- The Project Gutenberg eBook, Poems, Vol. 1 [of 3], by George Meredith
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- Title: Poems, Vol. 1 [of 3]
- Author: George Meredith
- Release Date: January 2, 2015 [eBook #1381]
- [This file was first posted on May 7, 1998]
- Language: English
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- ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS, VOL. 1 [OF 3]***
- Transcribed from the 1912 Times Book Club “Surrey Edition” by David
- Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
- [Picture: Book cover]
- [Picture: Home cottage, Box Hill]
- POEMS
- VOL. I
- 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
- CHILLIANWALLAH, 1
- Chillianwallah, Chillianwallah!
- THE DOE: A FRAGMENT, 3
- And—‘Yonder look! yoho! yoho!
- BEAUTY ROHTRAUT, 9
- What is the name of King Ringang’s daughter?
- THE OLIVE BRANCH, 11
- A dove flew with an Olive Branch;
- SONG, 16
- Love within the lover’s breast
- THE WILD ROSE AND THE SNOWDROP, 17
- The Snowdrop is the prophet of the flowers;
- THE DEATH OF WINTER, 19
- When April with her wild blue eye
- SONG, 21
- The moon is alone in the sky
- JOHN LACKLAND, 21
- A wicked man is bad enough on earth;
- THE SLEEPING CITY, 22
- A Princess in the eastern tale
- THE POETRY OF CHAUCER, 27
- Grey with all honours of age! but fresh-featured and
- ruddy
- THE POETRY OF SPENSER, 27
- Lakes where the sunsheen is mystic with splendour and
- softness;
- THE POETRY OF SHAKESPEARE, 28
- Picture some Isle smiling green ’mid the white-foaming
- ocean;—
- THE POETRY OF MILTON, 28
- Like to some deep-chested organ whose grand inspiration,
- THE POETRY OF SOUTHEY, 29
- Keen as an eagle whose flight towards the dim empyréan
- THE POETRY OF COLERIDGE, 29
- A brook glancing under green leaves, self-delighting,
- exulting,
- THE POETRY OF SHELLEY, 30
- See’st thou a Skylark whose glistening winglets ascending
- THE POETRY OF WORDSWORTH, 30
- A breath of the mountains, fresh born in the regions
- majestic,
- THE POETRY OF KEATS, 31
- The song of a nightingale sent thro’ a slumbrous valley,
- VIOLETS, 31
- Violets, shy violets!
- ANGELIC LOVE, 32
- Angelic love that stoops with heavenly lips
- TWILIGHT MUSIC, 34
- Know you the low pervading breeze
- REQUIEM, 36
- Where faces are hueless, where eyelids are dewless,
- THE FLOWER OF THE RUINS, 37
- Take thy lute and sing
- THE RAPE OF AURORA, 40
- Never, O never,
- SOUTH-WEST WIND IN THE WOODLAND, 42
- The silence of preluded song—
- WILL O’ THE WISP, 46
- Follow me, follow me,
- SONG, 49
- Fair and false! No dawn will greet
- SONG, 50
- Two wedded lovers watched the rising moon,
- SONG, 51
- I cannot lose thee for a day,
- DAPHNE, 52
- Musing on the fate of Daphne,
- LONDON BY LAMPLIGHT, 68
- There stands a singer in the street,
- SONG, 73
- Under boughs of breathing May,
- PASTORALS, 74
- How sweet on sunny afternoons,
- TO A SKYLARK, 74
- O skylark! I see thee and call thee joy!
- SONG—SPRING, 85
- When buds of palm do burst and spread
- SONG—AUTUMN, 85
- When nuts behind the hazel-leaf
- SORROWS AND JOYS, 86
- Bury thy sorrows, and they shall rise
- SONG, 88
- The Flower unfolds its dawning cup,
- SONG, 89
- Thou to me art such a spring
- ANTIGONE, 90
- The buried voice bespake Antigone.
- ‘SWATHED ROUND IN MIST AND CROWN’D WITH CLOUD,’ 92
- SONG, 93
- No, no, the falling blossom is no sign
- THE TWO BLACKBIRDS, 94
- A Blackbird in a wicker cage,
- JULY, 96
- Blue July, bright July,
- SONG, 98
- I would I were the drop of rain
- SONG, 99
- Come to me in any shape!
- THE SHIPWRECK OF IDOMENEUS, 100
- Swept from his fleet upon that fatal night
- THE LONGEST DAY, 112
- On yonder hills soft twilight dwells
- TO ROBIN REDBREAST, 114
- Merrily ’mid the faded leaves,
- SONG, 115
- The daisy now is out upon the green;
- SUNRISE, 117
- The clouds are withdrawn
- PICTURES OF THE RHINE, 120
- The spirit of Romance dies not to those
- TO A NIGHTINGALE, 123
- O nightingale! how hast thou learnt
- INVITATION TO THE COUNTRY, 124
- Now ’tis Spring on wood and wold,
- THE SWEET O’ THE YEAR, 126
- Now the frog, all lean and weak,
- AUTUMN EVEN-SONG, 128
- The long cloud edged with streaming grey
- THE SONG OF COURTESY, 129
- When Sir Gawain was led to his bridal-bed,
- THE THREE MAIDENS, 131
- There were three maidens met on the highway;
- OVER THE HILLS, 132
- The old hound wags his shaggy tail,
- JUGGLING JERRY, 134
- Pitch here the tent, while the old horse grazes:
- THE CROWN OF LOVE, 139
- O might I load my arms with thee,
- THE HEAD OF BRAN THE BLEST, 141
- When the Head of Bran
- THE MEETING, 145
- The old coach-road through a common of furze,
- THE BEGGAR’S SOLILOQUY, 146
- Now, this, to my notion, is pleasant cheer,
- BY THE ROSANNA TO F. M., 151
- The old grey Alp has caught the cloud,
- PHANTASY, 152
- Within a Temple of the Toes,
- THE OLD CHARTIST, 158
- Whate’er I be, old England is my dam!
- SONG, 163
- Should thy love die;
- TO ALEX. SMITH, THE ‘GLASGOW POET,’ 164
- Not vainly doth the earnest voice of man
- GRANDFATHER BRIDGEMAN, 165
- ‘Heigh, boys!’ cried Grandfather Bridgeman, ‘it’s time
- before dinner to-day.’
- THE PROMISE IN DISTURBANCE, 180
- How low when angels fall their black descent,
- MODERN LOVE, 181
- I. By this he knew she wept with waking eyes:
- II. It ended, and the morrow brought the task.
- III. This was the woman; what now of the man?
- IV. All other joys of life he strove to warm,
- V. A message from her set his brain aflame.
- VI. It chanced his lips did meet her forehead
- cool.
- VII. She issues radiant from her dressing-room,
- VIII. Yet it was plain she struggled, and that salt
- IX. He felt the wild beast in him betweenwhiles
- X. But where began the change; and what’s my
- crime?
- XI. Out in the yellow meadows, where the bee
- XII. Not solely that the Future she destroys,
- XIII. ‘I play for Seasons; not Eternities!’
- XIV. What soul would bargain for a cure that
- brings
- XV. I think she sleeps: it must be sleep, when
- low
- XVI. In our old shipwrecked days there was an
- hour,
- XVII. At dinner, she is hostess, I am host.
- XVIII. Here Jack and Tom are paired with Moll and
- Meg.
- XIX. No state is enviable. To the luck alone
- XX. I am not of those miserable males
- XXI. We three are on the cedar-shadowed lawn;
- XXII. What may the woman labour to confess?
- XXIII. ’Tis Christmas weather, and a country house
- XXIV. The misery is greater, as I live!
- XXV. You like not that French novel? Tell me why.
- XXVI. Love ere he bleeds, an eagle in high skies,
- XXVII. Distraction is the panacea, Sir!
- XXVIII. I must be flattered. The imperious
- XXIX. Am I failing? For no longer can I cast
- XXX. What are we first? First, animals; and next
- XXXI. This golden head has wit in it. I live
- XXXII. Full faith I have she holds that rarest gift
- XXXIII. ‘In Paris, at the Louvre, there have I seen
- XXXIV. Madam would speak with me. So, now it comes:
- XXXV. It is no vulgar nature I have wived.
- XXXVI. My Lady unto Madam makes her bow.
- XXXVII. Along the garden terrace, under which
- XXXVIII. Give to imagination some pure light
- XXXIX. She yields: my Lady in her noblest mood
- XL. I bade my Lady think what she might mean.
- XLI. How many a thing which we cast to the ground,
- XLII. I am to follow her. There is much grace
- XLIII. Mark where the pressing wind shoots
- javelin-like
- XLIV. They say, that Pity in Love’s service dwells,
- XLV. It is the season of the sweet wild rose,
- XLVI. At last we parley: we so strangely dumb
- XLVII. We saw the swallows gathering in the sky,
- XLVIII. Their sense is with their senses all mixed
- in,
- XLIX. He found her by the ocean’s moaning verge,
- L. Thus piteously Love closed what he begat:
- THE PATRIOT ENGINEER, 231
- ‘Sirs! may I shake your hands?
- CASSANDRA, 236
- Captive on a foreign shore,
- THE YOUNG USURPER, 240
- On my darling’s bosom
- MARGARET’S BRIDAL EVE, 241
- The old grey mother she thrummed on her knee:
- MARIAN, 248
- She can be as wise as we,
- BY MORNING TWILIGHT, 249
- Night, like a dying mother,
- UNKNOWN FAIR FACES, 249
- Though I am faithful to my loves lived through,
- SHEMSELNIHAR, 250
- O my lover! the night like a broad smooth wave
- A ROAR THROUGH THE TALL TWIN ELM-TREES, 252
- A roar thro’ the tall twin elm-trees
- WHEN I WOULD IMAGE, 252
- When I would image her features,
- THE SPIRIT OF SHAKESPEARE, 253
- Thy greatest knew thee, Mother Earth; unsoured
- CONTINUED, 253
- How smiles he at a generation ranked
- ODE TO THE SPIRIT OF EARTH IN AUTUMN, 254
- Fair Mother Earth lay on her back last night,
- MARTIN’S PUZZLE, 261
- There she goes up the street with her book in her hand,
- CHILLIANWALLAH {1}
- CHILLANWALLAH, Chillanwallah!
- Where our brothers fought and bled,
- O thy name is natural music
- And a dirge above the dead!
- Though we have not been defeated,
- Though we can’t be overcome,
- Still, whene’er thou art repeated,
- I would fain that grief were dumb.
- Chillianwallah, Chillianwallah!
- ’Tis a name so sad and strange,
- Like a breeze through midnight harpstrings
- Ringing many a mournful change;
- But the wildness and the sorrow
- Have a meaning of their own—
- Oh, whereof no glad to-morrow
- Can relieve the dismal tone!
- Chillianwallah, Chillianwallah!
- ’Tis a village dark and low,
- By the bloody Jhelum river
- Bridged by the foreboding foe;
- And across the wintry water
- He is ready to retreat,
- When the carnage and the slaughter
- Shall have paid for his defeat.
- Chillianwallah, Chillianwallah!
- ’Tis a wild and dreary plain,
- Strewn with plots of thickest jungle,
- Matted with the gory stain.
- There the murder-mouthed artillery,
- In the deadly ambuscade,
- Wrought the thunder of its treachery
- On the skeleton brigade.
- Chillianwallah, Chillianwallah!
- When the night set in with rain,
- Came the savage plundering devils
- To their work among the slain;
- And the wounded and the dying
- In cold blood did share the doom
- Of their comrades round them lying,
- Stiff in the dead skyless gloom.
- Chillianwallah, Chillianwallah!
- Thou wilt be a doleful chord,
- And a mystic note of mourning
- That will need no chiming word;
- And that heart will leap with anguish
- Who may understand thee best;
- But the hopes of all will languish
- Till thy memory is at rest.
- THE DOE: A FRAGMENT
- (_FROM_ ‘_WANDERING WILLIE_’)
- AND—‘Yonder look! yoho! yoho!
- Nancy is off!’ the farmer cried,
- Advancing by the river side,
- Red-kerchieft and brown-coated;—‘So,
- My girl, who else could leap like that?
- So neatly! like a lady! ‘Zounds!
- Look at her how she leads the hounds!’
- And waving his dusty beaver hat,
- He cheered across the chase-filled water,
- And clapt his arm about his daughter,
- And gave to Joan a courteous hug,
- And kiss that, like a stubborn plug
- From generous vats in vastness rounded,
- The inner wealth and spirit sounded:
- Eagerly pointing South, where, lo,
- The daintiest, fleetest-footed doe
- Led o’er the fields and thro’ the furze
- Beyond: her lively delicate ears
- Prickt up erect, and in her track
- A dappled lengthy-striding pack.
- Scarce had they cast eyes upon her,
- When every heart was wagered on her,
- And half in dread, and half delight,
- They watched her lovely bounding flight;
- As now across the flashing green,
- And now beneath the stately trees,
- And now far distant in the dene,
- She headed on with graceful ease:
- Hanging aloft with doubled knees,
- At times athwart some hedge or gate;
- And slackening pace by slow degrees,
- As for the foremost foe to wait.
- Renewing her outstripping rate
- Whene’er the hot pursuers neared,
- By garden wall and paled estate,
- Where clambering gazers whooped and cheered.
- Here winding under elm and oak,
- And slanting up the sunny hill:
- Splashing the water here like smoke
- Among the mill-holms round the mill.
- And—‘Let her go; she shows her game,
- My Nancy girl, my pet and treasure!’
- The farmer sighed: his eyes with pleasure
- Brimming: ‘’Tis my daughter’s name,
- My second daughter lying yonder.’
- And Willie’s eye in search did wander,
- And caught at once, with moist regard,
- The white gleams of a grey churchyard.
- ‘Three weeks before my girl had gone,
- And while upon her pillows propped,
- She lay at eve; the weakling fawn—
- For still it seems a fawn just dropt
- A se’nnight—to my Nancy’s bed
- I brought to make my girl a gift:
- The mothers of them both were dead:
- And both to bless it was my drift,
- By giving each a friend; not thinking
- How rapidly my girl was sinking.
- And I remember how, to pat
- Its neck, she stretched her hand so weak,
- And its cold nose against her cheek
- Pressed fondly: and I fetched the mat
- To make it up a couch just by her,
- Where in the lone dark hours to lie:
- For neither dear old nurse nor I
- Would any single wish deny her.
- And there unto the last it lay;
- And in the pastures cared to play
- Little or nothing: there its meals
- And milk I brought: and even now
- The creature such affection feels
- For that old room that, when and how,
- ’Tis strange to mark, it slinks and steals
- To get there, and all day conceals.
- And once when nurse who, since that time,
- Keeps house for me, was very sick,
- Waking upon the midnight chime,
- And listening to the stair-clock’s click,
- I heard a rustling, half uncertain,
- Close against the dark bed-curtain:
- And while I thrust my leg to kick,
- And feel the phantom with my feet,
- A loving tongue began to lick
- My left hand lying on the sheet;
- And warm sweet breath upon me blew,
- And that ’twas Nancy then I knew.
- So, for her love, I had good cause
- To have the creature “Nancy” christened.’
- He paused, and in the moment’s pause,
- His eyes and Willie’s strangely glistened.
- Nearer came Joan, and Bessy hung
- With face averted, near enough
- To hear, and sob unheard; the young
- And careless ones had scampered off
- Meantime, and sought the loftiest place
- To beacon the approaching chase.
- ‘Daily upon the meads to browse,
- Goes Nancy with those dairy cows
- You see behind the clematis:
- And such a favourite she is,
- That when fatigued, and helter skelter,
- Among them from her foes to shelter,
- She dashes when the chase is over,
- They’ll close her in and give her cover,
- And bend their horns against the hounds,
- And low, and keep them out of bounds!
- From the house dogs she dreads no harm,
- And is good friends with all the farm,
- Man, and bird, and beast, howbeit
- Their natures seem so opposite.
- And she is known for many a mile,
- And noted for her splendid style,
- For her clear leap and quick slight hoof;
- Welcome she is in many a roof.
- And if I say, I love her, man!
- I say but little: her fine eyes full
- Of memories of my girl, at Yule
- And May-time, make her dearer than
- Dumb brute to men has been, I think.
- So dear I do not find her dumb.
- I know her ways, her slightest wink,
- So well; and to my hand she’ll come,
- Sidelong, for food or a caress,
- Just like a loving human thing.
- Nor can I help, I do confess,
- Some touch of human sorrowing
- To think there may be such a doubt
- That from the next world she’ll be shut out,
- And parted from me! And well I mind
- How, when my girl’s last moments came,
- Her soft eyes very soft and kind,
- She joined her hands and prayed the same,
- That she “might meet her father, mother,
- Sister Bess, and each dear brother,
- And with them, if it might be, one
- Who was her last companion.”
- Meaning the fawn—the doe you mark—
- For my bay mare was then a foal,
- And time has passed since then:—but hark!’
- For like the shrieking of a soul
- Shut in a tomb, a darkened cry
- Of inward-wailing agony
- Surprised them, and all eyes on each
- Fixed in the mute-appealing speech
- Of self-reproachful apprehension:
- Knowing not what to think or do:
- But Joan, recovering first, broke through
- The instantaneous suspension,
- And knelt upon the ground, and guessed
- The bitterness at a glance, and pressed
- Into the comfort of her breast
- The deep-throed quaking shape that drooped
- In misery’s wilful aggravation,
- Before the farmer as he stooped,
- Touched with accusing consternation:
- Soothing her as she sobbed aloud:—
- ‘Not me! not me! Oh, no, no, no!
- Not me! God will not take me in!
- Nothing can wipe away my sin!
- I shall not see her: you will go;
- You and all that she loves so:
- Not me! not me! Oh, no, no, no!’
- Colourless, her long black hair,
- Like seaweed in a tempest tossed
- Tangling astray, to Joan’s care
- She yielded like a creature lost:
- Yielded, drooping toward the ground,
- As doth a shape one half-hour drowned,
- And heaved from sea with mast and spar,
- All dark of its immortal star.
- And on that tender heart, inured
- To flatter basest grief, and fight
- Despair upon the brink of night,
- She suffered herself to sink, assured
- Of refuge; and her ear inclined
- To comfort; and her thoughts resigned
- To counsel; her wild hair let brush
- From off her weeping brows; and shook
- With many little sobs that took
- Deeper-drawn breaths, till into sighs,
- Long sighs, they sank; and to the ‘hush!’
- Of Joan’s gentle chide, she sought
- Childlike to check them as she ought,
- Looking up at her infantwise.
- And Willie, gazing on them both,
- Shivered with bliss through blood and brain,
- To see the darling of his troth
- Like a maternal angel strain
- The sinful and the sinless child
- At once on either breast, and there
- In peace and promise reconciled
- Unite them: nor could Nature’s care
- With subtler sweet beneficence
- Have fed the springs of penitence,
- Still keeping true, though harshly tried,
- The vital prop of human pride.
- BEAUTY ROHTRAUT
- (_FROM MÖRICKE_)
- WHAT is the name of King Ringang’s daughter?
- Rohtraut, Beauty Rohtraut!
- And what does she do the livelong day,
- Since she dare not knit and spin alway?
- O hunting and fishing is ever her play!
- And, heigh! that her huntsman I might be!
- I’d hunt and fish right merrily!
- Be silent, heart!
- And it chanced that, after this some time,—
- Rohtraut, Beauty Rohtraut,—
- The boy in the Castle has gained access,
- And a horse he has got and a huntsman’s dress,
- To hunt and to fish with the merry Princess;
- And, O! that a king’s son I might be!
- Beauty Rohtraut I love so tenderly.
- Hush! hush! my heart.
- Under a grey old oak they sat,
- Beauty, Beauty Rohtraut!
- She laughs: ‘Why look you so slyly at me?
- If you have heart enough, come, kiss me.’
- Cried the breathless boy, ‘kiss thee?’
- But he thinks, kind fortune has favoured my youth;
- And thrice he has kissed Beauty Rohtraut’s mouth.
- Down! down! mad heart.
- Then slowly and silently they rode home,—
- Rohtraut, Beauty Rohtraut!
- The boy was lost in his delight:
- ‘And, wert thou Empress this very night,
- I would not heed or feel the blight;
- Ye thousand leaves of the wild wood wist
- How Beauty Rohtraut’s mouth I kiss’d.
- Hush! hush! wild heart.’
- THE OLIVE BRANCH
- A DOVE flew with an Olive Branch;
- It crossed the sea and reached the shore,
- And on a ship about to launch
- Dropped down the happy sign it bore.
- ‘An omen’ rang the glad acclaim!
- The Captain stooped and picked it up,
- ‘Be then the Olive Branch her name,’
- Cried she who flung the christening cup.
- The vessel took the laughing tides;
- It was a joyous revelry
- To see her dashing from her sides
- The rough, salt kisses of the sea.
- And forth into the bursting foam
- She spread her sail and sped away,
- The rolling surge her restless home,
- Her incense wreaths the showering spray.
- Far out, and where the riot waves
- Run mingling in tumultuous throngs,
- She danced above a thousand graves,
- And heard a thousand briny songs.
- Her mission with her manly crew,
- Her flag unfurl’d, her title told,
- She took the Old World to the New,
- And brought the New World to the Old.
- Secure of friendliest welcomings,
- She swam the havens sheening fair;
- Secure upon her glad white wings,
- She fluttered on the ocean air.
- To her no more the bastioned fort
- Shot out its swarthy tongue of fire;
- From bay to bay, from port to port,
- Her coming was the world’s desire.
- And tho’ the tempest lashed her oft,
- And tho’ the rocks had hungry teeth,
- And lightnings split the masts aloft,
- And thunders shook the planks beneath,
- And tho’ the storm, self-willed and blind,
- Made tatters of her dauntless sail,
- And all the wildness of the wind
- Was loosed on her, she did not fail;
- But gallantly she ploughed the main,
- And gloriously her welcome pealed,
- And grandly shone to sky and plain
- The goodly bales her decks revealed;
- Brought from the fruitful eastern glebes
- Where blow the gusts of balm and spice,
- Or where the black blockaded ribs
- Are jammed ’mongst ghostly fleets of ice,
- Or where upon the curling hills
- Glow clusters of the bright-eyed grape,
- Or where the hand of labour drills
- The stubbornness of earth to shape;
- Rich harvestings and wealthy germs,
- And handicrafts and shapely wares,
- And spinnings of the hermit worms,
- And fruits that bloom by lions’ lairs.
- Come, read the meaning of the deep!
- The use of winds and waters learn!
- ’Tis not to make the mother weep
- For sons that never will return;
- ’Tis not to make the nations show
- Contempt for all whom seas divide;
- ’Tis not to pamper war and woe,
- Nor feed traditionary pride;
- ’Tis not to make the floating bulk
- Mask death upon its slippery deck,
- Itself in turn a shattered hulk,
- A ghastly raft, a bleeding wreck.
- It is to knit with loving lip
- The interests of land to land;
- To join in far-seen fellowship
- The tropic and the polar strand.
- It is to make that foaming Strength
- Whose rebel forces wrestle still
- Thro’ all his boundaried breadth and length
- Become a vassal to our will.
- It is to make the various skies,
- And all the various fruits they vaunt,
- And all the dowers of earth we prize,
- Subservient to our household want.
- And more, for knowledge crowns the gain
- Of intercourse with other souls,
- And Wisdom travels not in vain
- The plunging spaces of the poles.
- The wild Atlantic’s weltering gloom,
- Earth-clasping seas of North and South,
- The Baltic with its amber spume,
- The Caspian with its frozen mouth;
- The broad Pacific, basking bright,
- And girdling lands of lustrous growth,
- Vast continents and isles of light,
- Dumb tracts of undiscovered sloth;
- She visits these, traversing each;
- They ripen to the common sun;
- Thro’ diverse forms and different speech,
- The world’s humanity is one.
- O may her voice have power to say
- How soon the wrecking discords cease,
- When every wandering wave is gay
- With golden argosies of peace!
- Now when the ark of human fate,
- Long baffled by the wayward wind,
- Is drifting with its peopled freight,
- Safe haven on the heights to find;
- Safe haven from the drowning slime
- Of evil deeds and Deluge wrath;—
- To plant again the foot of Time
- Upon a purer, firmer path;
- ’Tis now the hour to probe the ground,
- To watch the Heavens, to speak the word,
- The fathoms of the deep to sound,
- And send abroad the missioned bird,
- On strengthened wing for evermore,
- Let Science, swiftly as she can,
- Fly seaward on from shore to shore,
- And bind the links of man to man;
- And like that fair propitious Dove
- Bless future fleets about to launch;
- Make every freight a freight of love,
- And every ship an Olive Branch.
- SONG
- LOVE within the lover’s breast
- Burns like Hesper in the west,
- O’er the ashes of the sun,
- Till the day and night are done;
- Then when dawn drives up her car—
- Lo! it is the morning star.
- Love! thy love pours down on mine
- As the sunlight on the vine,
- As the snow-rill on the vale,
- As the salt breeze in the sail;
- As the song unto the bird,
- On my lips thy name is heard.
- As a dewdrop on the rose
- In thy heart my passion glows,
- As a skylark to the sky
- Up into thy breast I fly;
- As a sea-shell of the sea
- Ever shall I sing of thee.
- THE WILD ROSE AND THE SNOWDROP
- THE Snowdrop is the prophet of the flowers;
- It lives and dies upon its bed of snows;
- And like a thought of spring it comes and goes,
- Hanging its head beside our leafless bowers.
- The sun’s betrothing kiss it never knows,
- Nor all the glowing joy of golden showers;
- But ever in a placid, pure repose,
- More like a spirit with its look serene,
- Droops its pale cheek veined thro’ with infant green.
- Queen of her sisters is the sweet Wild Rose,
- Sprung from the earnest sun and ripe young June;
- The year’s own darling and the Summer’s Queen!
- Lustrous as the new-throned crescent moon.
- Much of that early prophet look she shows,
- Mixed with her fair espoused blush which glows,
- As if the ethereal fairy blood were seen;
- Like a soft evening over sunset snows,
- Half twilight violet shade, half crimson sheen.
- Twin-born are both in beauteousness, most fair
- In all that glads the eye and charms the air;
- In all that wakes emotions in the mind
- And sows sweet sympathies for human kind.
- Twin-born, albeit their seasons are apart,
- They bloom together in the thoughtful heart;
- Fair symbols of the marvels of our state,
- Mute speakers of the oracles of fate!
- For each, fulfilling nature’s law, fulfils
- Itself and its own aspirations pure;
- Living and dying; letting faith ensure
- New life when deathless Spring shall touch the hills.
- Each perfect in its place; and each content
- With that perfection which its being meant:
- Divided not by months that intervene,
- But linked by all the flowers that bud between.
- Forever smiling thro’ its season brief,
- The one in glory and the one in grief:
- Forever painting to our museful sight,
- How lowlihead and loveliness unite.
- Born from the first blind yearning of the earth
- To be a mother and give happy birth,
- Ere yet the northern sun such rapture brings,
- Lo, from her virgin breast the Snowdrop springs;
- And ere the snows have melted from the grass,
- And not a strip of greensward doth appear,
- Save the faint prophecy its cheeks declare,
- Alone, unkissed, unloved, behold it pass!
- While in the ripe enthronement of the year,
- Whispering the breeze, and wedding the rich air
- With her so sweet, delicious bridal breath,—
- Odorous and exquisite beyond compare,
- And starr’d with dews upon her forehead clear,
- Fresh-hearted as a Maiden Queen should be
- Who takes the land’s devotion as her fee,—
- The Wild Rose blooms, all summer for her dower,
- Nature’s most beautiful and perfect flower.
- THE DEATH OF WINTER
- WHEN April with her wild blue eye
- Comes dancing over the grass,
- And all the crimson buds so shy
- Peep out to see her pass;
- As lightly she loosens her showery locks
- And flutters her rainy wings;
- Laughingly stoops
- To the glass of the stream,
- And loosens and loops
- Her hair by the gleam,
- While all the young villagers blithe as the flocks
- Go frolicking round in rings;—
- Then Winter, he who tamed the fly,
- Turns on his back and prepares to die,
- For he cannot live longer under the sky.
- Down the valleys glittering green,
- Down from the hills in snowy rills,
- He melts between the border sheen
- And leaps the flowery verges!
- He cannot choose but brighten their hues,
- And tho’ he would creep, he fain must leap,
- For the quick Spring spirit urges.
- Down the vale and down the dale
- He leaps and lights, till his moments fail,
- Buried in blossoms red and pale,
- While the sweet birds sing his dirges!
- O Winter! I’d live that life of thine,
- With a frosty brow and an icicle tongue,
- And never a song my whole life long,—
- Were such delicious burial mine!
- To die and be buried, and so remain
- A wandering brook in April’s train,
- Fixing my dying eyes for aye
- On the dawning brows of maiden May.
- SONG
- THE moon is alone in the sky
- As thou in my soul;
- The sea takes her image to lie
- Where the white ripples roll
- All night in a dream,
- With the light of her beam,
- Hushedly, mournfully, mistily up to the shore.
- The pebbles speak low
- In the ebb and the flow,
- As I when thy voice came at intervals, tuned to adore:
- Nought other stirred
- Save my heart all unheard
- Beating to bliss that is past evermore.
- JOHN LACKLAND
- A WICKED man is bad enough on earth;
- But O the baleful lustre of a chief
- Once pledged in tyranny! O star of dearth
- Darkly illumining a nation’s grief!
- How many men have worn thee on their brows!
- Alas for them and us! God’s precious gift
- Of gracious dispensation got by theft—
- The damning form of false unholy vows!
- The thief of God and man must have his fee:
- And thou, John Lackland, despicable prince—
- Basest of England’s banes before or since!
- Thrice traitor, coward, thief! O thou shalt be
- The historic warning, trampled and abhorr’d
- Who dared to steal and stain the symbols of the Lord!
- THE SLEEPING CITY
- A PRINCESS in the eastern tale
- Paced thro’ a marble city pale,
- And saw in ghastly shapes of stone
- The sculptured life she breathed alone;
- Saw, where’er her eye might range,
- Herself the only child of change;
- And heard her echoed footfall chime
- Between Oblivion and Time;
- And in the squares where fountains played,
- And up the spiral balustrade,
- Along the drowsy corridors,
- Even to the inmost sleeping floors,
- Surveyed in wonder chilled with dread
- The seemingness of Death, not dead;
- Life’s semblance but without its storm,
- And silence frosting every form;
- Crowned figures, cold and grouping slaves,
- Like suddenly arrested waves
- About to sink, about to rise,—
- Strange meaning in their stricken eyes;
- And cloths and couches live with flame
- Of leopards fierce and lions tame,
- And hunters in the jungle reed,
- Thrown out by sombre glowing brede;
- Dumb chambers hushed with fold on fold,
- And cumbrous gorgeousness of gold;
- White casements o’er embroidered seats,
- Looking on solitudes of streets,—
- On palaces and column’d towers,
- Unconscious of the stony hours;
- Harsh gateways startled at a sound,
- With burning lamps all burnish’d round;—
- Surveyed in awe this wealth and state,
- Touched by the finger of a Fate,
- And drew with slow-awakening fear
- The sternness of the atmosphere;—
- And gradually, with stealthier foot,
- Became herself a thing as mute,
- And listened,—while with swift alarm
- Her alien heart shrank from the charm;
- Yet as her thoughts dilating rose,
- Took glory in the great repose,
- And over every postured form
- Spread lava-like and brooded warm,—
- And fixed on every frozen face
- Beheld the record of its race,
- And in each chiselled feature knew
- The stormy life that once blushed thro’;—
- The ever-present of the past
- There written; all that lightened last,
- Love, anguish, hope, disease, despair,
- Beauty and rage, all written there;—
- Enchanted Passions! whose pale doom
- Is never flushed by blight or bloom,
- But sentinelled by silent orbs,
- Whose light the pallid scene absorbs.—
- Like such a one I pace along
- This City with its sleeping throng;
- Like her with dread and awe, that turns
- To rapture, and sublimely yearns;—
- For now the quiet stars look down
- On lights as quiet as their own;
- The streets that groaned with traffic show
- As if with silence paved below;
- The latest revellers are at peace,
- The signs of in-door tumult cease,
- From gay saloon and low resort,
- Comes not one murmur or report:
- The clattering chariot rolls not by,
- The windows show no waking eye,
- The houses smoke not, and the air
- Is clear, and all the midnight fair.
- The centre of the striving world,
- Round which the human fate is curled,
- To which the future crieth wild,—
- Is pillowed like a cradled child.
- The palace roof that guards a crown,
- The mansion swathed in dreamy down,
- Hovel, court, and alley-shed,
- Sleep in the calmness of the dead.
- Now while the many-motived heart
- Lies hushed—fireside and busy mart,
- And mortal pulses beat the tune
- That charms the calm cold ear o’ the moon
- Whose yellowing crescent down the West
- Leans listening, now when every breast
- Its basest or its purest heaves,
- The soul that joys, the soul that grieves;—
- While Fame is crowning happy brows
- That day will blindly scorn, while vows
- Of anguished love, long hidden, speak
- From faltering tongue and flushing cheek
- The language only known to dreams,
- Rich eloquence of rosy themes!
- While on the Beauty’s folded mouth
- Disdain just wrinkles baby youth;
- While Poverty dispenses alms
- To outcasts, bread, and healing balms;
- While old Mammon knows himself
- The greatest beggar for his pelf;
- While noble things in darkness grope,
- The Statesman’s aim, the Poet’s hope;
- The Patriot’s impulse gathers fire,
- And germs of future fruits aspire;—
- Now while dumb nature owns its links,
- And from one common fountain drinks,
- Methinks in all around I see
- This Picture in Eternity;—
- A marbled City planted there
- With all its pageants and despair;
- A peopled hush, a Death not dead,
- But stricken with Medusa’s head;—
- And in the Gorgon’s glance for aye
- The lifeless immortality
- Reveals in sculptured calmness all
- Its latest life beyond recall.
- THE POETRY OF CHAUCER
- GREY with all honours of age! but fresh-featured and ruddy
- As dawn when the drowsy farm-yard has thrice heard Chaunticlere.
- Tender to tearfulness—childlike, and manly, and motherly;
- Here beats true English blood richest joyance on sweet English ground.
- THE POETRY OF SPENSER
- LAKES where the sunsheen is mystic with splendour and softness;
- Vales where sweet life is all Summer with golden romance:
- Forests that glimmer with twilight round revel-bright palaces;
- Here in our May-blood we wander, careering ’mongst ladies and knights.
- THE POETRY OF SHAKESPEARE
- PICTURE some Isle smiling green ’mid the white-foaming ocean;—
- Full of old woods, leafy wisdoms, and frolicsome fays;
- Passions and pageants; sweet love singing bird-like above it;
- Life in all shapes, aims, and fates, is there warm’d by one great
- human heart.
- THE POETRY OF MILTON
- LIKE to some deep-chested organ whose grand inspiration,
- Serenely majestic in utterance, lofty and calm,
- Interprets to mortals with melody great as its burthen
- The mystical harmonies chiming for ever throughout the bright spheres.
- THE POETRY OF SOUTHEY
- KEEN as an eagle whose flight towards the dim empyréan
- Fearless of toil or fatigue ever royally wends!
- Vast in the cloud-coloured robes of the balm-breathing Orient
- Lo! the grand Epic advances, unfolding the humanest truth.
- THE POETRY OF COLERIDGE
- A BROOK glancing under green leaves, self-delighting, exulting,
- And full of a gurgling melody ever renewed—
- Renewed thro’ all changes of Heaven, unceasing in sunlight,
- Unceasing in moonlight, but hushed in the beams of the holier orb.
- THE POETRY OF SHELLEY
- SEE’ST thou a Skylark whose glistening winglets ascending
- Quiver like pulses beneath the melodious dawn?
- Deep in the heart-yearning distance of heaven it flutters—
- Wisdom and beauty and love are the treasures it brings down at eve.
- THE POETRY OF WORDSWORTH
- A BREATH of the mountains, fresh born in the regions majestic,
- That look with their eye-daring summits deep into the sky.
- The voice of great Nature; sublime with her lofty conceptions,
- Yet earnest and simple as any sweet child of the green lowly vale.
- THE POETRY OF KEATS
- THE song of a nightingale sent thro’ a slumbrous valley,
- Low-lidded with twilight, and tranced with the dolorous sound,
- Tranced with a tender enchantment; the yearning of passion
- That wins immortality even while panting delirious with death.
- VIOLETS
- VIOLETS, shy violets!
- How many hearts with you compare!
- Who hide themselves in thickest green,
- And thence, unseen,
- Ravish the enraptured air
- With sweetness, dewy fresh and rare!
- Violets, shy violets!
- Human hearts to me shall be
- Viewless violets in the grass,
- And as I pass,
- Odours and sweet imagery
- Will wait on mine and gladden me!
- ANGELIC LOVE
- ANGELIC love that stoops with heavenly lips
- To meet its earthly mate;
- Heroic love that to its sphere’s eclipse
- Can dare to join its fate
- With one beloved devoted human heart,
- And share with it the passion and the smart,
- The undying bliss
- Of its most fleeting kiss;
- The fading grace
- Of its most sweet embrace:—
- Angelic love, heroic love!
- Whose birth can only be above,
- Whose wandering must be on earth,
- Whose haven where it first had birth!
- Love that can part with all but its own worth,
- And joy in every sacrifice
- That beautifies its Paradise!
- And gently, like a golden-fruited vine,
- With earnest tenderness itself consign,
- And creeping up deliriously entwine
- Its dear delicious arms
- Round the beloved being!
- With fair unfolded charms,
- All-trusting, and all-seeing,—
- Grape-laden with full bunches of young wine!
- While to the panting heart’s dry yearning drouth
- Buds the rich dewy mouth—
- Tenderly uplifted,
- Like two rose-leaves drifted
- Down in a long warm sigh of the sweet South!
- Such love, such love is thine,
- Such heart is mine,
- O thou of mortal visions most divine!
- TWILIGHT MUSIC
- KNOW you the low pervading breeze
- That softly sings
- In the trembling leaves of twilight trees,
- As if the wind were dreaming on its wings?
- And have you marked their still degrees
- Of ebbing melody, like the strings
- Of a silver harp swept by a spirit’s hand
- In some strange glimmering land,
- ’Mid gushing springs,
- And glistenings
- Of waters and of planets, wild and grand!
- And have you marked in that still time
- The chariots of those shining cars
- Brighten upon the hushing dark,
- And bent to hark
- That Voice, amid the poplar and the lime,
- Pause in the dilating lustre
- Of the spheral cluster;
- Pause but to renew its sweetness, deep
- As dreams of heaven to souls that sleep!
- And felt, despite earth’s jarring wars,
- When day is done
- And dead the sun,
- Still a voice divine can sing,
- Still is there sympathy can bring
- A whisper from the stars!
- Ah, with this sentience quickly will you know
- How like a tree I tremble to the tones
- Of your sweet voice!
- How keenly I rejoice
- When in me with sweet motions slow
- The spiritual music ebbs and moans—
- Lives in the lustre of those heavenly eyes,
- Dies in the light of its own paradise,—
- Dies, and relives eternal from its death,
- Immortal melodies in each deep breath;
- Sweeps thro’ my being, bearing up to thee
- Myself, the weight of its eternity;
- Till, nerved to life from its ordeal fire,
- It marries music with the human lyre,
- Blending divine delight with loveliest desire.
- REQUIEM
- WHERE faces are hueless, where eyelids are dewless,
- Where passion is silent and hearts never crave;
- Where thought hath no theme, and where sleep hath no dream,
- In patience and peace thou art gone—to thy grave!
- Gone where no warning can wake thee to morning,
- Dead tho’ a thousand hands stretch’d out to save.
- Thou cam’st to us sighing, and singing and dying,
- How could it be otherwise, fair as thou wert?
- Placidly fading, and sinking and shading
- At last to that shadow, the latest desert;
- Wasting and waning, but still, still remaining.
- Alas for the hand that could deal the death-hurt!
- The Summer that brightens, the Winter that whitens,
- The world and its voices, the sea and the sky,
- The bloom of creation, the tie of relation,
- All—all is a blank to thine ear and thine eye;
- The ear may not listen, the eye may not glisten,
- Nevermore waked by a smile or a sigh.
- The tree that is rootless must ever be fruitless;
- And thou art alone in thy death and thy birth;
- No last loving token of wedded love broken,
- No sign of thy singleness, sweetness and worth;
- Lost as the flower that is drowned in the shower,
- Fall’n like a snowflake to melt in the earth.
- THE FLOWER OF THE RUINS
- TAKE thy lute and sing
- By the ruined castle walls,
- Where the torrent-foam falls,
- And long weeds wave:
- Take thy lute and sing,
- O’er the grey ancestral grave!
- Daughter of a King,
- Tune thy string.
- Sing of happy hours,
- In the roar of rushing time;
- Till all the echoes chime
- To the days gone by;
- Sing of passing hours
- To the ever-present sky;—
- Weep—and let the showers
- Wake thy flowers.
- Sing of glories gone:—
- No more the blazoned fold
- From the banner is unrolled;
- The gold sun is set.
- Sing his glory gone,
- For thy voice may charm him yet;
- Daughter of the dawn,
- He is gone!
- Pour forth all thy grief!
- Passionately sweep the chords,
- Wed them quivering to thy words;
- Wild words of wail!
- Shed thy withered grief—
- But hold not Autumn to thy bale;
- The eddy of the leaf
- Must be brief!
- Sing up to the night:
- Hard it is for streaming tears
- To read the calmness of the spheres;
- Coldly they shine;
- Sing up to their light;
- They have views thou may’st divine—
- Gain prophetic sight
- From their light!
- On the windy hills
- Lo, the little harebell leans
- On the spire-grass that it queens,
- With bonnet blue;
- Trusting love instils
- Love and subject reverence true;
- Learn what love instils
- On the hills!
- By the bare wayside
- Placid snowdrops hang their cheeks,
- Softly touch’d with pale green streaks,
- Soon, soon, to die;
- On the clothed hedgeside
- Bands of rosy beauties vie,
- In their prophesied
- Summer pride.
- From the snowdrop learn;
- Not in her pale life lives she,
- But in her blushing prophecy.
- Thus be thy hopes,
- Living but to yearn
- Upwards to the hidden scopes;—
- Even within the urn
- Let them burn!
- Heroes of thy race—
- Warriors with golden crowns,
- Ghostly shapes with marbled frowns
- Stare thee to stone;
- Matrons of thy race
- Pass before thee making moan;
- Full of solemn grace
- Is their pace.
- Piteous their despair!
- Piteous their looks forlorn!
- Terrible their ghostly scorn!
- Still hold thou fast;—
- Heed not their despair!—
- Thou art thy future, not thy past;
- Let them glance and glare
- Thro’ the air.
- Thou the ruin’s bud,
- Be not that moist rich-smelling weed
- With its arras-sembled brede,
- And ruin-haunting stalk;
- Thou the ruin’s bud,
- Be still the rose that lights the walk,
- Mix thy fragrant blood
- With the flood!
- THE RAPE OF AURORA
- NEVER, O never,
- Since dewy sweet Flora
- Was ravished by Zephyr,
- Was such a thing heard
- In the valleys so hollow!
- Till rosy Aurora,
- Uprising as ever,
- Bright Phosphor to follow,
- Pale Phoebe to sever,
- Was caught like a bird
- To the breast of Apollo!
- Wildly she flutters,
- And flushes all over
- With passionate mutters
- Of shame to the hush
- Of his amorous whispers:
- But O such a lover
- Must win when he utters,
- Thro’ rosy red lispers,
- The pains that discover
- The wishes that gush
- From the torches of Hesperus.
- One finger just touching
- The Orient chamber,
- Unflooded the gushing
- Of light that illumed
- All her lustrous unveiling.
- On clouds of glow amber,
- Her limbs richly blushing,
- She lay sweetly wailing,
- In odours that gloomed
- On the God as he bloomed
- O’er her loveliness paling.
- Great Pan in his covert
- Beheld the rare glistening,
- The cry of the love-hurt,
- The sigh and the kiss
- Of the latest close mingling;
- But love, thought he, listening,
- Will not do a dove hurt,
- I know,—and a tingling,
- Latent with bliss,
- Prickt thro’ him, I wis,
- For the Nymph he was singling.
- SOUTH-WEST WIND IN THE WOODLAND
- THE silence of preluded song—
- Æolian silence charms the woods;
- Each tree a harp, whose foliaged strings
- Are waiting for the master’s touch
- To sweep them into storms of joy,
- Stands mute and whispers not; the birds
- Brood dumb in their foreboding nests,
- Save here and there a chirp or tweet,
- That utters fear or anxious love,
- Or when the ouzel sends a swift
- Half warble, shrinking back again
- His golden bill, or when aloud
- The storm-cock warns the dusking hills
- And villages and valleys round:
- For lo, beneath those ragged clouds
- That skirt the opening west, a stream
- Of yellow light and windy flame
- Spreads lengthening southward, and the sky
- Begins to gloom, and o’er the ground
- A moan of coming blasts creeps low
- And rustles in the crisping grass;
- Till suddenly with mighty arms
- Outspread, that reach the horizon round,
- The great South-West drives o’er the earth,
- And loosens all his roaring robes
- Behind him, over heath and moor.
- He comes upon the neck of night,
- Like one that leaps a fiery steed
- Whose keen black haunches quivering shine
- With eagerness and haste, that needs
- No spur to make the dark leagues fly!
- Whose eyes are meteors of speed;
- Whose mane is as a flashing foam;
- Whose hoofs are travelling thunder-shocks;—
- He comes, and while his growing gusts,
- Wild couriers of his reckless course,
- Are whistling from the daggered gorse,
- And hurrying over fern and broom,
- Midway, far off, he feigns to halt
- And gather in his streaming train.
- Now, whirring like an eagle’s wing
- Preparing for a wide blue flight;
- Now, flapping like a sail that tacks
- And chides the wet bewildered mast;
- Now, screaming like an anguish’d thing
- Chased close by some down-breathing beak;
- Now, wailing like a breaking heart,
- That will not wholly break, but hopes
- With hope that knows itself in vain;
- Now, threatening like a storm-charged cloud;
- Now, cooing like a woodland dove;
- Now, up again in roar and wrath
- High soaring and wide sweeping; now,
- With sudden fury dashing down
- Full-force on the awaiting woods.
- Long waited there, for aspens frail
- That tinkle with a silver bell,
- To warn the Zephyr of their love,
- When danger is at hand, and wake
- The neighbouring boughs, surrendering all
- Their prophet harmony of leaves,
- Had caught his earliest windward thought,
- And told it trembling; naked birk
- Down showering her dishevelled hair,
- And like a beauty yielding up
- Her fate to all the elements,
- Had swayed in answer; hazels close,
- Thick brambles and dark brushwood tufts,
- And briared brakes that line the dells
- With shaggy beetling brows, had sung
- Shrill music, while the tattered flaws
- Tore over them, and now the whole
- Tumultuous concords, seized at once
- With savage inspiration,—pine,
- And larch, and beech, and fir, and thorn,
- And ash, and oak, and oakling, rave
- And shriek, and shout, and whirl, and toss,
- And stretch their arms, and split, and crack,
- And bend their stems, and bow their heads,
- And grind, and groan, and lion-like
- Roar to the echo-peopled hills
- And ravenous wilds, and crake-like cry
- With harsh delight, and cave-like call
- With hollow mouth, and harp-like thrill
- With mighty melodies, sublime,
- From clumps of column’d pines that wave
- A lofty anthem to the sky,
- Fit music for a prophet’s soul—
- And like an ocean gathering power,
- And murmuring deep, while down below
- Reigns calm profound;—not trembling now
- The aspens, but like freshening waves
- That fall upon a shingly beach;—
- And round the oak a solemn roll
- Of organ harmony ascends,
- And in the upper foliage sounds
- A symphony of distant seas.
- The voice of nature is abroad
- This night; she fills the air with balm;
- Her mystery is o’er the land;
- And who that hears her now and yields
- His being to her yearning tones,
- And seats his soul upon her wings,
- And broadens o’er the wind-swept world
- With her, will gather in the flight
- More knowledge of her secret, more
- Delight in her beneficence,
- Than hours of musing, or the lore
- That lives with men could ever give!
- Nor will it pass away when morn
- Shall look upon the lulling leaves,
- And woodland sunshine, Eden-sweet,
- Dreams o’er the paths of peaceful shade;—
- For every elemental power
- Is kindred to our hearts, and once
- Acknowledged, wedded, once embraced,
- Once taken to the unfettered sense,
- Once claspt into the naked life,
- The union is eternal.
- WILL O’ THE WISP
- FOLLOW me, follow me,
- Over brake and under tree,
- Thro’ the bosky tanglery,
- Brushwood and bramble!
- Follow me, follow me,
- Laugh and leap and scramble!
- Follow, follow,
- Hill and hollow,
- Fosse and burrow,
- Fen and furrow,
- Down into the bulrush beds,
- ’Midst the reeds and osier heads,
- In the rushy soaking damps,
- Where the vapours pitch their camps,
- Follow me, follow me,
- For a midnight ramble!
- O! what a mighty fog,
- What a merry night O ho!
- Follow, follow, nigher, nigher—
- Over bank, and pond, and briar,
- Down into the croaking ditches,
- Rotten log,
- Spotted frog,
- Beetle bright
- With crawling light,
- What a joy O ho!
- Deep into the purple bog—
- What a joy O ho!
- Where like hosts of puckered witches
- All the shivering agues sit
- Warming hands and chafing feet,
- By the blue marsh-hovering oils:
- O the fools for all their moans!
- Not a forest mad with fire
- Could still their teeth, or warm their bones,
- Or loose them from their chilly coils.
- What a clatter,
- How they chatter!
- Shrink and huddle,
- All a muddle!
- What a joy O ho!
- Down we go, down we go,
- What a joy O ho!
- Soon shall I be down below,
- Plunging with a grey fat friar,
- Hither, thither, to and fro,
- Breathing mists and whisking lamps,
- Plashing in the shiny swamps;
- While my cousin Lantern Jack,
- With cook ears and cunning eyes,
- Turns him round upon his back,
- Daubs him oozy green and black,
- Sits upon his rolling size,
- Where he lies, where he lies,
- Groaning full of sack—
- Staring with his great round eyes!
- What a joy O ho!
- Sits upon him in the swamps
- Breathing mists and whisking lamps!
- What a joy O ho!
- Such a lad is Lantern Jack,
- When he rides the black nightmare
- Through the fens, and puts a glare
- In the friar’s track.
- Such a frolic lad, good lack!
- To turn a friar on his back,
- Trip him, clip him, whip him, nip him.
- Lay him sprawling, smack!
- Such a lad is Lantern Jack!
- Such a tricksy lad, good lack!
- What a joy O ho!
- Follow me, follow me,
- Where he sits, and you shall see!
- SONG
- FAIR and false! No dawn will greet
- Thy waking beauty as of old;
- The little flower beneath thy feet
- Is alien to thy smile so cold;
- The merry bird flown up to meet
- Young morning from his nest i’ the wheat
- Scatters his joy to wood and wold,
- But scorns the arrogance of gold.
- False and fair! I scarce know why,
- But standing in the lonely air,
- And underneath the blessed sky,
- I plead for thee in my despair;—
- For thee cut off, both heart and eye
- From living truth; thy spring quite dry;
- For thee, that heaven my thought may share,
- Forget—how false! and think—how fair!
- SONG
- TWO wedded lovers watched the rising moon,
- That with her strange mysterious beauty glowing,
- Over misty hills and waters flowing,
- Crowned the long twilight loveliness of June:
- And thus in me, and thus in me, they spake,
- The solemn secret of fist love did wake.
- Above the hills the blushing orb arose;
- Her shape encircled by a radiant bower,
- In which the nightingale with charméd power
- Poured forth enchantment o’er the dark repose:
- And thus in me, and thus in me, they said,
- Earth’s mists did with the sweet new spirit wed.
- Far up the sky with ever purer beam,
- Upon the throne of night the moon was seated,
- And down the valley glens the shades retreated,
- And silver light was on the open stream.
- And thus in me, and thus in me, they sighed,
- Aspiring Love has hallowed Passion’s tide.
- SONG
- I CANNOT lose thee for a day,
- But like a bird with restless wing
- My heart will find thee far away,
- And on thy bosom fall and sing,
- My nest is here, my rest is here;—
- And in the lull of wind and rain,
- Fresh voices make a sweet refrain,
- ‘His rest is there, his nest is there.’
- With thee the wind and sky are fair,
- But parted, both are strange and dark;
- And treacherous the quiet air
- That holds me singing like a lark,
- O shield my love, strong arm above!
- Till in the hush of wind and rain,
- Fresh voices make a rich refrain,
- ‘The arm above will shield thy love.’
- DAPHNE
- MUSING on the fate of Daphne,
- Many feelings urged my breast,
- For the God so keen desiring,
- And the Nymph so deep distrest.
- Never flashed thro’ sylvan valley
- Visions so divinely fair!
- He with early ardour glowing,
- She with rosy anguish rare.
- Only still more sweet and lovely
- For those terrors on her brows,
- Those swift glances wild and brilliant,
- Those delicious panting vows.
- Timidly the timid shoulders
- Shrinking from the fervid hand!
- Dark the tide of hair back-flowing
- From the blue-veined temples bland!
- Lovely, too, divine Apollo
- In the speed of his pursuit;
- With his eye an azure lustre,
- And his voice a summer lute!
- Looking like some burnished eagle
- Hovering o’er a fluttered bird;
- Not unseen of silver Naiad,
- And of wistful Dryad heard!
- Many a morn the naked beauty
- Saw her bright reflection drown
- In the flowing smooth-faced river,
- While the god came sheening down.
- Down from Pindus bright Peneus
- Tells its muse-melodious source;
- Sacred is its fountained birthplace,
- And the Orient floods its course.
- Many a morn the sunny darling
- Saw the rising chariot-rays,
- From the winding river-reaches,
- Mellowing in amber haze.
- Thro’ the flaming mountain gorges
- Lo, the River leaps the plain;
- Like a wild god-stridden courser,
- Tossing high its foamy mane.
- Then he swims thro’ laurelled sunlight,
- Full of all sensations sweet,
- Misty with his morning incense,
- To the mirrored maiden’s feet!
- Wet and bright the dinting pebbles
- Shine where oft she paused and stood;
- All her dreamy warmth revolving,
- While the chilly waters wooed.
- Like to rosy-born Aurora,
- Glowing freshly into view,
- When her doubtful foot she ventures
- On the first cold morning blue.
- White as that Thessalian lily,
- Fairest Tempe’s fairest flower,
- Lo, the tall Peneïan virgin
- Stands beneath her bathing bower.
- There the laurell’d wreaths o’erarching
- Crown’d the dainty shuddering maid;
- There the dark prophetic laurel
- Kiss’d her with its sister shade.
- There the young green glistening leaflets
- Hush’d with love their breezy peal;
- There the little opening flowerets
- Blush’d beneath her vermeil heel!
- There among the conscious arbours
- Sounds of soft tumultuous wail,
- Mysteries of love, melodious,
- Came upon the lyric gale!
- Breathings of a deep enchantment,
- Effluence of immortal grace,
- Flitted round her faltering footstep,
- Spread a balm about her face!
- Witless of the enamour’d presence,
- Like a dreamy lotus bud
- From its drowsy stem down-drooping,
- Gazed she in the glowing flood.
- Softly sweet with fluttering presage,
- Felt she that ethereal sense,
- Drinking charms of love delirious,
- Reaping bliss of love intense!
- All the air was thrill’d with sunrise,
- Birds made music of her name,
- And the god-impregnate water
- Claspt her image ere she came.
- Richer for that glance unconscious!
- Dearer for that soft dismay!
- And the sudden self-possession!
- And the smile as bright as day!
- Plunging ’mid her scattered tresses,
- With her blue invoking eyes;
- See her like a star descending!
- Like a rosebud see her rise!
- Like a rosebud in the morning
- Dashing off its jewell’d dews,
- Ere unfolding all its fragrance
- It is gathered by the muse!
- Beauteous in the foamy laughter
- Bubbling round her shrinking waist,
- Lo! from locks and lips and eyelids
- Rain the glittering pearl-drops chaste!
- And about the maiden rapture
- Still the ruddy ripples play’d,
- Ebbing round in startled circlets
- When her arms began to wade;
- Flowing in like tides attracted
- To the glowing crescent shine!
- Clasping her ambrosial whiteness
- Like an Autumn-tinted vine!
- Sinking low with love’s emotion!
- Levying with look and tone
- All love’s rosy arts to mimic
- Cytherea’s magic zone!
- Trembling up with adoration
- To the crimson daisy tip
- Budding from the snowy bosom—
- Fainter than the rose-red lip!
- Rising in a storm of wavelets,
- That for shelter, feigning fright,
- Prest to those twin-heaving havens,
- Harbour’d there beneath her light;
- Gleaming in a whirl of eddies
- Round her lucid throat and neck;
- Eddying in a gleam of dimples
- Up against her bloomy cheek;
- Bribing all the breezy water
- With rich warmth, the nymph to keep
- In a self-imprison’d plaisance,
- Tempting her from deep to deep.
- Till at last delirious passion
- Thrill’d the god to wild excess,
- And the fervour of a moment
- Made divinity confess;
- And he stood in all his glory!
- But so radiant, being near,
- That her eyes were frozen on him
- In a fascinated fear!
- All with orient splendour shining,
- All with roseate birth aglow,
- Gleam’d the golden god before her,
- With his golden crescent bow.
- Soon the dazzled light subsided,
- And he seem’d a beauteous youth,
- Form’d to gain the maiden’s murmurs,
- And to pledge the vows of truth.
- Ah! that thus he had continued!
- O, that such for her had been!
- Graceful with all godlike beauty,
- But so humanly serene!
- Cheeks, and mouth, and mellow ringlets,
- Bounteous as the mid-day beam;
- Pleading looks and wistful tremour,
- Tender as a maiden’s dream!
- Palms that like a bird’s throbb’d bosom
- Palpitate with eagerness,
- Lips, the bridals of the roses,
- Dewy sweet from the caress!
- Lips and limbs, and eyes and ringlets,
- Swaying, praying to one prayer,
- Like a lyre, swept by a spirit,
- In the still, enraptur’d air.
- Like a lyre in some far valley,
- Uttering ravishments divine!
- All its strings to viewless fingers
- Yearning, modulations fine!
- Yearning with melodious fervour!
- Like a beauteous maiden flower,
- When the young beloved three paces
- Hovers from the bridal bower.
- Throbbing thro’ the dawning stillness!
- As a heart within a breast,
- When the young beloved is stepping
- Radiant to the nuptial nest.
- O for Daphne! gentle Daphne
- Ever warmer by degrees
- Whispers full of hopes and visions
- Throng her ears like honey bees!
- Never yet was lonely blossom
- Woo’d with such delicious voice!
- Never since hath mortal maiden
- Dwelt on such celestial choice!
- Love-suffused she quivers, falters—
- Falters, sighs, but never speaks,
- All her rosy blood up-gushing
- Overflows her ripe young cheeks.
- Blushing, sweet with virgin blushes,
- All her loveliness a-flame,
- Stands she in the orient waters,
- Stricken o’er with speechless shame!
- Ah! but lovelier, ever lovelier,
- As more deep the colour glows,
- And the honey-laden lily
- Changes to the fragrant rose.
- While the god with meek embraces,
- Whispering all his sacred charms,
- Softly folds her, gently holds her,
- In his white encircling arms!
- But, O Dian! veil not wholly
- Thy pale crescent from the morn!
- Vanish not, O virgin goddess,
- With that look of pallid scorn!
- Still thy pure protecting influence
- Shed from those fair watchful eyes!—
- Lo! her angry orb has vanished,
- And the bright sun thrones the skies!
- Voicelessly the forest Virgin
- Vanished! but one look she gave—
- Keen as Niobean arrow
- Thro’ the maiden’s heart it drave.
- Thus toward that throning bosom
- Where all earth is warmed,—each spot
- Nourished with autumnal blessings—
- Icy chill was Daphne caught.
- Icy chill! but swift revulsion
- All her gentler self renewed,
- Even as icy Winter quickens
- With bud-opening warmth imbued.
- Even as a torpid brooklet,
- That to the night-gleaming moon
- Flashed in turn the frozen glances,
- Melts upon the breast of noon.
- But no more—O never, never,
- Turns she to that bosom bright,
- Swiftly all her senses counsel,
- All her nerves are strung to flight.
- O’er the brows of radiant Pindus
- Rolls a shadow dark and cold,
- And a sound of lamentation
- Issues from its mournful fold.
- Voice of the far-sighted Muses!
- Cry of keen foreboding song!
- Every cleft of startled Tempe
- Tingles with it sharp and long.
- Over bourn and bosk and dingle,
- Over rivers, over rills,
- Runs the sad subservient Echo
- Toward the dim blue distant hills!
- And another and another!
- ’Tis a cry more wild than all;
- And the hills with muffled voices
- Answer ‘Daphne!’ to the call.
- And another and another!
- ’Tis a cry so wildly sweet,
- That her charmed heart turns rebel
- To the instinct of her feet;
- And she pauses for an instant;
- But his arms have scarcely slid
- Round her waist in cestian girdles,
- And his low voluptuous lid
- Lifted pleading, and the honey
- Of his mouth for hers athirst,
- Ruby glistening, raised for moisture—
- Like a bud that waits to burst
- In the sweet espousing showers—
- And his tongue has scarce begun
- With its inarticulate burthen,
- And the clouds scarce show the sun
- As it pierces thro’ a crevice
- Of the mass that closed it o’er,
- When again the horror flashes—
- And she turns to flight once more!
- And again o’er radiant Pindus
- Rolls the shadow dark and cold,
- And the sound of lamentation
- Issues from its sable fold!
- And again the light winds chide her
- As she darts from his embrace—
- And again the far-voiced echoes
- Speak their tidings of the chase.
- Loudly now as swiftly, swiftly,
- O’er the glimmering sands she speeds;
- Wildly now as in the furzes
- From the piercing spikes she bleeds.
- Deeply and with direful anguish,
- As above each crimson drop
- Passion checks the god Apollo,
- And love bids him weep and stop.—
- He above each drop of crimson
- Shadowing—like the laurel leaf
- That above himself will shadow—
- Sheds a fadeless look of grief.
- Then with love’s remorseful discord,
- With its own desire at war,
- Sighing turns, while dimly fleeting
- Daphne flies the chase afar.
- But all nature is against her!
- Pan, with all his sylvan troop,
- Thro’ the vista’d woodland valleys
- Blocks her course with cry and whoop!
- In the twilights of the thickets
- Trees bend down their gnarled boughs,
- Wild green leaves and low curved branches
- Hold her hair and beat her brows.
- Many a brake of brushwood covert,
- Where cold darkness slumbers mute,
- Slips a shrub to thwart her passage,
- Slides a hand to clutch her foot.
- Glens and glades of lushest verdure
- Toil her in their tawny mesh,
- Wilder-woofed ways and alleys
- Lock her struggling limbs in leash.
- Feathery grasses, flowery mosses,
- Knot themselves to make her trip;
- Sprays and stubborn sprigs outstretching
- Put a bridle on her lip;
- Many a winding lane betrays her,
- Many a sudden bosky shoot,
- And her knee makes many a stumble
- O’er some hidden damp old root,
- Whose quaint face peers green and dusky
- ’Mongst the matted growth of plants,
- While she rises wild and weltering,
- Speeding on with many pants.
- Tangles of the wild red strawberry
- Spread their freckled trammels frail;
- In the pathway creeping brambles
- Catch her in their thorny trail.
- All the widely sweeping greensward
- Shifts and swims from knoll to knoll;
- Grey rough-fingered oak and elm wood
- Push her by from bole to bole.
- Groves of lemon, groves of citron,
- Tall high-foliaged plane and palm,
- Bloomy myrtle, light-blue olive,
- Wave her back with gusts of balm.
- Languid jasmine, scrambling briony,
- Walls of close-festooning braid,
- Fling themselves about her, mingling
- With her wafted looks, waylaid.
- Twisting bindweed, honey’d woodbine,
- Cling to her, while, red and blue,
- On her rounded form ripe berries
- Dash and die in gory dew.
- Running ivies dark and lingering
- Round her light limbs drag and twine;
- Round her waist with languorous tendrils
- Reels and wreathes the juicy vine;
- Reining in the flying creature
- With its arms about her mouth;
- Bursting all its mellowing bunches
- To seduce her husky drouth;
- Crowning her with amorous clusters;
- Pouring down her sloping back
- Fresh-born wines in glittering rillets,
- Following her in crimson track.
- Buried, drenched in dewy foliage,
- Thus she glimmers from the dawn,
- Watched by every forest creature,
- Fleet-foot Oread, frolic Faun.
- Silver-sandalled Arethusa
- Not more swiftly fled the sands,
- Fled the plains and fled the sunlights,
- Fled the murmuring ocean strands.
- O, that now the earth would open!
- O, that now the shades would hide!
- O, that now the gods would shelter!
- Caverns lead and seas divide!
- Not more faint soft-lowing Io
- Panted in those starry eyes,
- When the sleepless midnight meadows
- Piteously implored the skies!
- Still her breathless flight she urges
- By the sanctuary stream,
- And the god with golden swiftness
- Follows like an eastern beam.
- Her the close bewildering greenery
- Darkens with its duskiest green,—
- Him each little leaflet welcomes,
- Flushing with an orient sheen.
- Thus he nears, and now all Tempe
- Rings with his melodious cry,
- Avenues and blue expanses
- Beam in his large lustrous eye!
- All the branches start to music!
- As if from a secret spring
- Thousands of sweet bills are bubbling
- In the nest and on the wing.
- Gleams and shines the glassy river
- And rich valleys every one;
- But of all the throbbing beauty
- Brightest! singled by the sun!
- Ivy round her glimmering ancle,
- Vine about her glowing brow,
- Never sure was bride so beauteous,
- Daphne, chosen nymph, as thou!
- Thus he nears! and now she feels him
- Breathing hot on every limb;
- And he hears her own quick pantings—
- Ah! that they might be for him.
- O, that like the flower he tramples,
- Bending from his golden tread,
- Full of fair celestial ardours,
- She would bow her bridal head.
- O, that like the flower she presses,
- Nodding from her lily touch,
- Light as in the harmless breezes,
- She would know the god for such!
- See! the golden arms are round her—
- To the air she grasps and clings!
- See! his glowing arms have wound her—
- To the sky she shrieks and springs!
- See! the flushing chace of Tempe
- Trembles with Olympian air—
- See! green sprigs and buds are shooting
- From those white raised arms of prayer!
- In the earth her feet are rooting!—
- Breasts and limbs and lifted eyes,
- Hair and lips and stretching fingers,
- Fade away—and fadeless rise.
- And the god whose fervent rapture
- Clasps her finds his close embrace
- Full of palpitating branches,
- And new leaves that bud apace,
- Bound his wonder-stricken forehead;—
- While in ebbing measures slow
- Sounds of softly dying pulses
- Pause and quiver, pause and go;
- Go, and come again, and flutter
- On the verge of life,—then flee!
- All the white ambrosial beauty
- Is a lustrous Laurel Tree!
- Still with the great panting love-chase
- All its running sap is warmed;—
- But from head to foot the virgin
- Is transfigured and transformed.
- Changed!—yet the green Dryad nature
- Is instinct with human ties,
- And above its anguish’d lover
- Breathes pathetic sympathies;
- Sympathies of love and sorrow;
- Joy in her divine escape;
- Breathing through her bursting foliage
- Comfort to his bending shape.
- Vainly now the floating Naiads
- Seek to pierce the laurel maze,
- Nought but laurel meets their glances,
- Laurel glistens as they gaze.
- Nought but bright prophetic laurel!
- Laurel over eyes and brows,
- Over limbs and over bosom,
- Laurel leaves and laurel boughs!
- And in vain the listening Dryad
- Shells her hand against her ear!—
- All is silence—save the echo
- Travelling in the distance drear.
- LONDON BY LAMPLIGHT
- THERE stands a singer in the street,
- He has an audience motley and meet;
- Above him lowers the London night,
- And around the lamps are flaring bright.
- His minstrelsy may be unchaste—
- ’Tis much unto that motley taste,
- And loud the laughter he provokes
- From those sad slaves of obscene jokes.
- But woe is many a passer by
- Who as he goes turns half an eye,
- To see the human form divine
- Thus Circe-wise changed into swine!
- Make up the sum of either sex
- That all our human hopes perplex,
- With those unhappy shapes that know
- The silent streets and pale cock-crow.
- And can I trace in such dull eyes
- Of fireside peace or country skies?
- And could those haggard cheeks presume
- To memories of a May-tide bloom?
- Those violated forms have been
- The pride of many a flowering green;
- And still the virgin bosom heaves
- With daisy meads and dewy leaves.
- But stygian darkness reigns within
- The river of death from the founts of sin;
- And one prophetic water rolls
- Its gas-lit surface for their souls.
- I will not hide the tragic sight—
- Those drown’d black locks, those dead lips white,
- Will rise from out the slimy flood,
- And cry before God’s throne for blood!
- Those stiffened limbs, that swollen face,—
- Pollution’s last and best embrace,
- Will call, as such a picture can,
- For retribution upon man.
- Hark! how their feeble laughter rings,
- While still the ballad-monger sings,
- And flatters their unhappy breasts
- With poisonous words and pungent jests.
- O how would every daisy blush
- To see them ’mid that earthy crush!
- O dumb would be the evening thrush,
- And hoary look the hawthorn bush!
- The meadows of their infancy
- Would shrink from them, and every tree,
- And every little laughing spot,
- Would hush itself and know them not.
- Precursor to what black despairs
- Was that child’s face which once was theirs!
- And O to what a world of guile
- Was herald that young angel smile!
- That face which to a father’s eye
- Was balm for all anxiety;
- That smile which to a mother’s heart
- Went swifter than the swallow’s dart!
- O happy homes! that still they know
- At intervals, with what a woe
- Would ye look on them, dim and strange,
- Suffering worse than winter change!
- And yet could I transplant them there,
- To breathe again the innocent air
- Of youth, and once more reconcile
- Their outcast looks with nature’s smile;
- Could I but give them one clear day
- Of this delicious loving May,
- Release their souls from anguish dark,
- And stand them underneath the lark;—
- I think that Nature would have power
- To graft again her blighted flower
- Upon the broken stem, renew
- Some portion of its early hue;—
- The heavy flood of tears unlock,
- More precious than the Scriptured rock;
- At least instil a happier mood,
- And bring them back to womanhood.
- Alas! how many lost ones claim
- This refuge from despair and shame!
- How many, longing for the light,
- Sink deeper in the abyss this night!
- O, crying sin! O, blushing thought!
- Not only unto those that wrought
- The misery and deadly blight;
- But those that outcast them this night!
- O, agony of grief! for who
- Less dainty than his race, will do
- Such battle for their human right,
- As shall awake this startled night?
- Proclaim this evil human page
- Will ever blot the Golden Age
- That poets dream and saints invite,
- If it be unredeemed this night?
- This night of deep solemnity,
- And verdurous serenity,
- While over every fleecy field
- The dews descend and odours yield.
- This night of gleaming floods and falls,
- Of forest glooms and sylvan calls,
- Of starlight on the pebbly rills,
- And twilight on the circling hills.
- This night! when from the paths of men
- Grey error steams as from a fen;
- As o’er this flaring City wreathes
- The black cloud-vapour that it breathes!
- This night from which a morn will spring
- Blooming on its orient wing;
- A morn to roll with many more
- Its ghostly foam on the twilight shore.
- Morn! when the fate of all mankind
- Hangs poised in doubt, and man is blind.
- His duties of the day will seem
- The fact of life, and mine the dream:
- The destinies that bards have sung,
- Regeneration to the young,
- Reverberation of the truth,
- And virtuous culture unto youth!
- Youth! in whose season let abound
- All flowers and fruits that strew the ground,
- Voluptuous joy where love consents,
- And health and pleasure pitch their tents:
- All rapture and all pure delight;
- A garden all unknown to blight;
- But never the unnatural sight
- That throngs the shameless song this night!
- SONG
- UNDER boughs of breathing May,
- In the mild spring-time I lay,
- Lonely, for I had no love;
- And the sweet birds all sang for pity,
- Cuckoo, lark, and dove.
- Tell me, cuckoo, then I cried,
- Dare I woo and wed a bride?
- I, like thee, have no home-nest;
- And the twin notes thus tuned their ditty,—
- ‘Love can answer best.’
- Nor, warm dove with tender coo,
- Have I thy soft voice to woo,
- Even were a damsel by;
- And the deep woodland crooned its ditty,—
- ‘Love her first and try.’
- Nor have I, wild lark, thy wing,
- That from bluest heaven can bring
- Bliss, whatever fate befall;
- And the sky-lyrist trilled this ditty,—
- ‘Love will give thee all.’
- So it chanced while June was young,
- Wooing well with fervent song,
- I had won a damsel coy;
- And the sweet birds that sang for pity,
- Jubileed for joy.
- PASTORALS
- I
- HOW sweet on sunny afternoons,
- For those who journey light and well,
- To loiter up a hilly rise
- Which hides the prospect far beyond,
- And fancy all the landscape lying
- Beautiful and still;
- Beneath a sky of summer blue,
- Whose rounded cloudlets, folded soft,
- Gaze on the scene which we await
- And picture from their peacefulness;
- So calmly to the earth inclining
- Float those loving shapes!
- Like airy brides, each singling out
- A spot to love and bless with love,
- Their creamy bosoms glowing warm,
- Till distance weds them to the hills,
- And with its latest gleam the river
- Sinks in their embrace.
- And silverly the river runs,
- And many a graceful wind he makes,
- By fields where feed the happy flocks,
- And hedge-rows hushing pleasant lanes,
- The charms of English home reflected
- In his shining eye:
- Ancestral oak, broad-foliaged elm,
- Rich meadows sunned and starred with flowers,
- The cottage breathing tender smoke
- Against the brooding golden air,
- With glimpses of a stately mansion
- On a woodland sward;
- And circling round, as with a ring,
- The distance spreading amber haze,
- Enclosing hills and pastures sweet;
- A depth of soft and mellow light
- Which fills the heart with sudden yearning
- Aimless and serene!
- No disenchantment follows here,
- For nature’s inspiration moves
- The dream which she herself fulfils;
- And he whose heart, like valley warmth,
- Steams up with joy at scenes like this
- Shall never be forlorn.
- And O for any human soul
- The rapture of a wide survey—
- A valley sweeping to the West,
- With all its wealth of loveliness,
- Is more than recompense for days
- That taught us to endure.
- II
- YON upland slope which hides the sun
- Ascending from his eastern deeps,
- And now against the hues of dawn
- One level line of tillage rears;
- The furrowed brow of toil and time;
- To many it is but a sweep of land!
- To others ’tis an Autumn trust,
- But unto me a mystery;—
- An influence strange and swift as dreams;
- A whispering of old romance;
- A temple naked to the clouds;
- Or one of nature’s bosoms fresh revealed,
- Heaving with adoration! there
- The work of husbandry is done,
- And daily bread is daily earned;
- Nor seems there ought to indicate
- The springs which move in me such thoughts,
- But from my soul a spirit calls them up.
- All day into the open sky,
- All night to the eternal stars,
- For ever both at morn and eve
- Men mellow distances draw near,
- And shadows lengthen in the dusk,
- Athwart the heavens it rolls its glimmering line!
- When twilight from the dream-hued West
- Sighs hush! and all the land is still;
- When, from the lush empurpling East,
- The twilight of the crowing cock
- Peers on the drowsy village roofs,
- Athwart the heavens that glimmering line is seen.
- And now beneath the rising sun,
- Whose shining chariot overpeers
- The irradiate ridge, while fetlock deep
- In the rich soil his coursers plunge—
- How grand in robes of light it looks!
- How glorious with rare suggestive grace!
- The ploughman mounting up the height
- Becomes a glowing shape, as though
- ’Twere young Triptolemus, plough in hand,
- While Ceres in her amber scarf
- With gentle love directs him how
- To wed the willing earth and hope for fruits!
- The furrows running up are fraught
- With meanings; there the goddess walks,
- While Proserpine is young, and there—
- ’Mid the late autumn sheaves, her voice
- Sobbing and choked with dumb despair—
- The nights will hear her wailing for her child!
- Whatever dim tradition tells,
- Whatever history may reveal,
- Or fancy, from her starry brows,
- Of light or dreamful lustre shed,
- Could not at this sweet time increase
- The quiet consecration of the spot.
- Blest with the sweat of labour, blest
- With the young sun’s first vigorous beams,
- Village hope and harvest prayer,—
- The heart that throbs beneath it holds
- A bliss so perfect in itself
- Men’s thoughts must borrow rather than bestow.
- III
- NOW standing on this hedgeside path,
- Up which the evening winds are blowing
- Wildly from the lingering lines
- Of sunset o’er the hills;
- Unaided by one motive thought,
- My spirit with a strange impulsion
- Rises, like a fledgling,
- Whose wings are not mature, but still
- Supported by its strong desire
- Beats up its native air and leaves
- The tender mother’s nest.
- Great music under heaven is made,
- And in the track of rushing darkness
- Comes the solemn shape of night,
- And broods above the earth.
- A thing of Nature am I now,
- Abroad, without a sense or feeling
- Born not of her bosom;
- Content with all her truths and fates;
- Ev’n as yon strip of grass that bows
- Above the new-born violet bloom,
- And sings with wood and field.
- IV
- LO, as a tree, whose wintry twigs
- Drink in the sun with fibrous joy,
- And down into its dampest roots
- Thrills quickened with the draught of life,
- I wake unto the dawn, and leave my griefs to drowse.
- I rise and drink the fresh sweet air:
- Each draught a future bud of Spring;
- Each glance of blue a birth of green;
- I will not mimic yonder oak
- That dallies with dead leaves ev’n while the primrose peeps.
- But full of these warm-whispering beams,
- Like Memnon in his mother’s eye,—
- Aurora! when the statue stone
- Moaned soft to her pathetic touch,—
- My soul shall own its parent in the founts of day!
- And ever in the recurring light,
- True to the primal joy of dawn,
- Forget its barren griefs; and aye
- Like aspens in the faintest breeze
- Turn all its silver sides and tremble into song.
- V
- NOW from the meadow floods the wild duck clamours,
- Now the wood pigeon wings a rapid flight,
- Now the homeward rookery follows up its vanguard,
- And the valley mists are curling up the hills.
- Three short songs gives the clear-voiced throstle,
- Sweetening the twilight ere he fills the nest;
- While the little bird upon the leafless branches
- Tweets to its mate a tiny loving note.
- Deeper the stillness hangs on every motion;
- Calmer the silence follows every call;
- Now all is quiet save the roosting pheasant,
- The bell-wether’s tinkle and the watch-dog’s bark.
- Softly shine the lights from the silent kindling homestead,
- Stars of the hearth to the shepherd in the fold;
- Springs of desire to the traveller on the roadway;
- Ever breathing incense to the ever-blessing sky!
- VI
- How barren would this valley be,
- Without the golden orb that gazes
- On it, broadening to hues
- Of rose, and spreading wings of amber;
- Blessing it before it falls asleep.
- How barren would this valley be,
- Without the human lives now beating
- In it, or the throbbing hearts
- Far distant, who their flower of childhood
- Cherish here, and water it with tears!
- How barren should I be, were I
- Without above that loving splendour,
- Shedding light and warmth! without
- Some kindred natures of my kind
- To joy in me, or yearn towards me now!
- VII
- SUMMER glows warm on the meadows, and speedwell, and gold-cups, and
- daisies
- Darken ’mid deepening masses of sorrel, and shadowy grasses
- Show the ripe hue to the farmer, and summon the scythe and the
- hay-makers
- Down from the village; and now, even now, the air smells of the
- mowing,
- And the sharp song of the scythe whistles daily; from dawn, till the
- gloaming
- Wears its cool star, sweet and welcome to all flaming faces afield
- now;
- Heavily weighs the hot season, and drowses the darkening foliage,
- Drooping with languor; the white cloud floats, but sails not, for
- windless
- Heaven’s blue tents it; no lark singing up in its fleecy white
- valleys;
- Up in its fairy white valleys, once feathered with minstrels,
- melodious
- With the invisible joy that wakes dawn o’er the green fields of
- England.
- Summer glows warm on the meadows; then come, let us roam thro’ them
- gaily,
- Heedless of heat, and the hot-kissing sun, and the fear of dark
- freckles.
- Never one kiss will he give on a neck, or a lily-white forehead,
- Chin, hand, or bosom uncovered, all panting, to take the chance
- coolness,
- But full sure the fiery pressure leaves seal of espousal.
- Heed him not; come, tho’ he kiss till the soft little upper-lip loses
- Half its pure whiteness; just speck’d where the curve of the rosy
- mouth reddens.
- Come, let him kiss, let him kiss, and his kisses shall make thee the
- sweeter.
- Thou art no nun, veiled and vowed; doomed to nourish a withering
- pallor!
- City exotics beside thee would show like bleached linen at mid-day,
- Hung upon hedges of eglantine! Thou in the freedom of nature,
- Full of her beauty and wisdom, gentleness, joyance, and kindness!
- Come, and like bees will we gather the rich golden honey of noontide;
- Deep in the sweet summer meadows, border’d by hillside and river,
- Lined with long trenches half-hidden, where smell of white
- meadow-sweet, sweetest,
- Blissfully hovers—O sweetest! but pluck it not! even in the tenderest
- Grasp it will lose breath and wither; like many, not made for a posy.
- See, the sun slopes down the meadows, where all the flowers are
- falling!
- Falling unhymned; for the nightingale scarce ever charms the long
- twilight:
- Mute with the cares of the nest; only known by a ‘chuck, chuck,’ and
- dovelike
- Call of content, but the finch and the linnet and blackcap pipe
- loudly.
- Round on the western hill-side warbles the rich-billed ouzel;
- And the shrill throstle is filling the tangled thickening copses;
- Singing o’er hyacinths hid, and most honey’d of flowers, white
- field-rose.
- Joy thus to revel all day in the grass of our own beloved country;
- Revel all day, till the lark mounts at eve with his sweet
- ‘tirra-lirra’:
- Trilling delightfully. See, on the river the slow-rippled surface
- Shining; the slow ripple broadens in circles; the bright surface
- smoothens;
- Now it is flat as the leaves of the yet unseen water-lily.
- There dart the lives of a day, ever-varying tactics fantastic.
- There, by the wet-mirrored osiers, the emerald wing of the kingfisher
- Flashes, the fish in his beak! there the dab-chick dived, and the
- motion
- Lazily undulates all thro’ the tall standing army of rushes.
- Joy thus to revel all day, till the twilight turns us homeward!
- Till all the lingering deep-blooming splendour of sunset is over,
- And the one star shines mildly in mellowing hues, like a spirit
- Sent to assure us that light never dieth, tho’ day is now buried.
- Saying: to-morrow, to-morrow, few hours intervening, that interval
- Tuned by the woodlark in heaven, to-morrow my semblance, far eastward,
- Heralds the day ’tis my mission eternal to seal and to prophecy.
- Come then, and homeward; passing down the close path of the meadows.
- Home like the bees stored with sweetness; each with a lark in the
- bosom,
- Trilling for ever, and oh! will yon lark ever cease to sing up there?
- TO A SKYLARK
- O SKYLARK! I see thee and call thee joy!
- Thy wings bear thee up to the breast of the dawn;
- I see thee no more, but thy song is still
- The tongue of the heavens to me!
- Thus are the days when I was a boy;
- Sweet while I lived in them, dear now they’re gone:
- I feel them no longer, but still, O still
- They tell of the heavens to me.
- SONG
- SPRING
- WHEN buds of palm do burst and spread
- Their downy feathers in the lane,
- And orchard blossoms, white and red,
- Breathe Spring delight for Autumn gain;
- And the skylark shakes his wings in the rain;
- O then is the season to look for a bride!
- Choose her warily, woo her unseen;
- For the choicest maids are those that hide
- Like dewy violets under the green.
- SONG
- AUTUMN
- WHEN nuts behind the hazel-leaf
- Are brown as the squirrel that hunts them free,
- And the fields are rich with the sun-burnt sheaf,
- ’Mid the blue cornflower and the yellowing tree;
- And the farmer glows and beams in his glee;
- O then is the season to wed thee a bride!
- Ere the garners are filled and the ale-cups foam;
- For a smiling hostess is the pride
- And flower of every Harvest Home.
- SORROWS AND JOYS
- BURY thy sorrows, and they shall rise
- As souls to the immortal skies,
- And there look down like mothers’ eyes.
- But let thy joys be fresh as flowers,
- That suck the honey of the showers,
- And bloom alike on huts and towers.
- So shall thy days be sweet and bright;
- Solemn and sweet thy starry night,
- Conscious of love each change of light.
- The stars will watch the flowers asleep,
- The flowers will feel the soft stars weep,
- And both will mix sensations deep.
- With these below, with those above,
- Sits evermore the brooding dove,
- Uniting both in bonds of love.
- For both by nature are akin;
- Sorrow, the ashen fruit of sin,
- And joy, the juice of life within.
- Children of earth are these; and those
- The spirits of divine repose—
- Death radiant o’er all human woes.
- O, think what then had been thy doom,
- If homeless and without a tomb
- They had been left to haunt the gloom!
- O, think again what now they are—
- Motherly love, tho’ dim and far,
- Imaged in every lustrous star.
- For they, in their salvation, know
- No vestige of their former woe,
- While thro’ them all the heavens do flow.
- Thus art thou wedded to the skies,
- And watched by ever-loving eyes,
- And warned by yearning sympathies.
- SONG
- THE flower unfolds its dawning cup,
- And the young sun drinks the star-dews up,
- At eve it droops with the bliss of day,
- And dreams in the midnight far away.
- So am I in thy sole, sweet glance
- Pressed with a weight of utterance;
- Lovingly all my leaves unfold,
- And gleam to the beams of thirsty gold.
- At eve I droop, for then the swell
- Of feeling falters forth farewell;—
- At midnight I am dreaming deep,
- Of what has been, in blissful sleep.
- When—ah! when will love’s own fight
- Wed me alike thro’ day and night,
- When will the stars with their linking charms
- Wake us in each other’s arms?
- SONG
- THOU to me art such a spring
- As the Arab seeks at eve,
- Thirsty from the shining sands;
- There to bathe his face and hands,
- While the sun is taking leave,
- And dewy sleep is a delicious thing.
- Thou to me art such a dream
- As he dreams upon the grass,
- While the bubbling coolness near
- Makes sweet music in his ear;
- And the stars that slowly pass
- In solitary grandeur o’er him gleam.
- Thou to me art such a dawn
- As the dawn whose ruddy kiss
- Wakes him to his darling steed;
- And again the desert speed,
- And again the desert bliss,
- Lightens thro’ his veins, and he is gone!
- ANTIGONE
- The buried voice bespake Antigone.
- ‘O SISTER! couldst thou know, as thou wilt know,
- The bliss above, the reverence below,
- Enkindled by thy sacrifice for me;
- Thou wouldst at once with holy ecstasy
- Give thy warm limbs into the yearning earth.
- Sleep, Sister! for Elysium’s dawning birth,—
- And faith will fill thee with what is to be!
- Sleep, for the Gods are watching over thee!
- Thy dream will steer thee to perform their will,
- As silently their influence they instil.
- O Sister! in the sweetness of thy prime,
- Thy hand has plucked the bitter flower of death;
- But this will dower thee with Elysian breath,
- That fade into a never-fading clime.
- Dear to the Gods are those that do like thee
- A solemn duty! for the tyranny
- Of kings is feeble to the soul that dares
- Defy them to fulfil its sacred cares:
- And weak against a mighty will are men.
- O, Torch between two brothers! in whose gleam
- Our slaughtered House doth shine as one again,
- Tho’ severed by the sword; now may thy dream
- Kindle desire in thee for us, and thou,
- Forgetting not thy lover and his vow,
- Leaving no human memory forgot,
- Shalt cross, not unattended, the dark stream
- Which runs by thee in sleep and ripples not.
- The large stars glitter thro’ the anxious night,
- And the deep sky broods low to look at thee:
- The air is hush’d and dark o’er land and sea,
- And all is waiting for the morrow light:
- So do thy kindred spirits wait for thee.
- O Sister! soft as on the downward rill,
- Will those first daybeams from the distant hill
- Fall on the smoothness of thy placid brow,
- Like this calm sweetness breathing thro’ me now:
- And when the fated sounds shall wake thine eyes,
- Wilt thou, confiding in the supreme will,
- In all thy maiden steadfastness arise,
- Firm to obey and earnest to fulfil;
- Remembering the night thou didst not sleep,
- And this same brooding sky beheld thee creep,
- Defiant of unnatural decree,
- To where I lay upon the outcast land;
- Before the iron gates upon the plain;
- A wretched, graveless ghost, whose wailing chill
- Came to thy darkened door imploring thee;
- Yearning for burial like my brother slain;—
- And all was dared for love and piety!
- This thought will nerve again thy virgin hand
- To serve its purpose and its destiny.’
- She woke, they led her forth, and all was still.
- * * * * *
- SWATHED round in mist and crown’d with cloud,
- O Mountain! hid from peak to base—
- Caught up into the heavens and clasped
- In white ethereal arms that make
- Thy mystery of size sublime!
- What eye or thought can measure now
- Thy grand dilating loftiness!
- What giant crest dispute with thee
- Supremacy of air and sky!
- What fabled height with thee compare!
- Not those vine-terraced hills that seethe
- The lava in their fiery cusps;
- Nor that high-climbing robe of snow,
- Whose summits touch the morning star,
- And breathe the thinnest air of life;
- Nor crocus-couching Ida, warm
- With Juno’s latest nuptial lure;
- Nor Tenedos whose dreamy eye
- Still looks upon beleaguered Troy;
- Nor yet Olympus crown’d with gods
- Can boast a majesty like thine,
- O Mountain! hid from peak to base,
- And image of the awful power
- With which the secret of all things,
- That stoops from heaven to garment earth,
- Can speak to any human soul,
- When once the earthly limits lose
- Their pointed heights and sharpened lines,
- And measureless immensity
- Is palpable to sense and sight.
- SONG
- NO, no, the falling blossom is no sign
- Of loveliness destroy’d and sorrow mute;
- The blossom sheds its loveliness divine;—
- Its mission is to prophecy the fruit.
- Nor is the day of love for ever dead,
- When young enchantment and romance are gone;
- The veil is drawn, but all the future dread
- Is lightened by the finger of the dawn.
- Love moves with life along a darker way,
- They cast a shadow and they call it death:
- But rich is the fulfilment of their day;
- The purer passion and the firmer faith.
- THE TWO BLACKBIRDS
- A BLACKBIRD in a wicker cage,
- That hung and swung ’mid fruits and flowers,
- Had learnt the song-charm, to assuage
- The drearness of its wingless hours.
- And ever when the song was heard,
- From trees that shade the grassy plot
- Warbled another glossy bird,
- Whose mate not long ago was shot.
- Strange anguish in that creature’s breast,
- Unwept like human grief, unsaid,
- Has quickened in its lonely nest
- A living impulse from the dead.
- Not to console its own wild smart,—
- But with a kindling instinct strong,
- The novel feeling of its heart
- Beats for the captive bird of song.
- And when those mellow notes are still,
- It hops from off its choral perch,
- O’er path and sward, with busy bill,
- All grateful gifts to peck and search.
- Store of ouzel dainties choice
- To those white swinging bars it brings;
- And with a low consoling voice
- It talks between its fluttering wings.
- Deeply in their bitter grief
- Those sufferers reciprocate,
- The one sings for its woodland life,
- The other for its murdered mate.
- But deeper doth the secret prove,
- Uniting those sad creatures so;
- Humanity’s great link of love,
- The common sympathy of woe.
- Well divined from day to day
- Is the swift speech between them twain;
- For when the bird is scared away,
- The captive bursts to song again.
- Yet daily with its flattering voice,
- Talking amid its fluttering wings,
- Store of ouzel dainties choice
- With busy bill the poor bird brings.
- And shall I say, till weak with age
- Down from its drowsy branch it drops,
- It will not leave that captive cage,
- Nor cease those busy searching hops?
- Ah, no! the moral will not strain;
- Another sense will make it range,
- Another mate will soothe its pain,
- Another season work a change.
- But thro’ the live-long summer, tried,
- A pure devotion we may see;
- The ebb and flow of Nature’s tide;
- A self-forgetful sympathy.
- JULY
- I
- BLUE July, bright July,
- Month of storms and gorgeous blue;
- Violet lightnings o’er thy sky,
- Heavy falls of drenching dew;
- Summer crown! o’er glen and glade
- Shrinking hyacinths in their shade;
- I welcome thee with all thy pride,
- I love thee like an Eastern bride.
- Though all the singing days are done
- As in those climes that clasp the sun;
- Though the cuckoo in his throat
- Leaves to the dove his last twin note;
- Come to me with thy lustrous eye,
- Golden-dawning oriently,
- Come with all thy shining blooms,
- Thy rich red rose and rolling glooms.
- Though the cuckoo doth but sing ‘cuk, cuk,’
- And the dove alone doth coo;
- Though the cushat spins her coo-r-roo, r-r-roo—
- To the cuckoo’s halting ‘cuk.’
- II
- Sweet July, warm July!
- Month when mosses near the stream,
- Soft green mosses thick and shy,
- Are a rapture and a dream.
- Summer Queen! whose foot the fern
- Fades beneath while chestnuts burn;
- I welcome thee with thy fierce love,
- Gloom below and gleam above.
- Though all the forest trees hang dumb,
- With dense leafiness o’ercome;
- Though the nightingale and thrush,
- Pipe not from the bough or bush;
- Come to me with thy lustrous eye,
- Azure-melting westerly,
- The raptures of thy face unfold,
- And welcome in thy robes of gold!
- Tho’ the nightingale broods—‘sweet-chuck-sweet’—
- And the ouzel flutes so chill,
- Tho’ the throstle gives but one shrilly trill
- To the nightingale’s ‘sweet-sweet.’
- SONG
- I WOULD I were the drop of rain
- That falls into the dancing rill,
- For I should seek the river then,
- And roll below the wooded hill,
- Until I reached the sea.
- And O, to be the river swift
- That wrestles with the wilful tide,
- And fling the briny weeds aside
- That o’er the foamy billows drift,
- Until I came to thee!
- I would that after weary strife,
- And storm beneath the piping wind,
- The current of my true fresh life
- Might come unmingled, unimbrined,
- To where thou floatest free.
- Might find thee in some amber clime,
- Where sunlight dazzles on the sail,
- And dreaming of our plighted vale
- Might seal the dream, and bless the time,
- With maiden kisses three.
- SONG
- COME to me in any shape!
- As a victor crown’d with vine,
- In thy curls the clustering grape,—
- Or a vanquished slave:
- ’Tis thy coming that I crave,
- And thy folding serpent twine,
- Close and dumb;
- Ne’er from that would I escape;
- Come to me in any shape!
- Only come!
- Only come, and in my breast
- Hide thy shame or show thy pride;
- In my bosom be caressed,
- Never more to part;
- Come into my yearning heart;
- I, the serpent, golden-eyed,
- Twine round thee;
- Twine thee with no venomed test;
- Absence makes the venomed nest;
- Come to me!
- Come to me, my lover, come!
- Violets on the tender stem
- Die and wither in their bloom,
- Under dewy grass;
- Come, my lover, or, alas!
- I shall die, shall die like them,
- Frail and lone;
- Come to me, my lover, come!
- Let thy bosom be my tomb:
- Come, my own!
- THE SHIPWRECK OF IDOMENEUS
- SWEPT from his fleet upon that fatal night
- When great Poseidon’s sudden-veering wrath
- Scattered the happy homeward-floating Greeks
- Like foam-flakes off the waves, the King of Crete
- Held lofty commune with the dark Sea-god.
- His brows were crowned with victory, his cheeks
- Were flushed with triumph, but the mighty joy
- Of Troy’s destruction and his own great deeds
- Passed, for the thoughts of home were dearer now,
- And sweet the memory of wife and child,
- And weary now the ten long, foreign years,
- And terrible the doubt of short delay—
- More terrible, O Gods! he cried, but stopped;
- Then raised his voice upon the storm and prayed.
- O thou, if injured, injured not by me,
- Poseidon! whom sea-deities obey
- And mortals worship, hear me! for indeed
- It was our oath to aid the cause of Greece,
- Not unespoused by Gods, and most of all
- By thee, if gentle currents, havens calm,
- Fair winds and prosperous voyage, and the Shape
- Impersonate in many a perilous hour,
- Both in the stately councils of the Kings,
- And when the husky battle murmured thick,
- May testify of services performed!
- But now the seas are haggard with thy wrath,
- Thy breath is tempest! never at the shores
- Of hostile Ilium did thy stormful brows
- Betray such fierce magnificence! not even
- On that wild day when, mad with torch and glare,
- The frantic crowds with eyes like starving wolves
- Burst from their ports impregnable, a stream
- Of headlong fury toward the hissing deep;
- Where then full-armed I stood in guard, compact
- Beside thee, and alone, with brand and spear,
- We held at bay the swarming brood, and poured
- Blood of choice warriors on the foot-ploughed sands!
- Thou, meantime, dark with conflict, as a cloud
- That thickens in the bosom of the West
- Over quenched sunset, circled round with flame,
- Huge as a billow running from the winds
- Long distances, till with black shipwreck swoln,
- It flings its angry mane about the sky.
- And like that billow heaving ere it burst;
- And like that cloud urged by impulsive storm
- With charge of thunder, lightning, and the drench
- Of torrents, thou in all thy majesty
- Of mightiness didst fall upon the war!
- Remember that great moment! Nor forget
- The aid I gave thee; how my ready spear
- Flew swiftly seconding thy mortal stroke,
- Where’er the press was hottest; never slacked
- My arm its duty, nor mine eye its aim,
- Though terribly they compassed us, and stood
- Thick as an Autumn forest, whose brown hair,
- Lustrous with sunlight, by the still increase
- Of heat to glowing heat conceives like zeal
- Of radiance, till at the pitch of noon
- ’Tis seized with conflagration and distends
- Horridly over leagues of doom’d domain;
- Mingling the screams of birds, the cries of brutes,
- The wail of creatures in the covert pent,
- Howls, yells, and shrieks of agony, the hiss
- Of seething sap, and crash of falling boughs
- Together in its dull voracious roar.
- So closely and so fearfully they throng’d,
- Savage with phantasies of victory,
- A sea of dusky shapes; for day had passed
- And night fell on their darkened faces, red
- With fight and torchflare; shrill the resonant air
- With eager shouts, and hoarse with angry groans;
- While over all the dense and sullen boom,
- The din and murmur of the myriads,
- Rolled with its awful intervals, as though
- The battle breathed, or as against the shore
- Waves gather back to heave themselves anew.
- That night sleep dropped not from the dreary skies,
- Nor could the prowess of our chiefs oppose
- That sea of raging men. But what were they?
- Or what is man opposed to thee? Its hopes
- Are wrecks, himself the drowning, drifting weed
- That wanders on thy waters; such as I
- Who see the scattered remnants of my fleet,
- Remembering the day when first we sailed,
- Each glad ship shining like the morning star
- With promise for the world. Oh! such as I
- Thus darkly drifting on the drowning waves.
- O God of waters! ’tis a dreadful thing
- To suffer for an evil unrevealed;
- Dreadful it is to hear the perishing cry
- Of those we love; the silence that succeeds
- How dreadful! Still my trust is fixed on thee
- For those that still remain and for myself.
- And if I hear thy swift foam-snorting steeds
- Drawing thy dusky chariot, as in
- The pauses of the wind I seem to hear,
- Deaf thou art not to my entreating prayer!
- Haste then to give us help, for closely now
- Crete whispers in my ears, and all my blood
- Runs keen and warm for home, and I have yearning,
- Such yearning as I never felt before,
- To see again my wife, my little son,
- My Queen, my pretty nursling of five years,
- The darling of my hopes, our dearest pledge
- Of marriage, and our brightest prize of love,
- Whose parting cry rings clearest in my heart.
- O lay this horror, much-offended God!
- And making all as fair and firm as when
- We trusted to thy mighty depths of old,—
- I vow to sacrifice the first whom Zeus
- Shall prompt to hail us from the white seashore
- And welcome our return to royal Crete,
- An offering, Poseidon, unto thee!
- Amid the din of elemental strife,
- No voice may pierce but Deity supreme:
- And Deity supreme alone can hear,
- Above the hurricane’s discordant shrieks,
- The cry of agonized humanity.
- Not unappeased was He who smites the waves,
- When to his stormy ears the warrior’s vow
- Entered, and from his foamy pinnacle
- Tumultuous he beheld the prostrate form,
- And knew the mighty heart. Awhile he gazed,
- As doubtful of his purpose, and the storm,
- Conscious of that divine debate, withheld
- Its fierce emotion, in the luminous gloom
- Of those so dark irradiating eyes!
- Beneath whose wavering lustre shone revealed
- The tumult of the purpling deeps, and all
- The throbbing of the tempest, as it paused,
- Slowly subsiding, seeming to await
- The sudden signal, as a faithful hound
- Pants with the forepaws stretched before its nose,
- Athwart the greensward, after an eager chase;
- Its hot tongue thrust to cool, its foamy jaws
- Open to let the swift breath come and go,
- Its quick interrogating eyes fixed keen
- Upon the huntsman’s countenance, and ever
- Lashing its sharp impatient tail with haste:
- Prompt at the slightest sign to scour away,
- And hang itself afresh by the bleeding fangs,
- Upon the neck of some death-singled stag,
- Whose royal antlers, eyes, and stumbling knees
- Will supplicate the Gods in mute despair.
- This time not mute, nor yet in vain this time!
- For still the burden of the earnest voice
- And all the vivid glories it revoked
- Sank in the God, with that absorbed suspense
- Felt only by the Olympians, whose minds
- Unbounded like our mortal brain, perceive
- All things complete, the end, the aim of all;
- To whom the crown and consequence of deeds
- Are ever present with the deed itself.
- And now the pouring surges, vast and smooth,
- Grew weary of restraint, and heaved themselves
- Headlong beneath him, breaking at his feet
- With wild importunate cries and angry wail;
- Like crowds that shout for bread and hunger more.
- And now the surface of their rolling backs
- Was ridged with foam-topt furrows, rising high
- And dashing wildly, like to fiery steeds,
- Fresh from the Thracian or Thessalian plains,
- High-blooded mares just tempering to the bit,
- Whose manes at full-speed stream upon the winds,
- And in whose delicate nostrils when the gust
- Breathes of their native plains, they ramp and rear,
- Frothing the curb, and bounding from the earth,
- As though the Sun-god’s chariot alone
- Were fit to follow in their flashing track.
- Anon with gathering stature to the height
- Of those colossal giants, doomed long since
- To torturous grief and penance, that assailed
- The sky-throned courts of Zeus, and climbing, dared
- For once in a world the Olympic wrath, and braved
- The electric spirit which from his clenching hand
- Pierces the dark-veined earth, and with a touch
- Is death to mortals, fearfully they grew!
- And with like purpose of audacity
- Threatened Titanic fury to the God.
- Such was the agitation of the sea
- Beneath Poseidon’s thought-revolving brows,
- Storming for signal. But no signal came.
- And as when men, who congregate to hear
- Some proclamation from the regal fount,
- With eager questioning and anxious phrase
- Betray the expectation of their hearts,
- Till after many hours of fretful sloth,
- Weary with much delay, they hold discourse
- In sullen groups and cloudy masses, stirred
- With rage irresolute and whispering plot,
- Known more by indication than by word,
- And understood alone by those whose minds
- Participate;—even so the restless waves
- Began to lose all sense of servitude,
- And worked with rebel passions, bursting, now
- To right, and now to left, but evermore
- Subdued with influence, and controlled with dread
- Of that inviolate Authority.
- Then, swiftly as he mused, the impetuous God
- Seized on the pausing reins, his coursers plunged,
- His brows resumed the grandeur of their ire;
- Throughout his vast divinity the deeps
- Concurrent thrilled with action, and away,
- As sweeps a thunder-cloud across the sky
- In harvest-time, preluded by dull blasts;
- Or some black-visaged whirlwind, whose wide folds
- Rush, wrestling on with all ’twixt heaven and earth,
- Darkling he hurried, and his distant voice,
- Not softened by delay, was heard in tones
- Distinctly terrible, still following up
- Its rapid utterance of tremendous wrath
- With hoarse reverberations; like the roar
- Of lions when they hunger, and awake
- The sullen echoes from their forest sleep,
- To speed the ravenous noise from hill to hill
- And startle victims; but more awful, He,
- Scudding across the hills that rise and sink,
- With foam, and splash, and cataracts of spray,
- Clothed in majestic splendour; girt about
- With Sea-gods and swift creatures of the sea;
- Their briny eyes blind with the showering drops;
- Their stormy locks, salt tongues, and scaly backs,
- Quivering in harmony with the tempest, fierce
- And eager with tempestuous delight;—
- He like a moving rock above them all
- Solemnly towering while fitful gleams
- Brake from his dense black forehead, which display’d
- The enduring chiefs as their distracted fleets
- Tossed, toiling with the waters, climbing high,
- And plunging downward with determined beaks,
- In lurid anguish; but the Cretan king
- And all his crew were ’ware of under-tides,
- That for the groaning vessel made a path,
- On which the impending and precipitous waves
- Fell not, nor suck’d to their abysmal gorge.
- O, happy they to feel the mighty God,
- Without his whelming presence near: to feel
- Safety and sweet relief from such despair,
- And gushing of their weary hopes once more
- Within their fond warm hearts, tired limbs, and eyes
- Heavy with much fatigue and want of sleep!
- Prayers did not lack; like mountain springs they came,
- After the earth has drunk the drenching rains,
- And throws her fresh-born jets into the sun
- With joyous sparkles;—for there needed not
- Evidence more serene of instant grace,
- Immortal mercy! and the sense which follows
- Divine interposition, when the shock
- Of danger hath been thwarted by the Gods,
- Visibly, and through supplication deep,—
- Rose in them, chiefly in the royal mind
- Of him whose interceding vow had saved.
- Tears from that great heroic soul sprang up;
- Not painful as in grief, nor smarting keen
- With shame of weeping; but calm, fresh, and sweet;
- Such as in lofty spirits rise, and wed
- The nature of the woman to the man;
- A sight most lovely to the Gods! They fell
- Like showers of starlight from his steadfast eyes,
- As ever towards the prow he gazed, nor moved
- One muscle, with firm lips and level lids,
- Motionless; while the winds sang in his ears,
- And took the length of his brown hair in streams
- Behind him. Thus the hours passed, and the oars
- Plied without pause, and nothing but the sound
- Of the dull rowlocks and still watery sough,
- Far off, the carnage of the storm, was heard.
- For nothing spake the mariners in their toil,
- And all the captains of the war were dumb:
- Too much oppressed with wonder, too much thrilled
- By their great chieftain’s silence, to disturb
- Such meditation with poor human speech.
- Meantime the moon through slips of driving cloud
- Came forth, and glanced athwart the seas a path
- Of dusky splendour, like the Hadean brows,
- When with Elysian passion they behold
- Persephone’s complacent hueless cheeks.
- Soon gathering strength and lustre, as a ship
- That swims into some blue and open bay
- With bright full-bosomed sails, the radiant car
- Of Artemis advanced, and on the waves
- Sparkled like arrows from her silver bow
- The keenness of her pure and tender gaze.
- Then, slowly, one by one the chiefs sought rest;
- The watches being set, and men to relieve
- The rowers at midseason. Fair it was
- To see them as they lay! Some up the prow,
- Some round the helm, in open-handed sleep;
- With casques unloosed, and bucklers put aside;
- The ten years’ tale of war upon their cheeks,
- Where clung the salt wet locks, and on their breasts
- Beards, the thick growth of many a proud campaign;
- And on their brows the bright invisible crown
- Victory sheds from her own radiant form,
- As o’er her favourites’ heads she sings and soars.
- But dreams came not so calmly; as around
- Turbulent shores wild waves and swamping surf
- Prevail, while seaward, on the tranquil deeps,
- Reign placid surfaces and solemn peace,
- So, from the troubled strands of memory, they
- Launched and were tossed, long ere they found the tides
- That lead to the gentle bosoms of pure rest.
- And like to one who from a ghostly watch
- In a lone house where murder hath been done,
- And secret violations, pale with stealth
- Emerges, staggering on the first chill gust
- Wherewith the morning greets him, feeling not
- Its balmy freshness on his bloodless cheek,—
- But swift to hide his midnight face afar,
- ’Mongst the old woods and timid-glancing flowers
- Hastens, till on the fresh reviving breasts
- Of tender Dryads folded he forgets
- The pallid witness of those nameless things,
- In renovated senses lapt, and joins
- The full, keen joyance of the day, so they
- From sights and sounds of battle smeared with blood,
- And shrieking souls on Acheron’s bleak tides,
- And wail of execrating kindred, slid
- Into oblivious slumber and a sense
- Of satiate deliciousness complete.
- Leave them, O Muse, in that so happy sleep!
- Leave them to reap the harvest of their toil,
- While fast in moonlight the glad vessel glides,
- As if instinctive to its forest home.
- O Muse, that in all sorrows and all joys,
- Rapturous bliss and suffering divine,
- Dwellest with equal fervour, in the calm
- Of thy serene philosophy, albeit
- Thy gentle nature is of joy alone,
- And loves the pipings of the happy fields,
- Better than all the great parade and pomp
- Which forms the train of heroes and of kings,
- And sows, too frequently, the tragic seeds
- That choke with sobs thy singing,—turn away
- Thy lustrous eyes back to the oath-bound man!
- For as a shepherd stands above his flock,
- The lofty figure of the king is seen,
- Standing above his warriors as they sleep:
- And still as from a rock grey waters gush,
- While still the rock is passionless and dark,
- Nor moves one feature of its giant face,
- The tears fall from his eyes, and he stirs not.
- And O, bright Muse! forget not thou to fold
- In thy prophetic sympathy the thought
- Of him whose destiny has heard its doom:
- The Sacrifice thro’ whom the ship is saved.
- Haply that Sacrifice is sleeping now,
- And dreams of glad tomorrows. Haply now,
- His hopes are keenest, and his fervent blood
- Richest with youth, and love, and fond regard!
- Round him the circle of affections blooms,
- And in some happy nest of home he lives,
- One name oft uttering in delighted ears,
- Mother! at which the heart of men are kin
- With reverence and yearning. Haply, too,
- That other name, twin holy, twin revered,
- He whispers often to the passing winds
- That blow toward the Asiatic coasts;
- For Crete has sent her bravest to the war,
- And multitudes pressed forward to that rank,
- Men with sad weeping wives and little ones.
- That other name—O Father! who art thou,
- Thus doomed to lose the star of thy last days?
- It may be the sole flower of thy life,
- And that of all who now look up to thee!
- O Father, Father! unto thee even now
- Fate cries; the future with imploring voice
- Cries ‘Save me,’ ‘Save me,’ though thou hearest not.
- And O thou Sacrifice, foredoomed by Zeus;
- Even now the dark inexorable deed
- Is dealing its relentless stroke, and vain
- Are prayers, and tears, and struggles, and despair!
- The mother’s tears, the nation’s stormful grief,
- The people’s indignation and revenge!
- Vain the last childlike pleading voice for life,
- The quick resolve, the young heroic brow,
- So like, so like, and vainly beautiful!
- Oh! whosoe’er ye are the Muse says not,
- And sees not, but the Gods look down on both.
- THE LONGEST DAY
- ON yonder hills soft twilight dwells
- And Hesper burns where sunset dies,
- Moist and chill the woodland smells
- From the fern-covered hollows uprise;
- Darkness drops not from the skies,
- But shadows of darkness are flung o’er the vale
- From the boughs of the chestnut, the oak, and the elm,
- While night in yon lines of eastern pines
- Preserves alone her inviolate realm
- Against the twilight pale.
- Say, then say, what is this day,
- That it lingers thus with half-closed eyes,
- When the sunset is quenched and the orient ray
- Of the roseate moon doth rise,
- Like a midnight sun o’er the skies!
- ’Tis the longest, the longest of all the glad year,
- The longest in life and the fairest in hue,
- When day and night, in bridal light,
- Mingle their beings beneath the sweet blue,
- And bless the balmy air!
- Upward to this starry height
- The culminating seasons rolled;
- On one slope green with spring delight,
- The other with harvest gold,
- And treasures of Autumn untold:
- And on this highest throne of the midsummer now
- The waning but deathless day doth dream,
- With a rapturous grace, as tho’ from the face
- Of the unveiled infinity, lo, a far beam
- Had fall’n on her dim-flushed brow!
- Prolong, prolong that tide of song,
- O leafy nightingale and thrush!
- Still, earnest-throated blackcap, throng
- The woods with that emulous gush
- Of notes in tumultuous rush.
- Ye summer souls, raise up one voice!
- A charm is afloat all over the land;
- The ripe year doth fall to the Spirit of all,
- Who blesses it with outstretched hand;
- Ye summer souls, rejoice!
- TO ROBIN REDBREAST
- MERRILY ’mid the faded leaves,
- O Robin of the bright red breast!
- Cheerily over the Autumn eaves,
- Thy note is heard, bonny bird;
- Sent to cheer us, and kindly endear us
- To what would be a sorrowful time
- Without thee in the weltering clime:
- Merry art thou in the boughs of the lime,
- While thy fadeless waistcoat glows on thy breast,
- In Autumn’s reddest livery drest.
- A merry song, a cheery song!
- In the boughs above, on the sward below,
- Chirping and singing the live day long,
- While the maple in grief sheds its fiery leaf,
- And all the trees waning, with bitter complaining,
- Chestnut, and elm, and sycamore,
- Catch the wild gust in their arms, and roar
- Like the sea on a stormy shore,
- Till wailfully they let it go,
- And weep themselves naked and weary with woe.
- Merrily, cheerily, joyously still
- Pours out the crimson-crested tide.
- The set of the season burns bright on the hill,
- Where the foliage dead falls yellow and red,
- Picturing vainly, but foretelling plainly
- The wealth of cottage warmth that comes
- When the frost gleams and the blood numbs,
- And then, bonny Robin, I’ll spread thee out crumbs
- In my garden porch for thy redbreast pride,
- The song and the ensign of dear fireside.
- SONG
- THE daisy now is out upon the green;
- And in the grassy lanes
- The child of April rains,
- The sweet fresh-hearted violet, is smelt and loved unseen.
- Along the brooks and meads, the daffodil
- Its yellow richness spreads,
- And by the fountain-heads
- Of rivers, cowslips cluster round, and over every hill.
- The crocus and the primrose may have gone,
- The snowdrop may be low,
- But soon the purple glow
- Of hyacinths will fill the copse, and lilies watch the dawn.
- And in the sweetness of the budding year,
- The cuckoo’s woodland call,
- The skylark over all,
- And then at eve, the nightingale, is doubly sweet and dear.
- My soul is singing with the happy birds,
- And all my human powers
- Are blooming with the flowers,
- My foot is on the fields and downs, among the flocks and herds.
- Deep in the forest where the foliage droops,
- I wander, fill’d with joy.
- Again as when a boy,
- The sunny vistas tempt me on with dim delicious hopes.
- The sunny vistas, dim with hurrying shade,
- And old romantic haze:—
- Again as in past days,
- The spirit of immortal Spring doth every sense pervade.
- Oh! do not say that this will ever cease;—
- This joy of woods and fields,
- This youth that nature yields,
- Will never speak to me in vain, tho’ soundly rapt in peace.
- SUNRISE
- THE clouds are withdrawn
- And their thin-rippled mist,
- That stream’d o’er the lawn
- To the drowsy-eyed west.
- Cold and grey
- They slept in the way,
- And shrank from the ray
- Of the chariot East:
- But now they are gone,
- And the bounding light
- Leaps thro’ the bars
- Of doubtful dawn;
- Blinding the stars,
- And blessing the sight;
- Shedding delight
- On all below;
- Glimmering fields,
- And wakening wealds,
- And rising lark,
- And meadows dark,
- And idle rills,
- And labouring mills,
- And far-distant hills
- Of the fawn and the doe.
- The sun is cheered
- And his path is cleared,
- As he steps to the air
- From his emerald cave,
- His heel in the wave,
- Most bright and bare;
- In the tide of the sky
- His radiant hair
- From his temples fair
- Blown back on high;
- As forward he bends,
- And upward ascends,
- Timely and true,
- To the breast of the blue;
- His warm red lips
- Kissing the dew,
- Which sweetened drips
- On his flower cupholders;
- Every hue
- From his gleaming shoulders
- Shining anew
- With colour sky-born,
- As it washes and dips
- In the pride of the morn.
- Robes of azure,
- Fringed with amber,
- Fold upon fold
- Of purple and gold,
- Vine-leaf bloom,
- And the grape’s ripe gloom,
- When season deep
- In noontide leisure,
- With clustering heap
- The tendrils clamber
- Full in the face
- Of his hot embrace,
- Fill’d with the gleams
- Of his firmest beams.
- Autumn flushes,
- Roseate blushes,
- Vermeil tinges,
- Violet fringes,
- Every hue
- Of his flower cupholders,
- O’er the clear ether
- Mingled together,
- Shining anew
- From his gleaming shoulders!
- Circling about
- In a coronal rout,
- And floating behind,
- The way of the wind,
- As forward he bends,
- And upward ascends,
- Timely and true,
- To the breast of the blue.
- His bright neck curved,
- His clear limbs nerved,
- Diamond keen
- On his front serene,
- While each white arm strains
- To the racing reins,
- As plunging, eyes flashing,
- Dripping, and dashing,
- His steeds triple grown
- Rear up to his throne,
- Ruffling the rest
- Of the sea’s blue breast,
- From his flooding, flaming crimson crest!
- PICTURES OF THE RHINE
- I
- THE spirit of Romance dies not to those
- Who hold a kindred spirit in their souls:
- Even as the odorous life within the rose
- Lives in the scattered leaflets and controls
- Mysterious adoration, so there glows
- Above dead things a thing that cannot die;
- Faint as the glimmer of a tearful eye,
- Ere the orb fills and all the sorrow flows.
- Beauty renews itself in many ways;
- The flower is fading while the new bud blows;
- And this dear land as true a symbol shows,
- While o’er it like a mellow sunset strays
- The legendary splendour of old days,
- In visible, inviolate repose.
- II
- About a mile behind the viny banks,
- How sweet it was, upon a sloping green,
- Sunspread, and shaded with a branching screen,
- To lie in peace half-murmuring words of thanks!
- To see the mountains on each other climb,
- With spaces for rich meadows flowery bright;
- The winding river freshening the sight
- At intervals, the trees in leafy prime;
- The distant village-roofs of blue and white,
- With intersections of quaint-fashioned beams
- All slanting crosswise, and the feudal gleams
- Of ruined turrets, barren in the light;—
- To watch the changing clouds, like clime in clime;
- Oh sweet to lie and bless the luxury of time.
- III
- Fresh blows the early breeze, our sail is full;
- A merry morning and a mighty tide.
- Cheerily O! and past St. Goar we glide,
- Half hid in misty dawn and mountain cool.
- The river is our own! and now the sun
- In saffron clothes the warming atmosphere;
- The sky lifts up her white veil like a nun,
- And looks upon the landscape blue and clear;—
- The lark is up; the hills, the vines in sight;
- The river broadens with his waking bliss
- And throws up islands to behold the light;
- Voices begin to rise, all hues to kiss;—
- Was ever such a happy morn as this!
- Birds sing, we shout, flowers breathe, trees shine with one delight!
- IV
- Between the two white breasts of her we love,
- A dewy blushing rose will sometimes spring;
- Thus Nonnenwerth like an enchanted thing
- Rises mid-stream the crystal depths above.
- On either side the waters heave and swell,
- But all is calm within the little Isle;
- Content it is to give its holy smile,
- And bless with peace the lives that in it dwell.
- Most dear on the dark grass beneath its bower
- Of kindred trees embracing branch and bough,
- To dream of fairy foot and sudden flower;
- Or haply with a twilight on the brow,
- To muse upon the legendary hour,
- And Roland’s lonely love and Hildegard’s sad vow.
- V
- Hark! how the bitter winter breezes blow
- Round the sharp rocks and o’er the half-lifted wave,
- While all the rocky woodland branches rave
- Shrill with the piercing cold, and every cave,
- Along the icy water-margin low,
- Rings bubbling with the whirling overflow;
- And sharp the echoes answer distant cries
- Of dawning daylight and the dim sunrise,
- And the gloom-coloured clouds that stain the skies
- With pictures of a warmth, and frozen glow
- Spread over endless fields of sheeted snow;
- And white untrodden mountains shining cold,
- And muffled footpaths winding thro’ the wold,
- O’er which those wintry gusts cease not to howl and blow.
- VI
- Rare is the loveliness of slow decay!
- With youth and beauty all must be desired,
- But ’tis the charm of things long past away,
- They leave, alone, the light they have inspired:
- The calmness of a picture; Memory now
- Is the sole life among the ruins grey,
- And like a phantom in fantastic play
- She wanders with rank weeds stuck on her brow,
- Over grass-hidden caves and turret-tops,
- Herself almost as tottering as they;
- While, to the steps of Time, her latest props
- Fall stone by stone, and in the Sun’s hot ray
- All that remains stands up in rugged pride,
- And bridal vines drink in his juices on each side.
- TO A NIGHTINGALE
- O NIGHTINGALE! how hast thou learnt
- The note of the nested dove?
- While under thy bower the fern hangs burnt
- And no cloud hovers above!
- Rich July has many a sky
- With splendour dim, that thou mightst hymn,
- And make rejoice with thy wondrous voice,
- And the thrill of thy wild pervading tone!
- But instead of to woo, thou hast learnt to coo:
- Thy song is mute at the mellowing fruit,
- And the dirge of the flowers is sung by the hours
- In silence and twilight alone.
- O nightingale! ’tis this, ’tis this
- That makes thee mock the dove!
- That thou hast past thy marriage bliss,
- To know a parent’s love.
- The waves of fern may fade and burn,
- The grasses may fall, the flowers and all,
- And the pine-smells o’er the oak dells
- Float on their drowsy and odorous wings,
- But thou wilt do nothing but coo,
- Brimming the nest with thy brooding breast,
- ’Midst that young throng of future song,
- Round whom the Future sings!
- INVITATION TO THE COUNTRY
- NOW ’tis Spring on wood and wold,
- Early Spring that shivers with cold,
- But gladdens, and gathers, day by day,
- A lovelier hue, a warmer ray,
- A sweeter song, a dearer ditty;
- Ouzel and throstle, new-mated and gay,
- Singing their bridals on every spray—
- Oh, hear them, deep in the songless City!
- Cast off the yoke of toil and smoke,
- As Spring is casting winter’s grey,
- As serpents cast their skins away:
- And come, for the Country awaits thee with pity
- And longs to bathe thee in her delight,
- And take a new joy in thy kindling sight;
- And I no less, by day and night,
- Long for thy coming, and watch for, and wait thee,
- And wonder what duties can thus berate thee.
- Dry-fruited firs are dropping their cones,
- And vista’d avenues of pines
- Take richer green, give fresher tones,
- As morn after morn the glad sun shines.
- Primrose tufts peep over the brooks,
- Fair faces amid moist decay!
- The rivulets run with the dead leaves at play,
- The leafless elms are alive with the rooks.
- Over the meadows the cowslips are springing,
- The marshes are thick with king-cup gold,
- Clear is the cry of the lambs in the fold,
- The skylark is singing, and singing, and singing.
- Soon comes the cuckoo when April is fair,
- And her blue eye the brighter the more it may weep:
- The frog and the butterfly wake from their sleep,
- Each to its element, water and air.
- Mist hangs still on every hill,
- And curls up the valleys at eve; but noon
- Is fullest of Spring; and at midnight the moon
- Gives her westering throne to Orion’s bright zone,
- As he slopes o’er the darkened world’s repose;
- And a lustre in eastern Sirius glows.
- Come, in the season of opening buds;
- Come, and molest not the otter that whistles
- Unlit by the moon, ’mid the wet winter bristles
- Of willow, half-drowned in the fattening floods.
- Let him catch his cold fish without fear of a gun,
- And the stars shall shield him, and thou wilt shun!
- And every little bird under the sun
- Shall know that the bounty of Spring doth dwell
- In the winds that blow, in the waters that run,
- And in the breast of man as well.
- THE SWEET O’ THE YEAR
- NOW the frog, all lean and weak,
- Yawning from his famished sleep,
- Water in the ditch doth seek,
- Fast as he can stretch and leap:
- Marshy king-cups burning near
- Tell him ’tis the sweet o’ the year.
- Now the ant works up his mound
- In the mouldered piny soil,
- And above the busy ground
- Takes the joy of earnest toil:
- Dropping pine-cones, dry and sere,
- Warn him ’tis the sweet o’ the year.
- Now the chrysalis on the wall
- Cracks, and out the creature springs,
- Raptures in his body small,
- Wonders on his dusty wings:
- Bells and cups, all shining clear,
- Show him ’tis the sweet o’ the year.
- Now the brown bee, wild and wise,
- Hums abroad, and roves and roams,
- Storing in his wealthy thighs
- Treasure for the golden combs:
- Dewy buds and blossoms dear
- Whisper ’tis the sweet o’ the year.
- Now the merry maids so fair
- Weave the wreaths and choose the queen,
- Blooming in the open air,
- Like fresh flowers upon the green;
- Spring, in every thought sincere,
- Thrills them with the sweet o’ the year.
- Now the lads, all quick and gay,
- Whistle to the browsing herds,
- Or in the twilight pastures grey
- Learn the use of whispered words:
- First a blush, and then a tear,
- And then a smile, i’ the sweet o’ the year.
- Now the May-fly and the fish
- Play again from noon to night;
- Every breeze begets a wish,
- Every motion means delight:
- Heaven high over heath and mere
- Crowns with blue the sweet o’ the year.
- Now all Nature is alive,
- Bird and beetle, man and mole;
- Bee-like goes the human hive,
- Lark-like sings the soaring soul:
- Hearty faith and honest cheer
- Welcome in the sweet o’ the year.
- AUTUMN EVEN-SONG
- THE long cloud edged with streaming grey
- Soars from the West;
- The red leaf mounts with it away,
- Showing the nest
- A blot among the branches bare:
- There is a cry of outcasts in the air.
- Swift little breezes, darting chill,
- Pant down the lake;
- A crow flies from the yellow hill,
- And in its wake
- A baffled line of labouring rooks:
- Steel-surfaced to the light the river looks.
- Pale on the panes of the old hall
- Gleams the lone space
- Between the sunset and the squall;
- And on its face
- Mournfully glimmers to the last:
- Great oaks grow mighty minstrels in the blast.
- Pale the rain-rutted roadways shine
- In the green light
- Behind the cedar and the pine:
- Come, thundering night!
- Blacken broad earth with hoards of storm:
- For me yon valley-cottage beckons warm.
- THE SONG OF COURTESY
- I
- WHEN Sir Gawain was led to his bridal-bed,
- By Arthur’s knights in scorn God-sped:—
- How think you he felt?
- O the bride within
- Was yellow and dry as a snake’s old skin;
- Loathly as sin!
- Scarcely faceable,
- Quite unembraceable;
- With a hog’s bristle on a hag’s chin!—
- Gentle Gawain felt as should we,
- Little of Love’s soft fire knew he:
- But he was the Knight of Courtesy.
- II
- When that evil lady he lay beside
- Bade him turn to greet his bride,
- What think you he did?
- O, to spare her pain,
- And let not his loathing her loathliness vain
- Mirror too plain,
- Sadly, sighingly,
- Almost dyingly,
- Turned he and kissed her once and again.
- Like Sir Gawain, gentles, should we?
- _Silent_, _all_! But for pattern agree
- There’s none like the Knight of Courtesy.
- III
- Sir Gawain sprang up amid laces and curls:
- Kisses are not wasted pearls:—
- What clung in his arms?
- O, a maiden flower,
- Burning with blushes the sweet bride-bower,
- Beauty her dower!
- Breathing perfumingly;
- Shall I live bloomingly,
- Said she, by day, or the bridal hour?
- Thereat he clasped her, and whispered he,
- Thine, rare bride, the choice shall be.
- Said she, Twice blest is Courtesy!
- IV
- Of gentle Sir Gawain they had no sport,
- When it was morning in Arthur’s court;
- What think you they cried?
- Now, life and eyes!
- This bride is the very Saint’s dream of a prize,
- Fresh from the skies!
- See ye not, Courtesy
- Is the true Alchemy,
- Turning to gold all it touches and tries?
- Like the true knight, so may we
- Make the basest that there be
- Beautiful by Courtesy!
- THE THREE MAIDENS
- THERE were three maidens met on the highway;
- The sun was down, the night was late:
- And two sang loud with the birds of May,
- O the nightingale is merry with its mate.
- Said they to the youngest, Why walk you there so still?
- The land is dark, the night is late:
- O, but the heart in my side is ill,
- And the nightingale will languish for its mate.
- Said they to the youngest, Of lovers there is store;
- The moon mounts up, the night is late:
- O, I shall look on man no more,
- And the nightingale is dumb without its mate.
- Said they to the youngest, Uncross your arms and sing;
- The moon mounts high, the night is late:
- O my dear lover can hear no thing,
- And the nightingale sings only to its mate.
- They slew him in revenge, and his true-love was his lure;
- The moon is pale, the night is late:
- His grave is shallow on the moor;
- O the nightingale is dying for its mate.
- His blood is on his breast, and the moss-roots at his hair;
- The moon is chill, the night is late:
- But I will lie beside him there:
- O the nightingale is dying for its mate.
- OVER THE HILLS
- THE old hound wags his shaggy tail,
- And I know what he would say:
- It’s over the hills we’ll bound, old hound,
- Over the hills, and away.
- There’s nought for us here save to count the clock,
- And hang the head all day:
- But over the hills we’ll bound, old hound,
- Over the hills and away.
- Here among men we’re like the deer
- That yonder is our prey:
- So, over the hills we’ll bound, old hound,
- Over the hills and away.
- The hypocrite is master here,
- But he’s the cock of clay:
- So, over the hills we’ll bound, old hound,
- Over the hills and away.
- The women, they shall sigh and smile,
- And madden whom they may:
- It’s over the hills we’ll bound, old hound,
- Over the hills and away.
- Let silly lads in couples run
- To pleasure, a wicked fay:
- ’Tis ours on the heather to bound, old hound,
- Over the hills and away.
- The torrent glints under the rowan red,
- And shakes the bracken spray:
- What joy on the heather to bound, old hound,
- Over the hills and away.
- The sun bursts broad, and the heathery bed
- Is purple, and orange, and gray:
- Away, and away, we’ll bound, old hound,
- Over the hills and away.
- JUGGLING JERRY
- I
- PITCH here the tent, while the old horse grazes:
- By the old hedge-side we’ll halt a stage.
- It’s nigh my last above the daisies:
- My next leaf ’ll be man’s blank page.
- Yes, my old girl! and it’s no use crying:
- Juggler, constable, king, must bow.
- One that outjuggles all’s been spying
- Long to have me, and he has me now.
- II
- We’ve travelled times to this old common:
- Often we’ve hung our pots in the gorse.
- We’ve had a stirring life, old woman!
- You, and I, and the old grey horse.
- Races, and fairs, and royal occasions,
- Found us coming to their call:
- Now they’ll miss us at our stations:
- There’s a Juggler outjuggles all!
- III
- Up goes the lark, as if all were jolly!
- Over the duck-pond the willow shakes.
- Easy to think that grieving’s folly,
- When the hand’s firm as driven stakes!
- Ay, when we’re strong, and braced, and manful,
- Life’s a sweet fiddle: but we’re a batch
- Born to become the Great Juggler’s han’ful:
- Balls he shies up, and is safe to catch.
- IV
- Here’s where the lads of the village cricket:
- I was a lad not wide from here:
- Couldn’t I whip off the bail from the wicket?
- Like an old world those days appear!
- Donkey, sheep, geese, and thatched ale-house—I know them!
- They are old friends of my halts, and seem,
- Somehow, as if kind thanks I owe them:
- Juggling don’t hinder the heart’s esteem.
- V
- Juggling’s no sin, for we must have victual:
- Nature allows us to bait for the fool.
- Holding one’s own makes us juggle no little;
- But, to increase it, hard juggling’s the rule.
- You that are sneering at my profession,
- Haven’t you juggled a vast amount?
- There’s the Prime Minister, in one Session,
- Juggles more games than my sins ’ll count.
- VI
- I’ve murdered insects with mock thunder:
- Conscience, for that, in men don’t quail.
- I’ve made bread from the bump of wonder:
- That’s my business, and there’s my tale.
- Fashion and rank all praised the professor:
- Ay! and I’ve had my smile from the Queen:
- Bravo, Jerry! she meant: God bless her!
- Ain’t this a sermon on that scene?
- VII
- I’ve studied men from my topsy-turvy
- Close, and, I reckon, rather true.
- Some are fine fellows: some, right scurvy:
- Most, a dash between the two.
- But it’s a woman, old girl, that makes me
- Think more kindly of the race:
- And it’s a woman, old girl, that shakes me
- When the Great Juggler I must face.
- VIII
- We two were married, due and legal:
- Honest we’ve lived since we’ve been one.
- Lord! I could then jump like an eagle:
- You danced bright as a bit o’ the sun.
- Birds in a May-bush we were! right merry!
- All night we kiss’d, we juggled all day.
- Joy was the heart of Juggling Jerry!
- Now from his old girl he’s juggled away.
- IX
- It’s past parsons to console us:
- No, nor no doctor fetch for me:
- I can die without my bolus;
- Two of a trade, lass, never agree!
- Parson and Doctor!—don’t they love rarely,
- Fighting the devil in other men’s fields!
- Stand up yourself and match him fairly:
- Then see how the rascal yields!
- X
- I, lass, have lived no gipsy, flaunting
- Finery while his poor helpmate grubs:
- Coin I’ve stored, and you won’t be wanting:
- You shan’t beg from the troughs and tubs.
- Nobly you’ve stuck to me, though in his kitchen
- Many a Marquis would hail you Cook!
- Palaces you could have ruled and grown rich in,
- But our old Jerry you never forsook.
- XI
- Hand up the chirper! ripe ale winks in it;
- Let’s have comfort and be at peace.
- Once a stout draught made me light as a linnet.
- Cheer up! the Lord must have his lease.
- May be—for none see in that black hollow—
- It’s just a place where we’re held in pawn,
- And, when the Great Juggler makes as to swallow,
- It’s just the sword-trick—I ain’t quite gone!
- XII
- Yonder came smells of the gorse, so nutty,
- Gold-like and warm: it’s the prime of May.
- Better than mortar, brick and putty,
- Is God’s house on a blowing day.
- Lean me more up the mound; now I feel it:
- All the old heath-smells! Ain’t it strange?
- There’s the world laughing, as if to conceal it,
- But He’s by us, juggling the change.
- XIII
- I mind it well, by the sea-beach lying,
- Once—it’s long gone—when two gulls we beheld,
- Which, as the moon got up, were flying
- Down a big wave that sparked and swelled.
- Crack, went a gun: one fell: the second
- Wheeled round him twice, and was off for new luck:
- There in the dark her white wing beckon’d:—
- Drop me a kiss—I’m the bird dead-struck!
- THE CROWN OF LOVE
- O MIGHT I load my arms with thee,
- Like that young lover of Romance
- Who loved and gained so gloriously
- The fair Princess of France!
- Because he dared to love so high,
- He, bearing her dear weight, shall speed
- To where the mountain touched on sky:
- So the proud king decreed.
- Unhalting he must bear her on,
- Nor pause a space to gather breath,
- And on the height she will be won;
- And she was won in death!
- Red the far summit flames with morn,
- While in the plain a glistening Court
- Surrounds the king who practised scorn
- Through such a mask of sport.
- She leans into his arms; she lets
- Her lovely shape be clasped: he fares.
- God speed him whole! The knights make bets:
- The ladies lift soft prayers.
- O have you seen the deer at chase?
- O have you seen the wounded kite?
- So boundingly he runs the race,
- So wavering grows his flight.
- —My lover! linger here, and slake
- Thy thirst, or me thou wilt not win.
- —See’st thou the tumbled heavens? they break!
- They beckon us up and in.
- —Ah, hero-love! unloose thy hold:
- O drop me like a curséd thing.
- —See’st thou the crowded swards of gold?
- They wave to us Rose and Ring.
- —O death-white mouth! O cast me down!
- Thou diest? Then with thee I die.
- —See’st thou the angels with their Crown?
- We twain have reached the sky.
- THE HEAD OF BRAN THE BLEST
- I
- WHEN the Head of Bran
- Was firm on British shoulders,
- God made a man!
- Cried all beholders.
- Steel could not resist
- The weight his arm would rattle;
- He, with naked fist,
- Has brain’d a knight in battle.
- He marched on the foe,
- And never counted numbers;
- Foreign widows know
- The hosts he sent to slumbers.
- As a street you scan,
- That’s towered by the steeple,
- So the Head of Bran
- Rose o’er his people.
- II
- ‘Death’s my neighbour,’
- Quoth Bran the Blest;
- ‘Christian labour
- Brings Christian rest.
- From the trunk sever
- The Head of Bran,
- That which never
- Has bent to man!
- ‘That which never
- To men has bowed
- Shall live ever
- To shame the shroud:
- Shall live ever
- To face the foe;
- Sever it, sever,
- And with one blow.
- ‘Be it written,
- That all I wrought
- Was for Britain,
- In deed and thought:
- Be it written,
- That while I die,
- Glory to Britain!
- Is my last cry.
- ‘Glory to Britain!
- Death echoes me round.
- Glory to Britain!
- The world shall resound.
- Glory to Britain!
- In ruin and fall,
- Glory to Britain!
- Is heard over all.’
- III
- Burn, Sun, down the sea!
- Bran lies low with thee.
- Burst, Morn, from the main!
- Bran so shall rise again.
- Blow, Wind, from the field!
- Bran’s Head is the Briton’s shield.
- Beam, Star, in the West!
- Bright burns the Head of Bran the Blest.
- IV
- Crimson-footed, like the stork,
- From great ruts of slaughter,
- Warriors of the Golden Torque
- Cross the lifting water.
- Princes seven, enchaining hands,
- Bear the live head homeward.
- Lo! it speaks, and still commands:
- Gazing out far foamward.
- Fiery words of lightning sense
- Down the hollows thunder;
- Forest hostels know not whence
- Comes the speech, and wonder.
- City-Castles, on the steep,
- Where the faithful Seven
- House at midnight, hear, in sleep,
- Laughter under heaven.
- Lilies, swimming on the mere,
- In the castle shadow,
- Under draw their heads, and Fear
- Walks the misty meadow.
- Tremble not! it is not Death
- Pledging dark espousal:
- ’Tis the Head of endless breath,
- Challenging carousal!
- Brim the horn! a health is drunk,
- Now, that shall keep going:
- Life is but the pebble sunk;
- Deeds, the circle growing!
- Fill, and pledge the Head of Bran!
- While his lead they follow,
- Long shall heads in Britain plan
- Speech Death cannot swallow!
- THE MEETING
- THE old coach-road through a common of furze,
- With knolls of pine, ran white;
- Berries of autumn, with thistles, and burrs,
- And spider-threads, droop’d in the light.
- The light in a thin blue veil peered sick;
- The sheep grazed close and still;
- The smoke of a farm by a yellow rick
- Curled lazily under a hill.
- No fly shook the round of the silver net;
- No insect the swift bird chased;
- Only two travellers moved and met
- Across that hazy waste.
- One was a girl with a babe that throve,
- Her ruin and her bliss;
- One was a youth with a lawless love,
- Who clasped it the more for this.
- The girl for her babe hummed prayerful speech;
- The youth for his love did pray;
- Each cast a wistful look on each,
- And either went their way.
- THE BEGGAR’S SOLILOQUY
- I
- NOW, this, to my notion, is pleasant cheer,
- To lie all alone on a ragged heath,
- Where your nose isn’t sniffing for bones or beer,
- But a peat-fire smells like a garden beneath.
- The cottagers bustle about the door,
- And the girl at the window ties her strings.
- She’s a dish for a man who’s a mind to be poor;
- Lord! women are such expensive things.
- II
- We don’t marry beggars, says she: why, no:
- It seems that to make ’em is what you do;
- And as I can cook, and scour, and sew,
- I needn’t pay half my victuals for you.
- A man for himself should be able to scratch,
- But tickling’s a luxury:—love, indeed!
- Love burns as long as the lucifer match,
- Wedlock’s the candle! Now, that’s my creed.
- III
- The church-bells sound water-like over the wheat;
- And up the long path troop pair after pair.
- The man’s well-brushed, and the woman looks neat:
- It’s man and woman everywhere!
- Unless, like me, you lie here flat,
- With a donkey for friend, you must have a wife:
- She pulls out your hair, but she brushes your hat.
- Appearances make the best half of life.
- IV
- You nice little madam! you know you’re nice.
- I remember hearing a parson say
- You’re a plateful of vanity pepper’d with vice;
- You chap at the gate thinks t’ other way.
- On his waistcoat you read both his head and his heart:
- There’s a whole week’s wages there figured in gold!
- Yes! when you turn round you may well give a start:
- It’s fun to a fellow who’s getting old.
- V
- Now, that’s a good craft, weaving waistcoats and flowers,
- And selling of ribbons, and scenting of lard:
- It gives you a house to get in from the showers,
- And food when your appetite jockeys you hard.
- You live a respectable man; but I ask
- If it’s worth the trouble? You use your tools,
- And spend your time, and what’s your task?
- Why, to make a slide for a couple of fools.
- VI
- You can’t match the colour o’ these heath mounds,
- Nor better that peat-fire’s agreeable smell.
- I’m clothed-like with natural sights and sounds;
- To myself I’m in tune: I hope you’re as well.
- You jolly old cot! though you don’t own coal:
- It’s a generous pot that’s boiled with peat.
- Let the Lord Mayor o’ London roast oxen whole:
- His smoke, at least, don’t smell so sweet.
- VII
- I’m not a low Radical, hating the laws,
- Who’d the aristocracy rebuke.
- I talk o’ the Lord Mayor o’ London because
- I once was on intimate terms with his cook.
- I served him a turn, and got pensioned on scraps,
- And, Lord, Sir! didn’t I envy his place,
- Till Death knock’d him down with the softest of taps,
- And I knew what was meant by a tallowy face!
- VIII
- On the contrary, I’m Conservative quite;
- There’s beggars in Scripture ’mongst Gentiles and Jews:
- It’s nonsense, trying to set things right,
- For if people will give, why, who’ll refuse?
- That stopping old custom wakes my spleen:
- The poor and the rich both in giving agree:
- Your tight-fisted shopman’s the Radical mean:
- There’s nothing in common ’twixt him and me.
- IX
- He says I’m no use! but I won’t reply.
- You’re lucky not being of use to him!
- On week-days he’s playing at Spider and Fly,
- And on Sundays he sings about Cherubim!
- Nailing shillings to counters is his chief work:
- He nods now and then at the name on his door:
- But judge of us two, at a bow and a smirk,
- I think I’m his match: and I’m honest—that’s more.
- X
- No use! well, I mayn’t be. You ring a pig’s snout,
- And then call the animal glutton! Now, he,
- Mr. Shopman, he’s nought but a pipe and a spout
- Who won’t let the goods o’ this world pass free.
- This blazing blue weather all round the brown crop,
- He can’t enjoy! all but cash he hates.
- He’s only a snail that crawls under his shop;
- Though he has got the ear o’ the magistrates.
- XI
- Now, giving and taking’s a proper exchange,
- Like question and answer: you’re both content.
- But buying and selling seems always strange;
- You’re hostile, and that’s the thing that’s meant.
- It’s man against man—you’re almost brutes;
- There’s here no thanks, and there’s there no pride.
- If Charity’s Christian, don’t blame my pursuits,
- I carry a touchstone by which you’re tried.
- XII
- —‘Take it,’ says she, ‘it’s all I’ve got’:
- I remember a girl in London streets:
- She stood by a coffee-stall, nice and hot,
- My belly was like a lamb that bleats.
- Says I to myself, as her shilling I seized,
- You haven’t a character here, my dear!
- But for making a rascal like me so pleased,
- I’ll give you one, in a better sphere!
- XIII
- And that’s where it is—she made me feel
- I was a rascal: but people who scorn,
- And tell a poor patch-breech he isn’t genteel,
- Why, they make him kick up—and he treads on a corn.
- It isn’t liking, it’s curst ill-luck,
- Drives half of us into the begging-trade:
- If for taking to water you praise a duck,
- For taking to beer why a man upbraid?
- XIV
- The sermon’s over: they’re out of the porch,
- And it’s time for me to move a leg;
- But in general people who come from church,
- And have called themselves sinners, hate chaps to beg.
- I’ll wager they’ll all of ’em dine to-day!
- I was easy half a minute ago.
- If that isn’t pig that’s baking away,
- May I perish!—we’re never contented—heigho!
- BY THE ROSANNA
- TO F. M.
- STANZER THAL, TYROL
- THE old grey Alp has caught the cloud,
- And the torrent river sings aloud;
- The glacier-green Rosanna sings
- An organ song of its upper springs.
- Foaming under the tiers of pine,
- I see it dash down the dark ravine,
- And it tumbles the rocks in boisterous play,
- With an earnest will to find its way.
- Sharp it throws out an emerald shoulder,
- And, thundering ever of the mountain,
- Slaps in sport some giant boulder,
- And tops it in a silver fountain.
- A chain of foam from end to end,
- And a solitude so deep, my friend,
- You may forget that man abides
- Beyond the great mute mountain-sides.
- Yet to me, in this high-walled solitude
- Of river and rock and forest rude,
- The roaring voice through the long white chain
- Is the voice of the world of bubble and brain.
- PHANTASY
- I
- WITHIN a Temple of the Toes,
- Where twirled the passionate Wili,
- I saw full many a market rose,
- And sighed for my village lily.
- II
- With cynical Adrian then I took flight
- To that old dead city whose carol
- Bursts out like a reveller’s loud in the night,
- As he sits astride his barrel.
- III
- We two were bound the Alps to scale,
- Up the rock-reflecting river;
- Old times blew thro’ me like a gale,
- And kept my thoughts in a quiver.
- IV
- Hawking ruin, wood-slope, and vine
- Reeled silver-laced under my vision,
- And into me passed, with the green-eyed wine
- Knocking hard at my head for admission.
- V
- I held the village lily cheap,
- And the dream around her idle:
- Lo, quietly as I lay to sleep,
- The bells led me off to a bridal.
- VI
- My bride wore the hood of a Béguine,
- And mine was the foot to falter;
- Three cowled monks, rat-eyed, were seen;
- The Cross was of bones o’er the altar.
- VII
- The Cross was of bones; the priest that read,
- A spectacled necromancer:
- But at the fourth word, the bride I led
- Changed to an Opera dancer.
- VIII
- A young ballet-beauty, who perked in her place,
- A darling of pink and spangles;
- One fair foot level with her face,
- And the hearts of men at her ankles.
- IX
- She whirled, she twirled, the mock-priest grinned,
- And quickly his mask unriddled;
- ’Twas Adrian! loud his old laughter dinned;
- Then he seized a fiddle, and fiddled.
- X
- He fiddled, he glowed with the bottomless fire,
- Like Sathanas in feature:
- All through me he fiddled a wolfish desire
- To dance with that bright creature.
- XI
- And gathering courage I said to my soul,
- Throttle the thing that hinders!
- When the three cowled monks, from black as coal,
- Waxed hot as furnace-cinders.
- XII
- They caught her up, twirling: they leapt between-whiles:
- The fiddler flickered with laughter:
- Profanely they flew down the awful aisles,
- Where I went sliding after.
- XIII
- Down the awful aisles, by the fretted walls,
- Beneath the Gothic arches:—
- King Skull in the black confessionals
- Sat rub-a-dub-dubbing his marches.
- XIV
- Then the silent cold stone warriors frowned,
- The pictured saints strode forward:
- A whirlwind swept them from holy ground;
- A tempest puffed them nor’ward.
- XV
- They shot through the great cathedral door;
- Like mallards they traversed ocean:
- And gazing below, on its boiling floor,
- I marked a horrid commotion.
- XVI
- Down a forest’s long alleys they spun like tops:
- It seemed that for ages and ages,
- Thro’ the Book of Life bereft of stops,
- They waltzed continuous pages.
- XVII
- And ages after, scarce awake,
- And my blood with the fever fretting,
- I stood alone by a forest-lake,
- Whose shadows the moon were netting.
- XVIII
- Lilies, golden and white, by the curls
- Of their broad flat leaves hung swaying.
- A wreath of languid twining girls
- Streamed upward, long locks disarraying.
- XIX
- Their cheeks had the satin frost-glow of the moon;
- Their eyes the fire of Sirius.
- They circled, and droned a monotonous tune,
- Abandoned to love delirious.
- XX
- Like lengths of convolvulus torn from the hedge,
- And trailing the highway over,
- The dreamy-eyed mistresses circled the sedge,
- And called for a lover, a lover!
- XXI
- I sank, I rose through seas of eyes,
- In odorous swathes delicious:
- They fanned me with impetuous sighs,
- They hit me with kisses vicious.
- XXII
- My ears were spelled, my neck was coiled,
- And I with their fury was glowing,
- When the marbly waters bubbled and boiled
- At a watery noise of crowing.
- XXIII
- They dragged me low and low to the lake:
- Their kisses more stormily showered;
- On the emerald brink, in the white moon’s wake,
- An earthly damsel cowered.
- XXIV
- Fresh heart-sobs shook her knitted hands
- Beneath a tiny suckling,
- As one by one of the doleful bands
- Dived like a fairy duckling.
- XXV
- And now my turn had come—O me!
- What wisdom was mine that second!
- I dropped on the adorer’s knee;
- To that sweet figure I beckoned.
- XXVI
- Save me! save me! for now I know
- The powers that Nature gave me,
- And the value of honest love I know:—
- My village lily! save me!
- XXVII
- Come ’twixt me and the sisterhood,
- While the passion-born phantoms are fleeing!
- Oh, he that is true to flesh and blood
- Is true to his own being!
- XXVIII
- And he that is false to flesh and blood
- Is false to the star within him:
- And the mad and hungry sisterhood
- All under the tides shall win him!
- XXIX
- My village lily! save me! save!
- For strength is with the holy:—
- Already I shuddered to feel the wave,
- As I kept sinking slowly:—
- XXX
- I felt the cold wave and the under-tug
- Of the Brides, when—starting and shrinking—
- Lo, Adrian tilts the water-jug!
- And Bruges with morn is blinking.
- XXXI
- Merrily sparkles sunny prime
- On gabled peak and arbour:
- Merrily rattles belfry-chime
- The song of Sevilla’s Barber.
- THE OLD CHARTIST
- I
- WHATE’ER I be, old England is my dam!
- So there’s my answer to the judges, clear.
- I’m nothing of a fox, nor of a lamb;
- I don’t know how to bleat nor how to leer:
- I’m for the nation!
- That’s why you see me by the wayside here,
- Returning home from transportation.
- II
- It’s Summer in her bath this morn, I think.
- I’m fresh as dew, and chirpy as the birds:
- And just for joy to see old England wink
- Thro’ leaves again, I could harangue the herds:
- Isn’t it something
- To speak out like a man when you’ve got words,
- And prove you’re not a stupid dumb thing?
- III
- They shipp’d me of for it; I’m here again.
- Old England is my dam, whate’er I be!
- Says I, I’ll tramp it home, and see the grain:
- If you see well, you’re king of what you see:
- Eyesight is having,
- If you’re not given, I said, to gluttony.
- Such talk to ignorance sounds as raving.
- IV
- You dear old brook, that from his Grace’s park
- Come bounding! on you run near my old town:
- My lord can’t lock the water; nor the lark,
- Unless he kills him, can my lord keep down.
- Up, is the song-note!
- I’ve tried it, too:—for comfort and renown,
- I rather pitch’d upon the wrong note.
- V
- I’m not ashamed: Not beaten’s still my boast:
- Again I’ll rouse the people up to strike.
- But home’s where different politics jar most.
- Respectability the women like.
- This form, or that form,—
- The Government may be hungry pike,
- But don’t you mount a Chartist platform!
- VI
- Well, well! Not beaten—spite of them, I shout;
- And my estate is suffering for the Cause.—
- No,—what is yon brown water-rat about,
- Who washes his old poll with busy paws?
- What does he mean by’t?
- It’s like defying all our natural laws,
- For him to hope that he’ll get clean by’t.
- VII
- His seat is on a mud-bank, and his trade
- Is dirt:—he’s quite contemptible; and yet
- The fellow’s all as anxious as a maid
- To show a decent dress, and dry the wet.
- Now it’s his whisker,
- And now his nose, and ear: he seems to get
- Each moment at the motion brisker!
- VIII
- To see him squat like little chaps at school,
- I could let fly a laugh with all my might.
- He peers, hangs both his fore-paws:—bless that fool,
- He’s bobbing at his frill now!—what a sight!
- Licking the dish up,
- As if he thought to pass from black to white,
- Like parson into lawny bishop.
- IX
- The elms and yellow reed-flags in the sun,
- Look on quite grave:—the sunlight flecks his side;
- And links of bindweed-flowers round him run,
- And shine up doubled with him in the tide.
- _I’m_ nearly splitting,
- But nature seems like seconding his pride,
- And thinks that his behaviour’s fitting.
- X
- That isle o’ mud looks baking dry with gold.
- His needle-muzzle still works out and in.
- It really is a wonder to behold,
- And makes me feel the bristles of my chin.
- Judged by appearance,
- I fancy of the two I’m nearer Sin,
- And might as well commence a clearance.
- XI
- And that’s what my fine daughter said:—she meant:
- Pray, hold your tongue, and wear a Sunday face.
- Her husband, the young linendraper, spent
- Much argument thereon:—I’m their disgrace.
- Bother the couple!
- I feel superior to a chap whose place
- Commands him to be neat and supple.
- XII
- But if I go and say to my old hen:
- I’ll mend the gentry’s boots, and keep discreet,
- Until they grow _too_ violent,—why, then,
- A warmer welcome I might chance to meet:
- Warmer and better.
- And if she fancies her old cock is beat,
- And drops upon her knees—so let her!
- XIII
- She suffered for me:—women, you’ll observe,
- Don’t suffer for a Cause, but for a man.
- When I was in the dock she show’d her nerve:
- I saw beneath her shawl my old tea-can
- Trembling . . . she brought it
- To screw me for my work: she loath’d my plan,
- And therefore doubly kind I thought it.
- XIV
- I’ve never lost the taste of that same tea:
- That liquor on my logic floats like oil,
- When I state facts, and fellows disagree.
- For human creatures all are in a coil;
- All may want pardon.
- I see a day when every pot will boil
- Harmonious in one great Tea-garden!
- XV
- We wait the setting of the Dandy’s day,
- Before that time!—He’s furbishing his dress,—
- He _will_ be ready for it!—and I say,
- That yon old dandy rat amid the cress,—
- Thanks to hard labour!—
- If cleanliness is next to godliness,
- The old fat fellow’s heaven’s neighbour!
- XVI
- You teach me a fine lesson, my old boy!
- I’ve looked on my superiors far too long,
- And small has been my profit as my joy.
- You’ve done the right while I’ve denounced the wrong.
- Prosper me later!
- Like you I will despise the sniggering throng,
- And please myself and my Creator.
- XVII
- I’ll bring the linendraper and his wife
- Some day to see you; taking off my hat.
- Should they ask why, I’ll answer: in my life
- I never found so true a democrat.
- Base occupation
- Can’t rob you of your own esteem, old rat!
- I’ll preach you to the British nation.
- SONG {163}
- SHOULD thy love die;
- O bury it not under ice-blue eyes!
- And lips that deny,
- With a scornful surprise,
- The life it once lived in thy breast when it wore no disguise.
- Should thy love die;
- O bury it where the sweet wild-flowers blow!
- And breezes go by,
- With no whisper of woe;
- And strange feet cannot guess of the anguish that slumbers below.
- Should thy love die;
- O wander once more to the haunt of the bee!
- Where the foliaged sky
- Is most sacred to see,
- And thy being first felt its wild birth like a wind-wakened tree.
- Should thy love die;
- O dissemble it! smile! let the rose hide the thorn!
- While the lark sings on high,
- And no thing looks forlorn,
- Bury it, bury it, bury it where it was born.
- TO ALEX. SMITH, THE ‘GLASGOW POET,’ {164}
- ON HIS SONNET TO ‘FAME’
- NOT vainly doth the earnest voice of man
- Call for the thing that is his pure desire!
- Fame is the birthright of the living lyre!
- To noble impulse Nature puts no ban.
- Nor vainly to the Sphinx thy voice was raised!
- Tho’ all thy great emotions like a sea,
- Against her stony immortality,
- Shatter themselves unheeded and amazed.
- Time moves behind her in a blind eclipse:
- Yet if in her cold eyes the end of all
- Be visible, as on her large closed lips
- Hangs dumb the awful riddle of the earth;—
- She sees, and she might speak, since that wild call,
- The mighty warning of a Poet’s birth.
- GRANDFATHER BRIDGEMAN
- I
- ‘HEIGH, boys!’ cried Grandfather Bridgeman, ‘it’s time before dinner
- to-day.’
- He lifted the crumpled letter, and thumped a surprising ‘Hurrah!’
- Up jumped all the echoing young ones, but John, with the starch in his
- throat,
- Said, ‘Father, before we make noises, let’s see the contents of the
- note.’
- The old man glared at him harshly, and twinkling made answer: ‘Too
- bad!
- John Bridgeman, I’m always the whisky, and you are the water, my lad!’
- II
- But soon it was known thro’ the house, and the house ran over for joy,
- That news, good news, great marvels, had come from the soldier boy;
- Young Tom, the luckless scapegrace, offshoot of Methodist John;
- His grandfather’s evening tale, whom the old man hailed as his son.
- And the old man’s shout of pride was a shout of his victory, too;
- For he called his affection a method: the neighbours’ opinions he
- knew.
- III
- Meantime, from the morning table removing the stout breakfast cheer,
- The drink of the three generations, the milk, the tea, and the beer
- (Alone in its generous reading of pints stood the Grandfather’s jug),
- The women for sight of the missive came pressing to coax and to hug.
- He scattered them quick, with a buss and a smack; thereupon he began
- Diversions with John’s little Sarah: on Sunday, the naughty old man!
- IV
- Then messengers sped to the maltster, the auctioneer, miller, and all
- The seven sons of the farmer who housed in the range of his call.
- Likewise the married daughters, three plentiful ladies, prime cooks,
- Who bowed to him while they condemned, in meek hope to stand high in
- his books.
- ‘John’s wife is a fool at a pudding,’ they said, and the light carts
- up hill
- Went merrily, flouting the Sabbath: for puddings well made mend a
- will.
- V
- The day was a van-bird of summer: the robin still piped, but the blue,
- As a warm and dreamy palace with voices of larks ringing thro’,
- Looked down as if wistfully eyeing the blossoms that fell from its
- lap:
- A day to sweeten the juices: a day to quicken the sap.
- All round the shadowy orchard sloped meadows in gold, and the dear
- Shy violets breathed their hearts out: the maiden breath of the year!
- VI
- Full time there was before dinner to bring fifteen of his blood,
- To sit at the old man’s table: they found that the dinner was good.
- But who was she by the lilacs and pouring laburnums concealed,
- When under the blossoming apple the chair of the Grandfather wheeled?
- She heard one little child crying, ‘Dear brave Cousin Tom!’ as it
- leapt;
- Then murmured she: ‘Let me spare them!’ and passed round the walnuts,
- and wept.
- VII
- Yet not from sight had she slipped ere feminine eyes could detect
- The figure of Mary Charlworth. ‘It’s just what we all might expect,’
- Was uttered: and: ‘Didn’t I tell you?’ Of Mary the rumour resounds,
- That she is now her own mistress, and mistress of five thousand
- pounds.
- ’Twas she, they say, who cruelly sent young Tom to the war.
- Miss Mary, we thank you now! If you knew what we’re thanking you for!
- VIII
- But, ‘Have her in: let her hear it,’ called Grandfather Bridgeman,
- elate,
- While Mary’s black-gloved fingers hung trembling with flight on the
- gate.
- Despite the women’s remonstrance, two little ones, lighter than deer,
- Were loosed, and Mary, imprisoned, her whole face white as a tear,
- Came forward with culprit footsteps. Her punishment was to commence:
- The pity in her pale visage they read in a different sense.
- IX
- ‘You perhaps may remember a fellow, Miss Charlworth, a sort of black
- sheep,’
- The old man turned his tongue to ironical utterance deep:
- ‘He came of a Methodist dad, so it wasn’t his fault if he kicked.
- He earned a sad reputation, but Methodists are mortal strict.
- His name was Tom, and, dash me! but Bridgeman! I think you might add:
- Whatever he was, bear in mind that he came of a Methodist dad.’
- X
- This prelude dismally lengthened, till Mary, starting, exclaimed,
- ‘A letter, Sir, from your grandson?’ ‘Tom Bridgeman that rascal is
- named,’
- The old man answered, and further, the words that sent Tom to the
- ranks
- Repeated as words of a person to whom they all owed mighty thanks.
- But Mary never blushed: with her eyes on the letter, she sate,
- And twice interrupting him faltered, ‘The date, may I ask, Sir, the
- date?’
- XI
- ‘Why, that’s what I never look at in a letter,’ the farmer replied:
- ‘Facts first! and now I’ll be parson.’ The Bridgeman women descried
- A quiver on Mary’s eyebrows. One turned, and while shifting her comb,
- Said low to a sister: ‘I’m certain she knows more than we about Tom.
- She wants him now he’s a hero!’ The same, resuming her place,
- Begged Mary to check them the moment she found it a tedious case.
- XII
- Then as a mastiff swallows the snarling noises of cats,
- The voice of the farmer opened. ‘“Three cheers, and off with your
- hats!”
- —That’s Tom. “We’ve beaten them, Daddy, and tough work it was, to be
- sure!
- A regular stand-up combat: eight hours smelling powder and gore.
- I entered it Serjeant-Major,”—and now he commands a salute,
- And carries the flag of old England! Heigh! see him lift foes on his
- foot!
- XIII
- ‘—An officer! ay, Miss Charlworth, he is, or he is so to be;
- You’ll own war isn’t such humbug: and Glory means something, you see.
- “But don’t say a word,” he continues, “against the brave French any
- more.”
- —That stopt me: we’ll now march together. I couldn’t read further
- before.
- That “brave French” I couldn’t stomach. He can’t see their cunning to
- get
- Us Britons to fight their battles, while best half the winnings they
- net!’
- XIV
- The old man sneered, and read forward. It was of that desperate
- fight;—
- The Muscovite stole thro’ the mist-wreaths that wrapped the chill
- Inkermann height,
- Where stood our silent outposts: old England was in them that day!
- O sharp worked his ruddy wrinkles, as if to the breath of the fray
- They moved! He sat bareheaded: his long hair over him slow
- Swung white as the silky bog-flowers in purple heath-hollows that
- grow.
- XV
- And louder at Tom’s first person: acute and in thunder the ‘I’
- Invaded the ear with a whinny of triumph, that seem’d to defy
- The hosts of the world. All heated, what wonder he little could brook
- To catch the sight of Mary’s demure puritanical look?
- And still as he led the onslaught, his treacherous side-shots he sent
- At her who was fighting a battle as fierce, and who sat there unbent.
- XVI
- ‘“We stood in line, and like hedgehogs the Russians rolled under us
- thick.
- They frightened me there.”—He’s no coward; for when, Miss, they came
- at the quick,
- The sight, he swears, was a breakfast.—“My stomach felt tight: in a
- glimpse
- I saw you snoring at home with the dear cuddled-up little imps.
- And then like the winter brickfields at midnight, hot fire lengthened
- out.
- Our fellows were just leashed bloodhounds: no heart of the lot faced
- about.
- XVII
- ‘“And only that grumbler, Bob Harris, remarked that we stood one to
- ten:
- ‘Ye fool,’ says Mick Grady, ‘just tell ’em they know to compliment
- men!’
- And I sang out your old words: ‘If the opposite side isn’t God’s,
- Heigh! after you’ve counted a dozen, the pluckiest lads have the
- odds.’
- Ping-ping flew the enemies’ pepper: the Colonel roared, Forward, and
- we
- Went at them. ’Twas first like a blanket: and then a long plunge in
- the sea.
- XVIII
- ‘“Well, now about me and the Frenchman: it happened I can’t tell you
- how:
- And, Grandfather, hear, if you love me, and put aside prejudice now”:
- He never says “Grandfather”—Tom don’t—save it’s a serious thing.
- “Well, there were some pits for the rifles, just dug on our
- French-leaning wing:
- And backwards, and forwards, and backwards we went, and at last I was
- vexed,
- And swore I would never surrender a foot when the Russians charged
- next.
- XIX
- ‘“I know that life’s worth keeping.”—Ay, so it is, lad; so it is!—
- “But my life belongs to a woman.”—Does that mean Her Majesty, Miss?—
- “These Russians came lumping and grinning: they’re fierce at it,
- though they are blocks.
- Our fellows were pretty well pumped, and looked sharp for the little
- French cocks.
- Lord, didn’t we pray for their crowing! when over us, on the hill-top,
- Behold the first line of them skipping, like kangaroos seen on the
- hop.
- XX
- ‘“That sent me into a passion, to think of them spying our flight!”
- Heigh, Tom! you’ve Bridgeman blood, boy! And, “‘Face them!’ I
- shouted: ‘All right;
- Sure, Serjeant, we’ll take their shot dacent, like gentlemen,’ Grady
- replied.
- A ball in his mouth, and the noble old Irishman dropped by my side.
- Then there was just an instant to save myself, when a short wheeze
- Of bloody lungs under the smoke, and a red-coat crawled up on his
- knees.
- XXI
- ‘“’Twas Ensign Baynes of our parish.”—Ah, ah, Miss Charlworth, the one
- Our Tom fought for a young lady? Come, now we’ve got into the fun!—
- “I shouldered him: he primed his pistol, and I trailed my musket,
- prepared.”
- Why, that’s a fine pick-a-back for ye, to make twenty Russians look
- scared!
- “They came—never mind how many: we couldn’t have run very well,
- We fought back to back: ‘face to face, our last time!’ he said,
- smiling, and fell.
- XXII
- ‘“Then I strove wild for his body: the beggars saw glittering rings,
- Which I vowed to send to his mother. I got some hard knocks and sharp
- stings,
- But felt them no more than angel, or devil, except in the wind.
- I know that I swore at a Russian for showing his teeth, and he grinned
- The harder: quick, as from heaven, a man on a horse rode between,
- And fired, and swung his bright sabre: I can’t write you more of the
- scene.
- XXIII
- ‘“But half in his arms, and half at his stirrup, he bore me right
- forth,
- And pitched me among my old comrades: before I could tell south from
- north,
- He caught my hand up, and kissed it! Don’t ever let any man speak
- A word against Frenchmen, I near him! I can’t find his name, tho’ I
- seek.
- But French, and a General, surely he was, and, God bless him! thro’
- him
- I’ve learnt to love a whole nation.”’ The ancient man paused, winking
- dim.
- XXIV
- A curious look, half woeful, was seen on his face as he turned
- His eyes upon each of his children, like one who but faintly discerned
- His old self in an old mirror. Then gathering sense in his fist,
- He sounded it hard on his knee-cap. ‘Your hand, Tom, the French
- fellow kissed!
- He kissed my boy’s old pounder! I say he’s a gentleman!’ Straight
- The letter he tossed to one daughter; bade her the remainder relate.
- XXV
- Tom properly stated his praises in facts, but the lady preferred
- To deck the narration with brackets, and drop her additional word.
- What nobler Christian natures these women could boast, who, ’twas
- known,
- Once spat at the name of their nephew, and now made his praises their
- own!
- The letter at last was finished, the hearers breathed freely, and sign
- Was given, ‘Tom’s health!’—Quoth the farmer: ‘Eh, Miss? are you weak
- in the spine?’
- XXVI
- For Mary had sunk, and her body was shaking, as if in a fit.
- Tom’s letter she held, and her thumb-nail the month when the letter
- was writ
- Fast-dinted, while she hung sobbing: ‘O, see, Sir, the letter is old!
- O, do not be too happy!’—‘If I understand you, I’m bowled!’
- Said Grandfather Bridgeman, ‘and down go my wickets!—not happy! when
- here,
- Here’s Tom like to marry his General’s daughter—or widow—I’ll swear!
- XXVII
- ‘I wager he knows how to strut, too! It’s all on the cards that the
- Queen
- Will ask him to Buckingham Palace, to say what he’s done and he’s
- seen.
- Victoria’s fond of her soldiers: and she’s got a nose for a fight.
- If Tom tells a cleverish story—there is such a thing as a knight!
- And don’t he look roguish and handsome!—To see a girl snivelling
- there—
- By George, Miss, it’s clear that you’re jealous’—‘I love him!’ she
- answered his stare.
- XXVIII
- ‘Yes! now!’ breathed the voice of a woman.—‘Ah! now!’ quiver’d low the
- reply.
- ‘And “now”’s just a bit too late, so it’s no use your piping your
- eye,’
- The farmer added bluffly: ‘Old Lawyer Charlworth was rich;
- You followed his instructions in kicking Tom into the ditch.
- If you’re such a dutiful daughter, that doesn’t prove Tom is a fool.
- Forgive and forget’s my motto! and here’s my grog growing cool!’
- XXIX
- ‘But, Sir,’ Mary faintly repeated: ‘for four long weeks I have failed
- To come and cast on you my burden; such grief for you always
- prevailed!
- My heart has so bled for you!’ The old man burst on her speech:
- ‘You’ve chosen a likely time, Miss! a pretty occasion to preach!’
- And was it not outrageous, that now, of all times, one should come
- With incomprehensible pity! Far better had Mary been dumb.
- XXX
- But when again she stammered in this bewildering way,
- The farmer no longer could bear it, and begged her to go, or to stay,
- But not to be whimpering nonsense at such a time. Pricked by a goad,
- ’Twas you who sent him to glory:—you’ve come here to reap what you
- sowed.
- Is that it?’ he asked; and the silence the elders preserved plainly
- said,
- On Mary’s heaving bosom this begging-petition was read.
- XXXI
- And that it was scarcely a bargain that she who had driven him wild
- Should share now the fruits of his valour, the women expressed, as
- they smiled.
- The family pride of the Bridgemans was comforted; still, with
- contempt,
- They looked on a monied damsel of modesty quite so exempt.
- ‘O give me force to tell them!’ cried Mary, and even as she spoke,
- A shout and a hush of the children: a vision on all of them broke.
- XXXII
- Wheeled, pale, in a chair, and shattered, the wreck of their hero was
- seen;
- The ghost of Tom drawn slow o’er the orchard’s shadowy green.
- Could this be the martial darling they joyed in a moment ago?
- ‘He knows it?’ to Mary Tom murmured, and closed his weak lids at her
- ‘No.’
- ‘Beloved!’ she said, falling by him, ‘I have been a coward: I thought
- You lay in the foreign country, and some strange good might be
- wrought.
- XXXIII
- ‘Each day I have come to tell him, and failed, with my hand on the
- gate.
- I bore the dreadful knowledge, and crushed my heart with its weight.
- The letter brought by your comrade—he has but just read it aloud!
- It only reached him this morning!’ Her head on his shoulder she
- bowed.
- Then Tom with pity’s tenderest lordliness patted her arm,
- And eyed the old white-head fondly, with something of doubt and alarm.
- XXXIV
- O, take to your fancy a sculptor whose fresh marble offspring appears
- Before him, shiningly perfect, the laurel-crown’d issue of years:
- Is heaven offended? for lightning behold from its bosom escape,
- And those are mocking fragments that made the harmonious shape!
- He cannot love the ruins, till, feeling that ruins alone
- Are left, he loves them threefold. So passed the old grandfather’s
- moan.
- XXXV
- John’s text for a sermon on Slaughter he heard, and he did not
- protest.
- All rigid as April snowdrifts, he stood, hard and feeble; his chest
- Just showing the swell of the fire as it melted him. Smiting a rib,
- ‘Heigh! what have we been about, Tom! Was this all a terrible fib?’
- He cried, and the letter forth-trembled. Tom told what the cannon had
- done.
- Few present but ached to see falling those aged tears on his heart’s
- son!
- XXXVI
- Up lanes of the quiet village, and where the mill-waters rush red
- Thro’ browning summer meadows to catch the sun’s crimsoning head,
- You meet an old man and a maiden who has the soft ways of a wife
- With one whom they wheel, alternate; whose delicate flush of new life
- Is prized like the early primrose. Then shake his right hand, in the
- chair—
- The old man fails never to tell you: ‘You’ve got the French General’s
- there!’
- THE PROMISE IN DISTURBANCE
- HOW low when angels fall their black descent,
- Our primal thunder tells: known is the pain
- Of music, that nigh throning wisdom went,
- And one false note cast wailful to the insane.
- Now seems the language heard of Love as rain
- To make a mire where fruitfulness was meant.
- The golden harp gives out a jangled strain,
- Too like revolt from heaven’s Omnipotent.
- But listen in the thought; so may there come
- Conception of a newly-added chord,
- Commanding space beyond where ear has home.
- In labour of the trouble at its fount,
- Leads Life to an intelligible Lord
- The rebel discords up the sacred mount.
- MODERN LOVE
- I
- BY this he knew she wept with waking eyes:
- That, at his hand’s light quiver by her head,
- The strange low sobs that shook their common bed
- Were called into her with a sharp surprise,
- And strangled mute, like little gaping snakes,
- Dreadfully venomous to him. She lay
- Stone-still, and the long darkness flowed away
- With muffled pulses. Then, as midnight makes
- Her giant heart of Memory and Tears
- Drink the pale drug of silence, and so beat
- Sleep’s heavy measure, they from head to feet
- Were moveless, looking through their dead black years,
- By vain regret scrawled over the blank wall.
- Like sculptured effigies they might be seen
- Upon their marriage-tomb, the sword between;
- Each wishing for the sword that severs all.
- II
- It ended, and the morrow brought the task.
- Her eyes were guilty gates, that let him in
- By shutting all too zealous for their sin:
- Each sucked a secret, and each wore a mask.
- But, oh, the bitter taste her beauty had!
- He sickened as at breath of poison-flowers:
- A languid humour stole among the hours,
- And if their smiles encountered, he went mad,
- And raged deep inward, till the light was brown
- Before his vision, and the world, forgot,
- Looked wicked as some old dull murder-spot.
- A star with lurid beams, she seemed to crown
- The pit of infamy: and then again
- He fainted on his vengefulness, and strove
- To ape the magnanimity of love,
- And smote himself, a shuddering heap of pain.
- III
- This was the woman; what now of the man?
- But pass him. If he comes beneath a heel,
- He shall be crushed until he cannot feel,
- Or, being callous, haply till he can.
- But he is nothing:—nothing? Only mark
- The rich light striking out from her on him!
- Ha! what a sense it is when her eyes swim
- Across the man she singles, leaving dark
- All else! Lord God, who mad’st the thing so fair,
- See that I am drawn to her even now!
- It cannot be such harm on her cool brow
- To put a kiss? Yet if I meet him there!
- But she is mine! Ah, no! I know too well
- I claim a star whose light is overcast:
- I claim a phantom-woman in the Past.
- The hour has struck, though I heard not the bell!
- IV
- All other joys of life he strove to warm,
- And magnify, and catch them to his lip:
- But they had suffered shipwreck with the ship,
- And gazed upon him sallow from the storm.
- Or if Delusion came, ’twas but to show
- The coming minute mock the one that went.
- Cold as a mountain in its star-pitched tent,
- Stood high Philosophy, less friend than foe:
- Whom self-caged Passion, from its prison-bars,
- Is always watching with a wondering hate.
- Not till the fire is dying in the grate,
- Look we for any kinship with the stars.
- Oh, wisdom never comes when it is gold,
- And the great price we pay for it full worth:
- We have it only when we are half earth.
- Little avails that coinage to the old!
- V
- A message from her set his brain aflame.
- A world of household matters filled her mind,
- Wherein he saw hypocrisy designed:
- She treated him as something that is tame,
- And but at other provocation bites.
- Familiar was her shoulder in the glass,
- Through that dark rain: yet it may come to pass
- That a changed eye finds such familiar sights
- More keenly tempting than new loveliness.
- The ‘What has been’ a moment seemed his own:
- The splendours, mysteries, dearer because known,
- Nor less divine: Love’s inmost sacredness
- Called to him, ‘Come!’—In his restraining start,
- Eyes nurtured to be looked at scarce could see
- A wave of the great waves of Destiny
- Convulsed at a checked impulse of the heart.
- VI
- It chanced his lips did meet her forehead cool.
- She had no blush, but slanted down her eye.
- Shamed nature, then, confesses love can die:
- And most she punishes the tender fool
- Who will believe what honours her the most!
- Dead! is it dead? She has a pulse, and flow
- Of tears, the price of blood-drops, as I know,
- For whom the midnight sobs around Love’s ghost,
- Since then I heard her, and so will sob on.
- The love is here; it has but changed its aim.
- O bitter barren woman! what’s the name?
- The name, the name, the new name thou hast won?
- Behold me striking the world’s coward stroke!
- That will I not do, though the sting is dire.
- —Beneath the surface this, while by the fire
- They sat, she laughing at a quiet joke.
- VII
- She issues radiant from her dressing-room,
- Like one prepared to scale an upper sphere:
- —By stirring up a lower, much I fear!
- How deftly that oiled barber lays his bloom!
- That long-shanked dapper Cupid with frisked curls
- Can make known women torturingly fair;
- The gold-eyed serpent dwelling in rich hair
- Awakes beneath his magic whisks and twirls.
- His art can take the eyes from out my head,
- Until I see with eyes of other men;
- While deeper knowledge crouches in its den,
- And sends a spark up:—is it true we are wed?
- Yea! filthiness of body is most vile,
- But faithlessness of heart I do hold worse.
- The former, it were not so great a curse
- To read on the steel-mirror of her smile.
- VIII
- Yet it was plain she struggled, and that salt
- Of righteous feeling made her pitiful.
- Poor twisting worm, so queenly beautiful!
- Where came the cleft between us? whose the fault?
- My tears are on thee, that have rarely dropped
- As balm for any bitter wound of mine:
- My breast will open for thee at a sign!
- But, no: we are two reed-pipes, coarsely stopped:
- The God once filled them with his mellow breath;
- And they were music till he flung them down,
- Used! used! Hear now the discord-loving clown
- Puff his gross spirit in them, worse than death!
- I do not know myself without thee more:
- In this unholy battle I grow base:
- If the same soul be under the same face,
- Speak, and a taste of that old time restore!
- IX
- He felt the wild beast in him betweenwhiles
- So masterfully rude, that he would grieve
- To see the helpless delicate thing receive
- His guardianship through certain dark defiles.
- Had he not teeth to rend, and hunger too?
- But still he spared her. Once: ‘Have you no fear?’
- He said: ’twas dusk; she in his grasp; none near.
- She laughed: ‘No, surely; am I not with you?’
- And uttering that soft starry ‘you,’ she leaned
- Her gentle body near him, looking up;
- And from her eyes, as from a poison-cup,
- He drank until the flittering eyelids screened.
- Devilish malignant witch! and oh, young beam
- Of heaven’s circle-glory! Here thy shape
- To squeeze like an intoxicating grape—
- I might, and yet thou goest safe, supreme.
- X
- But where began the change; and what’s my crime?
- The wretch condemned, who has not been arraigned,
- Chafes at his sentence. Shall I, unsustained,
- Drag on Love’s nerveless body thro’ all time?
- I must have slept, since now I wake. Prepare,
- You lovers, to know Love a thing of moods:
- Not, like hard life, of laws. In Love’s deep woods,
- I dreamt of loyal Life:—the offence is there!
- Love’s jealous woods about the sun are curled;
- At least, the sun far brighter there did beam.—
- My crime is, that the puppet of a dream,
- I plotted to be worthy of the world.
- Oh, had I with my darling helped to mince
- The facts of life, you still had seen me go
- With hindward feather and with forward toe,
- Her much-adored delightful Fairy Prince!
- XI
- Out in the yellow meadows, where the bee
- Hums by us with the honey of the Spring,
- And showers of sweet notes from the larks on wing
- Are dropping like a noon-dew, wander we.
- Or is it now? or was it then? for now,
- As then, the larks from running rings pour showers:
- The golden foot of May is on the flowers,
- And friendly shadows dance upon her brow.
- What’s this, when Nature swears there is no change
- To challenge eyesight? Now, as then, the grace
- Of heaven seems holding earth in its embrace.
- Nor eyes, nor heart, has she to feel it strange?
- Look, woman, in the West. There wilt thou see
- An amber cradle near the sun’s decline:
- Within it, featured even in death divine,
- Is lying a dead infant, slain by thee.
- XII
- Not solely that the Future she destroys,
- And the fair life which in the distance lies
- For all men, beckoning out from dim rich skies:
- Nor that the passing hour’s supporting joys
- Have lost the keen-edged flavour, which begat
- Distinction in old times, and still should breed
- Sweet Memory, and Hope,—earth’s modest seed,
- And heaven’s high-prompting: not that the world is flat
- Since that soft-luring creature I embraced
- Among the children of Illusion went:
- Methinks with all this loss I were content,
- If the mad Past, on which my foot is based,
- Were firm, or might be blotted: but the whole
- Of life is mixed: the mocking Past will stay:
- And if I drink oblivion of a day,
- So shorten I the stature of my soul.
- XIII
- ‘I play for Seasons; not Eternities!’
- Says Nature, laughing on her way. ‘So must
- All those whose stake is nothing more than dust!’
- And lo, she wins, and of her harmonies
- She is full sure! Upon her dying rose
- She drops a look of fondness, and goes by,
- Scarce any retrospection in her eye;
- For she the laws of growth most deeply knows,
- Whose hands bear, here, a seed-bag—there, an urn.
- Pledged she herself to aught, ’twould mark her end!
- This lesson of our only visible friend
- Can we not teach our foolish hearts to learn?
- Yes! yes!—but, oh, our human rose is fair
- Surpassingly! Lose calmly Love’s great bliss,
- When the renewed for ever of a kiss
- Whirls life within the shower of loosened hair!
- XIV
- What soul would bargain for a cure that brings
- Contempt the nobler agony to kill?
- Rather let me bear on the bitter ill,
- And strike this rusty bosom with new stings!
- It seems there is another veering fit,
- Since on a gold-haired lady’s eyeballs pure
- I looked with little prospect of a cure,
- The while her mouth’s red bow loosed shafts of wit.
- Just heaven! can it be true that jealousy
- Has decked the woman thus? and does her head
- Swim somewhat for possessions forfeited?
- Madam, you teach me many things that be.
- I open an old book, and there I find
- That ‘Women still may love whom they deceive.’
- Such love I prize not, madam: by your leave,
- The game you play at is not to my mind.
- XV
- I think she sleeps: it must be sleep, when low
- Hangs that abandoned arm toward the floor;
- The face turned with it. Now make fast the door.
- Sleep on: it is your husband, not your foe.
- The Poet’s black stage-lion of wronged love
- Frights not our modern dames:—well if he did!
- Now will I pour new light upon that lid,
- Full-sloping like the breasts beneath. ‘Sweet dove,
- Your sleep is pure. Nay, pardon: I disturb.
- I do not? good!’ Her waking infant-stare
- Grows woman to the burden my hands bear:
- Her own handwriting to me when no curb
- Was left on Passion’s tongue. She trembles through;
- A woman’s tremble—the whole instrument:—
- I show another letter lately sent.
- The words are very like: the name is new.
- XVI
- In our old shipwrecked days there was an hour,
- When in the firelight steadily aglow,
- Joined slackly, we beheld the red chasm grow
- Among the clicking coals. Our library-bower
- That eve was left to us: and hushed we sat
- As lovers to whom Time is whispering.
- From sudden-opened doors we heard them sing:
- The nodding elders mixed good wine with chat.
- Well knew we that Life’s greatest treasure lay
- With us, and of it was our talk. ‘Ah, yes!
- Love dies!’ I said: I never thought it less.
- She yearned to me that sentence to unsay.
- Then when the fire domed blackening, I found
- Her cheek was salt against my kiss, and swift
- Up the sharp scale of sobs her breast did lift:—
- Now am I haunted by that taste! that sound!
- XVII
- At dinner, she is hostess, I am host.
- Went the feast ever cheerfuller? She keeps
- The Topic over intellectual deeps
- In buoyancy afloat. They see no ghost.
- With sparkling surface-eyes we ply the ball:
- It is in truth a most contagious game:
- HIDING THE SKELETON, shall be its name.
- Such play as this the devils might appal!
- But here’s the greater wonder; in that we,
- Enamoured of an acting nought can tire,
- Each other, like true hypocrites, admire;
- Warm-lighted looks, Love’s ephemerioe,
- Shoot gaily o’er the dishes and the wine.
- We waken envy of our happy lot.
- Fast, sweet, and golden, shows the marriage-knot.
- Dear guests, you now have seen Love’s corpse-light shine.
- XVIII
- Here Jack and Tom are paired with Moll and Meg.
- Curved open to the river-reach is seen
- A country merry-making on the green.
- Fair space for signal shakings of the leg.
- That little screwy fiddler from his booth,
- Whence flows one nut-brown stream, commands the joints
- Of all who caper here at various points.
- I have known rustic revels in my youth:
- The May-fly pleasures of a mind at ease.
- An early goddess was a country lass:
- A charmed Amphion-oak she tripped the grass.
- What life was that I lived? The life of these?
- Heaven keep them happy! Nature they seem near.
- They must, I think, be wiser than I am;
- They have the secret of the bull and lamb.
- ’Tis true that when we trace its source, ’tis beer.
- XIX
- No state is enviable. To the luck alone
- Of some few favoured men I would put claim.
- I bleed, but her who wounds I will not blame.
- Have I not felt her heart as ’twere my own
- Beat thro’ me? could I hurt her? heaven and hell!
- But I could hurt her cruelly! Can I let
- My Love’s old time-piece to another set,
- Swear it can’t stop, and must for ever swell?
- Sure, that’s one way Love drifts into the mart
- Where goat-legged buyers throng. I see not plain:—
- My meaning is, it must not be again.
- Great God! the maddest gambler throws his heart.
- If any state be enviable on earth,
- ’Tis yon born idiot’s, who, as days go by,
- Still rubs his hands before him, like a fly,
- In a queer sort of meditative mirth.
- XX
- I am not of those miserable males
- Who sniff at vice and, daring not to snap,
- Do therefore hope for heaven. I take the hap
- Of all my deeds. The wind that fills my sails
- Propels; but I am helmsman. Am I wrecked,
- I know the devil has sufficient weight
- To bear: I lay it not on him, or fate.
- Besides, he’s damned. That man I do suspect
- A coward, who would burden the poor deuce
- With what ensues from his own slipperiness.
- I have just found a wanton-scented tress
- In an old desk, dusty for lack of use.
- Of days and nights it is demonstrative,
- That, like some aged star, gleam luridly.
- If for those times I must ask charity,
- Have I not any charity to give?
- XXI
- We three are on the cedar-shadowed lawn;
- My friend being third. He who at love once laughed
- Is in the weak rib by a fatal shaft
- Struck through, and tells his passion’s bashful dawn
- And radiant culmination, glorious crown,
- When ‘this’ she said: went ‘thus’: most wondrous she.
- Our eyes grow white, encountering: that we are three,
- Forgetful; then together we look down.
- But he demands our blessing; is convinced
- That words of wedded lovers must bring good.
- We question; if we dare! or if we should!
- And pat him, with light laugh. We have not winced.
- Next, she has fallen. Fainting points the sign
- To happy things in wedlock. When she wakes,
- She looks the star that thro’ the cedar shakes:
- Her lost moist hand clings mortally to mine.
- XXII
- What may the woman labour to confess?
- There is about her mouth a nervous twitch.
- ’Tis something to be told, or hidden:—which?
- I get a glimpse of hell in this mild guess.
- She has desires of touch, as if to feel
- That all the household things are things she knew.
- She stops before the glass. What sight in view?
- A face that seems the latest to reveal!
- For she turns from it hastily, and tossed
- Irresolute steals shadow-like to where
- I stand; and wavering pale before me there,
- Her tears fall still as oak-leaves after frost.
- She will not speak. I will not ask. We are
- League-sundered by the silent gulf between.
- You burly lovers on the village green,
- Yours is a lower, and a happier star!
- XXIII
- ’Tis Christmas weather, and a country house
- Receives us: rooms are full: we can but get
- An attic-crib. Such lovers will not fret
- At that, it is half-said. The great carouse
- Knocks hard upon the midnight’s hollow door,
- But when I knock at hers, I see the pit.
- Why did I come here in that dullard fit?
- I enter, and lie couched upon the floor.
- Passing, I caught the coverlet’s quick beat:—
- Come, Shame, burn to my soul! and Pride, and Pain—
- Foul demons that have tortured me, enchain!
- Out in the freezing darkness the lambs bleat.
- The small bird stiffens in the low starlight.
- I know not how, but shuddering as I slept,
- I dreamed a banished angel to me crept:
- My feet were nourished on her breasts all night.
- XXIV
- The misery is greater, as I live!
- To know her flesh so pure, so keen her sense,
- That she does penance now for no offence,
- Save against Love. The less can I forgive!
- The less can I forgive, though I adore
- That cruel lovely pallor which surrounds
- Her footsteps; and the low vibrating sounds
- That come on me, as from a magic shore.
- Low are they, but most subtle to find out
- The shrinking soul. Madam, ’tis understood
- When women play upon their womanhood,
- It means, a Season gone. And yet I doubt
- But I am duped. That nun-like look waylays
- My fancy. Oh! I do but wait a sign!
- Pluck out the eyes of pride! thy mouth to mine!
- Never! though I die thirsting. Go thy ways!
- XXV
- You like not that French novel? Tell me why.
- You think it quite unnatural. Let us see.
- The actors are, it seems, the usual three:
- Husband, and wife, and lover. She—but fie!
- In England we’ll not hear of it. Edmond,
- The lover, her devout chagrin doth share;
- Blanc-mange and absinthe are his penitent fare,
- Till his pale aspect makes her over-fond:
- So, to preclude fresh sin, he tries rosbif.
- Meantime the husband is no more abused:
- Auguste forgives her ere the tear is used.
- Then hangeth all on one tremendous IF:—
- _If_ she will choose between them. She does choose;
- And takes her husband, like a proper wife.
- Unnatural? My dear, these things are life:
- And life, some think, is worthy of the Muse.
- XXVI
- Love ere he bleeds, an eagle in high skies,
- Has earth beneath his wings: from reddened eve
- He views the rosy dawn. In vain they weave
- The fatal web below while far he flies.
- But when the arrow strikes him, there’s a change.
- He moves but in the track of his spent pain,
- Whose red drops are the links of a harsh chain,
- Binding him to the ground, with narrow range.
- A subtle serpent then has Love become.
- I had the eagle in my bosom erst:
- Henceforward with the serpent I am cursed.
- I can interpret where the mouth is dumb.
- Speak, and I see the side-lie of a truth.
- Perchance my heart may pardon you this deed:
- But be no coward:—you that made Love bleed,
- You must bear all the venom of his tooth!
- XXVII
- Distraction is the panacea, Sir!
- I hear my oracle of Medicine say.
- Doctor! that same specific yesterday
- I tried, and the result will not deter
- A second trial. Is the devil’s line
- Of golden hair, or raven black, composed?
- And does a cheek, like any sea-shell rosed,
- Or clear as widowed sky, seem most divine?
- No matter, so I taste forgetfulness.
- And if the devil snare me, body and mind,
- Here gratefully I score:—he seemëd kind,
- When not a soul would comfort my distress!
- O sweet new world, in which I rise new made!
- O Lady, once I gave love: now I take!
- Lady, I must be flattered. Shouldst thou wake
- The passion of a demon, be not afraid.
- XXVIII
- I must be flattered. The imperious
- Desire speaks out. Lady, I am content
- To play with you the game of Sentiment,
- And with you enter on paths perilous;
- But if across your beauty I throw light,
- To make it threefold, it must be all mine.
- First secret; then avowed. For I must shine
- Envied,—I, lessened in my proper sight!
- Be watchful of your beauty, Lady dear!
- How much hangs on that lamp you cannot tell.
- Most earnestly I pray you, tend it well:
- And men shall see me as a burning sphere;
- And men shall mark you eyeing me, and groan
- To be the God of such a grand sunflower!
- I feel the promptings of Satanic power,
- While you do homage unto me alone.
- XXIX
- Am I failing? For no longer can I cast
- A glory round about this head of gold.
- Glory she wears, but springing from the mould;
- Not like the consecration of the Past!
- Is my soul beggared? Something more than earth
- I cry for still: I cannot be at peace
- In having Love upon a mortal lease.
- I cannot take the woman at her worth!
- Where is the ancient wealth wherewith I clothed
- Our human nakedness, and could endow
- With spiritual splendour a white brow
- That else had grinned at me the fact I loathed?
- A kiss is but a kiss now! and no wave
- Of a great flood that whirls me to the sea.
- But, as you will! we’ll sit contentedly,
- And eat our pot of honey on the grave.
- XXX
- What are we first? First, animals; and next
- Intelligences at a leap; on whom
- Pale lies the distant shadow of the tomb,
- And all that draweth on the tomb for text.
- Into which state comes Love, the crowning sun:
- Beneath whose light the shadow loses form.
- We are the lords of life, and life is warm.
- Intelligence and instinct now are one.
- But nature says: ‘My children most they seem
- When they least know me: therefore I decree
- That they shall suffer.’ Swift doth young Love flee,
- And we stand wakened, shivering from our dream.
- Then if we study Nature we are wise.
- Thus do the few who live but with the day:
- The scientific animals are they.—
- Lady, this is my sonnet to your eyes.
- XXXI
- This golden head has wit in it. I live
- Again, and a far higher life, near her.
- Some women like a young philosopher;
- Perchance because he is diminutive.
- For woman’s manly god must not exceed
- Proportions of the natural nursing size.
- Great poets and great sages draw no prize
- With women: but the little lap-dog breed,
- Who can be hugged, or on a mantel-piece
- Perched up for adoration, these obtain
- Her homage. And of this we men are vain?
- Of this! ’Tis ordered for the world’s increase!
- Small flattery! Yet she has that rare gift
- To beauty, Common Sense. I am approved.
- It is not half so nice as being loved,
- And yet I do prefer it. What’s my drift?
- XXXII
- Full faith I have she holds that rarest gift
- To beauty, Common Sense. To see her lie
- With her fair visage an inverted sky
- Bloom-covered, while the underlids uplift,
- Would almost wreck the faith; but when her mouth
- (Can it kiss sweetly? sweetly!) would address
- The inner me that thirsts for her no less,
- And has so long been languishing in drouth,
- I feel that I am matched; that I am man!
- One restless corner of my heart or head,
- That holds a dying something never dead,
- Still frets, though Nature giveth all she can.
- It means, that woman is not, I opine,
- Her sex’s antidote. Who seeks the asp
- For serpent’s bites? ’Twould calm me could I clasp
- Shrieking Bacchantes with their souls of wine!
- XXXIII
- ‘In Paris, at the Louvre, there have I seen
- The sumptuously-feathered angel pierce
- Prone Lucifer, descending. Looked he fierce,
- Showing the fight a fair one? Too serene!
- The young Pharsalians did not disarray
- Less willingly their locks of floating silk:
- That suckling mouth of his upon the milk
- Of heaven might still be feasting through the fray.
- Oh, Raphael! when men the Fiend do fight,
- They conquer not upon such easy terms.
- Half serpent in the struggle grow these worms.
- And does he grow half human, all is right.’
- This to my Lady in a distant spot,
- Upon the theme: _While mind is mastering clay_,
- _Gross clay invades it_. If the spy you play,
- My wife, read this! Strange love talk, is it not?
- XXXIV
- Madam would speak with me. So, now it comes:
- The Deluge or else Fire! She’s well; she thanks
- My husbandship. Our chain on silence clanks.
- Time leers between, above his twiddling thumbs.
- Am I quite well? Most excellent in health!
- The journals, too, I diligently peruse.
- Vesuvius is expected to give news:
- Niagara is no noisier. By stealth
- Our eyes dart scrutinizing snakes. She’s glad
- I’m happy, says her quivering under-lip.
- ‘And are not you?’ ‘How can I be?’ ‘Take ship!
- For happiness is somewhere to be had.’
- ‘Nowhere for me!’ Her voice is barely heard.
- I am not melted, and make no pretence.
- With commonplace I freeze her, tongue and sense.
- Niagara or Vesuvius is deferred.
- XXXV
- It is no vulgar nature I have wived.
- Secretive, sensitive, she takes a wound
- Deep to her soul, as if the sense had swooned,
- And not a thought of vengeance had survived.
- No confidences has she: but relief
- Must come to one whose suffering is acute.
- O have a care of natures that are mute!
- They punish you in acts: their steps are brief.
- What is she doing? What does she demand
- From Providence or me? She is not one
- Long to endure this torpidly, and shun
- The drugs that crowd about a woman’s hand.
- At Forfeits during snow we played, and I
- Must kiss her. ‘Well performed!’ I said: then she:
- ‘’Tis hardly worth the money, you agree?’
- Save her? What for? To act this wedded lie!
- XXXVI
- My Lady unto Madam makes her bow.
- The charm of women is, that even while
- You’re probed by them for tears, you yet may smile,
- Nay, laugh outright, as I have done just now.
- The interview was gracious: they anoint
- (To me aside) each other with fine praise:
- Discriminating compliments they raise,
- That hit with wondrous aim on the weak point:
- My Lady’s nose of Nature might complain.
- It is not fashioned aptly to express
- Her character of large-browed steadfastness.
- But Madam says: Thereof she may be vain!
- Now, Madam’s faulty feature is a glazed
- And inaccessible eye, that has soft fires,
- Wide gates, at love-time, only. This admires
- My Lady. At the two I stand amazed.
- XXXVII
- Along the garden terrace, under which
- A purple valley (lighted at its edge
- By smoky torch-flame on the long cloud-ledge
- Whereunder dropped the chariot) glimmers rich,
- A quiet company we pace, and wait
- The dinner-bell in prae-digestive calm.
- So sweet up violet banks the Southern balm
- Breathes round, we care not if the bell be late:
- Though here and there grey seniors question Time
- In irritable coughings. With slow foot
- The low rosed moon, the face of Music mute,
- Begins among her silent bars to climb.
- As in and out, in silvery dusk, we thread,
- I hear the laugh of Madam, and discern
- My Lady’s heel before me at each turn.
- Our tragedy, is it alive or dead?
- XXXVIII
- Give to imagination some pure light
- In human form to fix it, or you shame
- The devils with that hideous human game:—
- Imagination urging appetite!
- Thus fallen have earth’s greatest Gogmagogs,
- Who dazzle us, whom we can not revere:
- Imagination is the charioteer
- That, in default of better, drives the hogs.
- So, therefore, my dear Lady, let me love!
- My soul is arrowy to the light in you.
- You know me that I never can renew
- The bond that woman broke: what would you have?
- ’Tis Love, or Vileness! not a choice between,
- Save petrifaction! What does Pity here?
- She killed a thing, and now it’s dead, ’tis dear.
- Oh, when you counsel me, think what you mean!
- XXXIX
- She yields: my Lady in her noblest mood
- Has yielded: she, my golden-crownëd rose!
- The bride of every sense! more sweet than those
- Who breathe the violet breath of maidenhood.
- O visage of still music in the sky!
- Soft moon! I feel thy song, my fairest friend!
- True harmony within can apprehend
- Dumb harmony without. And hark! ’tis nigh!
- Belief has struck the note of sound: a gleam
- Of living silver shows me where she shook
- Her long white fingers down the shadowy brook,
- That sings her song, half waking, half in dream.
- What two come here to mar this heavenly tune?
- A man is one: the woman bears my name,
- And honour. Their hands touch! Am I still tame?
- God, what a dancing spectre seems the moon!
- XL
- I bade my Lady think what she might mean.
- Know I my meaning, I? Can I love one,
- And yet be jealous of another? None
- Commits such folly. Terrible Love, I ween,
- Has might, even dead, half sighing to upheave
- The lightless seas of selfishness amain:
- Seas that in a man’s heart have no rain
- To fall and still them. Peace can I achieve,
- By turning to this fountain-source of woe,
- This woman, who’s to Love as fire to wood?
- She breathed the violet breath of maidenhood
- Against my kisses once! but I say, No!
- The thing is mocked at! Helplessly afloat,
- I know not what I do, whereto I strive.
- The dread that my old love may be alive
- Has seized my nursling new love by the throat.
- XLI
- How many a thing which we cast to the ground,
- When others pick it up becomes a gem!
- We grasp at all the wealth it is to them;
- And by reflected light its worth is found.
- Yet for us still ’tis nothing! and that zeal
- Of false appreciation quickly fades.
- This truth is little known to human shades,
- How rare from their own instinct ’tis to feel!
- They waste the soul with spurious desire,
- That is not the ripe flame upon the bough.
- We two have taken up a lifeless vow
- To rob a living passion: dust for fire!
- Madam is grave, and eyes the clock that tells
- Approaching midnight. We have struck despair
- Into two hearts. O, look we like a pair
- Who for fresh nuptials joyfully yield all else?
- XLII
- I am to follow her. There is much grace
- In woman when thus bent on martyrdom.
- They think that dignity of soul may come,
- Perchance, with dignity of body. Base!
- But I was taken by that air of cold
- And statuesque sedateness, when she said
- ‘I’m going’; lit a taper, bowed her head,
- And went, as with the stride of Pallas bold.
- Fleshly indifference horrible! The hands
- Of Time now signal: O, she’s safe from me!
- Within those secret walls what do I see?
- Where first she set the taper down she stands:
- Not Pallas: Hebe shamed! Thoughts black as death
- Like a stirred pool in sunshine break. Her wrists
- I catch: she faltering, as she half resists,
- ‘You love . . .? love . . .? love . . .?’ all on an indrawn breath.
- XLIII
- Mark where the pressing wind shoots javelin-like
- Its skeleton shadow on the broad-backed wave!
- Here is a fitting spot to dig Love’s grave;
- Here where the ponderous breakers plunge and strike,
- And dart their hissing tongues high up the sand:
- In hearing of the ocean, and in sight
- Of those ribbed wind-streaks running into white.
- If I the death of Love had deeply planned,
- I never could have made it half so sure,
- As by the unblest kisses which upbraid
- The full-waked sense; or failing that, degrade!
- ’Tis morning: but no morning can restore
- What we have forfeited. I see no sin:
- The wrong is mixed. In tragic life, God wot,
- No villain need be! Passions spin the plot:
- We are betrayed by what is false within.
- XLIV
- They say, that Pity in Love’s service dwells,
- A porter at the rosy temple’s gate.
- I missed him going: but it is my fate
- To come upon him now beside his wells;
- Whereby I know that I Love’s temple leave,
- And that the purple doors have closed behind.
- Poor soul! if, in those early days unkind,
- Thy power to sting had been but power to grieve,
- We now might with an equal spirit meet,
- And not be matched like innocence and vice.
- She for the Temple’s worship has paid price,
- And takes the coin of Pity as a cheat.
- She sees through simulation to the bone:
- What’s best in her impels her to the worst:
- Never, she cries, shall Pity soothe Love’s thirst,
- Or foul hypocrisy for truth atone!
- XLV
- It is the season of the sweet wild rose,
- My Lady’s emblem in the heart of me!
- So golden-crownëd shines she gloriously,
- And with that softest dream of blood she glows;
- Mild as an evening heaven round Hesper bright!
- I pluck the flower, and smell it, and revive
- The time when in her eyes I stood alive.
- I seem to look upon it out of Night.
- Here’s Madam, stepping hastily. Her whims
- Bid her demand the flower, which I let drop.
- As I proceed, I feel her sharply stop,
- And crush it under heel with trembling limbs.
- She joins me in a cat-like way, and talks
- Of company, and even condescends
- To utter laughing scandal of old friends.
- These are the summer days, and these our walks.
- XLVI
- At last we parley: we so strangely dumb
- In such a close communion! It befell
- About the sounding of the Matin-bell,
- And lo! her place was vacant, and the hum
- Of loneliness was round me. Then I rose,
- And my disordered brain did guide my foot
- To that old wood where our first love-salute
- Was interchanged: the source of many throes!
- There did I see her, not alone. I moved
- Toward her, and made proffer of my arm.
- She took it simply, with no rude alarm;
- And that disturbing shadow passed reproved.
- I felt the pained speech coming, and declared
- My firm belief in her, ere she could speak.
- A ghastly morning came into her cheek,
- While with a widening soul on me she stared.
- XLVII
- We saw the swallows gathering in the sky,
- And in the osier-isle we heard them noise.
- We had not to look back on summer joys,
- Or forward to a summer of bright dye:
- But in the largeness of the evening earth
- Our spirits grew as we went side by side.
- The hour became her husband and my bride.
- Love, that had robbed us so, thus blessed our dearth!
- The pilgrims of the year waxed very loud
- In multitudinous chatterings, as the flood
- Full brown came from the West, and like pale blood
- Expanded to the upper crimson cloud.
- Love, that had robbed us of immortal things,
- This little moment mercifully gave,
- Where I have seen across the twilight wave
- The swan sail with her young beneath her wings.
- XLVIII
- Their sense is with their senses all mixed in,
- Destroyed by subtleties these women are!
- More brain, O Lord, more brain! or we shall mar
- Utterly this fair garden we might win.
- Behold! I looked for peace, and thought it near.
- Our inmost hearts had opened, each to each.
- We drank the pure daylight of honest speech.
- Alas! that was the fatal draught, I fear.
- For when of my lost Lady came the word,
- This woman, O this agony of flesh!
- Jealous devotion bade her break the mesh,
- That I might seek that other like a bird.
- I do adore the nobleness! despise
- The act! She has gone forth, I know not where.
- Will the hard world my sentience of her share
- I feel the truth; so let the world surmise.
- XLIX
- He found her by the ocean’s moaning verge,
- Nor any wicked change in her discerned;
- And she believed his old love had returned,
- Which was her exultation, and her scourge.
- She took his hand, and walked with him, and seemed
- The wife he sought, though shadow-like and dry.
- She had one terror, lest her heart should sigh,
- And tell her loudly she no longer dreamed.
- She dared not say, ‘This is my breast: look in.’
- But there’s a strength to help the desperate weak.
- That night he learned how silence best can speak
- The awful things when Pity pleads for Sin.
- About the middle of the night her call
- Was heard, and he came wondering to the bed.
- ‘Now kiss me, dear! it may be, now!’ she said.
- Lethe had passed those lips, and he knew all.
- L
- Thus piteously Love closed what he begat:
- The union of this ever-diverse pair!
- These two were rapid falcons in a snare,
- Condemned to do the flitting of the bat.
- Lovers beneath the singing sky of May,
- They wandered once; clear as the dew on flowers:
- But they fed not on the advancing hours:
- Their hearts held cravings for the buried day.
- Then each applied to each that fatal knife,
- Deep questioning, which probes to endless dole.
- Ah, what a dusty answer gets the soul
- When hot for certainties in this our life!—
- In tragic hints here see what evermore
- Moves dark as yonder midnight ocean’s force,
- Thundering like ramping hosts of warrior horse,
- To throw that faint thin fine upon the shore!
- THE PATRIOT ENGINEER
- ‘SIRS! may I shake your hands?
- My countrymen, I see!
- I’ve lived in foreign lands
- Till England’s Heaven to me.
- A hearty shake will do me good,
- And freshen up my sluggish blood.’
- Into his hard right hand we struck,
- Gave the shake, and wish’d him luck.
- ‘—From Austria I come,
- An English wife to win,
- And find an English home,
- And live and die therein.
- Great Lord! how many a year I’ve pined
- To drink old ale and speak my mind!’
- Loud rang our laughter, and the shout
- Hills round the Meuse-boat echoed about.
- ‘—Ay, no offence: laugh on,
- Young gentlemen: I’ll join.
- Had you to exile gone,
- Where free speech is base coin,
- You’d sigh to see the jolly nose
- Where Freedom’s native liquor flows!’
- He this time the laughter led,
- Dabbling his oily bullet head.
- ‘—Give me, to suit my moods,
- An ale-house on a heath,
- I’ll hand the crags and woods
- To B’elzebub beneath.
- A fig for scenery! what scene
- Can beat a Jackass on a green?’
- Gravely he seem’d, with gaze intense,
- Putting the question to common sense.
- ‘—Why, there’s the ale-house bench:
- The furze-flower shining round:
- And there’s my waiting-wench,
- As lissome as a hound.
- With “hail Britannia!” ere I drink,
- I’ll kiss her with an artful wink.’
- Fair flash’d the foreign landscape while
- We breath’d again our native Isle.
- ‘—The geese may swim hard-by;
- They gabble, and you talk:
- You’re sure there’s not a spy
- To mark your name with chalk.
- My heart’s an oak, and it won’t grow
- In flower-pots, foreigners must know.’
- Pensive he stood: then shook his head
- Sadly; held out his fist, and said:
- ‘—You’ve heard that Hungary’s floor’d?
- They’ve got her on the ground.
- A traitor broke her sword:
- Two despots held her bound.
- I’ve seen her gasping her last hope:
- I’ve seen her sons strung up b’ the rope.
- ‘Nine gallant gentlemen
- In Arad they strung up!
- I work’d in peace till then:—
- That poison’d all my cup.
- A smell of corpses haunted me:
- My nostril sniff’d like life for sea.
- ‘Take money for my hire
- From butchers?—not the man!
- I’ve got some natural fire,
- And don’t flash in the pan;—
- A few ideas I reveal’d:—
- ’Twas well old England stood my shield!
- ‘Said I, “The Lord of Hosts
- Have mercy on your land!
- I see those dangling ghosts,—
- And you may keep command,
- And hang, and shoot, and have your day:
- They hold your bill, and you must pay.
- ‘“You’ve sent them where they’re strong,
- You carrion Double-Head!
- I hear them sound a gong
- In Heaven above!”—I said.
- “My God, what feathers won’t you moult
- For this!” says I: and then I bolt.
- ‘The Bird’s a beastly Bird,
- And what is more, a fool.
- I shake hands with the herd
- That flock beneath his rule.
- They’re kindly; and their land is fine.
- I thought it rarer once than mine.
- ‘And rare would be its lot,
- But that he baulks its powers:
- It’s just an earthen pot
- For hearts of oak like ours.
- Think! Think!—four days from those frontiers,
- And I’m a-head full fifty years.
- ‘It tingles to your scalps,
- To think of it, my boys!
- Confusion on their Alps,
- And all their baby toys!
- The mountains Britain boasts are men:
- And scale you them, my brethren!’
- Cluck, went his tongue; his fingers, snap.
- Britons were proved all heights to cap.
- And we who worshipp’d crags,
- Where purple splendours burn’d,
- Our idol saw in rags,
- And right about were turn’d.
- Horizons rich with trembling spires
- On violet twilights lost their fires.
- And heights where morning wakes
- With one cheek over snow;—
- And iron-wallèd lakes
- Where sits the white moon low;—
- For us on youthful travel bent,
- The robing picturesque was rent.
- Wherever Beauty show’d
- The wonders of her face,
- This man his Jackass rode,
- High despot of the place.
- Fair dreams of our enchanted life
- Fled fast from his shrill island fife.
- And yet we liked him well;
- We laugh’d with honest hearts:—
- He shock’d some inner spell,
- And rous’d discordant parts.
- We echoed what we half abjured:
- And hating, smilingly endured.
- Moreover, could we be
- To our dear land disloyal?
- And were not also we
- Of History’s blood-Royal?
- We glow’d to think how donkeys graze
- In England, thrilling at their brays.
- For there a man may view
- An aspect more sublime
- Than Alps against the blue:—
- The morning eyes of Time!
- The very Ass participates
- The glory Freedom radiates!
- CASSANDRA
- I
- CAPTIVE on a foreign shore,
- Far from Ilion’s hoary wave,
- Agamemnon’s bridal slave
- Speaks Futurity no more:
- Death is busy with her grave.
- II
- Thick as water, bursts remote
- Round her ears the alien din,
- While her little sullen chin
- Fills the hollows of her throat:
- Silent lie her slaughter’d kin.
- III
- Once to many a pealing shriek,
- Lo, from Ilion’s topmost tower,
- Ilion’s fierce prophetic flower
- Cried the coming of the Greek!
- Black in Hades sits the hour.
- IV
- Eyeing phantoms of the Past,
- Folded like a prophet’s scroll,
- In the deep’s long shoreward roll
- Here she sees the anchor cast:
- Backward moves her sunless soul.
- V
- Chieftains, brethren of her joy,
- Shades, the white light in their eyes
- Slanting to her lips, arise,
- Crowding quick the plains of Troy:
- Now they tell her not she lies.
- VI
- O the bliss upon the plains,
- Where the joining heroes clashed
- Shield and spear, and, unabashed,
- Challenged with hot chariot-reins
- Gods!—they glimmer ocean-washed.
- VII
- Alien voices round the ships,
- Thick as water, shouting Home.
- Argives, pale as midnight foam,
- Wax before her awful lips:
- White as stars that front the gloom.
- VIII
- Like a torch-flame that by day
- Up the daylight twists, and, pale,
- Catches air in leaps that fail,
- Crushed by the inveterate ray,
- Through her shines the Ten-Years’ Tale.
- IX
- Once to many a pealing shriek,
- Lo, from Ilion’s topmost tower,
- Ilion’s fierce prophetic flower
- Cried the coming of the Greek!
- Black in Hades sits the hour.
- X
- Still upon her sunless soul
- Gleams the narrow hidden space
- Forward, where her fiery race
- Falters on its ashen goal:
- Still the Future strikes her face.
- XI
- See toward the conqueror’s car
- Step the purple Queen whose hate
- Wraps red-armed her royal mate
- With his Asian tempest-star:
- Now Cassandra views her Fate.
- XII
- King of men! the blinded host
- Shout:—she lifts her brooding chin:
- Glad along the joyous din
- Smiles the grand majestic ghost:
- Clytemnestra leads him in.
- XIII
- Lo, their smoky limbs aloof,
- Shadowing heaven and the seas,
- Fates and Furies, tangling Threes,
- Tear and mix above the roof:
- Fates and fierce Eumenides.
- XIV
- Is the prophetess with rods
- Beaten, that she writhes in air?
- With the Gods who never spare,
- Wrestling with the unsparing Gods,
- Lone, her body struggles there.
- XV
- Like the snaky torch-flame white,
- Levelled as aloft it twists,
- She, her soaring arms, and wrists
- Drooping, struggles with the light,
- Helios, bright above all mists!
- XVI
- In his orb she sees the tower,
- Dusk against its flaming rims,
- Where of old her wretched limbs
- Twisted with the stolen power:
- Ilium all the lustre dims!
- XVII
- O the bliss upon the plains,
- Where the joining heroes clashed
- Shield and spear, and, unabashed,
- Challenged with hot chariot-reins
- Gods!—they glimmer ocean-washed.
- XVIII
- Thrice the Sun-god’s name she calls;
- Shrieks the deed that shames the sky;
- Like a fountain leaping high,
- Falling as a fountain falls:
- Lo, the blazing wheels go by!
- XIX
- Captive on a foreign shore,
- Far from Ilion’s hoary wave,
- Agamemnon’s bridal slave
- Speaks Futurity no more:
- Death is busy with her grave.
- THE YOUNG USURPER
- ON my darling’s bosom
- Has dropped a living rosy bud,
- Fair as brilliant Hesper
- Against the brimming flood.
- She handles him,
- She dandles him,
- She fondles him and eyes him:
- And if upon a tear he wakes,
- With many a kiss she dries him:
- She covets every move he makes,
- And never enough can prize him.
- Ah, the young Usurper!
- I yield my golden throne:
- Such angel bands attend his hands
- To claim it for his own.
- MARGARET’S BRIDAL EVE
- I
- THE old grey mother she thrummed on her knee:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- And which of the handsome young men shall it be?
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- My daughter, come hither, come hither to me:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- Come, point me your finger on him that you see:
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- O mother, my mother, it never can be:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- For I shall bring shame on the man marries me:
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- Now let your tongue be deep as the sea:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- And the man’ll jump for you, right briskly will he:
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- Tall Margaret wept bitterly:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- And as her parent bade did she:
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- O the handsome young man dropped down on his knee:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- Pale Margaret gave him her hand, woe’s me!
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- II
- O mother, my mother, this thing I must say:
- _There is a rose in the garden_;
- Ere he lies on the breast where that other lay:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- Now, folly, my daughter, for men are men:
- _There is a rose in the garden_;
- You marry them blindfold, I tell you again:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- O mother, but when he kisses me!
- _There is a rose in the garden_;
- My child, ’tis which shall sweetest be!
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- O mother, but when I awake in the morn!
- _There is a rose in the garden_;
- My child, you are his, and the ring is worn:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- Tall Margaret sighed and loosened a tress:
- _There is a rose in the garden_;
- Poor comfort she had of her comeliness
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- My mother will sink if this thing be said:
- _There is a rose in the garden_;
- That my first betrothed came thrice to my bed;
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- He died on my shoulder the third cold night:
- _There is a rose in the garden_;
- I dragged his body all through the moonlight:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- But when I came by my father’s door:
- _There is a rose in the garden_;
- I fell in a lump on the stiff dead floor:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- O neither to heaven, nor yet to hell:
- _There is a rose in the garden_;
- Could I follow the lover I loved so well!
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- III
- The bridesmaids slept in their chambers apart:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- Tall Margaret walked with her thumping heart:
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- The frill of her nightgown below the left breast:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- Had fall’n like a cloud of the moonlighted West:
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- But where the West-cloud breaks to a star:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- Pale Margaret’s breast showed a winding scar:
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- O few are the brides with such a sign!
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- Though I went mad the fault was mine:
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- I must speak to him under this roof to-night:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- I shall burn to death if I speak in the light:
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- O my breast! I must strike you a bloodier wound:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- Than when I scored you red and swooned:
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- I will stab my honour under his eye:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- Though I bleed to the death, I shall let out the lie:
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- O happy my bridesmaids! white sleep is with you!
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- Had he chosen among you he might sleep too!
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- O happy my bridesmaids! your breasts are clean:
- _There is a rose that’s ready_;
- You carry no mark of what has been!
- _There’s a rose that’s ready for clipping_.
- IV
- An hour before the chilly beam:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- The bridegroom started out of a dream:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- He went to the door, and there espied:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- The figure of his silent bride:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- He went to the door, and let her in:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- Whiter looked she than a child of sin:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- She looked so white, she looked so sweet:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- She looked so pure he fell at her feet:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- He fell at her feet with love and awe:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- A stainless body of light he saw:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- O Margaret, say you are not of the dead!
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- My bride! by the angels at night are you led?
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- I am not led by the angels about:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- But I have a devil within to let out:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- O Margaret! my bride and saint!
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- There is on you no earthly taint:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- I am no saint, and no bride can I be:
- _Red rose and while in the garden_;
- Until I have opened my bosom to thee:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- To catch at her heart she laid one hand:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- She told the tale where she did stand:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- She stood before him pale and tall:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- Her eyes between his, she told him all:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- She saw how her body grow freckled and foul:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- She heard from the woods the hooting owl:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- With never a quiver her mouth did speak:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- O when she had done she stood so meek!
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- The bridegroom stamped and called her vile:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- He did but waken a little smile:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- The bridegroom raged and called her foul:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- She heard from the woods the hooting owl:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- He muttered a name full bitter and sore:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- She fell in a lump on the still dead floor:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- O great was the wonder, and loud the wail:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- When through the household flew the tale:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- The old grey mother she dressed the bier:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- With a shivering chin and never a tear:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- O had you but done as I bade you, my child!
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- You would not have died and been reviled:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- The bridegroom he hung at midnight by the bier:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- He eyed the white girl thro’ a dazzling tear:
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- O had you been false as the women who stray:
- _Red rose and white in the garden_;
- You would not be now with the Angels of Day!
- _And the bird sings over the roses_.
- MARIAN
- I
- SHE can be as wise as we,
- And wiser when she wishes;
- She can knit with cunning wit,
- And dress the homely dishes.
- She can flourish staff or pen,
- And deal a wound that lingers;
- She can talk the talk of men,
- And touch with thrilling fingers.
- II
- Match her ye across the sea,
- Natures fond and fiery;
- Ye who zest the turtle’s nest
- With the eagle’s eyrie.
- Soft and loving is her soul,
- Swift and lofty soaring;
- Mixing with its dove-like dole
- Passionate adoring.
- III
- Such a she who’ll match with me?
- In flying or pursuing,
- Subtle wiles are in her smiles
- To set the world a-wooing.
- She is steadfast as a star,
- And yet the maddest maiden:
- She can wage a gallant war,
- And give the peace of Eden.
- BY MORNING TWILIGHT
- NIGHT, like a dying mother,
- Eyes her young offspring, Day.
- The birds are dreamily piping.
- And O, my love, my darling!
- The night is life ebb’d away:
- Away beyond our reach!
- A sea that has cast us pale on the beach;
- Weeds with the weeds and the pebbles
- That hear the lone tamarisk rooted in sand
- Sway
- With the song of the sea to the land.
- UNKNOWN FAIR FACES
- THOUGH I am faithful to my loves lived through,
- And place them among Memory’s great stars,
- Where burns a face like Hesper: one like Mars:
- Of visages I get a moment’s view,
- Sweet eyes that in the heaven of me, too,
- Ascend, tho’ virgin to my life they passed.
- Lo, these within my destiny seem glassed
- At times so bright, I wish that Hope were new.
- A gracious freckled lady, tall and grave,
- Went, in a shawl voluminous and white,
- Last sunset by; and going sow’d a glance.
- Earth is too poor to hold a second chance;
- I will not ask for more than Fortune gave:
- My heart she goes from—never from my sight!
- SHEMSELNIHAR
- O MY lover! the night like a broad smooth wave
- Bears us onward, and morn, a black rock, shines wet.
- How I shuddered—I knew not that I was a slave,
- Till I looked on thy face:—then I writhed in the net.
- Then I felt like a thing caught by fire, that her star
- Glowed dark on the bosom of Shemselnihar.
- And he came, whose I am: O my lover! he came:
- And his slave, still so envied of women, was I:
- And I turned as a hissing leaf spits from the flame,
- Yes, I shrivelled to dust from him, haggard and dry.
- O forgive her:—she was but as dead lilies are:
- The life of her heart fled from Shemselnihar.
- Yet with thee like a full throbbing rose how I bloom!
- Like a rose by the fountain whose showering we hear,
- As we lie, O my lover! in this rich gloom,
- Smelling faint the cool breath of the lemon-groves near.
- As we lie gazing out on that glowing great star—
- Ah! dark on the bosom of Shemselnihar.
- Yet with thee am I not as an arm of the vine,
- Firm to bind thee, to cherish thee, feed thee sweet?
- Swear an oath on my lip to let none disentwine
- The life that here fawns to give warmth to thy feet.
- I on thine, thus! no more shall that jewelled Head jar
- The music thou breathest on Shemselnihar.
- Far away, far away, where the wandering scents
- Of all flowers are sweetest, white mountains among,
- There my kindred abide in their green and blue tents:
- Bear me to them, my lover! they lost me so young.
- Let us slip down the stream and leap steed till afar
- None question thy claim upon Shemselnihar.
- O that long note the bulbul gave out—meaning love!
- O my lover, hark to him and think it my voice!
- The blue night like a great bell-flower from above
- Drooping low and gold-eyed: O, but hear him rejoice!
- Can it be? ’twas a flash! that accurst scimitàr
- In thought even cuts thee from Shemselnihar.
- Yes, I would that, less generous, he would oppress,
- He would chain me, upbraid me, burn deep brands for hate,
- Than with this mask of freedom and gorgeousness
- Bespangle my slavery, mock my strange fate.
- Would, would, would, O my lover, he knew—dared debar
- Thy coming, and earn curse of Shemselnihar!
- A ROAR THROUGH THE TALL TWIN ELM-TREES
- A ROAR thro’ the tall twin elm-trees
- The mustering storm betrayed:
- The South-wind seized the willow
- That over the water swayed.
- Then fell the steady deluge
- In which I strove to doze,
- Hearing all night at my window
- The knock of the winter rose.
- The rainy rose of winter!
- An outcast it must pine.
- And from thy bosom outcast
- Am I, dear lady mine.
- WHEN I WOULD IMAGE
- WHEN I would image her features,
- Comes up a shrouded head:
- I touch the outlines, shrinking;
- She seems of the wandering dead.
- But when love asks for nothing,
- And lies on his bed of snow,
- The face slips under my eyelids,
- All in its living glow.
- Like a dark cathedral city,
- Whose spires, and domes, and towers
- Quiver in violet lightnings,
- My soul basks on for hours.
- THE SPIRIT OF SHAKESPEARE
- THY greatest knew thee, Mother Earth; unsoured
- He knew thy sons. He probed from hell to hell
- Of human passions, but of love deflowered
- His wisdom was not, for he knew thee well.
- Thence came the honeyed corner at his lips,
- The conquering smile wherein his spirit sails
- Calm as the God who the white sea-wave whips,
- Yet full of speech and intershifting tales,
- Close mirrors of us: thence had he the laugh
- We feel is thine: broad as ten thousand beeves
- At pasture! thence thy songs, that winnow chaff
- From grain, bid sick Philosophy’s last leaves
- Whirl, if they have no response—they enforced
- To fatten Earth when from her soul divorced.
- CONTINUED
- HOW smiles he at a generation ranked
- In gloomy noddings over life! They pass.
- Not he to feed upon a breast unthanked,
- Or eye a beauteous face in a cracked glass.
- But he can spy that little twist of brain
- Which moved some weighty leader of the blind,
- Unwitting ’twas the goad of personal pain,
- To view in curst eclipse our Mother’s mind,
- And show us of some rigid harridan
- The wretched bondmen till the end of time.
- O lived the Master now to paint us Man,
- That little twist of brain would ring a chime
- Of whence it came and what it caused, to start
- Thunders of laughter, clearing air and heart.
- ODE TO THE SPIRIT OF EARTH IN AUTUMN
- FAIR Mother Earth lay on her back last night,
- To gaze her fill on Autumn’s sunset skies,
- When at a waving of the fallen light
- Sprang realms of rosy fruitage o’er her eyes.
- A lustrous heavenly orchard hung the West,
- Wherein the blood of Eden bloomed again:
- Red were the myriad cherub-mouths that pressed,
- Among the clusters, rich with song, full fain,
- But dumb, because that overmastering spell
- Of rapture held them dumb: then, here and there,
- A golden harp lost strings; a crimson shell
- Burnt grey; and sheaves of lustre fell to air.
- The illimitable eagerness of hue
- Bronzed, and the beamy winged bloom that flew
- ’Mid those bunched fruits and thronging figures failed.
- A green-edged lake of saffron touched the blue,
- With isles of fireless purple lying through:
- And Fancy on that lake to seek lost treasures sailed.
- Not long the silence followed:
- The voice that issues from thy breast,
- O glorious South-west,
- Along the gloom-horizon holloa’d;
- Warning the valleys with a mellow roar
- Through flapping wings; then sharp the woodland bore
- A shudder and a noise of hands:
- A thousand horns from some far vale
- In ambush sounding on the gale.
- Forth from the cloven sky came bands
- Of revel-gathering spirits; trooping down,
- Some rode the tree-tops; some on torn cloud-strips
- Burst screaming thro’ the lighted town:
- And scudding seaward, some fell on big ships:
- Or mounting the sea-horses blew
- Bright foam-flakes on the black review
- Of heaving hulls and burying beaks.
- Still on the farthest line, with outpuffed cheeks,
- ’Twixt dark and utter dark, the great wind drew
- From heaven that disenchanted harmony
- To join earth’s laughter in the midnight blind:
- Booming a distant chorus to the shrieks
- Preluding him: then he,
- His mantle streaming thunderingly behind,
- Across the yellow realm of stiffened Day,
- Shot thro’ the woodland alleys signals three;
- And with the pressure of a sea
- Plunged broad upon the vale that under lay.
- Night on the rolling foliage fell:
- But I, who love old hymning night,
- And know the Dryad voices well,
- Discerned them as their leaves took flight,
- Like souls to wander after death:
- Great armies in imperial dyes,
- And mad to tread the air and rise,
- The savage freedom of the skies
- To taste before they rot. And here,
- Like frail white-bodied girls in fear,
- The birches swung from shrieks to sighs;
- The aspens, laughers at a breath,
- In showering spray-falls mixed their cries,
- Or raked a savage ocean-strand
- With one incessant drowning screech.
- Here stood a solitary beech,
- That gave its gold with open hand,
- And all its branches, toning chill,
- Did seem to shut their teeth right fast,
- To shriek more mercilessly shrill,
- And match the fierceness of the blast.
- But heard I a low swell that noised
- Of far-off ocean, I was ’ware
- Of pines upon their wide roots poised,
- Whom never madness in the air
- Can draw to more than loftier stress
- Of mournfulness, not mournfulness
- For melancholy, but Joy’s excess,
- That singing on the lap of sorrow faints:
- And Peace, as in the hearts of saints
- Who chant unto the Lord their God;
- Deep Peace below upon the muffled sod,
- The stillness of the sea’s unswaying floor,
- Could I be sole there not to see
- The life within the life awake;
- The spirit bursting from the tree,
- And rising from the troubled lake?
- Pour, let the wines of Heaven pour!
- The Golden Harp is struck once more,
- And all its music is for me!
- Pour, let the wines of Heaven pour!
- And, ho, for a night of Pagan glee!
- There is a curtain o’er us.
- For once, good souls, we’ll not pretend
- To be aught better than her who bore us,
- And is our only visible friend.
- Hark to her laughter! who laughs like this,
- Can she be dead, or rooted in pain?
- She has been slain by the narrow brain,
- But for us who love her she lives again.
- Can she die? O, take her kiss!
- The crimson-footed nymph is panting up the glade,
- With the wine-jar at her arm-pit, and the drunken ivy-braid
- Round her forehead, breasts, and thighs: starts a Satyr, and they
- speed:
- Hear the crushing of the leaves: hear the cracking of the bough!
- And the whistling of the bramble, the piping of the weed!
- But the bull-voiced oak is battling now:
- The storm has seized him half-asleep,
- And round him the wild woodland throngs
- To hear the fury of his songs,
- The uproar of an outraged deep.
- He wakes to find a wrestling giant
- Trunk to trunk and limb to limb,
- And on his rooted force reliant
- He laughs and grasps the broadened giant,
- And twist and roll the Anakim;
- And multitudes, acclaiming to the cloud,
- Cry which is breaking, which is bowed.
- Away, for the cymbals clash aloft
- In the circles of pine, on the moss-floor soft.
- The nymphs of the woodland are gathering there.
- They huddle the leaves, and trample, and toss;
- They swing in the branches, they roll in the moss,
- They blow the seed on the air.
- Back to back they stand and blow
- The winged seed on the cradling air,
- A fountain of leaves over bosom and back.
- The pipe of the Faun comes on their track
- And the weltering alleys overflow
- With musical shrieks and wind-wedded hair.
- The riotous companies melt to a pair.
- Bless them, mother of kindness!
- A star has nodded through
- The depths of the flying blue.
- Time only to plant the light
- Of a memory in the blindness.
- But time to show me the sight
- Of my life thro’ the curtain of night;
- Shining a moment, and mixed
- With the onward-hurrying stream,
- Whose pressure is darkness to me;
- Behind the curtain, fixed,
- Beams with endless beam
- That star on the changing sea.
- Great Mother Nature! teach me, like thee,
- To kiss the season and shun regrets.
- And am I more than the mother who bore,
- Mock me not with thy harmony!
- Teach me to blot regrets,
- Great Mother! me inspire
- With faith that forward sets
- But feeds the living fire,
- Faith that never frets
- For vagueness in the form.
- In life, O keep me warm!
- For, what is human grief?
- And what do men desire?
- Teach me to feel myself the tree,
- And not the withered leaf.
- Fixed am I and await the dark to-be
- And O, green bounteous Earth!
- Bacchante Mother! stern to those
- Who live not in thy heart of mirth;
- Death shall I shrink from, loving thee?
- Into the breast that gives the rose,
- Shall I with shuddering fall?
- Earth, the mother of all,
- Moves on her stedfast way,
- Gathering, flinging, sowing.
- Mortals, we live in her day,
- She in her children is growing.
- She can lead us, only she,
- Unto God’s footstool, whither she reaches:
- Loved, enjoyed, her gifts must be,
- Reverenced the truths she teaches,
- Ere a man may hope that he
- Ever can attain the glee
- Of things without a destiny!
- She knows not loss:
- She feels but her need,
- Who the winged seed
- With the leaf doth toss.
- And may not men to this attain?
- That the joy of motion, the rapture of being,
- Shall throw strong light when our season is fleeing,
- Nor quicken aged blood in vain,
- At the gates of the vault, on the verge of the plain?
- Life thoroughly lived is a fact in the brain,
- While eyes are left for seeing.
- Behold, in yon stripped Autumn, shivering grey,
- Earth knows no desolation.
- She smells regeneration
- In the moist breath of decay.
- Prophetic of the coming joy and strife,
- Like the wild western war-chief sinking
- Calm to the end he eyes unblinking,
- Her voice is jubilant in ebbing life.
- He for his happy hunting-fields
- Forgets the droning chant, and yields
- His numbered breaths to exultation
- In the proud anticipation:
- Shouting the glories of his nation,
- Shouting the grandeur of his race,
- Shouting his own great deeds of daring:
- And when at last death grasps his face,
- And stiffened on the ground in peace
- He lies with all his painted terrors glaring;
- Hushed are the tribe to hear a threading cry:
- Not from the dead man;
- Not from the standers-by:
- The spirit of the red man
- Is welcomed by his fathers up on high.
- MARTIN’S PUZZLE
- I
- THERE she goes up the street with her book in her hand,
- And her Good morning, Martin! Ay, lass, how d’ye do?
- Very well, thank you, Martin!—I can’t understand!
- I might just as well never have cobbled a shoe!
- I can’t understand it. She talks like a song;
- Her voice takes your ear like the ring of a glass;
- She seems to give gladness while limping along,
- Yet sinner ne’er suffer’d like that little lass.
- II
- First, a fool of a boy ran her down with a cart.
- Then, her fool of a father—a blacksmith by trade—
- Why the deuce does he tell us it half broke his heart?
- His heart!—where’s the leg of the poor little maid!
- Well, that’s not enough; they must push her downstairs,
- To make her go crooked: but why count the list?
- If it’s right to suppose that our human affairs
- Are all order’d by heaven—there, bang goes my fist!
- III
- For if angels can look on such sights—never mind!
- When you’re next to blaspheming, it’s best to be mum.
- The parson declares that her woes weren’t designed;
- But, then, with the parson it’s all kingdom-come.
- Lose a leg, save a soul—a convenient text;
- I call it Tea doctrine, not savouring of God.
- When poor little Molly wants ‘chastening,’ why, next
- The Archangel Michael might taste of the rod.
- IV
- But, to see the poor darling go limping for miles
- To read books to sick people!—and just of an age
- When girls learn the meaning of ribands and smiles!
- Makes me feel like a squirrel that turns in a cage.
- The more I push thinking the more I revolve:
- I never get farther:—and as to her face,
- It starts up when near on my puzzle I solve,
- And says, ‘This crush’d body seems such a sad case.’
- V
- Not that she’s for complaining: she reads to earn pence;
- And from those who can’t pay, simple thanks are enough.
- Does she leave lamentation for chaps without sense?
- Howsoever, she’s made up of wonderful stuff.
- Ay, the soul in her body must be a stout cord;
- She sings little hymns at the close of the day,
- Though she has but three fingers to lift to the Lord,
- And only one leg to kneel down with to pray.
- VI
- What I ask is, Why persecute such a poor dear,
- If there’s Law above all? Answer that if you can!
- Irreligious I’m not; but I look on this sphere
- As a place where a man should just think like a man.
- It isn’t fair dealing! But, contrariwise,
- Do bullets in battle the wicked select?
- Why, then it’s all chance-work! And yet, in her eyes,
- She holds a fixed something by which I am checked.
- VII
- Yonder riband of sunshine aslope on the wall,
- If you eye it a minute ’ll have the same look:
- So kind! and so merciful! God of us all!
- It’s the very same lesson we get from the Book.
- Then, is Life but a trial? Is that what is meant?
- Some must toil, and some perish, for others below:
- The injustice to each spreads a common content;
- Ay! I’ve lost it again, for it can’t be quite so.
- VIII
- She’s the victim of fools: that seems nearer the mark.
- On earth there are engines and numerous fools.
- Why the Lord can permit them, we’re still in the dark;
- He does, and in some sort of way they’re His tools.
- It’s a roundabout way, with respect let me add,
- If Molly goes crippled that we may be taught:
- But, perhaps, it’s the only way, though it’s so bad;
- In that case we’ll bow down our heads,—as we ought.
- IX
- But the worst of _me_ is, that when I bow my head,
- I perceive a thought wriggling away in the dust,
- And I follow its tracks, quite forgetful, instead
- Of humble acceptance: for, question I must!
- Here’s a creature made carefully—carefully made!
- Put together with craft, and then stamped on, and why?
- The answer seems nowhere: it’s discord that’s played.
- The sky’s a blue dish!—an implacable sky!
- X
- Stop a moment. I seize an idea from the pit.
- They tell us that discord, though discord, alone,
- Can be harmony when the notes properly fit:
- Am I judging all things from a single false tone?
- Is the Universe one immense Organ, that rolls
- From devils to angels? I’m blind with the sight.
- It pours such a splendour on heaps of poor souls!
- I might try at kneeling with Molly to-night.
- FOOTNOTES
- {1} First contributed to a MS. magazine, ‘The Monthly Observer,’ in the
- year 1849; first printed in _Chambers’ Edinburgh Journal_, July 7, 1849.
- {163} Originally printed in ‘Poems,’ 1851.
- {164} ‘The Leader,’ December 20, 1851.
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