- The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Song of the Sword, by W. E. Henley
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- Title: The Song of the Sword
- and Other Verses
- Author: W. E. Henley
- Release Date: January 18, 2008 [eBook #24363]
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
- ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SONG OF THE SWORD***
- Transcribed from the 1892 David Nutt edition by David Price, email
- ccx074@pglaf.org
- THE SONG
- OF THE SWORD
- AND OTHER VERSES
- BY
- W. E. HENLEY
- LONDON
- Published by DAVID NUTT
- in the Strand
- 1892
- To R. T. Hamilton-Bruce
- _Edinburgh_, _Mar._ 17, 1892
- _With three exceptions_, _these numbers have appeared in_ '_The National
- Observer_,' _by permission of whose proprietors they are here reprinted_.
- THE SONG OF THE SWORD
- (To Rudyard Kipling)
- _The Sword_
- _Singing_--
- _The voice of the Sword from the heart of the Sword_
- _Clanging imperious_
- _Forth from Time's battlements_
- _His ancient and triumphing Song_.
- In the beginning,
- Ere God inspired Himself
- Into the clay thing
- Thumbed to His image,
- The vacant, the naked shell
- Soon to be Man:
- Thoughtful He pondered it,
- Prone there and impotent,
- Fragile, inviting
- Attack and discomfiture:
- Then, with a smile--
- As He heard in the Thunder
- That laughed over Eden
- The voice of the Trumpet,
- The iron Beneficence,
- Calling His dooms
- To the Winds of the world--
- Stooping, He drew
- On the sand with His finger
- A shape for a sign
- Of His way to the eyes
- That in wonder should waken,
- For a proof of His will
- To the breaking intelligence:
- That was the birth of me:
- I am the Sword.
- Hard and bleak, keen and cruel,
- Short-hilted, long-shafted,
- I froze into steel:
- And the blood of my elder,
- His hand on the hafts of me,
- Sprang like a wave
- In the wind, as the sense
- Of his strength grew to ecstasy,
- Glowed like a coal
- At the throat of the furnace,
- As he knew me and named me
- The War-Thing, the Comrade,
- Father of honour
- And giver of kingship,
- The fame-smith, the song-master,
- Bringer of women
- On fire at his hands
- For the pride of fulfilment,
- _Priest_ (saith the Lord)
- _Of his marriage with victory_.
- Ho! then, the Trumpet,
- Handmaid of heroes,
- Calling the peers
- To the place of espousal!
- Ho! then, the splendour
- And sheen of my ministry,
- Clothing the earth
- With a livery of lightnings!
- Ho! then, the music
- Of battles in onset
- And ruining armours,
- And God's gift returning
- In fury to God!
- Glittering and keen
- As the song of the winter stars,
- Ho! then, the sound
- Of my voice, the implacable
- Angel of Destiny!--
- I am the Sword.
- Heroes, my children,
- Follow, O follow me,
- Follow, exulting
- In the great light that breaks
- From the sacred companionship:
- Thrust through the fatuous,
- Thrust through the fungous brood
- Spawned in my shadow
- And gross with my gift!
- Thrust through, and hearken,
- O hark, to the Trumpet,
- The Virgin of Battles,
- Calling, still calling you
- Into the Presence,
- Sons of the Judgment,
- Pure wafts of the Will!
- Edged to annihilate,
- Hilted with government,
- Follow, O follow me
- Till the waste places
- All the grey globe over
- Ooze, as the honeycomb
- Drips, with the sweetness
- Distilled of my strength:
- And, teeming in peace
- Through the wrath of my coming,
- They give back in beauty
- The dread and the anguish
- They had of me visitant!
- Follow, O follow, then,
- Heroes, my harvesters!
- Where the tall grain is ripe
- Thrust in your sickles:
- Stripped and adust
- In a stubble of empire,
- Scything and binding
- The full sheaves of sovranty:
- Thus, O thus gloriously,
- Shall you fulfil yourselves:
- Thus, O thus mightily,
- Show yourselves sons of mine--
- Yea, and win grace of me:
- I am the Sword.
- I am the feast-maker:
- Hark, through a noise
- Of the screaming of eagles,
- Hark how the Trumpet,
- The mistress of mistresses,
- Calls, silver-throated
- And stern, where the tables
- Are spread, and the work
- Of the Lord is in hand!
- Driving the darkness,
- Even as the banners
- And spears of the Morning;
- Sifting the nations,
- The slag from the metal,
- The waste and the weak
- From the fit and the strong;
- Fighting the brute,
- The abysmal Fecundity;
- Checking the gross,
- Multitudinous blunders,
- The groping, the purblind
- Excesses in service,
- Of the Womb universal,
- The absolute Drudge;
- Changing the charactry
- Carved on the World,
- The miraculous gem
- In the seal-ring that burns
- On the hand of the Master--
- Yea! and authority
- Flames through the dim,
- Unappeasable Grisliness
- Prone down the nethermost
- Chasms of the Void;
- Clear singing, clean slicing;
- Sweet spoken, soft finishing;
- Making death beautiful,
- Life but a coin
- To be staked in the pastime
- Whose playing is more
- Than the transfer of being;
- Arch-anarch, chief builder,
- Prince and evangelist,
- I am the Will of God:
- I am the Sword.
- _The Sword_
- _Singing_--
- _The voice of the Sword from the heart of the Sword_
- _Clanging majestical_,
- _As from the starry-staired_
- _Courts of the primal Supremacy_,
- _His high_, _irresistible song_.
- LONDON
- VOLUNTARIES
- (To Charles Whibley)
- I
- _Andante con mote_
- Forth from the dust and din,
- The crush, the heat, the many-spotted glare,
- The odour and sense of life and lust aflare,
- The wrangle and jangle of unrests,
- Let us take horse, dear heart, take horse and win--
- As from swart August to the green lap of May--
- To quietness and the fresh and fragrant breasts
- Of the still, delicious night, not yet aware
- In any of her innumerable nests
- Of that first sudden plash of dawn,
- Clear, sapphirine, luminous, large,
- Which tells that soon the flowing springs of day
- In deep and ever deeper eddies drawn
- Forward and up, in wider and wider way
- Shall float the sands and brim the shores
- On this our haunch of Earth, as round she roars
- And spins into the outlook of the Sun
- (The Lord's first gift, the Lord's especial charge)
- With light, with living light, from marge to marge,
- Until the course He set and staked be run.
- Through street and square, through square and street,
- Each with his home-grown quality of dark
- And violated silence, loud and fleet,
- Waylaid by a merry ghost at every lamp,
- The hansom wheels and plunges. Hark, O hark,
- Sweet, how the old mare's bit and chain
- Ring back a rough refrain
- Upon the marked and cheerful tramp
- Of her four shoes! Here is the Park,
- And O the languid midsummer wafts adust,
- The tired midsummer blooms!
- O the mysterious distances, the glooms
- Romantic, the august
- And solemn shapes! At night this City of Trees
- Tunis to a tryst of vague and strange
- And monstrous Majesties,
- Let loose from some dim underworld to range
- These terrene vistas till their twilight sets:
- When, dispossessed of wonderfulness, they stand
- Beggared and common, plain to all the land
- For stooks of leaves! And lo! the wizard hour
- Whose shining, silent sorcery hath such power!
- Still, still the streets, between their carcanets
- Of linking gold, are avenues of sleep:
- But see how gable ends and parapets
- In gradual beauty and significance
- Emerge! And did you hear
- That little twitter-and-cheep,
- Breaking inordinately loud and clear
- On this still, spectral, exquisite atmosphere?
- 'Tis a first nest at matins! And behold
- A rakehell cat--how furtive and acold!
- A spent witch homing from some infamous dance--
- Obscene, quick-trotting, see her tip and fade
- Through shadowy railings into a pit of shade!
- And lo! a little wind and shy,
- The smell of ships (that earnest of romance),
- A sense of space and water, and thereby
- A lamplit bridge ouching the troubled sky.
- And look, O look! a tangle of silver gleams
- And dusky lights, our River and all his dreams,
- His dreams of a dead past that cannot die!
- What miracle is happening in the air,
- Charging the very texture of the gray
- With something luminous and rare?
- The night goes out like an ill-parcelled fire,
- And, as one lights a candle, it is day.
- The extinguisher that fain would strut for spire
- On the formal little church is not yet green
- Across the water: but the house-tops nigher,
- The corner-lines, the chimneys--look how clean,
- How new, how naked! See the batch of boats,
- Here at the stairs, washed in the fresh-sprung beam!
- And those are barges that were goblin floats,
- Black, hag-steered, fraught with devilry and dream!
- And in the piles the water frolics clear,
- The ripples into loose rings wander and flee,
- And we--we can behold that could but hear
- The ancient River singing as he goes
- New-mailed in morning to the ancient Sea.
- The gas burns lank and jaded in its glass:
- The old Ruffian soon shall yawn himself awake,
- And light his pipe, and shoulder his tools, and take
- His hobnailed way to work!
- Let us too pass:
- Through these long blindfold rows
- Of casements staring blind to right and left,
- Each with his gaze turned inward on some piece
- Of life in death's own likeness--Life bereft
- Of living looks as by the Great Release
- (Perchance of shadow-shapes from shadow-shows),
- Whose upshot all men know yet no man knows.
- Reach upon reach of burial--so they feel,
- These colonies of dreams! And as we steal
- Homeward together, but for the buxom breeze
- That frolics at our heel,
- Greeting the town with news of the summer seas,
- We might--thus awed, thus lonely that we are--
- Be wandering some depopulated star,
- Some world of memories and unbroken graves,
- So broods the abounding Silence near and far:
- Till even your footfall craves
- Forgiveness of the majesty it braves.
- II
- _Scherzando_
- Down through the ancient Strand
- The Spirit of October, mild and boon
- And sauntering, takes his way
- This golden end of afternoon,
- As though the corn stood yellow in all the land
- And the ripe apples dropped to the harvest-moon.
- Lo! the round sun, half down the western slope--
- Seen as along an unglazed telescope--
- Lingers and lolls, loth to be done with day:
- Gifting the long, lean, lanky street
- And its abounding confluences of being
- With aspects generous and bland:
- Making a thousand harnesses to shine
- As with new ore from some enchanted mine,
- And every horse's coat so full of sheen
- He looks new-tailored, and every 'bus feels clean,
- And never a hansom but is worth the feeing;
- And every jeweller within the pale
- Offers a real Arabian Night for sale;
- And even the roar
- Of the strong streams of toil that pause and pour
- Eastward and westward sounds suffused--
- Seems as it were bemused
- And blurred, and like the speech
- Of lazy seas upon a lotus-eating beach--
- With this enchanted lustrousness,
- This mellow magic, that (as a man's caress
- Brings back to some faded face beloved before
- A heavenly shadow of the grace it wore
- Ere the poor eyes were minded to beseech)
- Old things transfigures, and you hail and bless
- Their looks of long-lapsed loveliness once more;
- Till the sedate and mannered elegance
- Of Clement's is all tinctured with romance;
- The while the fanciful, formal, finicking charm
- Of Bride's, that madrigal in stone,
- Glows flushed and warm
- And beauteous with a beauty not its own;
- And the high majesty of Paul's
- Uplifts a voice of living light, and calls--
- Calls to his millions to behold and see
- How goodly this his London Town can be!
- For earth and sky and air
- Are golden everywhere,
- And golden with a gold so suave and fine
- The looking on it lifts the heart like wine.
- Trafalgar Square
- (The fountains volleying golden glaze)
- Gleams like an angel-market. High aloft
- Over his couchant Lions in a haze
- Shimmering and bland and soft,
- A dust of chrysoprase,
- Our Sailor takes the golden gaze
- Of the saluting sun, and flames superb
- As once he flamed it on his ocean round.
- The dingy dreariness of the picture-place,
- Turned very nearly bright,
- Takes on a certain dismal grace,
- And shows not all a scandal to the ground.
- The very blind man pottering on the kerb,
- Among the posies and the ostrich feathers
- And the rude voices touched with all the weathers
- Of all the varying year,
- Shares in the universal alms of light.
- The windows, with their fleeting, flickering fires,
- The height and spread of frontage shining sheer,
- The glistering signs, the rejoicing roofs and spires--
- 'Tis El Dorado--El Dorado plain,
- The Golden City! And when a girl goes by,
- Look! as she turns her glancing head,
- A call of gold is floated from her ear!
- Golden, all golden! In a golden glory,
- Long lapsing down a golden coasted sky,
- The day not dies but seems
- Dispersed in wafts and drifts of gold, and shed
- Upon a past of golden song and story
- And memories of gold and golden dreams.
- III
- _Largo e mesto_
- Out of the poisonous East,
- Over a continent of blight,
- Like a maleficent Influence released
- From the most squalid cellarage of hell,
- The Wind-Fiend, the abominable--
- The hangman wind that tortures temper and light--
- Comes slouching, sullen and obscene,
- Hard on the skirts of the embittered night:
- And in a cloud unclean
- Of excremental humours, roused to strife
- By the operation of some ruinous change
- Wherever his evil mandate run and range
- Into a dire intensity of life,
- A craftsman at his bench, he settles down
- To the grim job of throttling London Town.
- And, by a jealous lightlessness beset
- That might have oppressed the dragons of old time
- Crunching and groping in the abysmal slime,
- A cave of cut-throat thoughts and villainous dreams,
- Hag-rid and crying with cold and dirt and wet,
- The afflicted city, prone from mark to mark
- In shameful occultation, seems
- A nightmare labyrinthine, dim and drifting,
- With wavering gulfs and antic heights and shifting
- Rent in the stuff of a material dark
- Wherein the lamplight, scattered and sick and pale,
- Shows like the leper's living blotch of bale:
- Uncoiling monstrous into street on street
- Paven with perils, teeming with mischance,
- Where man and beast go blindfold and in dread,
- Working with oaths and threats and faltering feet
- Somewhither in the hideousness ahead;
- Working through wicked airs and deadly dews
- That make the laden robber grin askance
- At the good places in his black romance,
- And the poor, loitering harlot rather choose
- Go pinched and pined to bed
- Than lurk and shiver and curse her wretched way
- From arch to arch, scouting some threepenny prey.
- Forgot his dawns and far-flushed afterglows,
- His green garlands and windy eyots forgot,
- The old Father-River flows,
- His watchfires cores of menace in the gloom,
- As he came oozing from the Pit, and bore,
- Sunk in his filthily transfigured sides,
- Shoals of dishonoured dead to tumble and rot
- In the squalor of the universal shore:
- His voices sounding through the gruesome air
- As from the ferry where the Boat of Doom
- With her blaspheming cargo reels and rides:
- The while his children, the brave ships,
- No more adventurous and fair
- Nor tripping it light of heel as home-bound brides,
- But infamously enchanted,
- Huddle together in the foul eclipse,
- Or feel their course by inches desperately,
- As through a tangle of alleys murder-haunted,
- From sinister reach to reach--out--out--to sea.
- And Death the while--
- Death with his well-worn, lean, professional smile,
- Death in his threadbare working trim--
- Comes to your bedside, unannounced and bland,
- And with expert, inevitable hand
- Feels at your windpipe, fingers you in the lung,
- Or flicks the clot well into the labouring heart:
- Thus signifying unto old and young,
- However hard of mouth or wild of whim,
- 'Tis time--'tis time by his ancient watch--to part
- With books and women and talk and drink and art:
- And you go humbly after him
- To a mean suburban lodging: on the way
- To what or where
- Not Death, who is old and very wise, can say:
- And you--how should you care
- So long as, unreclaimed of hell,
- The Wind-Fiend, the insufferable,
- Thus vicious and thus patient sits him down
- To the black job of burking London Town?
- IV
- _Allegro maestoso_
- Spring winds that blow
- As over leagues of myrtle-blooms and may;
- Bevies of spring clouds trooping slow,
- Like matrons heavy-bosomed and aglow
- With the mild and placid pride of increase! Nay,
- What makes this insolent and comely stream
- Of appetence, this freshet of desire
- (Milk from the wild breasts of the wilful Day!),
- Down Piccadilly dance and murmur and gleam
- In genial wave on wave and gyre on gyre?
- Why does that nymph unparalleled splash and churn
- The wealth of her enchanted urn
- Till, over-billowing all between
- Her cheerful margents grey and living green,
- It floats and wanders, glittering and fleeing,
- An estuary of the joy of being?
- Why should the buxom leafage of the Park
- Touch to an ecstasy the act of seeing?
- --As if my paramour, my bride of brides,
- Lingering and flushed, mysteriously abides
- In some dim, eye-proof angle of odorous dark,
- Some smiling nook of green-and-golden shade,
- In the divine conviction robed and crowned
- The globe fulfils his immemorial round
- But as the marrying-place of all things made!
- There is no man, this deifying day,
- But feels the primal blessing in his blood.
- The sacred impulse of the May
- Brightening like sex made sunshine through her veins,
- There is no woman but disdains
- To vail the ensigns of her womanhood.
- None but, rejoicing, flaunts them as she goes,
- Bounteous in looks of her delicious best,
- On her inviolable quest:
- These with their hopes, with their sweet secrets those,
- But all desirable and frankly fair,
- As each were keeping some most prosperous tryst,
- And in the knowledge went imparadised.
- For look! a magical influence everywhere,
- Look how the liberal and transfiguring air
- Washes this inn of memorable meetings,
- This centre of ravishments and gracious greetings,
- Till, through its jocund loveliness of length
- A tidal-race of lust from shore to shore,
- A brimming reach of beauty met with strength,
- It shines and sounds like some miraculous dream,
- Some vision multitudinous and agleam,
- Of happiness as it shall be evermore!
- Praise God for giving
- Through this His messenger among the days
- His word the life He gave is thrice-worth living!
- For Pan, the bountiful, imperious Pan--
- Not dead, not dead, as dreamers feigned,
- But the lush genius of a million Mays
- Renewing his beneficent endeavour!--
- Still reigns and triumphs, as he hath triumphed and reigned
- Since in the dim blue dawn of time
- The universal ebb-and-flow began,
- To sound his ancient music, and prevails
- By the persuasion of his mighty rhyme
- Here in this radiant and immortal street
- Lavishly and omnipotently as ever
- In the open hills, the undissembling dales,
- The laughing-places of the juvenile earth.
- For lo! the wills of man and woman meet,
- Meet and are moved, each unto each endeared
- As once in Eden's prodigal bowers befell,
- To share his shameless, elemental mirth
- In one great act of faith, while deep and strong,
- Incomparably nerved and cheered,
- The enormous heart of London joys to beat
- To the measures of his rough, majestic song:
- The lewd, perennial, overmastering spell
- That keeps the rolling universe ensphered
- And life and all for which life lives to long
- Wanton and wondrous and for ever well.
- RHYMES
- AND RHYTHMS
- I
- Where forlorn sunsets flare and fade
- On desolate sea and lonely sand,
- Out of the silence and the shade
- What is the voice of strange command
- Calling you still, as friend calls friend
- With love that cannot brook delay,
- To rise and follow the ways that wend
- Over the hills and far away?
- Hark in the city, street on street
- A roaring reach of death and life,
- Of vortices that clash and fleet
- And ruin in appointed strife,
- Hark to it calling, calling clear,
- Calling until you cannot stay
- From dearer things than your own most dear
- Over the hills and far away.
- Out of the sound of ebb and flow,
- Out of the sight of lamp and star,
- It calls you where the good winds blow,
- And the unchanging meadows are:
- From faded hopes and hopes agleam,
- It calls you, calls you night and day
- Beyond the dark into the dream
- Over the hills and far away.
- II
- A desolate shore,
- The sinister seduction of the Moon,
- The menace of the irreclaimable Sea.
- Flaunting, tawdry and grim,
- From cloud to cloud along her beat,
- Leering her battered and inveterate leer,
- She signals where he prowls in the dark alone,
- Her horrible old man,
- Mumbling old oaths and warming
- His villainous old bones with villainous talk--
- The secrets of their grisly housekeeping
- Since they went out upon the pad
- In the first twilight of self-conscious Time:
- Growling, obscene and hoarse,
- Tales of unnumbered Ships,
- Goodly and strong, Companions of the Advance
- In some vile alley of the night
- Waylaid and bludgeoned--
- Dead.
- Deep cellared in primeval ooze,
- Ruined, dishonoured, spoiled,
- They lie where the lean water-worm
- Crawls free of their secrets, and their broken sides
- Bulge with the slime of life. Thus they abide,
- Thus fouled and desecrate,
- The summons of the Trumpet, and the while
- These Twain, their murderers,
- Unravined, imperturbable, unsubdued,
- Hang at the heels of their children--She aloft
- As in the shining streets,
- He as in ambush at some fetid stair.
- The stalwart Ships,
- The beautiful and bold adventurers!
- Stationed out yonder in the isle,
- The tall Policeman,
- Flashing his bull's-eye, as he peers
- About him in the ancient vacancy,
- Tells them this way is safety--this way home.
- III
- (To R. F. B.)
- We are the Choice of the Will: God, when He gave the word
- That called us into line, set in our hand a sword;
- Set us a sword to wield none else could lift and draw,
- And bade us forth to the sound of the trumpet of the Law.
- East and west and north, wherever the battle grew,
- As men to a feast we fared, the work of the Will to do.
- Bent upon vast beginnings, bidding anarchy cease--
- (Had we hacked it to the Pit, we had left it a place of peace!)--
- Marching, building, sailing, pillar of cloud or fire,
- Sons of the Will, we fought the fight of the Will, our sire.
- Road was never so rough that we left its purpose dark;
- Stark was ever the sea, but our ships were yet more stark;
- We tracked the winds of the world to the steps of their very thrones;
- The secret parts of the world were salted with our bones;
- Till now the name of names, England, the name of might,
- Flames from the austral bounds to the ends of the northern night;
- And the call of her morning drum goes in a girdle of sound,
- Like the voice of the sun in song, the great globe round and round;
- And the shadow of her flag, when it shouts to the mother-breeze,
- Floats from shore to shore of the universal seas;
- And the loneliest death is fair with a memory of her flowers,
- And the end of the road to Hell with the sense of her dews and showers!
- Who says that we shall pass, or the fame of us fade and die,
- While the living stars fulfil their round in the living sky?
- For the sire lives in his sons, and they pay their father's debt,
- And the Lion has left a whelp wherever his claw was set:
- And the Lion in his whelps, his whelps that none shall brave,
- Is but less strong than Time and the all-devouring Grave.
- IV
- It came with the threat of a waning moon
- And the wail of an ebbing tide,
- But many a woman has lived for less,
- And many a man has died;
- For life upon life took hold and passed,
- Strong in a fate set free,
- Out of the deep, into the dark,
- On for the years to be.
- Between the gleam of a waning moon
- And the song of an ebbing tide,
- Chance upon chance of love and death
- Took wing for the world so wide.
- Leaf out of leaf is the way of the land,
- Wave out of wave of the sea;
- And who shall reckon what lives may live
- In the life that we bade to be?
- V
- Why, my heart, do we love her so?
- (Geraldine, Geraldine!)--
- Why does the great sea ebb and flow?
- Why does the round world spin?
- Geraldine, Geraldine,
- Bid me my life renew,
- What is it worth unless I win,
- Love--love and you?
- Why, my heart, when we speak her name
- (Geraldine, Geraldine!),
- Throbs the word like a flinging flame?--
- Why does the spring begin?
- Geraldine, Geraldine,
- Bid me indeed to be,
- Open your heart and take us in,
- Love--love and me.
- VI
- Space and dread and the dark--
- Over a livid stretch of sky
- Cloud-monsters crawling like a funeral train
- Of huge primeval presences
- Stooping beneath the weight
- Of some enormous, rudimentary grief;
- While in the haunting loneliness
- The far sea waits and wanders, with a sound
- As of the trailing skirts of Destiny
- Passing unseen
- To some immitigable end
- With her grey henchman, Death.
- What larve, what spectre is this
- Thrilling the wilderness to life
- As with the bodily shape of Fear?
- What but a desperate sense,
- A strong foreboding of those dim,
- Interminable continents, forlorn
- And many-silenced in a dusk
- Inviolable utterly, and dead
- As the poor dead it huddles and swarms and styes
- In hugger-mugger through eternity?
- Life--life--let there be life!
- Better a thousand times the roaring hours
- When wave and wind,
- Like the Arch-Murderer in flight
- From the Avenger at his heel,
- Storm through the desolate fastnesses
- And wild waste places of the world!
- Life--give me life until the end,
- That at the very top of being,
- The battle-spirit shouting in my blood,
- Out of the reddest hell of the fight
- I may be snatched and flung
- Into the everlasting lull,
- The immortal, incommunicable dream.
- VII
- There's a regret
- So grinding, so immitigably sad,
- Remorse thereby feels tolerant, even glad. . . .
- Do you not know it yet?
- For deeds undone
- Rankle, and snarl, and hunger for their due
- Till there seems naught so despicable as you
- In all the grin o' the sun.
- Like an old shoe
- The sea spurns and the land abhors, you lie
- About the beach of Time, till by-and-by
- Death, that derides you too--
- Death, as he goes
- His ragman's round, espies you, where you stray,
- With half-an-eye, and kicks you out of his way;
- And then--and then, who knows
- But the kind Grave
- Turns on you, and you feel the convict Worm,
- In that black bridewell working out his term,
- Hanker and grope and crave?
- 'Poor fool that might--
- That might, yet would not, dared not, let this be,
- Think of it, here and thus made over to me
- In the implacable night!'
- And writhing, fain
- And like a lover, he his fill shall take
- Where no triumphant memory lives to make
- His obscene victory vain.
- VIII
- (To J. A. C.)
- Fresh from his fastnesses
- Wholesome and spacious,
- The north wind, the mad huntsman,
- Halloos on his white hounds
- Over the grey, roaring
- Reaches and ridges,
- The forest of ocean,
- The chace of the world.
- Hark to the peal
- Of the pack in full cry,
- As he thongs them before him
- Swarming voluminous,
- Weltering, wide-wallowing,
- Till in a ruining
- Chaos of energy,
- Hurled on their quarry,
- They crash into foam!
- Old Indefatigable,
- Time's right-hand man, the sea
- Laughs as in joy
- From his millions of wrinkles:
- Laughs that his destiny,
- Great with the greatness
- Of triumphing order,
- Shows as a dwarf
- By the strength of his heart
- And the might of his hands.
- Master of masters,
- O maker of heroes,
- Thunder the brave,
- Irresistible message:--
- 'Life is worth living
- Through every grain of it
- From the foundations
- To the last edge
- Of the cornerstone, death.'
- IX
- 'As like the Woman as you can'--
- (_Thus the New Adam was beguiled_)--
- 'So shall you touch the Perfect Man'--
- (_God in the Garden heard and smiled_).
- 'Your father perished with his day:
- 'A clot of passions fierce and blind
- 'He fought, he slew, he hacked his way:
- 'Your muscles, Child, must be of mind.
- 'The Brute that lurks and irks within,
- 'How, till you have him gagged and bound,
- 'Escape the foullest form of Sin?'
- (_God in the Garden laughed and frowned_).
- 'So vile, so rank, the bestial mood
- 'In which the race is bid to be,
- 'It wrecks the Rarer Womanhood:
- 'Live, therefore, you, for Purity!
- 'Take for your mate no buxom croup,
- 'No girl all grace and natural will:
- 'To make her happy were to stoop
- 'From light to dark, from Good to Ill.
- 'Choose one of whom your grosser make'--
- (_God in the Garden laughed outright_)--
- 'The true refining touch may take
- 'Till both attain Life's highest height.
- 'There, equal, purged of soul and sense,
- 'Beneficent, high-thinking, just,
- 'Beyond the appeal of Violence,
- 'Incapable of common Lust,
- 'In mental Marriage still prevail'--
- (_God in the Garden hid His face_)--
- 'Till you achieve that Female-Male,
- 'In Which shall culminate the race.
- X
- Midsummer midnight skies,
- Midsummer midnight influences and airs,
- The shining sensitive silver of the sea
- Touched with the strange-hued blazonings of dawn:
- And all so solemnly still I seem to hear
- The breathing of Life and Death,
- The secular Accomplices,
- Renewing the visible miracle of the world.
- The wistful stars
- Shine like good memories. The young morning wind
- Blows full of unforgotten hours
- As over a region of roses. Life and Death
- Sound on--sound on. . . . And the night magical,
- Troubled yet comforting, thrills
- As if the Enchanted Castle at the heart
- Of the wood's dark wonderment
- Swung wide his valves and filled the dim sea-banks
- With exquisite visitants:
- Words fiery-hearted yet, dreams and desires
- With living looks intolerable, regrets
- Whose voice comes as the voice of an only child
- Heard from the grave: shapes of a Might-Have-Been--
- Beautiful, miserable, distraught--
- The Law no man may baffle denied and slew.
- The spell-bound ships stand as at gaze
- To let the marvel by. The grey road glooms . . .
- Glimmers . . . goes out . . . and there, O there where it fades,
- What grace, what glamour, what wild will,
- Transfigure the shadows? Whose,
- Heart of my heart, Soul of my soul, but yours?
- Ghosts--ghosts--the sapphirine air
- Teems with them even to the gleaming ends
- Of the wild day-spring! Ghosts,
- Everywhere--everywhere--till I and you
- At last--dear love, at last!--
- Are in the dreaming, even as Life and Death,
- Twin-ministers of the unoriginal Will.
- XI
- Gulls in an aery morrice
- Gleam and vanish and gleam . . .
- The full sea, sleepily basking,
- Dreams under skies of dream.
- Gulls in an aery morrice
- Circle and swoop and close . . .
- Fuller and ever fuller
- The rose of the morning blows.
- Gulls in an aery morrice
- Frolicking float and fade . . .
- O the way of a bird in the sunshine,
- The way of a man with a maid!
- XII
- Some starlit garden grey with dew,
- Some chamber flushed with wine and fire,
- What matters where, so I and you
- Are worthy our desire?
- Behind, a past that scolds and jeers
- For ungirt loin and lamp unlit;
- In front the unmanageable years,
- The trap upon the pit;
- Think on the shame of dreams for deeds,
- The scandal of unnatural strife,
- The slur upon immortal needs,
- The treason done to life:
- Arise! no more a living lie
- And with me quicken and control
- A memory that shall magnify
- The universal Soul.
- XIII
- (To James McNeill Whistler)
- Under a stagnant sky,
- Gloom out of gloom uncoiling into gloom,
- The River, jaded and forlorn,
- Welters and wanders wearily--wretchedly--on;
- Yet in and out among the ribs
- Of the old skeleton bridge, as in the piles
- Of some dead lake-built city, fall of skulls,
- Worm-worn, rat-riddled, mouldy with memories,
- Lingers to babble, to a broken tune
- (Once, O the unvoiced music of my heart!)
- So melancholy a soliloquy
- It sounds as it might tell
- The secret of the unending grief-in-grain,
- The terror of Time and Change and Death,
- That wastes this floating, transitory world.
- What of the incantation
- That forced the huddled shapes on yonder short
- To take and wear the night
- Like a material majesty?
- That touched the shafts of wavering fire
- About this miserable welter and wash--
- (River, O River of Journeys, River of Dreams!--)
- Into long, shining signals from the panes
- Of an enchanted pleasure-house
- Where life and life might live life lost in life
- For ever and evermore?
- O Death! O Change! O Time!
- Without you, O the insufferable eyes
- Of these poor Might-Have-Beens,
- These fatuous, ineffectual Yesterdays!
- XIV
- Time and the Earth--
- The old Father and Mother--
- Their teeming accomplished,
- Their purpose fulfilled,
- Close with a smile
- For a moment of kindness
- Ere for the winter
- They settle to sleep.
- Failing yet gracious,
- Slow pacing, soon homing,
- A patriarch that strolls
- Through the tents of his children,
- The Sun, as he journeys
- His round on the lower
- Ascents of the blue,
- Washes the roofs
- And the hillsides with clarity;
- Charms the dark pools
- Till they break into pictures;
- Scatters magnificent
- Alms to the beggar trees;
- Touches the mist-folk
- That crowd to his escort
- Into translucencies
- Radiant and ravishing,
- As with the visible
- Spirit of Summer
- Gloriously vaporised,
- Visioned in gold.
- Love, though the fallen leaf
- Mark, and the fleeting light
- And the loud, loitering
- Footfall of darkness
- Sign, to the heart
- Of the passage of destiny,
- Here is the ghost
- Of a summer that lived for us,
- Here is a promise
- Of summers to be.
- XV
- You played and sang a snatch of song,
- A song that all-too well we knew;
- But whither had flown the ancient wrong;
- And was it really I and you?
- O since the end of life's to live
- And pay in pence the common debt,
- What should it cost us to forgive
- Whose daily task is to forget?
- You babbled in the well-known voice--
- Not new, not new, the words you said.
- You touched me off that famous poise,
- That old effect, of neck and head.
- Dear, was it really you and I?
- In truth the riddle's ill to read,
- So many are the deaths we die
- Before we can be dead indeed.
- XVI
- One with the ruined sunset,
- The strange forsaken sands,
- What is it waits and wanders
- And signs with desperate hands?
- What is it calls in the twilight--
- Calls as its chance were vain?
- The cry of a gull sent seaward
- Or the voice of an ancient pain?
- The red ghost of the sunset,
- It walks them as its own,
- These dreary and desolate reaches . . .
- But O that it walked alone!
- XVII
- _CARMEN PATIBULARE_
- (To H. S.)
- Tree, Old Tree of the Triple Crook
- And the rope of the Black Election,
- 'Tis the faith of the Fool that a race you rule
- Can never achieve perfection:
- And 'It's O for the time of the New Sublime
- And the better than human way
- When the Wolf (poor beast) shall come to his own
- And the Rat shall have his day!'
- For Tree, Old Tree of the Triple Beam
- And the power of provocation,
- You have cockered the Brute with your dreadful fruit
- Till your thought is mere stupration:
- And 'It's how should we rise to be pure and wise,
- And how can we choose but fall,
- So long as the Hangman makes us dread
- And the Noose floats free for all?'
- So Tree, Old Tree of the Triple Coign
- And the trick there's no recalling,
- They will haggle and hew till they hack you through
- And at last they lay you sprawling:
- When 'Hey! for the hour of the race in flower
- And the long good-bye to sin!'
- And 'Ho! for the fires of Hell gone out
- For the want of keeping in!'
- But Tree, Old Tree of the Triple Bough
- And the ghastly Dreams that tend you,
- Your growth began with the life of Man
- And only his death can end you:
- They may tug in line at your hempen twine,
- They may flourish with axe and saw,
- But your taproot drinks of the Sacred Springs
- In the living rock of Law.
- And Tree, Old Tree of the Triple Fork,
- When the spent sun reels and blunders
- Down a welkin lit with the flare of the Pit
- As it seethes in spate and thunders,
- Stern on the glare of the tortured air
- Your lines august shall gloom,
- And your master-beam be the last thing whelmed
- In the ruining roar of Doom.
- XVIII
- (To M. E. H.)
- When you wake in your crib,
- You, an inch of experience--
- Vaulted about
- With the wonder of darkness;
- Wailing and striving
- To reach from your feebleness
- Something you feel
- Will be good to and cherish you,
- Something you know
- And can rest upon blindly:
- O then a hand
- (Your mother's, your mother's!)
- By the fall of its fingers
- All knowledge, all power to you,
- Out of the dreary,
- Discouraging strangenesses
- Comes to and masters you,
- Takes you, and lovingly
- Woos you and soothes you
- Back, as you cling to it,
- Back to some comforting
- Corner of sleep.
- So you wake in your bed,
- Having lived, having loved:
- But the shadows are there,
- And the world and its kingdoms
- Incredibly faded;
- And you grope in the Terror
- Above you and under
- For the light, for the warmth,
- The assurance of life;
- But the blasts are ice-born,
- And your heart is nigh burst
- With the weight of the gloom
- And the stress of your strangled
- And desperate endeavour:
- Sudden a hand--
- Mother, O Mother!--
- God at His best to you,
- Out of the roaring,
- Impossible silences,
- Falls on and urges you,
- Mightily, tenderly,
- Forth, as you clutch at it,
- Forth to the infinite
- Peace of the Grave.
- XIX
- O Time and Change, they range and range
- From sunshine round to thunder!--
- They glance and go as the great winds blow,
- And the best of our dreams drive under:
- For Time and Change estrange, estrange--
- And, now they have looked and seen us,
- O we that were dear we are all-too near
- With the thick of the world between us.
- O Death and Time, they chime and chime
- Like bells at sunset falling!--
- They end the song, they right the wrong,
- They set the old echoes calling:
- For Death and Time bring on the prime
- Of God's own chosen weather,
- And we lie in the peace of the Great Release
- As once in the grass together.
- XX
- The shadow of Dawn;
- Stillness and stars and over-mastering dreams
- Of Life and Death and Sleep;
- Heard over gleaming flats the old unchanging sound
- Of the old unchanging Sea.
- My soul and yours--
- O hand in hand let us fare forth, two ghosts,
- Into the ghostliness,
- The infinite and abounding solitudes,
- Beyond--O beyond!--beyond . . .
- Here in the porch
- Upon the multitudinous silences
- Of the kingdoms of the grave,
- We twain are you and I--two ghosts Omnipotence
- Can touch no more--no more!
- XXI
- When the wind storms by with a shout, and the stern sea-caves
- Exult in the tramp and the roar of onsetting waves,
- Then, then, it comes home to the heart that the top of life
- Is the passion that burns the blood in the act of strife--
- Till you pity the dead down there in their quiet graves.
- But to drowse with the fen behind and the fog before,
- When the rain-rot spreads and a tame sea mumbles the shore,
- Not to adventure, none to fight, no right and no wrong,
- Sons of the Sword heart-sick for a stave of your sire's old song--
- O you envy the blessed dead that can live no more!
- XXII
- Trees and the menace of night;
- Then a long, lonely, leaden mere
- Backed by a desolate fell
- As by a spectral battlement; and then,
- Low-brooding, interpenetrating all,
- A vast, grey, listless, inexpressive sky,
- So beggared, so incredibly bereft
- Of starlight and the song of racing worlds
- It might have bellied down upon the Void
- Where as in terror Light was beginning to be.
- Hist! In the trees fulfilled of night
- (Night and the wretchedness of the sky)
- Is it the hurry of the rain?
- Or the noise of a drive of the Dead
- Streaming before the irresistible Will
- Through the strange dusk of this, the Debateable Land
- Between their place and ours?
- Like the forgetfulness
- Of the work-a-day world made visible,
- A mist falls from the melancholy sky:
- A messenger from some lost and loving soul,
- Hopeless, far wandered, dazed
- Here in the provinces of life,
- A great white moth fades miserably past.
- Thro' the trees in the strange dead night,
- Under the vast dead sky,
- Forgetting and forgot, a drift of Dead
- Sets to the mystic mere, the phantom fell,
- And the unimagined vastitudes beyond.
- XXIII
- (To P. A. G.)
- Here they trysted, here they strayed,
- In the leafage dewy and boon,
- Many a man and many a maid,
- And the morn was merry June:
- 'Death is fleet, Life is sweet,'
- Sang the blackbird in the may;
- And the hour with flying feet
- While they dreamed was yesterday.
- Many a maid and many a man
- Found the leafage close and boon;
- Many a destiny began--
- O the morn was merry June.
- Dead and gone, dead and gone,
- (Hark the blackbird in the may!),
- Life and Death went hurrying on,
- Cheek on cheek--and where were they?
- Dust in dust engendering dust
- In the leafage fresh and boon,
- Man and maid fulfil their trust--
- Still the morn turns merry June.
- Mother Life, Father Death
- (O the blackbird in the may!),
- Each the other's breath for breath,
- Fleet the times of the world away.
- XXIV
- (To A. C.)
- What should the Trees,
- Midsummer-manifold, each one,
- Voluminous, a labyrinth of life--
- What should such things of bulk and multitude
- Yield of their huge, unutterable selves,
- To the random importunity of Day,
- The blabbing journalist?
- Alert to snatch and publish hour by hour
- Their greenest hints, their leafiest privacies,
- How can he other than endure
- The ruminant irony that foists him off
- With broad-blown falsehoods, or the obviousness
- Of laughter flickering back from shine to shade,
- And disappearances of homing birds,
- And frolicsome freaks
- Of little boughs that frisk with little boughs?
- Now, at the word
- Of the ancient, sacerdotal Night,
- Night of the many secrets, whose effect--
- Transfiguring, hierophantic, dread--
- Themselves alone may fully apprehend,
- They tremble and are changed:
- In each, the uncouth individual soul
- Looms forth and glooms
- Essential, and, their bodily presences
- Touched with inordinate significance,
- Wearing the darkness like the livery
- Of some mysterious and tremendous guild,
- They brood--they menace--they appal:
- Or the anguish of prophecy tears them, and they wring
- Wild hands of warning in the face
- Of some inevitable advance of doom:
- Or, each to the other bending, beckoning, signing,
- As in some monstrous market-place,
- They pass the news, these Gossips of the Prime,
- In that old speech their forefathers
- Learned on the lawns of Eden, ere they heard
- The troubled voice of Eve
- Naming the wondering folk of Paradise.
- Your sense is sealed, or you should hear them tell
- The tale of their dim life and all
- Its compost of experience: how the Sun
- Spreads them their daily feast,
- Sumptuous, of light, firing them as with wine;
- Of the old Moon's fitful solicitude
- And those mild messages the Stars
- Descend in silver silences and dews;
- Or what the buxom West,
- Wanton with wading in the swirl of the wheat,
- Said, and their leafage laughed;
- And how the wet-winged Angel of the Rain
- Came whispering . . . whispering; and the gifts of the Year--
- The sting of the stirring sap
- Under the wizardry of the young-eyed Spring,
- Their summer amplitudes of pomp
- And rich autumnal melancholy, and the shrill,
- Embittered housewifery
- Of the lean Winter: all such things,
- And with them all the goodness of the Master
- Whose right hand blesses with increase and life,
- Whose left hand honours with decay and death.
- So, under the constraint of Night,
- These gross and simple creatures,
- Each in his scores of rings, which rings are years,
- A servant of the Will.
- And God, the Craftsman, as He walks
- The floor of His workshop, hearkens, full of cheer
- In thus accomplishing
- The aims of His miraculous artistry.
- XXV
- What have I done for you,
- England, my England?
- What is there I would not do,
- England my own?
- With your glorious eyes austere,
- As the Lord were walking near,
- Whispering terrible things and dear
- As the Song on your bugles blown,
- England--
- Round the world on your bugles blown!
- Where shall the watchful Sun,
- England, my England,
- Match the master-work you've done,
- England my own?
- When shall he rejoice agen
- Such a breed of mighty men
- As come forward, one to ten,
- To the Song on your bugles blown,
- England--
- Down the years on your bugles blown?
- Ever the faith endures,
- England, my England:--
- 'Take and break us: we are yours,
- 'England, my own!
- 'Life is good, and joy runs high
- 'Between English earth and sky:
- 'Death is death; but we shall die
- 'To the Song on your bugles blown,
- 'England--
- 'To the stars on your bugles blown!'
- They call you proud and hard,
- England, my England:
- You with worlds to watch and ward,
- England, my own!
- You whose mailed hand keeps the keys
- Of such teeming destinies
- You could know nor dread nor ease
- Were the Song on your bugles blown,
- England,
- Round the Pit on your bugles blown!
- Mother of Ships whose might,
- England, my England,
- Is the fierce old Sea's delight,
- England, my own,
- Chosen daughter of the Lord,
- Spouse-in-Chief of the ancient Sword,
- There's the menace of the Word
- In the Song on your bugles blown,
- England--
- Out of heaven on your bugles blown!
- Edinburgh: T. and A. CONSTABLE, Printers to Her Majesty
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