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  • Title: Chamber Music
  • Author: James Joyce
  • Release Date: December 11, 2008 [EBook #2817]
  • Last updated: January 23, 2019
  • Language: English
  • Character set encoding: UTF-8
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBER MUSIC ***
  • Produced by David Reed, and David Widger
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  • Chamber Music
  • by James Joyce
  • Contents With First Lines
  • I Strings in the earth and air
  • Make music sweet;
  • II The twilight turns from amethyst
  • To deep and deeper blue,
  • III At that hour when all things have repose,
  • O lonely watcher of the skies,
  • IV When the shy star goes forth in heaven
  • All maidenly, disconsolate,
  • V Lean out of the window,
  • Goldenhair,
  • VI I would in that sweet bosom be
  • (O sweet it is and fair it is!)
  • VII My love is in a light attire
  • Among the apple-trees,
  • VIII Who goes amid the green wood
  • With springtide all adorning her?
  • IX Winds of May, that dance on the sea,
  • Dancing a ring-around in glee
  • X Bright cap and streamers,
  • He sings in the hollow:
  • XI Bid adieu, adieu, adieu,
  • Bid adieu to girlish days,
  • XII What counsel has the hooded moon
  • Put in thy heart, my shyly sweet,
  • XIII Go seek her out all courteously,
  • And say I come,
  • XIV My dove, my beautiful one,
  • Arise, arise!
  • XV From dewy dreams, my soul, arise,
  • From love’s deep slumber and from death,
  • XVI O cool is the valley now
  • And there, love, will we go
  • XVII Because your voice was at my sidew
  • I gave him pain,
  • XVIII O sweetheart, hear you
  • Your lover’s tale;
  • XIX Be not sad because all men
  • Prefer a lying clamour before you:
  • XX In the dark pine-wood
  • I would we lay,
  • XXI He who hath glory lost, nor hath
  • Found any soul to fellow his,
  • XXII Of that so sweet imprisonment
  • My soul, dearest, is fain—
  • XXIII This heart that flutters near my heart
  • My hope and all my riches is,
  • XXIV Silently she’s combing,
  • Combing her long hair,
  • XXV Lightly come or lightly go:
  • Though thy heart presage thee woe,
  • XXVI Thou leanest to the shell of night,
  • Dear lady, a divining ear.
  • XXVII Though I thy Mithridates were,
  • Framed to defy the poison-dart,
  • XXVIII Gentle lady, do not sing
  • Sad songs about the end of love;
  • XXIX Dear heart, why will you use me so?
  • Dear eyes that gently me upbraid,
  • XXX Love came to us in time gone by
  • When one at twilight shyly played
  • XXXI O, it was out by Donnycarney
  • When the bat flew from tree to tree
  • XXXII Rain has fallen all the day.
  • O come among the laden trees:
  • XXXIII Now, O now, in this brown land
  • Where Love did so sweet music make
  • XXXIV Sleep now, O sleep now,
  • O you unquiet heart!
  • XXXV All day I hear the noise of waters
  • Making moan,
  • XXXVI I hear an army charging upon the land,
  • And the thunder of horses plunging, foam about their knees:
  • I
  • Strings in the earth and air
  • Make music sweet;
  • Strings by the river where
  • The willows meet.
  • There’s music along the river
  • For Love wanders there,
  • Pale flowers on his mantle,
  • Dark leaves on his hair.
  • All softly playing,
  • With head to the music bent,
  • And fingers straying
  • Upon an instrument.
  • II
  • The twilight turns from amethyst
  • To deep and deeper blue,
  • The lamp fills with a pale green glow
  • The trees of the avenue.
  • The old piano plays an air,
  • Sedate and slow and gay;
  • She bends upon the yellow keys,
  • Her head inclines this way.
  • Shy thought and grave wide eyes and hands
  • That wander as they list—
  • The twilight turns to darker blue
  • With lights of amethyst.
  • III
  • At that hour when all things have repose,
  • O lonely watcher of the skies,
  • Do you hear the night wind and the sighs
  • Of harps playing unto Love to unclose
  • The pale gates of sunrise?
  • When all things repose, do you alone
  • Awake to hear the sweet harps play
  • To Love before him on his way,
  • And the night wind answering in antiphon
  • Till night is overgone?
  • Play on, invisible harps, unto Love,
  • Whose way in heaven is aglow
  • At that hour when soft lights come and go,
  • Soft sweet music in the air above
  • And in the earth below.
  • IV
  • When the shy star goes forth in heaven
  • All maidenly, disconsolate,
  • Hear you amid the drowsy even
  • One who is singing by your gate.
  • His song is softer than the dew
  • And he is come to visit you.
  • O bend no more in revery
  • When he at eventide is calling,
  • Nor muse: Who may this singer be
  • Whose song about my heart is falling?
  • Know you by this, the lover’s chant,
  • ’Tis I that am your visitant.
  • V
  • Lean out of the window,
  • Goldenhair,
  • I hear you singing
  • A merry air.
  • My book was closed,
  • I read no more,
  • Watching the fire dance
  • On the floor.
  • I have left my book,
  • I have left my room,
  • For I heard you singing
  • Through the gloom.
  • Singing and singing
  • A merry air,
  • Lean out of the window,
  • Goldenhair.
  • VI
  • I would in that sweet bosom be
  • (O sweet it is and fair it is!)
  • Where no rude wind might visit me.
  • Because of sad austerities
  • I would in that sweet bosom be.
  • I would be ever in that heart
  • (O soft I knock and soft entreat her!)
  • Where only peace might be my part.
  • Austerities were all the sweeter
  • So I were ever in that heart.
  • VII
  • My love is in a light attire
  • Among the apple-trees,
  • Where the gay winds do most desire
  • To run in companies.
  • There, where the gay winds stay to woo
  • The young leaves as they pass,
  • My love goes slowly, bending to
  • Her shadow on the grass;
  • And where the sky’s a pale blue cup
  • Over the laughing land,
  • My love goes lightly, holding up
  • Her dress with dainty hand.
  • VIII
  • Who goes amid the green wood
  • With springtide all adorning her?
  • Who goes amid the merry green wood
  • To make it merrier?
  • Who passes in the sunlight
  • By ways that know the light footfall?
  • Who passes in the sweet sunlight
  • With mien so virginal?
  • The ways of all the woodland
  • Gleam with a soft and golden fire—
  • For whom does all the sunny woodland
  • Carry so brave attire?
  • O, it is for my true love
  • The woods their rich apparel wear—
  • O, it is for my own true love,
  • That is so young and fair.
  • IX
  • Winds of May, that dance on the sea,
  • Dancing a ring-around in glee
  • From furrow to furrow, while overhead
  • The foam flies up to be garlanded,
  • In silvery arches spanning the air,
  • Saw you my true love anywhere?
  • Welladay! Welladay!
  • For the winds of May!
  • Love is unhappy when love is away!
  • X
  • Bright cap and streamers,
  • He sings in the hollow:
  • Come follow, come follow,
  • All you that love.
  • Leave dreams to the dreamers
  • That will not after,
  • That song and laughter
  • Do nothing move.
  • With ribbons streaming
  • He sings the bolder;
  • In troop at his shoulder
  • The wild bees hum.
  • And the time of dreaming
  • Dreams is over—
  • As lover to lover,
  • Sweetheart, I come.
  • XI
  • Bid adieu, adieu, adieu,
  • Bid adieu to girlish days,
  • Happy Love is come to woo
  • Thee and woo thy girlish ways—
  • The zone that doth become thee fair,
  • The snood upon thy yellow hair,
  • When thou hast heard his name upon
  • The bugles of the cherubim
  • Begin thou softly to unzone
  • Thy girlish bosom unto him
  • And softly to undo the snood
  • That is the sign of maidenhood.
  • XII
  • What counsel has the hooded moon
  • Put in thy heart, my shyly sweet,
  • Of Love in ancient plenilune,
  • Glory and stars beneath his feet—
  • A sage that is but kith and kin
  • With the comedian Capuchin?
  • Believe me rather that am wise
  • In disregard of the divine,
  • A glory kindles in those eyes
  • Trembles to starlight. Mine, O Mine!
  • No more be tears in moon or mist
  • For thee, sweet sentimentalist.
  • XIII
  • Go seek her out all courteously,
  • And say I come,
  • Wind of spices whose song is ever
  • Epithalamium.
  • O, hurry over the dark lands
  • And run upon the sea
  • For seas and lands shall not divide us,
  • My love and me.
  • Now, wind, of your good courtesy
  • I pray you go,
  • And come into her little garden
  • And sing at her window;
  • Singing: The bridal wind is blowing
  • For Love is at his noon;
  • And soon will your true love be with you,
  • Soon, O soon.
  • XIV
  • My dove, my beautiful one,
  • Arise, arise!
  • The night-dew lies
  • Upon my lips and eyes.
  • The odorous winds are weaving
  • A music of sighs:
  • Arise, arise,
  • My dove, my beautiful one!
  • I wait by the cedar tree,
  • My sister, my love,
  • White breast of the dove,
  • My breast shall be your bed.
  • The pale dew lies
  • Like a veil on my head.
  • My fair one, my fair dove,
  • Arise, arise!
  • XV
  • From dewy dreams, my soul, arise,
  • From love’s deep slumber and from death,
  • For lo! the trees are full of sighs
  • Whose leaves the morn admonisheth.
  • Eastward the gradual dawn prevails
  • Where softly-burning fires appear,
  • Making to tremble all those veils
  • Of grey and golden gossamer.
  • While sweetly, gently, secretly,
  • The flowery bells of morn are stirred
  • And the wise choirs of faery
  • Begin (innumerous!) to be heard.
  • XVI
  • O cool is the valley now
  • And there, love, will we go
  • For many a choir is singing now
  • Where Love did sometime go.
  • And hear you not the thrushes calling,
  • Calling us away?
  • O cool and pleasant is the valley
  • And there, love, will we stay.
  • XVII
  • Because your voice was at my side
  • I gave him pain,
  • Because within my hand I held
  • Your hand again.
  • There is no word nor any sign
  • Can make amend—
  • He is a stranger to me now
  • Who was my friend.
  • XVIII
  • O sweetheart, hear you
  • Your lover’s tale;
  • A man shall have sorrow
  • When friends him fail.
  • For he shall know then
  • Friends be untrue
  • And a little ashes
  • Their words come to.
  • But one unto him
  • Will softly move
  • And softly woo him
  • In ways of love.
  • His hand is under
  • Her smooth round breast;
  • So he who has sorrow
  • Shall have rest.
  • XIX
  • Be not sad because all men
  • Prefer a lying clamour before you:
  • Sweetheart, be at peace again—
  • Can they dishonour you?
  • They are sadder than all tears;
  • Their lives ascend as a continual sigh.
  • Proudly answer to their tears:
  • As they deny, deny.
  • XX
  • In the dark pine-wood
  • I would we lay,
  • In deep cool shadow
  • At noon of day.
  • How sweet to lie there,
  • Sweet to kiss,
  • Where the great pine-forest
  • Enaisled is!
  • Thy kiss descending
  • Sweeter were
  • With a soft tumult
  • Of thy hair.
  • O, unto the pine-wood
  • At noon of day
  • Come with me now,
  • Sweet love, away.
  • XXI
  • He who hath glory lost, nor hath
  • Found any soul to fellow his,
  • Among his foes in scorn and wrath
  • Holding to ancient nobleness,
  • That high unconsortable one—
  • His love is his companion.
  • XXII
  • Of that so sweet imprisonment
  • My soul, dearest, is fain—
  • Soft arms that woo me to relent
  • And woo me to detain.
  • Ah, could they ever hold me there
  • Gladly were I a prisoner!
  • Dearest, through interwoven arms
  • By love made tremulous,
  • That night allures me where alarms
  • Nowise may trouble us;
  • But sleep to dreamier sleep be wed
  • Where soul with soul lies prisoned.
  • XXIII
  • This heart that flutters near my heart
  • My hope and all my riches is,
  • Unhappy when we draw apart
  • And happy between kiss and kiss;
  • My hope and all my riches—yes!—
  • And all my happiness.
  • For there, as in some mossy nest
  • The wrens will divers treasures keep,
  • I laid those treasures I possessed
  • Ere that mine eyes had learned to weep.
  • Shall we not be as wise as they
  • Though love live but a day?
  • XXIV
  • Silently she’s combing,
  • Combing her long hair,
  • Silently and graciously,
  • With many a pretty air.
  • The sun is in the willow leaves
  • And on the dappled grass,
  • And still she’s combing her long hair
  • Before the looking-glass.
  • I pray you, cease to comb out,
  • Comb out your long hair,
  • For I have heard of witchery
  • Under a pretty air,
  • That makes as one thing to the lover
  • Staying and going hence,
  • All fair, with many a pretty air
  • And many a negligence.
  • XXV
  • Lightly come or lightly go:
  • Though thy heart presage thee woe,
  • Vales and many a wasted sun,
  • Oread let thy laughter run
  • Till the irreverent mountain air
  • Ripple all thy flying hair.
  • Lightly, lightly—ever so:
  • Clouds that wrap the vales below
  • At the hour of evenstar
  • Lowliest attendants are;
  • Love and laughter song-confessed
  • When the heart is heaviest.
  • XXVI
  • Thou leanest to the shell of night,
  • Dear lady, a divining ear.
  • In that soft choiring of delight
  • What sound hath made thy heart to fear?
  • Seemed it of rivers rushing forth
  • From the grey deserts of the north?
  • That mood of thine, O timorous,
  • Is his, if thou but scan it well,
  • Who a mad tale bequeaths to us
  • At ghosting hour conjurable—
  • And all for some strange name he read
  • In Purchas or in Holinshed.
  • XXVII
  • Though I thy Mithridates were,
  • Framed to defy the poison-dart,
  • Yet must thou fold me unaware
  • To know the rapture of thy heart,
  • And I but render and confess
  • The malice of thy tenderness.
  • For elegant and antique phrase,
  • Dearest, my lips wax all too wise;
  • Nor have I known a love whose praise
  • Our piping poets solemnize,
  • Neither a love where may not be
  • Ever so little falsity.
  • XXVIII
  • Gentle lady, do not sing
  • Sad songs about the end of love;
  • Lay aside sadness and sing
  • How love that passes is enough.
  • Sing about the long deep sleep
  • Of lovers that are dead, and how
  • In the grave all love shall sleep:
  • Love is aweary now.
  • XXIX
  • Dear heart, why will you use me so?
  • Dear eyes that gently me upbraid,
  • Still are you beautiful—but O,
  • How is your beauty raimented!
  • Through the clear mirror of your eyes,
  • Through the soft sigh of kiss to kiss,
  • Desolate winds assail with cries
  • The shadowy garden where love is.
  • And soon shall love dissolved be
  • When over us the wild winds blow—
  • But you, dear love, too dear to me,
  • Alas! why will you use me so?
  • XXX
  • Love came to us in time gone by
  • When one at twilight shyly played
  • And one in fear was standing nigh—
  • For Love at first is all afraid.
  • We were grave lovers. Love is past
  • That had his sweet hours many a one;
  • Welcome to us now at the last
  • The ways that we shall go upon.
  • XXXI
  • O, it was out by Donnycarney
  • When the bat flew from tree to tree
  • My love and I did walk together;
  • And sweet were the words she said to me.
  • Along with us the summer wind
  • Went murmuring—O, happily!—
  • But softer than the breath of summer
  • Was the kiss she gave to me.
  • XXXII
  • Rain has fallen all the day.
  • O come among the laden trees:
  • The leaves lie thick upon the way
  • Of memories.
  • Staying a little by the way
  • Of memories shall we depart.
  • Come, my beloved, where I may
  • Speak to your heart.
  • XXXIII
  • Now, O now, in this brown land
  • Where Love did so sweet music make
  • We two shall wander, hand in hand,
  • Forbearing for old friendship’ sake,
  • Nor grieve because our love was gay
  • Which now is ended in this way.
  • A rogue in red and yellow dress
  • Is knocking, knocking at the tree;
  • And all around our loneliness
  • The wind is whistling merrily.
  • The leaves—they do not sigh at all
  • When the year takes them in the fall.
  • Now, O now, we hear no more
  • The vilanelle and roundelay!
  • Yet will we kiss, sweetheart, before
  • We take sad leave at close of day.
  • Grieve not, sweetheart, for anything—
  • The year, the year is gathering.
  • XXXIV
  • Sleep now, O sleep now,
  • O you unquiet heart!
  • A voice crying “Sleep now”
  • Is heard in my heart.
  • The voice of the winter
  • Is heard at the door.
  • O sleep, for the winter
  • Is crying “Sleep no more.”
  • My kiss will give peace now
  • And quiet to your heart—
  • Sleep on in peace now,
  • O you unquiet heart!
  • XXXV
  • All day I hear the noise of waters
  • Making moan,
  • Sad as the sea-bird is, when going
  • Forth alone,
  • He hears the winds cry to the water’s
  • Monotone.
  • The grey winds, the cold winds are blowing
  • Where I go.
  • I hear the noise of many waters
  • Far below.
  • All day, all night, I hear them flowing
  • To and fro.
  • XXXVI
  • I hear an army charging upon the land,
  • And the thunder of horses plunging, foam about their knees:
  • Arrogant, in black armour, behind them stand,
  • Disdaining the reins, with fluttering whips, the charioteers.
  • They cry unto the night their battle-name:
  • I moan in sleep when I hear afar their whirling laughter.
  • They cleave the gloom of dreams, a blinding flame,
  • Clanging, clanging upon the heart as upon an anvil.
  • They come shaking in triumph their long, green hair:
  • They come out of the sea and run shouting by the shore.
  • My heart, have you no wisdom thus to despair?
  • My love, my love, my love, why have you left me alone?
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