- The Project Gutenberg eBook, Late Lyrics and Earlier, by Thomas Hardy
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- Title: Late Lyrics and Earlier
- with many other verses
- Author: Thomas Hardy
- Release Date: January 18, 2015 [eBook #4758]
- [This file was first posted on March 12, 2002]
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: UTF-8
- ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LATE LYRICS AND EARLIER***
- Transcribed from the 1922 Macmillan and Co. edition by David Price, email
- ccx074@pglaf.org
- [Picture: Book cover]
- LATE LYRICS
- AND EARLIER
- WITH MANY OTHER VERSES
- BY
- THOMAS HARDY
- * * * * *
- MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
- ST. MARTIN’S STREET, LONDON
- 1922
- * * * * *
- COPYRIGHT
- * * * * *
- PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN
- * * * * *
- APOLOGY
- ABOUT half the verses that follow were written quite lately. The rest
- are older, having been held over in MS. when past volumes were published,
- on considering that these would contain a sufficient number of pages to
- offer readers at one time, more especially during the distractions of the
- war. The unusually far back poems to be found here are, however, but
- some that were overlooked in gathering previous collections. A freshness
- in them, now unattainable, seemed to make up for their inexperience and
- to justify their inclusion. A few are dated; the dates of others are not
- discoverable.
- The launching of a volume of this kind in neo-Georgian days by one who
- began writing in mid-Victorian, and has published nothing to speak of for
- some years, may seem to call for a few words of excuse or explanation.
- Whether or no, readers may feel assured that a new book is submitted to
- them with great hesitation at so belated a date. Insistent practical
- reasons, however, among which were requests from some illustrious men of
- letters who are in sympathy with my productions, the accident that
- several of the poems have already seen the light, and that dozens of them
- have been lying about for years, compelled the course adopted, in spite
- of the natural disinclination of a writer whose works have been so
- frequently regarded askance by a pragmatic section here and there, to
- draw attention to them once more.
- I do not know that it is necessary to say much on the contents of the
- book, even in deference to suggestions that will be mentioned presently.
- I believe that those readers who care for my poems at all—readers to whom
- no passport is required—will care for this new instalment of them,
- perhaps the last, as much as for any that have preceded them. Moreover,
- in the eyes of a less friendly class the pieces, though a very mixed
- collection indeed, contain, so far as I am able to see, little or nothing
- in technic or teaching that can be considered a Star-Chamber matter, or
- so much as agitating to a ladies’ school; even though, to use
- Wordsworth’s observation in his Preface to _Lyrical Ballads_, such
- readers may suppose “that by the act of writing in verse an author makes
- a formal engagement that he will gratify certain known habits of
- association: that he not only thus apprises the reader that certain
- classes of ideas and expressions will be found in his book, but that
- others will be carefully excluded.”
- It is true, nevertheless, that some grave, positive, stark, delineations
- are interspersed among those of the passive, lighter, and traditional
- sort presumably nearer to stereotyped tastes. For—while I am quite aware
- that a thinker is not expected, and, indeed, is scarcely allowed, now
- more than heretofore, to state all that crosses his mind concerning
- existence in this universe, in his attempts to explain or excuse the
- presence of evil and the incongruity of penalizing the irresponsible—it
- must be obvious to open intelligences that, without denying the beauty
- and faithful service of certain venerable cults, such disallowance of
- “obstinate questionings” and “blank misgivings” tends to a paralysed
- intellectual stalemate. Heine observed nearly a hundred years ago that
- the soul has her eternal rights; that she will not be darkened by
- statutes, nor lullabied by the music of bells. And what is to-day, in
- allusions to the present author’s pages, alleged to be “pessimism” is, in
- truth, only such “questionings” in the exploration of reality, and is the
- first step towards the soul’s betterment, and the body’s also.
- If I may be forgiven for quoting my own old words, let me repeat what I
- printed in this relation more than twenty years ago, and wrote much
- earlier, in a poem entitled “In Tenebris”:
- If way to the Better there be, it exacts a full look at the Worst:
- that is to say, by the exploration of reality, and its frank recognition
- stage by stage along the survey, with an eye to the best consummation
- possible: briefly, evolutionary meliorism. But it is called pessimism
- nevertheless; under which word, expressed with condemnatory emphasis, it
- is regarded by many as some pernicious new thing (though so old as to
- underlie the Christian idea, and even to permeate the Greek drama); and
- the subject is charitably left to decent silence, as if further comment
- were needless.
- Happily there are some who feel such Levitical passing-by to be, alas, by
- no means a permanent dismissal of the matter; that comment on where the
- world stands is very much the reverse of needless in these disordered
- years of our prematurely afflicted century: that amendment and not
- madness lies that way. And looking down the future these few hold fast
- to the same: that whether the human and kindred animal races survive till
- the exhaustion or destruction of the globe, or whether these races perish
- and are succeeded by others before that conclusion comes, pain to all
- upon it, tongued or dumb, shall be kept down to a minimum by
- lovingkindness, operating through scientific knowledge, and actuated by
- the modicum of free will conjecturally possessed by organic life when the
- mighty necessitating forces—unconscious or other—that have “the
- balancings of the clouds,” happen to be in equilibrium, which may or may
- not be often.
- To conclude this question I may add that the argument of the so-called
- optimists is neatly summarized in a stern pronouncement against me by my
- friend Mr. Frederic Harrison in a late essay of his, in the words: “This
- view of life is not mine.” The solemn declaration does not seem to me to
- be so annihilating to the said “view” (really a series of fugitive
- impressions which I have never tried to co-ordinate) as is complacently
- assumed. Surely it embodies a too human fallacy quite familiar in logic.
- Next, a knowing reviewer, apparently a Roman Catholic young man, speaks,
- with some rather gross instances of the _suggestio falsi_ in his article,
- of “Mr. Hardy refusing consolation,” the “dark gravity of his ideas,” and
- so on. When a Positivist and a Catholic agree there must be something
- wonderful in it, which should make a poet sit up. But . . . O that
- ’twere possible!
- I would not have alluded in this place or anywhere else to such casual
- personal criticisms—for casual and unreflecting they must be—but for the
- satisfaction of two or three friends in whose opinion a short answer was
- deemed desirable, on account of the continual repetition of these
- criticisms, or more precisely, quizzings. After all, the serious and
- truly literary inquiry in this connection is: Should a shaper of such
- stuff as dreams are made on disregard considerations of what is customary
- and expected, and apply himself to the real function of poetry, the
- application of ideas to life (in Matthew Arnold’s familiar phrase)? This
- bears more particularly on what has been called the “philosophy” of these
- poems—usually reproved as “queer.” Whoever the author may be that
- undertakes such application of ideas in this “philosophic”
- direction—where it is specially required—glacial judgments must
- inevitably fall upon him amid opinion whose arbiters largely decry
- individuality, to whom _ideas_ are oddities to smile at, who are moved by
- a yearning the reverse of that of the Athenian inquirers on Mars Hill;
- and stiffen their features not only at sound of a new thing, but at a
- restatement of old things in new terms. Hence should anything of this
- sort in the following adumbrations seem “queer”—should any of them seem
- to good Panglossians to embody strange and disrespectful conceptions of
- this best of all possible worlds, I apologize; but cannot help it.
- Such divergences, which, though piquant for the nonce, it would be
- affectation to say are not saddening and discouraging likewise, may, to
- be sure, arise sometimes from superficial aspect only, writer and reader
- seeing the same thing at different angles. But in palpable cases of
- divergence they arise, as already said, whenever a serious effort is made
- towards that which the authority I have cited—who would now be called
- old-fashioned, possibly even parochial—affirmed to be what no good critic
- could deny as the poet’s province, the application of ideas to life. One
- might shrewdly guess, by the by, that in such recommendation the famous
- writer may have overlooked the cold-shouldering results upon an
- enthusiastic disciple that would be pretty certain to follow his putting
- the high aim in practice, and have forgotten the disconcerting experience
- of Gil Blas with the Archbishop.
- To add a few more words to what has already taken up too many, there is a
- contingency liable to miscellanies of verse that I have never seen
- mentioned, so far as I can remember; I mean the chance little shocks that
- may be caused over a book of various character like the present and its
- predecessors by the juxtaposition of unrelated, even discordant,
- effusions; poems perhaps years apart in the making, yet facing each
- other. An odd result of this has been that dramatic anecdotes of a
- satirical and humorous intention (such, _e.g._, as “Royal Sponsors”)
- following verse in graver voice, have been read as misfires because they
- raise the smile that they were intended to raise, the journalist, deaf to
- the sudden change of key, being unconscious that he is laughing with the
- author and not at him. I admit that I did not foresee such contingencies
- as I ought to have done, and that people might not perceive when the tone
- altered. But the difficulties of arranging the themes in a graduated
- kinship of moods would have been so great that irrelation was almost
- unavoidable with efforts so diverse. I must trust for right
- note-catching to those finely-touched spirits who can divine without half
- a whisper, whose intuitiveness is proof against all the accidents of
- inconsequence. In respect of the less alert, however, should any one’s
- train of thought be thrown out of gear by a consecutive piping of vocal
- reeds in jarring tonics, without a semiquaver’s rest between, and be led
- thereby to miss the writer’s aim and meaning in one out of two contiguous
- compositions, I shall deeply regret it.
- Having at last, I think, finished with the personal points that I was
- recommended to notice, I will forsake the immediate object of this
- Preface; and, leaving _Late Lyrics_ to whatever fate it deserves, digress
- for a few moments to more general considerations. The thoughts of any
- man of letters concerned to keep poetry alive cannot but run
- uncomfortably on the precarious prospects of English verse at the present
- day. Verily the hazards and casualties surrounding the birth and setting
- forth of almost every modern creation in numbers are ominously like those
- of one of Shelley’s paper-boats on a windy lake. And a forward
- conjecture scarcely permits the hope of a better time, unless men’s
- tendencies should change. So indeed of all art, literature, and “high
- thinking” nowadays. Whether owing to the barbarizing of taste in the
- younger minds by the dark madness of the late war, the unabashed
- cultivation of selfishness in all classes, the plethoric growth of
- knowledge simultaneously with the stunting of wisdom, “a degrading thirst
- after outrageous stimulation” (to quote Wordsworth again), or from any
- other cause, we seem threatened with a new Dark Age.
- I formerly thought, like so many roughly handled writers, that so far as
- literature was concerned a partial cause might be impotent or mischievous
- criticism; the satirizing of individuality, the lack of whole-seeing in
- contemporary estimates of poetry and kindred work, the knowingness
- affected by junior reviewers, the overgrowth of meticulousness in their
- peerings for an opinion, as if it were a cultivated habit in them to
- scrutinize the tool-marks and be blind to the building, to hearken for
- the key-creaks and be deaf to the diapason, to judge the landscape by a
- nocturnal exploration with a flash-lantern. In other words, to carry on
- the old game of sampling the poem or drama by quoting the worst line or
- worst passage only, in ignorance or not of Coleridge’s proof that a
- versification of any length neither can be nor ought to be all poetry; of
- reading meanings into a book that its author never dreamt of writing
- there. I might go on interminably.
- But I do not now think any such temporary obstructions to be the cause of
- the hazard, for these negligences and ignorances, though they may have
- stifled a few true poets in the run of generations, disperse like
- stricken leaves before the wind of next week, and are no more heard of
- again in the region of letters than their writers themselves. No: we may
- be convinced that something of the deeper sort mentioned must be the
- cause.
- In any event poetry, pure literature in general, religion—I include
- religion because poetry and religion touch each other, or rather modulate
- into each other; are, indeed, often but different names for the same
- thing—these, I say, the visible signs of mental and emotional life, must
- like all other things keep moving, becoming; even though at present, when
- belief in witches of Endor is displacing the Darwinian theory and “the
- truth that shall make you free,” men’s minds appear, as above noted, to
- be moving backwards rather than on. I speak, of course, somewhat
- sweepingly, and should except many isolated minds; also the minds of men
- in certain worthy but small bodies of various denominations, and perhaps
- in the homely quarter where advance might have been the very least
- expected a few years back—the English Church—if one reads it rightly as
- showing evidence of “removing those things that are shaken,” in
- accordance with the wise Epistolary recommendation to the Hebrews. For
- since the historic and once august hierarchy of Rome some generation ago
- lost its chance of being the religion of the future by doing otherwise,
- and throwing over the little band of neo-Catholics who were making a
- struggle for continuity by applying the principle of evolution to their
- own faith, joining hands with modern science, and outflanking the
- hesitating English instinct towards liturgical reform (a flank march
- which I at the time quite expected to witness, with the gathering of many
- millions of waiting agnostics into its fold); since then, one may ask,
- what other purely English establishment than the Church, of sufficient
- dignity and footing, and with such strength of old association, such
- architectural spell, is left in this country to keep the shreds of
- morality together?
- It may be a forlorn hope, a mere dream, that of an alliance between
- religion, which must be retained unless the world is to perish, and
- complete rationality, which must come, unless also the world is to
- perish, by means of the interfusing effect of poetry—“the breath and
- finer spirit of all knowledge; the impassioned expression of science,” as
- it was defined by an English poet who was quite orthodox in his ideas.
- But if it be true, as Comte argued, that advance is never in a straight
- line, but in a looped orbit, we may, in the aforesaid ominous moving
- backward, be doing it _pour mieux sauter_, drawing back for a spring. I
- repeat that I forlornly hope so, notwithstanding the supercilious regard
- of hope by Schopenhauer, von Hartmann, and other philosophers down to
- Einstein who have my respect. But one dares not prophesy. Physical,
- chronological, and other contingencies keep me in these days from
- critical studies and literary circles
- Where once we held debate, a band
- Of youthful friends, on mind and art
- (if one may quote Tennyson in this century of free verse). Hence I
- cannot know how things are going so well as I used to know them, and the
- aforesaid limitations must quite prevent my knowing hence-forward.
- I have to thank the editors and owners of _The Times_, _Fortnightly_,
- _Mercury_, and other periodicals in which a few of the poems have
- appeared for kindly assenting to their being reclaimed for collected
- publication.
- T. H.
- _February_ 1922.
- CONTENTS
- PAGE
- APOLOGY v
- WEATHERS 1
- THE MAID OF KEINTON MANDEVILLE 3
- SUMMER SCHEMES 5
- EPEISODIA 6
- FAINTHEART IN A RAILWAY TRAIN 8
- AT MOONRISE AND ONWARDS 9
- THE GARDEN SEAT 11
- BARTHÉLÉMON AT VAUXHALL 12
- “I SOMETIMES THINK” 14
- JEZREEL 15
- A JOG-TROT PAIR 17
- “THE CURTAINS NOW ARE DRAWN” 19
- “ACCORDING TO THE MIGHTY WORKING” 21
- “I WAS NOT HE” 22
- THE WEST-OF-WESSEX GIRL 23
- WELCOME HOME 25
- GOING AND STAYING 26
- READ BY MOONLIGHT 27
- AT A HOUSE IN HAMPSTEAD 28
- A WOMAN’S FANCY 30
- HER SONG 33
- A WET AUGUST 35
- THE DISSEMBLERS 36
- TO A LADY PLAYING AND SINGING IN THE MORNING 37
- “A MAN WAS DRAWING NEAR TO ME” 38
- THE STRANGE HOUSE 40
- “AS ’TWERE TO-NIGHT” 42
- THE CONTRETEMPS 43
- A GENTLEMAN’S EPITAPH ON HIMSELF AND A LADY 46
- THE OLD GOWN 48
- A NIGHT IN NOVEMBER 50
- A DUETTIST TO HER PIANOFORTE 51
- “WHERE THREE ROADS JOINED” 53
- “AND THERE WAS A GREAT CALM” 55
- HAUNTING FINGERS 59
- THE WOMAN I MET 63
- “IF IT’S EVER SPRING AGAIN” 67
- THE TWO HOUSES 68
- ON STINSFORD HILL AT MIDNIGHT 72
- THE FALLOW DEER AT THE LONELY HOUSE 74
- THE SELFSAME SONG 75
- THE WANDERER 76
- A WIFE COMES BACK 78
- A YOUNG MAN’S EXHORTATION 81
- AT LULWORTH COVE A CENTURY BACK 83
- A BYGONE OCCASION 85
- TWO SERENADES 86
- THE WEDDING MORNING 89
- END OF THE YEAR 1912 90
- THE CHIMES PLAY “LIFE’S A BUMPER!” 91
- “I WORKED NO WILE TO MEET YOU” 93
- AT THE RAILWAY STATION, UPWAY 95
- SIDE BY SIDE 96
- DREAM OF THE CITY SHOPWOMAN 98
- A MAIDEN’S PLEDGE 100
- THE CHILD AND THE SAGE 101
- MISMET 103
- AN AUTUMN RAIN-SCENE 105
- MEDITATIONS ON A HOLIDAY 107
- AN EXPERIENCE 111
- THE BEAUTY 113
- THE COLLECTOR CLEANS HIS PICTURE 114
- THE WOOD FIRE 117
- SAYING GOOD-BYE 119
- ON THE TUNE CALLED THE OLD-HUNDRED-AND-FOURTH 121
- THE OPPORTUNITY 123
- EVELYN G. OF CHRISTMINSTER 124
- THE RIFT 126
- VOICES FROM THINGS GROWING 127
- ON THE WAY 130
- “SHE DID NOT TURN” 132
- GROWTH IN MAY 133
- THE CHILDREN AND SIR NAMELESS 134
- AT THE ROYAL ACADEMY 136
- HER TEMPLE 138
- A TWO-YEARS’ IDYLL 139
- BY HENSTRIDGE CROSS AT THE YEAR’S END 141
- PENANCE 143
- “I LOOK IN HER FACE” 145
- AFTER THE WAR 146
- “IF YOU HAD KNOWN” 148
- THE CHAPEL-ORGANIST 150
- FETCHING HER 157
- “COULD I BUT WILL” 159
- SHE REVISITS ALONE THE CHURCH OF HER MARRIAGE 161
- AT THE ENTERING OF THE NEW YEAR 163
- THEY WOULD NOT COME 165
- AFTER A ROMANTIC DAY 167
- THE TWO WIVES 168
- “I KNEW A LADY” 170
- A HOUSE WITH A HISTORY 171
- A PROCESSION OF DEAD DAYS 173
- HE FOLLOWS HIMSELF 176
- THE SINGING WOMAN 178
- WITHOUT, NOT WITHIN HER 179
- “O I WON’T LEAD A HOMELY LIFE” 180
- IN THE SMALL HOURS 181
- THE LITTLE OLD TABLE 183
- VAGG HOLLOW 184
- THE DREAM IS—WHICH? 186
- THE COUNTRY WEDDING 187
- FIRST OR LAST 190
- LONELY DAYS 191
- “WHAT DID IT MEAN?” 194
- AT THE DINNER-TABLE 196
- THE MARBLE TABLET 198
- THE MASTER AND THE LEAVES 199
- LAST WORDS TO A DUMB FRIEND 201
- A DRIZZLING EASTER MORNING 204
- ON ONE WHO LIVED AND DIED WHERE HE WAS BORN 205
- THE SECOND NIGHT 207
- SHE WHO SAW NOT 210
- THE OLD WORKMAN 212
- THE SAILOR’S MOTHER 214
- OUTSIDE THE CASEMENT 216
- THE PASSER-BY 218
- “I WAS THE MIDMOST” 220
- A SOUND IN THE NIGHT 221
- ON A DISCOVERED CURL OF HAIR 226
- AN OLD LIKENESS 227
- HER APOTHEOSIS 229
- “SACRED TO THE MEMORY” 230
- TO A WELL-NAMED DWELLING 231
- THE WHIPPER-IN 232
- A MILITARY APPOINTMENT 234
- THE MILESTONE BY THE RABBIT-BURROW 236
- THE LAMENT OF THE LOOKING-GLASS 237
- CROSS-CURRENTS 238
- THE OLD NEIGHBOUR AND THE NEW 240
- THE CHOSEN 241
- THE INSCRIPTION 244
- THE MARBLE-STREETED TOWN 251
- A WOMAN DRIVING 252
- A WOMAN’S TRUST 254
- BEST TIMES 256
- THE CASUAL ACQUAINTANCE 258
- INTRA SEPULCHRUM 260
- THE WHITEWASHED WALL 262
- JUST THE SAME 264
- THE LAST TIME 265
- THE SEVEN TIMES 266
- THE SUN’S LAST LOOK ON THE COUNTRY GIRL 269
- IN A LONDON FLAT 270
- DRAWING DETAILS IN AN OLD CHURCH 272
- RAKE-HELL MUSES 273
- THE COLOUR 277
- MURMURS IN THE GLOOM 279
- EPITAPH 281
- AN ANCIENT TO ANCIENTS 282
- AFTER READING PSALMS XXXIX., XL. 285
- SURVIEW 287
- WEATHERS
- I
- THIS is the weather the cuckoo likes,
- And so do I;
- When showers betumble the chestnut spikes,
- And nestlings fly:
- And the little brown nightingale bills his best,
- And they sit outside at “The Travellers’ Rest,”
- And maids come forth sprig-muslin drest,
- And citizens dream of the south and west,
- And so do I.
- II
- This is the weather the shepherd shuns,
- And so do I;
- When beeches drip in browns and duns,
- And thresh, and ply;
- And hill-hid tides throb, throe on throe,
- And meadow rivulets overflow,
- And drops on gate-bars hang in a row,
- And rooks in families homeward go,
- And so do I.
- THE MAID OF KEINTON MANDEVILLE
- (A TRIBUTE TO SIR H. BISHOP)
- I HEAR that maiden still
- Of Keinton Mandeville
- Singing, in flights that played
- As wind-wafts through us all,
- Till they made our mood a thrall
- To their aery rise and fall,
- “Should he upbraid.”
- Rose-necked, in sky-gray gown,
- From a stage in Stower Town
- Did she sing, and singing smile
- As she blent that dexterous voice
- With the ditty of her choice,
- And banished our annoys
- Thereawhile.
- One with such song had power
- To wing the heaviest hour
- Of him who housed with her.
- Who did I never knew
- When her spoused estate ondrew,
- And her warble flung its woo
- In his ear.
- Ah, she’s a beldame now,
- Time-trenched on cheek and brow,
- Whom I once heard as a maid
- From Keinton Mandeville
- Of matchless scope and skill
- Sing, with smile and swell and trill,
- “Should he upbraid!”
- 1915 or 1916.
- SUMMER SCHEMES
- WHEN friendly summer calls again,
- Calls again
- Her little fifers to these hills,
- We’ll go—we two—to that arched fane
- Of leafage where they prime their bills
- Before they start to flood the plain
- With quavers, minims, shakes, and trills.
- “—We’ll go,” I sing; but who shall say
- What may not chance before that day!
- And we shall see the waters spring,
- Waters spring
- From chinks the scrubby copses crown;
- And we shall trace their oncreeping
- To where the cascade tumbles down
- And sends the bobbing growths aswing,
- And ferns not quite but almost drown.
- “—We shall,” I say; but who may sing
- Of what another moon will bring!
- EPEISODIA
- I
- PAST the hills that peep
- Where the leaze is smiling,
- On and on beguiling
- Crisply-cropping sheep;
- Under boughs of brushwood
- Linking tree and tree
- In a shade of lushwood,
- There caressed we!
- II
- Hemmed by city walls
- That outshut the sunlight,
- In a foggy dun light,
- Where the footstep falls
- With a pit-pat wearisome
- In its cadency
- On the flagstones drearisome
- There pressed we!
- III
- Where in wild-winged crowds
- Blown birds show their whiteness
- Up against the lightness
- Of the clammy clouds;
- By the random river
- Pushing to the sea,
- Under bents that quiver
- There rest we.
- FAINTHEART IN A RAILWAY TRAIN
- AT nine in the morning there passed a church,
- At ten there passed me by the sea,
- At twelve a town of smoke and smirch,
- At two a forest of oak and birch,
- And then, on a platform, she:
- A radiant stranger, who saw not me.
- I queried, “Get out to her do I dare?”
- But I kept my seat in my search for a plea,
- And the wheels moved on. O could it but be
- That I had alighted there!
- AT MOONRISE AND ONWARDS
- I THOUGHT you a fire
- On Heron-Plantation Hill,
- Dealing out mischief the most dire
- To the chattels of men of hire
- There in their vill.
- But by and by
- You turned a yellow-green,
- Like a large glow-worm in the sky;
- And then I could descry
- Your mood and mien.
- How well I know
- Your furtive feminine shape!
- As if reluctantly you show
- You nude of cloud, and but by favour throw
- Aside its drape . . .
- —How many a year
- Have you kept pace with me,
- Wan Woman of the waste up there,
- Behind a hedge, or the bare
- Bough of a tree!
- No novelty are you,
- O Lady of all my time,
- Veering unbid into my view
- Whether I near Death’s mew,
- Or Life’s top cyme!
- THE GARDEN SEAT
- ITS former green is blue and thin,
- And its once firm legs sink in and in;
- Soon it will break down unaware,
- Soon it will break down unaware.
- At night when reddest flowers are black
- Those who once sat thereon come back;
- Quite a row of them sitting there,
- Quite a row of them sitting there.
- With them the seat does not break down,
- Nor winter freeze them, nor floods drown,
- For they are as light as upper air,
- They are as light as upper air!
- BARTHÉLÉMON AT VAUXHALL
- François Hippolite Barthélémon, first-fiddler at Vauxhall Gardens,
- composed what was probably the most popular morning hymn-tune ever
- written. It was formerly sung, full-voiced, every Sunday in most
- churches, to Bishop Ken’s words, but is now seldom heard.
- HE said: “Awake my soul, and with the sun,” . . .
- And paused upon the bridge, his eyes due east,
- Where was emerging like a full-robed priest
- The irradiate globe that vouched the dark as done.
- It lit his face—the weary face of one
- Who in the adjacent gardens charged his string,
- Nightly, with many a tuneful tender thing,
- Till stars were weak, and dancing hours outrun.
- And then were threads of matin music spun
- In trial tones as he pursued his way:
- “This is a morn,” he murmured, “well begun:
- This strain to Ken will count when I am clay!”
- And count it did; till, caught by echoing lyres,
- It spread to galleried naves and mighty quires.
- “I SOMETIMES THINK”
- (FOR F. E. H.)
- I SOMETIMES think as here I sit
- Of things I have done,
- Which seemed in doing not unfit
- To face the sun:
- Yet never a soul has paused a whit
- On such—not one.
- There was that eager strenuous press
- To sow good seed;
- There was that saving from distress
- In the nick of need;
- There were those words in the wilderness:
- Who cared to heed?
- Yet can this be full true, or no?
- For one did care,
- And, spiriting into my house, to, fro,
- Like wind on the stair,
- Cares still, heeds all, and will, even though
- I may despair.
- JEZREEL
- ON ITS SEIZURE BY THE ENGLISH UNDER ALLENBY, SEPTEMBER 1918
- DID they catch as it were in a Vision at shut of the day—
- When their cavalry smote through the ancient Esdraelon Plain,
- And they crossed where the Tishbite stood forth in his enemy’s way—
- His gaunt mournful Shade as he bade the King haste off amain?
- On war-men at this end of time—even on Englishmen’s eyes—
- Who slay with their arms of new might in that long-ago place,
- Flashed he who drove furiously? . . . Ah, did the phantom arise
- Of that queen, of that proud Tyrian woman who painted her face?
- Faintly marked they the words “Throw her down!” rise from Night
- eerily,
- Spectre-spots of the blood of her body on some rotten wall?
- And the thin note of pity that came: “A King’s daughter is she,”
- As they passed where she trodden was once by the chargers’ footfall?
- Could such be the hauntings of men of to-day, at the cease
- Of pursuit, at the dusk-hour, ere slumber their senses could seal?
- Enghosted seers, kings—one on horseback who asked “Is it peace?” . . .
- Yea, strange things and spectral may men have beheld in Jezreel!
- _September_ 24, 1918.
- A JOG-TROT PAIR
- WHO were the twain that trod this track
- So many times together
- Hither and back,
- In spells of certain and uncertain weather?
- Commonplace in conduct they
- Who wandered to and fro here
- Day by day:
- Two that few dwellers troubled themselves to know here.
- The very gravel-path was prim
- That daily they would follow:
- Borders trim:
- Never a wayward sprout, or hump, or hollow.
- Trite usages in tamest style
- Had tended to their plighting.
- “It’s just worth while,
- Perhaps,” they had said. “And saves much sad good-nighting.”
- And petty seemed the happenings
- That ministered to their joyance:
- Simple things,
- Onerous to satiate souls, increased their buoyance.
- Who could those common people be,
- Of days the plainest, barest?
- They were we;
- Yes; happier than the cleverest, smartest, rarest.
- “THE CURTAINS NOW ARE DRAWN”
- (SONG)
- I
- THE curtains now are drawn,
- And the spindrift strikes the glass,
- Blown up the jagged pass
- By the surly salt sou’-west,
- And the sneering glare is gone
- Behind the yonder crest,
- While she sings to me:
- “O the dream that thou art my Love, be it thine,
- And the dream that I am thy Love, be it mine,
- And death may come, but loving is divine.”
- II
- I stand here in the rain,
- With its smite upon her stone,
- And the grasses that have grown
- Over women, children, men,
- And their texts that “Life is vain”;
- But I hear the notes as when
- Once she sang to me:
- “O the dream that thou art my Love, be it thine,
- And the dream that I am thy Love, be it mine,
- And death may come, but loving is divine.”
- 1913.
- “ACCORDING TO THE MIGHTY WORKING”
- I
- WHEN moiling seems at cease
- In the vague void of night-time,
- And heaven’s wide roomage stormless
- Between the dusk and light-time,
- And fear at last is formless,
- We call the allurement Peace.
- II
- Peace, this hid riot, Change,
- This revel of quick-cued mumming,
- This never truly being,
- This evermore becoming,
- This spinner’s wheel onfleeing
- Outside perception’s range.
- 1917.
- “I WAS NOT HE”
- (SONG)
- I WAS not he—the man
- Who used to pilgrim to your gate,
- At whose smart step you grew elate,
- And rosed, as maidens can,
- For a brief span.
- It was not I who sang
- Beside the keys you touched so true
- With note-bent eyes, as if with you
- It counted not whence sprang
- The voice that rang . . .
- Yet though my destiny
- It was to miss your early sweet,
- You still, when turned to you my feet,
- Had sweet enough to be
- A prize for me!
- THE WEST-OF-WESSEX GIRL
- A VERY West-of-Wessex girl,
- As blithe as blithe could be,
- Was once well-known to me,
- And she would laud her native town,
- And hope and hope that we
- Might sometime study up and down
- Its charms in company.
- But never I squired my Wessex girl
- In jaunts to Hoe or street
- When hearts were high in beat,
- Nor saw her in the marbled ways
- Where market-people meet
- That in her bounding early days
- Were friendly with her feet.
- Yet now my West-of-Wessex girl,
- When midnight hammers slow
- From Andrew’s, blow by blow,
- As phantom draws me by the hand
- To the place—Plymouth Hoe—
- Where side by side in life, as planned,
- We never were to go!
- Begun in Plymouth, _March_ 1913.
- WELCOME HOME
- TO my native place
- Bent upon returning,
- Bosom all day burning
- To be where my race
- Well were known, ’twas much with me
- There to dwell in amity.
- Folk had sought their beds,
- But I hailed: to view me
- Under the moon, out to me
- Several pushed their heads,
- And to each I told my name,
- Plans, and that therefrom I came.
- “Did you? . . . Ah, ’tis true
- I once heard, back a long time,
- Here had spent his young time,
- Some such man as you . . .
- Good-night.” The casement closed again,
- And I was left in the frosty lane.
- GOING AND STAYING
- I
- THE moving sun-shapes on the spray,
- The sparkles where the brook was flowing,
- Pink faces, plightings, moonlit May,
- These were the things we wished would stay;
- But they were going.
- II
- Seasons of blankness as of snow,
- The silent bleed of a world decaying,
- The moan of multitudes in woe,
- These were the things we wished would go;
- But they were staying.
- III
- Then we looked closelier at Time,
- And saw his ghostly arms revolving
- To sweep off woeful things with prime,
- Things sinister with things sublime
- Alike dissolving.
- READ BY MOONLIGHT
- I PAUSED to read a letter of hers
- By the moon’s cold shine,
- Eyeing it in the tenderest way,
- And edging it up to catch each ray
- Upon her light-penned line.
- I did not know what years would flow
- Of her life’s span and mine
- Ere I read another letter of hers
- By the moon’s cold shine!
- I chance now on the last of hers,
- By the moon’s cold shine;
- It is the one remaining page
- Out of the many shallow and sage
- Whereto she set her sign.
- Who could foresee there were to be
- Such letters of pain and pine
- Ere I should read this last of hers
- By the moon’s cold shine!
- AT A HOUSE IN HAMPSTEAD
- SOMETIME THE DWELLING OF JOHN KEATS
- O POET, come you haunting here
- Where streets have stolen up all around,
- And never a nightingale pours one
- Full-throated sound?
- Drawn from your drowse by the Seven famed Hills,
- Thought you to find all just the same
- Here shining, as in hours of old,
- If you but came?
- What will you do in your surprise
- At seeing that changes wrought in Rome
- Are wrought yet more on the misty slope
- One time your home?
- Will you wake wind-wafts on these stairs?
- Swing the doors open noisily?
- Show as an umbraged ghost beside
- Your ancient tree?
- Or will you, softening, the while
- You further and yet further look,
- Learn that a laggard few would fain
- Preserve your nook? . . .
- —Where the Piazza steps incline,
- And catch late light at eventide,
- I once stood, in that Rome, and thought,
- “’Twas here he died.”
- I drew to a violet-sprinkled spot,
- Where day and night a pyramid keeps
- Uplifted its white hand, and said,
- “’Tis there he sleeps.”
- Pleasanter now it is to hold
- That here, where sang he, more of him
- Remains than where he, tuneless, cold,
- Passed to the dim.
- _July_ 1920.
- A WOMAN’S FANCY
- “AH Madam; you’ve indeed come back here?
- ’Twas sad—your husband’s so swift death,
- And you away! You shouldn’t have left him:
- It hastened his last breath.”
- “Dame, I am not the lady you think me;
- I know not her, nor know her name;
- I’ve come to lodge here—a friendless woman;
- My health my only aim.”
- She came; she lodged. Wherever she rambled
- They held her as no other than
- The lady named; and told how her husband
- Had died a forsaken man.
- So often did they call her thuswise
- Mistakenly, by that man’s name,
- So much did they declare about him,
- That his past form and fame
- Grew on her, till she pitied his sorrow
- As if she truly had been the cause—
- Yea, his deserter; and came to wonder
- What mould of man he was.
- “Tell me my history!” would exclaim she;
- “_Our_ history,” she said mournfully.
- “But _you_ know, surely, Ma’am?” they would answer,
- Much in perplexity.
- Curious, she crept to his grave one evening,
- And a second time in the dusk of the morrow;
- Then a third time, with crescent emotion
- Like a bereaved wife’s sorrow.
- No gravestone rose by the rounded hillock;
- —“I marvel why this is?” she said.
- —“He had no kindred, Ma’am, but you near.”
- —She set a stone at his head.
- She learnt to dream of him, and told them:
- “In slumber often uprises he,
- And says: ‘I am joyed that, after all, Dear,
- You’ve not deserted me!”
- At length died too this kinless woman,
- As he had died she had grown to crave;
- And at her dying she besought them
- To bury her in his grave.
- Such said, she had paused; until she added:
- “Call me by his name on the stone,
- As I were, first to last, his dearest,
- Not she who left him lone!”
- And this they did. And so it became there
- That, by the strength of a tender whim,
- The stranger was she who bore his name there,
- Not she who wedded him.
- HER SONG
- I SANG that song on Sunday,
- To witch an idle while,
- I sang that song on Monday,
- As fittest to beguile;
- I sang it as the year outwore,
- And the new slid in;
- I thought not what might shape before
- Another would begin.
- I sang that song in summer,
- All unforeknowingly,
- To him as a new-comer
- From regions strange to me:
- I sang it when in afteryears
- The shades stretched out,
- And paths were faint; and flocking fears
- Brought cup-eyed care and doubt.
- Sings he that song on Sundays
- In some dim land afar,
- On Saturdays, or Mondays,
- As when the evening star
- Glimpsed in upon his bending face
- And my hanging hair,
- And time untouched me with a trace
- Of soul-smart or despair?
- A WET AUGUST
- NINE drops of water bead the jessamine,
- And nine-and-ninety smear the stones and tiles:
- —’Twas not so in that August—full-rayed, fine—
- When we lived out-of-doors, sang songs, strode miles.
- Or was there then no noted radiancy
- Of summer? Were dun clouds, a dribbling bough,
- Gilt over by the light I bore in me,
- And was the waste world just the same as now?
- It can have been so: yea, that threatenings
- Of coming down-drip on the sunless gray,
- By the then possibilities in things
- Were wrought more bright than brightest skies to-day.
- 1920.
- THE DISSEMBLERS
- “IT was not you I came to please,
- Only myself,” flipped she;
- “I like this spot of phantasies,
- And thought you far from me.”
- But O, he was the secret spell
- That led her to the lea!
- “It was not she who shaped my ways,
- Or works, or thoughts,” he said.
- “I scarcely marked her living days,
- Or missed her much when dead.”
- But O, his joyance knew its knell
- When daisies hid her head!
- TO A LADY PLAYING AND SINGING IN THE MORNING
- JOYFUL lady, sing!
- And I will lurk here listening,
- Though nought be done, and nought begun,
- And work-hours swift are scurrying.
- Sing, O lady, still!
- Aye, I will wait each note you trill,
- Though duties due that press to do
- This whole day long I unfulfil.
- “—It is an evening tune;
- One not designed to waste the noon,”
- You say. I know: time bids me go—
- For daytide passes too, too soon!
- But let indulgence be,
- This once, to my rash ecstasy:
- When sounds nowhere that carolled air
- My idled morn may comfort me!
- “A MAN WAS DRAWING NEAR TO ME”
- ON that gray night of mournful drone,
- A part from aught to hear, to see,
- I dreamt not that from shires unknown
- In gloom, alone,
- By Halworthy,
- A man was drawing near to me.
- I’d no concern at anything,
- No sense of coming pull-heart play;
- Yet, under the silent outspreading
- Of even’s wing
- Where Otterham lay,
- A man was riding up my way.
- I thought of nobody—not of one,
- But only of trifles—legends, ghosts—
- Though, on the moorland dim and dun
- That travellers shun
- About these coasts,
- The man had passed Tresparret Posts.
- There was no light at all inland,
- Only the seaward pharos-fire,
- Nothing to let me understand
- That hard at hand
- By Hennett Byre
- The man was getting nigh and nigher.
- There was a rumble at the door,
- A draught disturbed the drapery,
- And but a minute passed before,
- With gaze that bore
- My destiny,
- The man revealed himself to me.
- THE STRANGE HOUSE
- (MAX GATE, A.D. 2000)
- “I HEAR the piano playing—
- Just as a ghost might play.”
- “—O, but what are you saying?
- There’s no piano to-day;
- Their old one was sold and broken;
- Years past it went amiss.”
- “—I heard it, or shouldn’t have spoken:
- A strange house, this!
- “I catch some undertone here,
- From some one out of sight.”
- “—Impossible; we are alone here,
- And shall be through the night.”
- “—The parlour-door—what stirred it?”
- “—No one: no soul’s in range.”
- “—But, anyhow, I heard it,
- And it seems strange!
- “Seek my own room I cannot—
- A figure is on the stair!”
- “—What figure? Nay, I scan not
- Any one lingering there.
- A bough outside is waving,
- And that’s its shade by the moon.”
- “—Well, all is strange! I am craving
- Strength to leave soon.”
- “—Ah, maybe you’ve some vision
- Of showings beyond our sphere;
- Some sight, sense, intuition
- Of what once happened here?
- The house is old; they’ve hinted
- It once held two love-thralls,
- And they may have imprinted
- Their dreams on its walls?
- “They were—I think ’twas told me—
- Queer in their works and ways;
- The teller would often hold me
- With weird tales of those days.
- Some folk can not abide here,
- But we—we do not care
- Who loved, laughed, wept, or died here,
- Knew joy, or despair.”
- “AS ’TWERE TO-NIGHT”
- (SONG)
- AS ’twere to-night, in the brief space
- Of a far eventime,
- My spirit rang achime
- At vision of a girl of grace;
- As ’twere to-night, in the brief space
- Of a far eventime.
- As ’twere at noontide of to-morrow
- I airily walked and talked,
- And wondered as I walked
- What it could mean, this soar from sorrow;
- As ’twere at noontide of to-morrow
- I airily walked and talked.
- As ’twere at waning of this week
- Broke a new life on me;
- Trancings of bliss to be
- In some dim dear land soon to seek;
- As ’twere at waning of this week
- Broke a new life on me!
- THE CONTRETEMPS
- A FORWARD rush by the lamp in the gloom,
- And we clasped, and almost kissed;
- But she was not the woman whom
- I had promised to meet in the thawing brume
- On that harbour-bridge; nor was I he of her tryst.
- So loosening from me swift she said:
- “O why, why feign to be
- The one I had meant!—to whom I have sped
- To fly with, being so sorrily wed!”
- —’Twas thus and thus that she upbraided me.
- My assignation had struck upon
- Some others’ like it, I found.
- And her lover rose on the night anon;
- And then her husband entered on
- The lamplit, snowflaked, sloppiness around.
- “Take her and welcome, man!” he cried:
- “I wash my hands of her.
- I’ll find me twice as good a bride!”
- —All this to me, whom he had eyed,
- Plainly, as his wife’s planned deliverer.
- And next the lover: “Little I knew,
- Madam, you had a third!
- Kissing here in my very view!”
- —Husband and lover then withdrew.
- I let them; and I told them not they erred.
- Why not? Well, there faced she and I—
- Two strangers who’d kissed, or near,
- Chancewise. To see stand weeping by
- A woman once embraced, will try
- The tension of a man the most austere.
- So it began; and I was young,
- She pretty, by the lamp,
- As flakes came waltzing down among
- The waves of her clinging hair, that hung
- Heavily on her temples, dark and damp.
- And there alone still stood we two;
- She one cast off for me,
- Or so it seemed: while night ondrew,
- Forcing a parley what should do
- We twain hearts caught in one catastrophe.
- In stranded souls a common strait
- Wakes latencies unknown,
- Whose impulse may precipitate
- A life-long leap. The hour was late,
- And there was the Jersey boat with its funnel agroan.
- “Is wary walking worth much pother?”
- It grunted, as still it stayed.
- “One pairing is as good as another
- Where all is venture! Take each other,
- And scrap the oaths that you have aforetime made.” . . .
- —Of the four involved there walks but one
- On earth at this late day.
- And what of the chapter so begun?
- In that odd complex what was done?
- Well; happiness comes in full to none:
- Let peace lie on lulled lips: I will not say.
- WEYMOUTH.
- A GENTLEMAN’S EPITAPH ON HIMSELF AND A LADY, WHO WERE BURIED TOGETHER
- I DWELT in the shade of a city,
- She far by the sea,
- With folk perhaps good, gracious, witty;
- But never with me.
- Her form on the ballroom’s smooth flooring
- I never once met,
- To guide her with accents adoring
- Through Weippert’s “First Set.” {46}
- I spent my life’s seasons with pale ones
- In Vanity Fair,
- And she enjoyed hers among hale ones
- In salt-smelling air.
- Maybe she had eyes of deep colour,
- Maybe they were blue,
- Maybe as she aged they got duller;
- That never I knew.
- She may have had lips like the coral,
- But I never kissed them,
- Saw pouting, nor curling in quarrel,
- Nor sought for, nor missed them.
- Not a word passed of love all our lifetime,
- Between us, nor thrill;
- We’d never a husband-and-wife time,
- For good or for ill.
- Yet as one dust, through bleak days and vernal,
- Lie I and lies she,
- This never-known lady, eternal
- Companion to me!
- THE OLD GOWN
- (SONG)
- I HAVE seen her in gowns the brightest,
- Of azure, green, and red,
- And in the simplest, whitest,
- Muslined from heel to head;
- I have watched her walking, riding,
- Shade-flecked by a leafy tree,
- Or in fixed thought abiding
- By the foam-fingered sea.
- In woodlands I have known her,
- When boughs were mourning loud,
- In the rain-reek she has shown her
- Wild-haired and watery-browed.
- And once or twice she has cast me
- As she pomped along the street
- Court-clad, ere quite she had passed me,
- A glance from her chariot-seat.
- But in my memoried passion
- For evermore stands she
- In the gown of fading fashion
- She wore that night when we,
- Doomed long to part, assembled
- In the snug small room; yea, when
- She sang with lips that trembled,
- “Shall I see his face again?”
- A NIGHT IN NOVEMBER
- I MARKED when the weather changed,
- And the panes began to quake,
- And the winds rose up and ranged,
- That night, lying half-awake.
- Dead leaves blew into my room,
- And alighted upon my bed,
- And a tree declared to the gloom
- Its sorrow that they were shed.
- One leaf of them touched my hand,
- And I thought that it was you
- There stood as you used to stand,
- And saying at last you knew!
- (?) 1913.
- A DUETTIST TO HER PIANOFORTE
- SONG OF SILENCE
- (E. L. H.—H. C. H.)
- SINCE every sound moves memories,
- How can I play you
- Just as I might if you raised no scene,
- By your ivory rows, of a form between
- My vision and your time-worn sheen,
- As when each day you
- Answered our fingers with ecstasy?
- So it’s hushed, hushed, hushed, you are for me!
- And as I am doomed to counterchord
- Her notes no more
- In those old things I used to know,
- In a fashion, when we practised so,
- “Good-night!—Good-bye!” to your pleated show
- Of silk, now hoar,
- Each nodding hammer, and pedal and key,
- For dead, dead, dead, you are to me!
- I fain would second her, strike to her stroke,
- As when she was by,
- Aye, even from the ancient clamorous “Fall
- Of Paris,” or “Battle of Prague” withal,
- To the “Roving Minstrels,” or “Elfin Call”
- Sung soft as a sigh:
- But upping ghosts press achefully,
- And mute, mute, mute, you are for me!
- Should I fling your polyphones, plaints, and quavers
- Afresh on the air,
- Too quick would the small white shapes be here
- Of the fellow twain of hands so dear;
- And a black-tressed profile, and pale smooth ear;
- —Then how shall I bear
- Such heavily-haunted harmony?
- Nay: hushed, hushed, hushed you are for me!
- “WHERE THREE ROADS JOINED”
- WHERE three roads joined it was green and fair,
- And over a gate was the sun-glazed sea,
- And life laughed sweet when I halted there;
- Yet there I never again would be.
- I am sure those branchways are brooding now,
- With a wistful blankness upon their face,
- While the few mute passengers notice how
- Spectre-beridden is the place;
- Which nightly sighs like a laden soul,
- And grieves that a pair, in bliss for a spell
- Not far from thence, should have let it roll
- Away from them down a plumbless well
- While the phasm of him who fared starts up,
- And of her who was waiting him sobs from near,
- As they haunt there and drink the wormwood cup
- They filled for themselves when their sky was clear.
- Yes, I see those roads—now rutted and bare,
- While over the gate is no sun-glazed sea;
- And though life laughed when I halted there,
- It is where I never again would be.
- “AND THERE WAS A GREAT CALM”
- (ON THE SIGNING OF THE ARMISTICE, Nov. 11, 1918)
- I
- THERE had been years of Passion—scorching, cold,
- And much Despair, and Anger heaving high,
- Care whitely watching, Sorrows manifold,
- Among the young, among the weak and old,
- And the pensive Spirit of Pity whispered, “Why?”
- II
- Men had not paused to answer. Foes distraught
- Pierced the thinned peoples in a brute-like blindness,
- Philosophies that sages long had taught,
- And Selflessness, were as an unknown thought,
- And “Hell!” and “Shell!” were yapped at Lovingkindness.
- III
- The feeble folk at home had grown full-used
- To “dug-outs,” “snipers,” “Huns,” from the war-adept
- In the mornings heard, and at evetides perused;
- To day—dreamt men in millions, when they mused—
- To nightmare-men in millions when they slept.
- IV
- Waking to wish existence timeless, null,
- Sirius they watched above where armies fell;
- He seemed to check his flapping when, in the lull
- Of night a boom came thencewise, like the dull
- Plunge of a stone dropped into some deep well.
- V
- So, when old hopes that earth was bettering slowly
- Were dead and damned, there sounded “War is done!”
- One morrow. Said the bereft, and meek, and lowly,
- “Will men some day be given to grace? yea, wholly,
- And in good sooth, as our dreams used to run?”
- VI
- Breathless they paused. Out there men raised their glance
- To where had stood those poplars lank and lopped,
- As they had raised it through the four years’ dance
- Of Death in the now familiar flats of France;
- And murmured, “Strange, this! How? All firing stopped?”
- VII
- Aye; all was hushed. The about-to-fire fired not,
- The aimed-at moved away in trance-lipped song.
- One checkless regiment slung a clinching shot
- And turned. The Spirit of Irony smirked out, “What?
- Spoil peradventures woven of Rage and Wrong?”
- VIII
- Thenceforth no flying fires inflamed the gray,
- No hurtlings shook the dewdrop from the thorn,
- No moan perplexed the mute bird on the spray;
- Worn horses mused: “We are not whipped to-day”;
- No weft-winged engines blurred the moon’s thin horn.
- IX
- Calm fell. From Heaven distilled a clemency;
- There was peace on earth, and silence in the sky;
- Some could, some could not, shake off misery:
- The Sinister Spirit sneered: “It had to be!”
- And again the Spirit of Pity whispered, “Why?”
- HAUNTING FINGERS
- A PHANTASY IN A MUSEUM OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
- “ARE you awake,
- Comrades, this silent night?
- Well ’twere if all of our glossy gluey make
- Lay in the damp without, and fell to fragments quite!”
- “O viol, my friend,
- I watch, though Phosphor nears,
- And I fain would drowse away to its utter end
- This dumb dark stowage after our loud melodious years!”
- And they felt past handlers clutch them,
- Though none was in the room,
- Old players’ dead fingers touch them,
- Shrunk in the tomb.
- “’Cello, good mate,
- You speak my mind as yours:
- Doomed to this voiceless, crippled, corpselike state,
- Who, dear to famed Amphion, trapped here, long endures?”
- “Once I could thrill
- The populace through and through,
- Wake them to passioned pulsings past their will.” . . .
- (A contra-basso spake so, and the rest sighed anew.)
- And they felt old muscles travel
- Over their tense contours,
- And with long skill unravel
- Cunningest scores.
- “The tender pat
- Of her aery finger-tips
- Upon me daily—I rejoiced thereat!”
- (Thuswise a harpsicord, as from dampered lips.)
- “My keys’ white shine,
- Now sallow, met a hand
- Even whiter. . . . Tones of hers fell forth with mine
- In sowings of sound so sweet no lover could withstand!”
- And its clavier was filmed with fingers
- Like tapering flames—wan, cold—
- Or the nebulous light that lingers
- In charnel mould.
- “Gayer than most
- Was I,” reverbed a drum;
- “The regiments, marchings, throngs, hurrahs! What a host
- I stirred—even when crape mufflings gagged me well-nigh dumb!”
- Trilled an aged viol:
- “Much tune have I set free
- To spur the dance, since my first timid trial
- Where I had birth—far hence, in sun-swept Italy!”
- And he feels apt touches on him
- From those that pressed him then;
- Who seem with their glance to con him,
- Saying, “Not again!”
- “A holy calm,”
- Mourned a shawm’s voice subdued,
- “Steeped my Cecilian rhythms when hymn and psalm
- Poured from devout souls met in Sabbath sanctitude.”
- “I faced the sock
- Nightly,” twanged a sick lyre,
- “Over ranked lights! O charm of life in mock,
- O scenes that fed love, hope, wit, rapture, mirth, desire!”
- Thus they, till each past player
- Stroked thinner and more thin,
- And the morning sky grew grayer
- And day crawled in.
- THE WOMAN I MET
- A STRANGER, I threaded sunken-hearted
- A lamp-lit crowd;
- And anon there passed me a soul departed,
- Who mutely bowed.
- In my far-off youthful years I had met her,
- Full-pulsed; but now, no more life’s debtor,
- Onward she slid
- In a shroud that furs half-hid.
- “Why do you trouble me, dead woman,
- Trouble me;
- You whom I knew when warm and human?
- —How it be
- That you quitted earth and are yet upon it
- Is, to any who ponder on it,
- Past being read!”
- “Still, it is so,” she said.
- “These were my haunts in my olden sprightly
- Hours of breath;
- Here I went tempting frail youth nightly
- To their death;
- But you deemed me chaste—me, a tinselled sinner!
- How thought you one with pureness in her
- Could pace this street
- Eyeing some man to greet?
- “Well; your very simplicity made me love you
- Mid such town dross,
- Till I set not Heaven itself above you,
- Who grew my Cross;
- For you’d only nod, despite how I sighed for you;
- So you tortured me, who fain would have died for you!
- —What I suffered then
- Would have paid for the sins of ten!
- “Thus went the days. I feared you despised me
- To fling me a nod
- Each time, no more: till love chastised me
- As with a rod
- That a fresh bland boy of no assurance
- Should fire me with passion beyond endurance,
- While others all
- I hated, and loathed their call.
- “I said: ‘It is his mother’s spirit
- Hovering around
- To shield him, maybe!’ I used to fear it,
- As still I found
- My beauty left no least impression,
- And remnants of pride withheld confession
- Of my true trade
- By speaking; so I delayed.
- “I said: ‘Perhaps with a costly flower
- He’ll be beguiled.’
- I held it, in passing you one late hour,
- To your face: you smiled,
- Keeping step with the throng; though you did not see there
- A single one that rivalled me there! . . .
- Well: it’s all past.
- I died in the Lock at last.”
- So walked the dead and I together
- The quick among,
- Elbowing our kind of every feather
- Slowly and long;
- Yea, long and slowly. That a phantom should stalk there
- With me seemed nothing strange, and talk there
- That winter night
- By flaming jets of light.
- She showed me Juans who feared their call-time,
- Guessing their lot;
- She showed me her sort that cursed their fall-time,
- And that did not.
- Till suddenly murmured she: “Now, tell me,
- Why asked you never, ere death befell me,
- To have my love,
- Much as I dreamt thereof?”
- I could not answer. And she, well weeting
- All in my heart,
- Said: “God your guardian kept our fleeting
- Forms apart!”
- Sighing and drawing her furs around her
- Over the shroud that tightly bound her,
- With wafts as from clay
- She turned and thinned away.
- LONDON, 1918.
- “IF IT’S EVER SPRING AGAIN”
- (SONG)
- IF it’s ever spring again,
- Spring again,
- I shall go where went I when
- Down the moor-cock splashed, and hen,
- Seeing me not, amid their flounder,
- Standing with my arm around her;
- If it’s ever spring again,
- Spring again,
- I shall go where went I then.
- If it’s ever summer-time,
- Summer-time,
- With the hay crop at the prime,
- And the cuckoos—two—in rhyme,
- As they used to be, or seemed to,
- We shall do as long we’ve dreamed to,
- If it’s ever summer-time,
- Summer-time,
- With the hay, and bees achime.
- THE TWO HOUSES
- IN the heart of night,
- When farers were not near,
- The left house said to the house on the right,
- “I have marked your rise, O smart newcomer here.”
- Said the right, cold-eyed:
- “Newcomer here I am,
- Hence haler than you with your cracked old hide,
- Loose casements, wormy beams, and doors that jam.
- “Modern my wood,
- My hangings fair of hue;
- While my windows open as they should,
- And water-pipes thread all my chambers through.
- “Your gear is gray,
- Your face wears furrows untold.”
- “—Yours might,” mourned the other, “if you held, brother,
- The Presences from aforetime that I hold.
- “You have not known
- Men’s lives, deaths, toils, and teens;
- You are but a heap of stick and stone:
- A new house has no sense of the have-beens.
- “Void as a drum
- You stand: I am packed with these,
- Though, strangely, living dwellers who come
- See not the phantoms all my substance sees!
- “Visible in the morning
- Stand they, when dawn drags in;
- Visible at night; yet hint or warning
- Of these thin elbowers few of the inmates win.
- “Babes new-brought-forth
- Obsess my rooms; straight-stretched
- Lank corpses, ere outborne to earth;
- Yea, throng they as when first from the ’Byss upfetched.
- “Dancers and singers
- Throb in me now as once;
- Rich-noted throats and gossamered fingers
- Of heels; the learned in love-lore and the dunce.
- “Note here within
- The bridegroom and the bride,
- Who smile and greet their friends and kin,
- And down my stairs depart for tracks untried.
- “Where such inbe,
- A dwelling’s character
- Takes theirs, and a vague semblancy
- To them in all its limbs, and light, and atmosphere.
- “Yet the blind folk
- My tenants, who come and go
- In the flesh mid these, with souls unwoke,
- Of such sylph-like surrounders do not know.”
- “—Will the day come,”
- Said the new one, awestruck, faint,
- “When I shall lodge shades dim and dumb—
- And with such spectral guests become acquaint?”
- “—That will it, boy;
- Such shades will people thee,
- Each in his misery, irk, or joy,
- And print on thee their presences as on me.”
- ON STINSFORD HILL AT MIDNIGHT
- I GLIMPSED a woman’s muslined form
- Sing-songing airily
- Against the moon; and still she sang,
- And took no heed of me.
- Another trice, and I beheld
- What first I had not scanned,
- That now and then she tapped and shook
- A timbrel in her hand.
- So late the hour, so white her drape,
- So strange the look it lent
- To that blank hill, I could not guess
- What phantastry it meant.
- Then burst I forth: “Why such from you?
- Are you so happy now?”
- Her voice swam on; nor did she show
- Thought of me anyhow.
- I called again: “Come nearer; much
- That kind of note I need!”
- The song kept softening, loudening on,
- In placid calm unheed.
- “What home is yours now?” then I said;
- “You seem to have no care.”
- But the wild wavering tune went forth
- As if I had not been there.
- “This world is dark, and where you are,”
- I said, “I cannot be!”
- But still the happy one sang on,
- And had no heed of me.
- THE FALLOW DEER AT THE LONELY HOUSE
- ONE without looks in to-night
- Through the curtain-chink
- From the sheet of glistening white;
- One without looks in to-night
- As we sit and think
- By the fender-brink.
- We do not discern those eyes
- Watching in the snow;
- Lit by lamps of rosy dyes
- We do not discern those eyes
- Wondering, aglow,
- Fourfooted, tiptoe.
- THE SELFSAME SONG
- A BIRD bills the selfsame song,
- With never a fault in its flow,
- That we listened to here those long
- Long years ago.
- A pleasing marvel is how
- A strain of such rapturous rote
- Should have gone on thus till now
- Unchanged in a note!
- —But it’s not the selfsame bird.—
- No: perished to dust is he . . .
- As also are those who heard
- That song with me.
- THE WANDERER
- THERE is nobody on the road
- But I,
- And no beseeming abode
- I can try
- For shelter, so abroad
- I must lie.
- The stars feel not far up,
- And to be
- The lights by which I sup
- Glimmeringly,
- Set out in a hollow cup
- Over me.
- They wag as though they were
- Panting for joy
- Where they shine, above all care,
- And annoy,
- And demons of despair—
- Life’s alloy.
- Sometimes outside the fence
- Feet swing past,
- Clock-like, and then go hence,
- Till at last
- There is a silence, dense,
- Deep, and vast.
- A wanderer, witch-drawn
- To and fro,
- To-morrow, at the dawn,
- On I go,
- And where I rest anon
- Do not know!
- Yet it’s meet—this bed of hay
- And roofless plight;
- For there’s a house of clay,
- My own, quite,
- To roof me soon, all day
- And all night.
- A WIFE COMES BACK
- THIS is the story a man told me
- Of his life’s one day of dreamery.
- A woman came into his room
- Between the dawn and the creeping day:
- She was the years-wed wife from whom
- He had parted, and who lived far away,
- As if strangers they.
- He wondered, and as she stood
- She put on youth in her look and air,
- And more was he wonderstruck as he viewed
- Her form and flesh bloom yet more fair
- While he watched her there;
- Till she freshed to the pink and brown
- That were hers on the night when first they met,
- When she was the charm of the idle town
- And he the pick of the club-fire set . . .
- His eyes grew wet,
- And he stretched his arms: “Stay—rest!—”
- He cried. “Abide with me so, my own!”
- But his arms closed in on his hard bare breast;
- She had vanished with all he had looked upon
- Of her beauty: gone.
- He clothed, and drew downstairs,
- But she was not in the house, he found;
- And he passed out under the leafy pairs
- Of the avenue elms, and searched around
- To the park-pale bound.
- He mounted, and rode till night
- To the city to which she had long withdrawn,
- The vision he bore all day in his sight
- Being her young self as pondered on
- In the dim of dawn.
- “—The lady here long ago—
- Is she now here?—young—or such age as she is?”
- “—She is still here.”—“Thank God. Let her know;
- She’ll pardon a comer so late as this
- Whom she’d fain not miss.”
- She received him—an ancient dame,
- Who hemmed, with features frozen and numb,
- “How strange!—I’d almost forgotten your name!—
- A call just now—is troublesome;
- Why did you come?”
- A YOUNG MAN’S EXHORTATION
- CALL off your eyes from care
- By some determined deftness; put forth joys
- Dear as excess without the core that cloys,
- And charm Life’s lourings fair.
- Exalt and crown the hour
- That girdles us, and fill it full with glee,
- Blind glee, excelling aught could ever be
- Were heedfulness in power.
- Send up such touching strains
- That limitless recruits from Fancy’s pack
- Shall rush upon your tongue, and tender back
- All that your soul contains.
- For what do we know best?
- That a fresh love-leaf crumpled soon will dry,
- And that men moment after moment die,
- Of all scope dispossest.
- If I have seen one thing
- It is the passing preciousness of dreams;
- That aspects are within us; and who seems
- Most kingly is the King.
- 1867: WESTBOURNE PARK VILLAS.
- AT LULWORTH COVE A CENTURY BACK
- HAD I but lived a hundred years ago
- I might have gone, as I have gone this year,
- By Warmwell Cross on to a Cove I know,
- And Time have placed his finger on me there:
- “_You see that man_?”—I might have looked, and said,
- “O yes: I see him. One that boat has brought
- Which dropped down Channel round Saint Alban’s Head.
- So commonplace a youth calls not my thought.”
- “_You see that man_?”—“Why yes; I told you; yes:
- Of an idling town-sort; thin; hair brown in hue;
- And as the evening light scants less and less
- He looks up at a star, as many do.”
- “_You see that man_?”—“Nay, leave me!” then I plead,
- “I have fifteen miles to vamp across the lea,
- And it grows dark, and I am weary-kneed:
- I have said the third time; yes, that man I see!
- “Good. That man goes to Rome—to death, despair;
- And no one notes him now but you and I:
- A hundred years, and the world will follow him there,
- And bend with reverence where his ashes lie.”
- _September_ 1920.
- _Note_.—In September 1820 Keats, on his way to Rome, landed one day on
- the Dorset coast, and composed the sonnet, “Bright star! would I were
- steadfast as thou art.” The spot of his landing is judged to have been
- Lulworth Cove.
- A BYGONE OCCASION
- (SONG)
- THAT night, that night,
- That song, that song!
- Will such again be evened quite
- Through lifetimes long?
- No mirth was shown
- To outer seers,
- But mood to match has not been known
- In modern years.
- O eyes that smiled,
- O lips that lured;
- That such would last was one beguiled
- To think ensured!
- That night, that night,
- That song, that song;
- O drink to its recalled delight,
- Though tears may throng!
- TWO SERENADES
- I
- _On Christmas Eve_
- LATE on Christmas Eve, in the street alone,
- Outside a house, on the pavement-stone,
- I sang to her, as we’d sung together
- On former eves ere I felt her tether.—
- Above the door of green by me
- Was she, her casement seen by me;
- But she would not heed
- What I melodied
- In my soul’s sore need—
- She would not heed.
- Cassiopeia overhead,
- And the Seven of the Wain, heard what I said
- As I bent me there, and voiced, and fingered
- Upon the strings. . . . Long, long I lingered:
- Only the curtains hid from her
- One whom caprice had bid from her;
- But she did not come,
- And my heart grew numb
- And dull my strum;
- She did not come.
- II
- _A Year Later_
- I SKIMMED the strings; I sang quite low;
- I hoped she would not come or know
- That the house next door was the one now dittied,
- Not hers, as when I had played unpitied;
- —Next door, where dwelt a heart fresh stirred,
- My new Love, of good will to me,
- Unlike my old Love chill to me,
- Who had not cared for my notes when heard:
- Yet that old Love came
- To the other’s name
- As hers were the claim;
- Yea, the old Love came
- My viol sank mute, my tongue stood still,
- I tried to sing on, but vain my will:
- I prayed she would guess of the later, and leave me;
- She stayed, as though, were she slain by the smart,
- She would bear love’s burn for a newer heart.
- The tense-drawn moment wrought to bereave me
- Of voice, and I turned in a dumb despair
- At her finding I’d come to another there.
- Sick I withdrew
- At love’s grim hue
- Ere my last Love knew;
- Sick I withdrew.
- From an old copy.
- THE WEDDING MORNING
- TABITHA dressed for her wedding:—
- “Tabby, why look so sad?”
- “—O I feel a great gloominess spreading, spreading,
- Instead of supremely glad! . . .
- “I called on Carry last night,
- And he came whilst I was there,
- Not knowing I’d called. So I kept out of sight,
- And I heard what he said to her:
- “‘—Ah, I’d far liefer marry
- _You_, Dear, to-morrow!’ he said,
- ‘But that cannot be.’—O I’d give him to Carry,
- And willingly see them wed,
- “But how can I do it when
- His baby will soon be born?
- After that I hope I may die. And then
- She can have him. I shall not mourn!”
- END OF THE YEAR 1912
- YOU were here at his young beginning,
- You are not here at his agèd end;
- Off he coaxed you from Life’s mad spinning,
- Lest you should see his form extend
- Shivering, sighing,
- Slowly dying,
- And a tear on him expend.
- So it comes that we stand lonely
- In the star-lit avenue,
- Dropping broken lipwords only,
- For we hear no songs from you,
- Such as flew here
- For the new year
- Once, while six bells swung thereto.
- THE CHIMES PLAY “LIFE’S A BUMPER!”
- “AWAKE! I’m off to cities far away,”
- I said; and rose, on peradventures bent.
- The chimes played “Life’s a Bumper!” on that day
- To the measure of my walking as I went:
- Their sweetness frisked and floated on the lea,
- As they played out “Life’s a Bumper!” there to me.
- “Awake!” I said. “I go to take a bride!”
- —The sun arose behind me ruby-red
- As I journeyed townwards from the countryside,
- The chiming bells saluting near ahead.
- Their sweetness swelled in tripping tings of glee
- As they played out “Life’s a Bumper!” there to me.
- “Again arise.” I seek a turfy slope,
- And go forth slowly on an autumn noon,
- And there I lay her who has been my hope,
- And think, “O may I follow hither soon!”
- While on the wind the chimes come cheerily,
- Playing out “Life’s a Bumper!” there to me.
- 1913.
- “I WORKED NO WILE TO MEET YOU”
- (SONG)
- I WORKED no wile to meet you,
- My sight was set elsewhere,
- I sheered about to shun you,
- And lent your life no care.
- I was unprimed to greet you
- At such a date and place,
- Constraint alone had won you
- Vision of my strange face!
- You did not seek to see me
- Then or at all, you said,
- —Meant passing when you neared me,
- But stumblingblocks forbade.
- You even had thought to flee me,
- By other mindings moved;
- No influent star endeared me,
- Unknown, unrecked, unproved!
- What, then, was there to tell us
- The flux of flustering hours
- Of their own tide would bring us
- By no device of ours
- To where the daysprings well us
- Heart-hydromels that cheer,
- Till Time enearth and swing us
- Round with the turning sphere.
- AT THE RAILWAY STATION, UPWAY
- “THERE is not much that I can do,
- For I’ve no money that’s quite my own!”
- Spoke up the pitying child—
- A little boy with a violin
- At the station before the train came in,—
- “But I can play my fiddle to you,
- And a nice one ’tis, and good in tone!”
- The man in the handcuffs smiled;
- The constable looked, and he smiled, too,
- As the fiddle began to twang;
- And the man in the handcuffs suddenly sang
- Uproariously:
- “This life so free
- Is the thing for me!”
- And the constable smiled, and said no word,
- As if unconscious of what he heard;
- And so they went on till the train came in—
- The convict, and boy with the violin.
- SIDE BY SIDE
- SO there sat they,
- The estranged two,
- Thrust in one pew
- By chance that day;
- Placed so, breath-nigh,
- Each comer unwitting
- Who was to be sitting
- In touch close by.
- Thus side by side
- Blindly alighted,
- They seemed united
- As groom and bride,
- Who’d not communed
- For many years—
- Lives from twain spheres
- With hearts distuned.
- Her fringes brushed
- His garment’s hem
- As the harmonies rushed
- Through each of them:
- Her lips could be heard
- In the creed and psalms,
- And their fingers neared
- At the giving of alms.
- And women and men,
- The matins ended,
- By looks commended
- Them, joined again.
- Quickly said she,
- “Don’t undeceive them—
- Better thus leave them:”
- “Quite so,” said he.
- Slight words!—the last
- Between them said,
- Those two, once wed,
- Who had not stood fast.
- Diverse their ways
- From the western door,
- To meet no more
- In their span of days.
- DREAM OF THE CITY SHOPWOMAN
- ’TWERE sweet to have a comrade here,
- Who’d vow to love this garreteer,
- By city people’s snap and sneer
- Tried oft and hard!
- We’d rove a truant cock and hen
- To some snug solitary glen,
- And never be seen to haunt again
- This teeming yard.
- Within a cot of thatch and clay
- We’d list the flitting pipers play,
- Our lives a twine of good and gay
- Enwreathed discreetly;
- Our blithest deeds so neighbouring wise
- That doves should coo in soft surprise,
- “These must belong to Paradise
- Who live so sweetly.”
- Our clock should be the closing flowers,
- Our sprinkle-bath the passing showers,
- Our church the alleyed willow bowers,
- The truth our theme;
- And infant shapes might soon abound:
- Their shining heads would dot us round
- Like mushroom balls on grassy ground . . .
- —But all is dream!
- O God, that creatures framed to feel
- A yearning nature’s strong appeal
- Should writhe on this eternal wheel
- In rayless grime;
- And vainly note, with wan regret,
- Each star of early promise set;
- Till Death relieves, and they forget
- Their one Life’s time!
- WESTBOURNE PARK VILLAS, 1866.
- A MAIDEN’S PLEDGE
- (SONG)
- I DO not wish to win your vow
- To take me soon or late as bride,
- And lift me from the nook where now
- I tarry your farings to my side.
- I am blissful ever to abide
- In this green labyrinth—let all be,
- If but, whatever may betide,
- You do not leave off loving me!
- Your comet-comings I will wait
- With patience time shall not wear through;
- The yellowing years will not abate
- My largened love and truth to you,
- Nor drive me to complaint undue
- Of absence, much as I may pine,
- If never another ’twixt us two
- Shall come, and you stand wholly mine.
- THE CHILD AND THE SAGE
- YOU say, O Sage, when weather-checked,
- “I have been favoured so
- With cloudless skies, I must expect
- This dash of rain or snow.”
- “Since health has been my lot,” you say,
- “So many months of late,
- I must not chafe that one short day
- Of sickness mars my state.”
- You say, “Such bliss has been my share
- From Love’s unbroken smile,
- It is but reason I should bear
- A cross therein awhile.”
- And thus you do not count upon
- Continuance of joy;
- But, when at ease, expect anon
- A burden of annoy.
- But, Sage—this Earth—why not a place
- Where no reprisals reign,
- Where never a spell of pleasantness
- Makes reasonable a pain?
- _December_ 21, 1908.
- MISMET
- I
- HE was leaning by a face,
- He was looking into eyes,
- And he knew a trysting-place,
- And he heard seductive sighs;
- But the face,
- And the eyes,
- And the place,
- And the sighs,
- Were not, alas, the right ones—the ones meet for him—
- Though fine and sweet the features, and the feelings all abrim.
- II
- She was looking at a form,
- She was listening for a tread,
- She could feel a waft of charm
- When a certain name was said;
- But the form,
- And the tread,
- And the charm
- Of name said,
- Were the wrong ones for her, and ever would be so,
- While the heritor of the right it would have saved her soul to know!
- AN AUTUMN RAIN-SCENE
- THERE trudges one to a merry-making
- With a sturdy swing,
- On whom the rain comes down.
- To fetch the saving medicament
- Is another bent,
- On whom the rain comes down.
- One slowly drives his herd to the stall
- Ere ill befall,
- On whom the rain comes down.
- This bears his missives of life and death
- With quickening breath,
- On whom the rain comes down.
- One watches for signals of wreck or war
- From the hill afar,
- On whom the rain comes down.
- No care if he gain a shelter or none,
- Unhired moves one,
- On whom the rain comes down.
- And another knows nought of its chilling fall
- Upon him at all,
- On whom the rain comes down.
- _October_ 1904.
- MEDITATIONS ON A HOLIDAY
- (A NEW THEME TO AN OLD FOLK-JINGLE)
- ’TIS May morning,
- All-adorning,
- No cloud warning
- Of rain to-day.
- Where shall I go to,
- Go to, go to?—
- Can I say No to
- Lyonnesse-way?
- Well—what reason
- Now at this season
- Is there for treason
- To other shrines?
- Tristram is not there,
- Isolt forgot there,
- New eras blot there
- Sought-for signs!
- Stratford-on-Avon—
- Poesy-paven—
- I’ll find a haven
- There, somehow!—
- Nay—I’m but caught of
- Dreams long thought of,
- The Swan knows nought of
- His Avon now!
- What shall it be, then,
- I go to see, then,
- Under the plea, then,
- Of votary?
- I’ll go to Lakeland,
- Lakeland, Lakeland,
- Certainly Lakeland
- Let it be.
- But—why to that place,
- That place, that place,
- Such a hard come-at place
- Need I fare?
- When its bard cheers no more,
- Loves no more, fears no more,
- Sees no more, hears no more
- Anything there!
- Ah, there is Scotland,
- Burns’s Scotland,
- And Waverley’s. To what land
- Better can I hie?—
- Yet—if no whit now
- Feel those of it now—
- Care not a bit now
- For it—why I?
- I’ll seek a town street,
- Aye, a brick-brown street,
- Quite a tumbledown street,
- Drawing no eyes.
- For a Mary dwelt there,
- And a Percy felt there
- Heart of him melt there,
- A Claire likewise.
- Why incline to _that_ city,
- Such a city, _that_ city,
- Now a mud-bespat city!—
- Care the lovers who
- Now live and walk there,
- Sit there and talk there,
- Buy there, or hawk there,
- Or wed, or woo?
- Laughters in a volley
- Greet so fond a folly
- As nursing melancholy
- In this and that spot,
- Which, with most endeavour,
- Those can visit never,
- But for ever and ever
- Will now know not!
- If, on lawns Elysian,
- With a broadened vision
- And a faint derision
- Conscious be they,
- How they might reprove me
- That these fancies move me,
- Think they ill behoove me,
- Smile, and say:
- “What!—our hoar old houses,
- Where the past dead-drowses,
- Nor a child nor spouse is
- Of our name at all?
- Such abodes to care for,
- Inquire about and bear for,
- And suffer wear and tear for—
- How weak of you and small!”
- _May_ 1921.
- AN EXPERIENCE
- WIT, weight, or wealth there was not
- In anything that was said,
- In anything that was done;
- All was of scope to cause not
- A triumph, dazzle, or dread
- To even the subtlest one,
- My friend,
- To even the subtlest one.
- But there was a new afflation—
- An aura zephyring round,
- That care infected not:
- It came as a salutation,
- And, in my sweet astound,
- I scarcely witted what
- Might pend,
- I scarcely witted what.
- The hills in samewise to me
- Spoke, as they grayly gazed,
- —First hills to speak so yet!
- The thin-edged breezes blew me
- What I, though cobwebbed, crazed,
- Was never to forget,
- My friend,
- Was never to forget!
- THE BEAUTY
- O DO not praise my beauty more,
- In such word-wild degree,
- And say I am one all eyes adore;
- For these things harass me!
- But do for ever softly say:
- “From now unto the end
- Come weal, come wanzing, come what may,
- Dear, I will be your friend.”
- I hate my beauty in the glass:
- My beauty is not I:
- I wear it: none cares whether, alas,
- Its wearer live or die!
- The inner I O care for, then,
- Yea, me and what I am,
- And shall be at the gray hour when
- My cheek begins to clam.
- _Note_.—“The Regent Street beauty, Miss Verrey, the Swiss confectioner’s
- daughter, whose personal attractions have been so mischievously
- exaggerated, died of fever on Monday evening, brought on by the annoyance
- she had been for some time subject to.”—London paper, October 1828.
- THE COLLECTOR CLEANS HIS PICTURE
- Fili hominis, ecce ego tollo a te desiderabile oculorum tuorom in
- plaga.—EZECH. xxiv. 16.
- HOW I remember cleaning that strange picture!
- I had been deep in duty for my sick neighbour—
- His besides my own—over several Sundays,
- Often, too, in the week; so with parish pressures,
- Baptisms, burials, doctorings, conjugal counsel—
- All the whatnots asked of a rural parson—
- Faith, I was well-nigh broken, should have been fully
- Saving for one small secret relaxation,
- One that in mounting manhood had grown my hobby.
- This was to delve at whiles for easel-lumber,
- Stowed in the backmost slums of a soon-reached city,
- Merely on chance to uncloak some worthy canvas,
- Panel, or plaque, blacked blind by uncouth adventure,
- Yet under all concealing a precious art-feat.
- Such I had found not yet. My latest capture
- Came from the rooms of a trader in ancient house-gear
- Who had no scent of beauty or soul for brushcraft.
- Only a tittle cost it—murked with grime-films,
- Gatherings of slow years, thick-varnished over,
- Never a feature manifest of man’s painting.
- So, one Saturday, time ticking hard on midnight
- Ere an hour subserved, I set me upon it.
- Long with coiled-up sleeves I cleaned and yet cleaned,
- Till a first fresh spot, a high light, looked forth,
- Then another, like fair flesh, and another;
- Then a curve, a nostril, and next a finger,
- Tapering, shapely, significantly pointing slantwise.
- “Flemish?” I said. “Nay, Spanish . . . But, nay, Italian!”
- —Then meseemed it the guise of the ranker Venus,
- Named of some Astarte, of some Cotytto.
- Down I knelt before it and kissed the panel,
- Drunk with the lure of love’s inhibited dreamings.
- Till the dawn I rubbed, when there gazed up at me
- A hag, that had slowly emerged from under my hands there,
- Pointing the slanted finger towards a bosom
- Eaten away of a rot from the lusts of a lifetime . . .
- —I could have ended myself in heart-shook horror.
- Stunned I sat till roused by a clear-voiced bell-chime,
- Fresh and sweet as the dew-fleece under my luthern.
- It was the matin service calling to me
- From the adjacent steeple.
- THE WOOD FIRE
- (A FRAGMENT)
- “THIS is a brightsome blaze you’ve lit good friend, to-night!”
- “—Aye, it has been the bleakest spring I have felt for years,
- And nought compares with cloven logs to keep alight:
- I buy them bargain-cheap of the executioners,
- As I dwell near; and they wanted the crosses out of sight
- By Passover, not to affront the eyes of visitors.
- “Yes, they’re from the crucifixions last week-ending
- At Kranion. We can sometimes use the poles again,
- But they get split by the nails, and ’tis quicker work than mending
- To knock together new; though the uprights now and then
- Serve twice when they’re let stand. But if a feast’s impending,
- As lately, you’ve to tidy up for the corners’ ken.
- “Though only three were impaled, you may know it didn’t pass off
- So quietly as was wont? That Galilee carpenter’s son
- Who boasted he was king, incensed the rabble to scoff:
- I heard the noise from my garden. This piece is the one he was on . . .
- Yes, it blazes up well if lit with a few dry chips and shroff;
- And it’s worthless for much else, what with cuts and stains thereon.”
- SAYING GOOD-BYE
- (SONG)
- WE are always saying
- “Good-bye, good-bye!”
- In work, in playing,
- In gloom, in gaying:
- At many a stage
- Of pilgrimage
- From youth to age
- We say, “Good-bye,
- Good-bye!”
- We are undiscerning
- Which go to sigh,
- Which will be yearning
- For soon returning;
- And which no more
- Will dark our door,
- Or tread our shore,
- But go to die,
- To die.
- Some come from roaming
- With joy again;
- Some, who come homing
- By stealth at gloaming,
- Had better have stopped
- Till death, and dropped
- By strange hands propped,
- Than come so fain,
- So fain.
- So, with this saying,
- “Good-bye, good-bye,”
- We speed their waying
- Without betraying
- Our grief, our fear
- No more to hear
- From them, close, clear,
- Again: “Good-bye,
- Good-bye!”
- ON THE TUNE CALLED THE OLD-HUNDRED-AND-FOURTH
- WE never sang together
- Ravenscroft’s terse old tune
- On Sundays or on weekdays,
- In sharp or summer weather,
- At night-time or at noon.
- Why did we never sing it,
- Why never so incline
- On Sundays or on weekdays,
- Even when soft wafts would wing it
- From your far floor to mine?
- Shall we that tune, then, never
- Stand voicing side by side
- On Sundays or on weekdays? . . .
- Or shall we, when for ever
- In Sheol we abide,
- Sing it in desolation,
- As we might long have done
- On Sundays or on weekdays
- With love and exultation
- Before our sands had run?
- THE OPPORTUNITY
- (FOR H. P.)
- FORTY springs back, I recall,
- We met at this phase of the Maytime:
- We might have clung close through all,
- But we parted when died that daytime.
- We parted with smallest regret;
- Perhaps should have cared but slightly,
- Just then, if we never had met:
- Strange, strange that we lived so lightly!
- Had we mused a little space
- At that critical date in the Maytime,
- One life had been ours, one place,
- Perhaps, till our long cold daytime.
- —This is a bitter thing
- For thee, O man: what ails it?
- The tide of chance may bring
- Its offer; but nought avails it!
- EVELYN G. OF CHRISTMINSTER
- I CAN see the towers
- In mind quite clear
- Not many hours’
- Faring from here;
- But how up and go,
- And briskly bear
- Thither, and know
- That are not there?
- Though the birds sing small,
- And apple and pear
- On your trees by the wall
- Are ripe and rare,
- Though none excel them,
- I have no care
- To taste them or smell them
- And you not there.
- Though the College stones
- Are smit with the sun,
- And the graduates and Dons
- Who held you as one
- Of brightest brow
- Still think as they did,
- Why haunt with them now
- Your candle is hid?
- Towards the river
- A pealing swells:
- They cost me a quiver—
- Those prayerful bells!
- How go to God,
- Who can reprove
- With so heavy a rod
- As your swift remove!
- The chorded keys
- Wait all in a row,
- And the bellows wheeze
- As long ago.
- And the psalter lingers,
- And organist’s chair;
- But where are your fingers
- That once wagged there?
- Shall I then seek
- That desert place
- This or next week,
- And those tracks trace
- That fill me with cark
- And cloy; nowhere
- Being movement or mark
- Of you now there!
- THE RIFT
- (SONG: _Minor Mode_)
- ’TWAS just at gnat and cobweb-time,
- When yellow begins to show in the leaf,
- That your old gamut changed its chime
- From those true tones—of span so brief!—
- That met my beats of joy, of grief,
- As rhyme meets rhyme.
- So sank I from my high sublime!
- We faced but chancewise after that,
- And never I knew or guessed my crime. . .
- Yes; ’twas the date—or nigh thereat—
- Of the yellowing leaf; at moth and gnat
- And cobweb-time.
- VOICES FROM THINGS GROWING IN A CHURCHYARD
- THESE flowers are I, poor Fanny Hurd,
- Sir or Madam,
- A little girl here sepultured.
- Once I flit-fluttered like a bird
- Above the grass, as now I wave
- In daisy shapes above my grave,
- All day cheerily,
- All night eerily!
- —I am one Bachelor Bowring, “Gent,”
- Sir or Madam;
- In shingled oak my bones were pent;
- Hence more than a hundred years I spent
- In my feat of change from a coffin-thrall
- To a dancer in green as leaves on a wall.
- All day cheerily,
- All night eerily!
- —I, these berries of juice and gloss,
- Sir or Madam,
- Am clean forgotten as Thomas Voss;
- Thin-urned, I have burrowed away from the moss
- That covers my sod, and have entered this yew,
- And turned to clusters ruddy of view,
- All day cheerily,
- All night eerily!
- —The Lady Gertrude, proud, high-bred,
- Sir or Madam,
- Am I—this laurel that shades your head;
- Into its veins I have stilly sped,
- And made them of me; and my leaves now shine,
- As did my satins superfine,
- All day cheerily,
- All night eerily!
- —I, who as innocent withwind climb,
- Sir or Madam.
- Am one Eve Greensleeves, in olden time
- Kissed by men from many a clime,
- Beneath sun, stars, in blaze, in breeze,
- As now by glowworms and by bees,
- All day cheerily,
- All night eerily! {128}
- —I’m old Squire Audeley Grey, who grew,
- Sir or Madam,
- Aweary of life, and in scorn withdrew;
- Till anon I clambered up anew
- As ivy-green, when my ache was stayed,
- And in that attire I have longtime gayed
- All day cheerily,
- All night eerily!
- —And so they breathe, these masks, to each
- Sir or Madam
- Who lingers there, and their lively speech
- Affords an interpreter much to teach,
- As their murmurous accents seem to come
- Thence hitheraround in a radiant hum,
- All day cheerily,
- All night eerily!
- ON THE WAY
- THE trees fret fitfully and twist,
- Shutters rattle and carpets heave,
- Slime is the dust of yestereve,
- And in the streaming mist
- Fishes might seem to fin a passage if they list.
- But to his feet,
- Drawing nigh and nigher
- A hidden seat,
- The fog is sweet
- And the wind a lyre.
- A vacant sameness grays the sky,
- A moisture gathers on each knop
- Of the bramble, rounding to a drop,
- That greets the goer-by
- With the cold listless lustre of a dead man’s eye.
- But to her sight,
- Drawing nigh and nigher
- Its deep delight,
- The fog is bright
- And the wind a lyre.
- “SHE DID NOT TURN”
- SHE did not turn,
- But passed foot-faint with averted head
- In her gown of green, by the bobbing fern,
- Though I leaned over the gate that led
- From where we waited with table spread;
- But she did not turn:
- Why was she near there if love had fled?
- She did not turn,
- Though the gate was whence I had often sped
- In the mists of morning to meet her, and learn
- Her heart, when its moving moods I read
- As a book—she mine, as she sometimes said;
- But she did not turn,
- And passed foot-faint with averted head.
- GROWTH IN MAY
- I ENTER a daisy-and-buttercup land,
- And thence thread a jungle of grass:
- Hurdles and stiles scarce visible stand
- Above the lush stems as I pass.
- Hedges peer over, and try to be seen,
- And seem to reveal a dim sense
- That amid such ambitious and elbow-high green
- They make a mean show as a fence.
- Elsewhere the mead is possessed of the neats,
- That range not greatly above
- The rich rank thicket which brushes their teats,
- And _her_ gown, as she waits for her Love.
- NEAR CHARD.
- THE CHILDREN AND SIR NAMELESS
- Sir Nameless, once of Athelhall, declared:
- “These wretched children romping in my park
- Trample the herbage till the soil is bared,
- And yap and yell from early morn till dark!
- Go keep them harnessed to their set routines:
- Thank God I’ve none to hasten my decay;
- For green remembrance there are better means
- Than offspring, who but wish their sires away.”
- Sir Nameless of that mansion said anon:
- “To be perpetuate for my mightiness
- Sculpture must image me when I am gone.”
- —He forthwith summoned carvers there express
- To shape a figure stretching seven-odd feet
- (For he was tall) in alabaster stone,
- With shield, and crest, and casque, and word complete:
- When done a statelier work was never known.
- Three hundred years hied; Church-restorers came,
- And, no one of his lineage being traced,
- They thought an effigy so large in frame
- Best fitted for the floor. There it was placed,
- Under the seats for schoolchildren. And they
- Kicked out his name, and hobnailed off his nose;
- And, as they yawn through sermon-time, they say,
- “Who was this old stone man beneath our toes?”
- AT THE ROYAL ACADEMY
- THESE summer landscapes—clump, and copse, and croft—
- Woodland and meadowland—here hung aloft,
- Gay with limp grass and leafery new and soft,
- Seem caught from the immediate season’s yield
- I saw last noonday shining over the field,
- By rapid snatch, while still are uncongealed
- The saps that in their live originals climb;
- Yester’s quick greenage here set forth in mime
- Just as it stands, now, at our breathing-time.
- But these young foils so fresh upon each tree,
- Soft verdures spread in sprouting novelty,
- Are not this summer’s, though they feign to be.
- Last year their May to Michaelmas term was run,
- Last autumn browned and buried every one,
- And no more know they sight of any sun.
- HER TEMPLE
- DEAR, think not that they will forget you:
- —If craftsmanly art should be mine
- I will build up a temple, and set you
- Therein as its shrine.
- They may say: “Why a woman such honour?”
- —Be told, “O, so sweet was her fame,
- That a man heaped this splendour upon her;
- None now knows his name.”
- A TWO-YEARS’ IDYLL
- YES; such it was;
- Just those two seasons unsought,
- Sweeping like summertide wind on our ways;
- Moving, as straws,
- Hearts quick as ours in those days;
- Going like wind, too, and rated as nought
- Save as the prelude to plays
- Soon to come—larger, life-fraught:
- Yes; such it was.
- “Nought” it was called,
- Even by ourselves—that which springs
- Out of the years for all flesh, first or last,
- Commonplace, scrawled
- Dully on days that go past.
- Yet, all the while, it upbore us like wings
- Even in hours overcast:
- Aye, though this best thing of things,
- “Nought” it was called!
- What seems it now?
- Lost: such beginning was all;
- Nothing came after: romance straight forsook
- Quickly somehow
- Life when we sped from our nook,
- Primed for new scenes with designs smart and tall . . .
- —A preface without any book,
- A trumpet uplipped, but no call;
- That seems it now.
- BY HENSTRIDGE CROSS AT THE YEAR’S END
- (From this centuries-old cross-road the highway leads east to London,
- north to Bristol and Bath, west to Exeter and the Land’s End, and south
- to the Channel coast.)
- WHY go the east road now? . . .
- That way a youth went on a morrow
- After mirth, and he brought back sorrow
- Painted upon his brow
- Why go the east road now?
- Why go the north road now?
- Torn, leaf-strewn, as if scoured by foemen,
- Once edging fiefs of my forefolk yeomen,
- Fallows fat to the plough:
- Why go the north road now?
- Why go the west road now?
- Thence to us came she, bosom-burning,
- Welcome with joyousness returning . . .
- —She sleeps under the bough:
- Why go the west road now?
- Why go the south road now?
- That way marched they some are forgetting,
- Stark to the moon left, past regretting
- Loves who have falsed their vow . . .
- Why go the south road now?
- Why go any road now?
- White stands the handpost for brisk on-bearers,
- “Halt!” is the word for wan-cheeked farers
- Musing on Whither, and How . . .
- Why go any road now?
- “Yea: we want new feet now”
- Answer the stones. “Want chit-chat, laughter:
- Plenty of such to go hereafter
- By our tracks, we trow!
- We are for new feet now.”
- _During the War_.
- PENANCE
- “WHY do you sit, O pale thin man,
- At the end of the room
- By that harpsichord, built on the quaint old plan?
- —It is cold as a tomb,
- And there’s not a spark within the grate;
- And the jingling wires
- Are as vain desires
- That have lagged too late.”
- “Why do I? Alas, far times ago
- A woman lyred here
- In the evenfall; one who fain did so
- From year to year;
- And, in loneliness bending wistfully,
- Would wake each note
- In sick sad rote,
- None to listen or see!
- “I would not join. I would not stay,
- But drew away,
- Though the winter fire beamed brightly . . . Aye!
- I do to-day
- What I would not then; and the chill old keys,
- Like a skull’s brown teeth
- Loose in their sheath,
- Freeze my touch; yes, freeze.”
- “I LOOK IN HER FACE”
- (SONG: _Minor_)
- I LOOK in her face and say,
- “Sing as you used to sing
- About Love’s blossoming”;
- But she hints not Yea or Nay.
- “Sing, then, that Love’s a pain,
- If, Dear, you think it so,
- Whether it be or no;”
- But dumb her lips remain.
- I go to a far-off room,
- A faint song ghosts my ear;
- _Which_ song I cannot hear,
- But it seems to come from a tomb.
- AFTER THE WAR
- LAST Post sounded
- Across the mead
- To where he loitered
- With absent heed.
- Five years before
- In the evening there
- Had flown that call
- To him and his Dear.
- “You’ll never come back;
- Good-bye!” she had said;
- “Here I’ll be living,
- And my Love dead!”
- Those closing minims
- Had been as shafts darting
- Through him and her pressed
- In that last parting;
- They thrilled him not now,
- In the selfsame place
- With the selfsame sun
- On his war-seamed face.
- “Lurks a god’s laughter
- In this?” he said,
- “That I am the living
- And she the dead!”
- “IF YOU HAD KNOWN”
- IF you had known
- When listening with her to the far-down moan
- Of the white-selvaged and empurpled sea,
- And rain came on that did not hinder talk,
- Or damp your flashing facile gaiety
- In turning home, despite the slow wet walk
- By crooked ways, and over stiles of stone;
- If you had known
- You would lay roses,
- Fifty years thence, on her monument, that discloses
- Its graying shape upon the luxuriant green;
- Fifty years thence to an hour, by chance led there,
- What might have moved you?—yea, had you foreseen
- That on the tomb of the selfsame one, gone where
- The dawn of every day is as the close is,
- You would lay roses!
- 1920.
- THE CHAPEL-ORGANIST
- (A.D. 185–)
- I’VE been thinking it through, as I play here to-night, to play never
- again,
- By the light of that lowering sun peering in at the window-pane,
- And over the back-street roofs, throwing shades from the boys of the
- chore
- In the gallery, right upon me, sitting up to these keys once more . . .
- How I used to hear tongues ask, as I sat here when I was new:
- “Who is she playing the organ? She touches it mightily true!”
- “She travels from Havenpool Town,” the deacon would softly speak,
- “The stipend can hardly cover her fare hither twice in the week.”
- (It fell far short of doing, indeed; but I never told,
- For I have craved minstrelsy more than lovers, or beauty, or gold.)
- ’Twas so he answered at first, but the story grew different later:
- “It cannot go on much longer, from what we hear of her now!”
- At the meaning wheeze in the words the inquirer would shift his place
- Till he could see round the curtain that screened me from people
- below.
- “A handsome girl,” he would murmur, upstaring, (and so I am).
- “But—too much sex in her build; fine eyes, but eyelids too heavy;
- A bosom too full for her age; in her lips too voluptuous a look.”
- (It may be. But who put it there? Assuredly it was not I.)
- I went on playing and singing when this I had heard, and more,
- Though tears half-blinded me; yes, I remained going on and on,
- Just as I used me to chord and to sing at the selfsame time! . . .
- For it’s a contralto—my voice is; they’ll hear it again here to-night
- In the psalmody notes that I love more than world or than flesh or
- than life.
- Well, the deacon, in fact, that day had learnt new tidings about me;
- They troubled his mind not a little, for he was a worthy man.
- (He trades as a chemist in High Street, and during the week he had
- sought
- His fellow-deacon, who throve as a book-binder over the way.)
- “These are strange rumours,” he said. “We must guard the good name of
- the chapel.
- If, sooth, she’s of evil report, what else can we do but dismiss her?”
- “—But get such another to play here we cannot for double the price!”
- It settled the point for the time, and I triumphed awhile in their
- strait,
- And my much-beloved grand semibreves went living on under my fingers.
- At length in the congregation more head-shakes and murmurs were rife,
- And my dismissal was ruled, though I was not warned of it then.
- But a day came when they declared it. The news entered me as a sword;
- I was broken; so pallid of face that they thought I should faint, they
- said.
- I rallied. “O, rather than go, I will play you for nothing!” said I.
- ’Twas in much desperation I spoke it, for bring me to forfeit I could
- not
- Those melodies chorded so richly for which I had laboured and lived.
- They paused. And for nothing I played at the chapel through Sundays
- anon,
- Upheld by that art which I loved more than blandishments lavished of
- men.
- But it fell that murmurs again from the flock broke the pastor’s
- peace.
- Some member had seen me at Havenpool, comrading close a sea-captain.
- (Yes; I was thereto constrained, lacking means for the fare to and
- fro.)
- Yet God knows, if aught He knows ever, I loved the Old-Hundredth,
- Saint Stephen’s,
- Mount Zion, New Sabbath, Miles-Lane, Holy Rest, and Arabia, and Eaton,
- Above all embraces of body by wooers who sought me and won! . . .
- Next week ’twas declared I was seen coming home with a lover at dawn.
- The deacons insisted then, strong; and forgiveness I did not implore.
- I saw all was lost for me, quite, but I made a last bid in my throbs.
- High love had been beaten by lust; and the senses had conquered the
- soul,
- But the soul should die game, if I knew it! I turned to my masters
- and said:
- “I yield, Gentlemen, without parlance. But—let me just hymn you
- _once_ more!
- It’s a little thing, Sirs, that I ask; and a passion is music with
- me!”
- They saw that consent would cost nothing, and show as good grace, as
- knew I,
- Though tremble I did, and feel sick, as I paused thereat, dumb for
- their words.
- They gloomily nodded assent, saying, “Yes, if you care to. Once more,
- And only once more, understand.” To that with a bend I agreed.
- —“You’ve a fixed and a far-reaching look,” spoke one who had eyed me
- awhile.
- “I’ve a fixed and a far-reaching plan, and my look only showed it,”
- said I.
- This evening of Sunday is come—the last of my functioning here.
- “She plays as if she were possessed!” they exclaim, glancing upward
- and round.
- “Such harmonies I never dreamt the old instrument capable of!”
- Meantime the sun lowers and goes; shades deepen; the lights are turned
- up,
- And the people voice out the last singing: tune Tallis: the Evening
- Hymn.
- (I wonder Dissenters sing Ken: it shows them more liberal in spirit
- At this little chapel down here than at certain new others I know.)
- I sing as I play. Murmurs some one: “No woman’s throat richer than
- hers!”
- “True: in these parts, at least,” ponder I. “But, my man, you will
- hear it no more.”
- And I sing with them onward: “The grave dread as little do I as my
- bed.”
- I lift up my feet from the pedals; and then, while my eyes are still
- wet
- From the symphonies born of my fingers, I do that whereon I am set,
- And draw from my “full round bosom,” (their words; how can _I_ help
- its heave?)
- A bottle blue-coloured and fluted—a vinaigrette, they may conceive—
- And before the choir measures my meaning, reads aught in my moves to
- and fro,
- I drink from the phial at a draught, and they think it a pick-me-up;
- so.
- Then I gather my books as to leave, bend over the keys as to pray.
- When they come to me motionless, stooping, quick death will have
- whisked me away.
- “Sure, nobody meant her to poison herself in her haste, after all!”
- The deacons will say as they carry me down and the night shadows fall,
- “Though the charges were true,” they will add. “It’s a case red as
- scarlet withal!”
- I have never once minced it. Lived chaste I have not. Heaven knows
- it above! . . .
- But past all the heavings of passion—it’s music has been my life-love! . . .
- That tune did go well—this last playing! . . . I reckon they’ll bury
- me here . . .
- Not a soul from the seaport my birthplace—will come, or bestow me . . .
- a tear.
- FETCHING HER
- AN hour before the dawn,
- My friend,
- You lit your waiting bedside-lamp,
- Your breakfast-fire anon,
- And outing into the dark and damp
- You saddled, and set on.
- Thuswise, before the day,
- My friend,
- You sought her on her surfy shore,
- To fetch her thence away
- Unto your own new-builded door
- For a staunch lifelong stay.
- You said: “It seems to be,
- My friend,
- That I were bringing to my place
- The pure brine breeze, the sea,
- The mews—all her old sky and space,
- In bringing her with me!”
- —But time is prompt to expugn,
- My friend,
- Such magic-minted conjurings:
- The brought breeze fainted soon,
- And then the sense of seamews’ wings,
- And the shore’s sibilant tune.
- So, it had been more due,
- My friend,
- Perhaps, had you not pulled this flower
- From the craggy nook it knew,
- And set it in an alien bower;
- But left it where it grew!
- “COULD I BUT WILL”
- (SONG: _Verses_ 1, 3, _key major_; _verse_ 2, _key minor_)
- COULD I but will,
- Will to my bent,
- I’d have afar ones near me still,
- And music of rare ravishment,
- In strains that move the toes and heels!
- And when the sweethearts sat for rest
- The unbetrothed should foot with zest
- Ecstatic reels.
- Could I be head,
- Head-god, “Come, now,
- Dear girl,” I’d say, “whose flame is fled,
- Who liest with linen-banded brow,
- Stirred but by shakes from Earth’s deep core—”
- I’d say to her: “Unshroud and meet
- That Love who kissed and called thee Sweet!—
- Yea, come once more!”
- Even half-god power
- In spinning dooms
- Had I, this frozen scene should flower,
- And sand-swept plains and Arctic glooms
- Should green them gay with waving leaves,
- Mid which old friends and I would walk
- With weightless feet and magic talk
- Uncounted eves.
- SHE REVISITS ALONE THE CHURCH OF HER MARRIAGE
- I HAVE come to the church and chancel,
- Where all’s the same!
- —Brighter and larger in my dreams
- Truly it shaped than now, meseems,
- Is its substantial frame.
- But, anyhow, I made my vow,
- Whether for praise or blame,
- Here in this church and chancel
- Where all’s the same.
- Where touched the check-floored chancel
- My knees and his?
- The step looks shyly at the sun,
- And says, “’Twas here the thing was done,
- For bale or else for bliss!”
- Of all those there I least was ware
- Would it be that or this
- When touched the check-floored chancel
- My knees and his!
- Here in this fateful chancel
- Where all’s the same,
- I thought the culminant crest of life
- Was reached when I went forth the wife
- I was not when I came.
- Each commonplace one of my race,
- Some say, has such an aim—
- To go from a fateful chancel
- As not the same.
- Here, through this hoary chancel
- Where all’s the same,
- A thrill, a gaiety even, ranged
- That morning when it seemed I changed
- My nature with my name.
- Though now not fair, though gray my hair,
- He loved me, past proclaim,
- Here in this hoary chancel,
- Where all’s the same.
- AT THE ENTERING OF THE NEW YEAR
- I
- (OLD STYLE)
- OUR songs went up and out the chimney,
- And roused the home-gone husbandmen;
- Our allemands, our heys, poussettings,
- Our hands-across and back again,
- Sent rhythmic throbbings through the casements
- On to the white highway,
- Where nighted farers paused and muttered,
- “Keep it up well, do they!”
- The contrabasso’s measured booming
- Sped at each bar to the parish bounds,
- To shepherds at their midnight lambings,
- To stealthy poachers on their rounds;
- And everybody caught full duly
- The notes of our delight,
- As Time unrobed the Youth of Promise
- Hailed by our sanguine sight.
- II
- (NEW STYLE)
- WE stand in the dusk of a pine-tree limb,
- As if to give ear to the muffled peal,
- Brought or withheld at the breeze’s whim;
- But our truest heed is to words that steal
- From the mantled ghost that looms in the gray,
- And seems, so far as our sense can see,
- To feature bereaved Humanity,
- As it sighs to the imminent year its say:—
- “O stay without, O stay without,
- Calm comely Youth, untasked, untired;
- Though stars irradiate thee about
- Thy entrance here is undesired.
- Open the gate not, mystic one;
- Must we avow what we would close confine?
- _With thee_, _good friend_, _we would have converse none_,
- Albeit the fault may not be thine.”
- _December_ 31. _During the War_.
- THEY WOULD NOT COME
- I TRAVELLED to where in her lifetime
- She’d knelt at morning prayer,
- To call her up as if there;
- But she paid no heed to my suing,
- As though her old haunt could win not
- A thought from her spirit, or care.
- I went where my friend had lectioned
- The prophets in high declaim,
- That my soul’s ear the same
- Full tones should catch as aforetime;
- But silenced by gear of the Present
- Was the voice that once there came!
- Where the ocean had sprayed our banquet
- I stood, to recall it as then:
- The same eluding again!
- No vision. Shows contingent
- Affrighted it further from me
- Even than from my home-den.
- When I found them no responders,
- But fugitives prone to flee
- From where they had used to be,
- It vouched I had been led hither
- As by night wisps in bogland,
- And bruised the heart of me!
- AFTER A ROMANTIC DAY
- THE railway bore him through
- An earthen cutting out from a city:
- There was no scope for view,
- Though the frail light shed by a slim young moon
- Fell like a friendly tune.
- Fell like a liquid ditty,
- And the blank lack of any charm
- Of landscape did no harm.
- The bald steep cutting, rigid, rough,
- And moon-lit, was enough
- For poetry of place: its weathered face
- Formed a convenient sheet whereon
- The visions of his mind were drawn.
- THE TWO WIVES
- (SMOKER’S CLUB-STORY)
- I WAITED at home all the while they were boating together—
- My wife and my near neighbour’s wife:
- Till there entered a woman I loved more than life,
- And we sat and sat on, and beheld the uprising dark weather,
- With a sense that some mischief was rife.
- Tidings came that the boat had capsized, and that one of the ladies
- Was drowned—which of them was unknown:
- And I marvelled—my friend’s wife?—or was it my own
- Who had gone in such wise to the land where the sun as the shade is?
- —We learnt it was _his_ had so gone.
- Then I cried in unrest: “He is free! But no good is releasing
- To him as it would be to me!”
- “—But it is,” said the woman I loved, quietly.
- “How?” I asked her. “—Because he has long loved me too without
- ceasing,
- And it’s just the same thing, don’t you see.”
- “I KNEW A LADY”
- (CLUB SONG)
- I KNEW a lady when the days
- Grew long, and evenings goldened;
- But I was not emboldened
- By her prompt eyes and winning ways.
- And when old Winter nipt the haws,
- “Another’s wife I’ll be,
- And then you’ll care for me,”
- She said, “and think how sweet I was!”
- And soon she shone as another’s wife:
- As such I often met her,
- And sighed, “How I regret her!
- My folly cuts me like a knife!”
- And then, to-day, her husband came,
- And moaned, “Why did you flout her?
- Well could I do without her!
- For both our burdens you are to blame!”
- A HOUSE WITH A HISTORY
- THERE is a house in a city street
- Some past ones made their own;
- Its floors were criss-crossed by their feet,
- And their babblings beat
- From ceiling to white hearth-stone.
- And who are peopling its parlours now?
- Who talk across its floor?
- Mere freshlings are they, blank of brow,
- Who read not how
- Its prime had passed before
- Their raw equipments, scenes, and says
- Afflicted its memoried face,
- That had seen every larger phase
- Of human ways
- Before these filled the place.
- To them that house’s tale is theirs,
- No former voices call
- Aloud therein. Its aspect bears
- Their joys and cares
- Alone, from wall to wall.
- A PROCESSION OF DEAD DAYS
- I SEE the ghost of a perished day;
- I know his face, and the feel of his dawn:
- ’Twas he who took me far away
- To a spot strange and gray:
- Look at me, Day, and then pass on,
- But come again: yes, come anon!
- Enters another into view;
- His features are not cold or white,
- But rosy as a vein seen through:
- Too soon he smiles adieu.
- Adieu, O ghost-day of delight;
- But come and grace my dying sight.
- Enters the day that brought the kiss:
- He brought it in his foggy hand
- To where the mumbling river is,
- And the high clematis;
- It lent new colour to the land,
- And all the boy within me manned.
- Ah, this one. Yes, I know his name,
- He is the day that wrought a shine
- Even on a precinct common and tame,
- As ’twere of purposed aim.
- He shows him as a rainbow sign
- Of promise made to me and mine.
- The next stands forth in his morning clothes,
- And yet, despite their misty blue,
- They mark no sombre custom-growths
- That joyous living loathes,
- But a meteor act, that left in its queue
- A train of sparks my lifetime through.
- I almost tremble at his nod—
- This next in train—who looks at me
- As I were slave, and he were god
- Wielding an iron rod.
- I close my eyes; yet still is he
- In front there, looking mastery.
- In the similitude of a nurse
- The phantom of the next one comes:
- I did not know what better or worse
- Chancings might bless or curse
- When his original glossed the thrums
- Of ivy, bringing that which numbs.
- Yes; trees were turning in their sleep
- Upon their windy pillows of gray
- When he stole in. Silent his creep
- On the grassed eastern steep . . .
- I shall not soon forget that day,
- And what his third hour took away!
- HE FOLLOWS HIMSELF
- IN a heavy time I dogged myself
- Along a louring way,
- Till my leading self to my following self
- Said: “Why do you hang on me
- So harassingly?”
- “I have watched you, Heart of mine,” I cried,
- “So often going astray
- And leaving me, that I have pursued,
- Feeling such truancy
- Ought not to be.”
- He said no more, and I dogged him on
- From noon to the dun of day
- By prowling paths, until anew
- He begged: “Please turn and flee!—
- What do you see?”
- “Methinks I see a man,” said I,
- “Dimming his hours to gray.
- I will not leave him while I know
- Part of myself is he
- Who dreams such dree!”
- “I go to my old friend’s house,” he urged,
- “So do not watch me, pray!”
- “Well, I will leave you in peace,” said I,
- “Though of this poignancy
- You should fight free:
- “Your friend, O other me, is dead;
- You know not what you say.”
- —“That do I! And at his green-grassed door
- By night’s bright galaxy
- I bend a knee.”
- —The yew-plumes moved like mockers’ beards,
- Though only boughs were they,
- And I seemed to go; yet still was there,
- And am, and there haunt we
- Thus bootlessly.
- THE SINGING WOMAN
- THERE was a singing woman
- Came riding across the mead
- At the time of the mild May weather,
- Tameless, tireless;
- This song she sung: “I am fair, I am young!”
- And many turned to heed.
- And the same singing woman
- Sat crooning in her need
- At the time of the winter weather;
- Friendless, fireless,
- She sang this song: “Life, thou’rt too long!”
- And there was none to heed.
- WITHOUT, NOT WITHIN HER
- IT was what you bore with you, Woman,
- Not inly were,
- That throned you from all else human,
- However fair!
- It was that strange freshness you carried
- Into a soul
- Whereon no thought of yours tarried
- Two moments at all.
- And out from his spirit flew death,
- And bale, and ban,
- Like the corn-chaff under the breath
- Of the winnowing-fan.
- “O I WON’T LEAD A HOMELY LIFE”
- (_To an old air_)
- “O I won’t lead a homely life
- As father’s Jack and mother’s Jill,
- But I will be a fiddler’s wife,
- With music mine at will!
- Just a little tune,
- Another one soon,
- As I merrily fling my fill!”
- And she became a fiddler’s Dear,
- And merry all day she strove to be;
- And he played and played afar and near,
- But never at home played he
- Any little tune
- Or late or soon;
- And sunk and sad was she!
- IN THE SMALL HOURS
- I LAY in my bed and fiddled
- With a dreamland viol and bow,
- And the tunes flew back to my fingers
- I had melodied years ago.
- It was two or three in the morning
- When I fancy-fiddled so
- Long reels and country-dances,
- And hornpipes swift and slow.
- And soon anon came crossing
- The chamber in the gray
- Figures of jigging fieldfolk—
- Saviours of corn and hay—
- To the air of “Haste to the Wedding,”
- As after a wedding-day;
- Yea, up and down the middle
- In windless whirls went they!
- There danced the bride and bridegroom,
- And couples in a train,
- Gay partners time and travail
- Had longwhiles stilled amain! . . .
- It seemed a thing for weeping
- To find, at slumber’s wane
- And morning’s sly increeping,
- That Now, not Then, held reign.
- THE LITTLE OLD TABLE
- CREAK, little wood thing, creak,
- When I touch you with elbow or knee;
- That is the way you speak
- Of one who gave you to me!
- You, little table, she brought—
- Brought me with her own hand,
- As she looked at me with a thought
- That I did not understand.
- —Whoever owns it anon,
- And hears it, will never know
- What a history hangs upon
- This creak from long ago.
- VAGG HOLLOW
- Vagg Hollow is a marshy spot on the old Roman Road near Ilchester, where
- “things” are seen. Merchandise was formerly fetched inland from the
- canal-boats at Load-Bridge by waggons this way.
- “WHAT do you see in Vagg Hollow,
- Little boy, when you go
- In the morning at five on your lonely drive?”
- “—I see men’s souls, who follow
- Till we’ve passed where the road lies low,
- When they vanish at our creaking!
- “They are like white faces speaking
- Beside and behind the waggon—
- One just as father’s was when here.
- The waggoner drinks from his flagon,
- (Or he’d flinch when the Hollow is near)
- But he does not give me any.
- “Sometimes the faces are many;
- But I walk along by the horses,
- He asleep on the straw as we jog;
- And I hear the loud water-courses,
- And the drops from the trees in the fog,
- And watch till the day is breaking.
- “And the wind out by Tintinhull waking;
- I hear in it father’s call
- As he called when I saw him dying,
- And he sat by the fire last Fall,
- And mother stood by sighing;
- But I’m not afraid at all!”
- THE DREAM IS—WHICH?
- I AM laughing by the brook with her,
- Splashed in its tumbling stir;
- And then it is a blankness looms
- As if I walked not there,
- Nor she, but found me in haggard rooms,
- And treading a lonely stair.
- With radiant cheeks and rapid eyes
- We sit where none espies;
- Till a harsh change comes edging in
- As no such scene were there,
- But winter, and I were bent and thin,
- And cinder-gray my hair.
- We dance in heys around the hall,
- Weightless as thistleball;
- And then a curtain drops between,
- As if I danced not there,
- But wandered through a mounded green
- To find her, I knew where.
- _March_ 1913.
- THE COUNTRY WEDDING
- (A FIDDLER’S STORY)
- LITTLE fogs were gathered in every hollow,
- But the purple hillocks enjoyed fine weather
- As we marched with our fiddles over the heather
- —How it comes back!—to their wedding that day.
- Our getting there brought our neighbours and all, O!
- Till, two and two, the couples stood ready.
- And her father said: “Souls, for God’s sake, be steady!”
- And we strung up our fiddles, and sounded out “A.”
- The groomsman he stared, and said, “You must follow!”
- But we’d gone to fiddle in front of the party,
- (Our feelings as friends being true and hearty)
- And fiddle in front we did—all the way.
- Yes, from their door by Mill-tail-Shallow,
- And up Styles-Lane, and by Front-Street houses,
- Where stood maids, bachelors, and spouses,
- Who cheered the songs that we knew how to play.
- I bowed the treble before her father,
- Michael the tenor in front of the lady,
- The bass-viol Reub—and right well played he!—
- The serpent Jim; ay, to church and back.
- I thought the bridegroom was flurried rather,
- As we kept up the tune outside the chancel,
- While they were swearing things none can cancel
- Inside the walls to our drumstick’s whack.
- “Too gay!” she pleaded. “Clouds may gather,
- And sorrow come.” But she gave in, laughing,
- And by supper-time when we’d got to the quaffing
- Her fears were forgot, and her smiles weren’t slack.
- A grand wedding ’twas! And what would follow
- We never thought. Or that we should have buried her
- On the same day with the man that married her,
- A day like the first, half hazy, half clear.
- Yes: little fogs were in every hollow,
- Though the purple hillocks enjoyed fine weather,
- When we went to play ’em to church together,
- And carried ’em there in an after year.
- FIRST OR LAST
- (SONG)
- IF grief come early
- Joy comes late,
- If joy come early
- Grief will wait;
- Aye, my dear and tender!
- Wise ones joy them early
- While the cheeks are red,
- Banish grief till surly
- Time has dulled their dread.
- And joy being ours
- Ere youth has flown,
- The later hours
- May find us gone;
- Aye, my dear and tender!
- LONELY DAYS
- LONELY her fate was,
- Environed from sight
- In the house where the gate was
- Past finding at night.
- None there to share it,
- No one to tell:
- Long she’d to bear it,
- And bore it well.
- Elsewhere just so she
- Spent many a day;
- Wishing to go she
- Continued to stay.
- And people without
- Basked warm in the air,
- But none sought her out,
- Or knew she was there.
- Even birthdays were passed so,
- Sunny and shady:
- Years did it last so
- For this sad lady.
- Never declaring it,
- No one to tell,
- Still she kept bearing it—
- Bore it well.
- The days grew chillier,
- And then she went
- To a city, familiar
- In years forespent,
- When she walked gaily
- Far to and fro,
- But now, moving frailly,
- Could nowhere go.
- The cheerful colour
- Of houses she’d known
- Had died to a duller
- And dingier tone.
- Streets were now noisy
- Where once had rolled
- A few quiet coaches,
- Or citizens strolled.
- Through the party-wall
- Of the memoried spot
- They danced at a ball
- Who recalled her not.
- Tramlines lay crossing
- Once gravelled slopes,
- Metal rods clanked,
- And electric ropes.
- So she endured it all,
- Thin, thinner wrought,
- Until time cured it all,
- And she knew nought.
- Versified from a Diary.
- “WHAT DID IT MEAN?”
- What did it mean that noontide, when
- You bade me pluck the flower
- Within the other woman’s bower,
- Whom I knew nought of then?
- I thought the flower blushed deeplier—aye,
- And as I drew its stalk to me
- It seemed to breathe: “I am, I see,
- Made use of in a human play.”
- And while I plucked, upstarted sheer
- As phantom from the pane thereby
- A corpse-like countenance, with eye
- That iced me by its baleful peer—
- Silent, as from a bier . . .
- When I came back your face had changed,
- It was no face for me;
- O did it speak of hearts estranged,
- And deadly rivalry
- In times before
- I darked your door,
- To seise me of
- Mere second love,
- Which still the haunting first deranged?
- AT THE DINNER-TABLE
- I SAT at dinner in my prime,
- And glimpsed my face in the sideboard-glass,
- And started as if I had seen a crime,
- And prayed the ghastly show might pass.
- Wrenched wrinkled features met my sight,
- Grinning back to me as my own;
- I well-nigh fainted with affright
- At finding me a haggard crone.
- My husband laughed. He had slily set
- A warping mirror there, in whim
- To startle me. My eyes grew wet;
- I spoke not all the eve to him.
- He was sorry, he said, for what he had done,
- And took away the distorting glass,
- Uncovering the accustomed one;
- And so it ended? No, alas,
- Fifty years later, when he died,
- I sat me in the selfsame chair,
- Thinking of him. Till, weary-eyed,
- I saw the sideboard facing there;
- And from its mirror looked the lean
- Thing I’d become, each wrinkle and score
- The image of me that I had seen
- In jest there fifty years before.
- THE MARBLE TABLET
- THERE it stands, though alas, what a little of her
- Shows in its cold white look!
- Not her glance, glide, or smile; not a tittle of her
- Voice like the purl of a brook;
- Not her thoughts, that you read like a book.
- It may stand for her once in November
- When first she breathed, witless of all;
- Or in heavy years she would remember
- When circumstance held her in thrall;
- Or at last, when she answered her call!
- Nothing more. The still marble, date-graven,
- Gives all that it can, tersely lined;
- That one has at length found the haven
- Which every one other will find;
- With silence on what shone behind.
- ST. JULIOT: _September_ 8, 1916.
- THE MASTER AND THE LEAVES
- I
- WE are budding, Master, budding,
- We of your favourite tree;
- March drought and April flooding
- Arouse us merrily,
- Our stemlets newly studding;
- And yet you do not see!
- II
- We are fully woven for summer
- In stuff of limpest green,
- The twitterer and the hummer
- Here rest of nights, unseen,
- While like a long-roll drummer
- The nightjar thrills the treen.
- III
- We are turning yellow, Master,
- And next we are turning red,
- And faster then and faster
- Shall seek our rooty bed,
- All wasted in disaster!
- But you lift not your head.
- IV
- —“I mark your early going,
- And that you’ll soon be clay,
- I have seen your summer showing
- As in my youthful day;
- But why I seem unknowing
- Is too sunk in to say!”
- 1917.
- LAST WORDS TO A DUMB FRIEND
- PET was never mourned as you,
- Purrer of the spotless hue,
- Plumy tail, and wistful gaze
- While you humoured our queer ways,
- Or outshrilled your morning call
- Up the stairs and through the hall—
- Foot suspended in its fall—
- While, expectant, you would stand
- Arched, to meet the stroking hand;
- Till your way you chose to wend
- Yonder, to your tragic end.
- Never another pet for me!
- Let your place all vacant be;
- Better blankness day by day
- Than companion torn away.
- Better bid his memory fade,
- Better blot each mark he made,
- Selfishly escape distress
- By contrived forgetfulness,
- Than preserve his prints to make
- Every morn and eve an ache.
- From the chair whereon he sat
- Sweep his fur, nor wince thereat;
- Rake his little pathways out
- Mid the bushes roundabout;
- Smooth away his talons’ mark
- From the claw-worn pine-tree bark,
- Where he climbed as dusk embrowned,
- Waiting us who loitered round.
- Strange it is this speechless thing,
- Subject to our mastering,
- Subject for his life and food
- To our gift, and time, and mood;
- Timid pensioner of us Powers,
- His existence ruled by ours,
- Should—by crossing at a breath
- Into safe and shielded death,
- By the merely taking hence
- Of his insignificance—
- Loom as largened to the sense,
- Shape as part, above man’s will,
- Of the Imperturbable.
- As a prisoner, flight debarred,
- Exercising in a yard,
- Still retain I, troubled, shaken,
- Mean estate, by him forsaken;
- And this home, which scarcely took
- Impress from his little look,
- By his faring to the Dim
- Grows all eloquent of him.
- Housemate, I can think you still
- Bounding to the window-sill,
- Over which I vaguely see
- Your small mound beneath the tree,
- Showing in the autumn shade
- That you moulder where you played.
- _October_ 2, 1904.
- A DRIZZLING EASTER MORNING
- AND he is risen? Well, be it so . . .
- And still the pensive lands complain,
- And dead men wait as long ago,
- As if, much doubting, they would know
- What they are ransomed from, before
- They pass again their sheltering door.
- I stand amid them in the rain,
- While blusters vex the yew and vane;
- And on the road the weary wain
- Plods forward, laden heavily;
- And toilers with their aches are fain
- For endless rest—though risen is he.
- ON ONE WHO LIVED AND DIED WHERE HE WAS BORN
- WHEN a night in November
- Blew forth its bleared airs
- An infant descended
- His birth-chamber stairs
- For the very first time,
- At the still, midnight chime;
- All unapprehended
- His mission, his aim.—
- Thus, first, one November,
- An infant descended
- The stairs.
- On a night in November
- Of weariful cares,
- A frail aged figure
- Ascended those stairs
- For the very last time:
- All gone his life’s prime,
- All vanished his vigour,
- And fine, forceful frame:
- Thus, last, one November
- Ascended that figure
- Upstairs.
- On those nights in November—
- Apart eighty years—
- The babe and the bent one
- Who traversed those stairs
- From the early first time
- To the last feeble climb—
- That fresh and that spent one—
- Were even the same:
- Yea, who passed in November
- As infant, as bent one,
- Those stairs.
- Wise child of November!
- From birth to blanched hairs
- Descending, ascending,
- Wealth-wantless, those stairs;
- Who saw quick in time
- As a vain pantomime
- Life’s tending, its ending,
- The worth of its fame.
- Wise child of November,
- Descending, ascending
- Those stairs!
- THE SECOND NIGHT
- (BALLAD)
- I MISSED one night, but the next I went;
- It was gusty above, and clear;
- She was there, with the look of one ill-content,
- And said: “Do not come near!”
- —“I am sorry last night to have failed you here,
- And now I have travelled all day;
- And it’s long rowing back to the West-Hoe Pier,
- So brief must be my stay.”
- —“O man of mystery, why not say
- Out plain to me all you mean?
- Why you missed last night, and must now away
- Is—another has come between!”
- —“O woman so mocking in mood and mien,
- So be it!” I replied:
- “And if I am due at a differing scene
- Before the dark has died,
- “’Tis that, unresting, to wander wide
- Has ever been my plight,
- And at least I have met you at Cremyll side
- If not last eve, to-night.”
- —“You get small rest—that read I quite;
- And so do I, maybe;
- Though there’s a rest hid safe from sight
- Elsewhere awaiting me!”
- A mad star crossed the sky to the sea,
- Wasting in sparks as it streamed,
- And when I looked to where stood she
- She had changed, much changed, it seemed:
- The sparks of the star in her pupils gleamed,
- She was vague as a vapour now,
- And ere of its meaning I had dreamed
- She’d vanished—I knew not how.
- I stood on, long; each cliff-top bough,
- Like a cynic nodding there,
- Moved up and down, though no man’s brow
- But mine met the wayward air.
- Still stood I, wholly unaware
- Of what had come to pass,
- Or had brought the secret of my new Fair
- To my old Love, alas!
- I went down then by crag and grass
- To the boat wherein I had come.
- Said the man with the oars: “This news of the lass
- Of Edgcumbe, is sharp for some!
- “Yes: found this daybreak, stiff and numb
- On the shore here, whither she’d sped
- To meet her lover last night in the glum,
- And he came not, ’tis said.
- “And she leapt down, heart-hit. Pity she’s dead:
- So much for the faithful-bent!” . . .
- I looked, and again a star overhead
- Shot through the firmament.
- SHE WHO SAW NOT
- “DID you see something within the house
- That made me call you before the red sunsetting?
- Something that all this common scene endows
- With a richened impress there can be no forgetting?”
- “—I have found nothing to see therein,
- O Sage, that should have made you urge me to enter,
- Nothing to fire the soul, or the sense to win:
- I rate you as a rare misrepresenter!”
- “—Go anew, Lady,—in by the right . . .
- Well: why does your face not shine like the face of Moses?”
- “—I found no moving thing there save the light
- And shadow flung on the wall by the outside roses.”
- “—Go yet once more, pray. Look on a seat.”
- “—I go . . . O Sage, it’s only a man that sits there
- With eyes on the sun. Mute,—average head to feet.”
- “—No more?”—“No more. Just one the place befits there,
- “As the rays reach in through the open door,
- And he looks at his hand, and the sun glows through his fingers,
- While he’s thinking thoughts whose tenour is no more
- To me than the swaying rose-tree shade that lingers.”
- No more. And years drew on and on
- Till no sun came, dank fogs the house enfolding;
- And she saw inside, when the form in the flesh had gone,
- As a vision what she had missed when the real beholding.
- THE OLD WORKMAN
- “WHY are you so bent down before your time,
- Old mason? Many have not left their prime
- So far behind at your age, and can still
- Stand full upright at will.”
- He pointed to the mansion-front hard by,
- And to the stones of the quoin against the sky;
- “Those upper blocks,” he said, “that there you see,
- It was that ruined me.”
- There stood in the air up to the parapet
- Crowning the corner height, the stones as set
- By him—ashlar whereon the gales might drum
- For centuries to come.
- “I carried them up,” he said, “by a ladder there;
- The last was as big a load as I could bear;
- But on I heaved; and something in my back
- Moved, as ’twere with a crack.
- “So I got crookt. I never lost that sprain;
- And those who live there, walled from wind and rain
- By freestone that I lifted, do not know
- That my life’s ache came so.
- “They don’t know me, or even know my name,
- But good I think it, somehow, all the same
- To have kept ’em safe from harm, and right and tight,
- Though it has broke me quite.
- “Yes; that I fixed it firm up there I am proud,
- Facing the hail and snow and sun and cloud,
- And to stand storms for ages, beating round
- When I lie underground.”
- THE SAILOR’S MOTHER
- “O WHENCE do you come,
- Figure in the night-fog that chills me numb?”
- “I come to you across from my house up there,
- And I don’t mind the brine-mist clinging to me
- That blows from the quay,
- For I heard him in my chamber, and thought you unaware.”
- “But what did you hear,
- That brought you blindly knocking in this middle-watch so drear?”
- “My sailor son’s voice as ’twere calling at your door,
- And I don’t mind my bare feet clammy on the stones,
- And the blight to my bones,
- For he only knows of _this_ house I lived in before.”
- “Nobody’s nigh,
- Woman like a skeleton, with socket-sunk eye.”
- “Ah—nobody’s nigh! And my life is drearisome,
- And this is the old home we loved in many a day
- Before he went away;
- And the salt fog mops me. And nobody’s come!”
- From “To Please his Wife.”
- OUTSIDE THE CASEMENT
- (A REMINISCENCE OF THE WAR)
- WE sat in the room
- And praised her whom
- We saw in the portico-shade outside:
- She could not hear
- What was said of her,
- But smiled, for its purport we did not hide.
- Then in was brought
- That message, fraught
- With evil fortune for her out there,
- Whom we loved that day
- More than any could say,
- And would fain have fenced from a waft of care.
- And the question pressed
- Like lead on each breast,
- Should we cloak the tidings, or call her and tell?
- It was too intense
- A choice for our sense,
- As we pondered and watched her we loved so well.
- Yea, spirit failed us
- At what assailed us;
- How long, while seeing what soon must come,
- Should we counterfeit
- No knowledge of it,
- And stay the stroke that would blanch and numb?
- And thus, before
- For evermore
- Joy left her, we practised to beguile
- Her innocence when
- She now and again
- Looked in, and smiled us another smile.
- THE PASSER-BY
- (L. H. RECALLS HER ROMANCE)
- He used to pass, well-trimmed and brushed,
- My window every day,
- And when I smiled on him he blushed,
- That youth, quite as a girl might; aye,
- In the shyest way.
- Thus often did he pass hereby,
- That youth of bounding gait,
- Until the one who blushed was I,
- And he became, as here I sate,
- My joy, my fate.
- And now he passes by no more,
- That youth I loved too true!
- I grieve should he, as here of yore,
- Pass elsewhere, seated in his view,
- Some maiden new!
- If such should be, alas for her!
- He’ll make her feel him dear,
- Become her daily comforter,
- Then tire him of her beauteous gear,
- And disappear!
- “I WAS THE MIDMOST”
- I WAS the midmost of my world
- When first I frisked me free,
- For though within its circuit gleamed
- But a small company,
- And I was immature, they seemed
- To bend their looks on me.
- She was the midmost of my world
- When I went further forth,
- And hence it was that, whether I turned
- To south, east, west, or north,
- Beams of an all-day Polestar burned
- From that new axe of earth.
- Where now is midmost in my world?
- I trace it not at all:
- No midmost shows it here, or there,
- When wistful voices call
- “We are fain! We are fain!” from everywhere
- On Earth’s bewildering ball!
- A SOUND IN THE NIGHT
- (WOODSFORD CASTLE: 17–)
- “WHAT do I catch upon the night-wind, husband?—
- What is it sounds in this house so eerily?
- It seems to be a woman’s voice: each little while I hear it,
- And it much troubles me!”
- “’Tis but the eaves dripping down upon the plinth-slopes:
- Letting fancies worry thee!—sure ’tis a foolish thing,
- When we were on’y coupled half-an-hour before the noontide,
- And now it’s but evening.”
- “Yet seems it still a woman’s voice outside the castle, husband,
- And ’tis cold to-night, and rain beats, and this is a lonely place.
- Didst thou fathom much of womankind in travel or adventure
- Ere ever thou sawest my face?”
- “It may be a tree, bride, that rubs his arms acrosswise,
- If it is not the eaves-drip upon the lower slopes,
- Or the river at the bend, where it whirls about the hatches
- Like a creature that sighs and mopes.”
- “Yet it still seems to me like the crying of a woman,
- And it saddens me much that so piteous a sound
- On this my bridal night when I would get agone from sorrow
- Should so ghost-like wander round!”
- “To satisfy thee, Love, I will strike the flint-and-steel, then,
- And set the rush-candle up, and undo the door,
- And take the new horn-lantern that we bought upon our journey,
- And throw the light over the moor.”
- He struck a light, and breeched and booted in the further chamber,
- And lit the new horn-lantern and went from her sight,
- And vanished down the turret; and she heard him pass the postern,
- And go out into the night.
- She listened as she lay, till she heard his step returning,
- And his voice as he unclothed him: “’Twas nothing, as I said,
- But the nor’-west wind a-blowing from the moor ath’art the river,
- And the tree that taps the gurgoyle-head.”
- “Nay, husband, you perplex me; for if the noise I heard here,
- Awaking me from sleep so, were but as you avow,
- The rain-fall, and the wind, and the tree-bough, and the river,
- Why is it silent now?
- “And why is thy hand and thy clasping arm so shaking,
- And thy sleeve and tags of hair so muddy and so wet,
- And why feel I thy heart a-thumping every time thou kissest me,
- And thy breath as if hard to get?”
- He lay there in silence for a while, still quickly breathing,
- Then started up and walked about the room resentfully:
- “O woman, witch, whom I, in sooth, against my will have wedded,
- Why castedst thou thy spells on me?
- “There was one I loved once: the cry you heard was her cry:
- She came to me to-night, and her plight was passing sore,
- As no woman . . . Yea, and it was e’en the cry you heard, wife,
- But she will cry no more!
- “And now I can’t abide thee: this place, it hath a curse on’t,
- This farmstead once a castle: I’ll get me straight away!”
- He dressed this time in darkness, unspeaking, as she listened,
- And went ere the dawn turned day.
- They found a woman’s body at a spot called Rocky Shallow,
- Where the Froom stream curves amid the moorland, washed aground,
- And they searched about for him, the yeoman, who had darkly known her,
- But he could not be found.
- And the bride left for good-and-all the farmstead once a castle,
- And in a county far away lives, mourns, and sleeps alone,
- And thinks in windy weather that she hears a woman crying,
- And sometimes an infant’s moan.
- ON A DISCOVERED CURL OF HAIR
- WHEN your soft welcomings were said,
- This curl was waving on your head,
- And when we walked where breakers dinned
- It sported in the sun and wind,
- And when I had won your words of grace
- It brushed and clung about my face.
- Then, to abate the misery
- Of absentness, you gave it me.
- Where are its fellows now? Ah, they
- For brightest brown have donned a gray,
- And gone into a caverned ark,
- Ever unopened, always dark!
- Yet this one curl, untouched of time,
- Beams with live brown as in its prime,
- So that it seems I even could now
- Restore it to the living brow
- By bearing down the western road
- Till I had reached your old abode.
- _February_ 1913.
- AN OLD LIKENESS
- (RECALLING R. T.)
- WHO would have thought
- That, not having missed her
- Talks, tears, laughter
- In absence, or sought
- To recall for so long
- Her gamut of song;
- Or ever to waft her
- Signal of aught
- That she, fancy-fanned,
- Would well understand,
- I should have kissed her
- Picture when scanned
- Yawning years after!
- Yet, seeing her poor
- Dim-outlined form
- Chancewise at night-time,
- Some old allure
- Came on me, warm,
- Fresh, pleadful, pure,
- As in that bright time
- At a far season
- Of love and unreason,
- And took me by storm
- Here in this blight-time!
- And thus it arose
- That, yawning years after
- Our early flows
- Of wit and laughter,
- And framing of rhymes
- At idle times,
- At sight of her painting,
- Though she lies cold
- In churchyard mould,
- I took its feinting
- As real, and kissed it,
- As if I had wist it
- Herself of old.
- HER APOTHEOSIS
- “Secretum meum mihi”
- (FADED WOMAN’S SONG)
- THERE was a spell of leisure,
- No record vouches when;
- With honours, praises, pleasure
- To womankind from men.
- But no such lures bewitched me,
- No hand was stretched to raise,
- No gracious gifts enriched me,
- No voices sang my praise.
- Yet an iris at that season
- Amid the accustomed slight
- From denseness, dull unreason,
- Ringed me with living light.
- “SACRED TO THE MEMORY”
- (MARY H.)
- THAT “Sacred to the Memory”
- Is clearly carven there I own,
- And all may think that on the stone
- The words have been inscribed by me
- In bare conventionality.
- They know not and will never know
- That my full script is not confined
- To that stone space, but stands deep lined
- Upon the landscape high and low
- Wherein she made such worthy show.
- TO A WELL-NAMED DWELLING
- GLAD old house of lichened stonework,
- What I owed you in my lone work,
- Noon and night!
- Whensoever faint or ailing,
- Letting go my grasp and failing,
- You lent light.
- How by that fair title came you?
- Did some forward eye so name you
- Knowing that one,
- Sauntering down his century blindly,
- Would remark your sound, so kindly,
- And be won?
- Smile in sunlight, sleep in moonlight,
- Bask in April, May, and June-light,
- Zephyr-fanned;
- Let your chambers show no sorrow,
- Blanching day, or stuporing morrow,
- While they stand.
- THE WHIPPER-IN
- MY father was the whipper-in,—
- Is still—if I’m not misled?
- And now I see, where the hedge is thin,
- A little spot of red;
- Surely it is my father
- Going to the kennel-shed!
- “I cursed and fought my father—aye,
- And sailed to a foreign land;
- And feeling sorry, I’m back, to stay,
- Please God, as his helping hand.
- Surely it is my father
- Near where the kennels stand?”
- “—True. Whipper-in he used to be
- For twenty years or more;
- And you did go away to sea
- As youths have done before.
- Yes, oddly enough that red there
- Is the very coat he wore.
- “But he—he’s dead; was thrown somehow,
- And gave his back a crick,
- And though that is his coat, ’tis now
- The scarecrow of a rick;
- You’ll see when you get nearer—
- ’Tis spread out on a stick.
- “You see, when all had settled down
- Your mother’s things were sold,
- And she went back to her own town,
- And the coat, ate out with mould,
- Is now used by the farmer
- For scaring, as ’tis old.”
- A MILITARY APPOINTMENT
- (SCHERZANDO)
- “SO back you have come from the town, Nan, dear!
- And have you seen him there, or near—
- That soldier of mine—
- Who long since promised to meet me here?”
- “—O yes, Nell: from the town I come,
- And have seen your lover on sick-leave home—
- That soldier of yours—
- Who swore to meet you, or Strike-him-dumb;
- “But has kept himself of late away;
- Yet,—in short, he’s coming, I heard him say—
- That lover of yours—
- To this very spot on this very day.”
- “—Then I’ll wait, I’ll wait, through wet or dry!
- I’ll give him a goblet brimming high—
- This lover of mine—
- And not of complaint one word or sigh!”
- “—Nell, him I have chanced so much to see,
- That—he has grown the lover of me!—
- That lover of yours—
- And it’s here our meeting is planned to be.”
- THE MILESTONE BY THE RABBIT-BURROW
- (ON YELL’HAM HILL)
- IN my loamy nook
- As I dig my hole
- I observe men look
- At a stone, and sigh
- As they pass it by
- To some far goal.
- Something it says
- To their glancing eyes
- That must distress
- The frail and lame,
- And the strong of frame
- Gladden or surprise.
- Do signs on its face
- Declare how far
- Feet have to trace
- Before they gain
- Some blest champaign
- Where no gins are?
- THE LAMENT OF THE LOOKING-GLASS
- WORDS from the mirror softly pass
- To the curtains with a sigh:
- “Why should I trouble again to glass
- These smileless things hard by,
- Since she I pleasured once, alas,
- Is now no longer nigh!”
- “I’ve imaged shadows of coursing cloud,
- And of the plying limb
- On the pensive pine when the air is loud
- With its aerial hymn;
- But never do they make me proud
- To catch them within my rim!
- “I flash back phantoms of the night
- That sometimes flit by me,
- I echo roses red and white—
- The loveliest blooms that be—
- But now I never hold to sight
- So sweet a flower as she.”
- CROSS-CURRENTS
- THEY parted—a pallid, trembling I pair,
- And rushing down the lane
- He left her lonely near me there;
- —I asked her of their pain.
- “It is for ever,” at length she said,
- “His friends have schemed it so,
- That the long-purposed day to wed
- Never shall we two know.”
- “In such a cruel case,” said I,
- “Love will contrive a course?”
- “—Well, no . . . A thing may underlie,
- Which robs that of its force;
- “A thing I could not tell him of,
- Though all the year I have tried;
- This: never could I have given him love,
- Even had I been his bride.
- “So, when his kinsfolk stop the way
- Point-blank, there could not be
- A happening in the world to-day
- More opportune for me!
- “Yet hear—no doubt to your surprise—
- I am sorry, for his sake,
- That I have escaped the sacrifice
- I was prepared to make!”
- THE OLD NEIGHBOUR AND THE NEW
- ’TWAS to greet the new rector I called I here,
- But in the arm-chair I see
- My old friend, for long years installed here,
- Who palely nods to me.
- The new man explains what he’s planning
- In a smart and cheerful tone,
- And I listen, the while that I’m scanning
- The figure behind his own.
- The newcomer urges things on me;
- I return a vague smile thereto,
- The olden face gazing upon me
- Just as it used to do!
- And on leaving I scarcely remember
- Which neighbour to-day I have seen,
- The one carried out in September,
- Or him who but entered yestreen.
- THE CHOSEN
- “Ατιυά ἐστιν ἀλληγορούμενα
- “A WOMAN for whom great gods might strive!”
- I said, and kissed her there:
- And then I thought of the other five,
- And of how charms outwear.
- I thought of the first with her eating eyes,
- And I thought of the second with hers, green-gray,
- And I thought of the third, experienced, wise,
- And I thought of the fourth who sang all day.
- And I thought of the fifth, whom I’d called a jade,
- And I thought of them all, tear-fraught;
- And that each had shown her a passable maid,
- Yet not of the favour sought.
- So I traced these words on the bark of a beech,
- Just at the falling of the mast:
- “After scanning five; yes, each and each,
- I’ve found the woman desired—at last!”
- “—I feel a strange benumbing spell,
- As one ill-wished!” said she.
- And soon it seemed that something fell
- Was starving her love for me.
- “I feel some curse. O, _five_ were there?”
- And wanly she swerved, and went away.
- I followed sick: night numbed the air,
- And dark the mournful moorland lay.
- I cried: “O darling, turn your head!”
- But never her face I viewed;
- “O turn, O turn!” again I said,
- And miserably pursued.
- At length I came to a Christ-cross stone
- Which she had passed without discern;
- And I knelt upon the leaves there strown,
- And prayed aloud that she might turn.
- I rose, and looked; and turn she did;
- I cried, “My heart revives!”
- “Look more,” she said. I looked as bid;
- Her face was all the five’s.
- All the five women, clear come back,
- I saw in her—with her made one,
- The while she drooped upon the track,
- And her frail term seemed well-nigh run.
- She’d half forgot me in her change;
- “Who are you? Won’t you say
- Who you may be, you man so strange,
- Following since yesterday?”
- I took the composite form she was,
- And carried her to an arbour small,
- Not passion-moved, but even because
- In one I could atone to all.
- And there she lies, and there I tend,
- Till my life’s threads unwind,
- A various womanhood in blend—
- Not one, but all combined.
- THE INSCRIPTION
- (A TALE)
- SIR JOHN was entombed, and the crypt was closed, and she,
- Like a soul that could meet no more the sight of the sun,
- Inclined her in weepings and prayings continually,
- As his widowed one.
- And to pleasure her in her sorrow, and fix his name
- As a memory Time’s fierce frost should never kill,
- She caused to be richly chased a brass to his fame,
- Which should link them still;
- For she bonded her name with his own on the brazen page,
- As if dead and interred there with him, and cold, and numb,
- (Omitting the day of her dying and year of her age
- Till her end should come;)
- And implored good people to pray “Of their Charytie
- For these twaine Soules,”—yea, she who did last remain
- Forgoing Heaven’s bliss if ever with spouse should she
- Again have lain.
- Even there, as it first was set, you may see it now,
- Writ in quaint Church text, with the date of her death left bare,
- In the aged Estminster aisle, where the folk yet bow
- Themselves in prayer.
- Thereafter some years slid, till there came a day
- When it slowly began to be marked of the standers-by
- That she would regard the brass, and would bend away
- With a drooping sigh.
- Now the lady was fair as any the eye might scan
- Through a summer day of roving—a type at whose lip
- Despite her maturing seasons, no meet man
- Would be loth to sip.
- And her heart was stirred with a lightning love to its pith
- For a newcomer who, while less in years, was one
- Full eager and able to make her his own forthwith,
- Restrained of none.
- But she answered Nay, death-white; and still as he urged
- She adversely spake, overmuch as she loved the while,
- Till he pressed for why, and she led with the face of one scourged
- To the neighbouring aisle,
- And showed him the words, ever gleaming upon her pew,
- Memorizing her there as the knight’s eternal wife,
- Or falsing such, debarred inheritance due
- Of celestial life.
- He blenched, and reproached her that one yet undeceased
- Should bury her future—that future which none can spell;
- And she wept, and purposed anon to inquire of the priest
- If the price were hell
- Of her wedding in face of the record. Her lover agreed,
- And they parted before the brass with a shudderful kiss,
- For it seemed to flash out on their impulse of passionate need,
- “Mock ye not this!”
- Well, the priest, whom more perceptions moved than one,
- Said she erred at the first to have written as if she were dead
- Her name and adjuration; but since it was done
- Nought could be said
- Save that she must abide by the pledge, for the peace of her soul,
- And so, by her life, maintain the apostrophe good,
- If she wished anon to reach the coveted goal
- Of beatitude.
- To erase from the consecrate text her prayer as there prayed
- Would aver that, since earth’s joys most drew her, past doubt,
- Friends’ prayers for her joy above by Jesu’s aid
- Could be done without.
- Moreover she thought of the laughter, the shrug, the jibe
- That would rise at her back in the nave when she should pass
- As another’s avowed by the words she had chosen to inscribe
- On the changeless brass.
- And so for months she replied to her Love: “No, no”;
- While sorrow was gnawing her beauties ever and more,
- Till he, long-suffering and weary, grew to show
- Less warmth than before.
- And, after an absence, wrote words absolute:
- That he gave her till Midsummer morn to make her mind clear;
- And that if, by then, she had not said Yea to his suit,
- He should wed elsewhere.
- Thence on, at unwonted times through the lengthening days
- She was seen in the church—at dawn, or when the sun dipt
- And the moon rose, standing with hands joined, blank of gaze,
- Before the script.
- She thinned as he came not; shrank like a creature that cowers
- As summer drew nearer; but still had not promised to wed,
- When, just at the zenith of June, in the still night hours,
- She was missed from her bed.
- “The church!” they whispered with qualms; “where often she sits.”
- They found her: facing the brass there, else seeing none,
- But feeling the words with her finger, gibbering in fits;
- And she knew them not one.
- And so she remained, in her handmaids’ charge; late, soon,
- Tracing words in the air with her finger, as seen that night—
- Those incised on the brass—till at length unwatched one noon,
- She vanished from sight.
- And, as talebearers tell, thence on to her last-taken breath
- Was unseen, save as wraith that in front of the brass made moan;
- So that ever the way of her life and the time of her death
- Remained unknown.
- And hence, as indited above, you may read even now
- The quaint church-text, with the date of her death left bare,
- In the aged Estminster aisle, where folk yet bow
- Themselves in prayer.
- _October_ 30, 1907.
- THE MARBLE-STREETED TOWN
- I REACH the marble-streeted town,
- Whose “Sound” outbreathes its air
- Of sharp sea-salts;
- I see the movement up and down
- As when she was there.
- Ships of all countries come and go,
- The bandsmen boom in the sun
- A throbbing waltz;
- The schoolgirls laugh along the Hoe
- As when she was one.
- I move away as the music rolls:
- The place seems not to mind
- That she—of old
- The brightest of its native souls—
- Left it behind!
- Over this green aforedays she
- On light treads went and came,
- Yea, times untold;
- Yet none here knows her history—
- Has heard her name.
- PLYMOUTH (1914?).
- A WOMAN DRIVING
- HOW she held up the horses’ heads,
- Firm-lipped, with steady rein,
- Down that grim steep the coastguard treads,
- Till all was safe again!
- With form erect and keen contour
- She passed against the sea,
- And, dipping into the chine’s obscure,
- Was seen no more by me.
- To others she appeared anew
- At times of dusky light,
- But always, so they told, withdrew
- From close and curious sight.
- Some said her silent wheels would roll
- Rutless on softest loam,
- And even that her steeds’ footfall
- Sank not upon the foam.
- Where drives she now? It may be where
- No mortal horses are,
- But in a chariot of the air
- Towards some radiant star.
- A WOMAN’S TRUST
- IF he should live a thousand years
- He’d find it not again
- That scorn of him by men
- Could less disturb a woman’s trust
- In him as a steadfast star which must
- Rise scathless from the nether spheres:
- If he should live a thousand years
- He’d find it not again.
- She waited like a little child,
- Unchilled by damps of doubt,
- While from her eyes looked out
- A confidence sublime as Spring’s
- When stressed by Winter’s loiterings.
- Thus, howsoever the wicked wiled,
- She waited like a little child
- Unchilled by damps of doubt.
- Through cruel years and crueller
- Thus she believed in him
- And his aurore, so dim;
- That, after fenweeds, flowers would blow;
- And above all things did she show
- Her faith in his good faith with her;
- Through cruel years and crueller
- Thus she believed in him!
- BEST TIMES
- WE went a day’s excursion to the stream,
- Basked by the bank, and bent to the ripple-gleam,
- And I did not know
- That life would show,
- However it might flower, no finer glow.
- I walked in the Sunday sunshine by the road
- That wound towards the wicket of your abode,
- And I did not think
- That life would shrink
- To nothing ere it shed a rosier pink.
- Unlooked for I arrived on a rainy night,
- And you hailed me at the door by the swaying light,
- And I full forgot
- That life might not
- Again be touching that ecstatic height.
- And that calm eve when you walked up the stair,
- After a gaiety prolonged and rare,
- No thought soever
- That you might never
- Walk down again, struck me as I stood there.
- Rewritten from an old draft.
- THE CASUAL ACQUAINTANCE
- WHILE he was here in breath and bone,
- To speak to and to see,
- Would I had known—more clearly known—
- What that man did for me
- When the wind scraped a minor lay,
- And the spent west from white
- To gray turned tiredly, and from gray
- To broadest bands of night!
- But I saw not, and he saw not
- What shining life-tides flowed
- To me-ward from his casual jot
- Of service on that road.
- He would have said: “’Twas nothing new;
- We all do what we can;
- ’Twas only what one man would do
- For any other man.”
- Now that I gauge his goodliness
- He’s slipped from human eyes;
- And when he passed there’s none can guess,
- Or point out where he lies.
- INTRA SEPULCHRUM
- WHAT curious things we said,
- What curious things we did
- Up there in the world we walked till dead
- Our kith and kin amid!
- How we played at love,
- And its wildness, weakness, woe;
- Yes, played thereat far more than enough
- As it turned out, I trow!
- Played at believing in gods
- And observing the ordinances,
- I for your sake in impossible codes
- Right ready to acquiesce.
- Thinking our lives unique,
- Quite quainter than usual kinds,
- We held that we could not abide a week
- The tether of typic minds.
- —Yet people who day by day
- Pass by and look at us
- From over the wall in a casual way
- Are of this unconscious.
- And feel, if anything,
- That none can be buried here
- Removed from commonest fashioning,
- Or lending note to a bier:
- No twain who in heart-heaves proved
- Themselves at all adept,
- Who more than many laughed and loved,
- Who more than many wept,
- Or were as sprites or elves
- Into blind matter hurled,
- Or ever could have been to themselves
- The centre of the world.
- THE WHITEWASHED WALL
- WHY does she turn in that shy soft way
- Whenever she stirs the fire,
- And kiss to the chimney-corner wall,
- As if entranced to admire
- Its whitewashed bareness more than the sight
- Of a rose in richest green?
- I have known her long, but this raptured rite
- I never before have seen.
- —Well, once when her son cast his shadow there,
- A friend took a pencil and drew him
- Upon that flame-lit wall. And the lines
- Had a lifelike semblance to him.
- And there long stayed his familiar look;
- But one day, ere she knew,
- The whitener came to cleanse the nook,
- And covered the face from view.
- “Yes,” he said: “My brush goes on with a rush,
- And the draught is buried under;
- When you have to whiten old cots and brighten,
- What else can you do, I wonder?”
- But she knows he’s there. And when she yearns
- For him, deep in the labouring night,
- She sees him as close at hand, and turns
- To him under his sheet of white.
- JUST THE SAME
- I SAT. It all was past;
- Hope never would hail again;
- Fair days had ceased at a blast,
- The world was a darkened den.
- The beauty and dream were gone,
- And the halo in which I had hied
- So gaily gallantly on
- Had suffered blot and died!
- I went forth, heedless whither,
- In a cloud too black for name:
- —People frisked hither and thither;
- The world was just the same.
- THE LAST TIME
- THE kiss had been given and taken,
- And gathered to many past:
- It never could reawaken;
- But you heard none say: “It’s the last!”
- The clock showed the hour and the minute,
- But you did not turn and look:
- You read no finis in it,
- As at closing of a book.
- But you read it all too rightly
- When, at a time anon,
- A figure lay stretched out whitely,
- And you stood looking thereon.
- THE SEVEN TIMES
- THE dark was thick. A boy he seemed at that time
- Who trotted by me with uncertain air;
- “I’ll tell my tale,” he murmured, “for I fancy
- A friend goes there? . . . ”
- Then thus he told. “I reached—’twas for the first time—
- A dwelling. Life was clogged in me with care;
- I thought not I should meet an eyesome maiden,
- But found one there.
- “I entered on the precincts for the second time—
- ’Twas an adventure fit and fresh and fair—
- I slackened in my footsteps at the porchway,
- And found her there.
- “I rose and travelled thither for the third time,
- The hope-hues growing gayer and yet gayer
- As I hastened round the boscage of the outskirts,
- And found her there.
- “I journeyed to the place again the fourth time
- (The best and rarest visit of the rare,
- As it seemed to me, engrossed about these goings),
- And found her there.
- “When I bent me to my pilgrimage the fifth time
- (Soft-thinking as I journeyed I would dare
- A certain word at token of good auspice),
- I found her there.
- “That landscape did I traverse for the sixth time,
- And dreamed on what we purposed to prepare;
- I reached a tryst before my journey’s end came,
- And found her there.
- “I went again—long after—aye, the seventh time;
- The look of things was sinister and bare
- As I caught no customed signal, heard no voice call,
- Nor found her there.
- “And now I gad the globe—day, night, and any time,
- To light upon her hiding unaware,
- And, maybe, I shall nigh me to some nymph-niche,
- And find her there!”
- “But how,” said I, “has your so little lifetime
- Given roomage for such loving, loss, despair?
- A boy so young!” Forthwith I turned my lantern
- Upon him there.
- His head was white. His small form, fine aforetime,
- Was shrunken with old age and battering wear,
- An eighty-years long plodder saw I pacing
- Beside me there.
- THE SUN’S LAST LOOK ON THE COUNTRY GIRL
- (M. H.)
- THE sun threw down a radiant spot
- On the face in the winding-sheet—
- The face it had lit when a babe’s in its cot;
- And the sun knew not, and the face knew not
- That soon they would no more meet.
- Now that the grave has shut its door,
- And lets not in one ray,
- Do they wonder that they meet no more—
- That face and its beaming visitor—
- That met so many a day?
- _December_ 1915.
- IN A LONDON FLAT
- I
- “YOU look like a widower,” she said
- Through the folding-doors with a laugh from the bed,
- As he sat by the fire in the outer room,
- Reading late on a night of gloom,
- And a cab-hack’s wheeze, and the clap of its feet
- In its breathless pace on the smooth wet street,
- Were all that came to them now and then . . .
- “You really do!” she quizzed again.
- II
- And the Spirits behind the curtains heard,
- And also laughed, amused at her word,
- And at her light-hearted view of him.
- “Let’s get him made so—just for a whim!”
- Said the Phantom Ironic. “’Twould serve her right
- If we coaxed the Will to do it some night.”
- “O pray not!” pleaded the younger one,
- The Sprite of the Pities. “She said it in fun!”
- III
- But so it befell, whatever the cause,
- That what she had called him he next year was;
- And on such a night, when she lay elsewhere,
- He, watched by those Phantoms, again sat there,
- And gazed, as if gazing on far faint shores,
- At the empty bed through the folding-doors
- As he remembered her words; and wept
- That she had forgotten them where she slept.
- DRAWING DETAILS IN AN OLD CHURCH
- I HEAR the bell-rope sawing,
- And the oil-less axle grind,
- As I sit alone here drawing
- What some Gothic brain designed;
- And I catch the toll that follows
- From the lagging bell,
- Ere it spreads to hills and hollows
- Where the parish people dwell.
- I ask not whom it tolls for,
- Incurious who he be;
- So, some morrow, when those knolls for
- One unguessed, sound out for me,
- A stranger, loitering under
- In nave or choir,
- May think, too, “Whose, I wonder?”
- But care not to inquire.
- RAKE-HELL MUSES
- YES; since she knows not need,
- Nor walks in blindness,
- I may without unkindness
- A true thing tell:
- Which would be truth, indeed,
- Though worse in speaking,
- Were her poor footsteps seeking
- A pauper’s cell.
- I judge, then, better far
- She now have sorrow,
- Than gladness that to-morrow
- Might know its knell.—
- It may be men there are
- Could make of union
- A lifelong sweet communion—
- A passioned spell;
- But _I_, to save her name
- And bring salvation
- By altar-affirmation
- And bridal bell;
- I, by whose rash unshame
- These tears come to her:—
- My faith would more undo her
- Than my farewell!
- Chained to me, year by year
- My moody madness
- Would wither her old gladness
- Like famine fell.
- She’ll take the ill that’s near,
- And bear the blaming.
- ’Twill pass. Full soon her shaming
- They’ll cease to yell.
- Our unborn, first her moan,
- Will grow her guerdon,
- Until from blot and burden
- A joyance swell;
- In that therein she’ll own
- My good part wholly,
- My evil staining solely
- My own vile vell.
- Of the disgrace, may be
- “He shunned to share it,
- Being false,” they’ll say. I’ll bear it;
- Time will dispel
- The calumny, and prove
- This much about me,
- That she lives best without me
- Who would live well.
- That, this once, not self-love
- But good intention
- Pleads that against convention
- We two rebel.
- For, is one moonlight dance,
- One midnight passion,
- A rock whereon to fashion
- Life’s citadel?
- Prove they their power to prance
- Life’s miles together
- From upper slope to nether
- Who trip an ell?
- —Years hence, or now apace,
- May tongues be calling
- News of my further falling
- Sinward pell-mell:
- Then this great good will grace
- Our lives’ division,
- She’s saved from more misprision
- Though I plumb hell.
- 189–
- THE COLOUR
- (_The following lines are partly made up_, _partly remembered from a
- Wessex folk-rhyme_)
- “WHAT shall I bring you?
- Please will white do
- Best for your wearing
- The long day through?”
- “—White is for weddings,
- Weddings, weddings,
- White is for weddings,
- And that won’t do.”
- “What shall I bring you?
- Please will red do
- Best for your wearing
- The long day through?”
- “ —Red is for soldiers,
- Soldiers, soldiers,
- Red is for soldiers,
- And that won’t do.”
- “What shall I bring you?
- Please will blue do
- Best for your wearing
- The long day through?”
- “—Blue is for sailors,
- Sailors, sailors,
- Blue is for sailors,
- And that won’t do.
- “What shall I bring you?
- Please will green do
- Best for your wearing
- The long day through?”
- “—Green is for mayings,
- Mayings, mayings,
- Green is for mayings,
- And that won’t do.”
- “What shall I bring you
- Then? Will black do
- Best for your wearing
- The long day through?”
- “—Black is for mourning,
- Mourning, mourning,
- Black is for mourning,
- And black will do.”
- MURMURS IN THE GLOOM
- (NOCTURNE)
- I WAYFARED at the nadir of the sun
- Where populations meet, though seen of none;
- And millions seemed to sigh around
- As though their haunts were nigh around,
- And unknown throngs to cry around
- Of things late done.
- “O Seers, who well might high ensample show”
- (Came throbbing past in plainsong small and slow),
- “Leaders who lead us aimlessly,
- Teachers who train us shamelessly,
- Why let ye smoulder flamelessly
- The truths ye trow?
- “Ye scribes, that urge the old medicament,
- Whose fusty vials have long dried impotent,
- Why prop ye meretricious things,
- Denounce the sane as vicious things,
- And call outworn factitious things
- Expedient?
- “O Dynasties that sway and shake us so,
- Why rank your magnanimities so low
- That grace can smooth no waters yet,
- But breathing threats and slaughters yet
- Ye grieve Earth’s sons and daughters yet
- As long ago?
- “Live there no heedful ones of searching sight,
- Whose accents might be oracles that smite
- To hinder those who frowardly
- Conduct us, and untowardly;
- To lead the nations vawardly
- From gloom to light?”
- _September_ 22, 1899.
- EPITAPH
- I NEVER cared for Life: Life cared for me,
- And hence I owed it some fidelity.
- It now says, “Cease; at length thou hast learnt to grind
- Sufficient toll for an unwilling mind,
- And I dismiss thee—not without regard
- That thou didst ask no ill-advised reward,
- Nor sought in me much more than thou couldst find.”
- AN ANCIENT TO ANCIENTS
- WHERE once we danced, where once sang,
- Gentlemen,
- The floors are sunken, cobwebs hang,
- And cracks creep; worms have fed upon
- The doors. Yea, sprightlier times were then
- Than now, with harps and tabrets gone,
- Gentlemen!
- Where once we rowed, where once we sailed,
- Gentlemen,
- And damsels took the tiller, veiled
- Against too strong a stare (God wot
- Their fancy, then or anywhen!)
- Upon that shore we are clean forgot,
- Gentlemen!
- We have lost somewhat, afar and near,
- Gentlemen,
- The thinning of our ranks each year
- Affords a hint we are nigh undone,
- That we shall not be ever again
- The marked of many, loved of one,
- Gentlemen.
- In dance the polka hit our wish,
- Gentlemen,
- The paced quadrille, the spry schottische,
- “Sir Roger.”—And in opera spheres
- The “Girl” (the famed “Bohemian”),
- And “Trovatore,” held the ears,
- Gentlemen.
- This season’s paintings do not please,
- Gentlemen,
- Like Etty, Mulready, Maclise;
- Throbbing romance has waned and wanned;
- No wizard wields the witching pen
- Of Bulwer, Scott, Dumas, and Sand,
- Gentlemen.
- The bower we shrined to Tennyson,
- Gentlemen,
- Is roof-wrecked; damps there drip upon
- Sagged seats, the creeper-nails are rust,
- The spider is sole denizen;
- Even she who read those rhymes is dust,
- Gentlemen!
- We who met sunrise sanguine-souled,
- Gentlemen,
- Are wearing weary. We are old;
- These younger press; we feel our rout
- Is imminent to Aïdes’ den,—
- That evening’s shades are stretching out,
- Gentlemen!
- And yet, though ours be failing frames,
- Gentlemen,
- So were some others’ history names,
- Who trode their track light-limbed and fast
- As these youth, and not alien
- From enterprise, to their long last,
- Gentlemen.
- Sophocles, Plato, Socrates,
- Gentlemen,
- Pythagoras, Thucydides,
- Herodotus, and Homer,—yea,
- Clement, Augustin, Origen,
- Burnt brightlier towards their setting-day,
- Gentlemen.
- And ye, red-lipped and smooth-browed; list,
- Gentlemen;
- Much is there waits you we have missed;
- Much lore we leave you worth the knowing,
- Much, much has lain outside our ken:
- Nay, rush not: time serves: we are going,
- Gentlemen.
- AFTER READING PSALMS
- XXXIX., XL., ETC.
- SIMPLE was I and was young;
- Kept no gallant tryst, I;
- Even from good words held my tongue,
- _Quoniam Tu fecisti_!
- Through my youth I stirred me not,
- High adventure missed I,
- Left the shining shrines unsought;
- Yet—_me deduxisti_!
- At my start by Helicon
- Love-lore little wist I,
- Worldly less; but footed on;
- Why? _Me suscepisti_!
- When I failed at fervid rhymes,
- “Shall,” I said, “persist I?”
- “_Dies_” (I would add at times)
- “_Meos posuisti_!”
- So I have fared through many suns;
- Sadly little grist I
- Bring my mill, or any one’s,
- _Domine_, _Tu scisti_!
- And at dead of night I call:
- “Though to prophets list I,
- Which hath understood at all?
- Yea: _Quem elegisti_?”
- 187–
- SURVIEW
- “Cogitavi vias meas”
- A CRY from the green-grained sticks of the fire
- Made me gaze where it seemed to be:
- ’Twas my own voice talking therefrom to me
- On how I had walked when my sun was higher—
- My heart in its arrogancy.
- “_You held not to whatsoever was true_,”
- Said my own voice talking to me:
- “_Whatsoever was just you were slack to see_;
- _Kept not things lovely and pure in view_,”
- Said my own voice talking to me.
- “_You slighted her that endureth all_,”
- Said my own voice talking to me;
- “_Vaunteth not_, _trusteth hopefully_;
- _That suffereth long and is kind withal_,”
- Said my own voice talking to me.
- “_You taught not that which you set about_,”
- Said my own voice talking to me;
- “_That the greatest of things is Charity_. . . ”
- —And the sticks burnt low, and the fire went out,
- And my voice ceased talking to me.
- FOOTNOTES
- {46} Quadrilles danced early in the nineteenth century.
- {128} It was said her real name was Eve Trevillian or Trevelyan; and
- that she was the handsome mother of two or three illegitimate children,
- _circa_ 1784–95.
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