- The Project Gutenberg eBook, Poems, Volume 2 [of 3], by George Meredith
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- Title: Poems, Volume 2 [of 3]
- Author: George Meredith
- Release Date: January 2, 2015 [eBook #1382]
- [This file was first posted on May 7, 1998]
- Language: English
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- ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS, VOLUME 2 [OF 3]***
- Transcribed from the 1912 Times Book Club “Surrey” edition by David
- Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
- [Picture: Book cover]
- [Picture: The Châlet, Box Hill]
- POEMS
- VOL. II
- BY
- GEORGE MEREDITH
- * * * * *
- SURREY EDITION
- * * * * *
- LONDON
- THE TIMES BOOK CLUB
- 376–384 OXFORD STREET, W.
- 1912
- * * * * *
- Edinburgh: T. and A. Constable, Printers to his Majesty
- CONTENTS
- PAGE
- TO J. M., 1
- Let Fate or Insufficiency provide
- LINES TO A FRIEND VISITING AMERICA, 2
- Now farewell to you! you are
- TIME AND SENTIMENT, 11
- I see a fair young couple in a wood,
- LUCIFER IN STARLIGHT, 12
- On a starred night Prince Lucifer uprose
- THE STAR SIRIUS, 12
- Bright Sirius! that when Orion pales
- SENSE AND SPIRIT, 13
- The senses loving Earth or well or ill
- EARTH’S SECRET, 13
- Not solitarily in fields we find
- INTERNAL HARMONY, 14
- Assured of worthiness we do not dread
- GRACE AND LOVE, 14
- Two flower-enfolding crystal vases she
- APPRECIATION, 15
- Earth was not Earth before her sons appeared,
- THE DISCIPLINE OF WISDOM, 15
- Rich labour is the struggle to be wise
- THE STATE OF AGE, 16
- Rub thou thy battered lamp: nor claim nor beg
- PROGRESS, 16
- In Progress you have little faith, say you:
- THE WORLD’S ADVANCE, 17
- Judge mildly the tasked world; and disincline
- A CERTAIN PEOPLE, 17
- As Puritans they prominently wax,
- THE GARDEN OF EPICURUS, 18
- That Garden of sedate Philosophy
- A LATER ALEXANDRIAN, 18
- An inspiration caught from dubious hues
- AN ORSON OF THE MUSE, 19
- Her son, albeit the Muse’s livery
- THE POINT OF TASTE, 19
- Unhappy poets of a sunken prime!
- CAMELUS SALTAT, 20
- What say you, critic, now you have become
- CONTINUED, 20
- Oracle of the market! thence you drew
- MY THEME, 21
- Of me and of my theme think what thou wilt:
- CONTINUED, 21
- ’Tis true the wisdom that my mind exacts
- ON THE DANGER OF WAR, 22
- Avert, High Wisdom, never vainly wooed,
- TO CARDINAL MANNING, 23
- I, wakeful for the skylark voice in men,
- TO COLONEL CHARLES, 24
- An English heart, my commandant,
- TO CHILDREN: FOR TYRANTS, 27
- Strike not thy dog with a stick!
- Poems and Lyrics of the Joy of Earth
- THE WOODS OF WESTERMAIN, 33
- Enter these enchanted woods,
- A BALLAD OF PAST MERIDIAN, 48
- Last night returning from my twilight walk
- THE DAY OF THE DAUGHTER OF HADES, 49
- He who has looked upon Earth
- THE LARK ASCENDING, 67
- He rises and begins to round,
- PHOEBUS WITH ADMETUS, 71
- When by Zeus relenting the mandate was revoked,
- MELAMPUS, 75
- With love exceeding a simple love of the things
- LOVE IN THE VALLEY, 80
- Under yonder beech-tree single on the greensward,
- THE THREE SINGERS TO YOUNG BLOOD, 88
- Carols nature, counsel men,
- THE ORCHARD AND THE HEATH, 90
- I chanced upon an early walk to spy
- EARTH AND MAN, 92
- On her great venture, Man,
- A BALLAD OF FAIR LADIES IN REVOLT, 100
- See the sweet women, friend, that lean beneath
- Ballads and poems of Tragic Life
- THE TWO MASKS, 115
- Melpomene among her livid people,
- ARCHDUCHESS ANNE, 116
- I. In middle age an evil thing
- II. Archduchess Anne sat carved in frost
- III. Old Kraken read a missive penned
- THE SONG OF THEODOLINDA, 133
- Queen Theodolind has built
- A PREACHING FROM A SPANISH BALLAD, 139
- Ladies who in chains of wedlock
- THE YOUNG PRINCESS, 144
- I. When the South sang like a nightingale
- II. The lords of the Court they sighed heart-sick,
- III. Lord Dusiote sprang from priest and squire;
- IV. The soft night-wind went laden to death
- KING HARALD’S TRANCE, 154
- Sword in length a reaping-hook amain
- WHIMPER OF SYMPATHY, 158
- Hawk or shrike has done this deed
- YOUNG REYNARD, 159
- Gracefullest leaper, the dappled fox-cub
- MANFRED, 160
- Projected from the bilious Childe,
- HERNANI, 161
- Cistercians might crack their sides
- THE NUPTIALS OF ATTILA, 162
- Flat as to an eagle’s eye,
- ANEURIN’S HARP, 180
- Prince of Bards was old Aneurin;
- MEN AND MAN, 186
- Men the Angels eyed;
- THE LAST CONTENTION, 187
- Young captain of a crazy bark!
- PERIANDER, 190
- How died Melissa none dares shape in words.
- SOLON, 195
- The Tyrant passed, and friendlier was his eye
- BELLEROPHON, 197
- Maimed, beggared, grey; seeking an alms; with nod
- PHAÉTHÔN, 200
- At the coming up of Phoebus the all-luminous
- charioteer,
- A Reading of Earth
- SEED-TIME, 209
- Flowers of the willow-herb are wool;
- HARD WEATHER, 211
- Bursts from a rending East in flaws
- THE SOUTH-WESTER, 215
- Day of the cloud in fleets! O day
- THE THRUSH IN FEBRUARY, 220
- I know him, February’s thrush,
- THE APPEASEMENT OF DEMETER, 226
- Demeter devastated our good land,
- EARTH AND A WEDDED WOMAN, 231
- The shepherd, with his eye on hazy South,
- MOTHER TO BABE, 234
- Fleck of sky you are,
- WOODLAND PEACE, 235
- Sweet as Eden is the air,
- THE QUESTION WHITHER, 236
- When we have thrown off this old suit,
- OUTER AND INNER, 237
- From twig to twig the spider weaves
- NATURE AND LIFE, 239
- Leave the uproar: at a leap
- DIRGE IN WOODS, 240
- A wind sways the pines,
- A FAITH ON TRIAL, 241
- On the morning of May,
- CHANGE IN RECURRENCE, 260
- I stood at the gate of the cot
- HYMN TO COLOUR, 261
- With Life and Death I walked when Love appeared,
- MEDITATION UNDER STARS, 265
- What links are ours with orbs that are
- WOODMAN AND ECHO, 268
- Close Echo hears the woodman’s axe,
- THE WISDOM OF ELD, 270
- We spend our lives in learning pilotage,
- EARTH’S PREFERENCE, 270
- Earth loves her young: a preference manifest:
- SOCIETY, 271
- Historic be the survey of our kind,
- WINTER HEAVENS, 271
- Sharp is the night, but stars with frost alive
- NOTES 272
- TO J. M.
- LET Fate or Insufficiency provide
- Mean ends for men who what they are would be:
- Penned in their narrow day no change they see
- Save one which strikes the blow to brutes and pride.
- Our faith is ours and comes not on a tide:
- And whether Earth’s great offspring, by decree,
- Must rot if they abjure rapacity,
- Not argument but effort shall decide.
- They number many heads in that hard flock:
- Trim swordsmen they push forth: yet try thy steel.
- Thou, fighting for poor humankind, wilt feel
- The strength of Roland in thy wrist to hew
- A chasm sheer into the barrier rock,
- And bring the army of the faithful through.
- LINES TO A FRIEND VISITING AMERICA
- I
- NOW farewell to you! you are
- One of my dearest, whom I trust:
- Now follow you the Western star,
- And cast the old world off as dust.
- II
- From many friends adieu! adieu!
- The quick heart of the word therein.
- Much that we hope for hangs with you:
- We lose you, but we lose to win.
- III
- The beggar-king, November, frets:
- His tatters rich with Indian dyes
- Goes hugging: we our season’s debts
- Pay calmly, of the Spring forewise.
- IV
- We send our worthiest; can no less,
- If we would now be read aright,—
- To that great people who may bless
- Or curse mankind: they have the might.
- V
- The proudest seasons find their graves,
- And we, who would not be wooed, must court.
- We have let the blunderers and the waves
- Divide us, and the devil had sport.
- VI
- The blunderers and the waves no more
- Shall sever kindred sending forth
- Their worthiest from shore to shore
- For welcome, bent to prove their worth.
- VII
- Go you and such as you afloat,
- Our lost kinsfellowship to revive.
- The battle of the antidote
- Is tough, though silent: may you thrive!
- VIII
- I, when in this North wind I see
- The straining red woods blown awry,
- Feel shuddering like the winter tree,
- All vein and artery on cold sky.
- IX
- The leaf that clothed me is torn away;
- My friend is as a flying seed.
- Ay, true; to bring replenished day
- Light ebbs, but I am bare, and bleed.
- X
- What husky habitations seem
- These comfortable sayings! they fell,
- In some rich year become a dream:—
- So cries my heart, the infidel! . . .
- XI
- Oh! for the strenuous mind in quest,
- Arabian visions could not vie
- With those broad wonders of the West,
- And would I bid you stay? Not I!
- XII
- The strange experimental land
- Where men continually dare take
- Niagara leaps;—unshattered stand
- ’Twixt fall and fall;—for conscience’ sake,
- XIII
- Drive onward like a flood’s increase;—
- Fresh rapids and abysms engage;—
- (We live—we die) scorn fireside peace,
- And, as a garment, put on rage,
- XIV
- Rather than bear God’s reprimand,
- By rearing on a full fat soil
- Concrete of sin and sloth;—this land,
- You will observe it coil in coil.
- XV
- The land has been discover’d long,
- The people we have yet to know;
- Themselves they know not, save that strong
- For good and evil still they grow.
- XVI
- Nor know they us. Yea, well enough
- In that inveterate machine
- Through which we speak the printed stuff
- Daily, with voice most hugeous, mien
- XVII
- Tremendous:—as a lion’s show
- The grand menagerie paintings hide:
- Hear the drum beat, the trombones blow!
- The poor old Lion lies inside! . . .
- XVIII
- It is not England that they hear,
- But mighty Mammon’s pipers, trained
- To trumpet out his moods, and stir
- His sluggish soul: _her_ voice is chained:
- XIX
- Almost her spirit seems moribund!
- O teach them, ’tis not she displays
- The panic of a purse rotund,
- Eternal dread of evil days,—
- XX
- That haunting spectre of success
- Which shows a heart sunk low in the girths:
- Not England answers nobleness,—
- ‘Live for thyself: thou art not earth’s.’
- XXI
- Not she, when struggling manhood tries
- For freedom, air, a hopefuller fate,
- Points out the planet, Compromise,
- And shakes a mild reproving pate:
- XXII
- Says never: ‘I am well at ease,
- My sneers upon the weak I shed:
- The strong have my cajoleries:
- And those beneath my feet I tread.’
- XXIII
- Nay, but ’tis said for her, great Lord!
- The misery’s there! The shameless one
- Adjures mankind to sheathe the sword,
- Herself not yielding what it won:—
- XXIV
- Her sermon at cock-crow doth preach,
- On sweet Prosperity—or greed.
- ‘Lo! as the beasts feed, each for each,
- God’s blessings let us take, and feed!’
- XXV
- Ungrateful creatures crave a part—
- She tells them firmly she is full;
- Lost sheared sheep hurt her tender heart
- With bleating, stops her ears with wool:—
- XXVI
- Seized sometimes by prodigious qualms
- (Nightmares of bankruptcy and death),—
- Showers down in lumps a load of alms,
- Then pants as one who has lost a breath;
- XXVII
- Believes high heaven, whence favours flow,
- Too kind to ask a sacrifice
- For what it specially doth bestow;—
- Gives _she_, ’tis generous, cheese to mice.
- XXVIII
- She saw the young Dominion strip
- For battle with a grievous wrong,
- And curled a noble Norman lip,
- And looked with half an eye sidelong;
- XXIX
- And in stout Saxon wrote her sneers,
- Denounced the waste of blood and coin,
- Implored the combatants, with tears,
- Never to think they could rejoin.
- XXX
- Oh! was it England that, alas!
- Turned sharp the victor to cajole?
- Behold her features in the glass:
- A monstrous semblance mocks her soul!
- XXXI
- A false majority, by stealth,
- Have got her fast, and sway the rod:
- A headless tyrant built of wealth,
- The hypocrite, the belly-God.
- XXXII
- To him the daily hymns they raise:
- His tastes are sought: his will is done:
- He sniffs the putrid steam of praise,
- Place for true England here is none!
- XXXIII
- But can a distant race discern
- The difference ’twixt her and him?
- My friend, that will you bid them learn.
- He shames and binds her, head and limb.
- XXXIV
- Old wood has blossoms of this sort.
- Though sound at core, she is old wood.
- If freemen hate her, one retort
- She has; but one!—‘You are my blood.’
- XXXV
- A poet, half a prophet, rose
- In recent days, and called for power.
- I love him; but his mountain prose—
- His Alp and valley and wild flower—
- XXXVI
- Proclaimed our weakness, not its source.
- What medicine for disease had he?
- Whom summoned for a show of force?
- Our titular aristocracy!
- XXXVII
- Why, these are great at City feasts;
- From City riches mainly rise:
- ’Tis well to hear them, when the beasts
- That die for us they eulogize!
- XXXVIII
- But these, of all the liveried crew
- Obeisant in Mammon’s walk,
- Most deferent ply the facial screw,
- The spinal bend, submissive talk.
- XXXIX
- Small fear that they will run to books
- (At least the better form of seed)!
- I, too, have hoped from their good looks,
- And fables of their Northman breed;—
- XL
- Have hoped that they the land would head
- In acts magnanimous; but, lo,
- When fainting heroes beg for bread
- They frown: where they are driven they go.
- XLI
- Good health, my friend! and may your lot
- Be cheerful o’er the Western rounds.
- This butter-woman’s market-trot
- Of verse is passing market-bounds.
- XLII
- Adieu! the sun sets; he is gone.
- On banks of fog faint lines extend:
- Adieu! bring back a braver dawn
- To England, and to me my friend.
- _November_ 15_th_, 1867.
- TIME AND SENTIMENT
- I SEE a fair young couple in a wood,
- And as they go, one bends to take a flower,
- That so may be embalmed their happy hour,
- And in another day, a kindred mood,
- Haply together, or in solitude,
- Recovered what the teeth of Time devour,
- The joy, the bloom, and the illusive power,
- Wherewith by their young blood they are endued
- To move all enviable, framed in May,
- And of an aspect sisterly with Truth:
- Yet seek they with Time’s laughing things to wed:
- Who will be prompted on some pallid day
- To lift the hueless flower and show that dead,
- Even such, and by this token, is their youth.
- LUCIFER IN STARLIGHT
- ON a starred night Prince Lucifer uprose.
- Tired of his dark dominion swung the fiend
- Above the rolling ball in cloud part screened,
- Where sinners hugged their spectre of repose.
- Poor prey to his hot fit of pride were those.
- And now upon his western wing he leaned,
- Now his huge bulk o’er Afric’s sands careened,
- Now the black planet shadowed Arctic snows.
- Soaring through wider zones that pricked his scars
- With memory of the old revolt from Awe,
- He reached a middle height, and at the stars,
- Which are the brain of heaven, he looked, and sank.
- Around the ancient track marched, rank on rank,
- The army of unalterable law.
- THE STAR SIRIUS
- BRIGHT Sirius! that when Orion pales
- To dotlings under moonlight still art keen
- With cheerful fervour of a warrior’s mien
- Who holds in his great heart the battle-scales:
- Unquenched of flame though swift the flood assails,
- Reducing many lustrous to the lean:
- Be thou my star, and thou in me be seen
- To show what source divine is, and prevails.
- Long watches through, at one with godly night,
- I mark thee planting joy in constant fire;
- And thy quick beams, whose jets of life inspire
- Life to the spirit, passion for the light,
- Dark Earth since first she lost her lord from sight
- Has viewed and felt them sweep her as a lyre.
- SENSE AND SPIRIT
- THE senses loving Earth or well or ill
- Ravel yet more the riddle of our lot.
- The mind is in their trammels, and lights not
- By trimming fear-bred tales; nor does the will
- To find in nature things which less may chill
- An ardour that desires, unknowing what.
- Till we conceive her living we go distraught,
- At best but circle-windsails of a mill.
- Seeing she lives, and of her joy of life
- Creatively has given us blood and breath
- For endless war and never wound unhealed,
- The gloomy Wherefore of our battle-field
- Solves in the Spirit, wrought of her through strife
- To read her own and trust her down to death.
- EARTH’S SECRET
- NOT solitarily in fields we find
- Earth’s secret open, though one page is there;
- Her plainest, such as children spell, and share
- With bird and beast; raised letters for the blind.
- Not where the troubled passions toss the mind,
- In turbid cities, can the key be bare.
- It hangs for those who hither thither fare,
- Close interthreading nature with our kind.
- They, hearing History speak, of what men were,
- And have become, are wise. The gain is great
- In vision and solidity; it lives.
- Yet at a thought of life apart from her,
- Solidity and vision lose their state,
- For Earth, that gives the milk, the spirit gives.
- INTERNAL HARMONY
- ASSURED of worthiness we do not dread
- Competitors; we rather give them hail
- And greeting in the lists where we may fail:
- Must, if we bear an aim beyond the head!
- My betters are my masters: purely fed
- By their sustainment I likewise shall scale
- Some rocky steps between the mount and vale;
- Meanwhile the mark I have and I will wed.
- So that I draw the breath of finer air,
- Station is nought, nor footways laurel-strewn,
- Nor rivals tightly belted for the race.
- Good speed to them! My place is here or there;
- My pride is that among them I have place:
- And thus I keep this instrument in tune.
- GRACE AND LOVE
- TWO flower-enfolding crystal vases she
- I love fills daily, mindful but of one:
- And close behind pale morn she, like the sun
- Priming our world with light, pours, sweet to see,
- Clear water in the cup, and into me
- The image of herself: and that being done,
- Choice of what blooms round her fair garden run
- In climbers or in creepers or the tree
- She ranges with unerring fingers fine,
- To harmony so vivid that through sight
- I hear, I have her heavenliness to fold
- Beyond the senses, where such love as mine,
- Such grace as hers, should the strange Fates withhold
- Their starry more from her and me, unite.
- APPRECIATION
- EARTH was not Earth before her sons appeared,
- Nor Beauty Beauty ere young Love was born:
- And thou when I lay hidden wast as morn
- At city-windows, touching eyelids bleared;
- To none by her fresh wingedness endeared;
- Unwelcome unto revellers outworn.
- I the last echoes of Diana’s horn
- In woodland heard, and saw thee come, and cheered.
- No longer wast thou then mere light, fair soul!
- And more than simple duty moved thy feet.
- New colours rose in thee, from fear, from shame,
- From hope, effused: though not less pure a scroll
- May men read on the heart I taught to beat:
- That change in thee, if not thyself, I claim.
- THE DISCIPLINE OF WISDOM
- RICH labour is the struggle to be wise,
- While we make sure the struggle cannot cease.
- Else better were it in some bower of peace
- Slothful to swing, contending with the flies.
- You point at Wisdom fixed on lofty skies,
- As mid barbarian hordes a sculptured Greece:
- She falls. To live and shine, she grows her fleece,
- Is shorn, and rubs with follies and with lies.
- So following her, your hewing may attain
- The right to speak unto the mute, and shun
- That sly temptation of the illumined brain,
- Deliveries oracular, self-spun.
- Who sweats not with the flock will seek in vain
- To shed the words which are ripe fruit of sun.
- THE STATE OF AGE
- RUB thou thy battered lamp: nor claim nor beg
- Honours from aught about thee. Light the young.
- Thy frame is as a dusty mantle hung,
- O grey one! pendant on a loosened peg.
- Thou art for this our life an ancient egg,
- Or a tough bird: thou hast a rudderless tongue,
- Turning dead trifles, like the cock of dung,
- Which runs, Time’s contrast to thy halting leg.
- Nature, it is most sure, not thee admires.
- But hast thou in thy season set her fires
- To burn from Self to Spirit through the lash,
- Honoured the sons of Earth shall hold thee high:
- Yea, to spread light when thy proud letter I
- Drops prone and void as any thoughtless dash.
- PROGRESS
- IN Progress you have little faith, say you:
- Men will maintain dear interests, wreak base hates,
- By force, and gentle women choose their mates
- Most amorously from the gilded fighting crew:
- The human heart Bellona’s mad halloo
- Will ever fire to dicing with the Fates.
- ‘Now at this time,’ says History, ‘those two States
- Stood ready their past wrestling to renew.
- They sharpened arms and showed them, like the brutes
- Whose haunches quiver. But a yellow blight
- Fell on their waxing harvests. They deferred
- The bloody settlement of their disputes
- Till God should bless them better.’ They did right.
- And naming Progress, both shall have the word.
- THE WORLD’S ADVANCE
- JUDGE mildly the tasked world; and disincline
- To brand it, for it bears a heavy pack.
- You have perchance observed the inebriate’s track
- At night when he has quitted the inn-sign:
- He plays diversions on the homeward line,
- Still that way bent albeit his legs are slack:
- A hedge may take him, but he turns not back,
- Nor turns this burdened world, of curving spine.
- ‘Spiral,’ the memorable Lady terms
- Our mind’s ascent: our world’s advance presents
- That figure on a flat; the way of worms.
- Cherish the promise of its good intents,
- And warn it, not one instinct to efface
- Ere Reason ripens for the vacant place.
- A CERTAIN PEOPLE
- AS Puritans they prominently wax,
- And none more kindly gives and takes hard knocks.
- Strong psalmic chanting, like to nasal cocks,
- They join to thunderings of their hearty thwacks.
- But naughtiness, with hoggery, not lacks
- When Peace another door in them unlocks,
- Where conscience shows the eyeing of an ox
- Grown dully apprehensive of an Axe.
- Graceless they are when gone to frivolousness,
- Fearing the God they flout, the God they glut.
- They need their pious exercises less
- Than schooling in the Pleasures: fair belief
- That these are devilish only to their thief,
- Charged with an Axe nigh on the occiput.
- THE GARDEN OF EPICURUS
- THAT Garden of sedate Philosophy
- Once flourished, fenced from passion and mishap,
- A shining spot upon a shaggy map;
- Where mind and body, in fair junction free,
- Luted their joyful concord; like the tree
- From root to flowering twigs a flowing sap.
- Clear Wisdom found in tended Nature’s lap
- Of gentlemen the happy nursery.
- That Garden would on light supremest verge,
- Were the long drawing of an equal breath
- Healthful for Wisdom’s head, her heart, her aims.
- Our world which for its Babels wants a scourge,
- And for its wilds a husbandman, acclaims
- The crucifix that came of Nazareth.
- A LATER ALEXANDRIAN
- AN inspiration caught from dubious hues
- Filled him, and mystic wrynesses he chased;
- For they lead farther than the single-faced,
- Wave subtler promise when desire pursues.
- The moon of cloud discoloured was his Muse,
- His pipe the reed of the old moaning waste.
- Love was to him with anguish fast enlaced,
- And Beauty where she walked blood-shot the dews.
- Men railed at such a singer; women thrilled
- Responsively: he sang not Nature’s own
- Divinest, but his lyric had a tone,
- As ’twere a forest-echo of her voice:
- What barrenly they yearn for seemed distilled
- From what they dread, who do through tears rejoice.
- AN ORSON OF THE MUSE
- HER son, albeit the Muse’s livery
- And measured courtly paces rouse his taunts,
- Naked and hairy in his savage haunts,
- To Nature only will he bend the knee;
- Spouting the founts of her distillery
- Like rough rock-sources; and his woes and wants
- Being Nature’s, civil limitation daunts
- His utterance never; the nymphs blush, not he.
- Him, when he blows of Earth, and Man, and Fate,
- The Muse will hearken to with graver ear
- Than many of her train can waken: him
- Would fain have taught what fruitful things and dear
- Must sink beneath the tidewaves, of their weight,
- If in no vessel built for sea they swim.
- THE POINT OF TASTE
- UNHAPPY poets of a sunken prime!
- You to reviewers are as ball to bat.
- They shadow you with Homer, knock you flat
- With Shakespeare: bludgeons brainingly sublime
- On you the excommunicates of Rhyme,
- Because you sing not in the living Fat.
- The wiry whizz of an intrusive gnat
- Is verse that shuns their self-producing time.
- Sound them their clocks, with loud alarum trump,
- Or watches ticking temporal at their fobs,
- You win their pleased attention. But, bright God
- O’ the lyre, what bully-drawlers they applaud!
- Rather for us a tavern-catch, and bump
- Chorus where Lumpkin with his Giles hobnobs.
- CAMELUS SALTAT
- WHAT say you, critic, now you have become
- An author and maternal?—in this trap
- (To quote you) of poor hollow folk who rap
- On instruments as like as drum to drum.
- You snarled tut-tut for welcome to tum-tum,
- So like the nose fly-teased in its noon’s nap.
- You scratched an insect-slaughtering thunder-clap
- With that between the fingers and the thumb.
- It seemeth mad to quit the Olympian couch,
- Which bade our public gobble or reject.
- O spectacle of Peter, shrewdly pecked,
- Piper, by his own pepper from his pouch!
- What of the sneer, the jeer, the voice austere,
- You dealt?—the voice austere, the jeer, the sneer.
- CONTINUED
- ORACLE of the market! thence you drew
- The taste which stamped you guide of the inept.—
- A North-sea pilot, Hildebrand yclept,
- A sturdy and a briny, once men knew.
- He loved small beer, and for that copious brew,
- To roll ingurgitation till he slept,
- Rations exchanged with flavour for the adept:
- And merrily plied him captain, mate and crew.
- At last this dancer to the Polar star
- Sank, washed out within, and overboard was pitched,
- To drink the sea and pilot him to land.
- O captain-critic! printed, neatly stitched,
- Know while the pillory-eggs fly fast, they are
- Not eggs, but the drowned soul of Hildebrand.
- MY THEME
- OF me and of my theme think what thou wilt:
- The song of gladness one straight bolt can check.
- But I have never stood at Fortune’s beck:
- Were she and her light crew to run atilt
- At my poor holding little would be spilt;
- Small were the praise for singing o’er that wreck.
- Who courts her dooms to strife his bended neck;
- He grasps a blade, not always by the hilt.
- Nathless she strikes at random, can be fell
- With other than those votaries she deals
- The black or brilliant from her thunder-rift.
- I say but that this love of Earth reveals
- A soul beside our own to quicken, quell,
- Irradiate, and through ruinous floods uplift.
- CONTINUED
- ’TIS true the wisdom that my mind exacts
- Through contemplation from a heart unbent
- By many tempests may be stained and rent:
- The summer flies it mightily attracts.
- Yet they seem choicer than your sons of facts,
- Which scarce give breathing of the sty’s content
- For their diurnal carnal nourishment:
- Which treat with Nature in official pacts.
- The deader body Nature could proclaim.
- Much life have neither. Let the heavens of wrath
- Rattle, then both scud scattering to froth.
- But during calms the flies of idle aim
- Less put the spirit out, less baffle thirst
- For light than swinish grunters, blest or curst.
- ON THE DANGER OF WAR
- AVERT, High Wisdom, never vainly wooed,
- This threat of War, that shows a land brain-sick.
- When nations gain the pitch where rhetoric
- Seems reason they are ripe for cannon’s food.
- Dark looms the issue though the cause be good,
- But with the doubt ’tis our old devil’s trick.
- O now the down-slope of the lunatic
- Illumine lest we redden of that brood.
- For not since man in his first view of thee
- Ascended to the heavens giving sign
- Within him of deep sky and sounded sea,
- Did he unforfeiting thy laws transgress;
- In peril of his blood his ears incline
- To drums whose loudness is their emptiness.
- TO CARDINAL MANNING
- I, WAKEFUL for the skylark voice in men,
- Or straining for the angel of the light,
- Rebuked am I by hungry ear and sight,
- When I behold one lamp that through our fen
- Goes hourly where most noisome; hear again
- A tongue that loathsomeness will not affright
- From speaking to the soul of us forthright
- What things our craven senses keep from ken.
- This is the doing of the Christ; the way
- He went on earth; the service above guile
- To prop a tyrant creed: it sings, it shines;
- Cries to the Mammonites: Allay, allay
- Such misery as by these present signs
- Brings vengeance down; nor them who rouse revile.
- TO COLONEL CHARLES
- (DYING GENERAL C.B.B.)
- I
- AN English heart, my commandant,
- A soldier’s eye you have, awake
- To right and left; with looks askant
- On bulwarks not of adamant,
- Where white our Channel waters break.
- II
- Where Grisnez winks at Dungeness
- Across the ruffled strip of salt,
- You look, and like the prospect less.
- On men and guns would you lay stress,
- To bid the Island’s foemen halt.
- III
- While loud the Year is raising cry
- At birth to know if it must bear
- In history the bloody dye,
- An English heart, a soldier’s eye,
- For the old country first will care.
- IV
- And how stands she, artillerist,
- Among the vapours waxing dense,
- With cannon charged? ’Tis hist! and hist!
- And now she screws a gouty fist,
- And now she counts to clutch her pence.
- V
- With shudders chill as aconite,
- The couchant chewer of the cud
- Will start at times in pussy fright
- Before the dogs, when reads her sprite
- The streaks predicting streams of blood.
- VI
- She thinks they may mean something; thinks
- They may mean nothing: haply both.
- Where darkness all her daylight drinks,
- She fain would find a leader lynx,
- Not too much taxing mental sloth.
- VII
- Cleft like the fated house in twain,
- One half is, Arm! and one, Retrench!
- Gambetta’s word on dull MacMahon:
- ‘The cow that sees a passing train’:
- So spies she Russian, German, French.
- VIII
- She? no, her weakness: she unbraced
- Among those athletes fronting storms!
- The muscles less of steel than paste,
- Why, they of nature feel distaste
- For flash, much more for push, of arms.
- IX
- The poet sings, and well know we,
- That ‘iron draws men after it.’
- But towering wealth may seem the tree
- Which bears the fruit _Indemnity_,
- And draw as fast as battle’s fit,
- X
- If feeble be the hand on guard,
- Alas, alas! And nations are
- Still the mad forces, though the scarred.
- Should they once deem our emblem Pard
- Wagger of tail for all save war;—
- XI
- Mechanically screwed to flail
- His flanks by Presses conjuring fear;—
- A money-bag with head and tail;—
- Too late may valour then avail!
- As you beheld, my cannonier,
- XII
- When with the staff of Benedek,
- On the plateau of Königgrätz,
- You saw below that wedgeing speck;
- Foresaw proud Austria rammed to wreck,
- Where Chlum drove deep in smoky jets.
- _February_ 1887.
- TO CHILDREN: FOR TYRANTS
- I
- STRIKE not thy dog with a stick!
- I did it yesterday:
- Not to undo though I gained
- The Paradise: heavy it rained
- On Kobold’s flanks, and he lay.
- II
- Little Bruno, our long-ear pup,
- From his hunt had come back to my heel.
- I heard a sharp worrying sound,
- And Bruno foamed on the ground,
- With Koby as making a meal.
- III
- I did what I could not undo
- Were the gates of the Paradise shut
- Behind me: I deemed it was just.
- I left Koby crouched in the dust,
- Some yards from the woodman’s hut.
- IV
- He bewhimpered his welting, and I
- Scarce thought it enough for him: so,
- By degrees, through the upper box-grove,
- Within me an old story hove,
- Of a man and a dog: you shall know.
- V
- The dog was of novel breed,
- The Shannon retriever, untried:
- His master, an old Irish lord,
- In an oaken armchair snored
- At midnight, whisky beside.
- VI
- Perched up a desolate tower,
- Where the black storm-wind was a whip
- To set it nigh spinning, these two
- Were alone, like the last of a crew,
- Outworn in a wave-beaten ship.
- VII
- The dog lifted muzzle, and sniffed;
- He quitted his couch on the rug,
- Nose to floor, nose aloft; whined, barked;
- And, finding the signals unmarked,
- Caught a hand in a death-grapple tug.
- VIII
- He pulled till his master jumped
- For fury of wrath, and laid on
- With the length of a tough knotted staff,
- Fit to drive the life flying like chaff,
- And leave a sheer carcase anon.
- IX
- That done, he sat, panted, and cursed
- The vile cross of this brute: nevermore
- Would he house it to rear such a cur!
- The dog dragged his legs, pained to stir,
- Eyed his master, dropped, barked at the door.
- X
- Then his master raised head too, and sniffed:
- It struck him the dog had a sense
- That honoured both dam and sire.
- You have guessed how the tower was afire.
- The Shannon retriever dates thence.
- XI
- I mused: saw the pup ease his heart
- Of his instinct for chasing, and sink
- Overwrought by excitement so new:
- A scene that for Koby to view
- Was the seizure of nerves in a link.
- XII
- And part sympathetic, and part
- Imitatively, raged my poor brute;
- And I, not thinking of ill,
- Doing eviller: nerves are still
- Our savage too quick at the root.
- XIII
- They spring us: I proved it, albeit
- I played executioner then
- For discipline, justice, the like.
- Yon stick I had handy to strike
- Should have warned of the tyrant in men.
- XIV
- You read in your History books,
- How the Prince in his youth had a mind
- For governing gently his land.
- Ah, the use of that weapon at hand,
- When the temper is other than kind!
- XV
- At home all was well; Koby’s ribs
- Not so sore as my thoughts: if, beguiled,
- He forgives me, his criminal air
- Throws a shade of Llewellyn’s despair
- For the hound slain for saving his child.
- POEMS AND LYRICS OF THE JOY OF EARTH
- THE WOODS OF WESTERMAIN
- I
- ENTER these enchanted woods,
- You who dare.
- Nothing harms beneath the leaves
- More than waves a swimmer cleaves.
- Toss your heart up with the lark,
- Foot at peace with mouse and worm,
- Fair you fare.
- Only at a dread of dark
- Quaver, and they quit their form:
- Thousand eyeballs under hoods
- Have you by the hair.
- Enter these enchanted woods,
- You who dare.
- II
- Here the snake across your path
- Stretches in his golden bath:
- Mossy-footed squirrels leap
- Soft as winnowing plumes of Sleep:
- Yaffles on a chuckle skim
- Low to laugh from branches dim:
- Up the pine, where sits the star,
- Rattles deep the moth-winged jar.
- Each has business of his own;
- But should you distrust a tone,
- Then beware.
- Shudder all the haunted roods,
- All the eyeballs under hoods
- Shroud you in their glare.
- Enter these enchanted woods,
- You who dare.
- III
- Open hither, open hence,
- Scarce a bramble weaves a fence,
- Where the strawberry runs red,
- With white star-flower overhead;
- Cumbered by dry twig and cone,
- Shredded husks of seedlings flown,
- Mine of mole and spotted flint:
- Of dire wizardry no hint,
- Save mayhap the print that shows
- Hasty outward-tripping toes,
- Heels to terror on the mould.
- These, the woods of Westermain,
- Are as others to behold,
- Rich of wreathing sun and rain;
- Foliage lustreful around
- Shadowed leagues of slumbering sound.
- Wavy tree-tops, yellow whins,
- Shelter eager minikins,
- Myriads, free to peck and pipe:
- Would you better? would you worse?
- You with them may gather ripe
- Pleasures flowing not from purse.
- Quick and far as Colour flies
- Taking the delighted eyes,
- You of any well that springs
- May unfold the heaven of things;
- Have it homely and within,
- And thereof its likeness win,
- Will you so in soul’s desire:
- This do sages grant t’ the lyre.
- This is being bird and more,
- More than glad musician this;
- Granaries you will have a store
- Past the world of woe and bliss;
- Sharing still its bliss and woe;
- Harnessed to its hungers, no.
- On the throne Success usurps,
- You shall seat the joy you feel
- Where a race of water chirps,
- Twisting hues of flourished steel:
- Or where light is caught in hoop
- Up a clearing’s leafy rise,
- Where the crossing deerherds troop
- Classic splendours, knightly dyes.
- Or, where old-eyed oxen chew
- Speculation with the cud,
- Read their pool of vision through,
- Back to hours when mind was mud;
- Nigh the knot, which did untwine
- Timelessly to drowsy suns;
- Seeing Earth a slimy spine,
- Heaven a space for winging tons.
- Farther, deeper, may you read,
- Have you sight for things afield,
- Where peeps she, the Nurse of seed,
- Cloaked, but in the peep revealed;
- Showing a kind face and sweet:
- Look you with the soul you see’t.
- Glory narrowing to grace,
- Grace to glory magnified,
- Following that will you embrace
- Close in arms or aëry wide.
- Banished is the white Foam-born
- Not from here, nor under ban
- Phoebus lyrist, Phoebe’s horn,
- Pipings of the reedy Pan.
- Loved of Earth of old they were,
- Loving did interpret her;
- And the sterner worship bars
- None whom Song has made her stars.
- You have seen the huntress moon
- Radiantly facing dawn,
- Dusky meads between them strewn
- Glimmering like downy awn:
- Argent Westward glows the hunt,
- East the blush about to climb;
- One another fair they front,
- Transient, yet outshine the time;
- Even as dewlight off the rose
- In the mind a jewel sows.
- Thus opposing grandeurs live
- Here if Beauty be their dower:
- Doth she of her spirit give,
- Fleetingness will spare her flower.
- This is in the tune we play,
- Which no spring of strength would quell;
- In subduing does not slay;
- Guides the channel, guards the well:
- Tempered holds the young blood-heat,
- Yet through measured grave accord,
- Hears the heart of wildness beat
- Like a centaur’s hoof on sward.
- Drink the sense the notes infuse,
- You a larger self will find:
- Sweetest fellowship ensues
- With the creatures of your kind.
- Ay, and Love, if Love it be
- Flaming over _I_ and _ME_,
- Love meet they who do not shove
- Cravings in the van of Love.
- Courtly dames are here to woo,
- Knowing love if it be true.
- Reverence the blossom-shoot
- Fervently, they are the fruit.
- Mark them stepping, hear them talk,
- Goddess, is no myth inane,
- You will say of those who walk
- In the woods of Westermain.
- Waters that from throat and thigh
- Dart the sun his arrows back;
- Leaves that on a woodland sigh
- Chat of secret things no lack;
- Shadowy branch-leaves, waters clear,
- Bare or veiled they move sincere;
- Not by slavish terrors tripped
- Being anew in nature dipped,
- Growths of what they step on, these;
- With the roots the grace of trees.
- Casket-breasts they give, nor hide,
- For a tyrant’s flattered pride,
- Mind, which nourished not by light,
- Lurks the shuffling trickster sprite:
- Whereof are strange tales to tell;
- Some in blood writ, tombed in bell.
- Here the ancient battle ends,
- Joining two astonished friends,
- Who the kiss can give and take
- With more warmth than in that world
- Where the tiger claws the snake,
- Snake her tiger clasps infurled,
- And the issue of their fight
- People lands in snarling plight.
- Here her splendid beast she leads
- Silken-leashed and decked with weeds
- Wild as he, but breathing faint
- Sweetness of unfelt constraint.
- Love, the great volcano, flings
- Fires of lower Earth to sky;
- Love, the sole permitted, sings
- Sovereignly of _ME_ and _I_.
- Bowers he has of sacred shade,
- Spaces of superb parade,
- Voiceful . . . But bring you a note
- Wrangling, howsoe’er remote,
- Discords out of discord spin
- Round and round derisive din:
- Sudden will a pallor pant
- Chill at screeches miscreant;
- Owls or spectres, thick they flee;
- Nightmare upon horror broods;
- Hooded laughter, monkish glee,
- Gaps the vital air.
- Enter these enchanted woods
- You who dare.
- IV
- You must love the light so well
- That no darkness will seem fell.
- Love it so you could accost
- Fellowly a livid ghost.
- Whish! the phantom wisps away,
- Owns him smoke to cocks of day.
- In your breast the light must burn
- Fed of you, like corn in quern
- Ever plumping while the wheel
- Speeds the mill and drains the meal.
- Light to light sees little strange,
- Only features heavenly new;
- Then you touch the nerve of Change,
- Then of Earth you have the clue;
- Then her two-sexed meanings melt
- Through you, wed the thought and felt.
- Sameness locks no scurfy pond
- Here for Custom, crazy-fond:
- Change is on the wing to bud
- Rose in brain from rose in blood.
- Wisdom throbbing shall you see
- Central in complexity;
- From her pasture ’mid the beasts
- Rise to her ethereal feasts,
- Not, though lightnings track your wit
- Starward, scorning them you quit:
- For be sure the bravest wing
- Preens it in our common spring,
- Thence along the vault to soar,
- You with others, gathering more,
- Glad of more, till you reject
- Your proud title of elect,
- Perilous even here while few
- Roam the arched greenwood with you.
- Heed that snare.
- Muffled by his cavern-cowl
- Squats the scaly Dragon-fowl,
- Who was lord ere light you drank,
- And lest blood of knightly rank
- Stream, let not your fair princess
- Stray: he holds the leagues in stress,
- Watches keenly there.
- Oft has he been riven; slain
- Is no force in Westermain.
- Wait, and we shall forge him curbs,
- Put his fangs to uses, tame,
- Teach him, quick as cunning herbs,
- How to cure him sick and lame.
- Much restricted, much enringed,
- Much he frets, the hooked and winged,
- Never known to spare.
- ’Tis enough: the name of Sage
- Hits no thing in nature, nought;
- Man the least, save when grave Age
- From yon Dragon guards his thought.
- Eye him when you hearken dumb
- To what words from Wisdom come.
- When she says how few are by
- Listening to her, eye his eye.
- Self, his name declare.
- Him shall Change, transforming late,
- Wonderously renovate.
- Hug himself the creature may:
- What he hugs is loathed decay.
- Crying, slip thy scales, and slough!
- Change will strip his armour off;
- Make of him who was all maw,
- Inly only thrilling-shrewd,
- Such a servant as none saw
- Through his days of dragonhood.
- Days when growling o’er his bone,
- Sharpened he for mine and thine;
- Sensitive within alone;
- Scaly as the bark of pine.
- Change, the strongest son of Life,
- Has the Spirit here to wife.
- Lo, their young of vivid breed,
- Bear the lights that onward speed,
- Threading thickets, mounting glades,
- Up the verdurous colonnades,
- Round the fluttered curves, and down,
- Out of sight of Earth’s blue crown,
- Whither, in her central space,
- Spouts the Fount and Lure o’ the chase.
- Fount unresting, Lure divine!
- There meet all: too late look most.
- Fire in water hued as wine,
- Springs amid a shadowy host,
- Circled: one close-headed mob,
- Breathless, scanning divers heaps,
- Where a Heart begins to throb,
- Where it ceases, slow, with leaps.
- And ’tis very strange, ’tis said,
- How you spy in each of them
- Semblance of that Dragon red,
- As the oak in bracken-stem.
- And, ’tis said, how each and each:
- Which commences, which subsides:
- First my Dragon! doth beseech
- Her who food for all provides.
- And she answers with no sign;
- Utters neither yea nor nay;
- Fires the water hued as wine;
- Kneads another spark in clay.
- Terror is about her hid;
- Silence of the thunders locked;
- Lightnings lining the shut lid;
- Fixity on quaking rocked.
- Lo, you look at Flow and Drought
- Interflashed and interwrought:
- Ended is begun, begun
- Ended, quick as torrents run.
- Young Impulsion spouts to sink;
- Luridness and lustre link;
- ’Tis your come and go of breath;
- Mirrored pants the Life, the Death;
- Each of either reaped and sown:
- Rosiest rosy wanes to crone.
- See you so? your senses drift;
- ’Tis a shuttle weaving swift.
- Look with spirit past the sense,
- Spirit shines in permanence.
- That is She, the view of whom
- Is the dust within the tomb,
- Is the inner blush above,
- Look to loathe, or look to love;
- Think her Lump, or know her Flame;
- Dread her scourge, or read her aim;
- Shoot your hungers from their nerve;
- Or, in her example, serve.
- Some have found her sitting grave;
- Laughing, some; or, browed with sweat,
- Hurling dust of fool and knave
- In a hissing smithy’s jet.
- More it were not well to speak;
- Burn to see, you need but seek.
- Once beheld she gives the key
- Airing every doorway, she.
- Little can you stop or steer
- Ere of her you are the seër.
- On the surface she will witch,
- Rendering Beauty yours, but gaze
- Under, and the soul is rich
- Past computing, past amaze.
- Then is courage that endures
- Even her awful tremble yours.
- Then, the reflex of that Fount
- Spied below, will Reason mount
- Lordly and a quenchless force,
- Lighting Pain to its mad source,
- Scaring Fear till Fear escapes,
- Shot through all its phantom shapes.
- Then your spirit will perceive
- Fleshly seed of fleshly sins;
- Where the passions interweave,
- How the serpent tangle spins
- Of the sense of Earth misprised,
- Brainlessly unrecognized;
- She being Spirit in her clods,
- Footway to the God of Gods.
- Then for you are pleasures pure,
- Sureties as the stars are sure:
- Not the wanton beckoning flags
- Which, of flattery and delight,
- Wax to the grim Habit-Hags
- Riding souls of men to night:
- Pleasures that through blood run sane,
- Quickening spirit from the brain.
- Each of each in sequent birth,
- Blood and brain and spirit, three,
- (Say the deepest gnomes of Earth),
- Join for true felicity.
- Are they parted, then expect
- Some one sailing will be wrecked:
- Separate hunting are they sped,
- Scan the morsel coveted.
- Earth that Triad is: she hides
- Joy from him who that divides;
- Showers it when the three are one
- Glassing her in union.
- Earth your haven, Earth your helm,
- You command a double realm;
- Labouring here to pay your debt,
- Till your little sun shall set;
- Leaving her the future task:
- Loving her too well to ask.
- Eglantine that climbs the yew,
- She her darkest wreathes for those
- Knowing her the Ever-new,
- And themselves the kin o’ the rose.
- Life, the chisel, axe and sword,
- Wield who have her depths explored:
- Life, the dream, shall be their robe
- Large as air about the globe;
- Life, the question, hear its cry
- Echoed with concordant Why;
- Life, the small self-dragon ramped,
- Thrill for service to be stamped.
- Ay, and over every height
- Life for them shall wave a wand:
- That, the last, where sits affright,
- Homely shows the stream beyond.
- Love the light and be its lynx,
- You will track her and attain;
- Read her as no cruel Sphinx
- In the woods of Westermain,
- Daily fresh the woods are ranged;
- Glooms which otherwhere appal,
- Sounded: here, their worths exchanged
- Urban joins with pastoral:
- Little lost, save what may drop
- Husk-like, and the mind preserves.
- Natural overgrowths they lop,
- Yet from nature neither swerves,
- Trained or savage: for this cause:
- Of our Earth they ply the laws,
- Have in Earth their feeding root,
- Mind of man and bent of brute.
- Hear that song; both wild and ruled.
- Hear it: is it wail or mirth?
- Ordered, bubbled, quite unschooled?
- None, and all: it springs of Earth.
- O but hear it! ’tis the mind;
- Mind that with deep Earth unites,
- Round the solid trunk to wind
- Rings of clasping parasites.
- Music have you there to feed
- Simplest and most soaring need.
- Free to wind, and in desire
- Winding, they to her attached
- Feel the trunk a spring of fire,
- And ascend to heights unmatched,
- Whence the tidal world is viewed
- As a sea of windy wheat,
- Momently black, barren, rude;
- Golden-brown, for harvest meet,
- Dragon-reaped from folly-sown;
- Bride-like to the sickle-blade:
- Quick it varies, while the moan,
- Moan of a sad creature strayed,
- Chiefly is its voice. So flesh
- Conjures tempest-flails to thresh
- Good from worthless. Some clear lamps
- Light it; more of dead marsh-damps.
- Monster is it still, and blind,
- Fit but to be led by Pain.
- Glance we at the paths behind,
- Fruitful sight has Westermain.
- There we laboured, and in turn
- Forward our blown lamps discern,
- As you see on the dark deep
- Far the loftier billows leap,
- Foam for beacon bear.
- Hither, hither, if you will,
- Drink instruction, or instil,
- Run the woods like vernal sap,
- Crying, hail to luminousness!
- But have care.
- In yourself may lurk the trap:
- On conditions they caress.
- Here you meet the light invoked
- Here is never secret cloaked.
- Doubt you with the monster’s fry
- All his orbit may exclude;
- Are you of the stiff, the dry,
- Cursing the not understood;
- Grasp you with the monster’s claws;
- Govern with his truncheon-saws;
- Hate, the shadow of a grain;
- You are lost in Westermain:
- Earthward swoops a vulture sun,
- Nighted upon carrion:
- Straightway venom wine-cups shout
- Toasts to One whose eyes are out:
- Flowers along the reeling floor
- Drip henbane and hellebore:
- Beauty, of her tresses shorn,
- Shrieks as nature’s maniac:
- Hideousness on hoof and horn
- Tumbles, yapping in her track:
- Haggard Wisdom, stately once,
- Leers fantastical and trips:
- Allegory drums the sconce,
- Impiousness nibblenips.
- Imp that dances, imp that flits,
- Imp o’ the demon-growing girl,
- Maddest! whirl with imp o’ the pits
- Round you, and with them you whirl
- Fast where pours the fountain-rout
- Out of Him whose eyes are out:
- Multitudes on multitudes,
- Drenched in wallowing devilry:
- And you ask where you may be,
- In what reek of a lair
- Given to bones and ogre-broods:
- And they yell you Where.
- Enter these enchanted woods,
- You who dare.
- A BALLAD OF PAST MERIDIAN
- I
- LAST night returning from my twilight walk
- I met the grey mist Death, whose eyeless brow
- Was bent on me, and from his hand of chalk
- He reached me flowers as from a withered bough:
- O Death, what bitter nosegays givest thou!
- II
- Death said, I gather, and pursued his way.
- Another stood by me, a shape in stone,
- Sword-hacked and iron-stained, with breasts of clay,
- And metal veins that sometimes fiery shone:
- O Life, how naked and how hard when known!
- III
- Life said, As thou hast carved me, such am I.
- Then memory, like the nightjar on the pine,
- And sightless hope, a woodlark in night sky,
- Joined notes of Death and Life till night’s decline
- Of Death, of Life, those inwound notes are mine.
- THE DAY OF THE DAUGHTER OF HADES
- I
- HE who has looked upon Earth
- Deeper than flower and fruit,
- Losing some hue of his mirth,
- As the tree striking rock at the root,
- Unto him shall the marvellous tale
- Of Callistes more humanly come
- With the touch on his breast than a hail
- From the markets that hum.
- II
- Now the youth footed swift to the dawn.
- ’Twas the season when wintertide,
- In the higher rock-hollows updrawn,
- Leaves meadows to bud, and he spied,
- By light throwing shallow shade,
- Between the beam and the gloom,
- Sicilian Enna, whose Maid
- Such aspect wears in her bloom
- Underneath since the Charioteer
- Of Darkness whirled her away,
- On a reaped afternoon of the year,
- Nigh the poppy-droop of Day.
- O and naked of her, all dust,
- The majestic Mother and Nurse,
- Ringing cries to the God, the Just,
- Curled the land with the blight of her curse:
- Recollected of this glad isle
- Still quaking. But now more fair,
- And momently fraying the while
- The veil of the shadows there,
- Soft Enna that prostrate grief
- Sang through, and revealed round the vines,
- Bronze-orange, the crisp young leaf,
- The wheat-blades tripping in lines,
- A hue unillumined by sun
- Of the flowers flooding grass as from founts:
- All the penetrable dun
- Of the morn ere she mounts.
- III
- Nor had saffron and sapphire and red
- Waved aloft to their sisters below,
- When gaped by the rock-channel head
- Of the lake, black, a cave at one blow,
- Reverberant over the plain:
- A sound oft fearfully swung
- For the coming of wrathful rain:
- And forth, like the dragon-tongue
- Of a fire beaten flat by the gale,
- But more as the smoke to behold,
- A chariot burst. Then a wail
- Quivered high of the love that would fold
- Bliss immeasurable, bigger than heart,
- Though a God’s: and the wheels were stayed,
- And the team of the chariot swart
- Reared in marble, the six, dismayed,
- Like hoofs that by night plashing sea
- Curve and ramp from the vast swan-wave:
- For, lo, the Great Mother, She!
- And Callistes gazed, he gave
- His eyeballs up to the sight:
- The embrace of the Twain, of whom
- To men are their day, their night,
- Mellow fruits and the shearing tomb:
- Our Lady of the Sheaves
- And the Lily of Hades, the Sweet
- Of Enna: he saw through leaves
- The Mother and Daughter meet.
- They stood by the chariot-wheel,
- Embraced, very tall, most like
- Fellow poplars, wind-taken, that reel
- Down their shivering columns and strike
- Head to head, crossing throats: and apart,
- For the feast of the look, they drew,
- Which Darkness no longer could thwart;
- And they broke together anew,
- Exulting to tears, flower and bud.
- But the mate of the Rayless was grave:
- She smiled like Sleep on its flood,
- That washes of all we crave:
- Like the trance of eyes awake
- And the spirit enshrouded, she cast
- The wan underworld on the lake.
- They were so, and they passed.
- IV
- He tells it, who knew the law
- Upon mortals: he stood alive
- Declaring that this he saw:
- He could see, and survive.
- V
- Now the youth was not ware of the beams
- With the grasses intertwined,
- For each thing seen, as in dreams,
- Came stepping to rear through his mind,
- Till it struck his remembered prayer
- To be witness of this which had flown
- Like a smoke melted thinner than air,
- That the vacancy doth disown.
- And viewing a maiden, he thought
- It might now be morn, and afar
- Within him the memory wrought
- Of a something that slipped from the car
- When those, the august, moved by:
- Perchance a scarf, and perchance
- This maiden. She did not fly,
- Nor started at his advance:
- She looked, as when infinite thirst
- Pants pausing to bless the springs,
- Refreshed, unsated. Then first
- He trembled with awe of the things
- He had seen; and he did transfer,
- Divining and doubting in turn,
- His reverence unto her;
- Nor asked what he crouched to learn:
- The whence of her, whither, and why
- Her presence there, and her name,
- Her parentage: under which sky
- Her birth, and how hither she came,
- So young, a virgin, alone,
- Unfriended, having no fear,
- As Oreads have; no moan,
- Like the lost upon earth; no tear;
- Not a sign of the torch in the blood,
- Though her stature had reached the height
- When mantles a tender rud
- In maids that of youths have sight,
- If maids of our seed they be:
- For he said: A glad vision art thou!
- And she answered him: Thou to me!
- As men utter a vow.
- VI
- Then said she, quick as the cries
- Of the rainy cranes: Light! light!
- And Helios rose in her eyes,
- That were full as the dew-balls bright,
- Relucent to him as dews
- Unshaded. Breathing, she sent
- Her voice to the God of the Muse,
- And along the vale it went,
- Strange to hear: not thin, not shrill:
- Sweet, but no young maid’s throat:
- The echo beyond the hill
- Ran falling on half the note:
- And under the shaken ground
- Where the Hundred-headed groans
- By the roots of great Aetna bound,
- As of him were hollow tones
- Of wondering roared: a tale
- Repeated to sunless halls.
- But now off the face of the vale
- Shadows fled in a breath, and the walls
- Of the lake’s rock-head were gold,
- And the breast of the lake, that swell
- Of the crestless long wave rolled
- To shore-bubble, pebble and shell.
- A morning of radiant lids
- O’er the dance of the earth opened wide:
- The bees chose their flowers, the snub kids
- Upon hindlegs went sportive, or plied,
- Nosing, hard at the dugs to be filled:
- There was milk, honey, music to make:
- Up their branches the little birds billed:
- Chirrup, drone, bleat and buzz ringed the lake.
- O shining in sunlight, chief
- After water and water’s caress,
- Was the young bronze-orange leaf,
- That clung to the tree as a tress,
- Shooting lucid tendrils to wed
- With the vine-hook tree or pole,
- Like Arachne launched out on her thread.
- Then the maiden her dusky stole
- In the span of the black-starred zone,
- Gathered up for her footing fleet.
- As one that had toil of her own
- She followed the lines of wheat
- Tripping straight through the fields, green blades,
- To the groves of olive grey,
- Downy-grey, golden-tinged: and to glades
- Where the pear-blossom thickens the spray
- In a night, like the snow-packed storm:
- Pear, apple, almond, plum:
- Not wintry now: pushing, warm!
- And she touched them with finger and thumb,
- As the vine-hook closes: she smiled,
- Recounting again and again,
- Corn, wine, fruit, oil! like a child,
- With the meaning known to men.
- For hours in the track of the plough
- And the pruning-knife she stepped,
- And of how the seed works, and of how
- Yields the soil, she seemed adept.
- Then she murmured that name of the dearth,
- The Beneficent, Hers, who bade
- Our husbandmen sow for the birth
- Of the grain making earth full glad.
- She murmured that Other’s: the dirge
- Of life-light: for whose dark lap
- Our locks are clipped on the verge
- Of the realm where runs no sap.
- She said: We have looked on both!
- And her eyes had a wavering beam
- Of various lights, like the froth
- Of the storm-swollen ravine stream
- In flame of the bolt. What links
- Were these which had made him her friend?
- He eyed her, as one who drinks,
- And would drink to the end.
- VII
- Now the meadows with crocus besprent,
- And the asphodel woodsides she left,
- And the lake-slopes, the ravishing scent
- Of narcissus, dark-sweet, for the cleft
- That tutors the torrent-brook,
- Delaying its forceful spleen
- With many a wind and crook
- Through rock to the broad ravine.
- By the hyacinth-bells in the brakes,
- And the shade-loved white windflower, half hid,
- And the sun-loving lizards and snakes
- On the cleft’s barren ledges, that slid
- Out of sight, smooth as waterdrops, all,
- At a snap of twig or bark
- In the track of the foreign foot-fall,
- She climbed to the pineforest dark,
- Overbrowing an emerald chine
- Of the grass-billows. Thence, as a wreath,
- Running poplar and cypress to pine,
- The lake-banks are seen, and beneath,
- Vineyard, village, groves, rivers, towers, farms,
- The citadel watching the bay,
- The bay with the town in its arms,
- The town shining white as the spray
- Of the sapphire sea-wave on the rock,
- Where the rock stars the girdle of sea,
- White-ringed, as the midday flock,
- Clipped by heat, rings the round of the tree.
- That hour of the piercing shaft
- Transfixes bough-shadows, confused
- In veins of fire, and she laughed,
- With her quiet mouth amused
- To see the whole flock, adroop,
- Asleep, hug the tree-stem as one,
- Imperceptibly filling the loop
- Of its shade at a slant of sun.
- The pipes under pent of the crag,
- Where the goatherds in piping recline,
- Have whimsical stops, burst and flag
- Uncorrected as outstretched swine:
- For the fingers are slack and unsure,
- And the wind issues querulous:—thorns
- And snakes!—but she listened demure,
- Comparing day’s music with morn’s.
- Of the gentle spirit that slips
- From the bark of the tree she discoursed,
- And of her of the wells, whose lips
- Are coolness enchanting, rock-sourced.
- And much of the sacred loon,
- The frolic, the Goatfoot God,
- For stories of indolent noon
- In the pineforest’s odorous nod,
- She questioned, not knowing: he can
- Be waspish, irascible, rude,
- He is oftener friendly to man,
- And ever to beasts and their brood.
- For the which did she love him well,
- She said, and his pipes of the reed,
- His twitched lips puffing to tell
- In music his tears and his need,
- Against the sharp catch of his hurt.
- Not as shepherds of Pan did she speak,
- Nor spake as the schools, to divert,
- But fondly, perceiving him weak
- Before Gods, and to shepherds a fear,
- A holiness, horn and heel.
- All this she had learnt in her ear
- From Callistes, and taught him to feel.
- Yea, the solemn divinity flushed
- Through the shaggy brown skin of the beast,
- And the steeps where the cataract rushed,
- And the wilds where the forest is priest,
- Were his temple to clothe him in awe,
- While she spake: ’twas a wonder: she read
- The haunts of the beak and the claw
- As plain as the land of bread,
- But Cities and martial States,
- Whither soon the youth veered his theme,
- Were impervious barrier-gates
- To her: and that ship, a trireme,
- Nearing harbour, scarce wakened her glance,
- Though he dwelt on the message it bore
- Of sceptre and sword and lance
- To the bee-swarms black on the shore,
- Which were audible almost,
- So black they were. It befel
- That he called up the warrior host
- Of the Song pouring hydromel
- In thunder, the wide-winged Song.
- And he named with his boyish pride
- The heroes, the noble throng
- Past Acheron now, foul tide!
- With his joy of the godlike band
- And the verse divine, he named
- The chiefs pressing hot on the strand,
- Seen of Gods, of Gods aided, and maimed.
- The fleetfoot and ireful; the King;
- Him, the prompter in stratagem,
- Many-shifted and masterful: Sing,
- O Muse! But she cried: Not of them
- She breathed as if breath had failed,
- And her eyes, while she bade him desist,
- Held the lost-to-light ghosts grey-mailed,
- As you see the grey river-mist
- Hold shapes on the yonder bank.
- A moment her body waned,
- The light of her sprang and sank:
- Then she looked at the sun, she regained
- Clear feature, and she breathed deep.
- She wore the wan smile he had seen,
- As the flow of the river of Sleep,
- On the mouth of the Shadow-Queen.
- In sunlight she craved to bask,
- Saying: Life! And who was she? who?
- Of what issue? He dared not ask,
- For that partly he knew.
- VIII
- A noise of the hollow ground
- Turned the eye to the ear in debate:
- Not the soft overflowing of sound
- Of the pines, ranked, lofty, straight,
- Barely swayed to some whispers remote,
- Some swarming whispers above:
- Not the pines with the faint airs afloat,
- Hush-hushing the nested dove:
- It was not the pines, or the rout
- Oft heard from mid-forest in chase,
- But the long muffled roar of a shout
- Subterranean. Sharp grew her face.
- She rose, yet not moved by affright;
- ’Twas rather good haste to use
- Her holiday of delight
- In the beams of the God of the Muse.
- And the steeps of the forest she crossed,
- On its dry red sheddings and cones
- Up the paths by roots green-mossed,
- Spotted amber, and old mossed stones.
- Then out where the brook-torrent starts
- To her leap, and from bend to curve
- A hurrying elbow darts
- For the instant-glancing swerve,
- Decisive, with violent will
- In the action formed, like hers,
- The maiden’s, ascending; and still
- Ascending, the bud of the furze,
- The broom, and all blue-berried shoots
- Of stubborn and prickly kind,
- The juniper flat on its roots,
- The dwarf rhododaphne, behind
- She left, and the mountain sheep
- Far behind, goat, herbage and flower.
- The island was hers, and the deep,
- All heaven, a golden hour.
- Then with wonderful voice, that rang
- Through air as the swan’s nigh death,
- Of the glory of Light she sang,
- She sang of the rapture of Breath.
- Nor ever, says he who heard,
- Heard Earth in her boundaries broad,
- From bosom of singer or bird
- A sweetness thus rich of the God
- Whose harmonies always are sane.
- She sang of furrow and seed,
- The burial, birth of the grain,
- The growth, and the showers that feed,
- And the green blades waxing mature
- For the husbandman’s armful brown.
- O, the song in its burden ran pure,
- And burden to song was a crown.
- Callistes, a singer, skilled
- In the gift he could measure and praise,
- By a rival’s art was thrilled,
- Though she sang but a Song of Days,
- Where the husbandman’s toil and strife
- Little varies to strife and toil:
- But the milky kernel of life,
- With her numbered: corn, wine, fruit, oil
- The song did give him to eat:
- Gave the first rapt vision of Good,
- And the fresh young sense of Sweet
- The grace of the battle for food,
- With the issue Earth cannot refuse
- When men to their labour are sworn.
- ’Twas a song of the God of the Muse
- To the forehead of Morn.
- IX
- Him loved she. Lo, now was he veiled:
- Over sea stood a swelled cloud-rack:
- The fishing-boat heavenward sailed,
- Bent abeam, with a whitened track,
- Surprised, fast hauling the net,
- As it flew: sea dashed, earth shook.
- She said: Is it night? O not yet!
- With a travail of thoughts in her look.
- The mountain heaved up to its peak:
- Sea darkened: earth gathered her fowl;
- Of bird or of branch rose the shriek.
- Night? but never so fell a scowl
- Wore night, nor the sky since then
- When ocean ran swallowing shore,
- And the Gods looked down for men.
- Broke tempest with that stern roar
- Never yet, save when black on the whirl
- Rode wrath of a sovereign Power.
- Then the youth and the shuddering girl,
- Dim as shades in the angry shower,
- Joined hands and descended a maze
- Of the paths that were racing alive
- Round boulder and bush, cleaving ways,
- Incessant, with sound of a hive.
- The height was a fountain-urn
- Pouring streams, and the whole solid height
- Leaped, chasing at every turn
- The pair in one spirit of flight
- To the folding pineforest. Yet here,
- Like the pause to things hunted, in doubt,
- The stillness bred spectral fear
- Of the awfulness ranging without,
- And imminent. Downward they fled,
- From under the haunted roof,
- To the valley aquake with the tread
- Of an iron-resounding hoof,
- As of legions of thunderful horse
- Broken loose and in line tramping hard.
- For the rage of a hungry force
- Roamed blind of its mark over sward:
- They saw it rush dense in the cloak
- Of its travelling swathe of steam;
- All the vale through a thin thread-smoke
- Was thrown back to distance extreme:
- And dull the full breast of it blinked,
- Like a buckler of steel breathed o’er,
- Diminished, in strangeness distinct,
- Glowing cold, unearthly, hoar:
- An Enna of fields beyond sun,
- Out of light, in a lurid web;
- And the traversing fury spun
- Up and down with a wave’s flow and ebb;
- As the wave breaks to grasp and to spurn,
- Retire, and in ravenous greed,
- Inveterate, swell its return.
- Up and down, as if wringing from speed
- Sights that made the unsighted appear,
- Delude and dissolve, on it scoured.
- Lo, a sea upon land held career
- Through the plain of the vale half-devoured.
- Callistes of home and escape
- Muttered swiftly, unwitting of speech.
- She gazed at the Void of shape,
- She put her white hand to his reach,
- Saying: Now have we looked on the Three.
- And divided from day, from night,
- From air that is breath, stood she,
- Like the vale, out of light.
- X
- Then again in disorderly words
- He muttered of home, and was mute,
- With the heart of the cowering birds
- Ere they burst off the fowler’s foot.
- He gave her some redness that streamed
- Through her limbs in a flitting glow.
- The sigh of our life she seemed,
- The bliss of it clothing in woe.
- Frailer than flower when the round
- Of the sickle encircles it: strong
- To tell of the things profound,
- Our inmost uttering song,
- Unspoken. So stood she awhile
- In the gloom of the terror afield,
- And the silence about her smile
- Said more than of tongue is revealed.
- I have breathed: I have gazed: I have been:
- It said: and not joylessly shone
- The remembrance of light through the screen
- Of a face that seemed shadow and stone.
- She led the youth trembling, appalled,
- To the lake-banks he saw sink and rise
- Like a panic-struck breast. Then she called,
- And the hurricane blackness had eyes.
- It launched like the Thunderer’s bolt.
- Pale she drooped, and the youth by her side
- Would have clasped her and dared a revolt
- Sacrilegious as ever defied
- High Olympus, but vainly for strength
- His compassionate heart shook a frame
- Stricken rigid to ice all its length.
- On amain the black traveller came.
- Lo, a chariot, cleaving the storm,
- Clove the fountaining lake with a plough,
- And the lord of the steeds was in form
- He, the God of implacable brow,
- Darkness: he: he in person: he raged
- Through the wave like a boar of the wilds
- From the hunters and hounds disengaged,
- And a name shouted hoarsely: his child’s.
- Horror melted in anguish to hear.
- Lo, the wave hissed apart for the path
- Of the terrible Charioteer,
- With the foam and torn features of wrath,
- Hurled aloft on each arm in a sheet;
- And the steeds clove it, rushing at land
- Like the teeth of the famished at meat.
- Then he swept out his hand.
- XI
- This, no more, doth Callistes recall:
- He saw, ere he dropped in swoon,
- On the maiden the chariot fall,
- As a thundercloud swings on the moon.
- Forth, free of the deluge, one cry
- From the vanishing gallop rose clear:
- And: Skiágeneia! the sky
- Rang; Skiágeneia! the sphere.
- And she left him therewith, to rejoice,
- Repine, yearn, and know not his aim,
- The life of their day in her voice,
- Left her life in her name.
- XII
- Now the valley in ruin of fields
- And fair meadowland, showing at eve
- Like the spear-pitted warrior’s shields
- After battle, bade men believe
- That no other than wrathfullest God
- Had been loose on her beautiful breast,
- Where the flowery grass was clod,
- Wheat and vine as a trailing nest.
- The valley, discreet in grief,
- Disclosed but the open truth,
- And Enna had hope of the sheaf:
- There was none for the desolate youth
- Devoted to mourn and to crave.
- Of the secret he had divined
- Of his friend of a day would he rave:
- How for light of our earth she pined:
- For the olive, the vine and the wheat,
- Burning through with inherited fire:
- And when Mother went Mother to meet,
- She was prompted by simple desire
- In the day-destined car to have place
- At the skirts of the Goddess, unseen,
- And be drawn to the dear earth’s face.
- She was fire for the blue and the green
- Of our earth, dark fire; athirst
- As a seed of her bosom for dawn,
- White air that had robed and nursed
- Her mother. Now was she gone
- With the Silent, the God without tear,
- Like a bud peeping out of its sheath
- To be sundered and stamped with the sere.
- And Callistes to her beneath,
- As she to our beams, extinct,
- Strained arms: he was shade of her shade.
- In division so were they linked.
- But the song which had betrayed
- Her flight to the cavernous ear
- For its own keenly wakeful: that song
- Of the sowing and reaping, and cheer
- Of the husbandman’s heart made strong
- Through droughts and deluging rains
- With his faith in the Great Mother’s love:
- O the joy of the breath she sustains,
- And the lyre of the light above,
- And the first rapt vision of Good,
- And the fresh young sense of Sweet:
- That song the youth ever pursued
- In the track of her footing fleet.
- For men to be profited much
- By her day upon earth did he sing:
- Of her voice, and her steps, and her touch
- On the blossoms of tender Spring,
- Immortal: and how in her soul
- She is with them, and tearless abides,
- Folding grain of a love for one goal
- In patience, past flowing of tides.
- And if unto him she was tears,
- He wept not: he wasted within:
- Seeming sane in the song, to his peers,
- Only crazed where the cravings begin.
- Our Lady of Gifts prized he less
- Than her issue in darkness: the dim
- Lost Skiágencia’s caress
- Of our earth made it richest for him.
- And for that was a curse on him raised,
- And he withered rathe, dry to his prime,
- Though the bounteous Giver be praised
- Through the island with rites of old time
- Exceedingly fervent, and reaped
- Veneration for teachings devout,
- Pious hymns when the corn-sheaves are heaped
- And the wine-presses ruddily spout,
- And the olive and apple are juice
- At a touch light as hers lost below.
- Whatsoever to men is of use
- Sprang his worship of them who bestow,
- In a measure of songs unexcelled:
- But that soul loving earth and the sun
- From her home of the shadows he held
- For his beacon where beam there is none:
- And to join her, or have her brought back,
- In his frenzy the singer would call,
- Till he followed where never was track,
- On the path trod of all.
- THE LARK ASCENDING
- HE rises and begins to round,
- He drops the silver chain of sound,
- Of many links without a break,
- In chirrup, whistle, slur and shake,
- All intervolved and spreading wide,
- Like water-dimples down a tide
- Where ripple ripple overcurls
- And eddy into eddy whirls;
- A press of hurried notes that run
- So fleet they scarce are more than one,
- Yet changeingly the trills repeat
- And linger ringing while they fleet,
- Sweet to the quick o’ the ear, and dear
- To her beyond the handmaid ear,
- Who sits beside our inner springs,
- Too often dry for this he brings,
- Which seems the very jet of earth
- At sight of sun, her music’s mirth,
- As up he wings the spiral stair,
- A song of light, and pierces air
- With fountain ardour, fountain play,
- To reach the shining tops of day,
- And drink in everything discerned
- An ecstasy to music turned,
- Impelled by what his happy bill
- Disperses; drinking, showering still,
- Unthinking save that he may give
- His voice the outlet, there to live
- Renewed in endless notes of glee,
- So thirsty of his voice is he,
- For all to hear and all to know
- That he is joy, awake, aglow;
- The tumult of the heart to hear
- Through pureness filtered crystal-clear,
- And know the pleasure sprinkled bright
- By simple singing of delight;
- Shrill, irreflective, unrestrained,
- Rapt, ringing, on the jet sustained
- Without a break, without a fall,
- Sweet-silvery, sheer lyrical,
- Perennial, quavering up the chord
- Like myriad dews of sunny sward
- That trembling into fulness shine,
- And sparkle dropping argentine;
- Such wooing as the ear receives
- From zephyr caught in choric leaves
- Of aspens when their chattering net
- Is flushed to white with shivers wet;
- And such the water-spirit’s chime
- On mountain heights in morning’s prime,
- Too freshly sweet to seem excess,
- Too animate to need a stress;
- But wider over many heads
- The starry voice ascending spreads,
- Awakening, as it waxes thin,
- The best in us to him akin;
- And every face to watch him raised,
- Puts on the light of children praised;
- So rich our human pleasure ripes
- When sweetness on sincereness pipes,
- Though nought be promised from the seas,
- But only a soft-ruffling breeze
- Sweep glittering on a still content,
- Serenity in ravishment
- For singing till his heaven fills,
- ’Tis love of earth that he instils,
- And ever winging up and up,
- Our valley is his golden cup,
- And he the wine which overflows
- To lift us with him as he goes:
- The woods and brooks, the sheep and kine,
- He is, the hills, the human line,
- The meadows green, the fallows brown,
- The dreams of labour in the town;
- He sings the sap, the quickened veins;
- The wedding song of sun and rains
- He is, the dance of children, thanks
- Of sowers, shout of primrose-banks,
- And eye of violets while they breathe;
- All these the circling song will wreathe,
- And you shall hear the herb and tree,
- The better heart of men shall see,
- Shall feel celestially, as long
- As you crave nothing save the song.
- Was never voice of ours could say
- Our inmost in the sweetest way,
- Like yonder voice aloft, and link
- All hearers in the song they drink.
- Our wisdom speaks from failing blood,
- Our passion is too full in flood,
- We want the key of his wild note
- Of truthful in a tuneful throat;
- The song seraphically free
- Of taint of personality,
- So pure that it salutes the suns
- The voice of one for millions,
- In whom the millions rejoice
- For giving their one spirit voice.
- Yet men have we, whom we revere,
- Now names, and men still housing here,
- Whose lives, by many a battle-dint
- Defaced, and grinding wheels on flint,
- Yield substance, though they sing not, sweet
- For song our highest heaven to greet:
- Whom heavenly singing gives us new,
- Enspheres them brilliant in our blue,
- From firmest base to farthest leap,
- Because their love of Earth is deep,
- And they are warriors in accord
- With life to serve, and, pass reward,
- So touching purest and so heard
- In the brain’s reflex of yon bird:
- Wherefore their soul in me, or mine,
- Through self-forgetfulness divine,
- In them, that song aloft maintains,
- To fill the sky and thrill the plains
- With showerings drawn from human stores,
- As he to silence nearer soars,
- Extends the world at wings and dome,
- More spacious making more our home,
- Till lost on his aërial rings
- In light, and then the fancy sings.
- PHOEBUS WITH ADMETUS
- I
- WHEN by Zeus relenting the mandate was revoked,
- Sentencing to exile the bright Sun-God,
- Mindful were the ploughmen of who the steer had yoked,
- Who: and what a track showed the upturned sod!
- Mindful were the shepherds, as now the noon severe
- Bent a burning eyebrow to brown evetide,
- How the rustic flute drew the silver to the sphere,
- Sister of his own, till her rays fell wide.
- God! of whom music
- And song and blood are pure,
- The day is never darkened
- That had thee here obscure.
- II
- Chirping none, the scarlet cicadas crouched in ranks:
- Slack the thistle-head piled its down-silk grey:
- Scarce the stony lizard sucked hollows in his flanks:
- Thick on spots of umbrage our drowsed flocks lay.
- Sudden bowed the chestnuts beneath a wind unheard,
- Lengthened ran the grasses, the sky grew slate:
- Then amid a swift flight of winged seed white as curd,
- Clear of limb a Youth smote the master’s gate.
- God! of whom music
- And song and blood are pure,
- The day is never darkened
- That had thee here obscure.
- III
- Water, first of singers, o’er rocky mount and mead,
- First of earthly singers, the sun-loved rill,
- Sang of him, and flooded the ripples on the reed,
- Seeking whom to waken and what ear fill.
- Water, sweetest soother to kiss a wound and cool,
- Sweetest and divinest, the sky-born brook,
- Chuckled, with a whimper, and made a mirror-pool
- Round the guest we welcomed, the strange hand shook.
- God! of whom music
- And song and blood are pure,
- The day is never darkened
- That had thee here obscure.
- IV
- Many swarms of wild bees descended on our fields:
- Stately stood the wheatstalk with head bent high:
- Big of heart we laboured at storing mighty yields,
- Wool and corn, and clusters to make men cry!
- Hand-like rushed the vintage; we strung the bellied skins
- Plump, and at the sealing the Youth’s voice rose:
- Maidens clung in circle, on little fists their chins;
- Gentle beasties through pushed a cold long nose.
- God! of whom music
- And song and blood are pure,
- The day is never darkened
- That had thee here obscure.
- V
- Foot to fire in snowtime we trimmed the slender shaft:
- Often down the pit spied the lean wolf’s teeth
- Grin against his will, trapped by masterstrokes of craft;
- Helpless in his froth-wrath as green logs seethe!
- Safe the tender lambs tugged the teats, and winter sped
- Whirled before the crocus, the year’s new gold.
- Hung the hooky beak up aloft, the arrowhead
- Reddened through his feathers for our dear fold.
- God! of whom music
- And song and blood are pure,
- The day is never darkened
- That had thee here obscure.
- VI
- Tales we drank of giants at war with Gods above:
- Rocks were they to look on, and earth climbed air!
- Tales of search for simples, and those who sought of love
- Ease because the creature was all too fair.
- Pleasant ran our thinking that while our work was good,
- Sure as fruits for sweat would the praise come fast.
- He that wrestled stoutest and tamed the billow-brood
- Danced in rings with girls, like a sail-flapped mast.
- God! of whom music
- And song and blood are pure,
- The day is never darkened
- That had thee here obscure.
- VII
- Lo, the herb of healing, when once the herb is known,
- Shines in shady woods bright as new-sprung flame.
- Ere the string was tightened we heard the mellow tone,
- After he had taught how the sweet sounds came
- Stretched about his feet, labour done, ’twas as you see
- Red pomegranates tumble and burst hard rind.
- So began contention to give delight and be
- Excellent in things aimed to make life kind.
- God! of whom music
- And song and blood are pure,
- The day is never darkened
- That had thee here obscure.
- VIII
- You with shelly horns, rams! and, promontory goats,
- You whose browsing beards dip in coldest dew!
- Bulls, that walk the pastures in kingly-flashing coats!
- Laurel, ivy, vine, wreathed for feasts not few!
- You that build the shade-roof, and you that court the rays,
- You that leap besprinkling the rock stream-rent:
- He has been our fellow, the morning of our days!
- Us he chose for housemates, and this way went.
- God! of whom music
- And song and blood are pure,
- The day is never darkened
- That had thee here obscure.
- MELAMPUS
- I
- WITH love exceeding a simple love of the things
- That glide in grasses and rubble of woody wreck;
- Or change their perch on a beat of quivering wings
- From branch to branch, only restful to pipe and peck;
- Or, bristled, curl at a touch their snouts in a ball;
- Or cast their web between bramble and thorny hook;
- The good physician Melampus, loving them all,
- Among them walked, as a scholar who reads a book.
- II
- For him the woods were a home and gave him the key
- Of knowledge, thirst for their treasures in herbs and flowers.
- The secrets held by the creatures nearer than we
- To earth he sought, and the link of their life with ours:
- And where alike we are, unlike where, and the veined
- Division, veined parallel, of a blood that flows
- In them, in us, from the source by man unattained
- Save marks he well what the mystical woods disclose.
- III
- And this he deemed might be boon of love to a breast
- Embracing tenderly each little motive shape,
- The prone, the flitting, who seek their food whither best
- Their wits direct, whither best from their foes escape.
- For closer drawn to our mother’s natural milk,
- As babes they learn where her motherly help is great:
- They know the juice for the honey, juice for the silk,
- And need they medical antidotes, find them straight.
- IV
- Of earth and sun they are wise, they nourish their broods,
- Weave, build, hive, burrow and battle, take joy and pain
- Like swimmers varying billows: never in woods
- Runs white insanity fleeing itself: all sane
- The woods revolve: as the tree its shadowing limns
- To some resemblance in motion, the rooted life
- Restrains disorder: you hear the primitive hymns
- Of earth in woods issue wild of the web of strife.
- V
- Now sleeping once on a day of marvellous fire,
- A brood of snakes he had cherished in grave regret
- That death his people had dealt their dam and their sire,
- Through savage dread of them, crept to his neck, and set
- Their tongues to lick him: the swift affectionate tongue
- Of each ran licking the slumberer: then his ears
- A forked red tongue tickled shrewdly: sudden upsprung,
- He heard a voice piping: Ay, for he has no fears!
- VI
- A bird said that, in the notes of birds, and the speech
- Of men, it seemed: and another renewed: He moves
- To learn and not to pursue, he gathers to teach;
- He feeds his young as do we, and as we love loves.
- No fears have I of a man who goes with his head
- To earth, chance looking aloft at us, kind of hand:
- I feel to him as to earth of whom we are fed;
- I pipe him much for his good could he understand.
- VII
- Melampus touched at his ears, laid finger on wrist
- He was not dreaming, he sensibly felt and heard.
- Above, through leaves, where the tree-twigs inter-twist,
- He spied the birds and the bill of the speaking bird.
- His cushion mosses in shades of various green,
- The lumped, the antlered, he pressed, while the sunny snake
- Slipped under: draughts he had drunk of clear Hippocrene,
- It seemed, and sat with a gift of the Gods awake.
- VIII
- Divinely thrilled was the man, exultingly full,
- As quick well-waters that come of the heart of earth,
- Ere yet they dart in a brook are one bubble-pool
- To light and sound, wedding both at the leap of birth.
- The soul of light vivid shone, a stream within stream;
- The soul of sound from a musical shell outflew;
- Where others hear but a hum and see but a beam,
- The tongue and eye of the fountain of life he knew.
- IX
- He knew the Hours: they were round him, laden with seed
- Of hours bestrewn upon vapour, and one by one
- They winged as ripened in fruit the burden decreed
- For each to scatter; they flushed like the buds in sun,
- Bequeathing seed to successive similar rings,
- Their sisters, bearers to men of what men have earned:
- He knew them, talked with the yet unreddened; the stings,
- The sweets, they warmed at their bosoms divined, discerned.
- X
- Not unsolicited, sought by diligent feet,
- By riddling fingers expanded, oft watched in growth
- With brooding deep as the noon-ray’s quickening wheat,
- Ere touch’d, the pendulous flower of the plants of sloth,
- The plants of rigidness, answered question and squeeze,
- Revealing wherefore it bloomed, uninviting, bent,
- Yet making harmony breathe of life and disease,
- The deeper chord of a wonderful instrument.
- XI
- So passed he luminous-eyed for earth and the fates
- We arm to bruise or caress us: his ears were charged
- With tones of love in a whirl of voluble hates,
- With music wrought of distraction his heart enlarged.
- Celestial-shining, though mortal, singer, though mute,
- He drew the Master of harmonies, voiced or stilled,
- To seek him; heard at the silent medicine-root
- A song, beheld in fulfilment the unfulfilled.
- XII
- Him Phoebus, lending to darkness colour and form
- Of light’s excess, many lessons and counsels gave,
- Showed Wisdom lord of the human intricate swarm,
- And whence prophetic it looks on the hives that rave,
- And how acquired, of the zeal of love to acquire,
- And where it stands, in the centre of life a sphere;
- And Measure, mood of the lyre, the rapturous lyre,
- He said was Wisdom, and struck him the notes to hear.
- XIII
- Sweet, sweet: ’twas glory of vision, honey, the breeze
- In heat, the run of the river on root and stone,
- All senses joined, as the sister Pierides
- Are one, uplifting their chorus, the Nine, his own.
- In stately order, evolved of sound into sight,
- From sight to sound intershifting, the man descried
- The growths of earth, his adored, like day out of night,
- Ascend in song, seeing nature and song allied.
- XIV
- And there vitality, there, there solely in song,
- Resides, where earth and her uses to men, their needs,
- Their forceful cravings, the theme are: there is it strong,
- The Master said: and the studious eye that reads,
- (Yea, even as earth to the crown of Gods on the mount),
- In links divine with the lyrical tongue is bound.
- Pursue thy craft: it is music drawn of a fount
- To spring perennial; well-spring is common ground.
- XV
- Melampus dwelt among men: physician and sage,
- He served them, loving them, healing them; sick or maimed,
- Or them that frenzied in some delirious rage
- Outran the measure, his juice of the woods reclaimed.
- He played on men, as his master, Phoebus, on strings
- Melodious: as the God did he drive and check,
- Through love exceeding a simple love of the things
- That glide in grasses and rubble of woody wreck.
- LOVE IN THE VALLEY
- UNDER yonder beech-tree single on the greensward,
- Couched with her arms behind her golden head,
- Knees and tresses folded to slip and ripple idly,
- Lies my young love sleeping in the shade.
- Had I the heart to slide an arm beneath her,
- Press her parting lips as her waist I gather slow,
- Waking in amazement she could not but embrace me:
- Then would she hold me and never let me go?
- * * *
- Shy as the squirrel and wayward as the swallow,
- Swift as the swallow along the river’s light
- Circleting the surface to meet his mirrored winglets,
- Fleeter she seems in her stay than in her flight.
- Shy as the squirrel that leaps among the pine-tops,
- Wayward as the swallow overhead at set of sun,
- She whom I love is hard to catch and conquer,
- Hard, but O the glory of the winning were she won!
- * * *
- When her mother tends her before the laughing mirror,
- Tying up her laces, looping up her hair,
- Often she thinks, were this wild thing wedded,
- More love should I have, and much less care.
- When her mother tends her before the lighted mirror,
- Loosening her laces, combing down her curls,
- Often she thinks, were this wild thing wedded,
- I should miss but one for the many boys and girls.
- * * *
- Heartless she is as the shadow in the meadows
- Flying to the hills on a blue and breezy noon.
- No, she is athirst and drinking up her wonder:
- Earth to her is young as the slip of the new moon.
- Deals she an unkindness, ’tis but her rapid measure,
- Even as in a dance; and her smile can heal no less:
- Like the swinging May-cloud that pelts the flowers with hailstones
- Off a sunny border, she was made to bruise and bless.
- * * *
- Lovely are the curves of the white owl sweeping
- Wavy in the dusk lit by one large star.
- Lone on the fir-branch, his rattle-note unvaried,
- Brooding o’er the gloom, spins the brown eve-jar.
- Darker grows the valley, more and more forgetting:
- So were it with me if forgetting could be willed.
- Tell the grassy hollow that holds the bubbling well-spring,
- Tell it to forget the source that keeps it filled.
- * * *
- Stepping down the hill with her fair companions,
- Arm in arm, all against the raying West,
- Boldly she sings, to the merry tune she marches,
- Brave in her shape, and sweeter unpossessed.
- Sweeter, for she is what my heart first awaking
- Whispered the world was; morning light is she.
- Love that so desires would fain keep her changeless;
- Fain would fling the net, and fain have her free.
- * * *
- Happy happy time, when the white star hovers
- Low over dim fields fresh with bloomy dew,
- Near the face of dawn, that draws athwart the darkness,
- Threading it with colour, like yewberries the yew.
- Thicker crowd the shades as the grave East deepens
- Glowing, and with crimson a long cloud swells.
- Maiden still the morn is; and strange she is, and secret;
- Strange her eyes; her cheeks are cold as cold sea-shells.
- * * *
- Sunrays, leaning on our southern hills and lighting
- Wild cloud-mountains that drag the hills along,
- Oft ends the day of your shifting brilliant laughter
- Chill as a dull face frowning on a song.
- Ay, but shows the South-west a ripple-feathered bosom
- Blown to silver while the clouds are shaken and ascend
- Scaling the mid-heavens as they stream, there comes a sunset
- Rich, deep like love in beauty without end.
- * * *
- When at dawn she sighs, and like an infant to the window
- Turns grave eyes craving light, released from dreams,
- Beautiful she looks, like a white water-lily
- Bursting out of bud in havens of the streams.
- When from bed she rises clothed from neck to ankle
- In her long nightgown sweet as boughs of May,
- Beautiful she looks, like a tall garden lily
- Pure from the night, and splendid for the day.
- * * *
- Mother of the dews, dark eye-lashed twilight,
- Low-lidded twilight, o’er the valley’s brim,
- Rounding on thy breast sings the dew-delighted skylark,
- Clear as though the dewdrops had their voice in him.
- Hidden where the rose-flush drinks the rayless planet,
- Fountain-full he pours the spraying fountain-showers.
- Let me hear her laughter, I would have her ever
- Cool as dew in twilight, the lark above the flowers.
- * * *
- All the girls are out with their baskets for the primrose;
- Up lanes, woods through, they troop in joyful bands.
- My sweet leads: she knows not why, but now she loiters,
- Eyes bent anemones, and hangs her hands.
- Such a look will tell that the violets are peeping,
- Coming the rose: and unaware a cry
- Springs in her bosom for odours and for colour,
- Covert and the nightingale; she knows not why.
- * * *
- Kerchiefed head and chin, she darts between her tulips,
- Streaming like a willow grey in arrowy rain:
- Some bend beaten cheek to gravel, and their angel
- She will be; she lifts them, and on she speeds again.
- Black the driving raincloud breasts the iron gate-way:
- She is forth to cheer a neighbour lacking mirth.
- So when sky and grass met rolling dumb for thunder,
- Saw I once a white dove, sole light of earth.
- * * *
- Prim little scholars are the flowers of her garden,
- Trained to stand in rows, and asking if they please.
- I might love them well but for loving more the wild ones.
- O my wild ones! they tell me more than these.
- You, my wild one, you tell of honied field-rose,
- Violet, blushing eglantine in life; and even as they,
- They by the wayside are earnest of your goodness,
- You are of life’s, on the banks that line the way.
- * * *
- Peering at her chamber the white crowns the red rose,
- Jasmine winds the porch with stars two and three.
- Parted is the window; she sleeps; the starry jasmine
- Breathes a falling breath that carries thoughts of me.
- Sweeter unpossessed, have I said of her my sweetest
- Not while she sleeps: while she sleeps the jasmine breathes,
- Luring her to love; she sleeps; the starry jasmine
- Bears me to her pillow under white rose-wreaths.
- * * *
- Yellow with birdfoot-trefoil are the grass-glades;
- Yellow with cinquefoil of the dew-grey leaf:
- Yellow with stonecrop; the moss-mounds are yellow;
- Blue-necked the wheat sways, yellowing to the sheaf.
- Green-yellow, bursts from the copse the laughing yaffle;
- Sharp as a sickle is the edge of shade and shine:
- Earth in her heart laughs looking at the heavens,
- Thinking of the harvest: I look and think of mine.
- * * *
- This I may know: her dressing and undressing
- Such a change of light shows as when the skies in sport
- Shift from cloud to moonlight; or edging over thunder
- Slips a ray of sun; or sweeping into port
- White sails furl; or on the ocean borders
- White sails lean along the waves leaping green.
- Visions of her shower before me, but from eyesight
- Guarded she would be like the sun were she seen.
- * * *
- Front door and back of the mossed old farmhouse
- Open with the morn, and in a breezy link
- Freshly sparkles garden to stripe-shadowed orchard,
- Green across a rill where on sand the minnows wink.
- Busy in the grass the early sun of summer
- Swarms, and the blackbird’s mellow fluting notes
- Call my darling up with round and roguish challenge:
- Quaintest, richest carol of all the singing throats!
- * * *
- Cool was the woodside; cool as her white dairy
- Keeping sweet the cream-pan; and there the boys from school,
- Cricketing below, rushed brown and red with sunshine;
- O the dark translucence of the deep-eyed cool!
- Spying from the farm, herself she fetched a pitcher
- Full of milk, and tilted for each in turn the beak.
- Then a little fellow, mouth up and on tiptoe,
- Said, ‘I will kiss you’: she laughed and leaned her cheek.
- * * *
- Doves of the fir-wood walling high our red roof
- Through the long noon coo, crooning through the coo.
- Loose droop the leaves, and down the sleepy road-way
- Sometimes pipes a chaffinch; loose droops the blue.
- Cows flap a slow tail knee-deep in the river,
- Breathless, given up to sun and gnat and fly.
- Nowhere is she seen; and if I see her nowhere,
- Lightning may come, straight rains and tiger sky.
- * * *
- O the golden sheaf, the rustling treasure-armful!
- O the nutbrown tresses nodding interlaced!
- O the treasure-tresses one another over
- Nodding! O the girdle slack about the waist!
- Slain are the poppies that shot their random scarlet
- Quick amid the wheatears: wound about the waist,
- Gathered, see these brides of earth one blush of ripeness!
- O the nutbrown tresses nodding interlaced!
- * * *
- Large and smoky red the sun’s cold disk drops,
- Clipped by naked hills, on violet shaded snow:
- Eastward large and still lights up a bower of moon-rise,
- Whence at her leisure steps the moon aglow.
- Nightlong on black print-branches our beech-tree
- Gazes in this whiteness: nightlong could I.
- Here may life on death or death on life be painted.
- Let me clasp her soul to know she cannot die!
- * * *
- Gossips count her faults; they scour a narrow chamber
- Where there is no window, read not heaven or her.
- ‘When she was a tiny,’ one aged woman quavers,
- Plucks at my heart and leads me by the ear.
- Faults she had once as she learnt to run and tumbled:
- Faults of feature some see, beauty not complete.
- Yet, good gossips, beauty that makes holy
- Earth and air, may have faults from head to feet.
- * * *
- Hither she comes; she comes to me; she lingers,
- Deepens her brown eyebrows, while in new surprise
- High rise the lashes in wonder of a stranger;
- Yet am I the light and living of her eyes.
- Something friends have told her fills her heart to brimming,
- Nets her in her blushes, and wounds her, and tames.—
- Sure of her haven, O like a dove alighting,
- Arms up, she dropped: our souls were in our names.
- * * *
- Soon will she lie like a white-frost sunrise.
- Yellow oats and brown wheat, barley pale as rye,
- Long since your sheaves have yielded to the thresher,
- Felt the girdle loosened, seen the tresses fly.
- Soon will she lie like a blood-red sunset.
- Swift with the to-morrow, green-winged Spring!
- Sing from the South-west, bring her back the truants,
- Nightingale and swallow, song and dipping wing.
- * * *
- Soft new beech-leaves, up to beamy April
- Spreading bough on bough a primrose mountain, you
- Lucid in the moon, raise lilies to the skyfields,
- Youngest green transfused in silver shining through:
- Fairer than the lily, than the wild white cherry:
- Fair as in image my seraph love appears
- Borne to me by dreams when dawn is at my eye-lids:
- Fair as in the flesh she swims to me on tears.
- * * *
- Could I find a place to be alone with heaven,
- I would speak my heart out: heaven is my need.
- Every woodland tree is flushing like the dogwood,
- Flashing like the whitebeam, swaying like the reed.
- Flushing like the dogwood crimson in October;
- Streaming like the flag-reed South-west blown;
- Flashing as in gusts the sudden-lighted whitebeam:
- All seem to know what is for heaven alone.
- THE THREE SINGERS TO YOUNG BLOOD
- CAROLS nature, counsel men.
- Different notes as rook from wren
- Hear we when our steps begin,
- And the choice is cast within,
- Where a robber raven’s tale
- Urges passion’s nightingale.
- Hark to the three. Chimed they in one,
- Life were music of the sun.
- Liquid first, and then the caw,
- Then the cry that knows not law.
- I
- As the birds do, so do we,
- Bill our mate, and choose our tree.
- Swift to building work addressed,
- Any straw will help a nest.
- Mates are warm, and this is truth,
- Glad the young that come of youth.
- They have bloom i’ the blood and sap
- Chilling at no thunder-clap.
- Man and woman on the thorn
- Trust not Earth, and have her scorn.
- They who in her lead confide,
- Wither me if they spread not wide!
- Look for aid to little things,
- You will get them quick as wings,
- Thick as feathers; would you feed,
- Take the leap that springs the need.
- II
- Contemplate the rutted road:
- Life is both a lure and goad.
- Each to hold in measure just,
- Trample appetite to dust.
- Mark the fool and wanton spin:
- Keep to harness as a skin.
- Ere you follow nature’s lead,
- Of her powers in you have heed;
- Else a shiverer you will find
- You have challenged humankind.
- Mates are chosen marketwise:
- Coolest bargainer best buys.
- Leap not, nor let leap the heart:
- Trot your track, and drag your cart.
- So your end may be in wool,
- Honoured, and with manger full.
- III
- O the rosy light! it fleets,
- Dearer dying than all sweets.
- That is life: it waves and goes;
- Solely in that cherished Rose
- Palpitates, or else ’tis death.
- Call it love with all thy breath.
- Love! it lingers: Love! it nears:
- Love! O Love! the Rose appears,
- Blushful, magic, reddening air.
- Now the choice is on thee: dare!
- Mortal seems the touch, but makes
- Immortal the hand that takes.
- Feel what sea within thee shames
- Of its force all other claims,
- Drowns them. Clasp! the world will be
- Heavenly Rose to swelling sea.
- THE ORCHARD AND THE HEATH
- I CHANCED upon an early walk to spy
- A troop of children through an orchard gate:
- The boughs hung low, the grass was high;
- They had but to lift hands or wait
- For fruits to fill them; fruits were all their sky.
- They shouted, running on from tree to tree,
- And played the game the wind plays, on and round.
- ’Twas visible invisible glee
- Pursuing; and a fountain’s sound
- Of laughter spouted, pattering fresh on me.
- I could have watched them till the daylight fled,
- Their pretty bower made such a light of day.
- A small one tumbling sang, ‘Oh! head!’
- The rest to comfort her straightway
- Seized on a branch and thumped down apples red.
- The tiny creature flashing through green grass,
- And laughing with her feet and eyes among
- Fresh apples, while a little lass
- Over as o’er breeze-ripples hung:
- That sight I saw, and passed as aliens pass.
- My footpath left the pleasant farms and lanes,
- Soft cottage-smoke, straight cocks a-crow, gay flowers;
- Beyond the wheel-ruts of the wains,
- Across a heath I walked for hours,
- And met its rival tenants, rays and rains.
- Still in my view mile-distant firs appeared,
- When, under a patched channel-bank enriched
- With foxglove whose late bells drooped seared,
- Behold, a family had pitched
- Their camp, and labouring the low tent upreared.
- Here, too, were many children, quick to scan
- A new thing coming; swarthy cheeks, white teeth:
- In many-coloured rags they ran,
- Like iron runlets of the heath.
- Dispersed lay broth-pot, sticks, and drinking-can.
- Three girls, with shoulders like a boat at sea
- Tipped sideways by the wave (their clothing slid
- From either ridge unequally),
- Lean, swift and voluble, bestrid
- A starting-point, unfrocked to the bent knee.
- They raced; their brothers yelled them on, and broke
- In act to follow, but as one they snuffed
- Wood-fumes, and by the fire that spoke
- Of provender, its pale flame puffed,
- And rolled athwart dwarf furzes grey-blue smoke.
- Soon on the dark edge of a ruddier gleam,
- The mother-pot perusing, all, stretched flat,
- Paused for its bubbling-up supreme:
- A dog upright in circle sat,
- And oft his nose went with the flying steam.
- I turned and looked on heaven awhile, where now
- The moor-faced sunset broadened with red light;
- Threw high aloft a golden bough,
- And seemed the desert of the night
- Far down with mellow orchards to endow.
- EARTH AND MAN
- I
- ON her great venture, Man,
- Earth gazes while her fingers dint the breast
- Which is his well of strength, his home of rest,
- And fair to scan.
- II
- More aid than that embrace,
- That nourishment, she cannot give: his heart
- Involves his fate; and she who urged the start
- Abides the race.
- III
- For he is in the lists
- Contentious with the elements, whose dower
- First sprang him; for swift vultures to devour
- If he desists.
- IV
- His breath of instant thirst
- Is warning of a creature matched with strife,
- To meet it as a bride, or let fall life
- On life’s accursed.
- V
- No longer forth he bounds
- The lusty animal, afield to roam,
- But peering in Earth’s entrails, where the gnome
- Strange themes propounds.
- VI
- By hunger sharply sped
- To grasp at weapons ere he learns their use,
- In each new ring he bears a giant’s thews,
- An infant’s head.
- VII
- And ever that old task
- Of reading what he is and whence he came,
- Whither to go, finds wilder letters flame
- Across her mask.
- VIII
- She hears his wailful prayer,
- When now to the Invisible he raves
- To rend him from her, now of his mother craves
- Her calm, her care.
- IX
- The thing that shudders most
- Within him is the burden of his cry.
- Seen of his dread, she is to his blank eye
- The eyeless Ghost.
- X
- Or sometimes she will seem
- Heavenly, but her blush, soon wearing white,
- Veils like a gorsebush in a web of blight,
- With gold-buds dim.
- XI
- Once worshipped Prime of Powers,
- She still was the Implacable: as a beast,
- She struck him down and dragged him from the feast
- She crowned with flowers.
- XII
- Her pomp of glorious hues,
- Her revelries of ripeness, her kind smile,
- Her songs, her peeping faces, lure awhile
- With symbol-clues.
- XIII
- The mystery she holds
- For him, inveterately he strains to see,
- And sight of his obtuseness is the key
- Among those folds.
- XIV
- He may entreat, aspire,
- He may despair, and she has never heed.
- She drinking his warm sweat will soothe his need,
- Not his desire.
- XV
- She prompts him to rejoice,
- Yet scares him on the threshold with the shroud.
- He deems her cherishing of her best-endowed
- A wanton’s choice.
- XVI
- Albeit thereof he has found
- Firm roadway between lustfulness and pain;
- Has half transferred the battle to his brain,
- From bloody ground;
- XVII
- He will not read her good,
- Or wise, but with the passion Self obscures;
- Through that old devil of the thousand lures,
- Through that dense hood:
- XVIII
- Through terror, through distrust;
- The greed to touch, to view, to have, to live:
- Through all that makes of him a sensitive
- Abhorring dust.
- XIX
- Behold his wormy home!
- And he the wind-whipped, anywhither wave
- Crazily tumbled on a shingle-grave
- To waste in foam.
- XX
- Therefore the wretch inclined
- Afresh to the Invisible, who, he saith,
- Can raise him high: with vows of living faith
- For little signs.
- XXI
- Some signs he must demand,
- Some proofs of slaughtered nature; some prized few,
- To satisfy the senses it is true,
- And in his hand,
- XXII
- This miracle which saves
- Himself, himself doth from extinction clutch,
- By virtue of his worth, contrasting much
- With brutes and knaves.
- XXIII
- From dust, of him abhorred,
- He would be snatched by Grace discovering worth.
- ‘Sever me from the hollowness of Earth!
- Me take, dear Lord!’
- XXIV
- She hears him. Him she owes
- For half her loveliness a love well won
- By work that lights the shapeless and the dun,
- Their common foes.
- XXV
- He builds the soaring spires,
- That sing his soul in stone: of her he draws,
- Though blind to her, by spelling at her laws,
- Her purest fires.
- XXVI
- Through him hath she exchanged,
- For the gold harvest-robes, the mural crown,
- Her haggard quarry-features and thick frown
- Where monsters ranged.
- XXVII
- And order, high discourse,
- And decency, than which is life less dear,
- She has of him: the lyre of language clear,
- Love’s tongue and source.
- XXVIII
- She hears him, and can hear
- With glory in his gains by work achieved:
- With grief for grief that is the unperceived
- In her so near.
- XXIX
- If he aloft for aid
- Imploring storms, her essence is the spur.
- His cry to heaven is a cry to her
- He would evade.
- XXX
- Not elsewhere can he tend.
- Those are her rules which bid him wash foul sins;
- Those her revulsions from the skull that grins
- To ape his end.
- XXXI
- And her desires are those
- For happiness, for lastingness, for light.
- ’Tis she who kindles in his haunting night
- The hoped dawn-rose.
- XXXII
- Fair fountains of the dark
- Daily she waves him, that his inner dream
- May clasp amid the glooms a springing beam,
- A quivering lark:
- XXIII
- This life and her to know
- For Spirit: with awakenedness of glee
- To feel stern joy her origin: not he
- The child of woe.
- XXXIV
- But that the senses still
- Usurp the station of their issue mind,
- He would have burst the chrysalis of the blind:
- As yet he will;
- XXXV
- As yet he will, she prays,
- Yet will when his distempered devil of Self;—
- The glutton for her fruits, the wily elf
- In shifting rays;—
- XXXVI
- That captain of the scorned;
- The coveter of life in soul and shell,
- The fratricide, the thief, the infidel,
- The hoofed and horned;—
- XXXVII
- He singularly doomed
- To what he execrates and writhes to shun;—
- When fire has passed him vapour to the sun,
- And sun relumed,
- XXXVIII
- Then shall the horrid pall
- Be lifted, and a spirit nigh divine,
- ‘Live in thy offspring as I live in mine,’
- Will hear her call.
- XXXIX
- Whence looks he on a land
- Whereon his labour is a carven page;
- And forth from heritage to heritage
- Nought writ on sand.
- XL
- His fables of the Above,
- And his gapped readings of the crown and sword,
- The hell detested and the heaven adored,
- The hate, the love,
- XLI
- The bright wing, the black hoof,
- He shall peruse, from Reason not disjoined,
- And never unfaith clamouring to be coined
- To faith by proof.
- XLII
- She her just Lord may view,
- Not he, her creature, till his soul has yearned
- With all her gifts to reach the light discerned
- Her spirit through.
- XLIIII
- Then in him time shall run
- As in the hour that to young sunlight crows;
- And—‘If thou hast good faith it can repose,’
- She tells her son.
- XLIV
- Meanwhile on him, her chief
- Expression, her great word of life, looks she;
- Twi-minded of him, as the waxing tree,
- Or dated leaf.
- A BALLAD OF FAIR LADIES IN REVOLT
- I
- SEE the sweet women, friend, that lean beneath
- The ever-falling fountain of green leaves
- Round the white bending stem, and like a wreath
- Of our most blushful flower shine trembling through,
- To teach philosophers the thirst of thieves:
- Is one for me? is one for you?
- II
- —Fair sirs, we give you welcome, yield you place,
- And you shall choose among us which you will,
- Without the idle pastime of the chase,
- If to this treaty you can well agree:
- To wed our cause, and its high task fulfil.
- He who’s for us, for him are we!
- III
- —Most gracious ladies, nigh when light has birth,
- A troop of maids, brown as burnt heather-bells,
- And rich with life as moss-roots breathe of earth
- In the first plucking of them, past us flew
- To labour, singing rustic ritornells:
- Had they a cause? are they of you?
- IV
- —Sirs, they are as unthinking armies are
- To thoughtful leaders, and our cause is theirs.
- When they know men they know the state of war:
- But now they dream like sunlight on a sea,
- And deem you hold the half of happy pairs.
- He who’s for us, for him are we!
- V
- —Ladies, I listened to a ring of dames;
- Judicial in the robe and wig; secure
- As venerated portraits in their frames;
- And they denounced some insurrection new
- Against sound laws which keep you good and pure.
- Are you of them? are they of you?
- VI
- —Sirs, they are of us, as their dress denotes,
- And by as much: let them together chime:
- It is an ancient bell within their throats,
- Pulled by an aged ringer; with what glee
- Befits the yellow yesterdays of time.
- He who’s for us, for him are we!
- VII
- —Sweet ladies, you with beauty, you with wit;
- Dowered of all favours and all blessed things
- Whereat the ruddy torch of Love is lit;
- Wherefore this vain and outworn strife renew,
- Which stays the tide no more than eddy-rings?
- Who is for love must be for you.
- VIII
- —The manners of the market, honest sirs,
- ’Tis hard to quit when you behold the wares.
- You flatter us, or perchance our milliners
- You flatter; so this vain and outworn She
- May still be the charmed snake to your soft airs!
- A higher lord than Love claim we.
- IX
- —One day, dear lady, missing the broad track,
- I came on a wood’s border, by a mead,
- Where golden May ran up to moted black:
- And there I saw Queen Beauty hold review,
- With Love before her throne in act to plead.
- Take him for me, take her for you.
- X
- —Ingenious gentleman, the tale is known.
- Love pleaded sweetly: Beauty would not melt:
- She would not melt: he turned in wrath: her throne
- The shadow of his back froze witheringly,
- And sobbing at his feet Queen Beauty knelt.
- O not such slaves of Love are we!
- XI
- —Love, lady, like the star above that lance
- Of radiance flung by sunset on ridged cloud,
- Sad as the last line of a brave romance!—
- Young Love hung dim, yet quivering round him threw
- Beams of fresh fire, while Beauty waned and bowed.
- Scorn Love, and dread the doom for you.
- XII
- —Called she not for her mirror, sir? Forth ran
- Her women: I am lost, she cried, when lo,
- Love in the form of an admiring man
- Once more in adoration bent the knee,
- And brought the faded Pagan to full blow:
- For which her throne she gave: not we!
- XIII
- —My version, madam, runs not to that end.
- A certain madness of an hour half past,
- Caught her like fever; her just lord no friend
- She fancied; aimed beyond beauty, and thence grew
- The prim acerbity, sweet Love’s outcast.
- Great heaven ward off that stroke from you!
- XIV
- —Your prayer to heaven, good sir, is generous:
- How generous likewise that you do not name
- Offended nature! She from all of us
- Couched idle underneath our showering tree,
- May quite withhold her most destructive flame;
- And then what woeful women we!
- XV
- —Quite, could not be, fair lady; yet your youth
- May run to drought in visionary schemes:
- And a late waking to perceive the truth,
- When day falls shrouding her supreme adieu,
- Shows darker wastes than unaccomplished dreams:
- And that may be in store for you.
- XVI
- —O sir, the truth, the truth! is’t in the skies,
- Or in the grass, or in this heart of ours?
- But O the truth, the truth! the many eyes
- That look on it! the diverse things they see,
- According to their thirst for fruit or flowers!
- Pass on: it is the truth seek we.
- XVII
- —Lady, there is a truth of settled laws
- That down the past burns like a great watch-fire.
- Let youth hail changeful mornings; but your cause,
- Whetting its edge to cut the race in two,
- Is felony: you forfeit the bright lyre,
- Much honour and much glory you!
- XVIII
- —Sir, was it glory, was it honour, pride,
- And not as cat and serpent and poor slave,
- Wherewith we walked in union by your side?
- Spare to false womanliness her delicacy,
- Or bid true manliness give ear, we crave:
- In our defence thus chained are we.
- XIX
- —Yours, madam, were the privileges of life
- Proper to man’s ideal; you were the mark
- Of action, and the banner in the strife:
- Yea, of your very weakness once you drew
- The strength that sounds the wells, outflies the lark:
- Wrapped in a robe of flame were you!
- XX
- —Your friend looks thoughtful. Sir, when we were chill,
- You clothed us warmly; all in honour! when
- We starved you fed us; all in honour still:
- Oh, all in honour, ultra-honourably!
- Deep is the gratitude we owe to men,
- For privileged indeed were we!
- XXI
- —You cite exceptions, madam, that are sad,
- But come in the red struggle of our growth.
- Alas, that I should have to say it! bad
- Is two-sexed upon earth: this which you do,
- Shows animal impatience, mental sloth:
- Man monstrous! pining seraphs you!
- XXII
- —I fain would ask your friend . . . but I will ask
- You, sir, how if in place of numbers vague,
- Your sad exceptions were to break that mask
- They wear for your cool mind historically,
- And blaze like black lists of a _present_ plague?
- But in that light behold them we.
- XXIII
- —Your spirit breathes a mist upon our world,
- Lady, and like a rain to pierce the roof
- And drench the bed where toil-tossed man lies curled
- In his hard-earned oblivion! You are few,
- Scattered, ill-counselled, blinded: for a proof,
- I have lived, and have known none like you.
- XXIV
- —We may be blind to men, sir: we embrace
- A future now beyond the fowler’s nets.
- Though few, we hold a promise for the race
- That was not at our rising: you are free
- To win brave mates; you lose but marionnettes.
- He who’s for us, for him are we.
- XXV
- —Ah! madam, were they puppets who withstood
- Youth’s cravings for adventure to preserve
- The dedicated ways of womanhood?
- The light which leads us from the paths of rue,
- That light above us, never seen to swerve,
- Should be the home-lamp trimmed by you.
- XXVI
- —Ah! sir, our worshipped posture we perchance
- Shall not abandon, though we see not how,
- Being to that lamp-post fixed, we may advance
- Beside our lords in any real degree,
- Unless we move: and to advance is now
- A sovereign need, think more than we.
- XXVII
- —So push you out of harbour in small craft,
- With little seamanship; and comes a gale,
- The world will laugh, the world has often laughed,
- Lady, to see how bold when skies are blue,
- When black winds churn the deeps how panic-pale,
- How swift to the old nest fly you!
- XXVIII
- —What thinks your friend, kind sir? We have escaped
- But partly that old half-tamed wild beast’s paw
- Whereunder woman, the weak thing, was shaped:
- Men, too, have known the cramping enemy
- In grim brute force, whom force of brain shall awe:
- Him our deliverer, await we!
- XXIX
- —Delusions are with eloquence endowed,
- And yours might pluck an angel from the spheres
- To play in this revolt whereto you are vowed,
- Deliverer, lady! but like summer dew
- O’er fields that crack for rain your friends drop tears,
- Who see the awakening for you.
- XXX
- —Is he our friend, there silent? he weeps not.
- O sir, delusion mounting like a sun
- On a mind blank as the white wife of Lot,
- Giving it warmth and movement! if this be
- Delusion, think of what thereby was won
- For men, and dream of what win we.
- XXXI
- —Lady, the destiny of minor powers,
- Who would recast us, is but to convulse:
- You enter on a strife that frets and sours;
- You can but win sick disappointment’s hue;
- And simply an accelerated pulse,
- Some tonic you have drunk moves you.
- XXXII
- —Thinks your friend so? Good sir, your wit is bright;
- But wit that strives to speak the popular voice,
- Puts on its nightcap and puts out its light.
- Curfew, would seem your conqueror’s decree
- To women likewise: and we have no choice
- Save darkness or rebellion, we!
- XXXIII
- —A plain safe intermediate way is cleft
- By reason foiling passion: you that rave
- Of mad alternatives to right and left
- Echo the tempter, madam: and ’tis due
- Unto your sex to shun it as the grave,
- This later apple offered you.
- XXXIV
- —This apple is not ripe, it is not sweet;
- Nor rosy, sir, nor golden: eye and mouth
- Are little wooed by it; yet we would eat.
- We are somewhat tired of Eden, is our plea.
- We have thirsted long; this apple suits our drouth:
- ’Tis good for men to halve, think we.
- XXXV
- —But say, what seek you, madam? ’Tis enough
- That you should have dominion o’er the springs
- Domestic and man’s heart: those ways, how rough,
- How vile, outside the stately avenue
- Where you walk sheltered by your angel’s wings,
- Are happily unknown to you.
- XXXVI
- —We hear women’s shrieks on them. We like your phrase,
- Dominion domestic! And that roar,
- ‘What seek you?’ is of tyrants in all days.
- Sir, get you something of our purity
- And we will of your strength: we ask no more.
- That is the sum of what seek we.
- XXXVII
- —O for an image, madam, in one word,
- To show you as the lightning night reveals,
- Your error and your perils: you have erred
- In mind only, and the perils that ensue
- Swift heels may soften; wherefore to swift heels
- Address your hopes of safety you!
- XXXVIII
- —To err in mind, sir . . . your friend smiles: he may!
- To err in mind, if err in mind we can,
- Is grievous error you do well to stay.
- But O how different from reality
- Men’s fiction is! how like you in the plan,
- Is woman, knew you her as we!
- XXXIX
- —Look, lady, where yon river winds its line
- Toward sunset, and receives on breast and face
- The splendour of fair life: to be divine,
- ’Tis nature bids you be to nature true,
- Flowing with beauty, lending earth your grace,
- Reflecting heaven in clearness you.
- XL
- —Sir, you speak well: your friend no word vouchsafes.
- To flow with beauty, breeding fools and worse,
- Cowards and worse: at such fair life she chafes,
- Who is not wholly of the nursery,
- Nor of your schools: we share the primal curse;
- Together shake it off, say we!
- XLI
- —Hear, then, my friend, madam! Tongue-restrained he stands
- Till words are thoughts, and thoughts, like swords enriched
- With traceries of the artificer’s hands,
- Are fire-proved steel to cut, fair flowers to view.—
- Do I hear him? Oh, he is bewitched, bewitched!
- Heed him not! Traitress beauties you!
- XLII
- —We have won a champion, sisters, and a sage!
- —Ladies, you win a guest to a good feast!
- —Sir spokesman, sneers are weakness veiling rage.
- —Of weakness, and wise men, you have the key.
- —Then are there fresher mornings mounting East
- Than ever yet have dawned, sing we!
- XLIII
- —False ends as false began, madam, be sure!
- —What lure there is the pure cause purifies!
- —Who purifies the victim of the lure?
- —That soul which bids us our high light pursue.
- —Some heights are measured down: the wary wise
- Shun Reason in the masque with you!
- XLIV
- —Sir, for the friend you bring us, take our thanks.
- Yes, Beauty was of old this barren goal;
- A thing with claws; and brute-like in her pranks!
- But could she give more loyal guarantee
- Than wooing Wisdom, that in her a soul
- Has risen? Adieu: content are we!
- XLV
- Those ladies led their captive to the flood’s
- Green edge. He floating with them seemed the most
- Fool-flushed old noddy ever crowned with buds.
- Happier than I! Then, why not wiser too?
- For he that lives with Beauty, he may boast
- His comrade over me and you.
- XLVI
- Have women nursed some dream since Helen sailed
- Over the sea of blood the blushing star,
- That beauty, whom frail man as Goddess hailed,
- When not possessing her (for such is he!),
- Might in a wondering season seen afar,
- Be tamed to say not ‘I,’ but ‘we’?
- XLVII
- And shall they make of Beauty their estate,
- The fortress and the weapon of their sex?
- Shall she in her frost-brilliancy dictate,
- More queenly than of old, how we must woo,
- Ere she will melt? The halter’s on our necks,
- Kick as it likes us, I and you.
- XLVIII
- Certain it is, if Beauty has disdained
- Her ancient conquests, with an aim thus high:
- If this, if that, if more, the fight is gained.
- But can she keep her followers without fee?
- Yet ah! to hear anew those ladies cry,
- He who’s for us, for him are we!
- BALLADS AND POEMS OF TRAGIC LIFE
- THE TWO MASKS
- I
- MELPOMENE among her livid people,
- Ere stroke of lyre, upon Thaleia looks,
- Warned by old contests that one museful ripple
- Along those lips of rose with tendril hooks
- Forebodes disturbance in the springs of pathos,
- Perchance may change of masks midway demand,
- Albeit the man rise mountainous as Athos,
- The woman wild as Cape Leucadia stand.
- II
- For this the Comic Muse exacts of creatures
- Appealing to the fount of tears: that they
- Strive never to outleap our human features,
- And do Right Reason’s ordinance obey,
- In peril of the hum to laughter nighest.
- But prove they under stress of action’s fire
- Nobleness, to that test of Reason highest,
- She bows: she waves them for the loftier lyre.
- ARCHDUCHESS ANNE
- I
- I
- IN middle age an evil thing
- Befell Archduchess Anne:
- She looked outside her wedding-ring
- Upon a princely man.
- II
- Count Louis was for horse and arms;
- And if its beacon waved,
- For love; but ladies had not charms
- To match a danger braved.
- III
- On battlefields he was the bow
- Bestrung to fly the shaft:
- In idle hours his heart would flow
- As winds on currents waft.
- IV
- His blood was of those warrior tribes
- That streamed from morning’s fire,
- Whom now with traps and now with bribes
- The wily Council wire.
- V
- Archduchess Anne the Council ruled,
- Count Louis his great dame;
- And woe to both when one had cooled!
- Little was she to blame.
- VI
- Among her chiefs who spun their plots,
- Old Kraken stood the sword:
- As sharp his wits for cutting knots
- Of babble he abhorred.
- VII
- He reverenced her name and line,
- Nor other merit had
- Save soldierwise to wait her sign,
- And do the deed she bade.
- VIII
- He saw her hand jump at her side
- Ere royally she smiled
- On Louis and his fair young bride
- Where courtly ranks defiled.
- IX
- That was a moment when a shock
- Through the procession ran,
- And thrilled the plumes, and stayed the clock,
- Yet smiled Archduchess Anne.
- X
- No touch gave she to hound in leash,
- No wink to sword in sheath:
- She seemed a woman scarce of flesh;
- Above it, or beneath.
- XI
- Old Kraken spied with kennelled snarl,
- His Lady deemed disgraced.
- He footed as on burning marl,
- When out of Hall he paced.
- XII
- ’Twas seen he hammered striding legs,
- And stopped, and strode again.
- Now Vengeance has a brood of eggs,
- But Patience must be hen.
- XIII
- Too slow are they for wrath to hatch,
- Too hot for time to rear.
- Old Kraken kept unwinding watch;
- He marked his day appear.
- XIV
- He neighed a laugh, though moods were rough
- With standards in revolt:
- His nostrils took the news for snuff,
- His smacking lips for salt.
- XV
- Count Louis’ wavy cock’s plumes led
- His troops of black-haired manes,
- A rebel; and old Kraken sped
- To front him on the plains.
- XVI
- Then camp opposed to camp did they
- Fret earth with panther claws
- For signal of a bloody day,
- Each reading from the Laws.
- XVII
- ‘Forefend it, heaven!’ Count Louis cried,
- ‘And let the righteous plead:
- My country is a willing bride,
- Was never slave decreed.
- XVIII
- ‘Not we for thirst of blood appeal
- To sword and slaughter curst;
- We have God’s blessing on our steel,
- Do we our pleading first.’
- XIX
- Count Louis, soul of chivalry,
- Put trust in plighted word;
- By starlight on the broad brown lea,
- To bar the strife he spurred.
- XX
- Across his breast a crimson spot,
- That in a quiver glowed,
- The ruddy crested camp-fires shot,
- As he to darkness rode.
- XXI
- He rode while omens called, beware
- Old Kraken’s pledge of faith!
- A smile and waving hand in air,
- And outward flew the wraith.
- XXII
- Before pale morn had mixed with gold,
- His army roared, and chilled,
- As men who have a woe foretold,
- And see it red fulfilled.
- XXIII
- Away and to his young wife speed,
- And say that Honour’s dead!
- Another word she will not need
- To bow a widow’s head.
- XXIV
- Old Kraken roped his white moustache
- Right, left, for savage glee:
- —To swing him in his soldier’s sash
- Were kind for such as he!
- XXV
- Old Kraken’s look hard Winter wears
- When sweeps the wild snow-blast:
- He had the hug of Arctic bears
- For captives he held fast.
- II
- I
- Archduchess Anne sat carved in frost,
- Shut off from priest and spouse.
- Her lips were locked, her arms were crossed,
- Her eyes were in her brows.
- II
- One hand enclosed a paper scroll,
- Held as a strangled asp.
- So may we see the woman’s soul
- In her dire tempter’s grasp.
- III
- Along that scroll Count Louis’ doom
- Throbbed till the letters flamed.
- She saw him in his scornful bloom,
- She saw him chained and shamed.
- IV
- Around that scroll Count Louis’ fate
- Was acted to her stare,
- And hate in love and love in hate
- Fought fell to smite or spare.
- V
- Between the day that struck her old,
- And this black star of days,
- Her heart swung like a storm-bell tolled
- Above a town ablaze.
- VI
- His beauty pressed to intercede,
- His beauty served him ill.
- —Not Vengeance, ’tis his rebel’s deed,
- ’Tis Justice, not our will!
- VII
- Yet who had sprung to life’s full force
- A breast that loveless dried?
- But who had sapped it at the source,
- With scarlet to her pride!
- VIII
- He brought her waning heart as ’twere
- New message from the skies.
- And he betrayed, and left on her
- The burden of their sighs.
- IX
- In floods her tender memories poured;
- They foamed with waves of spite:
- She crushed them, high her heart outsoared,
- To keep her mind alight.
- X
- —The crawling creature, called in scorn
- A woman!—with this pen
- We sign a paper that may warn
- His crowing fellowmen.
- XI
- —We read them lesson of a power
- They slight who do us wrong.
- That bitter hour this bitter hour
- Provokes; by turns the strong!
- XII
- —That we were woman once is known:
- That we are Justice now,
- Above our sex, above the throne,
- Men quaking shall avow.
- XIII
- Archduchess Anne ascending flew,
- Her heart outsoared, but felt
- The demon of her sex pursue,
- Incensing or to melt.
- XIV
- Those counterfloods below at leap
- Still in her breast blew storm,
- And farther up the heavenly steep
- Wrestled in angels’ form.
- XV
- To disentangle one clear wish
- Not of her sex, she sought;
- And womanish to womanish
- Discerned in lighted thought.
- XVI
- With Louis’ chance it went not well
- When at herself she raged;
- A woman, of whom men might tell
- She doted, crazed and aged.
- XVII
- Or else enamoured of a sweet
- Withdrawn, a vengeful crone!
- And say, what figure at her feet
- Is this that utters moan?
- XVIII
- The Countess Louis from her head
- Drew veil: ‘Great Lady, hear!
- My husband deems you Justice dread,
- I know you Mercy dear.
- XIX
- ‘His error upon him may fall;
- He will not breathe a nay.
- I am his helpless mate in all,
- Except for grace to pray.
- XX
- ‘Perchance on me his choice inclined,
- To give his House an heir:
- I had not marriage with his mind,
- His counsel could not share.
- XXI
- ‘I brought no portion for his weal
- But this one instinct true,
- Which bids me in my weakness kneel,
- Archduchess Anne, to you.’
- XXII
- The frowning Lady uttered, ‘Forth!’
- Her look forbade delay:
- ‘It is not mine to weigh your worth;
- Your husband’s others weigh.
- XXIII
- ‘Hence with the woman in your speech,’
- For nothing it avails
- In woman’s fashion to beseech
- Where Justice holds the scales.’
- XXIV
- Then bent and went the lady wan,
- Whose girlishness made grey
- The thoughts that through Archduchess Anne
- Shattered like stormy spray.
- XXV
- Long sat she there, as flame that strives
- To hold on beating wind:
- —His wife must be the fool of wives,
- Or cunningly designed!
- XXVI
- She sat until the tempest-pitch
- In her torn bosom fell;
- —His wife must be a subtle witch
- Or else God loves her well!
- III
- I
- Old Kraken read a missive penned
- By his great Lady’s hand.
- Her condescension called him friend,
- To raise the crest she fanned.
- II
- Swiftly to where he lay encamped
- It flew, yet breathed aloof
- From woman’s feeling, and he stamped
- A heel more like a hoof.
- III
- She wrote of Mercy: ‘She was loth
- Too hard to goad a foe.’
- He stamped, as when men drive an oath
- Devils transcribe below.
- IV
- She wrote: ‘We have him half by theft.’
- His wrinkles glistened keen:
- And see the Winter storm-cloud cleft
- To lurid skies between!
- V
- When read old Kraken: ‘Christ our Guide,’
- His eyes were spikes of spar:
- And see the white snow-storm divide
- About an icy star!
- VI
- ‘She trusted him to understand,’
- She wrote, and further prayed
- That policy might rule the land.
- Old Kraken’s laughter neighed.
- VII
- Her words he took; her nods and winks
- Treated as woman’s fog.
- The man-dog for his mistress thinks,
- Not less her faithful dog.
- VIII
- She hugged a cloak old Kraken ripped;
- Disguise to him he loathed.
- —Your mercy, madam, shows you stripped,
- While mine will keep you clothed.
- IX
- A rough ill-soldered scar in haste
- He rubbed on his cheek-bone.
- —Our policy the man shall taste;
- Our mercy shall be shown.
- X
- ‘Count Louis, honour to your race
- Decrees the Council-hall:
- You ’scape the rope by special grace,
- And like a soldier fall.’
- XI
- —I am a man of many sins,
- Who for one virtue die,
- Count Louis said.—They play at shins,
- Who kick, was the reply.
- XII
- Uprose the day of crimson sight,
- The day without a God.
- At morn the hero said Good-night:
- See there that stain on sod!
- XIII
- At morn the Countess Louis heard
- Young light sing in the lark.
- Ere eve it was that other bird,
- Which brings the starless dark.
- XIV
- To heaven she vowed herself, and yearned
- Beside her lord to lie.
- Archduchess Anne on Kraken turned,
- All white as a dead eye.
- XV
- If I could kill thee! shrieked her look:
- If lightning sprang from Will!
- An oaken head old Kraken shook,
- And she might thank or kill.
- XVI
- The pride that fenced her heart in mail
- By mortal pain was torn.
- Forth from her bosom leaped a wail,
- As of a babe new-born.
- XVII
- She clad herself in courtly use,
- And one who heard them prate
- Had said they differed upon views
- Where statecraft raised debate.
- XVIII
- The wretch detested must she trust,
- The servant master own:
- Confide to godless cause so just,
- And for God’s blessing moan.
- XIX
- Austerely she her heart kept down,
- Her woman’s tongue was mute
- When voice of People, voice of Crown,
- In cannon held dispute.
- XX
- The Crown on seas of blood, like swine,
- Swam forefoot at the throat:
- It drank of its dear veins for wine,
- Enough if it might float!
- XXI
- It sank with piteous yelp, resurged
- Electrical with fear.
- O had she on old Kraken urged
- Her word of mercy clear!
- XXII
- O had they with Count Louis been
- Accordant in his plea!
- Cursed are the women vowed to screen
- A heart that all can see!
- XXIII
- The godless drove unto a goal
- Was worse than vile defeat.
- Did vengeance prick Count Louis’ soul
- They dressed him luscious meat.
- XXIV
- Worms will the faithless find their lies
- In the close treasure-chest.
- Without a God no day can rise,
- Though it should slay our best.
- XXV
- The Crown it furled a draggled flag,
- It sheathed a broken blade.
- Behold its triumph in the hag
- That lives with looks decayed!
- XXVI
- And lo, the man of oaken head,
- Of soldier’s honour bare,
- He fled his land, but most he fled
- His Lady’s frigid stare.
- XXVII
- Judged by the issue we discern
- God’s blessing, and the bane.
- Count Louis’ dust would fill an urn,
- His deeds are waving grain.
- XXVIII
- And she that helped to slay, yet bade
- To spare the fated man,
- Great were her errors, but she had
- Great heart, Archduchess Anne.
- THE SONG OF THEODOLINDA
- I
- QUEEN Theodolind has built
- In the earth a furnace-bed:
- There the Traitor Nail that spilt
- Blood of the anointed Head,
- Red of heat, resolves in shame:
- White of heat, awakes to flame.
- Beat, beat! white of heat,
- Red of heat, beat, beat!
- II
- Mark the skeleton of fire
- Lightening from its thunder-roof:
- So comes this that saw expire
- Him we love, for our behoof!
- Red of heat, O white of heat,
- This from off the Cross we greet.
- III
- Brown-cowled hammermen around
- Nerve their naked arms to strike
- Death with Resurrection crowned,
- Each upon that cruel spike.
- Red of heat the furnace leaps,
- White of heat transfigured sleeps.
- IV
- Hard against the furnace core
- Holds the Queen her streaming eyes:
- Lo! that thing of piteous gore
- In the lap of radiance lies,
- Red of heat, as when He takes,
- White of heat, whom earth forsakes.
- V
- Forth with it, and crushing ring
- Iron hymns, for men to hear
- Echoes of the deeds that sting
- Earth into its graves, and fear!
- Red of heat, He maketh thus,
- White of heat, a crown of us.
- VI
- This that killed Thee, kissed Thee, Lord!
- Touched Thee, and we touch it: dear,
- Dark it is; adored, abhorred:
- Vilest, yet most sainted here.
- Red of heat, O white of heat,
- In it hell and heaven meet.
- VII
- I behold our morning day
- When they chased Him out with rods
- Up to where this traitor lay
- Thirsting; and the blood was God’s!
- Red of heat, it shall be pressed,
- White of heat, once on my breast!
- VIII
- Quick! the reptile in me shrieks,
- Not the soul. Again; the Cross
- Burn there. Oh! this pain it wreaks
- Rapture is: pain is not loss.
- Red of heat, the tooth of Death,
- White of heat, has caught my breath.
- IX
- Brand me, bite me, bitter thing!
- Thus He felt, and thus I am
- One with Him in suffering,
- One with Him in bliss, the Lamb.
- Red of heat, O white of heat,
- Thus is bitterness made sweet.
- X
- Now am I, who bear that stamp
- Scorched in me, the living sign
- Sole on earth—the lighted lamp
- Of the dreadful Day divine.
- White of heat, beat on it fast!
- Red of heat, its shape has passed.
- XI
- Out in angry sparks they fly,
- They that sentenced Him to bleed:
- Pontius and his troop: they die,
- Damned for ever for the deed!
- White of heat in vain they soar:
- Red of heat they strew the floor.
- XII
- Fury on it! have its debt!
- Thunder on the Hill accurst,
- Golgotha, be ye! and sweat
- Blood, and thirst the Passion’s thirst.
- Red of heat and white of heat,
- Champ it like fierce teeth that eat.
- XIII
- Strike it as the ages crush
- Towers! for while a shape is seen
- I am rivalled. Quench its blush,
- Devil! But it crowns me Queen,
- Red of heat, as none before,
- White of heat, the circlet wore.
- XIV
- Lowly I will be, and quail,
- Crawling, with a beggar’s hand:
- On my breast the branded Nail,
- On my head the iron band.
- Red of heat, are none so base!
- White of heat, none know such grace!
- XV
- In their heaven the sainted hosts,
- Robed in violet unflecked,
- Gaze on humankind as ghosts:
- I draw down a ray direct.
- Red of heat, across my brow,
- White of heat, I touch Him now.
- XVI
- Robed in violet, robed in gold,
- Robed in pearl, they make our dawn.
- What am I to them? Behold
- What ye are to me, and fawn.
- Red of heat, be humble, ye!
- White of heat, O teach it me!
- XVII
- Martyrs! hungry peaks in air,
- Rent with lightnings, clad with snow,
- Crowned with stars! you strip me bare,
- Pierce me, shame me, stretch me low,
- Red of heat, but it may be,
- White of heat, some envy me!
- XVIII
- O poor enviers! God’s own gifts
- Have a devil for the weak.
- Yea, the very force that lifts
- Finds the vessel’s secret leak.
- Red of heat, I rise o’er all:
- White of heat, I faint, I fall.
- XIX
- Those old Martyrs sloughed their pride,
- Taking humbleness like mirth.
- I am to His Glory tied,
- I that witness Him on earth!
- Red of heat, my pride of dust,
- White of heat, feeds fire in trust.
- XX
- Kindle me to constant fire,
- Lest the nail be but a nail!
- Give me wings of great desire,
- Lest I look within, and fail!
- Red of heat, the furnace light,
- White of heat, fix on my sight.
- XXI
- Never for the Chosen peace!
- Know, by me tormented know,
- Never shall the wrestling cease
- Till with our outlasting Foe,
- Red of heat to white of heat,
- Roll we to the Godhead’s feet!
- Beat, beat! white of heat,
- Red of heat, beat, beat!
- A PREACHING FROM A SPANISH BALLAD
- I
- LADIES who in chains of wedlock
- Chafe at an unequal yoke,
- Not to nightingales give hearing;
- Better this, the raven’s croak.
- II
- Down the Prado strolled my seigneur,
- Arm at lordly bow on hip,
- Fingers trimming his moustachios,
- Eyes for pirate fellowship.
- III
- Home sat she that owned him master;
- Like the flower bent to ground
- Rain-surcharged and sun-forsaken;
- Heedless of her hair unbound.
- IV
- Sudden at her feet a lover
- Palpitating knelt and wooed;
- Seemed a very gift from heaven
- To the starved of common food.
- V
- Love me? she his vows repeated:
- Fiery vows oft sung and thrummed:
- Wondered, as on earth a stranger;
- Thirsted, trusted, and succumbed.
- VI
- O beloved youth! my lover!
- Mine! my lover! take my life
- Wholly: thine in soul and body,
- By this oath of more than wife!
- VII
- Know me for no helpless woman;
- Nay, nor coward, though I sink
- Awed beside thee, like an infant
- Learning shame ere it can think.
- VIII
- Swing me hence to do thee service,
- Be thy succour, prove thy shield;
- Heaven will hear!—in house thy handmaid,
- Squire upon the battlefield.
- IX
- At my breasts I cool thy footsoles;
- Wine I pour, I dress thy meats;
- Humbly, when my lord it pleaseth,
- Lie with him on perfumed sheets:
- X
- Pray for him, my blood’s dear fountain,
- While he sleeps, and watch his yawn
- In that wakening babelike moment,
- Sweeter to my thought than dawn!—
- XI
- Thundered then her lord of thunders;
- Burst the door, and, flashing sword,
- Loud disgorged the woman’s title:
- Condemnation in one word.
- XII
- Grand by righteous wrath transfigured,
- Towers the husband who provides
- In his person judge and witness,
- Death’s black doorkeeper besides!
- XIII
- Round his head the ancient terrors,
- Conjured of the stronger’s law,
- Circle, to abash the creature
- Daring twist beneath his paw.
- XIV
- How though he hath squandered Honour
- High of Honour let him scold:
- Gilding of the man’s possession,
- ’Tis the woman’s coin of gold.
- XV
- She inheriting from many
- Bleeding mothers bleeding sense
- Feels ’twixt her and sharp-fanged nature
- Honour first did plant the fence.
- XVI
- Nature, that so shrieks for justice;
- Honour’s thirst, that blood will slake;
- These are women’s riddles, roughly
- Mixed to write them saint or snake.
- XVII
- Never nature cherished woman:
- She throughout the sexes’ war
- Serves as temptress and betrayer,
- Favouring man, the muscular.
- XVIII
- Lureful is she, bent for folly;
- Doating on the child which crows:
- Yours to teach him grace in fealty,
- What the bloom is, what the rose.
- XIX
- Hard the task: your prison-chamber
- Widens not for lifted latch
- Till the giant thews and sinews
- Meet their Godlike overmatch.
- XX
- Read that riddle, scorning pity’s
- Tears, of cockatrices shed:
- When the heart is vowed for freedom,
- Captaincy it yields to head.
- XXI
- Meanwhile you, freaked nature’s martyrs,
- Honour’s army, flower and weed,
- Gentle ladies, wedded ladies,
- See for you this fair one bleed.
- XXII
- Sole stood her offence, she faltered;
- Prayed her lord the youth to spare;
- Prayed that in the orange garden
- She might lie, and ceased her prayer.
- XXIII
- Then commanding to all women
- Chastity, her breasts she laid
- Bare unto the self-avenger.
- Man in metal was the blade.
- THE YOUNG PRINCESS
- A BALLAD OF OLD LAWS OF LOVE
- I
- I
- WHEN the South sang like a nightingale
- Above a bower in May,
- The training of Love’s vine of flame
- Was writ in laws, for lord and dame
- To say their yea and nay.
- II
- When the South sang like a nightingale
- Across the flowering night,
- And lord and dame held gentle sport,
- There came a young princess to Court,
- A frost of beauty white.
- III
- The South sang like a nightingale
- To thaw her glittering dream:
- No vine of Love her bosom gave,
- She drank no wine of Love, but grave
- She held them to Love’s theme.
- IV
- The South grew all a nightingale
- Beneath a moon unmoved:
- Like the banner of war she led them on;
- She left them to lie, like the light that has gone
- From wine-cups overproved.
- V
- When the South was a fervid nightingale,
- And she a chilling moon,
- ’Twas pity to see on the garden swards,
- Against Love’s laws, those rival lords
- As willow-wands lie strewn.
- VI
- The South had throat of a nightingale
- For her, the young princess:
- She gave no vine of Love to rear,
- Love’s wine drank not, yet bent her ear
- To themes of Love no less.
- II
- I
- The lords of the Court they sighed heart-sick,
- Heart-free Lord Dusiote laughed:
- I prize her no more than a fling o’ the dice,
- But, or shame to my manhood, a lady of ice,
- We master her by craft!
- II
- Heart-sick the lords of joyance yawned,
- Lord Dusiote laughed heart-free:
- I count her as much as a crack o’ my thumb,
- But, or shame of my manhood, to me she shall come
- Like the bird to roost in the tree!
- III
- At dead of night when the palace-guard
- Had passed the measured rounds,
- The young princess awoke to feel
- A shudder of blood at the crackle of steel
- Within the garden-bounds.
- IV
- It ceased, and she thought of whom was need,
- The friar or the leech;
- When lo, stood her tirewoman breathless by:
- Lord Dusiote, madam, to death is nigh,
- Of you he would have speech.
- V
- He prays you of your gentleness,
- To light him to his dark end.
- The princess rose, and forth she went,
- For charity was her intent,
- Devoutly to befriend.
- VI
- Lord Dusiote hung on his good squire’s arm,
- The priest beside him knelt:
- A weeping handkerchief was pressed
- To stay the red flood at his breast,
- And bid cold ladies melt.
- VII
- O lady, though you are ice to men,
- All pure to heaven as light
- Within the dew within the flower,
- Of you ’tis whispered that love has power
- When secret is the night.
- VIII
- I have silenced the slanderers, peace to their souls!
- Save one was too cunning for me.
- I die, whose love is late avowed,
- He lives, who boasts the lily has bowed
- To the oath of a bended knee.
- IX
- Lord Dusiote drew breath with pain,
- And she with pain drew breath:
- On him she looked, on his like above;
- She flew in the folds of a marvel of love
- Revealed to pass to death.
- X
- You are dying, O great-hearted lord,
- You are dying for me, she cried;
- O take my hand, O take my kiss,
- And take of your right for love like this,
- The vow that plights me bride.
- XI
- She bade the priest recite his words
- While hand in hand were they,
- Lord Dusiote’s soul to waft to bliss;
- He had her hand, her vow, her kiss,
- And his body was borne away.
- III
- I
- Lord Dusiote sprang from priest and squire;
- He gazed at her lighted room:
- The laughter in his heart grew slack;
- He knew not the force that pushed him back
- From her and the morn in bloom.
- II
- Like a drowned man’s length on the strong flood-tide,
- Like the shade of a bird in the sun,
- He fled from his lady whom he might claim
- As ghost, and who made the daybeams flame
- To scare what he had done.
- III
- There was grief at Court for one so gay,
- Though he was a lord less keen
- For training the vine than at vintage-press;
- But in her soul the young princess
- Believed that love had been.
- IV
- Lord Dusiote fled the Court and land,
- He crossed the woeful seas,
- Till his traitorous doing seemed clearer to burn,
- And the lady beloved drew his heart for return,
- Like the banner of war in the breeze.
- V
- He neared the palace, he spied the Court,
- And music he heard, and they told
- Of foreign lords arrived to bring
- The nuptial gifts of a bridegroom king
- To the princess grave and cold.
- VI
- The masque and the dance were cloud on wave,
- And down the masque and the dance
- Lord Dusiote stepped from dame to dame,
- And to the young princess he came,
- With a bow and a burning glance.
- VII
- Do you take a new husband to-morrow, lady?
- She shrank as at prick of steel.
- Must the first yield place to the second, he sighed.
- Her eyes were like the grave that is wide
- For the corpse from head to heel.
- VIII
- My lady, my love, that little hand
- Has mine ringed fast in plight:
- I bear for your lips a lawful thirst,
- And as justly the second should follow the first,
- I come to your door this night.
- IX
- If a ghost should come a ghost will go:
- No more the lady said,
- Save that ever when he in wrath began
- To swear by the faith of a living man,
- She answered him, You are dead.
- IV
- I
- The soft night-wind went laden to death
- With smell of the orange in flower;
- The light leaves prattled to neighbour ears;
- The bird of the passion sang over his tears;
- The night named hour by hour.
- II
- Sang loud, sang low the rapturous bird
- Till the yellow hour was nigh,
- Behind the folds of a darker cloud:
- He chuckled, he sobbed, alow, aloud;
- The voice between earth and sky.
- III
- O will you, will you, women are weak;
- The proudest are yielding mates
- For a forward foot and a tongue of fire:
- So thought Lord Dusiote’s trusty squire,
- At watch by the palace-gates.
- IV
- The song of the bird was wine in his blood,
- And woman the odorous bloom:
- His master’s great adventure stirred
- Within him to mingle the bloom and bird,
- And morn ere its coming illume.
- V
- Beside him strangely a piece of the dark
- Had moved, and the undertones
- Of a priest in prayer, like a cavernous wave,
- He heard, as were there a soul to save
- For urgency now in the groans.
- VI
- No priest was hired for the play this night:
- And the squire tossed head like a deer
- At sniff of the tainted wind; he gazed
- Where cresset-lamps in a door were raised,
- Belike on a passing bier.
- VII
- All cloaked and masked, with naked blades,
- That flashed of a judgement done,
- The lords of the Court, from the palace-door,
- Came issuing silently, bearers four,
- And flat on their shoulders one.
- VIII
- They marched the body to squire and priest,
- They lowered it sad to earth:
- The priest they gave the burial dole,
- Bade wrestle hourly for his soul,
- Who was a lord of worth.
- IX
- One said, farewell to a gallant knight!
- And one, but a restless ghost!
- ’Tis a year and a day since in this place
- He died, sped high by a lady of grace
- To join the blissful host.
- X
- Not vainly on us she charged her cause,
- The lady whom we revere
- For faith in the mask of a love untrue
- To the Love we honour, the Love her due,
- The Love we have vowed to rear.
- XI
- A trap for the sweet tooth, lures for the light,
- For the fortress defiant a mine:
- Right well! But not in the South, princess,
- Shall the lady snared of her nobleness
- Ever shamed or a captive pine.
- XII
- When the South had voice of a nightingale
- Above a Maying bower,
- On the heights of Love walked radiant peers;
- The bird of the passion sang over his tears
- To the breeze and the orange-flower.
- KING HARALD’S TRANCE
- I
- SWORD in length a reaping-hook amain
- Harald sheared his field, blood up to shank:
- ’Mid the swathes of slain,
- First at moonrise drank.
- II
- Thereof hunger, as for meats the knife,
- Pricked his ribs, in one sharp spur to reach
- Home and his young wife,
- Nigh the sea-ford beach.
- III
- After battle keen to feed was he:
- Smoking flesh the thresher washed down fast,
- Like an angry sea
- Ships from keel to mast.
- IV
- Name us glory, singer, name us pride
- Matching Harald’s in his deeds of strength;
- Chiefs, wife, sword by side,
- Foemen stretched their length!
- V
- Half a winter night the toasts hurrahed,
- Crowned him, clothed him, trumpeted him high,
- Till awink he bade
- Wife to chamber fly.
- VI
- Twice the sun had mounted, twice had sunk,
- Ere his ears took sound; he lay for dead;
- Mountain on his trunk,
- Ocean on his head.
- VII
- Clamped to couch, his fiery hearing sucked
- Whispers that at heart made iron-clang:
- Here fool-women clucked,
- There men held harangue.
- VIII
- Burial to fit their lord of war
- They decreed him: hailed the kingling: ha!
- Hateful! but this Thor
- Failed a weak lamb’s baa.
- IX
- King they hailed a branchlet, shaped to fare,
- Weighted so, like quaking shingle spume,
- When his blood’s own heir
- Ripened in the womb!
- X
- Still he heard, and doglike, hoglike, ran
- Nose of hearing till his blind sight saw:
- Woman stood with man
- Mouthing low, at paw.
- XI
- Woman, man, they mouthed; they spake a thing
- Armed to split a mountain, sunder seas:
- Still the frozen king
- Lay and felt him freeze.
- XII
- Doglike, hoglike, horselike now he raced,
- Riderless, in ghost across a ground
- Flint of breast, blank-faced,
- Past the fleshly bound.
- XIII
- Smell of brine his nostrils filled with might:
- Nostrils quickened eyelids, eyelids hand:
- Hand for sword at right
- Groped, the great haft spanned.
- XIV
- Wonder struck to ice his people’s eyes:
- Him they saw, the prone upon the bier,
- Sheer from backbone rise,
- Sword uplifting peer.
- XV
- Sitting did he breathe against the blade,
- Standing kiss it for that proof of life:
- Strode, as netters wade,
- Straightway to his wife.
- XVI
- Her he eyed: his judgement was one word,
- Foulbed! and she fell: the blow clove two.
- Fearful for the third,
- All their breath indrew.
- XVII
- Morning danced along the waves to beach;
- Dumb his chiefs fetched breath for what might hap:
- Glassily on each
- Stared the iron cap.
- XVIII
- Sudden, as it were a monster oak
- Split to yield a limb by stress of heat,
- Strained he, staggered, broke
- Doubled at their feet.
- WHIMPER OF SYMPATHY
- HAWK or shrike has done this deed
- Of downy feathers: rueful sight!
- Sweet sentimentalist, invite
- Your bosom’s Power to intercede.
- So hard it seems that one must bleed
- Because another needs will bite!
- All round we find cold Nature slight
- The feelings of the totter-knee’d.
- O it were pleasant with you
- To fly from this tussle of foes,
- The shambles, the charnel, the wrinkle!
- To dwell in yon dribble of dew
- On the cheek of your sovereign rose,
- And live the young life of a twinkle.
- YOUNG REYNARD
- I
- GRACEFULLEST leaper, the dappled fox-cub
- Curves over brambles with berries and buds,
- Light as a bubble that flies from the tub,
- Whisked by the laundry-wife out of her suds.
- Wavy he comes, woolly, all at his ease,
- Elegant, fashioned to foot with the deuce;
- Nature’s own prince of the dance: then he sees
- Me, and retires as if making excuse.
- II
- Never closed minuet courtlier! Soon
- Cub-hunting troops were abroad, and a yelp
- Told of sure scent: ere the stroke upon noon
- Reynard the younger lay far beyond help.
- Wild, my poor friend, has the fate to be chased;
- Civil will conquer: were ’t other ’twere worse;
- Fair, by the flushed early morning embraced,
- Haply you live a day longer in verse.
- MANFRED
- I
- PROJECTED from the bilious Childe,
- This clatterjaw his foot could set
- On Alps, without a breast beguiled
- To glow in shedding rascal sweat.
- Somewhere about his grinder teeth,
- He mouthed of thoughts that grilled beneath,
- And summoned Nature to her feud
- With bile and buskin Attitude.
- II
- Considerably was the world
- Of spinsterdom and clergy racked
- While he his hinted horrors hurled,
- And she pictorially attacked.
- A duel hugeous. Tragic? Ho!
- The cities, not the mountains, blow
- Such bladders; in their shapes confessed
- An after-dinner’s indigest.
- HERNANI
- CISTERCIANS might crack their sides
- With laughter, and exemption get,
- At sight of heroes clasping brides,
- And hearing—O the horn! the horn!
- The horn of their obstructive debt!
- But quit the stage, that note applies
- For sermons cosmopolitan,
- Hernani. Have we filched our prize,
- Forgetting . . .? O the horn! the horn!
- The horn of the Old Gentleman!
- THE NUPTIALS OF ATTILA
- I
- FLAT as to an eagle’s eye,
- Earth hung under Attila.
- Sign for carnage gave he none.
- In the peace of his disdain,
- Sun and rain, and rain and sun,
- Cherished men to wax again,
- Crawl, and in their manner die.
- On his people stood a frost.
- Like the charger cut in stone,
- Rearing stiff, the warrior host,
- Which had life from him alone,
- Craved the trumpet’s eager note,
- As the bridled earth the Spring.
- Rusty was the trumpet’s throat.
- He let chief and prophet rave;
- Venturous earth around him string
- Threads of grass and slender rye,
- Wave them, and untrampled wave.
- O for the time when God did cry,
- Eye and have, my Attila!
- II
- Scorn of conquest filled like sleep
- Him that drank of havoc deep
- When the Green Cat pawed the globe:
- When the horsemen from his bow
- Shot in sheaves and made the foe
- Crimson fringes of a robe,
- Trailed o’er towns and fields in woe;
- When they streaked the rivers red,
- When the saddle was the bed.
- Attila, my Attila!
- III
- He breathed peace and pulled a flower.
- Eye and have, my Attila!
- This was the damsel Ildico,
- Rich in bloom until that hour:
- Shyer than the forest doe
- Twinkling slim through branches green.
- Yet the shyest shall be seen.
- Make the bed for Attila!
- IV
- Seen of Attila, desired,
- She was led to him straightway:
- Radiantly was she attired;
- Rifled lands were her array,
- Jewels bled from weeping crowns,
- Gold of woeful fields and towns.
- She stood pallid in the light.
- How she walked, how withered white,
- From the blessing to the board,
- She who would have proudly blushed,
- Women whispered, asking why,
- Hinting of a youth, and hushed.
- Was it terror of her lord?
- Was she childish? was she sly?
- Was it the bright mantle’s dye
- Drained her blood to hues of grief
- Like the ash that shoots the spark?
- See the green tree all in leaf:
- See the green tree stripped of bark!—
- Make the bed for Attila!
- V
- Round the banquet-table’s load
- Scores of iron horsemen rode;
- Chosen warriors, keen and hard;
- Grain of threshing battle-dints;
- Attila’s fierce body-guard,
- Smelling war like fire in flints.
- Grant them peace be fugitive!
- Iron-capped and iron-heeled,
- Each against his fellow’s shield
- Smote the spear-head, shouting, Live,
- Attila! my Attila!
- Eagle, eagle of our breed,
- Eagle, beak the lamb, and feed!
- Have her, and unleash us! live,
- Attila! my Attila!
- VI
- He was of the blood to shine
- Bronze in joy, like skies that scorch.
- Beaming with the goblet wine
- In the wavering of the torch,
- Looked he backward on his bride.
- Eye and have, my Attila!
- Fair in her wide robe was she:
- Where the robe and vest divide,
- Fair she seemed surpassingly:
- Soft, yet vivid as the stream
- Danube rolls in the moonbeam
- Through rock-barriers: but she smiled
- Never, she sat cold as salt:
- Open-mouthed as a young child
- Wondering with a mind at fault.
- Make the bed for Attila!
- VII
- Under the thin hoop of gold
- Whence in waves her hair outrolled,
- ’Twixt her brows the women saw
- Shadows of a vulture’s claw
- Gript in flight: strange knots that sped
- Closing and dissolving aye:
- Such as wicked dreams betray
- When pale dawn creeps o’er the bed.
- They might show the common pang
- Known to virgins, in whom dread
- Hunts their bliss like famished hounds;
- While the chiefs with roaring rounds
- Tossed her to her lord, and sang
- Praise of him whose hand was large,
- Cheers for beauty brought to yield,
- Chirrups of the trot afield,
- Hurrahs of the battle-charge.
- VIII
- Those rock-faces hung with weed
- Reddened: their great days of speed,
- Slaughter, triumph, flood and flame,
- Like a jealous frenzy wrought,
- Scoffed at them and did them shame,
- Quaffing idle, conquering nought.
- O for the time when God decreed
- Earth the prey of Attila!
- God called on thee in his wrath,
- Trample it to mire! ’Twas done.
- Swift as Danube clove our path
- Down from East to Western sun.
- Huns! behold your pasture, gaze,
- Take, our king said: heel to flank
- (Whisper it, the war-horse neighs!)
- Forth we drove, and blood we drank
- Fresh as dawn-dew: earth was ours:
- Men were flocks we lashed and spurned:
- Fast as windy flame devours,
- Flame along the wind, we burned.
- Arrow javelin, spear, and sword!
- Here the snows and there the plains;
- On! our signal: onward poured
- Torrents of the tightened reins,
- Foaming over vine and corn
- Hot against the city-wall.
- Whisper it, you sound a horn
- To the grey beast in the stall!
- Yea, he whinnies at a nod.
- O for sound of the trumpet-notes!
- O for the time when thunder-shod,
- He that scarce can munch his oats,
- Hung on the peaks, brooded aloof,
- Champed the grain of the wrath of God,
- Pressed a cloud on the cowering roof,
- Snorted out of the blackness fire!
- Scarlet broke the sky, and down,
- Hammering West with print of his hoof,
- He burst out of the bosom of ire
- Sharp as eyelight under thy frown,
- Attila, my Attila!
- IX
- Ravaged cities rolling smoke
- Thick on cornfields dry and black,
- Wave his banners, bear his yoke.
- Track the lightning, and you track
- Attila. They moan: ’tis he!
- Bleed: ’tis he! Beneath his foot
- Leagues are deserts charred and mute;
- Where he passed, there passed a sea.
- Attila, my Attila!
- X
- —Who breathed on the king cold breath?
- Said a voice amid the host,
- He is Death that weds a ghost,
- Else a ghost that weds with Death?
- Ildico’s chill little hand
- Shuddering he beheld: austere
- Stared, as one who would command
- Sight of what has filled his ear:
- Plucked his thin beard, laughed disdain.
- Feast, ye Huns! His arm be raised,
- Like the warrior, battle-dazed,
- Joining to the fight amain.
- Make the bed for Attila!
- XI
- Silent Ildico stood up.
- King and chief to pledge her well,
- Shocked sword sword and cup on cup,
- Clamouring like a brazen bell.
- Silent stepped the queenly slave.
- Fair, by heaven! she was to meet
- On a midnight, near a grave,
- Flapping wide the winding-sheet.
- XII
- Death and she walked through the crowd,
- Out beyond the flush of light.
- Ceremonious women bowed
- Following her: ’twas middle night.
- Then the warriors each on each
- Spied, nor overloudly laughed;
- Like the victims of the leech,
- Who have drunk of a strange draught.
- XIII
- Attila remained. Even so
- Frowned he when he struck the blow,
- Brained his horse, that stumbled twice,
- On a bloody day in Gaul,
- Bellowing, Perish omens! All
- Marvelled at the sacrifice,
- But the battle, swinging dim,
- Rang off that axe-blow for him.
- Attila, my Attila!
- XIV
- Brightening over Danube wheeled
- Star by star; and she, most fair,
- Sweet as victory half-revealed,
- Seized to make him glad and young;
- She, O sweet as the dark sign
- Given him oft in battles gone,
- When the voice within said, Dare!
- And the trumpet-notes were sprung
- Rapturous for the charge in line:
- She lay waiting: fair as dawn
- Wrapped in folds of night she lay;
- Secret, lustrous; flaglike there,
- Waiting him to stream and ray,
- With one loosening blush outflung,
- Colours of his hordes of horse
- Ranked for combat; still he hung
- Like the fever dreading air,
- Cursed of heat; and as a corse
- Gathers vultures, in his brain
- Images of her eyes and kiss
- Plucked at the limbs that could remain
- Loitering nigh the doors of bliss.
- Make the bed for Attila!
- XV
- Passion on one hand, on one,
- Destiny led forth the Hun.
- Heard ye outcries of affright,
- Voices that through many a fray,
- In the press of flag and spear,
- Warned the king of peril near?
- Men were dumb, they gave him way,
- Eager heads to left and right,
- Like the bearded standard, thrust,
- As in battle, for a nod
- From their lord of battle-dust.
- Attila, my Attila!
- Slow between the lines he trod.
- Saw ye not the sun drop slow
- On this nuptial day, ere eve
- Pierced him on the couch aglow?
- Attila, my Attila!
- Here and there his heart would cleave
- Clotted memory for a space:
- Some stout chief’s familiar face,
- Choicest of his fighting brood,
- Touched him, as ’twere one to know
- Ere he met his bride’s embrace.
- Attila, my Attila!
- Twisting fingers in a beard
- Scant as winter underwood,
- With a narrowed eye he peered;
- Like the sunset’s graver red
- Up old pine-stems. Grave he stood
- Eyeing them on whom was shed
- Burning light from him alone.
- Attila, my Attila!
- Red were they whose mouths recalled
- Where the slaughter mounted high,
- High on it, o’er earth appalled,
- He; heaven’s finger in their sight
- Raising him on waves of dead,
- Up to heaven his trumpets blown.
- O for the time when God’s delight
- Crowned the head of Attila!
- Hungry river of the crag
- Stretching hands for earth he came:
- Force and Speed astride his name
- Pointed back to spear and flag.
- He came out of miracle cloud,
- Lightning-swift and spectre-lean.
- Now those days are in a shroud:
- Have him to his ghostly queen.
- Make the bed for Attila!
- XVI
- One, with winecups overstrung,
- Cried him farewell in Rome’s tongue.
- Who? for the great king turned as though
- Wrath to the shaft’s head strained the bow.
- Nay, not wrath the king possessed,
- But a radiance of the breast.
- In that sound he had the key
- Of his cunning malady.
- Lo, where gleamed the sapphire lake,
- Leo, with his Rome at stake,
- Drew blank air to hues and forms;
- Whereof Two that shone distinct,
- Linked as orbed stars are linked,
- Clear among the myriad swarms,
- In a constellation, dashed
- Full on horse and rider’s eyes
- Sunless light, but light it was—
- Light that blinded and abashed,
- Froze his members, bade him pause,
- Caught him mid-gallop, blazed him home.
- Attila, my Attila!
- What are streams that cease to flow?
- What was Attila, rolled thence,
- Cheated by a juggler’s show?
- Like that lake of blue intense,
- Under tempest lashed to foam,
- Lurid radiance, as he passed,
- Filled him, and around was glassed,
- When deep-voiced he uttered, Rome!
- XVII
- Rome! the word was: and like meat
- Flung to dogs the word was torn.
- Soon Rome’s magic priests shall bleat
- Round their magic Pope forlorn!
- Loud they swore the king had sworn
- Vengeance on the Roman cheat,
- Ere he passed, as, grave and still,
- Danube through the shouting hill:
- Sworn it by his naked life!
- Eagle, snakes these women are:
- Take them on the wing! but war,
- Smoking war’s the warrior’s wife!
- Then for plunder! then for brides
- Won without a winking priest!—
- Danube whirled his train of tides
- Black toward the yellow East.
- Make the bed for Attila!
- XVIII
- Chirrups of the trot afield,
- Hurrahs of the battle-charge,
- How they answered, how they pealed,
- When the morning rose and drew
- Bow and javelin, lance and targe,
- In the nuptial casement’s view!
- Attila, my Attila!
- Down the hillspurs, out of tents
- Glimmering in mid-forest, through
- Mists of the cool morning scents,
- Forth from city-alley, court,
- Arch, the bounding horsemen flew,
- Joined along the plains of dew,
- Raced and gave the rein to sport,
- Closed and streamed like curtain-rents
- Fluttered by a wind, and flowed
- Into squadrons: trumpets blew,
- Chargers neighed, and trappings glowed
- Brave as the bright Orient’s.
- Look on the seas that run to greet
- Sunrise: look on the leagues of wheat:
- Look on the lines and squares that fret
- Leaping to level the lance blood-wet.
- Tens of thousands, man and steed,
- Tossing like field-flowers in Spring;
- Ready to be hurled at need
- Whither their great lord may sling.
- Finger Romeward, Romeward, King!
- Attila, my Attila!
- Still the woman holds him fast
- As a night-flag round the mast.
- XIX
- Nigh upon the fiery noon,
- Out of ranks a roaring burst.
- ’Ware white women like the moon!
- They are poison: they have thirst
- First for love, and next for rule.
- Jealous of the army, she?
- Ho, the little wanton fool!
- We were his before she squealed
- Blind for mother’s milk, and heeled
- Kicking on her mother’s knee.
- His in life and death are we:
- She but one flower of a field.
- We have given him bliss tenfold
- In an hour to match her night:
- Attila, my Attila!
- Still her arms the master hold,
- As on wounds the scarf winds tight.
- XX
- Over Danube day no more,
- Like the warrior’s planted spear,
- Stood to hail the King: in fear
- Western day knocked at his door.
- Attila, my Attila!
- Sudden in the army’s eyes
- Rolled a blast of lights and cries:
- Flashing through them: Dead are ye!
- Dead, ye Huns, and torn piecemeal!
- See the ordered army reel
- Stricken through the ribs: and see,
- Wild for speed to cheat despair,
- Horsemen, clutching knee to chin,
- Crouch and dart they know not where.
- Attila, my Attila!
- Faces covered, faces bare,
- Light the palace-front like jets
- Of a dreadful fire within.
- Beating hands and driving hair
- Start on roof and parapets.
- Dust rolls up; the slaughter din.
- —Death to them who call him dead!
- Death to them who doubt the tale!
- Choking in his dusty veil,
- Sank the sun on his death-bed.
- Make the bed for Attila!
- XXI
- ’Tis the room where thunder sleeps.
- Frenzy, as a wave to shore
- Surging, burst the silent door,
- And drew back to awful deeps
- Breath beaten out, foam-white. Anew
- Howled and pressed the ghastly crew,
- Like storm-waters over rocks.
- Attila, my Attila!
- One long shaft of sunset red
- Laid a finger on the bed.
- Horror, with the snaky locks,
- Shocked the surge to stiffened heaps,
- Hoary as the glacier’s head
- Faced to the moon. Insane they look.
- God it is in heaven who weeps
- Fallen from his hand the Scourge he shook.
- Make the bed for Attila!
- XXII
- Square along the couch, and stark,
- Like the sea-rejected thing
- Sea-sucked white, behold their King.
- Attila, my Attila!
- Beams that panted black and bright,
- Scornful lightnings danced their sight:
- Him they see an oak in bud,
- Him an oaklog stripped of bark:
- Him, their lord of day and night,
- White, and lifting up his blood
- Dumb for vengeance. Name us that,
- Huddled in the corner dark
- Humped and grinning like a cat,
- Teeth for lips!—’tis she! she stares,
- Glittering through her bristled hairs.
- Rend her! Pierce her to the hilt!
- She is Murder: have her out!
- What! this little fist, as big
- As the southern summer fig!
- She is Madness, none may doubt.
- Death, who dares deny her guilt!
- Death, who says his blood she spilt!
- Make the bed for Attila!
- XXIII
- Torch and lamp and sunset-red
- Fell three-fingered on the bed.
- In the torch the beard-hair scant
- With the great breast seemed to pant:
- In the yellow lamp the limbs
- Wavered, as the lake-flower swims:
- In the sunset red the dead
- Dead avowed him, dry blood-red.
- XXIV
- Hatred of that abject slave,
- Earth, was in each chieftain’s heart.
- Earth has got him, whom God gave,
- Earth may sing, and earth shall smart!
- Attila, my Attila!
- XXV
- Thus their prayer was raved and ceased.
- Then had Vengeance of her feast
- Scent in their quick pang to smite
- Which they knew not, but huge pain
- Urged them for some victim slain
- Swift, and blotted from the sight.
- Each at each, a crouching beast,
- Glared, and quivered for the word.
- Each at each, and all on that,
- Humped and grinning like a cat,
- Head-bound with its bridal-wreath.
- Then the bitter chamber heard
- Vengeance in a cauldron seethe.
- Hurried counsel rage and craft
- Yelped to hungry men, whose teeth
- Hard the grey lip-ringlet gnawed,
- Gleaming till their fury laughed.
- With the steel-hilt in the clutch,
- Eyes were shot on her that froze
- In their blood-thirst overawed;
- Burned to rend, yet feared to touch.
- She that was his nuptial rose,
- She was of his heart’s blood clad:
- Oh! the last of him she had!—
- Could a little fist as big
- As the southern summer fig,
- Push a dagger’s point to pierce
- Ribs like those? Who else! They glared
- Each at each. Suspicion fierce
- Many a black remembrance bared.
- Attila, my Attila!
- Death, who dares deny her guilt!
- Death, who says his blood she spilt!
- Traitor he, who stands between!
- Swift to hell, who harms the Queen!
- She, the wild contention’s cause,
- Combed her hair with quiet paws.
- Make the bed for Attila!
- XXVI
- Night was on the host in arms.
- Night, as never night before,
- Hearkened to an army’s roar
- Breaking up in snaky swarms:
- Torch and steel and snorting steed,
- Hunted by the cry of blood,
- Cursed with blindness, mad for day.
- Where the torches ran a flood,
- Tales of him and of the deed
- Showered like a torrent spray.
- Fear of silence made them strive
- Loud in warrior-hymns that grew
- Hoarse for slaughter yet unwreaked.
- Ghostly Night across the hive,
- With a crimson finger drew
- Letters on her breast and shrieked.
- Night was on them like the mould
- On the buried half alive.
- Night, their bloody Queen, her fold
- Wound on them and struck them through.
- Make the bed for Attila!
- XXVII
- Earth has got him whom God gave,
- Earth may sing, and earth shall smart!
- None of earth shall know his grave.
- They that dig with Death depart.
- Attila, my Attila!
- XXVIII
- Thus their prayer was raved and passed:
- Passed in peace their red sunset:
- Hewn and earthed those men of sweat
- Who had housed him in the vast,
- Where no mortal might declare,
- There lies he—his end was there!
- Attila, my Attila!
- XXIX
- Kingless was the army left:
- Of its head the race bereft.
- Every fury of the pit
- Tortured and dismembered it.
- Lo, upon a silent hour,
- When the pitch of frost subsides,
- Danube with a shout of power
- Loosens his imprisoned tides:
- Wide around the frighted plains
- Shake to hear his riven chains,
- Dreadfuller than heaven in wrath,
- As he makes himself a path:
- High leap the ice-cracks, towering pile
- Floes to bergs, and giant peers
- Wrestle on a drifted isle;
- Island on ice-island rears;
- Dissolution battles fast:
- Big the senseless Titans loom,
- Through a mist of common doom
- Striving which shall die the last:
- Till a gentle-breathing morn
- Frees the stream from bank to bank.
- So the Empire built of scorn
- Agonized, dissolved and sank.
- Of the Queen no more was told
- Than of leaf on Danube rolled.
- Make the bed for Attila!
- ANEURIN’S HARP
- I
- PRINCE of Bards was old Aneurin;
- He the grand Gododin sang;
- All his numbers threw such fire in,
- Struck his harp so wild a twang;—
- Still the wakeful Briton borrows
- Wisdom from its ancient heat:
- Still it haunts our source of sorrows,
- Deep excess of liquor sweet!
- II
- Here the Briton, there the Saxon,
- Face to face, three fields apart,
- Thirst for light to lay their thwacks on
- Each the other with good heart.
- Dry the Saxon sits, ’mid dinful
- Noise of iron knits his steel:
- Fresh and roaring with a skinful,
- Britons round the hirlas reel.
- III
- Yellow flamed the meady sunset;
- Red runs up the flag of morn.
- Signal for the British onset
- Hiccups through the British horn.
- Down these hillmen pour like cattle
- Sniffing pasture: grim below,
- Showing eager teeth of battle,
- In his spear-heads lies the foe.
- IV
- —Monster of the sea! we drive him
- Back into his hungry brine.
- —You shall lodge him, feed him, wive him,
- Look on us; we stand in line.
- —Pale sea-monster! foul the waters
- Cast him; foul he leaves our land.
- —You shall yield us land and daughters:
- Stay the tongue, and try the hand.
- V
- Swift as torrent-streams our warriors,
- Tossing torrent lights, find way;
- Burst the ridges, crowd the barriers,
- Pierce them where the spear-heads play;
- Turn them as the clods in furrow,
- Top them like the leaping foam;
- Sorrow to the mother, sorrow,
- Sorrow to the wife at home!
- VI
- Stags, they butted; bulls, they bellowed;
- Hounds, we baited them; oh, brave!
- Every second man, unfellowed,
- Took the strokes of two, and gave.
- Bare as hop-stakes in November’s
- Mists they met our battle-flood:
- Hoary-red as Winter’s embers
- Lay their dead lines done in blood.
- VII
- Thou, my Bard, didst hang thy lyre in
- Oak-leaves, and with crimson brand
- Rhythmic fury spent, Aneurin;
- Songs the churls could understand:
- Thrumming on their Saxon sconces
- Straight, the invariable blow,
- Till they snorted true responses.
- Ever thus the Bard they know!
- VIII
- But ere nightfall, harper lusty!
- When the sun was like a ball
- Dropping on the battle dusty,
- What was yon discordant call?
- Cambria’s old metheglin demon
- Breathed against our rushing tide;
- Clove us midst the threshing seamen:—
- Gashed, we saw our ranks divide!
- IX
- Britain then with valedictory
- Shriek veiled off her face and knelt.
- Full of liquor, full of victory,
- Chief on chief old vengeance dealt.
- Backward swung their hurly-burly;
- None but dead men kept the fight.
- They that drink their cup too early,
- Darkness they shall see ere night.
- X
- Loud we heard the yellow rover
- Laugh to sleep, while we raged thick,
- Thick as ants the ant-hill over,
- Asking who has thrust the stick.
- Lo, as frogs that Winter cumbers
- Meet the Spring with stiffen’d yawn,
- We from our hard night of slumbers
- Marched into the bloody dawn.
- XI
- Day on day we fought, though shattered:
- Pushed and met repulses sharp,
- Till our Raven’s plumes were scattered:
- All, save old Aneurin’s harp.
- Hear it wailing like a mother
- O’er the strings of children slain!
- He in one tongue, in another,
- Alien, I; one blood, yet twain.
- XII
- Old Aneurin! droop no longer.
- That squat ocean-scum, we own,
- Had fine stoutness, made us stronger,
- Brought us much-required backbone:
- Claimed of Power their dues, and granted
- Dues to Power in turn, when rose
- Mightier rovers; they that planted
- Sovereign here the Norman nose.
- XIII
- Glorious men, with heads of eagles,
- Chopping arms, and cupboard lips;
- Warriors, hunters, keen as beagles,
- Mounted aye on horse or ships.
- Active, being hungry creatures;
- Silent, having nought to say:
- High they raised the lord of features,
- Saxon-worshipped to this day.
- XIV
- Hear its deeds, the great recital!
- Stout as bergs of Arctic ice
- Once it led, and lived; a title
- Now it is, and names its price.
- This our Saxon brothers cherish:
- This, when by the worth of wits
- Lands are reared aloft, or perish,
- Sole illumes their lucre-pits.
- XV
- Know we not our wrongs, unwritten
- Though they be, Aneurin? Sword,
- Song, and subtle mind, the Briton
- Brings to market, all ignored.
- ’Gainst the Saxon’s bone impinging,
- Still is our Gododin played;
- Shamed we see him humbly cringing
- In a shadowy nose’s shade.
- XVI
- Bitter is the weight that crushes
- Low, my Bard, thy race of fire.
- Here no fair young future blushes
- Bridal to a man’s desire.
- Neither chief, nor aim, nor splendour
- Dressing distance, we perceive.
- Neither honour, nor the tender
- Bloom of promise, morn or eve.
- XVII
- Joined we are; a tide of races
- Rolled to meet a common fate;
- England clasps in her embraces
- Many: what is England’s state?
- England her distended middle
- Thumps with pride as Mammon’s wife;
- Says that thus she reads thy riddle,
- Heaven! ’tis heaven to plump her life.
- XVIII
- O my Bard! a yellow liquor,
- Like to that we drank of old—
- Gold is her metheglin beaker,
- She destruction drinks in gold.
- Warn her, Bard, that Power is pressing
- Hotly for his dues this hour;
- Tell her that no drunken blessing
- Stops the onward march of Power.
- XIX
- Has she ears to take forewarnings
- She will cleanse her of her stains,
- Feed and speed for braver mornings
- Valorously the growth of brains.
- Power, the hard man knit for action,
- Reads each nation on the brow.
- Cripple, fool, and petrifaction
- Fall to him—are falling now!
- MEN AND MAN
- I
- MEN the Angels eyed;
- And here they were wild waves,
- And there as marsh descried;
- Men the Angels eyed,
- And liked the picture best
- Where they were greenly dressed
- In brotherhood of graves.
- II
- Man the Angels marked:
- He led a host through murk,
- On fearful seas embarked;
- Man the Angels marked;
- To think without a nay,
- That he was good as they,
- And help him at his work.
- III
- Man and Angels, ye
- A sluggish fen shall drain,
- Shall quell a warring sea.
- Man and Angels, ye,
- Whom stain of strife befouls,
- A light to kindle souls
- Bear radiant in the stain.
- THE LAST CONTENTION
- I
- YOUNG captain of a crazy bark!
- O tameless heart in battered frame!
- Thy sailing orders have a mark,
- And hers is not the name.
- II
- For action all thine iron clanks
- In cravings for a splendid prize;
- Again to race or bump thy planks
- With any flag that flies.
- III
- Consult them; they are eloquent
- For senses not inebriate.
- They trust thee on the star intent,
- That leads to land their freight.
- IV
- And they have known thee high peruse
- The heavens, and deep the earth, till thou
- Didst into the flushed circle cruise
- Where reason quits the brow.
- V
- Thou animatest ancient tales,
- To prove our world of linear seed:
- Thy very virtue now assails,
- A tempter to mislead.
- VI
- But thou hast answer I am I;
- My passion hallows, bids command:
- And she is gracious, she is nigh:
- One motion of the hand!
- VII
- It will suffice; a whirly tune
- These winds will pipe, and thou perform
- The nodded part of pantaloon
- In thy created storm.
- VIII
- Admires thee Nature with much pride;
- She clasps thee for a gift of morn,
- Till thou art set against the tide,
- And then beware her scorn.
- IX
- Sad issue, should that strife befall
- Between thy mortal ship and thee!
- It writes the melancholy scrawl
- Of wreckage over sea.
- X
- This lady of the luting tongue,
- The flash in darkness, billow’s grace,
- For thee the worship; for the young
- In muscle the embrace.
- XI
- Soar on thy manhood clear from those
- Whose toothless Winter claws at May,
- And take her as the vein of rose
- Athwart an evening grey.
- PERIANDER
- I
- HOW died Melissa none dares shape in words.
- A woman who is wife despotic lords
- Count faggot at the question, Shall she live!
- Her son, because his brows were black of her,
- Runs barking for his bread, a fugitive,
- And Corinth frowns on them that feed the cur.
- II
- There is no Corinth save the whip and curb
- Of Corinth, high Periander; the superb
- In magnanimity, in rule severe.
- Up on his marble fortress-tower he sits,
- The city under him: a white yoked steer,
- That bears his heart for pulse, his head for wits.
- III
- Bloom of the generous fires of his fair Spring
- Still coloured him when men forbore to sting;
- Admiring meekly where the ordered seeds
- Of his good sovereignty showed gardens trim;
- And owning that the hoe he struck at weeds
- Was author of the flowers raised face to him.
- IV
- His Corinth, to each mood subservient
- In homage, made he as an instrument
- To yield him music with scarce touch of stops.
- He breathed, it piped; he moved, it rose to fly:
- At whiles a bloodhorse racing till it drops;
- At whiles a crouching dog, on him all eye.
- V
- His wisdom men acknowledged; only one,
- The creature, issue of him, Lycophron,
- That rebel with his mother in his brows,
- Contested: such an infamous would foul
- Pirene! Little heed where he might house
- The prince gave, hearing: so the fox, the owl!
- VI
- To prove the Gods benignant to his rule,
- The years, which fasten rigid whom they cool,
- Reviewing, saw him hold the seat of power.
- A grey one asked: Who next? nor answer had:
- One greyer pointed on the pallid hour
- To come: a river dried of waters glad.
- VII
- For which of his male issue promised grip
- To stride yon people, with the curb and whip?
- This Lycophron! he sole, the father like,
- Fired prospect of a line in one strong tide,
- By right of mastery; stern will to strike;
- Pride to support the stroke: yea, Godlike pride!
- VIII
- Himself the prince beheld a failing fount.
- His line stretched back unto its holy mount:
- The thirsty onward waved for him no sign.
- Then stood before his vision that hard son.
- The seizure of a passion for his line
- Impelled him to the path of Lycophron.
- IX
- The youth was tossing pebbles in the sea;
- A figure shunned along the busy quay,
- Perforce of the harsh edict for who dared
- Address him outcast. Naming it, he crossed
- His father’s look with look that proved them paired
- For stiffness, and another pebble tossed.
- X
- An exile to the Island ere nightfall
- He passed from sight, from the hushed mouths of all.
- It had resemblance to a death: and on,
- Against a coast where sapphire shattered white,
- The seasons rolled like troops of billows blown
- To spraymist. The prince gazed on capping night.
- XI
- Deaf Age spake in his ear with shouts: Thy son!
- Deep from his heart Life raved of work not done.
- He heard historic echoes moan his name,
- As of the prince in whom the race had pause;
- Till Tyranny paternity became,
- And him he hated loved he for the cause.
- XII
- Not Lycophron the exile now appeared,
- But young Periander, from the shadow cleared,
- That haunted his rebellious brows. The prince
- Grew bright for him; saw youth, if seeming loth,
- Return: and of pure pardon to convince,
- Despatched the messenger most dear with both.
- XIII
- His daughter, from the exile’s Island home,
- Wrote, as a flight of halcyons o’er the foam,
- Sweet words: her brother to his father bowed;
- Accepted his peace-offering, and rejoiced.
- To bring him back a prince the father vowed,
- Commanded man the oars, the white sails hoist.
- XIV
- He waved the fleet to strain its westward way
- On to the sea-hued hills that crown the bay:
- Soil of those hospitable islanders
- Whom now his heart, for honour to his blood,
- Thanked. They should learn what boons a prince confers
- When happiness enjoins him gratitude!
- XV
- In watch upon the offing, worn with haste
- To see his youth revived, and, close embraced,
- Pardon who had subdued him, who had gained
- Surely the stoutest battle between two
- Since Titan pierced by young Apollo stained
- Earth’s breast, the prince looked forth, himself looked through.
- XVI
- Errors aforetime unperceived were bared,
- To be by his young masterful repaired:
- Renewed his great ideas gone to smoke;
- His policy confirmed amid the surge
- Of States and people fretting at his yoke.
- And lo, the fleet brown-flocked on the sea-verge!
- XVII
- Oars pulled: they streamed in harbour; without cheer
- For welcome shadowed round the heaving bier.
- They, whose approach in such rare pomp and stress
- Of numbers the free islanders dismayed
- At Tyranny come masking to oppress,
- Found Lycophron this breathless, this lone-laid.
- XVIII
- Who smote the man thrown open to young joy?
- The image of the mother of his boy
- Came forth from his unwary breast in wreaths,
- With eyes. And shall a woman, that extinct,
- Smite out of dust the Powerful who breathes?
- Her loved the son; her served; they lay close-linked!
- XIX
- Dead was he, and demanding earth. Demand
- Sharper for vengeance of an instant hand,
- The Tyrant in the father heard him cry,
- And raged a plague; to prove on free Hellenes
- How prompt the Tyrant for the Persian dye;
- How black his Gods behind their marble screens.
- SOLON
- I
- THE Tyrant passed, and friendlier was his eye
- On the great man of Athens, whom for foe
- He knew, than on the sycophantic fry
- That broke as waters round a galley’s flow,
- Bubbles at prow and foam along the wake.
- Solidity the Thunderer could not shake,
- Beneath an adverse wind still stripping bare,
- His kinsman, of the light-in-cavern look,
- From thought drew, and a countenance could wear
- Not less at peace than fields in Attic air
- Shorn, and shown fruitful by the reaper’s hook.
- II
- Most enviable so; yet much insane
- To deem of minds of men they grow! these sheep,
- By fits wild horses, need the crook and rein;
- Hot bulls by fits, pure wisdom hold they cheap,
- My Lawgiver, when fiery is the mood.
- For ones and twos and threes thy words are good;
- For thine own government are pillars: mine
- Stand acts to fit the herd; which has quick thirst,
- Rejecting elegiacs, though they shine
- On polished brass, and, worthy of the Nine,
- In showering columns from their fountain burst.
- III
- Thus museful rode the Tyrant, princely plumed,
- To his high seat upon the sacred rock:
- And Solon, blank beside his rule, resumed
- The meditation which that passing mock
- Had buffeted awhile to sallowness.
- He little loved the man, his office less,
- Yet owned him for a flower of his kind.
- Therefore the heavier curse on Athens he!
- The people grew not in themselves, but, blind,
- Accepted sight from him, to him resigned
- Their hopes of stature, rootless as at sea.
- IV
- As under sea lay Solon’s work, or seemed
- By turbid shore-waves beaten day by day;
- Defaced, half formless, like an image dreamed,
- Or child that fashioned in another clay
- Appears, by strangers’ hands to home returned.
- But shall the Present tyrannize us? earned
- It was in some way, justly says the sage.
- One sees not how, while husbanding regrets;
- While tossing scorn abroad from righteous rage,
- High vision is obscured; for this is age
- When robbed—more infant than the babe it frets!
- V
- Yet see Athenians treading the black path
- Laid by a prince’s shadow! well content
- To wait his pleasure, shivering at his wrath:
- They bow to their accepted Orient
- With offer of the all that renders bright:
- Forgetful of the growth of men to light,
- As creatures reared on Persian milk they bow.
- Unripe! unripe! The times are overcast.
- But still may they who sowed behind the plough
- True seed fix in the mind an unborn NOW
- To make the plagues afflicting us things past.
- BELLEROPHON
- I
- MAIMED, beggared, grey; seeking an alms; with nod
- Of palsy doing task of thanks for bread;
- Upon the stature of a God,
- He whom the Gods have struck bends low his head.
- II
- Weak words he has, that slip the nerveless tongue
- Deformed, like his great frame: a broken arc:
- Once radiant as the javelin flung
- Right at the centre breastplate of his mark.
- III
- Oft pausing on his white-eyed inward look,
- Some undermountain narrative he tells,
- As gapped by Lykian heat the brook
- Cut from the source that in the upland swells.
- IV
- The cottagers who dole him fruit and crust
- With patient inattention hear him prate:
- And comes the snow, and comes the dust,
- Comes the old wanderer, more bent of late.
- V
- A crazy beggar grateful for a meal
- Has ever of himself a world to say.
- For them he is an ancient wheel
- Spinning a knotted thread the livelong day.
- VI
- He cannot, nor do they, the tale connect;
- For never singer in the land had been
- Who him for theme did not reject:
- Spurned of the hoof that sprang the Hippocrene.
- VII
- Albeit a theme of flame to bring them straight
- The snorting white-winged brother of the wave,
- They hear him as a thing by fate
- Cursed in unholy babble to his grave.
- VIII
- As men that spied the wings, that heard the snort,
- Their sires have told; and of a martial prince
- Bestriding him; and old report
- Speaks of a monster slain by one long since.
- IX
- There is that story of the golden bit
- By Goddess given to tame the lightning steed:
- A mortal who could mount, and sit
- Flying, and up Olympus midway speed.
- X
- He rose like the loosed fountain’s utmost leap;
- He played the star at span of heaven right o’er
- Men’s heads: they saw the snowy steep,
- Saw the winged shoulders: him they saw not more.
- XI
- He fell: and says the shattered man, I fell:
- And sweeps an arm the height an eagle wins;
- And in his breast a mouthless well
- Heaves the worn patches of his coat of skins.
- XII
- Lo, this is he in whom the surgent springs
- Of recollections richer than our skies
- To feed the flow of tuneful strings,
- Show but a pool of scum for shooting flies.
- PHAÉTHÔN
- ATTEMPTED IN THE GALLIAMBIC MEASURE
- AT the coming up of Phoebus the all-luminous charioteer,
- Double-visaged stand the mountains in imperial multitudes,
- And with shadows dappled men sing to him, Hail, O Beneficent!
- For they shudder chill, the earth-vales, at his clouding, shudder to
- black;
- In the light of him there is music thro’ the poplar and river-sedge,
- Renovation, chirp of brooks, hum of the forest—an ocean-song.
- Never pearl from ocean-hollows by the diver exultingly,
- In his breathlessness, above thrust, is as earth to Helios.
- Who usurps his place there, rashest? Aphrodite’s loved one it is!
- To his son the flaming Sun-God, to the tender youth, Phaethon,
- Rule of day this day surrenders as a thing hereditary,
- Having sworn by Styx tremendous, for the proof of his parentage,
- He would grant his son’s petition, whatsoever the sign thereof.
- Then, rejoiced, the stripling answered: ‘Rule of day give me; give it
- me,
- Give me place that men may see me how I blaze, and transcendingly
- I, divine, proclaim my birthright.’ Darkened Helios, and his
- utterance
- Choked prophetic: ‘O half mortal!’ he exclaimed in an agony,
- ‘O lost son of mine! lost son! No! put a prayer for another thing:
- Not for this: insane to wish it, and to crave the gift impious!
- Cannot other gifts my godhead shed upon thee? miraculous
- Mighty gifts to prove a blessing, that to earth thou shalt be a joy?
- Gifts of healing, wherewith men walk as the Gods beneficently;
- As a God to sway to concord hearts of men, reconciling them;
- Gifts of verse, the lyre, the laurel, therewithal that thine origin
- Shall be known even as when _I_ strike on the string’d shell with
- melody,
- And the golden notes, like medicine, darting straight to the cavities,
- Fill them up, till hearts of men bound as the billows, the ships
- thereon.’
- Thus intently urged the Sun-God; but the force of his eloquence
- Was the pressing on of sea-waves scattered broad from the rocks away.
- What shall move a soul from madness? Lost, lost in delirium,
- Rock-fast, the adolescent to his father, irreverent,
- ‘By the oath! the oath! thine oath!’ cried. The effulgent foreseër
- then,
- Quivering in his loins parental, on the boy’s beaming countenance
- Looked and moaned, and urged him for love’s sake, for sweet life’s
- sake, to yield the claim,
- To abandon his mad hunger, and avert the calamity.
- But he, vehement, passionate, called out: ‘Let me show I am what I
- say,
- That the taunts I hear be silenced: I am stung with their whispering.
- Only, Thou, my Father, Thou tell how aloft the revolving wheels,
- How aloft the cleaving horse-crests I may guide peremptorily,
- Till I drink the shadows, fire-hot, like a flower celestial,
- And my fellows see me curbing the fierce steeds, the dear
- dew-drinkers:
- Yea, for this I gaze on life’s light; throw for this any sacrifice.’
- All the end foreseeing, Phoebus to his oath irrevocable
- Bowed obedient, deploring the insanity pitiless.
- Then the flame-outsnorting horses were led forth: it was so decreed.
- They were yoked before the glad youth by his sister-ancillaries.
- Swift the ripple ripples follow’d, as of aureate Helicon,
- Down their flanks, while they impatient pawed desire of the distances,
- And the bit with fury champed. Oh! unimaginable delight!
- Unimagined speed and splendour in the circle of upper air!
- Glory grander than the armed host upon earth singing victory!
- Chafed the youth with their spirit súrcharged, as when blossom is
- shaken by winds,
- Marked that labour by his sister Phaethontiades finished, quick
- On the slope of the car his forefoot set assured: and the morning
- rose:
- Seeing whom, and what a day dawned, stood the God, as in harvest
- fields,
- When the reaper grasps the full sheaf and the sickle that severs it:
- Hugged the withered head with one hand, with the other, to indicate
- (If this woe might be averted, this immeasurable evil),
- Laid the kindling course in view, told how the reins to manipulate:
- Named the horses fondly, fearful, caution’d urgently betweenwhiles:
- Their diverging tempers dwelt on, and their wantonness, wickedness,
- That the voice of Gods alone held in restraint; but the voice of Gods;
- None but Gods can curb. He spake: vain were the words: scarcely
- listening,
- Mounted Phaethon, swinging reins loose, and, ‘Behold me, companions,
- It is I here, I!’ he shouted, glancing down with supremacy;
- ‘Not to any of you was this gift granted ever in annals of men;
- I alone what only Gods can, I alone am governing day!’
- Short the triumph, brief his rapture: see a hurricane suddenly
- Beat the lifting billow crestless, roll it broken this way and that;—
- At the leap on yielding ether, in despite of his reprimand,
- Swayed tumultuous the fire-steeds, plunging reckless hither and yon;
- Unto men a great amazement, all agaze at the Troubled East:—
- Pitifully for mastery striving in ascension, the charioteer,
- Reminiscent, drifts of counsel caught confused in his arid wits;
- The reins stiff ahind his shoulder madly pulled for the mastery,
- Till a thunder off the tense chords thro’ his ears dinnèd horrible.
- Panic seized him: fled his vision of inviolability;
- Fled the dream that he of mortals rode mischances predominant;
- And he cried, ‘Had I petitioned for a cup of chill aconite,
- My descent to awful Hades had been soft, for now must I go
- With the curse by father Zeus cast on ambition immoderate.
- Oh, my sisters! Thou, my Goddess, in whose love I was enviable,
- From whose arms I rushed befrenzied, what a wreck will this body be,
- That admired of thee stood rose-warm in the courts where thy mysteries
- Celebration had from me, me the most splendidly privileged!
- Never more shall I thy temple fill with incenses bewildering;
- Not again hear thy half-murmurs—I am lost!—never, never more.
- I am wrecked on seas of air, hurled to my death in a vessel of flame!
- Hither, sisters! Father, save me! Hither, succour me, Cypria!’
- Now a wail of men to Zeus rang: from Olympus the Thunderer
- Saw the rage of the havoc wide-mouthed, the bright car superimpending
- Over Asia, Africa, low down; ruin flaming over the vales;
- Light disastrous rising savage out of smoke inveterately;
- Beast-black, conflagration like a menacing shadow move
- With voracious roaring southward, where aslant, insufferable,
- The bright steeds careered their parched way down an arc of the
- firmament.
- For the day grew like to thick night, and the orb was its beacon-fire,
- And from hill to hill of darkness burst the day’s apparition forth.
- Lo, a wrestler, not a God, stood in the chariot ever lowering:
- Lo, the shape of one who raced there to outstrip the legitimate hours:
- Lo, the ravish’d beams of Phoebus dragged in shame at the
- chariot-wheels:
- Light of days of happy pipings by the mead-singing rivulets!
- Lo, lo, increasing lustre, torrid breath to the nostrils; lo,
- Torrid brilliancies thro’ the vapours lighten swifter, penetrate them,
- Fasten merciless, ruminant, hueless, on earth’s frame crackling
- busily.
- He aloft, the frenzied driver, in the glow of the universe,
- Like the paling of the dawn-star withers visibly, he aloft:
- Bitter fury in his aspect, bitter death in the heart of him.
- Crouch the herds, contract the reptiles, crouch the lions under their
- paws.
- White as metal in the furnace are the faces of human-kind:
- Inarticulate creatures of earth dumb all await the ultimate shock.
- To the bolt he launched, ‘Strike dead, thou,’ uttered Zeus, very
- terrible;
- ‘Perish folly, else ’tis man’s fate’; and the bolt flew unerringly.
- Then the kindler stooped; from the torch-car down the measureless
- altitudes
- Leaned his rayless head, relinquished rein and footing, raised not a
- cry.
- Like the flower on the river’s surface when expanding it vanishes,
- Gave his limbs to right and left, quenched: and so fell he
- precipitate,
- Seen of men as a glad rain-fall, sending coolness yet ere it comes:
- So he showered above them, shadowed o’er the blue archipelagoes,
- O’er the silken-shining pastures of the continents and the isles;
- So descending brought revival to the greenery of our earth.
- Lither, noisy in the breezes now his sisters shivering weep,
- By the river flowing smooth out to the vexed sea of Adria,
- Where he fell, and where they suffered sudden change to the tremulous
- Ever-wailful trees bemoaning him, a bruised purple cyclamen.
- A READING OF EARTH
- SEED-TIME
- I
- FLOWERS of the willow-herb are wool;
- Flowers of the briar berries red;
- Speeding their seed as the breeze may rule,
- Flowers of the thistle loosen the thread.
- Flowers of the clematis drip in beard,
- Slack from the fir-tree youngly climbed;
- Chaplets in air, flies foliage seared;
- Heeled upon earth, lie clusters rimed.
- II
- Where were skies of the mantle stained
- Orange and scarlet, a coat of frieze
- Travels from North till day has waned,
- Tattered, soaked in the ditch’s dyes;
- Tumbles the rook under grey or slate;
- Else enfolding us, damps to the bone;
- Narrows the world to my neighbour’s gate;
- Paints me Life as a wheezy crone.
- III
- Now seems none but the spider lord;
- Star in circle his web waits prey,
- Silvering bush-mounds, blue brushing sward;
- Slow runs the hour, swift flits the ray.
- Now to his thread-shroud is he nigh,
- Nigh to the tangle where wings are sealed,
- He who frolicked the jewelled fly;
- All is adroop on the down and the weald.
- IV
- Mists more lone for the sheep-bell enwrap
- Nights that tardily let slip a morn
- Paler than moons, and on noontide’s lap
- Flame dies cold, like the rose late born.
- Rose born late, born withered in bud!—
- I, even I, for a zenith of sun
- Cry, to fulfil me, nourish my blood:
- O for a day of the long light, one!
- V
- Master the blood, nor read by chills,
- Earth admonishes: Hast thou ploughed,
- Sown, reaped, harvested grain for the mills,
- Thou hast the light over shadow of cloud.
- Steadily eyeing, before that wail
- Animal-infant, thy mind began,
- Momently nearer me: should sight fail,
- Plod in the track of the husbandman.
- VI
- Verily now is our season of seed,
- Now in our Autumn; and Earth discerns
- Them that have served her in them that can read,
- Glassing, where under the surface she burns,
- Quick at her wheel, while the fuel, decay,
- Brightens the fire of renewal: and we?
- Death is the word of a bovine day,
- Know you the breast of the springing To-be.
- HARD WEATHER
- BURSTS from a rending East in flaws
- The young green leaflet’s harrier, sworn
- To strew the garden, strip the shaws,
- And show our Spring with banner torn.
- Was ever such virago morn?
- The wind has teeth, the wind has claws.
- All the wind’s wolves through woods are loose,
- The wild wind’s falconry aloft.
- Shrill underfoot the grassblade shrews,
- At gallop, clumped, and down the croft
- Bestrid by shadows, beaten, tossed;
- It seems a scythe, it seems a rod.
- The howl is up at the howl’s accost;
- The shivers greet and the shivers nod.
- Is the land ship? we are rolled, we drive
- Tritonly, cleaving hiss and hum;
- Whirl with the dead, or mount or dive,
- Or down in dregs, or on in scum.
- And drums the distant, pipes the near,
- And vale and hill are grey in grey,
- As when the surge is crumbling sheer,
- And sea-mews wing the haze of spray.
- Clouds—are they bony witches?—swarms,
- Darting swift on the robber’s flight,
- Hurry an infant sky in arms:
- It peeps, it becks; ’tis day, ’tis night.
- Black while over the loop of blue
- The swathe is closed, like shroud on corse.
- Lo, as if swift the Furies flew,
- The Fates at heel at a cry to horse!
- Interpret me the savage whirr:
- And is it Nature scourged, or she,
- Her offspring’s executioner,
- Reducing land to barren sea?
- But is there meaning in a day
- When this fierce angel of the air,
- Intent to throw, and haply slay,
- Can for what breath of life we bear,
- Exact the wrestle?—Call to mind
- The many meanings glistening up
- When Nature to her nurslings kind,
- Hands them the fruitage and the cup!
- And seek we rich significance
- Not otherwhere than with those tides
- Of pleasure on the sunned expanse,
- Whose flow deludes, whose ebb derides?
- Look in the face of men who fare
- Lock-mouthed, a match in lungs and thews
- For this fierce angel of the air,
- To twist with him and take his bruise.
- That is the face beloved of old
- Of Earth, young mother of her brood:
- Nor broken for us shows the mould
- When muscle is in mind renewed:
- Though farther from her nature rude,
- Yet nearer to her spirit’s hold:
- And though of gentler mood serene,
- Still forceful of her fountain-jet.
- So shall her blows be shrewdly met,
- Be luminously read the scene
- Where Life is at her grindstone set,
- That she may give us edgeing keen,
- String us for battle, till as play
- The common strokes of fortune shower.
- Such meaning in a dagger-day
- Our wits may clasp to wax in power.
- Yea, feel us warmer at her breast,
- By spin of blood in lusty drill,
- Than when her honeyed hands caressed,
- And Pleasure, sapping, seemed to fill.
- Behold the life at ease; it drifts.
- The sharpened life commands its course.
- She winnows, winnows roughly; sifts,
- To dip her chosen in her source:
- Contention is the vital force,
- Whence pluck they brain, her prize of gifts,
- Sky of the senses! on which height,
- Not disconnected, yet released,
- They see how spirit comes to light,
- Through conquest of the inner beast,
- Which Measure tames to movement sane,
- In harmony with what is fair.
- Never is Earth misread by brain:
- That is the welling of her, there
- The mirror: with one step beyond,
- For likewise is it voice; and more,
- Benignest kinship bids respond,
- When wail the weak, and them restore
- Whom days as fell as this may rive,
- While Earth sits ebon in her gloom,
- Us atomies of life alive
- Unheeding, bent on life to come.
- Her children of the labouring brain,
- These are the champions of the race,
- True parents, and the sole humane,
- With understanding for their base.
- Earth yields the milk, but all her mind
- Is vowed to thresh for stouter stock.
- Her passion for old giantkind,
- That scaled the mount, uphurled the rock,
- Devolves on them who read aright
- Her meaning and devoutly serve;
- Nor in her starlessness of night
- Peruse her with the craven nerve:
- But even as she from grass to corn,
- To eagle high from grubbing mole,
- Prove in strong brain her noblest born,
- The station for the flight of soul.
- THE SOUTH-WESTER
- DAY of the cloud in fleets! O day
- Of wedded white and blue, that sail
- Immingled, with a footing ray
- In shadow-sandals down our vale!—
- And swift to ravish golden meads,
- Swift up the run of turf it speeds,
- Thy bright of head and dark of heel,
- To where the hilltop flings on sky,
- As hawk from wrist or dust from wheel,
- The tiptoe sealers tossed to fly:—
- Thee the last thunder’s caverned peal
- Delivered from a wailful night:
- All dusky round thy cradled light,
- Those brine-born issues, now in bloom
- Transfigured, wreathed as raven’s plume
- And briony-leaf to watch thee lie:
- Dark eyebrows o’er a dreamful eye
- Nigh opening: till in the braid
- Of purpled vapours thou wert rosed:
- Till that new babe a Goddess maid
- Appeared and vividly disclosed
- Her beat of life: then crimson played
- On edges of the plume and leaf:
- Shape had they and fair feature brief,
- The wings, the smiles: they flew the breast,
- Earth’s milk. But what imperial march
- Their standards led for earth, none guessed
- Ere upward of a coloured arch,
- An arrow straining eager head
- Lightened, and high for zenith sped.
- Fierier followed; followed Fire.
- Name the young lord of Earth’s desire,
- Whose look her wine is, and whose mouth
- Her music! Beauteous was she seen
- Beneath her midway West of South;
- And sister was her quivered green
- To sapphire of the Nereid eyes
- On sea when sun is breeze; she winked
- As they, and waved, heaved waterwise
- Her flood of leaves and grasses linked:
- A myriad lustrous butterflies
- A moment in the fluttering sheen;
- Becapped with the slate air that throws
- The reindeer’s antlers black between
- Low-frowning and wide-fallen snows,
- A minute after; hooded, stoled
- To suit a graveside Season’s dirge.
- Lo, but the breaking of a surge,
- And she is in her lover’s fold,
- Illumined o’er a boundless range
- Anew: and through quick morning hours
- The Tropic-Arctic countercharge
- Did seem to pant in beams and showers.
- But noon beheld a larger heaven;
- Beheld on our reflecting field
- The Sower to the Bearer given,
- And both their inner sweetest yield,
- Fresh as when dews were grey or first
- Received the flush of hues athirst.
- Heard we the woodland, eyeing sun,
- As harp and harper were they one.
- A murky cloud a fair pursued,
- Assailed, and felt the limbs elude:
- He sat him down to pipe his woe,
- And some strange beast of sky became:
- A giant’s club withheld the blow;
- A milky cloud went all to flame.
- And there were groups where silvery springs
- The ethereal forest showed begirt
- By companies in choric rings,
- Whom but to see made ear alert.
- For music did each movement rouse,
- And motion was a minstrel’s rage
- To have our spirits out of house,
- And bathe them on the open page.
- This was a day that knew not age.
- Since flew the vapoury twos and threes
- From western pile to eastern rack;
- As on from peaks of Pyrenees
- To Graians; youngness ruled the track.
- When songful beams were shut in caves,
- And rainy drapery swept across;
- When the ranked clouds were downy waves,
- Breast of swan, eagle, albatross,
- In ordered lines to screen the blue,
- Youngest of light was nigh, we knew.
- The silver finger of it laughed
- Along the narrow rift: it shot,
- Slew the huge gloom with golden shaft,
- Then haled on high the volumed blot,
- To build the hurling palace, cleave
- The dazzling chasm; the flying nests,
- The many glory-garlands weave,
- Whose presence not our sight attests
- Till wonder with the splendour blent,
- And passion for the beauty flown,
- Make evanescence permanent,
- The thing at heart our endless own.
- Only at gathered eve knew we
- The marvels of the day: for then
- Mount upon mountain out of sea
- Arose, and to our spacious ken
- Trebled sublime Olympus round
- In towering amphitheatre.
- Colossal on enormous mound,
- Majestic gods we saw confer.
- They wafted the Dream-messenger
- From off the loftiest, the crowned:
- That Lady of the hues of foam
- In sun-rays: who, close under dome,
- A figure on the foot’s descent,
- Irradiate to vapour went,
- As one whose mission was resigned,
- Dispieced, undraped, dissolved to threads;
- Melting she passed into the mind,
- Where immortal with mortal weds.
- Whereby was known that we had viewed
- The union of our earth and skies
- Renewed: nor less alive renewed
- Than when old bards, in nature wise,
- Conceived pure beauty given to eyes,
- And with undyingness imbued.
- Pageant of man’s poetic brain,
- His grand procession of the song,
- It was; the Muses and their train;
- Their God to lead the glittering throng:
- At whiles a beat of forest gong;
- At whiles a glimpse of Python slain.
- Mostly divinest harmony,
- The lyre, the dance. We could believe
- A life in orb and brook and tree,
- And cloud; and still holds Memory
- A morning in the eyes of eve.
- THE THRUSH IN FEBRUARY
- I KNOW him, February’s thrush,
- And loud at eve he valentines
- On sprays that paw the naked bush
- Where soon will sprout the thorns and bines.
- Now ere the foreign singer thrills
- Our vale his plain-song pipe he pours,
- A herald of the million bills;
- And heed him not, the loss is yours.
- My study, flanked with ivied fir
- And budded beech with dry leaves curled,
- Perched over yew and juniper,
- He neighbours, piping to his world:—
- The wooded pathways dank on brown,
- The branches on grey cloud a web,
- The long green roller of the down,
- An image of the deluge-ebb:—
- And farther, they may hear along
- The stream beneath the poplar row.
- By fits, like welling rocks, the song
- Spouts of a blushful Spring in flow.
- But most he loves to front the vale
- When waves of warm South-western rains
- Have left our heavens clear in pale,
- With faintest beck of moist red veins:
- Vermilion wings, by distance held
- To pause aflight while fleeting swift:
- And high aloft the pearl inshelled
- Her lucid glow in glow will lift;
- A little south of coloured sky;
- Directing, gravely amorous,
- The human of a tender eye
- Through pure celestial on us:
- Remote, not alien; still, not cold;
- Unraying yet, more pearl than star;
- She seems a while the vale to hold
- In trance, and homelier makes the far.
- Then Earth her sweet unscented breathes,
- An orb of lustre quits the height;
- And like blue iris-flags, in wreaths
- The sky takes darkness, long ere quite.
- His Island voice then shall you hear,
- Nor ever after separate
- From such a twilight of the year
- Advancing to the vernal gate.
- He sings me, out of Winter’s throat,
- The young time with the life ahead;
- And my young time his leaping note
- Recalls to spirit-mirth from dead.
- Imbedded in a land of greed,
- Of mammon-quakings dire as Earth’s,
- My care was but to soothe my need;
- At peace among the littleworths.
- To light and song my yearning aimed;
- To that deep breast of song and light
- Which men have barrenest proclaimed;
- As ’tis to senses pricked with fright.
- So mine are these new fruitings rich
- The simple to the common brings;
- I keep the youth of souls who pitch
- Their joy in this old heart of things:
- Who feel the Coming young as aye,
- Thrice hopeful on the ground we plough;
- Alive for life, awake to die;
- One voice to cheer the seedling Now.
- Full lasting is the song, though he,
- The singer, passes: lasting too,
- For souls not lent in usury,
- The rapture of the forward view.
- With that I bear my senses fraught
- Till what I am fast shoreward drives.
- They are the vessel of the Thought.
- The vessel splits, the Thought survives.
- Nought else are we when sailing brave,
- Save husks to raise and bid it burn.
- Glimpse of its livingness will wave
- A light the senses can discern
- Across the river of the death,
- Their close. Meanwhile, O twilight bird
- Of promise! bird of happy breath!
- I hear, I would the City heard.
- The City of the smoky fray;
- A prodded ox, it drags and moans:
- Its Morrow no man’s child; its Day
- A vulture’s morsel beaked to bones.
- It strives without a mark for strife;
- It feasts beside a famished host:
- The loose restraint of wanton life,
- That threatened penance in the ghost!
- Yet there our battle urges; there
- Spring heroes many: issuing thence,
- Names that should leave no vacant air
- For fresh delight in confidence.
- Life was to them the bag of grain,
- And Death the weedy harrow’s tooth.
- Those warriors of the sighting brain
- Give worn Humanity new youth.
- Our song and star are they to lead
- The tidal multitude and blind
- From bestial to the higher breed
- By fighting souls of love divined,
- They scorned the ventral dream of peace,
- Unknown in nature. This they knew:
- That life begets with fair increase
- Beyond the flesh, if life be true.
- Just reason based on valiant blood,
- The instinct bred afield would match
- To pipe thereof a swelling flood,
- Were men of Earth made wise in watch.
- Though now the numbers count as drops
- An urn might bear, they father Time.
- She shapes anew her dusty crops;
- Her quick in their own likeness climb.
- Of their own force do they create;
- They climb to light, in her their root.
- Your brutish cry at muffled fate
- She smites with pangs of worse than brute.
- She, judged of shrinking nerves, appears
- A Mother whom no cry can melt;
- But read her past desires and fears,
- The letters on her breast are spelt.
- A slayer, yea, as when she pressed
- Her savage to the slaughter-heaps,
- To sacrifice she prompts her best:
- She reaps them as the sower reaps.
- But read her thought to speed the race,
- And stars rush forth of blackest night:
- You chill not at a cold embrace
- To come, nor dread a dubious might.
- Her double visage, double voice,
- In oneness rise to quench the doubt.
- This breath, her gift, has only choice
- Of service, breathe we in or out.
- Since Pain and Pleasure on each hand
- Led our wild steps from slimy rock
- To yonder sweeps of gardenland,
- We breathe but to be sword or block.
- The sighting brain her good decree
- Accepts; obeys those guides, in faith,
- By reason hourly fed, that she,
- To some the clod, to some the wraith,
- Is more, no mask; a flame, a stream.
- Flame, stream, are we, in mid career
- From torrent source, delirious dream,
- To heaven-reflecting currents clear.
- And why the sons of Strength have been
- Her cherished offspring ever; how
- The Spirit served by her is seen
- Through Law; perusing love will show.
- Love born of knowledge, love that gains
- Vitality as Earth it mates,
- The meaning of the Pleasures, Pains,
- The Life, the Death, illuminates.
- For love we Earth, then serve we all;
- Her mystic secret then is ours:
- We fall, or view our treasures fall,
- Unclouded, as beholds her flowers
- Earth, from a night of frosty wreck,
- Enrobed in morning’s mounted fire,
- When lowly, with a broken neck,
- The crocus lays her cheek to mire.
- THE APPEASEMENT OF DEMETER
- I
- DEMETER devastated our good land,
- In blackness for her daughter snatched below.
- Smoke-pillar or loose hillock was the sand,
- Where soil had been to clasp warm seed and throw
- The wheat, vine, olive, ripe to Summer’s ray.
- Now whether night advancing, whether day,
- Scarce did the baldness show:
- The hand of man was a defeated hand.
- II
- Necessity, the primal goad to growth,
- Stood shrunken; Youth and Age appeared as one;
- Like Winter Summer; good as labour sloth;
- Nor was there answer wherefore beamed the sun,
- Or why men drew the breath to carry pain.
- High reared the ploughshare, broken lay the wain,
- Idly the flax-wheel spun
- Unridered: starving lords were wasp and moth.
- III
- Lean grassblades losing green on their bent flags,
- Sang chilly to themselves; lone honey-bees
- Pursued the flowers that were not with dry bags;
- Sole sound aloud the snap of sapless trees,
- More sharp than slingstones on hard breastplates hurled.
- Back to first chaos tumbled the stopped world,
- Careless to lure or please.
- A nature of gaunt ribs, an earth of crags.
- IV
- No smile Demeter cast: the gloom she saw,
- Well draped her direful musing; for in gloom,
- In thicker gloom, deep down the cavern-maw,
- Her sweet had vanished; liker unto whom,
- And whose pale place of habitation mute,
- She and all seemed where Seasons, pledged for fruit
- Anciently, gaped for bloom:
- Where hand of man was as a plucked fowl’s claw.
- V
- The wrathful Queen descended on a vale,
- That ere the ravished hour for richness heaved.
- Iambe, maiden of the merry tale,
- Beside her eyed the once red-cheeked, green-leaved.
- It looked as if the Deluge had withdrawn.
- Pity caught at her throat; her jests were gone.
- More than for her who grieved,
- She could for this waste home have piped the wail.
- VI
- Iambe, her dear mountain-rivulet
- To waken laughter from cold stones, beheld
- A riven wheatfield cracking for the wet,
- And seed like infant’s teeth, that never swelled,
- Apeep up flinty ridges, milkless round.
- Teeth of the giants marked she where thin ground
- Rocky in spikes rebelled
- Against the hand here slack as rotted net.
- VII
- The valley people up the ashen scoop
- She beckoned, aiming hopelessly to win
- Her Mistress in compassion of yon group
- So pinched and wizened; with their aged grin,
- For lack of warmth to smile on mouths of woe,
- White as in chalk outlining little O,
- Dumb, from a falling chin;
- Young, old, alike half-bent to make the hoop.
- VIII
- Their tongues of birds they wagged, weak-voiced as when
- Dark underwaters the recesses choke;
- With cluck and upper quiver of a hen
- In grasp, past peeking: cry before the croak.
- Relentlessly their gold-haired Heaven, their fount
- Bountiful of old days, heard them recount
- This and that cruel stroke:
- Nor eye nor ear had she for piteous men.
- IX
- A figure of black rock by sunbeams crowned
- Through stormclouds, where the volumed shades enfold
- An earth in awe before the claps resound
- And woods and dwellings are as billows rolled,
- The barren Nourisher unmelted shed
- Death from the looks that wandered with the dead
- Out of the realms of gold,
- In famine for her lost, her lost unfound.
- X
- Iambe from her Mistress tripped; she raised
- The cattle-call above the moan of prayer;
- And slowly out of fields their fancy grazed,
- Among the droves, defiled a horse and mare:
- The wrecks of horse and mare: such ribs as view
- Seas that have struck brave ships ashore, while through
- Shoots the swift foamspit: bare
- They nodded, and Demeter on them gazed.
- XI
- Howbeit the season of the dancing blood,
- Forgot was horse of mare, yea, mare of horse:
- Reversed, each head at either’s flank, they stood.
- Whereat the Goddess, in a dim remorse,
- Laid hand on them, and smacked; and her touch pricked.
- Neighing within, at either’s flank they licked;
- Played on a moment’s force
- At courtship, withering to the crazy nod.
- XII
- The nod was that we gather for consent;
- And mournfully amid the group a dame,
- Interpreting the thing in nature meant,
- Her hands held out like bearers of the flame,
- And nodded for the negative sideways.
- Keen at her Mistress glanced Iambe: rays
- From the Great Mother came:
- Her lips were opened wide; the curse was rent.
- XIII
- She laughed: since our first harvesting heard none
- Like thunder of the song of heart: her face,
- The dreadful darkness, shook to mounted sun,
- And peal on peal across the hills held chase.
- She laughed herself to water; laughed to fire;
- Laughed the torrential laugh of dam and sire
- Full of the marrowy race.
- Her laughter, Gods! was flesh on skeleton.
- XIV
- The valley people huddled, broke, afraid,
- Assured, and taking lightning in the veins,
- They puffed, they leaped, linked hands, together swayed,
- Unwitting happiness till golden rains
- Of tears in laughter, laughter weeping, smote
- Knowledge of milky mercy from that throat
- Pouring to heal their pains:
- And one bold youth set mouth at a shy maid.
- XV
- Iambe clapped to see the kindly lusts
- Inspire the valley people, still on seas,
- Like poplar-tops relieved from stress of gusts,
- With rapture in their wonderment; but these,
- Low homage being rendered, ran to plough,
- Fed by the laugh, as by the mother cow
- Calves at the teats they tease:
- Soon drove they through the yielding furrow-crusts.
- XVI
- Uprose the blade in green, the leaf in red,
- The tree of water and the tree of wood:
- And soon among the branches overhead
- Gave beauty juicy issue sweet for food.
- O Laughter! beauty plumped and love had birth.
- Laughter! O thou reviver of sick Earth!
- Good for the spirit, good
- For body, thou! to both art wine and bread!
- EARTH AND A WEDDED WOMAN
- I
- THE shepherd, with his eye on hazy South,
- Has told of rain upon the fall of day.
- But promise is there none for Susan’s drouth,
- That he will come, who keeps in dry delay.
- The freshest of the village three years gone,
- She hangs as the white field-rose hangs short-lived;
- And she and Earth are one
- In withering unrevived.
- Rain! O the glad refresher of the grain!
- And welcome waterspouts, had we sweet rain!
- II
- Ah, what is Marriage, says each pouting maid,
- When she who wedded with the soldier hides
- At home as good as widowed in the shade,
- A lighthouse to the girls that would be brides:
- Nor dares to give a lad an ogle, nor
- To dream of dancing, but must hang and moan,
- Her husband in the war,
- And she to lie alone.
- Rain! O the glad refresher of the grain!
- And welcome waterspouts, had we sweet rain!
- III
- They have not known; they are not in the stream;
- Light as the flying seed-ball is their play,
- The silly maids! and happy souls they seem;
- Yet Grief would not change fates with such as they.
- They have not struck the roots which meet the fires
- Beneath, and bind us fast with Earth, to know
- The strength of her desires,
- The sternness of her woe.
- Rain! O the glad refresher of the grain!
- And welcome waterspouts, had we sweet rain!
- IV
- Now, shepherd, see thy word, where without shower
- A borderless low blotting Westward spreads.
- The hall-clock holds the valley on the hour;
- Across an inner chamber thunder treads:
- The dead leaf trips, the tree-top swings, the floor
- Of dust whirls, dropping lumped: near thunder speaks,
- And drives the dames to door,
- Their kerchiefs flapped at cheeks.
- Rain! O the glad refresher of the grain!
- And welcome waterspouts of blessed rain!
- V
- Through night, with bedroom window wide for air,
- Lay Susan tranced to hear all heaven descend:
- And gurgling voices came of Earth, and rare,
- Past flowerful, breathings, deeper than life’s end,
- From her heaved breast of sacred common mould;
- Whereby this lone-laid wife was moved to feel
- Unworded things and old
- To her pained heart appeal.
- Rain! O the glad refresher of the grain!
- And down in deluges of blessed rain!
- VI
- At morn she stood to live for ear and sight,
- Love sky or cloud, or rose or grasses drenched.
- A lureful devil, that in glow-worm light
- Set languor writhing all its folds, she quenched.
- But she would muse when neighbours praised her face,
- Her services, and staunchness to her mate:
- Knowing by some dim trace,
- The change might bear a date.
- Rain! O the glad refresher of the grain!
- Thrice beauteous is our sunshine after rain!
- MOTHER TO BABE
- I
- FLECK of sky you are,
- Dropped through branches dark,
- O my little one, mine!
- Promise of the star,
- Outpour of the lark;
- Beam and song divine.
- II
- See this precious gift,
- Steeping in new birth
- All my being, for sign
- Earth to heaven can lift,
- Heaven descend on earth,
- Both in one be mine!
- III
- Life in light you glass
- When you peep and coo,
- You, my little one, mine!
- Brooklet chirps to grass,
- Daisy looks in dew
- Up to dear sunshine.
- WOODLAND PEACE
- SWEET as Eden is the air,
- And Eden-sweet the ray.
- No Paradise is lost for them
- Who foot by branching root and stem,
- And lightly with the woodland share
- The change of night and day.
- Here all say,
- We serve her, even as I:
- We brood, we strive to sky,
- We gaze upon decay,
- We wot of life through death,
- How each feeds each we spy;
- And is a tangle round,
- Are patient; what is dumb
- We question not, nor ask
- The silent to give sound,
- The hidden to unmask,
- The distant to draw near.
- And this the woodland saith:
- I know not hope or fear;
- I take whate’er may come;
- I raise my head to aspects fair,
- From foul I turn away.
- Sweet as Eden is the air,
- And Eden-sweet the ray.
- THE QUESTION WHITHER
- I
- WHEN we have thrown off this old suit,
- So much in need of mending,
- To sink among the naked mute,
- Is that, think you, our ending?
- We follow many, more we lead,
- And you who sadly turf us,
- Believe not that all living seed
- Must flower above the surface.
- II
- Sensation is a gracious gift,
- But were it cramped to station,
- The prayer to have it cast adrift
- Would spout from all sensation.
- Enough if we have winked to sun,
- Have sped the plough a season;
- There is a soul for labour done,
- Endureth fixed as reason.
- III
- Then let our trust be firm in Good,
- Though we be of the fasting;
- Our questions are a mortal brood,
- Our work is everlasting.
- We children of Beneficence
- Are in its being sharers;
- And Whither vainer sounds than Whence,
- For word with such wayfarers.
- OUTER AND INNER
- I
- FROM twig to twig the spider weaves
- At noon his webbing fine.
- So near to mute the zephyrs flute
- That only leaflets dance.
- The sun draws out of hazel leaves
- A smell of woodland wine.
- I wake a swarm to sudden storm
- At any step’s advance.
- II
- Along my path is bugloss blue,
- The star with fruit in moss;
- The foxgloves drop from throat to top
- A daily lesser bell.
- The blackest shadow, nurse of dew,
- Has orange skeins across;
- And keenly red is one thin thread
- That flashing seems to swell.
- III
- My world I note ere fancy comes,
- Minutest hushed observe:
- What busy bits of motioned wits
- Through antlered mosswork strive.
- But now so low the stillness hums,
- My springs of seeing swerve,
- For half a wink to thrill and think
- The woods with nymphs alive.
- IV
- I neighbour the invisible
- So close that my consent
- Is only asked for spirits masked
- To leap from trees and flowers.
- And this because with them I dwell
- In thought, while calmly bent
- To read the lines dear Earth designs
- Shall speak her life on ours.
- V
- Accept, she says; it is not hard
- In woods; but she in towns
- Repeats, accept; and have we wept,
- And have we quailed with fears,
- Or shrunk with horrors, sure reward
- We have whom knowledge crowns;
- Who see in mould the rose unfold,
- The soul through blood and tears.
- NATURE AND LIFE
- I
- LEAVE the uproar: at a leap
- Thou shalt strike a woodland path,
- Enter silence, not of sleep,
- Under shadows, not of wrath;
- Breath which is the spirit’s bath
- In the old Beginnings find,
- And endow them with a mind,
- Seed for seedling, swathe for swathe.
- That gives Nature to us, this
- Give we her, and so we kiss.
- II
- Fruitful is it so: but hear
- How within the shell thou art,
- Music sounds; nor other near
- Can to such a tremor start.
- Of the waves our life is part;
- They our running harvests bear:
- Back to them for manful air,
- Laden with the woodland’s heart!
- That gives Battle to us, this
- Give we it, and good the kiss.
- DIRGE IN WOODS
- A wind sways the pines,
- And below
- Not a breath of wild air;
- Still as the mosses that glow
- On the flooring and over the lines
- Of the roots here and there.
- The pine-tree drops its dead;
- They are quiet, as under the sea.
- Overhead, overhead
- Rushes life in a race,
- As the clouds the clouds chase;
- And we go,
- And we drop like the fruits of the tree,
- Even we,
- Even so.
- A FAITH ON TRIAL
- ON the morning of May,
- Ere the children had entered my gate
- With their wreaths and mechanical lay,
- A metal ding-dong of the date!
- I mounted our hill, bearing heart
- That had little of life save its weight:
- The crowned Shadow poising dart
- Hung over her: she, my own,
- My good companion, mate,
- Pulse of me: she who had shown
- Fortitude quiet as Earth’s
- At the shedding of leaves. And around
- The sky was in garlands of cloud,
- Winning scents from unnumbered new births,
- Pointed buds, where the woods were browned
- By a mouldered beechen shroud;
- Or over our meads of the vale,
- Such an answer to sun as he,
- Brave in his gold; to a sound,
- None sweeter, of woods flapping sail,
- With the first full flood of our year,
- For their voyage on lustreful sea:
- Unto what curtained haven in chief,
- Will be writ in the book of the sere.
- But surely the crew are we,
- Eager or stamped or bowed;
- Counted thinner at fall of the leaf.
- Grief heard them, and passed like a bier.
- Due Summerward, lo, they were set,
- In volumes of foliage proud,
- On the heave of their favouring tides,
- And their song broadened out to the cheer
- When a neck of the ramping surf
- Rattles thunder a boat overrides.
- All smiles ran the highways wet;
- The worm drew its links from the turf;
- The bird of felicity loud
- Spun high, and a South wind blew.
- Weak out of sheath downy leaves
- Of the beech quivered lucid as dew,
- Their radiance asking, who grieves;
- For nought of a sorrow they knew:
- No space to the dread wrestle vowed,
- No chamber in shadow of night.
- At times as the steadier breeze
- Flutter-huddled their twigs to a crowd,
- The beam of them wafted my sight
- To league-long sun upon seas:
- The golden path we had crossed
- Many years, till her birthland swung
- Recovered to vision from lost,
- A light in her filial glance.
- And sweet was her voice with the tongue,
- The speechful tongue of her France,
- Soon at ripple about us, like rills
- Ever busy with little: away
- Through her Normandy, down where the mills
- Dot at lengths a rivercourse, grey
- As its bordering poplars bent
- To gusts off the plains above.
- Old stone château and farms,
- Home of her birth and her love!
- On the thread of the pasture you trace,
- By the river, their milk, for miles,
- Spotted once with the English tent,
- In days of the tocsin’s alarms,
- To tower of the tallest of piles,
- The country’s surveyor breast-high.
- Home of her birth and her love!
- Home of a diligent race;
- Thrifty, deft-handed to ply
- Shuttle or needle, and woo
- Sun to the roots of the pear
- Frogging each mud-walled cot.
- The elders had known her in arms.
- There plucked we the bluet, her hue
- Of the deeper forget-me-not;
- Well wedding her ripe-wheat hair.
- I saw, unsighting: her heart
- I saw, and the home of her love
- There printed, mournfully rent:
- Her ebbing adieu, her adieu,
- And the stride of the Shadow athwart.
- For one of our Autumns there! . . .
- Straight as the flight of a dove
- We went, swift winging we went.
- We trod solid ground, we breathed air,
- The heavens were unbroken. Break they,
- The word of the world is adieu:
- Her word: and the torrents are round,
- The jawed wolf-waters of prey.
- We stand upon isles, who stand:
- A Shadow before us, and back,
- A phantom the habited land.
- We may cry to the Sunderer, spare
- That dearest! he loosens his pack.
- Arrows we breathe, not air.
- The memories tenderly bound
- To us are a drifting crew,
- Amid grey-gapped waters for ground.
- Alone do we stand, each one,
- Till rootless as they we strew
- Those deeps of the corse-like stare
- At a foreign and stony sun.
- Eyes had I but for the scene
- Of my circle, what neighbourly grew.
- If haply no finger lay out
- To the figures of days that had been,
- I gathered my herb, and endured;
- My old cloak wrapped me about.
- Unfooted was ground-ivy blue,
- Whose rustic shrewd odour allured
- In Spring’s fresh of morning: unseen
- Her favourite wood-sorrel bell
- As yet, though the leaves’ green floor
- Awaited their flower, that would tell
- Of a red-veined moist yestreen,
- With its droop and the hues it wore,
- When we two stood overnight
- One, in the dark van-glow
- On our hill-top, seeing beneath
- Our household’s twinkle of light
- Through spruce-boughs, gem of a wreath.
- Budding, the service-tree, white
- Almost as whitebeam, threw,
- From the under of leaf upright,
- Flecks like a showering snow
- On the flame-shaped junipers green,
- On the sombre mounds of the yew.
- Like silvery tapers bright
- By a solemn cathedral screen,
- They glistened to closer view.
- Turf for a rooks’ revel striped
- Pleased those devourers astute.
- Chorister blackbird and thrush
- Together or alternate piped;
- A free-hearted harmony large,
- With meaning for man, for brute,
- When the primitive forces are brimmed.
- Like featherings hither and yon
- Of aëry tree-twigs over marge,
- To the comb of the winds, untrimmed,
- Their measure is found in the vast.
- Grief heard them, and stepped her way on.
- She has but a narrow embrace.
- Distrustful of hearing she passed.
- They piped her young Earth’s Bacchic rout;
- The race, and the prize of the race;
- Earth’s lustihead pressing to sprout.
- But sight holds a soberer space.
- Colourless dogwood low
- Curled up a twisted root,
- Nigh yellow-green mosses, to flush
- Redder than sun upon rocks,
- When the creeper clematis-shoot
- Shall climb, cap his branches, and show,
- Beside veteran green of the box,
- At close of the year’s maple blush,
- A bleeding greybeard is he,
- Now hale in the leafage lush.
- Our parasites paint us. Hard by,
- A wet yew-trunk flashed the peel
- Of our naked forefathers in fight;
- With stains of the fray sweating free;
- And him came no parasite nigh:
- Firm on the hard knotted knee,
- He stood in the crown of his dun;
- Earth’s toughest to stay her wheel:
- Under whom the full day is night;
- Whom the century-tempests call son,
- Having striven to rend him in vain.
- I walked to observe, not to feel,
- Not to fancy, if simple of eye
- One may be among images reaped
- For a shift of the glance, as grain:
- Profitless froth you espy
- Ashore after billows have leaped.
- I fled nothing, nothing pursued:
- The changeful visible face
- Of our Mother I sought for my food;
- Crumbs by the way to sustain.
- Her sentence I knew past grace.
- Myself I had lost of us twain,
- Once bound in mirroring thought.
- She had flung me to dust in her wake;
- And I, as your convict drags
- His chain, by the scourge untaught,
- Bore life for a goad, without aim.
- I champed the sensations that make
- Of a ruffled philosophy rags.
- For them was no meaning too blunt,
- Nor aspect too cutting of steel.
- This Earth of the beautiful breasts,
- Shining up in all colours aflame,
- To them had visage of hags:
- A Mother of aches and jests:
- Soulless, heading a hunt
- Aimless except for the meal.
- Hope, with the star on her front;
- Fear, with an eye in the heel;
- Our links to a Mother of grace;
- They were dead on the nerve, and dead
- For the nature divided in three;
- Gone out of heart, out of brain,
- Out of soul: I had in their place
- The calm of an empty room.
- We were joined but by that thin thread,
- My disciplined habit to see.
- And those conjure images, those,
- The puppets of loss or gain;
- Not he who is bare to his doom;
- For whom never semblance plays
- To bewitch, overcloud, illume.
- The dusty mote-images rose;
- Sheer film of the surface awag:
- They sank as they rose; their pain
- Declaring them mine of old days.
- Now gazed I where, sole upon gloom,
- As flower-bush in sun-specked crag,
- Up the spine of the double combe
- With yew-boughs heavily cloaked,
- A young apparition shone:
- Known, yet wonderful, white
- Surpassingly; doubtfully known,
- For it struck as the birth of Light:
- Even Day from the dark unyoked.
- It waved like a pilgrim flag
- O’er processional penitents flown
- When of old they broke rounding yon spine:
- O the pure wild-cherry in bloom!
- For their Eastward march to the shrine
- Of the footsore far-eyed Faith,
- Was banner so brave, so fair,
- So quick with celestial sign
- Of victorious rays over death?
- For a conquest of coward despair;—
- Division of soul from wits,
- And these made rulers;—full sure,
- More starlike never did shine
- To illumine the sinister field
- Where our life’s old night-bird flits.
- I knew it: with her, my own,
- Had hailed it pure of the pure;
- Our beacon yearly: but strange
- When it strikes to within is the known;
- Richer than newness revealed.
- There was needed darkness like mine.
- Its beauty to vividness blown
- Drew the life in me forward, chased,
- From aloft on a pinnacle’s range,
- That hindward spidery line,
- The length of the ways I had paced,
- A footfarer out of the dawn,
- To Youth’s wild forest, where sprang,
- For the morning of May long gone,
- The forest’s white virgin; she
- Seen yonder; and sheltered me, sang;
- She in me, I in her; what songs
- The fawn-eared wood-hollows revive
- To pour forth their tune-footed throngs;
- Inspire to the dreaming of good
- Illimitable to come:
- She, the white wild cherry, a tree,
- Earth-rooted, tangibly wood,
- Yet a presence throbbing alive;
- Nor she in our language dumb:
- A spirit born of a tree;
- Because earth-rooted alive:
- Huntress of things worth pursuit
- Of souls; in our naming, dreams.
- And each unto other was lute,
- By fits quick as breezy gleams.
- My quiver of aims and desires
- Had colour that she would have owned;
- And if by humaner fires
- Hued later, these held her enthroned:
- My crescent of Earth; my blood
- At the silvery early stir;
- Hour of the thrill of the bud
- About to burst, and by her
- Directed, attuned, englobed:
- My Goddess, the chaste, not chill;
- Choir over choir white-robed;
- White-bosomed fold within fold:
- For so could I dream, breast-bare,
- In my time of blooming; dream still
- Through the maze, the mesh, and the wreck,
- Despite, since manhood was bold,
- The yoke of the flesh on my neck.
- She beckoned, I gazed, unaware
- How a shaft of the blossoming tree
- Was shot from the yew-wood’s core.
- I stood to the touch of a key
- Turned in a fast-shut door.
- They rounded my garden, content,
- The small fry, clutching their fee,
- Their fruit of the wreath and the pole;
- And, chatter, hop, skip, they were sent,
- In a buzz of young company glee,
- Their natural music, swift shoal
- To the next easy shedders of pence.
- Why not? for they had me in tune
- With the hungers of my kind.
- Do readings of earth draw thence,
- Then a concord deeper than cries
- Of the Whither whose echo is Whence,
- To jar unanswered, shall rise
- As a fountain-jet in the mind
- Bowed dark o’er the falling and strewn.
- * * *
- Unwitting where it might lead,
- How it came, for the anguish to cease,
- And the Questions that sow not nor spin,
- This wisdom, rough-written, and black,
- As of veins that from venom bleed,
- I had with the peace within;
- Or patience, mortal of peace,
- Compressing the surgent strife
- In a heart laid open, not mailed,
- To the last blank hour of the rack,
- When struck the dividing knife:
- When the hand that never had failed
- In its pressure to mine hung slack.
- But this in myself did I know,
- Not needing a studious brow,
- Or trust in a governing star,
- While my ears held the jangled shout
- The children were lifting afar:
- That natures at interflow
- With all of their past and the now,
- Are chords to the Nature without,
- Orbs to the greater whole:
- First then, nor utterly then
- Till our lord of sensations at war,
- The rebel, the heart, yields place
- To brain, each prompting the soul.
- Thus our dear Earth we embrace
- For the milk, her strength to men.
- And crave we her medical herb,
- We have but to see and hear,
- Though pierced by the cruel acerb,
- The troops of the memories armed
- Hostile to strike at the nest
- That nourished and flew them warmed.
- Not she gives the tear for the tear.
- Weep, bleed, rave, writhe, be distraught,
- She is moveless. Not of her breast
- Are the symbols we conjure when Fear
- Takes leaven of Hope. I caught,
- With Death in me shrinking from Death,
- As cold from cold, for a sign
- Of the life beyond ashes: I cast,
- Believing the vision divine,
- Wings of that dream of my Youth
- To the spirit beloved: ’twas unglassed
- On her breast, in her depths austere:
- A flash through the mist, mere breath,
- Breath on a buckler of steel.
- For the flesh in revolt at her laws,
- Neither song nor smile in ruth,
- Nor promise of things to reveal,
- Has she, nor a word she saith:
- We are asking her wheels to pause.
- Well knows she the cry of unfaith.
- If we strain to the farther shore,
- We are catching at comfort near.
- Assurances, symbols, saws,
- Revelations in legends, light
- To eyes rolling darkness, these
- Desired of the flesh in affright,
- For the which it will swear to adore,
- She yields not for prayers at her knees;
- The woolly beast bleating will shear.
- These are our sensual dreams;
- Of the yearning to touch, to feel
- The dark Impalpable sure,
- And have the Unveiled appear;
- Whereon ever black she beams,
- Doth of her terrible deal,
- She who dotes over ripeness at play,
- Rosiness fondles and feeds,
- Guides it with shepherding crook,
- To her sports and her pastures alway.
- Not she gives the tear for the tear:
- Harsh wisdom gives Earth, no more;
- In one the spur and the curb:
- An answer to thoughts or deeds;
- To the Legends an alien look;
- To the Questions a figure of clay.
- Yet we have but to see and hear,
- Crave we her medical herb.
- For the road to her soul is the Real:
- The root of the growth of man:
- And the senses must traverse it fresh
- With a love that no scourge shall abate,
- To reach the lone heights where we scan
- In the mind’s rarer vision this flesh;
- In the charge of the Mother our fate;
- Her law as the one common weal.
- We, whom the view benumbs,
- We, quivering upward, each hour
- Know battle in air and in ground
- For the breath that goes as it comes,
- For the choice between sweet and sour,
- For the smallest grain of our worth:
- And he who the reckoning sums
- Finds nought in his hand save Earth.
- Of Earth are we stripped or crowned.
- The fleeting Present we crave,
- Barter our best to wed,
- In hope of a cushioned bower,
- What is it but Future and Past
- Like wind and tide at a wave!
- Idea of the senses, bred
- For the senses to snap and devour:
- Thin as the shell of a sound
- In delivery, withered in light.
- Cry we for permanence fast,
- Permanence hangs by the grave;
- Sits on the grave green-grassed,
- On the roll of the heaved grave-mound.
- By Death, as by Life, are we fed:
- The two are one spring; our bond
- With the numbers; with whom to unite
- Here feathers wings for beyond:
- Only they can waft us in flight.
- For they are Reality’s flower.
- Of them, and the contact with them,
- Issues Earth’s dearest daughter, the firm
- In footing, the stately of stem;
- Unshaken though elements lour;
- A warrior heart unquelled;
- Mirror of Earth, and guide
- To the Holies from sense withheld:
- Reason, man’s germinant fruit.
- She wrestles with our old worm
- Self in the narrow and wide:
- Relentless quencher of lies,
- With laughter she pierces the brute;
- And hear we her laughter peal,
- ’Tis Light in us dancing to scour
- The loathed recess of his dens;
- Scatter his monstrous bed,
- And hound him to harrow and plough.
- She is the world’s one prize;
- Our champion, rightfully head;
- The vessel whose piloted prow,
- Though Folly froth round, hiss and hoot,
- Leaves legible print at the keel.
- Nor least is the service she does,
- That service to her may cleanse
- The well of the Sorrows in us;
- For a common delight will drain
- The rank individual fens
- Of a wound refusing to heal
- While the old worm slavers its root.
- I bowed as a leaf in rain;
- As a tree when the leaf is shed
- To winds in the season at wane:
- And when from my soul I said,
- May the worm be trampled: smite,
- Sacred Reality! power
- Filled me to front it aright.
- I had come of my faith’s ordeal.
- It is not to stand on a tower
- And see the flat universe reel;
- Our mortal sublimities drop
- Like raiment by glisterlings worn,
- At a sweep of the scythe for the crop.
- Wisdom is won of its fight,
- The combat incessant; and dries
- To mummywrap perching a height.
- It chews the contemplative cud
- In peril of isolate scorn,
- Unfed of the onward flood.
- Nor view we a different morn
- If we gaze with the deeper sight,
- With the deeper thought forewise:
- The world is the same, seen through;
- The features of men are the same.
- But let their historian new
- In the language of nakedness write,
- Rejoice we to know not shame,
- Not a dread, not a doubt: to have done
- With the tortures of thought in the throes,
- Our animal tangle, and grasp
- Very sap of the vital in this:
- That from flesh unto spirit man grows
- Even here on the sod under sun:
- That she of the wanton’s kiss,
- Broken through with the bite of an asp,
- Is Mother of simple truth,
- Relentless quencher of lies;
- Eternal in thought; discerned
- In thought mid-ferry between
- The Life and the Death, which are one,
- As our breath in and out, joy or teen.
- She gives the rich vision to youth,
- If we will, of her prompting wise;
- Or men by the lash made lean,
- Who in harness the mind subserve,
- Their title to read her have earned;
- Having mastered sensation—insane
- At a stroke of the terrified nerve;
- And out of the sensual hive
- Grown to the flower of brain;
- To know her a thing alive,
- Whose aspects mutably swerve,
- Whose laws immutably reign.
- Our sentencer, clother in mist,
- Her morn bends breast to her noon,
- Noon to the hour dark-dyed,
- If we will, of her promptings wise:
- Her light is our own if we list.
- The legends that sweep her aside,
- Crying loud for an opiate boon,
- To comfort the human want,
- From the bosom of magical skies,
- She smiles on, marking their source:
- They read her with infant eyes.
- Good ships of morality they,
- For our crude developing force;
- Granite the thought to stay,
- That she is a thing alive
- To the living, the falling and strewn.
- But the Questions, the broods that haunt
- Sensation insurgent, may drive,
- The way of the channelling mole,
- Head in a ground-vault gaunt
- As your telescope’s skeleton moon.
- Barren comfort to these will she dole;
- Dead is her face to their cries.
- Intelligence pushing to taste
- A lesson from beasts might heed.
- They scatter a voice in the waste,
- Where any dry swish of a reed
- By grey-glassy water replies.
- ‘They see not above or below;
- Farthest are they from my soul,’
- Earth whispers: ‘they scarce have the thirst,
- Except to unriddle a rune;
- And I spin none; only show,
- Would humanity soar from its worst,
- Winged above darkness and dole,
- How flesh unto spirit must grow.
- Spirit raves not for a goal.
- Shapes in man’s likeness hewn
- Desires not; neither desires
- The sleep or the glory: it trusts;
- Uses my gifts, yet aspires;
- Dreams of a higher than it.
- The dream is an atmosphere;
- A scale still ascending to knit
- The clear to the loftier Clear.
- ’Tis Reason herself, tiptoe
- At the ultimate bound of her wit,
- On the verges of Night and Day.
- But is it a dream of the lusts,
- To my dustiest ’tis decreed;
- And them that so shuffle astray
- I touch with no key of gold
- For the wealth of the secret nook;
- Though I dote over ripeness at play,
- Rosiness fondle and feed,
- Guide it with shepherding crook
- To my sports and my pastures alway.
- The key will shriek in the lock,
- The door will rustily hinge,
- Will open on features of mould,
- To vanish corrupt at a glimpse,
- And mock as the wild echoes mock,
- Soulless in mimic, doth Greed
- Or the passion for fruitage tinge
- That dream, for your parricide imps
- To wing through the body of Time,
- Yourselves in slaying him slay.
- Much are you shots of your prime,
- You men of the act and the dream:
- And please you to fatten a weed
- That perishes, pledged to decay,
- ’Tis dearth in your season of need,
- Down the slopes of the shoreward way;—
- Nigh on the misty stream,
- Where Ferryman under his hood,
- With a call to be ready to pay
- The small coin, whitens red blood.
- But the young ethereal seed
- Shall bring you the bread no buyer
- Can have for his craving supreme;
- To my quenchless quick shall speed
- The soul at her wrestle rude
- With devil, with angel more dire;
- With the flesh, with the Fates, enringed.
- The dream of the blossom of Good
- Is your banner of battle unrolled
- In its waver and current and curve
- (Choir over choir white-winged,
- White-bosomed fold within fold):
- Hopeful of victory most
- When hard is the task to sustain
- Assaults of the fearful sense
- At a mind in desolate mood
- With the Whither, whose echo is Whence;
- And humanity’s clamour, lost, lost;
- And its clasp of the staves that snap;
- And evil abroad, as a main
- Uproarious, bursting its dyke.
- For back do you look, and lo,
- Forward the harvest of grain!—
- Numbers in council, awake
- To love more than things of my lap,
- Love me; and to let the types break,
- Men be grass, rocks rivers, all flow;
- All save the dream sink alike
- To the source of my vital in sap:
- Their battle, their loss, their ache,
- For my pledge of vitality know.
- The dream is the thought in the ghost;
- The thought sent flying for food;
- Eyeless, but sprung of an aim
- Supernal of Reason, to find
- The great Over-Reason we name
- Beneficence: mind seeking Mind.
- Dream of the blossom of Good,
- In its waver and current and curve,
- With the hopes of my offspring enscrolled!
- Soon to be seen of a host
- The flag of the Master I serve!
- And life in them doubled on Life,
- As flame upon flame, to behold,
- High over Time-tumbled sea,
- The bliss of his headship of strife,
- Him through handmaiden me.’
- CHANGE IN RECURRENCE
- I
- I STOOD at the gate of the cot
- Where my darling, with side-glance demure,
- Would spy, on her trim garden-plot,
- The busy wild things chase and lure.
- For these with their ways were her feast;
- They had surety no enemy lurked.
- Their deftest of tricks to their least
- She gathered in watch as she worked.
- II
- When berries were red on her ash,
- The blackbird would rifle them rough,
- Till the ground underneath looked a gash,
- And her rogue grew the round of a chough.
- The squirrel cocked ear o’er his hoop,
- Up the spruce, quick as eye, trailing brush.
- She knew any tit of the troop
- All as well as the snail-tapping thrush.
- III
- I gazed: ’twas the scene of the frame,
- With the face, the dear life for me, fled.
- No window a lute to my name,
- No watcher there plying the thread.
- But the blackbird hung peeking at will;
- The squirrel from cone hopped to cone;
- The thrush had a snail in his bill,
- And tap-tapped the shell hard on a stone.
- HYMN TO COLOUR
- I
- WITH Life and Death I walked when Love appeared,
- And made them on each side a shadow seem.
- Through wooded vales the land of dawn we neared,
- Where down smooth rapids whirls the helmless dream
- To fall on daylight; and night puts away
- Her darker veil for grey.
- II
- In that grey veil green grassblades brushed we by;
- We came where woods breathed sharp, and overhead
- Rocks raised clear horns on a transforming sky:
- Around, save for those shapes, with him who led
- And linked them, desert varied by no sign
- Of other life than mine.
- III
- By this the dark-winged planet, raying wide,
- From the mild pearl-glow to the rose upborne,
- Drew in his fires, less faint than far descried,
- Pure-fronted on a stronger wave of morn:
- And those two shapes the splendour interweaved,
- Hung web-like, sank and heaved.
- IV
- Love took my hand when hidden stood the sun
- To fling his robe on shoulder-heights of snow.
- Then said: There lie they, Life and Death in one.
- Whichever is, the other is: but know,
- It is thy craving self that thou dost see,
- Not in them seeing me.
- V
- Shall man into the mystery of breath,
- From his quick beating pulse a pathway spy?
- Or learn the secret of the shrouded death,
- By lifting up the lid of a white eye?
- Cleave thou thy way with fathering desire
- Of fire to reach to fire.
- VI
- Look now where Colour, the soul’s bridegroom, makes
- The house of heaven splendid for the bride.
- To him as leaps a fountain she awakes,
- In knotting arms, yet boundless: him beside,
- She holds the flower to heaven, and by his power
- Brings heaven to the flower.
- VII
- He gives her homeliness in desert air,
- And sovereignty in spaciousness; he leads
- Through widening chambers of surprise to where
- Throbs rapture near an end that aye recedes,
- Because his touch is infinite and lends
- A yonder to all ends.
- VIII
- Death begs of Life his blush; Life Death persuades
- To keep long day with his caresses graced.
- He is the heart of light, the wing of shades,
- The crown of beauty: never soul embraced
- Of him can harbour unfaith; soul of him
- Possessed walks never dim.
- IX
- Love eyed his rosy memories: he sang:
- O bloom of dawn, breathed up from the gold sheaf
- Held springing beneath Orient! that dost hang
- The space of dewdrops running over leaf;
- Thy fleetingness is bigger in the ghost
- Than Time with all his host!
- X
- Of thee to say behold, has said adieu:
- But love remembers how the sky was green,
- And how the grasses glimmered lightest blue;
- How saint-like grey took fervour: how the screen
- Of cloud grew violet; how thy moment came
- Between a blush and flame.
- XI
- Love saw the emissary eglantine
- Break wave round thy white feet above the gloom;
- Lay finger on thy star; thy raiment line
- With cherub wing and limb; wed thy soft bloom,
- Gold-quivering like sunrays in thistle-down,
- Earth under rolling brown.
- XII
- They do not look through love to look on thee,
- Grave heavenliness! nor know they joy of sight,
- Who deem the wave of rapt desire must be
- Its wrecking and last issue of delight.
- Dead seasons quicken in one petal-spot
- Of colour unforgot.
- XIII
- This way have men come out of brutishness
- To spell the letters of the sky and read
- A reflex upon earth else meaningless.
- With thee, O fount of the Untimed! to lead,
- Drink they of thee, thee eyeing, they unaged
- Shall on through brave wars waged.
- XIV
- More gardens will they win than any lost;
- The vile plucked out of them, the unlovely slain.
- Not forfeiting the beast with which they are crossed,
- To stature of the Gods will they attain.
- They shall uplift their Earth to meet her Lord,
- Themselves the attuning chord!
- XV
- The song had ceased; my vision with the song.
- Then of those Shadows, which one made descent
- Beside me I knew not: but Life ere long
- Came on me in the public ways and bent
- Eyes deeper than of old: Death met I too,
- And saw the dawn glow through.
- MEDITATION UNDER STARS
- WHAT links are ours with orbs that are
- So resolutely far:
- The solitary asks, and they
- Give radiance as from a shield:
- Still at the death of day,
- The seen, the unrevealed.
- Implacable they shine
- To us who would of Life obtain
- An answer for the life we strain
- To nourish with one sign.
- Nor can imagination throw
- The penetrative shaft: we pass
- The breath of thought, who would divine
- If haply they may grow
- As Earth; have our desire to know;
- If life comes there to grain from grass,
- And flowers like ours of toil and pain;
- Has passion to beat bar,
- Win space from cleaving brain;
- The mystic link attain,
- Whereby star holds on star.
- Those visible immortals beam
- Allurement to the dream:
- Ireful at human hungers brook
- No question in the look.
- For ever virgin to our sense,
- Remote they wane to gaze intense:
- Prolong it, and in ruthlessness they smite
- The beating heart behind the ball of sight:
- Till we conceive their heavens hoar,
- Those lights they raise but sparkles frore,
- And Earth, our blood-warm Earth, a shuddering prey
- To that frigidity of brainless ray.
- Yet space is given for breath of thought
- Beyond our bounds when musing: more
- When to that musing love is brought,
- And love is asked of love’s wherefore.
- ’Tis Earth’s, her gift; else have we nought:
- Her gift, her secret, here our tie.
- And not with her and yonder sky?
- Bethink you: were it Earth alone
- Breeds love, would not her region be
- The sole delight and throne
- Of generous Deity?
- To deeper than this ball of sight
- Appeal the lustrous people of the night.
- Fronting yon shoreless, sown with fiery sails,
- It is our ravenous that quails,
- Flesh by its craven thirsts and fears distraught.
- The spirit leaps alight,
- Doubts not in them is he,
- The binder of his sheaves, the sane, the right:
- Of magnitude to magnitude is wrought,
- To feel it large of the great life they hold:
- In them to come, or vaster intervolved,
- The issues known in us, our unsolved solved:
- That there with toil Life climbs the self-same Tree,
- Whose roots enrichment have from ripeness dropped.
- So may we read and little find them cold:
- Let it but be the lord of Mind to guide
- Our eyes; no branch of Reason’s growing lopped;
- Nor dreaming on a dream; but fortified
- By day to penetrate black midnight; see,
- Hear, feel, outside the senses; even that we,
- The specks of dust upon a mound of mould,
- We who reflect those rays, though low our place,
- To them are lastingly allied.
- So may we read, and little find them cold:
- Not frosty lamps illumining dead space,
- Not distant aliens, not senseless Powers.
- The fire is in them whereof we are born;
- The music of their motion may be ours.
- Spirit shall deem them beckoning Earth and voiced
- Sisterly to her, in her beams rejoiced.
- Of love, the grand impulsion, we behold
- The love that lends her grace
- Among the starry fold.
- Then at new flood of customary morn,
- Look at her through her showers,
- Her mists, her streaming gold,
- A wonder edges the familiar face:
- She wears no more that robe of printed hours;
- Half strange seems Earth, and sweeter than her flowers.
- WOODMAN AND ECHO
- CLOSE Echo hears the woodman’s axe,
- To double on it, as in glee,
- With clap of hands, and little lacks
- Of meaning in her repartee.
- For all shall fall,
- As one has done,
- The tree of me,
- Of thee the tree;
- And unto all
- The fate we wait
- Reveals the wheels
- Whereon we run:
- We tower to flower,
- We spread the shade,
- We drop for crop,
- At length are laid;
- Are rolled in mould,
- From chop and lop:
- And are we thick in woodland tracks,
- Or tempting of our stature we,
- The end is one, we do but wax
- For service over land and sea.
- So, strike! the like
- Shall thus of us,
- My brawny woodman, claim the tax.
- Nor foe thy blow,
- Though wood be good,
- And shriekingly the timber cracks:
- The ground we crowned
- Shall speed the seed
- Of younger into swelling sacks.
- For use he hews,
- To make awake
- The spirit of what stuff we be:
- Our earth of mirth
- And tears he clears
- For braver, let our minds agree;
- And then will men
- Within them win
- An Echo clapping harmony.
- THE WISDOM OF ELD
- WE spend our lives in learning pilotage,
- And grow good steersmen when the vessel’s crank!
- Gap-toothed he spake, and with a tottering shank
- Sidled to gain the sunny bench of Age.
- It is the sentence which completes that stage;
- A testament of wisdom reading blank.
- The seniors of the race, on their last plank,
- Pass mumbling it as nature’s final page.
- These, bent by such experience, are the band
- Who captain young enthusiasts to maintain
- What things we view, and Earth’s decree withstand,
- Lest dreaded Change, long dammed by dull decay,
- Should bring the world a vessel steered by brain,
- And ancients musical at close of day.
- EARTH’S PREFERENCE
- EARTH loves her young: a preference manifest:
- She prompts them to her fruits and flower-beds;
- Their beauty with her choicest interthreads,
- And makes her revel of their merry zest;
- As in our East much were it in our West,
- If men had risen to do the work of heads.
- Her gabbling grey she eyes askant, nor treads
- The ways they walk; by what they speak oppressed.
- How wrought they in their zenith? ’Tis not writ;
- Not all; yet she by one sure sign can read:
- Have they but held her laws and nature dear,
- They mouth no sentence of inverted wit.
- More prizes she her beasts than this high breed
- Wry in the shape she wastes her milk to rear.
- SOCIETY
- HISTORIC be the survey of our kind,
- And how their brave Society took shape.
- Lion, wolf, vulture, fox, jackal and ape,
- The strong of limb, the keen of nose, we find,
- Who, with some jars in harmony, combined,
- Their primal instincts taming, to escape
- The brawl indecent, and hot passions drape.
- Convenience pricked conscience, that the mind.
- Thus entered they the field of milder beasts,
- Which in some sort of civil order graze,
- And do half-homage to the God of Laws.
- But are they still for their old ravenous feasts,
- Earth gives the edifice they build no base:
- They spring another flood of fangs and claws.
- WINTER HEAVENS
- SHARP is the night, but stars with frost alive
- Leap off the rim of earth across the dome.
- It is a night to make the heavens our home
- More than the nest whereto apace we strive.
- Lengths down our road each fir-tree seems a hive,
- In swarms outrushing from the golden comb.
- They waken waves of thoughts that burst to foam:
- The living throb in me, the dead revive.
- Yon mantle clothes us: there, past mortal breath,
- Life glistens on the river of the death.
- It folds us, flesh and dust; and have we knelt,
- Or never knelt, or eyed as kine the springs
- Of radiance, the radiance enrings:
- And this is the soul’s haven to have felt.
- NOTES
- PHAETHON
- _The Galliambic Measure_
- Hermann (_Elementa Doctrinae Metricae_), after citing lines from the
- Tragic poet Phrynichus and from the Comic, observes:
- Dixi supra, Phrynichorum versus videri puros Ionicos esse. Id si verum
- est, Galliambi non alia re ab his differunt, quam quod anaclasin,
- contractionesque et solutiones recipiunt. Itaque versus Galliambicus ex
- duobus versibus Anacreonteis constat, quorum secundus catalecticus est,
- hac forma:
- [Picture: Graphic depiction of scheme]
- The wonderful _Attis_ of Catullus is the one classic example. A few
- lines have been gathered elsewhere. Lord Tennyson’s _Boadicea_ rides
- over many difficulties and is a noble poem. Catullus makes general use
- of the variant second of the above metrical forms:
- _Mihi januae frequentes_, _mihi limina tepida_:
- With stress on the emotion;
- _Jam_, _jam dolet quod egi_, _jam jamque poenitet_.
- A perfect conquest of the measure is not possible in our tongue. For the
- sake of an occasional success in the velocity, sweep, volume of the line,
- it seems worth an effort; and, if to some degree serviceable for
- narrative verse, it is one of the exercises of a writer which readers may
- be invited to share.
- THEODOLINDA
- The legend of the Iron Crown of Lombardy, formed of a nail of the true
- Cross by order of the devout Queen Theodolinda, is well known. In this
- dramatic song she is seen passing through one of the higher temptations
- of the believing Christian.
- * * * * *
- * * * * *
- Printed by T. and A. Constable, Printers to His Majesty
- at the Edinburgh University Press
- ***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS, VOLUME 2 [OF 3]***
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