • I must call at for a minute,
  • A sick man lies within it
  • Who soon will die.
  • “He wished to marry me,
  • So I am bound, when I drive near him,
  • To inquire, if but to cheer him,
  • How he may be.”
  • A message was sent in,
  • And wordlessly we waited,
  • Till some one came and stated
  • The bulletin.
  • And that the sufferer said,
  • For her call no words could thank her;
  • As his angel he must rank her
  • Till life’s spark fled.
  • Slowly we drove away,
  • When I turned my head, although not
  • Called; why so I turned I know not
  • Even to this day.
  • And lo, there in my view
  • Pressed against an upper lattice
  • Was a white face, gazing at us
  • As we withdrew.
  • And well did I divine
  • It to be the man’s there dying,
  • Who but lately had been sighing
  • For her pledged mine.
  • Then I deigned a deed of hell;
  • It was done before I knew it;
  • What devil made me do it
  • I cannot tell!
  • Yes, while he gazed above,
  • I put my arm about her
  • That he might see, nor doubt her
  • My plighted Love.
  • The pale face vanished quick,
  • As if blasted, from the casement,
  • And my shame and self-abasement
  • Began their prick.
  • And they prick on, ceaselessly,
  • For that stab in Love’s fierce fashion
  • Which, unfired by lover’s passion,
  • Was foreign to me.
  • She smiled at my caress,
  • But why came the soft embowment
  • Of her shoulder at that moment
  • She did not guess.
  • Long long years has he lain
  • In thy garth, O sad Saint Cleather:
  • What tears there, bared to weather,
  • Will cleanse that stain!
  • Love is long-suffering, brave,
  • Sweet, prompt, precious as a jewel;
  • But O, too, Love is cruel,
  • Cruel as the grave.
  • LOST LOVE
  • I PLAY my sweet old airs—
  • The airs he knew
  • When our love was true—
  • But he does not balk
  • His determined walk,
  • And passes up the stairs.
  • I sing my songs once more,
  • And presently hear
  • His footstep near
  • As if it would stay;
  • But he goes his way,
  • And shuts a distant door.
  • So I wait for another morn
  • And another night
  • In this soul-sick blight;
  • And I wonder much
  • As I sit, why such
  • A woman as I was born!
  • “MY SPIRIT WILL NOT HAUNT THE MOUND”
  • MY spirit will not haunt the mound
  • Above my breast,
  • But travel, memory-possessed,
  • To where my tremulous being found
  • Life largest, best.
  • My phantom-footed shape will go
  • When nightfall grays
  • Hither and thither along the ways
  • I and another used to know
  • In backward days.
  • And there you’ll find me, if a jot
  • You still should care
  • For me, and for my curious air;
  • If otherwise, then I shall not,
  • For you, be there.
  • WESSEX HEIGHTS (1896)
  • THERE are some heights in Wessex, shaped as if by a kindly hand
  • For thinking, dreaming, dying on, and at crises when I stand,
  • Say, on Ingpen Beacon eastward, or on Wylls-Neck westwardly,
  • I seem where I was before my birth, and after death may be.
  • In the lowlands I have no comrade, not even the lone man’s friend—
  • Her who suffereth long and is kind; accepts what he is too weak to
  • mend:
  • Down there they are dubious and askance; there nobody thinks as I,
  • But mind-chains do not clank where one’s next neighbour is the sky.
  • In the towns I am tracked by phantoms having weird detective ways—
  • Shadows of beings who fellowed with myself of earlier days:
  • They hang about at places, and they say harsh heavy things—
  • Men with a frigid sneer, and women with tart disparagings.
  • Down there I seem to be false to myself, my simple self that was,
  • And is not now, and I see him watching, wondering what crass cause
  • Can have merged him into such a strange continuator as this,
  • Who yet has something in common with himself, my chrysalis.
  • I cannot go to the great grey Plain; there’s a figure against the
  • moon,
  • Nobody sees it but I, and it makes my breast beat out of tune;
  • I cannot go to the tall-spired town, being barred by the forms now
  • passed
  • For everybody but me, in whose long vision they stand there fast.
  • There’s a ghost at Yell’ham Bottom chiding loud at the fall of the
  • night,
  • There’s a ghost in Froom-side Vale, thin lipped and vague, in a shroud
  • of white,
  • There is one in the railway-train whenever I do not want it near,
  • I see its profile against the pane, saying what I would not hear.
  • As for one rare fair woman, I am now but a thought of hers,
  • I enter her mind and another thought succeeds me that she prefers;
  • Yet my love for her in its fulness she herself even did not know;
  • Well, time cures hearts of tenderness, and now I can let her go.
  • So I am found on Ingpen Beacon, or on Wylls-Neck to the west,
  • Or else on homely Bulbarrow, or little Pilsdon Crest,
  • Where men have never cared to haunt, nor women have walked with me,
  • And ghosts then keep their distance; and I know some liberty.
  • IN DEATH DIVIDED
  • I
  • I SHALL rot here, with those whom in their day
  • You never knew,
  • And alien ones who, ere they chilled to clay,
  • Met not my view,
  • Will in your distant grave-place ever neighbour you.
  • II
  • No shade of pinnacle or tree or tower,
  • While earth endures,
  • Will fall on my mound and within the hour
  • Steal on to yours;
  • One robin never haunt our two green covertures.
  • III
  • Some organ may resound on Sunday noons
  • By where you lie,
  • Some other thrill the panes with other tunes
  • Where moulder I;
  • No selfsame chords compose our common lullaby.
  • IV
  • The simply-cut memorial at my head
  • Perhaps may take
  • A Gothic form, and that above your bed
  • Be Greek in make;
  • No linking symbol show thereon for our tale’s sake.
  • V
  • And in the monotonous moils of strained, hard-run
  • Humanity,
  • The eternal tie which binds us twain in one
  • No eye will see
  • Stretching across the miles that sever you from me.
  • THE PLACE ON THE MAP
  • I
  • I LOOK upon the map that hangs by me—
  • Its shires and towns and rivers lined in varnished artistry—
  • And I mark a jutting height
  • Coloured purple, with a margin of blue sea.
  • II
  • —’Twas a day of latter summer, hot and dry;
  • Ay, even the waves seemed drying as we walked on, she and I,
  • By this spot where, calmly quite,
  • She informed me what would happen by and by.
  • III
  • This hanging map depicts the coast and place,
  • And resuscitates therewith our unexpected troublous case
  • All distinctly to my sight,
  • And her tension, and the aspect of her face.
  • IV
  • Weeks and weeks we had loved beneath that blazing blue,
  • Which had lost the art of raining, as her eyes to-day had too,
  • While she told what, as by sleight,
  • Shot our firmament with rays of ruddy hue.
  • V
  • For the wonder and the wormwood of the whole
  • Was that what in realms of reason would have joyed our double soul
  • Wore a torrid tragic light
  • Under order-keeping’s rigorous control.
  • VI
  • So, the map revives her words, the spot, the time,
  • And the thing we found we had to face before the next year’s prime;
  • The charted coast stares bright,
  • And its episode comes back in pantomime.
  • WHERE THE PICNIC WAS
  • WHERE we made the fire,
  • In the summer time,
  • Of branch and briar
  • On the hill to the sea
  • I slowly climb
  • Through winter mire,
  • And scan and trace
  • The forsaken place
  • Quite readily.
  • Now a cold wind blows,
  • And the grass is gray,
  • But the spot still shows
  • As a burnt circle—aye,
  • And stick-ends, charred,
  • Still strew the sward
  • Whereon I stand,
  • Last relic of the band
  • Who came that day!
  • Yes, I am here
  • Just as last year,
  • And the sea breathes brine
  • From its strange straight line
  • Up hither, the same
  • As when we four came.
  • —But two have wandered far
  • From this grassy rise
  • Into urban roar
  • Where no picnics are,
  • And one—has shut her eyes
  • For evermore.
  • THE SCHRECKHORN
  • (_With thoughts of Leslie Stephen_)
  • (June 1897)
  • ALOOF, as if a thing of mood and whim;
  • Now that its spare and desolate figure gleams
  • Upon my nearing vision, less it seems
  • A looming Alp-height than a guise of him
  • Who scaled its horn with ventured life and limb,
  • Drawn on by vague imaginings, maybe,
  • Of semblance to his personality
  • In its quaint glooms, keen lights, and rugged trim.
  • At his last change, when Life’s dull coils unwind,
  • Will he, in old love, hitherward escape,
  • And the eternal essence of his mind
  • Enter this silent adamantine shape,
  • And his low voicing haunt its slipping snows
  • When dawn that calls the climber dyes them rose?
  • A SINGER ASLEEP
  • (_Algernon Charles Swinburne_, 1837–1909)
  • I
  • In this fair niche above the unslumbering sea,
  • That sentrys up and down all night, all day,
  • From cove to promontory, from ness to bay,
  • The Fates have fitly bidden that he should be Pillowed eternally.
  • II
  • —It was as though a garland of red roses
  • Had fallen about the hood of some smug nun
  • When irresponsibly dropped as from the sun,
  • In fulth of numbers freaked with musical closes,
  • Upon Victoria’s formal middle time
  • His leaves of rhythm and rhyme.
  • III
  • O that far morning of a summer day
  • When, down a terraced street whose pavements lay
  • Glassing the sunshine into my bent eyes,
  • I walked and read with a quick glad surprise
  • New words, in classic guise,—
  • IV
  • The passionate pages of his earlier years,
  • Fraught with hot sighs, sad laughters, kisses, tears;
  • Fresh-fluted notes, yet from a minstrel who
  • Blew them not naïvely, but as one who knew
  • Full well why thus he blew.
  • V
  • I still can hear the brabble and the roar
  • At those thy tunes, O still one, now passed through
  • That fitful fire of tongues then entered new!
  • Their power is spent like spindrift on this shore;
  • Thine swells yet more and more.
  • VI
  • —His singing-mistress verily was no other
  • Than she the Lesbian, she the music-mother
  • Of all the tribe that feel in melodies;
  • Who leapt, love-anguished, from the Leucadian steep
  • Into the rambling world-encircling deep
  • Which hides her where none sees.
  • VII
  • And one can hold in thought that nightly here
  • His phantom may draw down to the water’s brim,
  • And hers come up to meet it, as a dim
  • Lone shine upon the heaving hydrosphere,
  • And mariners wonder as they traverse near,
  • Unknowing of her and him.
  • VIII
  • One dreams him sighing to her spectral form:
  • “O teacher, where lies hid thy burning line;
  • Where are those songs, O poetess divine
  • Whose very arts are love incarnadine?”
  • And her smile back: “Disciple true and warm,
  • Sufficient now are thine.” . . .
  • IX
  • So here, beneath the waking constellations,
  • Where the waves peal their everlasting strains,
  • And their dull subterrene reverberations
  • Shake him when storms make mountains of their plains—
  • Him once their peer in sad improvisations,
  • And deft as wind to cleave their frothy manes—
  • I leave him, while the daylight gleam declines
  • Upon the capes and chines.
  • BONCHURCH, 1910.
  • A PLAINT TO MAN
  • WHEN you slowly emerged from the den of Time,
  • And gained percipience as you grew,
  • And fleshed you fair out of shapeless slime,
  • Wherefore, O Man, did there come to you
  • The unhappy need of creating me—
  • A form like your own—for praying to?
  • My virtue, power, utility,
  • Within my maker must all abide,
  • Since none in myself can ever be,
  • One thin as a shape on a lantern-slide
  • Shown forth in the dark upon some dim sheet,
  • And by none but its showman vivified.
  • “Such a forced device,” you may say, “is meet
  • For easing a loaded heart at whiles:
  • Man needs to conceive of a mercy-seat
  • Somewhere above the gloomy aisles
  • Of this wailful world, or he could not bear
  • The irk no local hope beguiles.”
  • —But since I was framed in your first despair
  • The doing without me has had no play
  • In the minds of men when shadows scare;
  • And now that I dwindle day by day
  • Beneath the deicide eyes of seers
  • In a light that will not let me stay,
  • And to-morrow the whole of me disappears,
  • The truth should be told, and the fact be faced
  • That had best been faced in earlier years:
  • The fact of life with dependence placed
  • On the human heart’s resource alone,
  • In brotherhood bonded close and graced
  • With loving-kindness fully blown,
  • And visioned help unsought, unknown.
  • 1909–10.
  • GOD’S FUNERAL
  • I
  • I saw a slowly-stepping train—
  • Lined on the brows, scoop-eyed and bent and hoar—
  • Following in files across a twilit plain
  • A strange and mystic form the foremost bore.
  • II
  • And by contagious throbs of thought
  • Or latent knowledge that within me lay
  • And had already stirred me, I was wrought
  • To consciousness of sorrow even as they.
  • III
  • The fore-borne shape, to my blurred eyes,
  • At first seemed man-like, and anon to change
  • To an amorphous cloud of marvellous size,
  • At times endowed with wings of glorious range.
  • IV
  • And this phantasmal variousness
  • Ever possessed it as they drew along:
  • Yet throughout all it symboled none the less
  • Potency vast and loving-kindness strong.
  • V
  • Almost before I knew I bent
  • Towards the moving columns without a word;
  • They, growing in bulk and numbers as they went,
  • Struck out sick thoughts that could be overheard:—
  • VI
  • “O man-projected Figure, of late
  • Imaged as we, thy knell who shall survive?
  • Whence came it we were tempted to create
  • One whom we can no longer keep alive?
  • VII
  • “Framing him jealous, fierce, at first,
  • We gave him justice as the ages rolled,
  • Will to bless those by circumstance accurst,
  • And longsuffering, and mercies manifold.
  • VIII
  • “And, tricked by our own early dream
  • And need of solace, we grew self-deceived,
  • Our making soon our maker did we deem,
  • And what we had imagined we believed.
  • IX
  • “Till, in Time’s stayless stealthy swing,
  • Uncompromising rude reality
  • Mangled the Monarch of our fashioning,
  • Who quavered, sank; and now has ceased to be.
  • X
  • “So, toward our myth’s oblivion,
  • Darkling, and languid-lipped, we creep and grope
  • Sadlier than those who wept in Babylon,
  • Whose Zion was a still abiding hope.
  • XI
  • “How sweet it was in years far hied
  • To start the wheels of day with trustful prayer,
  • To lie down liegely at the eventide
  • And feel a blest assurance he was there!
  • XII
  • “And who or what shall fill his place?
  • Whither will wanderers turn distracted eyes
  • For some fixed star to stimulate their pace
  • Towards the goal of their enterprise?” . . .
  • XIII
  • Some in the background then I saw,
  • Sweet women, youths, men, all incredulous,
  • Who chimed as one: “This figure is of straw,
  • This requiem mockery! Still he lives to us!”
  • XIV
  • I could not prop their faith: and yet
  • Many I had known: with all I sympathized;
  • And though struck speechless, I did not forget
  • That what was mourned for, I, too, once had prized.
  • XV
  • Still, how to bear such loss I deemed
  • The insistent question for each animate mind,
  • And gazing, to my growing sight there seemed
  • A pale yet positive gleam low down behind,
  • XVI
  • Whereof to lift the general night,
  • A certain few who stood aloof had said,
  • “See you upon the horizon that small light—
  • Swelling somewhat?” Each mourner shook his head.
  • XVII
  • And they composed a crowd of whom
  • Some were right good, and many nigh the best . . .
  • Thus dazed and puzzled ’twixt the gleam and gloom
  • Mechanically I followed with the rest.
  • 1908–10.
  • SPECTRES THAT GRIEVE
  • “IT is not death that harrows us,” they lipped,
  • “The soundless cell is in itself relief,
  • For life is an unfenced flower, benumbed and nipped
  • At unawares, and at its best but brief.”
  • The speakers, sundry phantoms of the gone,
  • Had risen like filmy flames of phosphor dye,
  • As if the palest of sheet lightnings shone
  • From the sward near me, as from a nether sky.
  • And much surprised was I that, spent and dead,
  • They should not, like the many, be at rest,
  • But stray as apparitions; hence I said,
  • “Why, having slipped life, hark you back distressed?
  • “We are among the few death sets not free,
  • The hurt, misrepresented names, who come
  • At each year’s brink, and cry to History
  • To do them justice, or go past them dumb.
  • “We are stript of rights; our shames lie unredressed,
  • Our deeds in full anatomy are not shown,
  • Our words in morsels merely are expressed
  • On the scriptured page, our motives blurred, unknown.”
  • Then all these shaken slighted visitants sped
  • Into the vague, and left me musing there
  • On fames that well might instance what they had said,
  • Until the New-Year’s dawn strode up the air.
  • “AH, ARE YOU DIGGING ON MY GRAVE?”
  • “AH, are you digging on my grave
  • My loved one?—planting rue?”
  • —“No: yesterday he went to wed
  • One of the brightest wealth has bred.
  • ‘It cannot hurt her now,’ he said,
  • ‘That I should not be true.’”
  • “Then who is digging on my grave?
  • My nearest dearest kin?”
  • —“Ah, no; they sit and think, ‘What use!
  • What good will planting flowers produce?
  • No tendance of her mound can loose
  • Her spirit from Death’s gin.’”
  • “But some one digs upon my grave?
  • My enemy?—prodding sly?”
  • —“Nay: when she heard you had passed the Gate
  • That shuts on all flesh soon or late,
  • She thought you no more worth her hate,
  • And cares not where you lie.”
  • “Then, who is digging on my grave?
  • Say—since I have not guessed!”
  • —“O it is I, my mistress dear,
  • Your little dog, who still lives near,
  • And much I hope my movements here
  • Have not disturbed your rest?”
  • “Ah, yes! _You_ dig upon my grave . . .
  • Why flashed it not on me
  • That one true heart was left behind!
  • What feeling do we ever find
  • To equal among human kind
  • A dog’s fidelity!”
  • “Mistress, I dug upon your grave
  • To bury a bone, in case
  • I should be hungry near this spot
  • When passing on my daily trot.
  • I am sorry, but I quite forgot
  • It was your resting-place.”
  • SATIRES OF CIRCUMSTANCES
  • IN FIFTEEN GLIMPSES
  • I
  • AT TEA
  • THE kettle descants in a cozy drone,
  • And the young wife looks in her husband’s face,
  • And then at her guest’s, and shows in her own
  • Her sense that she fills an envied place;
  • And the visiting lady is all abloom,
  • And says there was never so sweet a room.
  • And the happy young housewife does not know
  • That the woman beside her was first his choice,
  • Till the fates ordained it could not be so . . .
  • Betraying nothing in look or voice
  • The guest sits smiling and sips her tea,
  • And he throws her a stray glance yearningly.
  • II
  • IN CHURCH
  • “AND now to God the Father,” he ends,
  • And his voice thrills up to the topmost tiles:
  • Each listener chokes as he bows and bends,
  • And emotion pervades the crowded aisles.
  • Then the preacher glides to the vestry-door,
  • And shuts it, and thinks he is seen no more.
  • The door swings softly ajar meanwhile,
  • And a pupil of his in the Bible class,
  • Who adores him as one without gloss or guile,
  • Sees her idol stand with a satisfied smile
  • And re-enact at the vestry-glass
  • Each pulpit gesture in deft dumb-show
  • That had moved the congregation so.
  • III
  • BY HER AUNT’S GRAVE
  • “SIXPENCE a week,” says the girl to her lover,
  • “Aunt used to bring me, for she could confide
  • In me alone, she vowed. ’Twas to cover
  • The cost of her headstone when she died.
  • And that was a year ago last June;
  • I’ve not yet fixed it. But I must soon.”
  • “And where is the money now, my dear?”
  • “O, snug in my purse . . . Aunt was _so_ slow
  • In saving it—eighty weeks, or near.” . . .
  • “Let’s spend it,” he hints. “For she won’t know.
  • There’s a dance to-night at the Load of Hay.”
  • She passively nods. And they go that way.
  • IV
  • IN THE ROOM OF THE BRIDE-ELECT
  • “WOULD it had been the man of our wish!”
  • Sighs her mother. To whom with vehemence she
  • In the wedding-dress—the wife to be—
  • “Then why were you so mollyish
  • As not to insist on him for me!”
  • The mother, amazed: “Why, dearest one,
  • Because you pleaded for this or none!”
  • “But Father and you should have stood out strong!
  • Since then, to my cost, I have lived to find
  • That you were right and that I was wrong;
  • This man is a dolt to the one declined . . .
  • Ah!—here he comes with his button-hole rose.
  • Good God—I must marry him I suppose!”
  • V
  • AT A WATERING-PLACE
  • THEY sit and smoke on the esplanade,
  • The man and his friend, and regard the bay
  • Where the far chalk cliffs, to the left displayed,
  • Smile sallowly in the decline of day.
  • And saunterers pass with laugh and jest—
  • A handsome couple among the rest.
  • “That smart proud pair,” says the man to his friend,
  • “Are to marry next week . . . How little he thinks
  • That dozens of days and nights on end
  • I have stroked her neck, unhooked the links
  • Of her sleeve to get at her upper arm . . .
  • Well, bliss is in ignorance: what’s the harm!”
  • VI
  • IN THE CEMETERY
  • “YOU see those mothers squabbling there?”
  • Remarks the man of the cemetery.
  • One says in tears, ‘’_Tis mine lies here_!’
  • Another, ‘_Nay_, _mine_, _you Pharisee_!’
  • Another, ‘_How dare you move my flowers_
  • _And put your own on this grave of ours_!’
  • But all their children were laid therein
  • At different times, like sprats in a tin.
  • “And then the main drain had to cross,
  • And we moved the lot some nights ago,
  • And packed them away in the general foss
  • With hundreds more. But their folks don’t know,
  • And as well cry over a new-laid drain
  • As anything else, to ease your pain!”
  • VII
  • OUTSIDE THE WINDOW
  • “MY stick!” he says, and turns in the lane
  • To the house just left, whence a vixen voice
  • Comes out with the firelight through the pane,
  • And he sees within that the girl of his choice
  • Stands rating her mother with eyes aglare
  • For something said while he was there.
  • “At last I behold her soul undraped!”
  • Thinks the man who had loved her more than himself;
  • “My God—’tis but narrowly I have escaped.—
  • My precious porcelain proves it delf.”
  • His face has reddened like one ashamed,
  • And he steals off, leaving his stick unclaimed.
  • VIII
  • IN THE STUDY
  • HE enters, and mute on the edge of a chair
  • Sits a thin-faced lady, a stranger there,
  • A type of decayed gentility;
  • And by some small signs he well can guess
  • That she comes to him almost breakfastless.
  • “I have called—I hope I do not err—
  • I am looking for a purchaser
  • Of some score volumes of the works
  • Of eminent divines I own,—
  • Left by my father—though it irks
  • My patience to offer them.” And she smiles
  • As if necessity were unknown;
  • “But the truth of it is that oftenwhiles
  • I have wished, as I am fond of art,
  • To make my rooms a little smart.”
  • And lightly still she laughs to him,
  • As if to sell were a mere gay whim,
  • And that, to be frank, Life were indeed
  • To her not vinegar and gall,
  • But fresh and honey-like; and Need
  • No household skeleton at all.
  • IX
  • AT THE ALTAR-RAIL
  • “MY bride is not coming, alas!” says the groom,
  • And the telegram shakes in his hand. “I own
  • It was hurried! We met at a dancing-room
  • When I went to the Cattle-Show alone,
  • And then, next night, where the Fountain leaps,
  • And the Street of the Quarter-Circle sweeps.
  • “Ay, she won me to ask her to be my wife—
  • ’Twas foolish perhaps!—to forsake the ways
  • Of the flaring town for a farmer’s life.
  • She agreed. And we fixed it. Now she says:
  • ‘_It’s sweet of you_, _dear_, _to prepare me a nest_,
  • _But a swift_, _short_, _gay life suits me best_.
  • _What I really am you have never gleaned_;
  • _I had eaten the apple ere you were weaned_.’”
  • X
  • IN THE NUPTIAL CHAMBER
  • “O THAT mastering tune?” And up in the bed
  • Like a lace-robed phantom springs the bride;
  • “And why?” asks the man she had that day wed,
  • With a start, as the band plays on outside.
  • “It’s the townsfolks’ cheery compliment
  • Because of our marriage, my Innocent.”
  • “O but you don’t know! ’Tis the passionate air
  • To which my old Love waltzed with me,
  • And I swore as we spun that none should share
  • My home, my kisses, till death, save he!
  • And he dominates me and thrills me through,
  • And it’s he I embrace while embracing you!”
  • XI
  • IN THE RESTAURANT
  • “BUT hear. If you stay, and the child be born,
  • It will pass as your husband’s with the rest,
  • While, if we fly, the teeth of scorn
  • Will be gleaming at us from east to west;
  • And the child will come as a life despised;
  • I feel an elopement is ill-advised!”
  • “O you realize not what it is, my dear,
  • To a woman! Daily and hourly alarms
  • Lest the truth should out. How can I stay here,
  • And nightly take him into my arms!
  • Come to the child no name or fame,
  • Let us go, and face it, and bear the shame.”
  • XII
  • AT THE DRAPER’S
  • “I STOOD at the back of the shop, my dear,
  • But you did not perceive me.
  • Well, when they deliver what you were shown
  • _I_ shall know nothing of it, believe me!”
  • And he coughed and coughed as she paled and said,
  • “O, I didn’t see you come in there—
  • Why couldn’t you speak?”—“Well, I didn’t. I left
  • That you should not notice I’d been there.
  • “You were viewing some lovely things. ‘_Soon required_
  • _For a widow_, _of latest fashion_’;
  • And I knew ’twould upset you to meet the man
  • Who had to be cold and ashen
  • “And screwed in a box before they could dress you
  • ‘_In the last new note in mourning_,’
  • As they defined it. So, not to distress you,
  • I left you to your adorning.”
  • XIII
  • ON THE DEATH-BED
  • “I’LL tell—being past all praying for—
  • Then promptly die . . . He was out at the war,
  • And got some scent of the intimacy
  • That was under way between her and me;
  • And he stole back home, and appeared like a ghost
  • One night, at the very time almost
  • That I reached her house. Well, I shot him dead,
  • And secretly buried him. Nothing was said.
  • “The news of the battle came next day;
  • He was scheduled missing. I hurried away,
  • Got out there, visited the field,
  • And sent home word that a search revealed
  • He was one of the slain; though, lying alone
  • And stript, his body had not been known.
  • “But she suspected. I lost her love,
  • Yea, my hope of earth, and of Heaven above;
  • And my time’s now come, and I’ll pay the score,
  • Though it be burning for evermore.”
  • XIV
  • OVER THE COFFIN
  • THEY stand confronting, the coffin between,
  • His wife of old, and his wife of late,
  • And the dead man whose they both had been
  • Seems listening aloof, as to things past date.
  • —“I have called,” says the first. “Do you marvel or not?”
  • “In truth,” says the second, “I do—somewhat.”
  • “Well, there was a word to be said by me! . . .
  • I divorced that man because of you—
  • It seemed I must do it, boundenly;
  • But now I am older, and tell you true,
  • For life is little, and dead lies he;
  • I would I had let alone you two!
  • And both of us, scorning parochial ways,
  • Had lived like the wives in the patriarchs’ days.”
  • XV
  • IN THE MOONLIGHT
  • “O LONELY workman, standing there
  • In a dream, why do you stare and stare
  • At her grave, as no other grave there were?
  • “If your great gaunt eyes so importune
  • Her soul by the shine of this corpse-cold moon,
  • Maybe you’ll raise her phantom soon!”
  • “Why, fool, it is what I would rather see
  • Than all the living folk there be;
  • But alas, there is no such joy for me!”
  • “Ah—she was one you loved, no doubt,
  • Through good and evil, through rain and drought,
  • And when she passed, all your sun went out?”
  • “Nay: she was the woman I did not love,
  • Whom all the others were ranked above,
  • Whom during her life I thought nothing of.”
  • LYRICS AND REVERIES
  • (_continued_)
  • SELF-UNCONSCIOUS
  • ALONG the way
  • He walked that day,
  • Watching shapes that reveries limn,
  • And seldom he
  • Had eyes to see
  • The moment that encompassed him.
  • Bright yellowhammers
  • Made mirthful clamours,
  • And billed long straws with a bustling air,
  • And bearing their load
  • Flew up the road
  • That he followed, alone, without interest there.
  • From bank to ground
  • And over and round
  • They sidled along the adjoining hedge;
  • Sometimes to the gutter
  • Their yellow flutter
  • Would dip from the nearest slatestone ledge.
  • The smooth sea-line
  • With a metal shine,
  • And flashes of white, and a sail thereon,
  • He would also descry
  • With a half-wrapt eye
  • Between the projects he mused upon.
  • Yes, round him were these
  • Earth’s artistries,
  • But specious plans that came to his call
  • Did most engage
  • His pilgrimage,
  • While himself he did not see at all.
  • Dead now as sherds
  • Are the yellow birds,
  • And all that mattered has passed away;
  • Yet God, the Elf,
  • Now shows him that self
  • As he was, and should have been shown, that day.
  • O it would have been good
  • Could he then have stood
  • At a focussed distance, and conned the whole,
  • But now such vision
  • Is mere derision,
  • Nor soothes his body nor saves his soul.
  • Not much, some may
  • Incline to say,
  • To see therein, had it all been seen.
  • Nay! he is aware
  • A thing was there
  • That loomed with an immortal mien.
  • THE DISCOVERY
  • I WANDERED to a crude coast
  • Like a ghost;
  • Upon the hills I saw fires—
  • Funeral pyres
  • Seemingly—and heard breaking
  • Waves like distant cannonades that set the land shaking.
  • And so I never once guessed
  • A Love-nest,
  • Bowered and candle-lit, lay
  • In my way,
  • Till I found a hid hollow,
  • Where I burst on her my heart could not but follow.
  • TOLERANCE
  • “IT is a foolish thing,” said I,
  • “To bear with such, and pass it by;
  • Yet so I do, I know not why!”
  • And at each clash I would surmise
  • That if I had acted otherwise
  • I might have saved me many sighs.
  • But now the only happiness
  • In looking back that I possess—
  • Whose lack would leave me comfortless—
  • Is to remember I refrained
  • From masteries I might have gained,
  • And for my tolerance was disdained;
  • For see, a tomb. And if it were
  • I had bent and broke, I should not dare
  • To linger in the shadows there.
  • BEFORE AND AFTER SUMMER
  • I
  • LOOKING forward to the spring
  • One puts up with anything.
  • On this February day,
  • Though the winds leap down the street,
  • Wintry scourgings seem but play,
  • And these later shafts of sleet
  • —Sharper pointed than the first—
  • And these later snows—the worst—
  • Are as a half-transparent blind
  • Riddled by rays from sun behind.
  • II
  • Shadows of the October pine
  • Reach into this room of mine:
  • On the pine there stands a bird;
  • He is shadowed with the tree.
  • Mutely perched he bills no word;
  • Blank as I am even is he.
  • For those happy suns are past,
  • Fore-discerned in winter last.
  • When went by their pleasure, then?
  • I, alas, perceived not when.
  • AT DAY-CLOSE IN NOVEMBER
  • THE ten hours’ light is abating,
  • And a late bird flies across,
  • Where the pines, like waltzers waiting,
  • Give their black heads a toss.
  • Beech leaves, that yellow the noon-time,
  • Float past like specks in the eye;
  • I set every tree in my June time,
  • And now they obscure the sky.
  • And the children who ramble through here
  • Conceive that there never has been
  • A time when no tall trees grew here,
  • A time when none will be seen.
  • THE YEAR’S AWAKENING
  • HOW do you know that the pilgrim track
  • Along the belting zodiac
  • Swept by the sun in his seeming rounds
  • Is traced by now to the Fishes’ bounds
  • And into the Ram, when weeks of cloud
  • Have wrapt the sky in a clammy shroud,
  • And never as yet a tinct of spring
  • Has shown in the Earth’s apparelling;
  • O vespering bird, how do you know,
  • How do you know?
  • How do you know, deep underground,
  • Hid in your bed from sight and sound,
  • Without a turn in temperature,
  • With weather life can scarce endure,
  • That light has won a fraction’s strength,
  • And day put on some moments’ length,
  • Whereof in merest rote will come,
  • Weeks hence, mild airs that do not numb;
  • O crocus root, how do you know,
  • How do you know?
  • _February_ 1910.
  • UNDER THE WATERFALL
  • “WHENEVER I plunge my arm, like this,
  • In a basin of water, I never miss
  • The sweet sharp sense of a fugitive day
  • Fetched back from its thickening shroud of gray.
  • Hence the only prime
  • And real love-rhyme
  • That I know by heart,
  • And that leaves no smart,
  • Is the purl of a little valley fall
  • About three spans wide and two spans tall
  • Over a table of solid rock,
  • And into a scoop of the self-same block;
  • The purl of a runlet that never ceases
  • In stir of kingdoms, in wars, in peaces;
  • With a hollow boiling voice it speaks
  • And has spoken since hills were turfless peaks.”
  • “And why gives this the only prime
  • Idea to you of a real love-rhyme?
  • And why does plunging your arm in a bowl
  • Full of spring water, bring throbs to your soul?”
  • “Well, under the fall, in a crease of the stone,
  • Though where precisely none ever has known,
  • Jammed darkly, nothing to show how prized,
  • And by now with its smoothness opalized,
  • Is a drinking-glass:
  • For, down that pass
  • My lover and I
  • Walked under a sky
  • Of blue with a leaf-woven awning of green,
  • In the burn of August, to paint the scene,
  • And we placed our basket of fruit and wine
  • By the runlet’s rim, where we sat to dine;
  • And when we had drunk from the glass together,
  • Arched by the oak-copse from the weather,
  • I held the vessel to rinse in the fall,
  • Where it slipped, and sank, and was past recall,
  • Though we stooped and plumbed the little abyss
  • With long bared arms. There the glass still is.
  • And, as said, if I thrust my arm below
  • Cold water in basin or bowl, a throe
  • From the past awakens a sense of that time,
  • And the glass both used, and the cascade’s rhyme.
  • The basin seems the pool, and its edge
  • The hard smooth face of the brook-side ledge,
  • And the leafy pattern of china-ware
  • The hanging plants that were bathing there.
  • By night, by day, when it shines or lours,
  • There lies intact that chalice of ours,
  • And its presence adds to the rhyme of love
  • Persistently sung by the fall above.
  • No lip has touched it since his and mine
  • In turns therefrom sipped lovers’ wine.”
  • THE SPELL OF THE ROSE
  • “I MEAN to build a hall anon,
  • And shape two turrets there,
  • And a broad newelled stair,
  • And a cool well for crystal water;
  • Yes; I will build a hall anon,
  • Plant roses love shall feed upon,
  • And apple trees and pear.”
  • He set to build the manor-hall,
  • And shaped the turrets there,
  • And the broad newelled stair,
  • And the cool well for crystal water;
  • He built for me that manor-hall,
  • And planted many trees withal,
  • But no rose anywhere.
  • And as he planted never a rose
  • That bears the flower of love,
  • Though other flowers throve
  • A frost-wind moved our souls to sever
  • Since he had planted never a rose;
  • And misconceits raised horrid shows,
  • And agonies came thereof.
  • “I’ll mend these miseries,” then said I,
  • And so, at dead of night,
  • I went and, screened from sight,
  • That nought should keep our souls in severance,
  • I set a rose-bush. “This,” said I,
  • “May end divisions dire and wry,
  • And long-drawn days of blight.”
  • But I was called from earth—yea, called
  • Before my rose-bush grew;
  • And would that now I knew
  • What feels he of the tree I planted,
  • And whether, after I was called
  • To be a ghost, he, as of old,
  • Gave me his heart anew!
  • Perhaps now blooms that queen of trees
  • I set but saw not grow,
  • And he, beside its glow—
  • Eyes couched of the mis-vision that blurred me—
  • Ay, there beside that queen of trees
  • He sees me as I was, though sees
  • Too late to tell me so!
  • ST. LAUNCE’S REVISITED
  • SLIP back, Time!
  • Yet again I am nearing
  • Castle and keep, uprearing
  • Gray, as in my prime.
  • At the inn
  • Smiling close, why is it
  • Not as on my visit
  • When hope and I were twin?
  • Groom and jade
  • Whom I found here, moulder;
  • Strange the tavern-holder,
  • Strange the tap-maid.
  • Here I hired
  • Horse and man for bearing
  • Me on my wayfaring
  • To the door desired.
  • Evening gloomed
  • As I journeyed forward
  • To the faces shoreward,
  • Till their dwelling loomed.
  • If again
  • Towards the Atlantic sea there
  • I should speed, they’d be there
  • Surely now as then? . . .
  • Why waste thought,
  • When I know them vanished
  • Under earth; yea, banished
  • Ever into nought.
  • POEMS OF 1912–13
  • _Veteris vestigia flammae_
  • THE GOING
  • WHY did you give no hint that night
  • That quickly after the morrow’s dawn,
  • And calmly, as if indifferent quite,
  • You would close your term here, up and be gone
  • Where I could not follow
  • With wing of swallow
  • To gain one glimpse of you ever anon!
  • Never to bid good-bye,
  • Or give me the softest call,
  • Or utter a wish for a word, while I
  • Saw morning harden upon the wall,
  • Unmoved, unknowing
  • That your great going
  • Had place that moment, and altered all.
  • Why do you make me leave the house
  • And think for a breath it is you I see
  • At the end of the alley of bending boughs
  • Where so often at dusk you used to be;
  • Till in darkening dankness
  • The yawning blankness
  • Of the perspective sickens me!
  • You were she who abode
  • By those red-veined rocks far West,
  • You were the swan-necked one who rode
  • Along the beetling Beeny Crest,
  • And, reining nigh me,
  • Would muse and eye me,
  • While Life unrolled us its very best.
  • Why, then, latterly did we not speak,
  • Did we not think of those days long dead,
  • And ere your vanishing strive to seek
  • That time’s renewal? We might have said,
  • “In this bright spring weather
  • We’ll visit together
  • Those places that once we visited.”
  • Well, well! All’s past amend,
  • Unchangeable. It must go.
  • I seem but a dead man held on end
  • To sink down soon . . . O you could not know
  • That such swift fleeing
  • No soul foreseeing—
  • Not even I—would undo me so!
  • _December_ 1912.
  • YOUR LAST DRIVE
  • HERE by the moorway you returned,
  • And saw the borough lights ahead
  • That lit your face—all undiscerned
  • To be in a week the face of the dead,
  • And you told of the charm of that haloed view
  • That never again would beam on you.
  • And on your left you passed the spot
  • Where eight days later you were to lie,
  • And be spoken of as one who was not;
  • Beholding it with a cursory eye
  • As alien from you, though under its tree
  • You soon would halt everlastingly.
  • I drove not with you . . . Yet had I sat
  • At your side that eve I should not have seen
  • That the countenance I was glancing at
  • Had a last-time look in the flickering sheen,
  • Nor have read the writing upon your face,
  • “I go hence soon to my resting-place;
  • “You may miss me then. But I shall not know
  • How many times you visit me there,
  • Or what your thoughts are, or if you go
  • There never at all. And I shall not care.
  • Should you censure me I shall take no heed
  • And even your praises I shall not need.”
  • True: never you’ll know. And you will not mind.
  • But shall I then slight you because of such?
  • Dear ghost, in the past did you ever find
  • The thought “What profit?” move me much
  • Yet the fact indeed remains the same,
  • You are past love, praise, indifference, blame.
  • _December_ 1912.
  • THE WALK
  • YOU did not walk with me
  • Of late to the hill-top tree
  • By the gated ways,
  • As in earlier days;
  • You were weak and lame,
  • So you never came,
  • And I went alone, and I did not mind,
  • Not thinking of you as left behind.
  • I walked up there to-day
  • Just in the former way:
  • Surveyed around
  • The familiar ground
  • By myself again:
  • What difference, then?
  • Only that underlying sense
  • Of the look of a room on returning thence.
  • RAIN ON A GRAVE
  • CLOUDS spout upon her
  • Their waters amain
  • In ruthless disdain,—
  • Her who but lately
  • Had shivered with pain
  • As at touch of dishonour
  • If there had lit on her
  • So coldly, so straightly
  • Such arrows of rain.
  • She who to shelter
  • Her delicate head
  • Would quicken and quicken
  • Each tentative tread
  • If drops chanced to pelt her
  • That summertime spills
  • In dust-paven rills
  • When thunder-clouds thicken
  • And birds close their bills.
  • Would that I lay there
  • And she were housed here!
  • Or better, together
  • Were folded away there
  • Exposed to one weather
  • We both,—who would stray there
  • When sunny the day there,
  • Or evening was clear
  • At the prime of the year.
  • Soon will be growing
  • Green blades from her mound,
  • And daises be showing
  • Like stars on the ground,
  • Till she form part of them—
  • Ay—the sweet heart of them,
  • Loved beyond measure
  • With a child’s pleasure
  • All her life’s round.
  • _Jan._ 31, 1913.
  • “I FOUND HER OUT THERE”
  • I FOUND her out there
  • On a slope few see,
  • That falls westwardly
  • To the salt-edged air,
  • Where the ocean breaks
  • On the purple strand,
  • And the hurricane shakes
  • The solid land.
  • I brought her here,
  • And have laid her to rest
  • In a noiseless nest
  • No sea beats near.
  • She will never be stirred
  • In her loamy cell
  • By the waves long heard
  • And loved so well.
  • So she does not sleep
  • By those haunted heights
  • The Atlantic smites
  • And the blind gales sweep,
  • Whence she often would gaze
  • At Dundagel’s far head,
  • While the dipping blaze
  • Dyed her face fire-red;
  • And would sigh at the tale
  • Of sunk Lyonnesse,
  • As a wind-tugged tress
  • Flapped her cheek like a flail;
  • Or listen at whiles
  • With a thought-bound brow
  • To the murmuring miles
  • She is far from now.
  • Yet her shade, maybe,
  • Will creep underground
  • Till it catch the sound
  • Of that western sea
  • As it swells and sobs
  • Where she once domiciled,
  • And joy in its throbs
  • With the heart of a child.
  • WITHOUT CEREMONY
  • IT was your way, my dear,
  • To be gone without a word
  • When callers, friends, or kin
  • Had left, and I hastened in
  • To rejoin you, as I inferred.
  • And when you’d a mind to career
  • Off anywhere—say to town—
  • You were all on a sudden gone
  • Before I had thought thereon,
  • Or noticed your trunks were down.
  • So, now that you disappear
  • For ever in that swift style,
  • Your meaning seems to me
  • Just as it used to be:
  • “Good-bye is not worth while!”
  • LAMENT
  • HOW she would have loved
  • A party to-day!—
  • Bright-hatted and gloved,
  • With table and tray
  • And chairs on the lawn
  • Her smiles would have shone
  • With welcomings . . . But
  • She is shut, she is shut
  • From friendship’s spell
  • In the jailing shell
  • Of her tiny cell.
  • Or she would have reigned
  • At a dinner to-night
  • With ardours unfeigned,
  • And a generous delight;
  • All in her abode
  • She’d have freely bestowed
  • On her guests . . . But alas,
  • She is shut under grass
  • Where no cups flow,
  • Powerless to know
  • That it might be so.
  • And she would have sought
  • With a child’s eager glance
  • The shy snowdrops brought
  • By the new year’s advance,
  • And peered in the rime
  • Of Candlemas-time
  • For crocuses . . . chanced
  • It that she were not tranced
  • From sights she loved best;
  • Wholly possessed
  • By an infinite rest!
  • And we are here staying
  • Amid these stale things
  • Who care not for gaying,
  • And those junketings
  • That used so to joy her,
  • And never to cloy her
  • As us they cloy! . . . But
  • She is shut, she is shut
  • From the cheer of them, dead
  • To all done and said
  • In a yew-arched bed.
  • THE HAUNTER
  • HE does not think that I haunt here nightly:
  • How shall I let him know
  • That whither his fancy sets him wandering
  • I, too, alertly go?—
  • Hover and hover a few feet from him
  • Just as I used to do,
  • But cannot answer his words addressed me—
  • Only listen thereto!
  • When I could answer he did not say them:
  • When I could let him know
  • How I would like to join in his journeys
  • Seldom he wished to go.
  • Now that he goes and wants me with him
  • More than he used to do,
  • Never he sees my faithful phantom
  • Though he speaks thereto.
  • Yes, I accompany him to places
  • Only dreamers know,
  • Where the shy hares limp long paces,
  • Where the night rooks go;
  • Into old aisles where the past is all to him,
  • Close as his shade can do,
  • Always lacking the power to call to him,
  • Near as I reach thereto!
  • What a good haunter I am, O tell him,
  • Quickly make him know
  • If he but sigh since my loss befell him
  • Straight to his side I go.
  • Tell him a faithful one is doing
  • All that love can do
  • Still that his path may be worth pursuing,
  • And to bring peace thereto.
  • THE VOICE
  • WOMAN much missed, how you call to me, call to me,
  • Saying that now you are not as you were
  • When you had changed from the one who was all to me,
  • But as at first, when our day was fair.
  • Can it be you that I hear? Let me view you, then,
  • Standing as when I drew near to the town
  • Where you would wait for me: yes, as I knew you then,
  • Even to the original air-blue gown!
  • Or is it only the breeze, in its listlessness
  • Travelling across the wet mead to me here,
  • You being ever consigned to existlessness,
  • Heard no more again far or near?
  • Thus I; faltering forward,
  • Leaves around me falling,
  • Wind oozing thin through the thorn from norward
  • And the woman calling.
  • _December_ 1912.
  • HIS VISITOR
  • I COME across from Mellstock while the moon wastes weaker
  • To behold where I lived with you for twenty years and more:
  • I shall go in the gray, at the passing of the mail-train,
  • And need no setting open of the long familiar door
  • As before.
  • The change I notice in my once own quarters!
  • A brilliant budded border where the daisies used to be,
  • The rooms new painted, and the pictures altered,
  • And other cups and saucers, and no cozy nook for tea
  • As with me.
  • I discern the dim faces of the sleep-wrapt servants;
  • They are not those who tended me through feeble hours and strong,
  • But strangers quite, who never knew my rule here,
  • Who never saw me painting, never heard my softling song
  • Float along.
  • So I don’t want to linger in this re-decked dwelling,
  • I feel too uneasy at the contrasts I behold,
  • And I make again for Mellstock to return here never,
  • And rejoin the roomy silence, and the mute and manifold
  • Souls of old.
  • 1913.
  • A CIRCULAR
  • AS “legal representative”
  • I read a missive not my own,
  • On new designs the senders give
  • For clothes, in tints as shown.
  • Here figure blouses, gowns for tea,
  • And presentation-trains of state,
  • Charming ball-dresses, millinery,
  • Warranted up to date.
  • And this gay-pictured, spring-time shout
  • Of Fashion, hails what lady proud?
  • Her who before last year was out
  • Was costumed in a shroud.
  • A DREAM OR NO
  • WHY go to Saint-Juliot? What’s Juliot to me?
  • I was but made fancy
  • By some necromancy
  • That much of my life claims the spot as its key.
  • Yes. I have had dreams of that place in the West,
  • And a maiden abiding
  • Thereat as in hiding;
  • Fair-eyed and white-shouldered, broad-browed and brown-tressed.
  • And of how, coastward bound on a night long ago,
  • There lonely I found her,
  • The sea-birds around her,
  • And other than nigh things uncaring to know.
  • So sweet her life there (in my thought has it seemed)
  • That quickly she drew me
  • To take her unto me,
  • And lodge her long years with me. Such have I dreamed.
  • But nought of that maid from Saint-Juliot I see;
  • Can she ever have been here,
  • And shed her life’s sheen here,
  • The woman I thought a long housemate with me?
  • Does there even a place like Saint-Juliot exist?
  • Or a Vallency Valley
  • With stream and leafed alley,
  • Or Beeny, or Bos with its flounce flinging mist?
  • _February_ 1913.
  • AFTER A JOURNEY
  • HERETO I come to interview a ghost;
  • Whither, O whither will its whim now draw me?
  • Up the cliff, down, till I’m lonely, lost,
  • And the unseen waters’ ejaculations awe me.
  • Where you will next be there’s no knowing,
  • Facing round about me everywhere,
  • With your nut-coloured hair,
  • And gray eyes, and rose-flush coming and going.
  • Yes: I have re-entered your olden haunts at last;
  • Through the years, through the dead scenes I have tracked you;
  • What have you now found to say of our past—
  • Viewed across the dark space wherein I have lacked you?
  • Summer gave us sweets, but autumn wrought division?
  • Things were not lastly as firstly well
  • With us twain, you tell?
  • But all’s closed now, despite Time’s derision.
  • I see what you are doing: you are leading me on
  • To the spots we knew when we haunted here together,
  • The waterfall, above which the mist-bow shone
  • At the then fair hour in the then fair weather,
  • And the cave just under, with a voice still so hollow
  • That it seems to call out to me from forty years ago,
  • When you were all aglow,
  • And not the thin ghost that I now frailly follow!
  • Ignorant of what there is flitting here to see,
  • The waked birds preen and the seals flop lazily,
  • Soon you will have, Dear, to vanish from me,
  • For the stars close their shutters and the dawn whitens hazily.
  • Trust me, I mind not, though Life lours,
  • The bringing me here; nay, bring me here again!
  • I am just the same as when
  • Our days were a joy, and our paths through flowers.
  • PENTARGAN BAY.
  • A DEATH-DAY RECALLED
  • BEENY did not quiver,
  • Juliot grew not gray,
  • Thin Valency’s river
  • Held its wonted way.
  • Bos seemed not to utter
  • Dimmest note of dirge,
  • Targan mouth a mutter
  • To its creamy surge.
  • Yet though these, unheeding,
  • Listless, passed the hour
  • Of her spirit’s speeding,
  • She had, in her flower,
  • Sought and loved the places—
  • Much and often pined
  • For their lonely faces
  • When in towns confined.
  • Why did not Valency
  • In his purl deplore
  • One whose haunts were whence he
  • Drew his limpid store?
  • Why did Bos not thunder,
  • Targan apprehend
  • Body and breath were sunder
  • Of their former friend?
  • BEENY CLIFF
  • _March_ 1870—_March_ 1913
  • I
  • O THE opal and the sapphire of that wandering western sea,
  • And the woman riding high above with bright hair flapping free—
  • The woman whom I loved so, and who loyally loved me.
  • II
  • The pale mews plained below us, and the waves seemed far away
  • In a nether sky, engrossed in saying their ceaseless babbling say,
  • As we laughed light-heartedly aloft on that clear-sunned March day.
  • III
  • A little cloud then cloaked us, and there flew an irised rain,
  • And the Atlantic dyed its levels with a dull misfeatured stain,
  • And then the sun burst out again, and purples prinked the main.
  • IV
  • —Still in all its chasmal beauty bulks old Beeny to the sky,
  • And shall she and I not go there once again now March is nigh,
  • And the sweet things said in that March say anew there by and by?
  • V
  • What if still in chasmal beauty looms that wild weird western shore,
  • The woman now is—elsewhere—whom the ambling pony bore,
  • And nor knows nor cares for Beeny, and will see it nevermore.
  • AT CASTLE BOTEREL
  • As I drive to the junction of lane and highway,
  • And the drizzle bedrenches the waggonette,
  • I look behind at the fading byway,
  • And see on its slope, now glistening wet,
  • Distinctly yet
  • Myself and a girlish form benighted
  • In dry March weather. We climb the road
  • Beside a chaise. We had just alighted
  • To ease the sturdy pony’s load
  • When he sighed and slowed.
  • What we did as we climbed, and what we talked of
  • Matters not much, nor to what it led,—
  • Something that life will not be balked of
  • Without rude reason till hope is dead,
  • And feeling fled.
  • It filled but a minute. But was there ever
  • A time of such quality, since or before,
  • In that hill’s story? To one mind never,
  • Though it has been climbed, foot-swift, foot-sore,
  • By thousands more.
  • Primaeval rocks form the road’s steep border,
  • And much have they faced there, first and last,
  • Of the transitory in Earth’s long order;
  • But what they record in colour and cast
  • Is—that we two passed.
  • And to me, though Time’s unflinching rigour,
  • In mindless rote, has ruled from sight
  • The substance now, one phantom figure
  • Remains on the slope, as when that night
  • Saw us alight.
  • I look and see it there, shrinking, shrinking,
  • I look back at it amid the rain
  • For the very last time; for my sand is sinking,
  • And I shall traverse old love’s domain
  • Never again.
  • _March_ 1913.
  • PLACES
  • NOBODY says: Ah, that is the place
  • Where chanced, in the hollow of years ago,
  • What none of the Three Towns cared to know—
  • The birth of a little girl of grace—
  • The sweetest the house saw, first or last;
  • Yet it was so
  • On that day long past.
  • Nobody thinks: There, there she lay
  • In a room by the Hoe, like the bud of a flower,
  • And listened, just after the bedtime hour,
  • To the stammering chimes that used to play
  • The quaint Old Hundred-and-Thirteenth tune
  • In Saint Andrew’s tower
  • Night, morn, and noon.
  • Nobody calls to mind that here
  • Upon Boterel Hill, where the carters skid,
  • With cheeks whose airy flush outbid
  • Fresh fruit in bloom, and free of fear,
  • She cantered down, as if she must fall
  • (Though she never did),
  • To the charm of all.
  • Nay: one there is to whom these things,
  • That nobody else’s mind calls back,
  • Have a savour that scenes in being lack,
  • And a presence more than the actual brings;
  • To whom to-day is beneaped and stale,
  • And its urgent clack
  • But a vapid tale.
  • PLYMOUTH, _March_ 1913.
  • THE PHANTOM HORSEWOMAN
  • I
  • QUEER are the ways of a man I know:
  • He comes and stands
  • In a careworn craze,
  • And looks at the sands
  • And the seaward haze,
  • With moveless hands
  • And face and gaze,
  • Then turns to go . . .
  • And what does he see when he gazes so?
  • II
  • They say he sees as an instant thing
  • More clear than to-day,
  • A sweet soft scene
  • That once was in play
  • By that briny green;
  • Yes, notes alway
  • Warm, real, and keen,
  • What his back years bring—
  • A phantom of his own figuring.
  • III
  • Of this vision of his they might say more:
  • Not only there
  • Does he see this sight,
  • But everywhere
  • In his brain—day, night,
  • As if on the air
  • It were drawn rose bright—
  • Yea, far from that shore
  • Does he carry this vision of heretofore:
  • IV
  • A ghost-girl-rider. And though, toil-tried,
  • He withers daily,
  • Time touches her not,
  • But she still rides gaily
  • In his rapt thought
  • On that shagged and shaly
  • Atlantic spot,
  • And as when first eyed
  • Draws rein and sings to the swing of the tide.
  • MISCELLANEOUS PIECES
  • THE WISTFUL LADY
  • “LOVE, while you were away there came to me—
  • From whence I cannot tell—
  • A plaintive lady pale and passionless,
  • Who bent her eyes upon me critically,
  • And weighed me with a wearing wistfulness,
  • As if she knew me well.”
  • “I saw no lady of that wistful sort
  • As I came riding home.
  • Perhaps she was some dame the Fates constrain
  • By memories sadder than she can support,
  • Or by unhappy vacancy of brain,
  • To leave her roof and roam?”
  • “Ah, but she knew me. And before this time
  • I have seen her, lending ear
  • To my light outdoor words, and pondering each,
  • Her frail white finger swayed in pantomime,
  • As if she fain would close with me in speech,
  • And yet would not come near.
  • “And once I saw her beckoning with her hand
  • As I came into sight
  • At an upper window. And I at last went out;
  • But when I reached where she had seemed to stand,
  • And wandered up and down and searched about,
  • I found she had vanished quite.”
  • Then thought I how my dead Love used to say,
  • With a small smile, when she
  • Was waning wan, that she would hover round
  • And show herself after her passing day
  • To any newer Love I might have found,
  • But show her not to me.
  • THE WOMAN IN THE RYE
  • “WHY do you stand in the dripping rye,
  • Cold-lipped, unconscious, wet to the knee,
  • When there are firesides near?” said I.
  • “I told him I wished him dead,” said she.
  • “Yea, cried it in my haste to one
  • Whom I had loved, whom I well loved still;
  • And die he did. And I hate the sun,
  • And stand here lonely, aching, chill;
  • “Stand waiting, waiting under skies
  • That blow reproach, the while I see
  • The rooks sheer off to where he lies
  • Wrapt in a peace withheld from me.”
  • THE CHEVAL-GLASS
  • WHY do you harbour that great cheval-glass
  • Filling up your narrow room?
  • You never preen or plume,
  • Or look in a week at your full-length figure—
  • Picture of bachelor gloom!
  • “Well, when I dwelt in ancient England,
  • Renting the valley farm,
  • Thoughtless of all heart-harm,
  • I used to gaze at the parson’s daughter,
  • A creature of nameless charm.
  • “Thither there came a lover and won her,
  • Carried her off from my view.
  • O it was then I knew
  • Misery of a cast undreamt of—
  • More than, indeed, my due!
  • “Then far rumours of her ill-usage
  • Came, like a chilling breath
  • When a man languisheth;
  • Followed by news that her mind lost balance,
  • And, in a space, of her death.
  • “Soon sank her father; and next was the auction—
  • Everything to be sold:
  • Mid things new and old
  • Stood this glass in her former chamber,
  • Long in her use, I was told.
  • “Well, I awaited the sale and bought it . . .
  • There by my bed it stands,
  • And as the dawn expands
  • Often I see her pale-faced form there
  • Brushing her hair’s bright bands.
  • “There, too, at pallid midnight moments
  • Quick she will come to my call,
  • Smile from the frame withal
  • Ponderingly, as she used to regard me
  • Passing her father’s wall.
  • “So that it was for its revelations
  • I brought it oversea,
  • And drag it about with me . . .
  • Anon I shall break it and bury its fragments
  • Where my grave is to be.”
  • THE RE-ENACTMENT
  • BETWEEN the folding sea-downs,
  • In the gloom
  • Of a wailful wintry nightfall,
  • When the boom
  • Of the ocean, like a hammering in a hollow tomb,
  • Throbbed up the copse-clothed valley
  • From the shore
  • To the chamber where I darkled,
  • Sunk and sore
  • With gray ponderings why my Loved one had not come before
  • To salute me in the dwelling
  • That of late
  • I had hired to waste a while in—
  • Vague of date,
  • Quaint, and remote—wherein I now expectant sate;
  • On the solitude, unsignalled,
  • Broke a man
  • Who, in air as if at home there,
  • Seemed to scan
  • Every fire-flecked nook of the apartment span by span.
  • A stranger’s and no lover’s
  • Eyes were these,
  • Eyes of a man who measures
  • What he sees
  • But vaguely, as if wrapt in filmy phantasies.
  • Yea, his bearing was so absent
  • As he stood,
  • It bespoke a chord so plaintive
  • In his mood,
  • That soon I judged he would not wrong my quietude.
  • “Ah—the supper is just ready,”
  • Then he said,
  • “And the years’-long binned Madeira
  • Flashes red!”
  • (There was no wine, no food, no supper-table spread.)
  • “You will forgive my coming,
  • Lady fair?
  • I see you as at that time
  • Rising there,
  • The self-same curious querying in your eyes and air.
  • “Yet no. How so? You wear not
  • The same gown,
  • Your locks show woful difference,
  • Are not brown:
  • What, is it not as when I hither came from town?
  • “And the place . . . But you seem other—
  • Can it be?
  • What’s this that Time is doing
  • Unto me?
  • _You_ dwell here, unknown woman? . . . Whereabouts, then, is she?
  • “And the house—things are much shifted.—
  • Put them where
  • They stood on this night’s fellow;
  • Shift her chair:
  • Here was the couch: and the piano should be there.”
  • I indulged him, verily nerve-strained
  • Being alone,
  • And I moved the things as bidden,
  • One by one,
  • And feigned to push the old piano where he had shown.
  • “Aha—now I can see her!
  • Stand aside:
  • Don’t thrust her from the table
  • Where, meek-eyed,
  • She makes attempt with matron-manners to preside.
  • “She serves me: now she rises,
  • Goes to play . . .
  • But you obstruct her, fill her
  • With dismay,
  • And embarrassed, scared, she vanishes away!”
  • And, as ’twere useless longer
  • To persist,
  • He sighed, and sought the entry
  • Ere I wist,
  • And retreated, disappearing soundless in the mist.
  • That here some mighty passion
  • Once had burned,
  • Which still the walls enghosted,
  • I discerned,
  • And that by its strong spell mine might be overturned.
  • I sat depressed; till, later,
  • My Love came;
  • But something in the chamber
  • Dimmed our flame,—
  • An emanation, making our due words fall tame,
  • As if the intenser drama
  • Shown me there
  • Of what the walls had witnessed
  • Filled the air,
  • And left no room for later passion anywhere.
  • So came it that our fervours
  • Did quite fail
  • Of future consummation—
  • Being made quail
  • By the weird witchery of the parlour’s hidden tale,
  • Which I, as years passed, faintly
  • Learnt to trace,—
  • One of sad love, born full-winged
  • In that place
  • Where the predestined sorrowers first stood face to face.
  • And as that month of winter
  • Circles round,
  • And the evening of the date-day
  • Grows embrowned,
  • I am conscious of those presences, and sit spellbound.
  • There, often—lone, forsaken—
  • Queries breed
  • Within me; whether a phantom
  • Had my heed
  • On that strange night, or was it some wrecked heart indeed?
  • HER SECRET
  • THAT love’s dull smart distressed my heart
  • He shrewdly learnt to see,
  • But that I was in love with a dead man
  • Never suspected he.
  • He searched for the trace of a pictured face,
  • He watched each missive come,
  • And a note that seemed like a love-line
  • Made him look frozen and glum.
  • He dogged my feet to the city street,
  • He followed me to the sea,
  • But not to the neighbouring churchyard
  • Did he dream of following me.
  • “SHE CHARGED ME”
  • SHE charged me with having said this and that
  • To another woman long years before,
  • In the very parlour where we sat,—
  • Sat on a night when the endless pour
  • Of rain on the roof and the road below
  • Bent the spring of the spirit more and more . . .
  • —So charged she me; and the Cupid’s bow
  • Of her mouth was hard, and her eyes, and her face,
  • And her white forefinger lifted slow.
  • Had she done it gently, or shown a trace
  • That not too curiously would she view
  • A folly passed ere her reign had place,
  • A kiss might have ended it. But I knew
  • From the fall of each word, and the pause between,
  • That the curtain would drop upon us two
  • Ere long, in our play of slave and queen.
  • THE NEWCOMER’S WIFE
  • HE paused on the sill of a door ajar
  • That screened a lively liquor-bar,
  • For the name had reached him through the door
  • Of her he had married the week before.
  • “We called her the Hack of the Parade;
  • But she was discreet in the games she played;
  • If slightly worn, she’s pretty yet,
  • And gossips, after all, forget.
  • “And he knows nothing of her past;
  • I am glad the girl’s in luck at last;
  • Such ones, though stale to native eyes,
  • Newcomers snatch at as a prize.”
  • “Yes, being a stranger he sees her blent
  • Of all that’s fresh and innocent,
  • Nor dreams how many a love-campaign
  • She had enjoyed before his reign!”
  • That night there was the splash of a fall
  • Over the slimy harbour-wall:
  • They searched, and at the deepest place
  • Found him with crabs upon his face.
  • A CONVERSATION AT DAWN
  • HE lay awake, with a harassed air,
  • And she, in her cloud of loose lank hair,
  • Seemed trouble-tried
  • As the dawn drew in on their faces there.
  • The chamber looked far over the sea
  • From a white hotel on a white-stoned quay,
  • And stepping a stride
  • He parted the window-drapery.
  • Above the level horizon spread
  • The sunrise, firing them foot to head
  • From its smouldering lair,
  • And painting their pillows with dyes of red.
  • “What strange disquiets have stirred you, dear,
  • This dragging night, with starts in fear
  • Of me, as it were,
  • Or of something evil hovering near?”
  • “My husband, can I have fear of you?
  • What should one fear from a man whom few,
  • Or none, had matched
  • In that late long spell of delays undue!”
  • He watched her eyes in the heaving sun:
  • “Then what has kept, O reticent one,
  • Those lids unlatched—
  • Anything promised I’ve not yet done?”
  • “O it’s not a broken promise of yours
  • (For what quite lightly your lip assures
  • The due time brings)
  • That has troubled my sleep, and no waking cures!” . . .
  • “I have shaped my will; ’tis at hand,” said he;
  • “I subscribe it to-day, that no risk there be
  • In the hap of things
  • Of my leaving you menaced by poverty.”
  • “That a boon provision I’m safe to get,
  • Signed, sealed by my lord as it were a debt,
  • I cannot doubt,
  • Or ever this peering sun be set.”
  • “But you flung my arms away from your side,
  • And faced the wall. No month-old bride
  • Ere the tour be out
  • In an air so loth can be justified?
  • “Ah—had you a male friend once loved well,
  • Upon whose suit disaster fell
  • And frustrance swift?
  • Honest you are, and may care to tell.”
  • She lay impassive, and nothing broke
  • The stillness other than, stroke by stroke,
  • The lazy lift
  • Of the tide below them; till she spoke:
  • “I once had a friend—a Love, if you will—
  • Whose wife forsook him, and sank until
  • She was made a thrall
  • In a prison-cell for a deed of ill . . .
  • “He remained alone; and we met—to love,
  • But barring legitimate joy thereof
  • Stood a doorless wall,
  • Though we prized each other all else above.
  • “And this was why, though I’d touched my prime,
  • I put off suitors from time to time—
  • Yourself with the rest—
  • Till friends, who approved you, called it crime,
  • “And when misgivings weighed on me
  • In my lover’s absence, hurriedly,
  • And much distrest,
  • I took you . . . Ah, that such could be! . . .
  • “Now, saw you when crossing from yonder shore
  • At yesternoon, that the packet bore
  • On a white-wreathed bier
  • A coffined body towards the fore?
  • “Well, while you stood at the other end,
  • The loungers talked, and I could but lend
  • A listening ear,
  • For they named the dead. ’Twas the wife of my friend.
  • “He was there, but did not note me, veiled,
  • Yet I saw that a joy, as of one unjailed,
  • Now shone in his gaze;
  • He knew not his hope of me just had failed!
  • “They had brought her home: she was born in this isle;
  • And he will return to his domicile,
  • And pass his days
  • Alone, and not as he dreamt erstwhile!”
  • “—So you’ve lost a sprucer spouse than I!”
  • She held her peace, as if fain deny
  • She would indeed
  • For his pleasure’s sake, but could lip no lie.
  • “One far less formal and plain and slow!”
  • She let the laconic assertion go
  • As if of need
  • She held the conviction that it was so.
  • “Regard me as his he always should,
  • He had said, and wed me he vowed he would
  • In his prime or sere
  • Most verily do, if ever he could.
  • “And this fulfilment is now his aim,
  • For a letter, addressed in my maiden name,
  • Has dogged me here,
  • Reminding me faithfully of his claim.
  • “And it started a hope like a lightning-streak
  • That I might go to him—say for a week—
  • And afford you right
  • To put me away, and your vows unspeak.
  • “To be sure you have said, as of dim intent,
  • That marriage is a plain event
  • Of black and white,
  • Without any ghost of sentiment,
  • “And my heart has quailed.—But deny it true
  • That you will never this lock undo!
  • No God intends
  • To thwart the yearning He’s father to!”
  • The husband hemmed, then blandly bowed
  • In the light of the angry morning cloud.
  • “So my idyll ends,
  • And a drama opens!” he mused aloud;
  • And his features froze. “You may take it as true
  • That I will never this lock undo
  • For so depraved
  • A passion as that which kindles you.”
  • Said she: “I am sorry you see it so;
  • I had hoped you might have let me go,
  • And thus been saved
  • The pain of learning there’s more to know.”
  • “More? What may that be? Gad, I think
  • You have told me enough to make me blink!
  • Yet if more remain
  • Then own it to me. I will not shrink!”
  • “Well, it is this. As we could not see
  • That a legal marriage could ever be,
  • To end our pain
  • We united ourselves informally;
  • “And vowed at a chancel-altar nigh,
  • With book and ring, a lifelong tie;
  • A contract vain
  • To the world, but real to Him on High.”
  • “And you became as his wife?”—“I did.”—
  • He stood as stiff as a caryatid,
  • And said, “Indeed! . . .
  • No matter. You’re mine, whatever you ye hid!”
  • “But is it right! When I only gave
  • My hand to you in a sweat to save,
  • Through desperate need
  • (As I thought), my fame, for I was not brave!”
  • “To save your fame? Your meaning is dim,
  • For nobody knew of your altar-whim?”
  • “I mean—I feared
  • There might be fruit of my tie with him;
  • “And to cloak it by marriage I’m not the first,
  • Though, maybe, morally most accurst
  • Through your unpeered
  • And strict uprightness. That’s the worst!
  • “While yesterday his worn contours
  • Convinced me that love like his endures,
  • And that my troth-plight
  • Had been his, in fact, and not truly yours.”
  • “So, my lady, you raise the veil by degrees . . .
  • I own this last is enough to freeze
  • The warmest wight!
  • Now hear the other side, if you please:
  • “I did say once, though without intent,
  • That marriage is a plain event
  • Of black and white,
  • Whatever may be its sentiment.
  • “I’ll act accordingly, none the less
  • That you soiled the contract in time of stress,
  • Thereto induced
  • By the feared results of your wantonness.
  • “But the thing is over, and no one knows,
  • And it’s nought to the future what you disclose.
  • That you’ll be loosed
  • For such an episode, don’t suppose!
  • “No: I’ll not free you. And if it appear
  • There was too good ground for your first fear
  • From your amorous tricks,
  • I’ll father the child. Yes, by God, my dear.
  • “Even should you fly to his arms, I’ll damn
  • Opinion, and fetch you; treat as sham
  • Your mutinous kicks,
  • And whip you home. That’s the sort I am!”
  • She whitened. “Enough . . . Since you disapprove
  • I’ll yield in silence, and never move
  • Till my last pulse ticks
  • A footstep from the domestic groove.”
  • “Then swear it,” he said, “and your king uncrown.”
  • He drew her forth in her long white gown,
  • And she knelt and swore.
  • “Good. Now you may go and again lie down
  • “Since you’ve played these pranks and given no sign,
  • You shall crave this man of yours; pine and pine
  • With sighings sore,
  • ’Till I’ve starved your love for him; nailed you mine.
  • “I’m a practical man, and want no tears;
  • You’ve made a fool of me, it appears;
  • That you don’t again
  • Is a lesson I’ll teach you in future years.”
  • She answered not, but lay listlessly
  • With her dark dry eyes on the coppery sea,
  • That now and then
  • Flung its lazy flounce at the neighbouring quay.
  • 1910.
  • A KING’S SOLILOQUY
  • ON THE NIGHT OF HIS FUNERAL
  • FROM the slow march and muffled drum
  • And crowds distrest,
  • And book and bell, at length I have come
  • To my full rest.
  • A ten years’ rule beneath the sun
  • Is wound up here,
  • And what I have done, what left undone,
  • Figures out clear.
  • Yet in the estimate of such
  • It grieves me more
  • That I by some was loved so much
  • Than that I bore,
  • From others, judgment of that hue
  • Which over-hope
  • Breeds from a theoretic view
  • Of regal scope.
  • For kingly opportunities
  • Right many have sighed;
  • How best to bear its devilries
  • Those learn who have tried!
  • I have eaten the fat and drunk the sweet,
  • Lived the life out
  • From the first greeting glad drum-beat
  • To the last shout.
  • What pleasure earth affords to kings
  • I have enjoyed
  • Through its long vivid pulse-stirrings
  • Even till it cloyed.
  • What days of drudgery, nights of stress
  • Can cark a throne,
  • Even one maintained in peacefulness,
  • I too have known.
  • And so, I think, could I step back
  • To life again,
  • I should prefer the average track
  • Of average men,
  • Since, as with them, what kingship would
  • It cannot do,
  • Nor to first thoughts however good
  • Hold itself true.
  • Something binds hard the royal hand,
  • As all that be,
  • And it is That has shaped, has planned
  • My acts and me.
  • _May_ 1910.
  • THE CORONATION
  • AT Westminster, hid from the light of day,
  • Many who once had shone as monarchs lay.
  • Edward the Pious, and two Edwards more,
  • The second Richard, Henrys three or four;
  • That is to say, those who were called the Third,
  • Fifth, Seventh, and Eighth (the much self-widowered),
  • And James the Scot, and near him Charles the Second,
  • And, too, the second George could there be reckoned.
  • Of women, Mary and Queen Elizabeth,
  • And Anne, all silent in a musing death;
  • And William’s Mary, and Mary, Queen of Scots,
  • And consort-queens whose names oblivion blots;
  • And several more whose chronicle one sees
  • Adorning ancient royal pedigrees.
  • —Now, as they drowsed on, freed from Life’s old thrall,
  • And heedless, save of things exceptional,
  • Said one: “What means this throbbing thudding sound
  • That reaches to us here from overground;
  • “A sound of chisels, augers, planes, and saws,
  • Infringing all ecclesiastic laws?
  • “And these tons-weight of timber on us pressed,
  • Unfelt here since we entered into rest?
  • “Surely, at least to us, being corpses royal,
  • A meet repose is owing by the loyal?”
  • “—Perhaps a scaffold!” Mary Stuart sighed,
  • “If such still be. It was that way I died.”
  • “—Ods! Far more like,” said he the many-wived,
  • “That for a wedding ’tis this work’s contrived.
  • “Ha-ha! I never would bow down to Rimmon,
  • But I had a rare time with those six women!”
  • “Not all at once?” gasped he who loved confession.
  • “Nay, nay!” said Hal. “That would have been transgression.”
  • “—They build a catafalque here, black and tall,
  • Perhaps,” mused Richard, “for some funeral?”
  • And Anne chimed in: “Ah, yes: it maybe so!”
  • “Nay!” squeaked Eliza. “Little you seem to know—
  • “Clearly ’tis for some crowning here in state,
  • As they crowned us at our long bygone date;
  • “Though we’d no such a power of carpentry,
  • But let the ancient architecture be;
  • “If I were up there where the parsons sit,
  • In one of my gold robes, I’d see to it!”
  • “But you are not,” Charles chuckled. “You are here,
  • And never will know the sun again, my dear!”
  • “Yea,” whispered those whom no one had addressed;
  • “With slow, sad march, amid a folk distressed,
  • We were brought here, to take our dusty rest.
  • “And here, alas, in darkness laid below,
  • We’ll wait and listen, and endure the show . . .
  • Clamour dogs kingship; afterwards not so!”
  • 1911.
  • AQUAE SULIS
  • THE chimes called midnight, just at interlune,
  • And the daytime talk of the Roman investigations
  • Was checked by silence, save for the husky tune
  • The bubbling waters played near the excavations.
  • And a warm air came up from underground,
  • And a flutter, as of a filmy shape unsepulchred,
  • That collected itself, and waited, and looked around:
  • Nothing was seen, but utterances could be heard:
  • Those of the goddess whose shrine was beneath the pile
  • Of the God with the baldachined altar overhead:
  • “And what did you get by raising this nave and aisle
  • Close on the site of the temple I tenanted?
  • “The notes of your organ have thrilled down out of view
  • To the earth-clogged wrecks of my edifice many a year,
  • Though stately and shining once—ay, long ere you
  • Had set up crucifix and candle here.
  • “Your priests have trampled the dust of mine without rueing,
  • Despising the joys of man whom I so much loved,
  • Though my springs boil on by your Gothic arcades and pewing,
  • And sculptures crude . . . Would Jove they could be removed!”
  • “—Repress, O lady proud, your traditional ires;
  • You know not by what a frail thread we equally hang;
  • It is said we are images both—twitched by people’s desires;
  • And that I, like you, fail as a song men yesterday sang!”
  • * * * * *
  • And the olden dark hid the cavities late laid bare,
  • And all was suspended and soundless as before,
  • Except for a gossamery noise fading off in the air,
  • And the boiling voice of the waters’ medicinal pour.
  • BATH.
  • SEVENTY-FOUR AND TWENTY
  • HERE goes a man of seventy-four,
  • Who sees not what life means for him,
  • And here another in years a score
  • Who reads its very figure and trim.
  • The one who shall walk to-day with me
  • Is not the youth who gazes far,
  • But the breezy wight who cannot see
  • What Earth’s ingrained conditions are.
  • THE ELOPEMENT
  • “A WOMAN never agreed to it!” said my knowing friend to me.
  • “That one thing she’d refuse to do for Solomon’s mines in fee:
  • No woman ever will make herself look older than she is.”
  • I did not answer; but I thought, “you err there, ancient Quiz.”
  • It took a rare one, true, to do it; for she was surely rare—
  • As rare a soul at that sweet time of her life as she was fair.
  • And urging motives, too, were strong, for ours was a passionate case,
  • Yea, passionate enough to lead to freaking with that young face.
  • I have told no one about it, should perhaps make few believe,
  • But I think it over now that life looms dull and years bereave,
  • How blank we stood at our bright wits’ end, two frail barks in
  • distress,
  • How self-regard in her was slain by her large tenderness.
  • I said: “The only chance for us in a crisis of this kind
  • Is going it thorough!”—“Yes,” she calmly breathed. “Well, I don’t
  • mind.”
  • And we blanched her dark locks ruthlessly: set wrinkles on her brow;
  • Ay—she was a right rare woman then, whatever she may be now.
  • That night we heard a coach drive up, and questions asked below.
  • “A gent with an elderly wife, sir,” was returned from the bureau.
  • And the wheels went rattling on, and free at last from public ken
  • We washed all off in her chamber and restored her youth again.
  • How many years ago it was! Some fifty can it be
  • Since that adventure held us, and she played old wife to me?
  • But in time convention won her, as it wins all women at last,
  • And now she is rich and respectable, and time has buried the past.
  • “I ROSE UP AS MY CUSTOM IS”
  • I ROSE up as my custom is
  • On the eve of All-Souls’ day,
  • And left my grave for an hour or so
  • To call on those I used to know
  • Before I passed away.
  • I visited my former Love
  • As she lay by her husband’s side;
  • I asked her if life pleased her, now
  • She was rid of a poet wrung in brow,
  • And crazed with the ills he eyed;
  • Who used to drag her here and there
  • Wherever his fancies led,
  • And point out pale phantasmal things,
  • And talk of vain vague purposings
  • That she discredited.
  • She was quite civil, and replied,
  • “Old comrade, is that you?
  • Well, on the whole, I like my life.—
  • I know I swore I’d be no wife,
  • But what was I to do?
  • “You see, of all men for my sex
  • A poet is the worst;
  • Women are practical, and they
  • Crave the wherewith to pay their way,
  • And slake their social thirst.
  • “You were a poet—quite the ideal
  • That we all love awhile:
  • But look at this man snoring here—
  • He’s no romantic chanticleer,
  • Yet keeps me in good style.
  • “He makes no quest into my thoughts,
  • But a poet wants to know
  • What one has felt from earliest days,
  • Why one thought not in other ways,
  • And one’s Loves of long ago.”
  • Her words benumbed my fond frail ghost;
  • The nightmares neighed from their stalls
  • The vampires screeched, the harpies flew,
  • And under the dim dawn I withdrew
  • To Death’s inviolate halls.
  • A WEEK
  • ON Monday night I closed my door,
  • And thought you were not as heretofore,
  • And little cared if we met no more.
  • I seemed on Tuesday night to trace
  • Something beyond mere commonplace
  • In your ideas, and heart, and face.
  • On Wednesday I did not opine
  • Your life would ever be one with mine,
  • Though if it were we should well combine.
  • On Thursday noon I liked you well,
  • And fondly felt that we must dwell
  • Not far apart, whatever befell.
  • On Friday it was with a thrill
  • In gazing towards your distant vill
  • I owned you were my dear one still.
  • I saw you wholly to my mind
  • On Saturday—even one who shrined
  • All that was best of womankind.
  • As wing-clipt sea-gull for the sea
  • On Sunday night I longed for thee,
  • Without whom life were waste to me!
  • HAD YOU WEPT
  • HAD you wept; had you but neared me with a frail uncertain ray,
  • Dewy as the face of the dawn, in your large and luminous eye,
  • Then would have come back all the joys the tidings had slain that day,
  • And a new beginning, a fresh fair heaven, have smoothed the things
  • awry.
  • But you were less feebly human, and no passionate need for clinging
  • Possessed your soul to overthrow reserve when I came near;
  • Ay, though you suffer as much as I from storms the hours are bringing
  • Upon your heart and mine, I never see you shed a tear.
  • The deep strong woman is weakest, the weak one is the strong;
  • The weapon of all weapons best for winning, you have not used;
  • Have you never been able, or would you not, through the evil times and
  • long?
  • Has not the gift been given you, or such gift have you refused?
  • When I bade me not absolve you on that evening or the morrow,
  • Why did you not make war on me with those who weep like rain?
  • You felt too much, so gained no balm for all your torrid sorrow,
  • And hence our deep division, and our dark undying pain.
  • BEREFT, SHE THINKS SHE DREAMS
  • I DREAM that the dearest I ever knew
  • Has died and been entombed.
  • I am sure it’s a dream that cannot be true,
  • But I am so overgloomed
  • By its persistence, that I would gladly
  • Have quick death take me,
  • Rather than longer think thus sadly;
  • So wake me, wake me!
  • It has lasted days, but minute and hour
  • I expect to get aroused
  • And find him as usual in the bower
  • Where we so happily housed.
  • Yet stays this nightmare too appalling,
  • And like a web shakes me,
  • And piteously I keep on calling,
  • And no one wakes me!
  • IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM
  • “WHAT do you see in that time-touched stone,
  • When nothing is there
  • But ashen blankness, although you give it
  • A rigid stare?
  • “You look not quite as if you saw,
  • But as if you heard,
  • Parting your lips, and treading softly
  • As mouse or bird.
  • “It is only the base of a pillar, they’ll tell you,
  • That came to us
  • From a far old hill men used to name
  • Areopagus.”
  • —“I know no art, and I only view
  • A stone from a wall,
  • But I am thinking that stone has echoed
  • The voice of Paul,
  • “Paul as he stood and preached beside it
  • Facing the crowd,
  • A small gaunt figure with wasted features,
  • Calling out loud
  • “Words that in all their intimate accents
  • Pattered upon
  • That marble front, and were far reflected,
  • And then were gone.
  • “I’m a labouring man, and know but little,
  • Or nothing at all;
  • But I can’t help thinking that stone once echoed
  • The voice of Paul.”
  • IN THE SERVANTS’ QUARTERS
  • “MAN, you too, aren’t you, one of these rough followers of the
  • criminal?
  • All hanging hereabout to gather how he’s going to bear
  • Examination in the hall.” She flung disdainful glances on
  • The shabby figure standing at the fire with others there,
  • Who warmed them by its flare.
  • “No indeed, my skipping maiden: I know nothing of the trial here,
  • Or criminal, if so he be.—I chanced to come this way,
  • And the fire shone out into the dawn, and morning airs are cold now;
  • I, too, was drawn in part by charms I see before me play,
  • That I see not every day.”
  • “Ha, ha!” then laughed the constables who also stood to warm
  • themselves,
  • The while another maiden scrutinized his features hard,
  • As the blaze threw into contrast every line and knot that wrinkled
  • them,
  • Exclaiming, “Why, last night when he was brought in by the guard,
  • You were with him in the yard!”
  • “Nay, nay, you teasing wench, I say! You know you speak mistakenly.
  • Cannot a tired pedestrian who has footed it afar
  • Here on his way from northern parts, engrossed in humble marketings,
  • Come in and rest awhile, although judicial doings are
  • Afoot by morning star?”
  • “O, come, come!” laughed the constables. “Why, man, you speak the
  • dialect
  • He uses in his answers; you can hear him up the stairs.
  • So own it. We sha’n’t hurt ye. There he’s speaking now! His
  • syllables
  • Are those you sound yourself when you are talking unawares,
  • As this pretty girl declares.”
  • “And you shudder when his chain clinks!” she rejoined. “O yes, I
  • noticed it.
  • And you winced, too, when those cuffs they gave him echoed to us here.
  • They’ll soon be coming down, and you may then have to defend yourself
  • Unless you hold your tongue, or go away and keep you clear
  • When he’s led to judgment near!”
  • “No! I’ll be damned in hell if I know anything about the man!
  • No single thing about him more than everybody knows!
  • Must not I even warm my hands but I am charged with blasphemies?” . . .
  • —His face convulses as the morning cock that moment crows,
  • And he stops, and turns, and goes.
  • THE OBLITERATE TOMB
  • “MORE than half my life long
  • Did they weigh me falsely, to my bitter wrong,
  • But they all have shrunk away into the silence
  • Like a lost song.
  • “And the day has dawned and come
  • For forgiveness, when the past may hold it dumb
  • On the once reverberate words of hatred uttered
  • Half in delirium . . .
  • “With folded lips and hands
  • They lie and wait what next the Will commands,
  • And doubtless think, if think they can: ‘Let discord
  • Sink with Life’s sands!’
  • “By these late years their names,
  • Their virtues, their hereditary claims,
  • May be as near defacement at their grave-place
  • As are their fames.”
  • —Such thoughts bechanced to seize
  • A traveller’s mind—a man of memories—
  • As he set foot within the western city
  • Where had died these
  • Who in their lifetime deemed
  • Him their chief enemy—one whose brain had schemed
  • To get their dingy greatness deeplier dingied
  • And disesteemed.
  • So, sojourning in their town,
  • He mused on them and on their once renown,
  • And said, “I’ll seek their resting-place to-morrow
  • Ere I lie down,
  • “And end, lest I forget,
  • Those ires of many years that I regret,
  • Renew their names, that men may see some liegeness
  • Is left them yet.”
  • Duly next day he went
  • And sought the church he had known them to frequent,
  • And wandered in the precincts, set on eyeing
  • Where they lay pent,
  • Till by remembrance led
  • He stood at length beside their slighted bed,
  • Above which, truly, scarce a line or letter
  • Could now be read.
  • “Thus years obliterate
  • Their graven worth, their chronicle, their date!
  • At once I’ll garnish and revive the record
  • Of their past state,
  • “That still the sage may say
  • In pensive progress here where they decay,
  • ‘This stone records a luminous line whose talents
  • Told in their day.’”
  • While speaking thus he turned,
  • For a form shadowed where they lay inurned,
  • And he beheld a stranger in foreign vesture,
  • And tropic-burned.
  • “Sir, I am right pleased to view
  • That ancestors of mine should interest you,
  • For I have come of purpose here to trace them . . .
  • They are time-worn, true,
  • “But that’s a fault, at most,
  • Sculptors can cure. On the Pacific coast
  • I have vowed for long that relics of my forbears
  • I’d trace ere lost,
  • “And hitherward I come,
  • Before this same old Time shall strike me numb,
  • To carry it out.”—“Strange, this is!” said the other;
  • “What mind shall plumb
  • “Coincident design!
  • Though these my father’s enemies were and mine,
  • I nourished a like purpose—to restore them
  • Each letter and line.”
  • “Such magnanimity
  • Is now not needed, sir; for you will see
  • That since I am here, a thing like this is, plainly,
  • Best done by me.”
  • The other bowed, and left,
  • Crestfallen in sentiment, as one bereft
  • Of some fair object he had been moved to cherish,
  • By hands more deft.
  • And as he slept that night
  • The phantoms of the ensepulchred stood up-right
  • Before him, trembling that he had set him seeking
  • Their charnel-site.
  • And, as unknowing his ruth,
  • Asked as with terrors founded not on truth
  • Why he should want them. “Ha,” they hollowly hackered,
  • “You come, forsooth,
  • “By stealth to obliterate
  • Our graven worth, our chronicle, our date,
  • That our descendant may not gild the record
  • Of our past state,
  • “And that no sage may say
  • In pensive progress near where we decay:
  • ‘This stone records a luminous line whose talents
  • Told in their day.’”
  • Upon the morrow he went
  • And to that town and churchyard never bent
  • His ageing footsteps till, some twelvemonths onward,
  • An accident
  • Once more detained him there;
  • And, stirred by hauntings, he must needs repair
  • To where the tomb was. Lo, it stood still wasting
  • In no man’s care.
  • “The travelled man you met
  • The last time,” said the sexton, “has not yet
  • Appeared again, though wealth he had in plenty.
  • —Can he forget?
  • “The architect was hired
  • And came here on smart summons as desired,
  • But never the descendant came to tell him
  • What he required.”
  • And so the tomb remained
  • Untouched, untended, crumbling, weather-stained,
  • And though the one-time foe was fain to right it
  • He still refrained.
  • “I’ll set about it when
  • I am sure he’ll come no more. Best wait till then.”
  • But so it was that never the stranger entered
  • That city again.
  • And the well-meaner died
  • While waiting tremulously unsatisfied
  • That no return of the family’s foreign scion
  • Would still betide.
  • And many years slid by,
  • And active church-restorers cast their eye
  • Upon the ancient garth and hoary building
  • The tomb stood nigh.
  • And when they had scraped each wall,
  • Pulled out the stately pews, and smartened all,
  • “It will be well,” declared the spruce church-warden,
  • “To overhaul
  • “And broaden this path where shown;
  • Nothing prevents it but an old tombstone
  • Pertaining to a family forgotten,
  • Of deeds unknown.
  • “Their names can scarce be read,
  • Depend on’t, all who care for them are dead.”
  • So went the tomb, whose shards were as path-paving
  • Distributed.
  • Over it and about
  • Men’s footsteps beat, and wind and water-spout,
  • Until the names, aforetime gnawed by weathers,
  • Were quite worn out.
  • So that no sage can say
  • In pensive progress near where they decay,
  • “This stone records a luminous line whose talents
  • Told in their day.”
  • “REGRET NOT ME”
  • REGRET not me;
  • Beneath the sunny tree
  • I lie uncaring, slumbering peacefully.
  • Swift as the light
  • I flew my faery flight;
  • Ecstatically I moved, and feared no night.
  • I did not know
  • That heydays fade and go,
  • But deemed that what was would be always so.
  • I skipped at morn
  • Between the yellowing corn,
  • Thinking it good and glorious to be born.
  • I ran at eves
  • Among the piled-up sheaves,
  • Dreaming, “I grieve not, therefore nothing grieves.”
  • Now soon will come
  • The apple, pear, and plum
  • And hinds will sing, and autumn insects hum.
  • Again you will fare
  • To cider-makings rare,
  • And junketings; but I shall not be there.
  • Yet gaily sing
  • Until the pewter ring
  • Those songs we sang when we went gipsying.
  • And lightly dance
  • Some triple-timed romance
  • In coupled figures, and forget mischance;
  • And mourn not me
  • Beneath the yellowing tree;
  • For I shall mind not, slumbering peacefully.
  • THE RECALCITRANTS
  • LET us off and search, and find a place
  • Where yours and mine can be natural lives,
  • Where no one comes who dissects and dives
  • And proclaims that ours is a curious case,
  • That its touch of romance can scarcely grace.
  • You would think it strange at first, but then
  • Everything has been strange in its time.
  • When some one said on a day of the prime
  • He would bow to no brazen god again
  • He doubtless dazed the mass of men.
  • None will recognize us as a pair whose claims
  • To righteous judgment we care not making;
  • Who have doubted if breath be worth the taking,
  • And have no respect for the current fames
  • Whence the savour has flown while abide the names.
  • We have found us already shunned, disdained,
  • And for re-acceptance have not once striven;
  • Whatever offence our course has given
  • The brunt thereof we have long sustained.
  • Well, let us away, scorned unexplained.
  • STARLINGS ON THE ROOF
  • “NO smoke spreads out of this chimney-pot,
  • The people who lived here have left the spot,
  • And others are coming who knew them not.
  • “If you listen anon, with an ear intent,
  • The voices, you’ll find, will be different
  • From the well-known ones of those who went.”
  • “Why did they go? Their tones so bland
  • Were quite familiar to our band;
  • The comers we shall not understand.”
  • “They look for a new life, rich and strange;
  • They do not know that, let them range
  • Wherever they may, they will get no change.
  • “They will drag their house-gear ever so far
  • In their search for a home no miseries mar;
  • They will find that as they were they are,
  • “That every hearth has a ghost, alack,
  • And can be but the scene of a bivouac
  • Till they move perforce—no time to pack!”
  • THE MOON LOOKS IN
  • I
  • I have risen again,
  • And awhile survey
  • By my chilly ray
  • Through your window-pane
  • Your upturned face,
  • As you think, “Ah-she
  • Now dreams of me
  • In her distant place!”
  • II
  • I pierce her blind
  • In her far-off home:
  • She fixes a comb,
  • And says in her mind,
  • “I start in an hour;
  • Whom shall I meet?
  • Won’t the men be sweet,
  • And the women sour!”
  • THE SWEET HUSSY
  • IN his early days he was quite surprised
  • When she told him she was compromised
  • By meetings and lingerings at his whim,
  • And thinking not of herself but him;
  • While she lifted orbs aggrieved and round
  • That scandal should so soon abound,
  • (As she had raised them to nine or ten
  • Of antecedent nice young men)
  • And in remorse he thought with a sigh,
  • How good she is, and how bad am I!—
  • It was years before he understood
  • That she was the wicked one—he the good.
  • THE TELEGRAM
  • “O HE’S suffering—maybe dying—and I not there to aid,
  • And smooth his bed and whisper to him! Can I nohow go?
  • Only the nurse’s brief twelve words thus hurriedly conveyed,
  • As by stealth, to let me know.
  • “He was the best and brightest!—candour shone upon his brow,
  • And I shall never meet again a soldier such as he,
  • And I loved him ere I knew it, and perhaps he’s sinking now,
  • Far, far removed from me!”
  • —The yachts ride mute at anchor and the fulling moon is fair,
  • And the giddy folk are strutting up and down the smooth parade,
  • And in her wild distraction she seems not to be aware
  • That she lives no more a maid,
  • But has vowed and wived herself to one who blessed the ground she trod
  • To and from his scene of ministry, and thought her history known
  • In its last particular to him—aye, almost as to God,
  • And believed her quite his own.
  • So great her absentmindedness she droops as in a swoon,
  • And a movement of aversion mars her recent spousal grace,
  • And in silence we two sit here in our waning honeymoon
  • At this idle watering-place . . .
  • What now I see before me is a long lane overhung
  • With lovelessness, and stretching from the present to the grave.
  • And I would I were away from this, with friends I knew when young,
  • Ere a woman held me slave.
  • THE MOTH-SIGNAL
  • (_On Egdon Heath_)
  • “WHAT are you still, still thinking,”
  • He asked in vague surmise,
  • “That stare at the wick unblinking
  • With those great lost luminous eyes?”
  • “O, I see a poor moth burning
  • In the candle-flame,” said she,
  • “Its wings and legs are turning
  • To a cinder rapidly.”
  • “Moths fly in from the heather,”
  • He said, “now the days decline.”
  • “I know,” said she. “The weather,
  • I hope, will at last be fine.
  • “I think,” she added lightly,
  • “I’ll look out at the door.
  • The ring the moon wears nightly
  • May be visible now no more.”
  • She rose, and, little heeding,
  • Her husband then went on
  • With his attentive reading
  • In the annals of ages gone.
  • Outside the house a figure
  • Came from the tumulus near,
  • And speedily waxed bigger,
  • And clasped and called her Dear.
  • “I saw the pale-winged token
  • You sent through the crack,” sighed she.
  • “That moth is burnt and broken
  • With which you lured out me.
  • “And were I as the moth is
  • It might be better far
  • For one whose marriage troth is
  • Shattered as potsherds are!”
  • Then grinned the Ancient Briton
  • From the tumulus treed with pine:
  • “So, hearts are thwartly smitten
  • In these days as in mine!”
  • SEEN BY THE WAITS
  • THROUGH snowy woods and shady
  • We went to play a tune
  • To the lonely manor-lady
  • By the light of the Christmas moon.
  • We violed till, upward glancing
  • To where a mirror leaned,
  • We saw her airily dancing,
  • Deeming her movements screened;
  • Dancing alone in the room there,
  • Thin-draped in her robe of night;
  • Her postures, glassed in the gloom there,
  • Were a strange phantasmal sight.
  • She had learnt (we heard when homing)
  • That her roving spouse was dead;
  • Why she had danced in the gloaming
  • We thought, but never said.
  • THE TWO SOLDIERS
  • JUST at the corner of the wall
  • We met—yes, he and I—
  • Who had not faced in camp or hall
  • Since we bade home good-bye,
  • And what once happened came back—all—
  • Out of those years gone by.
  • And that strange woman whom we knew
  • And loved—long dead and gone,
  • Whose poor half-perished residue,
  • Tombless and trod, lay yon!
  • But at this moment to our view
  • Rose like a phantom wan.
  • And in his fixed face I could see,
  • Lit by a lurid shine,
  • The drama re-enact which she
  • Had dyed incarnadine
  • For us, and more. And doubtless he
  • Beheld it too in mine.
  • A start, as at one slightly known,
  • And with an indifferent air
  • We passed, without a sign being shown
  • That, as it real were,
  • A memory-acted scene had thrown
  • Its tragic shadow there.
  • THE DEATH OF REGRET
  • I OPENED my shutter at sunrise,
  • And looked at the hill hard by,
  • And I heartily grieved for the comrade
  • Who wandered up there to die.
  • I let in the morn on the morrow,
  • And failed not to think of him then,
  • As he trod up that rise in the twilight,
  • And never came down again.
  • I undid the shutter a week thence,
  • But not until after I’d turned
  • Did I call back his last departure
  • By the upland there discerned.
  • Uncovering the casement long later,
  • I bent to my toil till the gray,
  • When I said to myself, “Ah—what ails me,
  • To forget him all the day!”
  • As daily I flung back the shutter
  • In the same blank bald routine,
  • He scarcely once rose to remembrance
  • Through a month of my facing the scene.
  • And ah, seldom now do I ponder
  • At the window as heretofore
  • On the long valued one who died yonder,
  • And wastes by the sycamore.
  • IN THE DAYS OF CRINOLINE
  • A PLAIN tilt-bonnet on her head
  • She took the path across the leaze.
  • —Her spouse the vicar, gardening, said,
  • “Too dowdy that, for coquetries,
  • So I can hoe at ease.”
  • But when she had passed into the heath,
  • And gained the wood beyond the flat,
  • She raised her skirts, and from beneath
  • Unpinned and drew as from a sheath
  • An ostrich-feathered hat.
  • And where the hat had hung she now
  • Concealed and pinned the dowdy hood,
  • And set the hat upon her brow,
  • And thus emerging from the wood
  • Tripped on in jaunty mood.
  • The sun was low and crimson-faced
  • As two came that way from the town,
  • And plunged into the wood untraced . . .
  • When separately therefrom they paced
  • The sun had quite gone down.
  • The hat and feather disappeared,
  • The dowdy hood again was donned,
  • And in the gloom the fair one neared
  • Her home and husband dour, who conned
  • Calmly his blue-eyed blonde.
  • “To-day,” he said, “you have shown good sense,
  • A dress so modest and so meek
  • Should always deck your goings hence
  • Alone.” And as a recompense
  • He kissed her on the cheek.
  • THE ROMAN GRAVEMOUNDS
  • BY Rome’s dim relics there walks a man,
  • Eyes bent; and he carries a basket and spade;
  • I guess what impels him to scrape and scan;
  • Yea, his dreams of that Empire long decayed.
  • “Vast was Rome,” he must muse, “in the world’s regard,
  • Vast it looms there still, vast it ever will be;”
  • And he stoops as to dig and unmine some shard
  • Left by those who are held in such memory.
  • But no; in his basket, see, he has brought
  • A little white furred thing, stiff of limb,
  • Whose life never won from the world a thought;
  • It is this, and not Rome, that is moving him.
  • And to make it a grave he has come to the spot,
  • And he delves in the ancient dead’s long home;
  • Their fames, their achievements, the man knows not;
  • The furred thing is all to him—nothing Rome!
  • “Here say you that Cæsar’s warriors lie?—
  • But my little white cat was my only friend!
  • Could she but live, might the record die
  • Of Cæsar, his legions, his aims, his end!”
  • Well, Rome’s long rule here is oft and again
  • A theme for the sages of history,
  • And the small furred life was worth no one’s pen;
  • Yet its mourner’s mood has a charm for me.
  • _November_ 1910.
  • THE WORKBOX
  • “SEE, here’s the workbox, little wife,
  • That I made of polished oak.”
  • He was a joiner, of village life;
  • She came of borough folk.
  • He holds the present up to her
  • As with a smile she nears
  • And answers to the profferer,
  • “’Twill last all my sewing years!”
  • “I warrant it will. And longer too.
  • ’Tis a scantling that I got
  • Off poor John Wayward’s coffin, who
  • Died of they knew not what.
  • “The shingled pattern that seems to cease
  • Against your box’s rim
  • Continues right on in the piece
  • That’s underground with him.
  • “And while I worked it made me think
  • Of timber’s varied doom;
  • One inch where people eat and drink,
  • The next inch in a tomb.
  • “But why do you look so white, my dear,
  • And turn aside your face?
  • You knew not that good lad, I fear,
  • Though he came from your native place?”
  • “How could I know that good young man,
  • Though he came from my native town,
  • When he must have left there earlier than
  • I was a woman grown?”
  • “Ah no. I should have understood!
  • It shocked you that I gave
  • To you one end of a piece of wood
  • Whose other is in a grave?”
  • “Don’t, dear, despise my intellect,
  • Mere accidental things
  • Of that sort never have effect
  • On my imaginings.”
  • Yet still her lips were limp and wan,
  • Her face still held aside,
  • As if she had known not only John,
  • But known of what he died.
  • THE SACRILEGE
  • A BALLAD-TRAGEDY
  • (_Circa_ 182-)
  • PART I
  • “I HAVE a Love I love too well
  • Where Dunkery frowns on Exon Moor;
  • I have a Love I love too well,
  • To whom, ere she was mine,
  • ‘Such is my love for you,’ I said,
  • ‘That you shall have to hood your head
  • A silken kerchief crimson-red,
  • Wove finest of the fine.’
  • “And since this Love, for one mad moon,
  • On Exon Wild by Dunkery Tor,
  • Since this my Love for one mad moon
  • Did clasp me as her king,
  • I snatched a silk-piece red and rare
  • From off a stall at Priddy Fair,
  • For handkerchief to hood her hair
  • When we went gallanting.
  • “Full soon the four weeks neared their end
  • Where Dunkery frowns on Exon Moor;
  • And when the four weeks neared their end,
  • And their swift sweets outwore,
  • I said, ‘What shall I do to own
  • Those beauties bright as tulips blown,
  • And keep you here with me alone
  • As mine for evermore?’
  • “And as she drowsed within my van
  • On Exon Wild by Dunkery Tor—
  • And as she drowsed within my van,
  • And dawning turned to day,
  • She heavily raised her sloe-black eyes
  • And murmured back in softest wise,
  • ‘One more thing, and the charms you prize
  • Are yours henceforth for aye.
  • “‘And swear I will I’ll never go
  • While Dunkery frowns on Exon Moor
  • To meet the Cornish Wrestler Joe
  • For dance and dallyings.
  • If you’ll to yon cathedral shrine,
  • And finger from the chest divine
  • Treasure to buy me ear-drops fine,
  • And richly jewelled rings.’
  • “I said: ‘I am one who has gathered gear
  • From Marlbury Downs to Dunkery Tor,
  • Who has gathered gear for many a year
  • From mansion, mart and fair;
  • But at God’s house I’ve stayed my hand,
  • Hearing within me some command—
  • Curbed by a law not of the land
  • From doing damage there.’
  • “Whereat she pouts, this Love of mine,
  • As Dunkery frowns on Exon Moor,
  • And still she pouts, this Love of mine,
  • So cityward I go.
  • But ere I start to do the thing,
  • And speed my soul’s imperilling
  • For one who is my ravishing
  • And all the joy I know,
  • “I come to lay this charge on thee—
  • On Exon Wild by Dunkery Tor—
  • I come to lay this charge on thee
  • With solemn speech and sign:
  • Should things go ill, and my life pay
  • For botchery in this rash assay,
  • You are to take hers likewise—yea,
  • The month the law takes mine.
  • “For should my rival, Wrestler Joe,
  • Where Dunkery frowns on Exon Moor—
  • My reckless rival, Wrestler Joe,
  • My Love’s possessor be,
  • My tortured spirit would not rest,
  • But wander weary and distrest
  • Throughout the world in wild protest:
  • The thought nigh maddens me!”
  • PART II
  • Thus did he speak—this brother of mine—
  • On Exon Wild by Dunkery Tor,
  • Born at my birth of mother of mine,
  • And forthwith went his way
  • To dare the deed some coming night . . .
  • I kept the watch with shaking sight,
  • The moon at moments breaking bright,
  • At others glooming gray.
  • For three full days I heard no sound
  • Where Dunkery frowns on Exon Moor,
  • I heard no sound at all around
  • Whether his fay prevailed,
  • Or one malign the master were,
  • Till some afoot did tidings bear
  • How that, for all his practised care,
  • He had been caught and jailed.
  • They had heard a crash when twelve had chimed
  • By Mendip east of Dunkery Tor,
  • When twelve had chimed and moonlight climbed;
  • They watched, and he was tracked
  • By arch and aisle and saint and knight
  • Of sculptured stonework sheeted white
  • In the cathedral’s ghostly light,
  • And captured in the act.
  • Yes; for this Love he loved too well
  • Where Dunkery sights the Severn shore,
  • All for this Love he loved too well
  • He burst the holy bars,
  • Seized golden vessels from the chest
  • To buy her ornaments of the best,
  • At her ill-witchery’s request
  • And lure of eyes like stars . . .
  • When blustering March confused the sky
  • In Toneborough Town by Exon Moor,
  • When blustering March confused the sky
  • They stretched him; and he died.
  • Down in the crowd where I, to see
  • The end of him, stood silently,
  • With a set face he lipped to me—
  • “Remember.” “Ay!” I cried.
  • By night and day I shadowed her
  • From Toneborough Deane to Dunkery Tor,
  • I shadowed her asleep, astir,
  • And yet I could not bear—
  • Till Wrestler Joe anon began
  • To figure as her chosen man,
  • And took her to his shining van—
  • To doom a form so fair!
  • He made it handsome for her sake—
  • And Dunkery smiled to Exon Moor—
  • He made it handsome for her sake,
  • Painting it out and in;
  • And on the door of apple-green
  • A bright brass knocker soon was seen,
  • And window-curtains white and clean
  • For her to sit within.
  • And all could see she clave to him
  • As cleaves a cloud to Dunkery Tor,
  • Yea, all could see she clave to him,
  • And every day I said,
  • “A pity it seems to part those two
  • That hourly grow to love more true:
  • Yet she’s the wanton woman who
  • Sent one to swing till dead!”
  • That blew to blazing all my hate,
  • While Dunkery frowned on Exon Moor,
  • And when the river swelled, her fate
  • Came to her pitilessly . . .
  • I dogged her, crying: “Across that plank
  • They use as bridge to reach yon bank
  • A coat and hat lie limp and dank;
  • Your goodman’s, can they be?”
  • She paled, and went, I close behind—
  • And Exon frowned to Dunkery Tor,
  • She went, and I came up behind
  • And tipped the plank that bore
  • Her, fleetly flitting across to eye
  • What such might bode. She slid awry;
  • And from the current came a cry,
  • A gurgle; and no more.
  • How that befell no mortal knew
  • From Marlbury Downs to Exon Moor;
  • No mortal knew that deed undue
  • But he who schemed the crime,
  • Which night still covers . . . But in dream
  • Those ropes of hair upon the stream
  • He sees, and he will hear that scream
  • Until his judgment-time.
  • THE ABBEY MASON
  • (_Inventor of the_ “_Perpendicular_” _Style of Gothic Architecture_)
  • THE new-vamped Abbey shaped apace
  • In the fourteenth century of grace;
  • (The church which, at an after date,
  • Acquired cathedral rank and state.)
  • Panel and circumscribing wall
  • Of latest feature, trim and tall,
  • Rose roundabout the Norman core
  • In prouder pose than theretofore,
  • Encasing magically the old
  • With parpend ashlars manifold.
  • The trowels rang out, and tracery
  • Appeared where blanks had used to be.
  • Men toiled for pleasure more than pay,
  • And all went smoothly day by day,
  • Till, in due course, the transept part
  • Engrossed the master-mason’s art.
  • —Home-coming thence he tossed and turned
  • Throughout the night till the new sun burned.
  • “What fearful visions have inspired
  • These gaingivings?” his wife inquired;
  • “As if your tools were in your hand
  • You have hammered, fitted, muttered, planned;
  • “You have thumped as you were working hard:
  • I might have found me bruised and scarred.
  • “What then’s amiss. What eating care
  • Looms nigh, whereof I am unaware?”
  • He answered not, but churchward went,
  • Viewing his draughts with discontent;
  • And fumbled there the livelong day
  • Till, hollow-eyed, he came away.
  • —’Twas said, “The master-mason’s ill!”
  • And all the abbey works stood still.
  • Quoth Abbot Wygmore: “Why, O why
  • Distress yourself? You’ll surely die!”
  • The mason answered, trouble-torn,
  • “This long-vogued style is quite outworn!
  • “The upper archmould nohow serves
  • To meet the lower tracery curves:
  • “The ogees bend too far away
  • To give the flexures interplay.
  • “This it is causes my distress . . .
  • So it will ever be unless
  • “New forms be found to supersede
  • The circle when occasions need.
  • “To carry it out I have tried and toiled,
  • And now perforce must own me foiled!
  • “Jeerers will say: ‘Here was a man
  • Who could not end what he began!’”
  • —So passed that day, the next, the next;
  • The abbot scanned the task, perplexed;
  • The townsmen mustered all their wit
  • To fathom how to compass it,
  • But no raw artistries availed
  • Where practice in the craft had failed . . .
  • —One night he tossed, all open-eyed,
  • And early left his helpmeet’s side.
  • Scattering the rushes of the floor
  • He wandered from the chamber door
  • And sought the sizing pile, whereon
  • Struck dimly a cadaverous dawn
  • Through freezing rain, that drenched the board
  • Of diagram-lines he last had scored—
  • Chalked phantasies in vain begot
  • To knife the architectural knot—
  • In front of which he dully stood,
  • Regarding them in hopeless mood.
  • He closelier looked; then looked again:
  • The chalk-scratched draught-board faced the rain,
  • Whose icicled drops deformed the lines
  • Innumerous of his lame designs,
  • So that they streamed in small white threads
  • From the upper segments to the heads
  • Of arcs below, uniting them
  • Each by a stalactitic stem.
  • —At once, with eyes that struck out sparks,
  • He adds accessory cusping-marks,
  • Then laughs aloud. The thing was done
  • So long assayed from sun to sun . . .
  • —Now in his joy he grew aware
  • Of one behind him standing there,
  • And, turning, saw the abbot, who
  • The weather’s whim was watching too.
  • Onward to Prime the abbot went,
  • Tacit upon the incident.
  • —Men now discerned as days revolved
  • The ogive riddle had been solved;
  • Templates were cut, fresh lines were chalked
  • Where lines had been defaced and balked,
  • And the work swelled and mounted higher,
  • Achievement distancing desire;
  • Here jambs with transoms fixed between,
  • Where never the like before had been—
  • There little mullions thinly sawn
  • Where meeting circles once were drawn.
  • “We knew,” men said, “the thing would go
  • After his craft-wit got aglow,
  • “And, once fulfilled what he has designed,
  • We’ll honour him and his great mind!”
  • When matters stood thus poised awhile,
  • And all surroundings shed a smile,
  • The master-mason on an eve
  • Homed to his wife and seemed to grieve . . .
  • —“The abbot spoke to me to-day:
  • He hangs about the works alway.
  • “He knows the source as well as I
  • Of the new style men magnify.
  • “He said: ‘You pride yourself too much
  • On your creation. Is it such?
  • “‘Surely the hand of God it is
  • That conjured so, and only His!—
  • “‘Disclosing by the frost and rain
  • Forms your invention chased in vain;
  • “‘Hence the devices deemed so great
  • You copied, and did not create.’
  • “I feel the abbot’s words are just,
  • And that all thanks renounce I must.
  • “Can a man welcome praise and pelf
  • For hatching art that hatched itself? . . .
  • “So, I shall own the deft design
  • Is Heaven’s outshaping, and not mine.”
  • “What!” said she. “Praise your works ensure
  • To throw away, and quite obscure
  • “Your beaming and beneficent star?
  • Better you leave things as they are!
  • “Why, think awhile. Had not your zest
  • In your loved craft curtailed your rest—
  • “Had you not gone there ere the day
  • The sun had melted all away!”
  • —But, though his good wife argued so,
  • The mason let the people know
  • That not unaided sprang the thought
  • Whereby the glorious fane was wrought,
  • But that by frost when dawn was dim
  • The method was disclosed to him.
  • “Yet,” said the townspeople thereat,
  • “’Tis your own doing, even with that!”
  • But he—chafed, childlike, in extremes—
  • The temperament of men of dreams—
  • Aloofly scrupled to admit
  • That he did aught but borrow it,
  • And diffidently made request
  • That with the abbot all should rest.
  • —As none could doubt the abbot’s word,
  • Or question what the church averred,
  • The mason was at length believed
  • Of no more count than he conceived,
  • And soon began to lose the fame
  • That late had gathered round his name . . .
  • —Time passed, and like a living thing
  • The pile went on embodying,
  • And workmen died, and young ones grew,
  • And the old mason sank from view
  • And Abbots Wygmore and Staunton went
  • And Horton sped the embellishment.
  • But not till years had far progressed
  • Chanced it that, one day, much impressed,
  • Standing within the well-graced aisle,
  • He asked who first conceived the style;
  • And some decrepit sage detailed
  • How, when invention nought availed,
  • The cloud-cast waters in their whim
  • Came down, and gave the hint to him
  • Who struck each arc, and made each mould;
  • And how the abbot would not hold
  • As sole begetter him who applied
  • Forms the Almighty sent as guide;
  • And how the master lost renown,
  • And wore in death no artist’s crown.
  • —Then Horton, who in inner thought
  • Had more perceptions than he taught,
  • Replied: “Nay; art can but transmute;
  • Invention is not absolute;
  • “Things fail to spring from nought at call,
  • And art-beginnings most of all.
  • “He did but what all artists do,
  • Wait upon Nature for his cue.”
  • —“Had you been here to tell them so
  • Lord Abbot, sixty years ago,
  • “The mason, now long underground,
  • Doubtless a different fate had found.
  • “He passed into oblivion dim,
  • And none knew what became of him!
  • “His name? ’Twas of some common kind
  • And now has faded out of mind.”
  • The Abbot: “It shall not be hid!
  • I’ll trace it.” . . . But he never did.
  • —When longer yet dank death had wormed
  • The brain wherein the style had germed
  • From Gloucester church it flew afar—
  • The style called Perpendicular.—
  • To Winton and to Westminster
  • It ranged, and grew still beautifuller:
  • From Solway Frith to Dover Strand
  • Its fascinations starred the land,
  • Not only on cathedral walls
  • But upon courts and castle halls,
  • Till every edifice in the isle
  • Was patterned to no other style,
  • And till, long having played its part,
  • The curtain fell on Gothic art.
  • —Well: when in Wessex on your rounds,
  • Take a brief step beyond its bounds,
  • And enter Gloucester: seek the quoin
  • Where choir and transept interjoin,
  • And, gazing at the forms there flung
  • Against the sky by one unsung—
  • The ogee arches transom-topped,
  • The tracery-stalks by spandrels stopped,
  • Petrified lacework—lightly lined
  • On ancient massiveness behind—
  • Muse that some minds so modest be
  • As to renounce fame’s fairest fee,
  • (Like him who crystallized on this spot
  • His visionings, but lies forgot,
  • And many a mediaeval one
  • Whose symmetries salute the sun)
  • While others boom a baseless claim,
  • And upon nothing rear a name.
  • THE JUBILEE OF A MAGAZINE
  • (_To the Editor_)
  • YES; your up-dated modern page—
  • All flower-fresh, as it appears—
  • Can claim a time-tried lineage,
  • That reaches backward fifty years
  • (Which, if but short for sleepy squires,
  • Is much in magazines’ careers).
  • —Here, on your cover, never tires
  • The sower, reaper, thresher, while
  • As through the seasons of our sires
  • Each wills to work in ancient style
  • With seedlip, sickle, share and flail,
  • Though modes have since moved many a mile!
  • The steel-roped plough now rips the vale,
  • With cog and tooth the sheaves are won,
  • Wired wheels drum out the wheat like hail;
  • But if we ask, what has been done
  • To unify the mortal lot
  • Since your bright leaves first saw the sun,
  • Beyond mechanic furtherance—what
  • Advance can rightness, candour, claim?
  • Truth bends abashed, and answers not.
  • Despite your volumes’ gentle aim
  • To straighten visions wry and wrong,
  • Events jar onward much the same!
  • —Had custom tended to prolong,
  • As on your golden page engrained,
  • Old processes of blade and prong,
  • And best invention been retained
  • For high crusades to lessen tears
  • Throughout the race, the world had gained! . . .
  • But too much, this, for fifty years.
  • THE SATIN SHOES
  • “IF ever I walk to church to wed,
  • As other maidens use,
  • And face the gathered eyes,” she said,
  • “I’ll go in satin shoes!”
  • She was as fair as early day
  • Shining on meads unmown,
  • And her sweet syllables seemed to play
  • Like flute-notes softly blown.
  • The time arrived when it was meet
  • That she should be a bride;
  • The satin shoes were on her feet,
  • Her father was at her side.
  • They stood within the dairy door,
  • And gazed across the green;
  • The church loomed on the distant moor,
  • But rain was thick between.
  • “The grass-path hardly can be stepped,
  • The lane is like a pool!”—
  • Her dream is shown to be inept,
  • Her wish they overrule.
  • “To go forth shod in satin soft
  • A coach would be required!”
  • For thickest boots the shoes were doffed—
  • Those shoes her soul desired . . .
  • All day the bride, as overborne,
  • Was seen to brood apart,
  • And that the shoes had not been worn
  • Sat heavy on her heart.
  • From her wrecked dream, as months flew on,
  • Her thought seemed not to range.
  • “What ails the wife?” they said anon,
  • “That she should be so strange?” . . .
  • Ah—what coach comes with furtive glide—
  • A coach of closed-up kind?
  • It comes to fetch the last year’s bride,
  • Who wanders in her mind.
  • She strove with them, and fearfully ran
  • Stairward with one low scream:
  • “Nay—coax her,” said the madhouse man,
  • “With some old household theme.”
  • “If you will go, dear, you must fain
  • Put on those shoes—the pair
  • Meant for your marriage, which the rain
  • Forbade you then to wear.”
  • She clapped her hands, flushed joyous hues;
  • “O yes—I’ll up and ride
  • If I am to wear my satin shoes
  • And be a proper bride!”
  • Out then her little foot held she,
  • As to depart with speed;
  • The madhouse man smiled pleasantly
  • To see the wile succeed.
  • She turned to him when all was done,
  • And gave him her thin hand,
  • Exclaiming like an enraptured one,
  • “This time it will be grand!”
  • She mounted with a face elate,
  • Shut was the carriage door;
  • They drove her to the madhouse gate,
  • And she was seen no more . . .
  • Yet she was fair as early day
  • Shining on meads unmown,
  • And her sweet syllables seemed to play
  • Like flute-notes softly blown.
  • EXEUNT OMNES
  • I
  • EVERYBODY else, then, going,
  • And I still left where the fair was? . . .
  • Much have I seen of neighbour loungers
  • Making a lusty showing,
  • Each now past all knowing.
  • II
  • There is an air of blankness
  • In the street and the littered spaces;
  • Thoroughfare, steeple, bridge and highway
  • Wizen themselves to lankness;
  • Kennels dribble dankness.
  • III
  • Folk all fade. And whither,
  • As I wait alone where the fair was?
  • Into the clammy and numbing night-fog
  • Whence they entered hither.
  • Soon do I follow thither!
  • _June_ 2, 1913.
  • A POET
  • ATTENTIVE eyes, fantastic heed,
  • Assessing minds, he does not need,
  • Nor urgent writs to sup or dine,
  • Nor pledges in the roseate wine.
  • For loud acclaim he does not care
  • By the august or rich or fair,
  • Nor for smart pilgrims from afar,
  • Curious on where his hauntings are.
  • But soon or later, when you hear
  • That he has doffed this wrinkled gear,
  • Some evening, at the first star-ray,
  • Come to his graveside, pause and say:
  • “Whatever the message his to tell,
  • Two bright-souled women loved him well.”
  • Stand and say that amid the dim:
  • It will be praise enough for him.
  • _July_ 1914.
  • POSTSCRIPT
  • “MEN WHO MARCH AWAY”
  • (SONG OF THE SOLDIERS)
  • WHAT of the faith and fire within us
  • Men who march away
  • Ere the barn-cocks say
  • Night is growing gray,
  • To hazards whence no tears can win us;
  • What of the faith and fire within us
  • Men who march away?
  • Is it a purblind prank, O think you,
  • Friend with the musing eye,
  • Who watch us stepping by
  • With doubt and dolorous sigh?
  • Can much pondering so hoodwink you!
  • Is it a purblind prank, O think you,
  • Friend with the musing eye?
  • Nay. We well see what we are doing,
  • Though some may not see—
  • Dalliers as they be—
  • England’s need are we;
  • Her distress would leave us rueing:
  • Nay. We well see what we are doing,
  • Though some may not see!
  • In our heart of hearts believing
  • Victory crowns the just,
  • And that braggarts must
  • Surely bite the dust,
  • Press we to the field ungrieving,
  • In our heart of hearts believing
  • Victory crowns the just.
  • Hence the faith and fire within us
  • Men who march away
  • Ere the barn-cocks say
  • Night is growing gray,
  • To hazards whence no tears can win us:
  • Hence the faith and fire within us
  • Men who march away.
  • _September_ 5, 1914.
  • ***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SATIRES OF CIRCUMSTANCE***
  • ******* This file should be named 2863-0.txt or 2863-0.zip *******
  • This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
  • http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/8/6/2863
  • Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
  • be renamed.
  • Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
  • law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
  • so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
  • States without permission and without paying copyright
  • royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
  • of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
  • Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
  • concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
  • and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
  • specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
  • eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
  • for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
  • performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
  • away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
  • not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
  • trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
  • START: FULL LICENSE
  • THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
  • PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
  • To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
  • distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
  • (or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
  • Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
  • Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
  • www.gutenberg.org/license.
  • Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
  • Gutenberg-tm electronic works
  • 1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
  • electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
  • and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
  • (trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
  • the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
  • destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
  • possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
  • Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
  • by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
  • person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
  • 1.E.8.
  • 1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
  • used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
  • agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
  • things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
  • even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
  • paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
  • Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
  • agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
  • electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
  • 1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
  • Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
  • of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
  • works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
  • States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
  • United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
  • claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
  • displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
  • all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
  • that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
  • free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
  • works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
  • Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
  • comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
  • same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
  • you share it without charge with others.
  • 1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
  • what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
  • in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
  • check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
  • agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
  • distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
  • other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
  • representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
  • country outside the United States.
  • 1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
  • 1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
  • immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
  • prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
  • on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
  • phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
  • performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
  • This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
  • most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
  • restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
  • under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
  • eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
  • United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
  • are located before using this ebook.
  • 1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
  • derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
  • contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
  • copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
  • the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
  • redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
  • Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
  • either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
  • obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
  • trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
  • 1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
  • with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
  • must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
  • additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
  • will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
  • posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
  • beginning of this work.
  • 1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
  • License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
  • work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
  • 1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
  • electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
  • prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
  • active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
  • Gutenberg-tm License.
  • 1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
  • compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
  • any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
  • to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
  • other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
  • version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
  • (www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
  • to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
  • of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
  • Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
  • full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
  • 1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
  • performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
  • unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
  • 1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
  • access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
  • provided that
  • * You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
  • the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
  • you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
  • to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
  • agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
  • Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
  • within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
  • legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
  • payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
  • Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
  • Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
  • Literary Archive Foundation."
  • * You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
  • you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
  • does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
  • License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
  • copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
  • all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
  • works.
  • * You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
  • any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
  • electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
  • receipt of the work.
  • * You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
  • distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
  • 1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
  • Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
  • are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
  • from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
  • Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
  • trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
  • 1.F.
  • 1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
  • effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
  • works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
  • Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
  • electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
  • contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
  • or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
  • intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
  • other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
  • cannot be read by your equipment.
  • 1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
  • of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
  • Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
  • Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
  • Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
  • liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
  • fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
  • LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
  • PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
  • TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
  • LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
  • INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
  • DAMAGE.
  • 1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
  • defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
  • receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
  • written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
  • received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
  • with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
  • with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
  • lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
  • or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
  • opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
  • the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
  • without further opportunities to fix the problem.
  • 1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
  • in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
  • OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
  • LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
  • 1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
  • warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
  • damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
  • violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
  • agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
  • limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
  • unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
  • remaining provisions.
  • 1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
  • trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
  • providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
  • accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
  • production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
  • electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
  • including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
  • the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
  • or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
  • additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
  • Defect you cause.
  • Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
  • Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
  • electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
  • computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
  • exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
  • from people in all walks of life.
  • Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
  • assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
  • goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
  • remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
  • Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
  • and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
  • generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
  • Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
  • Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
  • www.gutenberg.org
  • Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
  • Archive Foundation
  • The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
  • 501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
  • state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
  • Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
  • number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
  • Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
  • U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
  • The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
  • mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
  • volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
  • locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
  • Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
  • date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
  • official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
  • For additional contact information:
  • Dr. Gregory B. Newby
  • Chief Executive and Director
  • gbnewby@pglaf.org
  • Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
  • Literary Archive Foundation
  • Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
  • spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
  • increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
  • freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
  • array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
  • ($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
  • status with the IRS.
  • The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
  • charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
  • States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
  • considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
  • with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
  • where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
  • DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
  • state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
  • While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
  • have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
  • against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
  • approach us with offers to donate.
  • International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
  • any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
  • outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
  • Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
  • methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
  • ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
  • donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
  • Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
  • Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
  • Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
  • freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
  • distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
  • volunteer support.
  • Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
  • editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
  • the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
  • necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
  • edition.
  • Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
  • facility: www.gutenberg.org
  • This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
  • including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
  • Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
  • subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.