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  • Title: Poems, Volume 3 [of 3]
  • Author: George Meredith
  • Release Date: January 10, 2015 [eBook #1383]
  • [This file was first posted on May 12, 1998]
  • Language: English
  • Character set encoding: UTF-8
  • ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POEMS, VOLUME 3 [OF 3]***
  • Transcribed from the 1912 Times Book Club “Surrey” edition by David
  • Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
  • [Picture: Book cover]
  • [Picture: The South Wester]
  • POEMS
  • VOL. III
  • 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
  • A STAVE OF ROVING TIM, 1
  • The wind is East, the wind is West,
  • JUMP-TO-GLORY JANE, 5
  • A revelation came on Jane,
  • THE RIDDLE FOR MEN, 14
  • This Riddle rede or die,
  • THE SAGE ENAMOURED AND THE HONEST LADY, 15
  • One fairest of the ripe unwedded left
  • ‘LOVE IS WINGED FOR TWO,’ 30
  • ‘ASK, IS LOVE DIVINE,’ 30
  • ‘JOY IS FLEET,’ 31
  • THE LESSON OF GRIEF, 31
  • Not ere the bitter herb we taste,
  • WIND ON THE LYRE, 32
  • That was the chirp of Ariel
  • THE YOUTHFUL QUEST, 33
  • His Lady queen of woods to meet,
  • THE EMPTY PURSE, 34
  • Thou, run to the dry on this wayside bank,
  • TO THE COMIC SPIRIT, 56
  • Sword of Common Sense!—
  • YOUTH IN MEMORY, 68
  • Days, when the ball of our vision
  • PENETRATION AND TRUST, 75
  • Sleek as a lizard at round of a stone,
  • NIGHT OF FROST IN MAY, 76
  • With splendour of a silver day,
  • THE TEACHING OF THE NUDE, 79
  • A Satyr spied a Goddess in her bath,
  • BREATH OF THE BRIAR, 81
  • O briar-scents, on yon wet wing
  • EMPEDOCLES, 82
  • He leaped. With none to hinder,
  • ENGLAND BEFORE THE STORM, 83
  • The day that is the night of days,
  • TARDY SPRING, 85
  • Now the North wind ceases,
  • THE LABOURER, 87
  • For a Heracles in his fighting ire there is never the
  • glory that follows
  • FORESIGHT AND PATIENCE, 89
  • Sprung of the father blood, the mother brain,
  • THE WARNING, 99
  • We have seen mighty men ballooning high,
  • OUTSIDE THE CROWD, 99
  • To sit on History in an easy chair,
  • TRAFALGAR DAY, 100
  • He leads: we hear our Seaman’s call
  • Odes in Contribution to the Song of French History
  • THE REVOLUTION, 105
  • Not yet had History’s Aetna smoked the skies,
  • NAPOLÉON, 116
  • Cannon his name,
  • FRANCE, 140
  • We look for her that sunlike stood
  • ALSACE-LORRAINE, 150
  • The sister Hours in circles linked,
  • THE CAGEING OF ARES, 170
  • How big of breast our Mother Gaea laughed
  • THE NIGHT-WALK, 175
  • Awakes for me and leaps from shroud
  • AT THE CLOSE, 178
  • To Thee, dear God of Mercy, both appeal,
  • A GARDEN IDYL, 179
  • With sagest craft Arachne worked
  • A Reading of Life
  • THE VITAL CHOICE, 185
  • Or shall we run with Artemis
  • WITH THE HUNTRESS, 186
  • Through the water-eye of night,
  • WITH THE PERSUADER, 189
  • Who murmurs, hither, hither: who
  • THE TEST OF MANHOOD, 200
  • Like a flood river whirled at rocky banks,
  • THE HUELESS LOVE, 208
  • Unto that love must we through fire attain,
  • UNION IN DISSEVERANCE, 209
  • Sunset worn to its last vermilion he;
  • SONG IN THE SONGLESS, 210
  • They have no song, the sedges dry,
  • THE BURDEN OF STRENGTH, 210
  • If that thou hast the gift of strength, then know
  • THE MAIN REGRET, 211
  • Seen, too clear and historic within us, our sins of
  • omission
  • ALTERNATION, 211
  • Between the fountain and the rill
  • FOREST HISTORY, 212
  • Beneath the vans of doom did men pass in.
  • Fragments of the Iliad in English Hexameter Verse
  • THE INVECTIVE OF ACHILLES, 221
  • ‘Heigh me! brazen of front, thou glutton for plunder, how
  • can one,
  • ‘Bibber besotted, with scowl of a cur, having heart of a
  • deer, thou!
  • MARSHALLING OF THE ACHAIANS, 225
  • Like as a terrible fire feeds fast on a forest enormous,
  • AGAMEMNON IN THE FIGHT, 227
  • These, then, he left, and away where ranks were now
  • clashing the thickest,
  • PARIS AND DIOMEDES, 228
  • So he, with a clear shout of laughter,
  • HYPNOS ON IDA, 230
  • They then to fountain-abundant Ida, mother of wild
  • beasts,
  • CLASH IN ARMS OF THE ACHAIANS AND TROJANS, 231
  • Not the sea-wave so bellows abroad when it bursts upon
  • shingle,
  • THE HORSES OF ACHILLES, 232
  • So now the horses of Aiakides, off wide of the
  • war-ground,
  • THE MARES OF THE CAMARGUE, 234
  • A hundred mares, all white! their manes
  • ‘ATKINS’, 236
  • Yonder’s the man with his life in his hand,
  • THE VOYAGE OF THE ‘OPHIR’, 237
  • Men of our race, we send you one
  • THE CRISIS, 239
  • Spirit of Russia, now has come
  • OCTOBER 21, 1905, 241
  • The hundred years have passed, and he
  • THE CENTENARY OF GARIBALDI, 243
  • We who have seen Italia in the throes,
  • THE WILD ROSE, 245
  • High climbs June’s wild rose,
  • THE CALL, 247
  • Under what spell are we debased
  • ON COMO, 250
  • A rainless darkness drew o’er the lake
  • MILTON, 251
  • What splendour of imperial station man,
  • IRELAND, 253
  • Fire in her ashes Ireland feels
  • THE YEARS HAD WORN THEIR SEASONS’ BELT, 255
  • The years had worn their seasons’ belt,
  • FRAGMENTS, 257
  • Open horizons round,
  • A wilding little stubble flower
  • From labours through the night, outworn,
  • This love of nature, that allures to take
  • IL Y A CENT ANS, 259
  • That march of the funereal Past behold;
  • YOUTH IN AGE, 261
  • Once I was part of the music I heard
  • Epitaphs
  • TO A FRIEND LOST, 265
  • When I remember, friend, whom lost I call,
  • M. M., 265
  • Who call her Mother and who calls her Wife
  • THE LADY C. M., 266
  • To them that knew her, there is vital flame
  • ON THE TOMBSTONE OF JAMES CHRISTOPHER WILSON, 266
  • Thou our beloved and light of Earth hast crossed
  • GORDON OF KHARTOUM, 266
  • Of men he would have raised to light he fell:
  • J. C. M., 267
  • A fountain of our sweetest, quick to spring
  • THE EMPEROR FREDERICK OF OUR TIME, 267
  • With Alfred and St. Louis he doth win
  • ISLET THE DACHS, 267
  • Our Islet out of Helgoland, dismissed
  • ON HEARING THE NEWS FROM VENICE, 268
  • Now dumb is he who waked the world to speak,
  • HAWARDEN, 269
  • When comes the lighted day for men to read
  • AT THE FUNERAL, 270
  • Her sacred body bear: the tenement
  • ANGELA BURDETT-COUTTS, 270
  • Long with us, now she leaves us; she has rest
  • THE YEAR’S SHEDDINGS, 270
  • The varied colours are a fitful heap:
  • A STAVE OF ROVING TIM
  • (ADDRESSED TO CERTAIN FRIENDLY TRAMPS.)
  • I
  • THE wind is East, the wind is West,
  • Blows in and out of haven;
  • The wind that blows is the wind that’s best,
  • And croak, my jolly raven!
  • If here awhile we jigged and laughed,
  • The like we will do yonder;
  • For he’s the man who masters a craft,
  • And light as a lord can wander.
  • So, foot the measure, Roving Tim,
  • And croak, my jolly raven!
  • The wind according to its whim
  • Is in and out of haven.
  • II
  • You live in rows of snug abodes,
  • With gold, maybe, for counting;
  • And mine’s the beck of the rainy roads
  • Against the sun a-mounting.
  • I take the day as it behaves,
  • Nor shiver when ’tis airy;
  • But comes a breeze, all you are on waves,
  • Sick chickens o’ Mother Carey!
  • So, now for next, cries Roving Tim,
  • And croak, my jolly raven!
  • The wind according to its whim
  • Is in and out of haven.
  • III
  • Sweet lass, you screw a lovely leer,
  • To make a man consider.
  • If you were up with the auctioneer,
  • I’d be a handsome bidder.
  • But wedlock clips the rover’s wing;
  • She tricks him fly to spider;
  • And when we get to fights in the Ring,
  • It’s trumps when you play outsider.
  • So, wrench and split, cries Roving Tim,
  • And croak, my jolly raven!
  • The wind according to its whim
  • Is in and out of haven.
  • IV
  • Along my winding way I know
  • A shady dell that’s winking;
  • The very corner for Self and Co
  • To do a world of thinking.
  • And shall I this? and shall I that?
  • Till Nature answers, ne’ther!
  • Strike match and light your pipe in your hat,
  • Rejoicing in sound shoe-leather!
  • So lead along, cries Roving Tim,
  • And croak, my jolly raven!
  • The wind according to its whim
  • Is in and out of haven.
  • V
  • A cunning hand ’ll hand you bread,
  • With freedom for your capers.
  • I’m not so sure of a cunning head;
  • It steers to pits or vapours.
  • But as for Life, we’ll bear in sight
  • The lesson Nature teaches;
  • Regard it in a sailoring light,
  • And treat it like thirsty leeches.
  • So, fly your jib, cries Roving Tim,
  • And top your boom, old raven!
  • The wind according to its whim
  • Is in and out of haven.
  • VI
  • She’ll take, to please her dame and dad,
  • The shopman nicely shaven.
  • She’ll learn to think o’ the marching lad
  • When perchers show they’re craven.
  • You say the shopman piles a heap,
  • While I perhaps am fasting;
  • And bless your wits, it haunts him in sleep,
  • His tin-kettle chance of lasting!
  • So hail the road, cries Roving Tim,
  • And hail the rain, old raven!
  • The wind according to its whim
  • Is in and out of haven.
  • VII
  • He’s half a wife, yon pecker bill;
  • A book and likewise preacher.
  • With any soul, in a game of skill,
  • He’ll prove your over-reacher.
  • The reason is, his brains are bent
  • On doing things right single.
  • You’d wish for them when pitching your tent
  • At night in a whirly dingle!
  • So, off we go, cries Roving Tim,
  • And on we go, old raven!
  • The wind according to its whim
  • Is in and out of haven.
  • VIII
  • Lord, no, man’s lot is not for bliss;
  • To call it woe is blindness:
  • It’ll here a kick, and it’s there a kiss,
  • And here and there a kindness.
  • He starts a hare and calls her joy;
  • He runs her down to sorrow:
  • The dogs within him bother the boy,
  • But ’tis a new day to-morrow.
  • So, I at helm, cries Roving Tim,
  • And you at bow, old raven!
  • The wind according to its whim
  • Is in and out of haven.
  • JUMP-TO-GLORY JANE
  • I
  • A REVELATION came on Jane,
  • The widow of a labouring swain:
  • And first her body trembled sharp,
  • Then all the woman was a harp
  • With winds along the strings; she heard,
  • Though there was neither tone nor word.
  • II
  • For past our hearing was the air,
  • Beyond our speaking what it bare,
  • And she within herself had sight
  • Of heaven at work to cleanse outright,
  • To make of her a mansion fit
  • For angel hosts inside to sit.
  • III
  • They entered, and forthwith entranced,
  • Her body braced, her members danced;
  • Surprisingly the woman leapt;
  • And countenance composed she kept:
  • As gossip neighbours in the lane
  • Declared, who saw and pitied Jane.
  • IV
  • These knew she had been reading books,
  • The which was witnessed by her looks
  • Of late: she had a mania
  • For mad folk in America,
  • And said for sure they led the way,
  • But meat and beer were meant to stay.
  • V
  • That she had visited a fair,
  • Had seen a gauzy lady there,
  • Alive with tricks on legs alone,
  • As good as wings, was also known:
  • And longwhiles in a sullen mood,
  • Before her jumping, Jane would brood.
  • VI
  • A good knee’s height, they say, she sprang;
  • Her arms and feet like those who hang:
  • As if afire the body sped,
  • And neither pair contributed.
  • She jumped in silence: she was thought
  • A corpse to resurrection caught.
  • VII
  • The villagers were mostly dazed;
  • They jeered, they wondered, and they praised.
  • ’Twas guessed by some she was inspired,
  • And some would have it she had hired
  • An engine in her petticoats,
  • To turn their wits and win their votes.
  • VIII
  • Her first was Winny Earnes, a kind
  • Of woman not to dance inclined;
  • But she went up, entirely won,
  • Ere Jump-to-glory Jane had done;
  • And once a vixen wild for speech,
  • She found the better way to preach.
  • IX
  • No long time after, Jane was seen
  • Directing jumps at Daddy Green;
  • And that old man, to watch her fly,
  • Had eyebrows made of arches high;
  • Till homeward he likewise did hop,
  • Oft calling on himself to stop!
  • X
  • It was a scene when man and maid,
  • Abandoning all other trade,
  • And careless of the call to meals,
  • Went jumping at the woman’s heels.
  • By dozens they were counted soon,
  • Without a sound to tell their tune.
  • XI
  • Along the roads they came, and crossed
  • The fields, and o’er the hills were lost,
  • And in the evening reappeared;
  • Then short like hobbled horses reared,
  • And down upon the grass they plumped:
  • Alone their Jane to glory jumped.
  • XII
  • At morn they rose, to see her spring
  • All going as an engine thing;
  • And lighter than the gossamer
  • She led the bobbers following her,
  • Past old acquaintances, and where
  • They made the stranger stupid stare.
  • XIII
  • When turnips were a filling crop,
  • In scorn they jumped a butcher’s shop:
  • Or, spite of threats to flog and souse,
  • They jumped for shame a public-house:
  • And much their legs were seized with rage
  • If passing by the vicarage.
  • XIV
  • The tightness of a hempen rope
  • Their bodies got; but laundry soap
  • Not handsomer can rub the skin
  • For token of the washed within.
  • Occasionally coughers cast
  • A leg aloft and coughed their last.
  • XV
  • The weaker maids and some old men,
  • Requiring rafters for the pen
  • On rainy nights, were those who fell.
  • The rest were quite a miracle,
  • Refreshed as you may search all round
  • On Club-feast days and cry, Not found!
  • XVI
  • For these poor innocents, that slept
  • Against the sky, soft women wept:
  • For never did they any theft;
  • ’Twas known when they their camping left,
  • And jumped the cold out of their rags;
  • In spirit rich as money-bags.
  • XVII
  • They jumped the question, jumped reply;
  • And whether to insist, deny,
  • Reprove, persuade, they jumped in ranks
  • Or singly, straight the arms to flanks,
  • And straight the legs, with just a knee
  • For bending in a mild degree.
  • XVIII
  • The villagers might call them mad;
  • An endless holiday they had,
  • Of pleasure in a serious work:
  • They taught by leaps where perils lurk,
  • And with the lambkins practised sports
  • For ’scaping Satan’s pounds and quarts.
  • XIX
  • It really seemed on certain days,
  • When they bobbed up their Lord to praise,
  • And bobbing up they caught the glance
  • Of light, our secret is to dance,
  • And hold the tongue from hindering peace;
  • To dance out preacher and police.
  • XX
  • Those flies of boys disturbed them sore
  • On Sundays and when daylight wore:
  • With withies cut from hedge or copse,
  • They treated them as whipping-tops,
  • And flung big stones with cruel aim;
  • Yet all the flock jumped on the same.
  • XXI
  • For what could persecution do
  • To worry such a blessed crew,
  • On whom it was as wind to fire,
  • Which set them always jumping higher?
  • The parson and the lawyer tried,
  • By meek persistency defied.
  • XXII
  • But if they bore, they could pursue
  • As well, and this the Bishop too;
  • When inner warnings proved him plain
  • The chase for Jump-to-glory Jane.
  • She knew it by his being sent
  • To bless the feasting in the tent.
  • XXIII
  • Not less than fifty years on end,
  • The Squire had been the Bishop’s friend:
  • And his poor tenants, harmless ones,
  • With souls to save! fed not on buns,
  • But angry meats: she took her place
  • Outside to show the way to grace.
  • XXIV
  • In apron suit the Bishop stood;
  • The crowding people kindly viewed.
  • A gaunt grey woman he saw rise
  • On air, with most beseeching eyes:
  • And evident as light in dark
  • It was, she set to him for mark.
  • XXV
  • Her highest leap had come: with ease
  • She jumped to reach the Bishop’s knees:
  • Compressing tight her arms and lips,
  • She sought to jump the Bishop’s hips:
  • Her aim flew at his apron-band,
  • That he might see and understand.
  • XXVI
  • The mild inquiry of his gaze
  • Was altered to a peaked amaze,
  • At sight of thirty in ascent,
  • To gain his notice clearly bent:
  • And greatly Jane at heart was vexed
  • By his ploughed look of mind perplexed.
  • XXVII
  • In jumps that said, Beware the pit!
  • More eloquent than speaking it—
  • That said, Avoid the boiled, the roast;
  • The heated nose on face of ghost,
  • Which comes of drinking: up and o’er
  • The flesh with me! did Jane implore.
  • XXVIII
  • She jumped him high as huntsmen go
  • Across the gate; she jumped him low,
  • To coax him to begin and feel
  • His infant steps returning, peel
  • His mortal pride, exposing fruit,
  • And off with hat and apron suit.
  • XXIX
  • We need much patience, well she knew,
  • And out and out, and through and through,
  • When we would gentlefolk address,
  • However we may seek to bless:
  • At times they hide them like the beasts
  • From sacred beams; and mostly priests.
  • XXX
  • He gave no sign of making bare,
  • Nor she of faintness or despair.
  • Inflamed with hope that she might win,
  • If she but coaxed him to begin,
  • She used all arts for making fain;
  • The mother with her babe was Jane.
  • XXXI
  • Now stamped the Squire, and knowing not
  • Her business, waved her from the spot.
  • Encircled by the men of might,
  • The head of Jane, like flickering light,
  • As in a charger, they beheld
  • Ere she was from the park expelled.
  • XXXII
  • Her grief, in jumps of earthly weight,
  • Did Jane around communicate:
  • For that the moment when began
  • The holy but mistaken man,
  • In view of light, to take his lift,
  • They cut him from her charm adrift!
  • XXXIII
  • And he was lost: a banished face
  • For ever from the ways of grace,
  • Unless pinched hard by dreams in fright.
  • They saw the Bishop’s wavering sprite
  • Within her look, at come and go,
  • Long after he had caused her woe.
  • XXXIV
  • Her greying eyes (until she sank
  • At Fredsham on the wayside bank,
  • Like cinder heaps that whitened lie
  • From coals that shot the flame to sky)
  • Had glassy vacancies, which yearned
  • For one in memory discerned.
  • XXXV
  • May those who ply the tongue that cheats,
  • And those who rush to beer and meats,
  • And those whose mean ambition aims
  • At palaces and titled names,
  • Depart in such a cheerful strain
  • As did our Jump-to-glory Jane!
  • XXXVI
  • Her end was beautiful: one sigh.
  • She jumped a foot when it was nigh.
  • A lily in a linen clout
  • She looked when they had laid her out.
  • It is a lily-light she bears
  • For England up the ladder-stairs.
  • THE RIDDLE FOR MEN
  • I
  • THIS Riddle rede or die,
  • Says History since our Flood,
  • To warn her sons of power:—
  • It can be truth, it can be lie;
  • Be parasite to twist awry;
  • The drouthy vampire for your blood;
  • The fountain of the silver flower;
  • A brand, a lure, a web, a crest;
  • Supple of wax or tempered steel;
  • The spur to honour, snake in nest:
  • ’Tis as you will with it to deal;
  • To wear upon the breast,
  • Or trample under heel.
  • II
  • And rede you not aright,
  • Says Nature, still in red
  • Shall History’s tale be writ!
  • For solely thus you lead to light
  • The trailing chapters she must write,
  • And pass my fiery test of dead
  • Or living through the furnace-pit:
  • Dislinked from who the softer hold
  • In grip of brute, and brute remain:
  • Of whom the woeful tale is told,
  • How for one short Sultanic reign,
  • Their bodies lapse to mould,
  • Their souls behowl the plain.
  • THE SAGE ENAMOURED AND THE HONEST LADY
  • I
  • ONE fairest of the ripe unwedded left
  • Her shadow on the Sage’s path; he found,
  • By common signs, that she had done a theft.
  • He could have made the sovereign heights resound
  • With questions of the wherefore of her state:
  • He on far other but an hour before
  • Intent. And was it man, or was it mate,
  • That she disdained? or was there haply more?
  • About her mouth a placid humour slipped
  • The dimple, as you see smooth lakes at eve
  • Spread melting rings where late a swallow dipped.
  • The surface was attentive to receive,
  • The secret underneath enfolded fast.
  • She had the step of the unconquered, brave,
  • Not arrogant; and if the vessel’s mast
  • Waved liberty, no challenge did it wave.
  • Her eyes were the sweet world desired of souls,
  • With something of a wavering line unspelt.
  • They hold the look whose tenderness condoles
  • For what the sister in the look has dealt
  • Of fatal beyond healing; and her tones
  • A woman’s honeyed amorous outvied,
  • As when in a dropped viol the wood-throb moans
  • Among the sobbing strings, that plain and chide
  • Like infants for themselves, less deep to thrill
  • Than those rich mother-notes for them breathed round.
  • Those voices are not magic of the will
  • To strike love’s wound, but of love’s wound give sound,
  • Conveying it; the yearnings, pains and dreams.
  • They waft to the moist tropics after storm,
  • When out of passion spent thick incense steams,
  • And jewel-belted clouds the wreck transform.
  • Was never hand on brush or lyre to paint
  • Her gracious manners, where the nuptial ring
  • Of melody clasped motion in restraint:
  • The reed-blade with the breeze thereof may sing.
  • With such endowments armed was she and decked
  • To make her spoken thoughts eclipse her kind;
  • Surpassing many a giant intellect,
  • The marvel of that cradled infant mind.
  • It clenched the tiny fist, it curled the toe;
  • Cherubic laughed, enticed, dispensed, absorbed;
  • And promised in fair feminine to grow
  • A Sage’s match and mate, more heavenly orbed.
  • II
  • Across his path the spouseless Lady cast
  • Her shadow, and the man that thing became.
  • His youth uprising called his age the Past.
  • This was the strong grey head of laurelled name,
  • And in his bosom an inverted Sage
  • Mistook for light of morn the light which sank.
  • But who while veins run blood shall know the page
  • Succeeding ere we turn upon our blank?
  • Comes Beauty with her tale of moon and cloud,
  • Her silvered rims of mystery pointing in
  • To hollows of the half-veiled unavowed,
  • Where beats her secret life, grey heads will spin
  • Quick as the young, and spell those hieroglyphs
  • Of phosphorescent dusk, devoutly bent;
  • They drink a cup to whirl on dizzier cliffs
  • For their shamed fall, which asks, why was she sent!
  • Why, and of whom, and whence; and tell they truth,
  • The legends of her mission to beguile?
  • Hard likeness to the toilful apes of youth
  • He bore at times, and tempted the sly smile;
  • And not on her soft lips was it descried.
  • She stepped her way benevolently grave:
  • Nor sign that Beauty fed her worm of pride,
  • By tossing victim to the courtier knave,
  • Let peep, nor of the naughty pride gave sign.
  • Rather ’twas humbleness in being pursued,
  • As pilgrim to the temple of a shrine.
  • Had he not wits to pierce the mask he wooed?
  • All wisdom’s armoury this man could wield;
  • And if the cynic in the Sage it pleased
  • Traverse her woman’s curtain and poor shield,
  • For new example of a world diseased;
  • Showing her shrineless, not a temple, bare;
  • A curtain ripped to tatters by the blast;
  • Yet she most surely to this man stood fair:
  • He worshipped like the young enthusiast,
  • Named simpleton or poet. Did he read
  • Right through, and with the voice she held reserved
  • Amid her vacant ruins jointly plead?
  • Compassion for the man thus noble nerved
  • The pity for herself she felt in him,
  • To wreak a deed of sacrifice, and save;
  • At least, be worthy. That our soul may swim,
  • We sink our heart down bubbling under wave.
  • It bubbles till it drops among the wrecks.
  • But, ah! confession of a woman’s breast:
  • She eminent, she honoured of her sex!
  • Truth speaks, and takes the spots of the confessed,
  • To veil them. None of women, save their vile,
  • Plays traitor to an army in the field.
  • The cries most vindicating most defile.
  • How shall a cause to Nature be appealed,
  • When, under pressure of their common foe,
  • Her sisters shun the Mother and disown,
  • On pain of his intolerable crow
  • Above the fiction, built for him, o’erthrown?
  • Irrational he is, irrational
  • Must they be, though not Reason’s light shall wane
  • In them with ever Nature at close call,
  • Behind the fiction torturing to sustain;
  • Who hear her in the milk, and sometimes make
  • A tongueless answer, shivered on a sigh:
  • Whereat men dread their lofty structure’s quake
  • Once more, and in their hosts for tocsin ply
  • The crazy roar of peril, leonine
  • For injured majesty. That sigh of dames
  • Is rare and soon suppressed. Not they combine
  • To shake the structure sheltering them, which tames
  • Their lustier if not wilder: fixed are they,
  • In elegancy scarce denoting ease;
  • And do they breathe, it is not to betray
  • The martyr in the caryatides.
  • Yet here and there along the graceful row
  • Is one who fetches breath from deeps, who deems,
  • Moved by a desperate craving, their old foe
  • May yield a trustier friend than woman seems,
  • And aid to bear the sculptured floral weight
  • Massed upon heads not utterly of stone:
  • May stamp endurance by expounding fate.
  • She turned to him, and, This you seek is gone;
  • Look in, she said, as pants the furnace, brief,
  • Frost-white. She gave his hearing sight to view
  • The silent chamber of a brown curled leaf:
  • Thing that had throbbed ere shot black lightning through.
  • No further sign of heart could he discern:
  • The picture of her speech was winter sky;
  • A headless figure folding a cleft urn,
  • Where tears once at the overflow were dry.
  • III
  • So spake she her first utterance on the rack.
  • It softened torment, in the funeral hues
  • Round wan Romance at ebb, but drove her back
  • To listen to herself, herself accuse
  • Harshly as Love’s imperial cause allowed.
  • She meant to grovel, and her lover praised
  • So high o’er the condemnatory crowd,
  • That she perforce a fellow phoenix blazed.
  • The picture was of hand fast joined to hand,
  • Both pushed from angry skies, their grasp more pledged
  • Under the threatened flash of a bright brand
  • At arm’s length up, for severing action edged.
  • Why, then Love’s Court of Honour contemplate;
  • And two drowned shorecasts, who, for the life esteemed
  • Above their lost, invoke an advocate
  • In Passion’s purity, thereby redeemed.
  • Redeemed, uplifted, glimmering on a throne,
  • The woman stricken by an arrow falls.
  • His advocate she can be, not her own,
  • If, Traitress to thy sex! one sister calls.
  • Have we such scenes of drapery’s mournfulness
  • On Beauty’s revelations, witched we plant,
  • Over the fair shape humbled to confess,
  • An angel’s buckler, with loud choiric chant.
  • IV
  • No knightly sword to serve, nor harp of bard,
  • The lady’s hand in her physician’s knew.
  • She had not hoped for them as her award,
  • When zig-zag on the tongue electric flew
  • Her charge of counter-motives, none impure:
  • But muteness whipped her skin. She could have said,
  • Her free confession was to work his cure,
  • Show proofs for why she could not love or wed.
  • Were they not shown? His muteness shook in thrall
  • Her body on the verge of that black pit
  • Sheer from the treacherous confessional,
  • Demanding further, while perusing it.
  • Slave is the open mouth beneath the closed.
  • She sank; she snatched at colours; they were peel
  • Of fruit past savour, in derision rosed.
  • For the dark downward then her soul did reel.
  • A press of hideous impulse urged to speak:
  • A novel dread of man enchained her dumb.
  • She felt the silence thicken, heard it shriek,
  • Heard Life subsiding on the eternal hum:
  • Welcome to women, when, between man’s laws
  • And Nature’s thirsts, they, soul from body torn,
  • Give suck at breast to a celestial cause,
  • Named by the mouth infernal, and forsworn.
  • Nathless her forehead twitched a sad content,
  • To think the cure so manifest, so frail
  • Her charm remaining. Was the curtain’s rent
  • Too wide? he but a man of that herd male?
  • She saw him as that herd of the forked head
  • Butting the woman harrowed on her knees,
  • Clothed only in life’s last devouring red.
  • Confession at her fearful instant sees
  • Judicial Silence write the devil fact
  • In letters of the skeleton: at once,
  • Swayed on the supplication of her act,
  • The rabble reading, roaring to denounce,
  • She joins. No longer colouring, with skips
  • At tangles, picture that for eyes in tears
  • Might swim the sequence, she addressed her lips
  • To do the scaffold’s office at his ears.
  • Into the bitter judgement of that herd
  • On women, she, deeming it present, fell.
  • Her frenzy of abasement hugged the word
  • They stone with, and so pile their citadel
  • To launch at outcasts the foul levin bolt.
  • As had he flung it, in her breast it burned.
  • Face and reflect it did her hot revolt
  • From hardness, to the writhing rebel turned;
  • Because the golden buckler was withheld,
  • She to herself applies the powder-spark,
  • For joy of one wild demon burst ere quelled,
  • Perishing to astound the tyrant Dark.
  • She had the Scriptural word so scored on brain,
  • It rang through air to sky, and rocked a world
  • That danced down shades the scarlet dance profane;
  • Most women! see! by the man’s view dustward hurled,
  • Impenitent, submissive, torn in two.
  • They sink upon their nature, the unnamed,
  • And sops of nourishment may get some few,
  • In place of understanding, scourged and shamed.
  • Barely have seasoned women understood
  • The great Irrational, who thunders power,
  • Drives Nature to her primitive wild wood,
  • And courts her in the covert’s dewy hour;
  • Returning to his fortress nigh night’s end,
  • With execration of her daughters’ lures.
  • They help him the proud fortress to defend,
  • Nor see what front it wears, what life immures,
  • The murder it commits; nor that its base
  • Is shifty as a huckster’s opening deal
  • For bargain under smoothest market face,
  • While Gentleness bids frigid Justice feel,
  • Justice protests that Reason is her seat;
  • Elect Convenience, as Reason masked,
  • Hears calmly cramped Humanity entreat;
  • Until a sentient world is overtasked,
  • And rouses Reason’s fountain-self: she calls
  • On Nature; Nature answers: Share your guilt
  • In common when contention cracks the walls
  • Of the big house which not on me is built.
  • The Lady said as much as breath will bear;
  • To happier sisters inconceivable:
  • Contemptible to veterans of the fair,
  • Who show for a convolving pearly shell,
  • A treasure of the shore, their written book.
  • As much as woman’s breath will bear and live
  • Shaped she to words beneath a knotted look,
  • That held as if for grain the summing sieve.
  • Her judge now brightened without pause, as wakes
  • Our homely daylight after dread of spells.
  • Lips sugared to let loose the little snakes
  • Of slimy lustres ringing elfin bells
  • About a story of the naked flesh,
  • Intending but to put some garment on,
  • Should learn, that in the subject they enmesh,
  • A traitor lurks and will be known anon.
  • Delusion heating pricks the torpid doubt,
  • Stationed for index down an ancient track:
  • And ware of it was he while she poured out
  • A broken moon on forest-waters black.
  • Though past the stage where midway men are skilled
  • To scan their senses wriggling under plough,
  • When yet to the charmed seed of speech distilled,
  • Their hearts are fallow, he, and witless how,
  • Loathing, had yielded, like bruised limb to leech,
  • Not handsomely; but now beholding bleed
  • Soul of the woman in her prostrate speech,
  • The valour of that rawness he could read.
  • Thence flashed it, as the crimson currents ran
  • From senses up to thoughts, how she had read
  • Maternally the warm remainder man
  • Beneath his crust, and Nature’s pity shed,
  • In shedding dearer than heart’s blood to light
  • His vision of the path mild Wisdom walks.
  • Therewith he could espy Confession’s fright;
  • Her need of him: these flowers grow on stalks;
  • They suck from soil, and have their urgencies
  • Beside and with the lovely face mid leaves.
  • Veins of divergencies, convergencies,
  • Our botanist in womankind perceives;
  • And if he hugs no wound, the man can prize
  • That splendid consummation and sure proof
  • Of more than heart in her, who might despise,
  • Who drowns herself, for pity up aloof
  • To soar and be like Nature’s pity: she
  • Instinctive of what virtue in young days
  • Had served him for his pilot-star on sea,
  • To trouble him in haven. Thus his gaze
  • Came out of rust, and more than the schooled tongue
  • Was gifted to encourage and assure.
  • He gave her of the deep well she had sprung;
  • And name it gratitude, the word is poor.
  • But name it gratitude, is aught as rare
  • From sex to sex? And let it have survived
  • Their conflict, comes the peace between the pair,
  • Unknown to thousands husbanded and wived:
  • Unknown to Passion, generous for prey:
  • Unknown to Love, too blissful in a truce.
  • Their tenderest of self did each one slay;
  • His cloak of dignity, her fleur de luce;
  • Her lily flower, and his abolla cloak,
  • Things living, slew they, and no artery bled.
  • A moment of some sacrificial smoke
  • They passed, and were the dearer for their dead.
  • He learnt how much we gain who make no claims.
  • A nightcap on his flicker of grey fire
  • Was thought of her sharp shudder in the flames,
  • Confessing; and its conjured image dire,
  • Of love, the torrent on the valley dashed;
  • The whirlwind swathing tremulous peaks; young force,
  • Visioned to hold corrected and abashed
  • Our senile emulous; which rolls its course
  • Proud to the shattering end; with these few last
  • Hot quintessential drops of bryony juice,
  • Squeezed out in anguish: all of that once vast!
  • And still, though having skin for man’s abuse,
  • Though no more glorying in the beauteous wreath
  • Shot skyward from a blood at passionate jet,
  • Repenting but in words, that stand as teeth
  • Between the vivid lips; a vassal set;
  • And numb, of formal value. Are we true
  • In nature, never natural thing repents;
  • Albeit receiving punishment for due,
  • Among the group of this world’s penitents;
  • Albeit remorsefully regretting, oft
  • Cravenly, while the scourge no shudder spares.
  • Our world believes it stabler if the soft
  • Are whipped to show the face repentance wears.
  • Then hear it, in a moan of atheist gloom,
  • Deplore the weedy growth of hypocrites;
  • Count Nature devilish, and accept for doom
  • The chasm between our passions and our wits!
  • Affecting lunar whiteness, patent snows,
  • It trembles at betrayal of a sore.
  • Hers is the glacier-conscience, to expose
  • Impurities for clearness at the core.
  • She to her hungered thundering in breast,
  • _Ye shall not starve_, not feebly designates
  • The world repressing as a life repressed,
  • Judged by the wasted martyrs it creates.
  • How Sin, amid the shades Cimmerian,
  • Repents, she points for sight: and she avers,
  • The hoofed half-angel in the Puritan
  • Nigh reads her when no brutish wrath deters.
  • Sin against immaturity, the sin
  • Of ravenous excess, what deed divides
  • Man from vitality; these bleed within;
  • Bleed in the crippled relic that abides.
  • Perpetually they bleed; a limb is lost,
  • A piece of life, the very spirit maimed.
  • But culprit who the law of man has crossed
  • With Nature’s dubiously within is blamed;
  • Despite our cry at cutting of the whip,
  • Our shiver in the night when numbers frown,
  • We but bewail a broken fellowship,
  • A sting, an isolation, a fall’n crown.
  • Abject of sinners is that sensitive,
  • The flesh, amenable to stripes, miscalled
  • Incorrigible: such title do we give
  • To the poor shrinking stuff wherewith we are walled;
  • And, taking it for Nature, place in ban
  • Our Mother, as a Power wanton-willed,
  • The shame and baffler of the soul of man,
  • The recreant, reptilious. Do thou build
  • Thy mind on her foundations in earth’s bed;
  • Behold man’s mind the child of her keen rod,
  • For teaching how the wits and passions wed
  • To rear that temple of the credible God;
  • Sacred the letters of her laws, and plain,
  • Will shine, to guide thy feet and hold thee firm:
  • Then, as a pathway through a field of grain,
  • Man’s laws appear the blind progressive worm,
  • That moves by touch, and thrust of linking rings
  • The which to endow with vision, lift from mud
  • To level of their nature’s aims and springs,
  • Must those, the twain beside our vital flood,
  • Now on opposing banks, the twain at strife
  • (Whom the so rosy ferryman invites
  • To junction, and mid-channel over Life,
  • Unmasked to the ghostly, much asunder smites)
  • Instruct in deeper than Convenience,
  • In higher than the harvest of a year.
  • Only the rooted knowledge to high sense
  • Of heavenly can mount, and feel the spur
  • For fruitfullest advancement, eye a mark
  • Beyond the path with grain on either hand,
  • Help to the steering of our social Ark
  • Over the barbarous waters unto land.
  • For us the double conscience and its war,
  • The serving of two masters, false to both,
  • Until those twain, who spring the root and are
  • The knowledge in division, plight a troth
  • Of equal hands: nor longer circulate
  • A pious token for their current coin,
  • To growl at the exchange; they, mate and mate,
  • Fair feminine and masculine shall join
  • Upon an upper plane, still common mould,
  • Where stamped religion and reflective pace
  • A statelier measure, and the hoop of gold
  • Rounds to horizon for their soul’s embrace.
  • Then shall those noblest of the earth and sun
  • Inmix unlike to waves on savage sea.
  • But not till Nature’s laws and man’s are one,
  • Can marriage of the man and woman be.
  • V
  • He passed her through the sermon’s dull defile.
  • Down under billowy vapour-gorges heaved
  • The city and the vale and mountain-pile.
  • She felt strange push of shuttle-threads that weaved.
  • A new land in an old beneath her lay;
  • And forth to meet it did her spirit rush,
  • As bride who without shame has come to say,
  • Husband, in his dear face that caused her blush.
  • A natural woman’s heart, not more than clad
  • By station and bright raiment, gathers heat
  • From nakedness in trusted hands: she had
  • The joy of those who feel the world’s heart beat,
  • After long doubt of it as fire or ice;
  • Because one man had helped her to breathe free;
  • Surprised to faith in something of a price
  • Past the old charity in chivalry:—
  • Our first wild step to right the loaded scales
  • Displaying women shamefully outweighed.
  • The wisdom of humaneness best avails
  • For serving justice till that fraud is brayed.
  • Her buried body fed the life she drank.
  • And not another stripping of her wound!
  • The startled thought on black delirium sank,
  • While with her gentle surgeon she communed,
  • And woman’s prospect of the yoke repelled.
  • Her buried body gave her flowers and food;
  • The peace, the homely skies, the springs that welled;
  • Love, the large love that folds the multitude.
  • Soul’s chastity in honesty, and this
  • With beauty, made the dower to men refused.
  • And little do they know the prize they miss;
  • Which is their happy fortune! Thus he mused
  • For him, the cynic in the Sage had play
  • A hazy moment, by a breath dispersed;
  • To think, of all alive most wedded they,
  • Whom time disjoined! He needed her quick thirst
  • For renovated earth: on earth she gazed,
  • With humble aim to foot beside the wise.
  • Lo, where the eyelashes of night are raised
  • Yet lowly over morning’s pure grey eyes.
  • ‘LOVE IS WINGED FOR TWO’
  • LOVE is winged for two,
  • In the worst he weathers,
  • When their hearts are tied;
  • But if they divide,
  • O too true!
  • Cracks a globe, and feathers, feathers,
  • Feathers all the ground bestrew.
  • I was breast of morning sea,
  • Rosy plume on forest dun,
  • I the laugh in rainy fleeces,
  • While with me
  • She made one.
  • Now must we pick up our pieces,
  • For that then so winged were we.
  • ‘ASK, IS LOVE DIVINE’
  • ASK, is Love divine,
  • Voices all are, ay.
  • Question for the sign,
  • There’s a common sigh.
  • Would we, through our years,
  • Love forego,
  • Quit of scars and tears?
  • Ah, but no, no, no!
  • ‘JOY IS FLEET’
  • JOY is fleet,
  • Sorrow slow.
  • Love, so sweet,
  • Sorrow will sow.
  • Love, that has flown
  • Ere day’s decline,
  • Love to have known,
  • Sorrow, be mine!
  • THE LESSON OF GRIEF
  • Not ere the bitter herb we taste,
  • Which ages thought of happy times,
  • To plant us in a weeping waste,
  • Rings with our fellows this one heart
  • Accordant chimes.
  • When I had shed my glad year’s leaf,
  • I did believe I stood alone,
  • Till that great company of Grief
  • Taught me to know this craving heart
  • For not my own.
  • WIND ON THE LYRE
  • THAT was the chirp of Ariel
  • You heard, as overhead it flew,
  • The farther going more to dwell,
  • And wing our green to wed our blue;
  • But whether note of joy or knell,
  • Not his own Father-singer knew;
  • Nor yet can any mortal tell,
  • Save only how it shivers through;
  • The breast of us a sounded shell,
  • The blood of us a lighted dew.
  • THE YOUTHFUL QUEST
  • HIS Lady queen of woods to meet,
  • He wanders day and night:
  • The leaves have whisperings discreet,
  • The mossy ways invite.
  • Across a lustrous ring of space,
  • By covert hoods and caves,
  • Is promise of her secret face
  • In film that onward waves.
  • For darkness is the light astrain,
  • Astrain for light the dark.
  • A grey moth down a larches’ lane
  • Unwinds a ghostly spark.
  • Her lamp he sees, and young desire
  • Is fed while cloaked she flies.
  • She quivers shot of violet fire
  • To ash at look of eyes.
  • THE EMPTY PURSE
  • A SERMON TO OUR LATER PRODIGAL SON
  • THOU, run to the dry on this wayside bank,
  • Too plainly of all the propellers bereft!
  • Quenched youth, and is that thy purse?
  • Even such limp slough as the snake has left
  • Slack to the gale upon spikes of whin,
  • For cast-off coat of a life gone blank,
  • In its frame of a grin at the seeker, is thine;
  • And thine to crave and to curse
  • The sweet thing once within.
  • Accuse him: some devil committed the theft,
  • Which leaves of the portly a skin,
  • No more; of the weighty a whine.
  • Pursue him: and first, to be sure of his track,
  • Over devious ways that have led to this,
  • In the stream’s consecutive line,
  • Let memory lead thee back
  • To where waves Morning her fleur-de-lys,
  • Unflushed at the front of the roseate door
  • Unopened yet: never shadow there
  • Of a Tartarus lighted by Dis
  • For souls whose cry is, alack!
  • An ivory cradle rocks, apeep
  • Through his eyelashes’ laugh, a breathing pearl.
  • There the young chief of the animals wore
  • A likeness to heavenly hosts, unaware
  • Of his love of himself; with the hours at leap.
  • In a dingle away from a rutted highroad,
  • Around him the earliest throstle and merle,
  • Our human smile between milk and sleep,
  • Effervescent of Nature he crowed.
  • Fair was that season; furl over furl
  • The banners of blossom; a dancing floor
  • This earth; very angels the clouds; and fair
  • Thou on the tablets of forehead and breast:
  • Careless, a centre of vigilant care.
  • Thy mother kisses an infant curl.
  • The room of the toys was a boundless nest,
  • A kingdom the field of the games,
  • Till entered the craving for more,
  • And the worshipped small body had aims.
  • A good little idol, as records attest,
  • When they tell of him lightly appeased in a scream
  • By sweets and caresses: he gave but sign
  • That the heir of a purse-plumped dominant race,
  • Accustomed to plenty, not dumb would pine.
  • Almost magician, his earliest dream
  • Was lord of the unpossessed
  • For a look; himself and his chase,
  • As on puffs of a wind at whirl,
  • Made one in the wink of a gleam.
  • She kisses a locket curl,
  • She conjures to vision a cherub face,
  • When her butterfly counted his day
  • All meadow and flowers, mishap
  • Derided, and taken for play
  • The fling of an urchin’s cap.
  • When her butterfly showed him an eaglet born,
  • For preying too heedlessly bred,
  • What a heart clapped in thee then!
  • With what fuller colours of morn!
  • And high to the uttermost heavens it flew,
  • Swift as on poet’s pen.
  • It flew to be wedded, to wed
  • The mystery scented around:
  • Issue of flower and dew,
  • Issue of light and sound:
  • Thinner than either; a thread
  • Spun of the dream they threw
  • To kindle, allure, evade.
  • It ran the sea-wave, the garden’s dance,
  • To the forest’s dark heart down a dappled glade;
  • Led on by a perishing glance,
  • By a twinkle’s eternal waylaid.
  • Woman, the name was, when she took form;
  • Sheaf of the wonders of life. She fled,
  • Close imaged; she neared, far seen. How she made
  • Palpitate earth of the living and dead!
  • Did she not show thee the world designed
  • Solely for loveliness? Nested warm,
  • The day was the morrow in flight. And for thee,
  • She muted the discords, tuned, refined;
  • Drowned sharp edges beneath her cloak.
  • Eye of the waters, and throb of the tree,
  • Sliding on radiance, winging from shade,
  • With her witch-whisper o’er ruins, in reeds,
  • She sang low the song of her promise delayed;
  • Beckoned and died, as a finger of smoke
  • Astream over woodland. And was not she
  • History’s heroines white on storm?
  • Remember her summons to valorous deeds.
  • Shone she a lure of the honey-bag swarm,
  • Most was her beam on the knightly: she led
  • For the honours of manhood more than the prize;
  • Waved her magnetical yoke
  • Whither the warrior bled,
  • Ere to the bower of sighs.
  • And shy of her secrets she was; under deeps
  • Plunged at the breath of a thirst that woke
  • The dream in the cave where the Dreaded sleeps.
  • Away over heaven the young heart flew,
  • And caught many lustres, till some one said
  • (Or was it the thought into hearing grew?),
  • _Not thou as commoner men_!
  • Thy stature puffed and it swayed,
  • It stiffened to royal-erect;
  • A brassy trumpet brayed;
  • A whirling seized thy head;
  • The vision of beauty was flecked.
  • Note well the how and the when,
  • The thing that prompted and sped.
  • Thereanon the keen passions clapped wing,
  • Fixed eye, and the world was prey.
  • No simple world of thy greenblade Spring,
  • Nor world of thy flowerful prime
  • On the topmost Orient peak
  • Above a yet vaporous day.
  • Flesh was it, breast to beak:
  • A four-walled windowless world without ray,
  • Only darkening jets on a river of slime,
  • Where harsh over music as woodland jay,
  • A voice chants, Woe to the weak!
  • And along an insatiate feast,
  • Women and men are one
  • In the cup transforming to beast.
  • Magian worship they paid to their sun,
  • Lord of the Purse! Behold him climb.
  • Stalked ever such figure of fun
  • For monarch in great-grin pantomime?
  • See now the heart dwindle, the frame distend;
  • The soul to its anchorite cavern retreat,
  • From a life that reeks of the rotted end;
  • While he—is he pictureable? replete,
  • Gourd-like swells of the rank of the soil,
  • Hollow, more hollow at core.
  • And for him did the hundreds toil
  • Despised; in the cold and heat,
  • This image ridiculous bore
  • On their shoulders for morsels of meat!
  • Gross, with the fumes of incense full,
  • With parasites tickled, with slaves begirt,
  • He strutted, a cock, he bellowed, a bull,
  • He rolled him, a dog, in dirt.
  • And dog, bull, cook, was he, fanged, horned, plumed;
  • Original man, as philosophers vouch;
  • Carnivorous, cannibal; length-long exhumed,
  • Frightfully living and armed to devour;
  • The primitive weapons of prey in his pouch;
  • The bait, the line and the hook:
  • To feed on his fellows intent.
  • God of the Danaé shower,
  • He had but to follow his bent.
  • He battened on fowl not safely hutched,
  • On sheep astray from the crook;
  • A lure for the foolish in fold:
  • To carrion turning what flesh he touched.
  • And O the grace of his air,
  • As he at the goblet sips,
  • A centre of girdles loosed,
  • With their grisly label, Sold!
  • Credulous hears the fidelity swear,
  • Which has roving eyes over yielded lips:
  • To-morrow will fancy himself the seduced,
  • The stuck in a treacherous slough,
  • Because of his faith in a purchased pair,
  • False to a vinous vow.
  • In his glory of banquet strip him bare,
  • And what is the creature we view?
  • Our pursy Apollo Apollyon’s tool;
  • A small one, still of the crew
  • By serpent Apollyon blest:
  • His plea in apology, blindfold Fool.
  • A fool surcharged, propelled, unwarned;
  • Not viler, you hear him protest:
  • Of a popular countenance not incorrect.
  • But deeds are the picture in essence, deeds
  • Paint him the hooved and homed,
  • Despite the poor pother he pleads,
  • And his look of a nation’s elect.
  • We have him, our quarry confessed!
  • And scan him: the features inspect
  • Of that bestial multiform: cry,
  • Corroborate I, O Samian Sage!
  • The book of thy wisdom, proved
  • On me, its last hieroglyph page,
  • Alive in the horned and hooved?
  • Thou! will he make reply.
  • Thus has the plenary purse
  • Done often: to do will engage
  • Anew upon all of thy like, or worse.
  • And now is thy deepest regret
  • To be man, clean rescued from beast:
  • From the grip of the Sorcerer, Gold,
  • Celestially released.
  • But now from his cavernous hold,
  • Free may thy soul be set,
  • As a child of the Death and the Life, to learn,
  • Refreshed by some bodily sweat,
  • The meaning of either in turn,
  • What issue may come of the two:—
  • A morn beyond mornings, beyond all reach
  • Of emotional arms at the stretch to enfold:
  • A firmament passing our visible blue.
  • To those having nought to reflect it, ’tis nought;
  • To those who are misty, ’tis mist on the beach
  • From the billow withdrawing; to those who see
  • Earth, our mother, in thought,
  • Her spirit it is, our key.
  • Ay, the Life and the Death are her words to us here,
  • Of one significance, pricking the blind.
  • This is thy gain now the surface is clear:
  • To read with a soul in the mirror of mind
  • Is man’s chief lesson.—Thou smilest! I preach!
  • Acid smiling, my friend, reveals
  • Abysses within; frigid preaching a street
  • Paved unconcernedly smooth
  • For the lecturer straight on his heels,
  • Up and down a policeman’s beat;
  • Bearing tonics not labelled to soothe.
  • Thou hast a disgust of the sermon in rhyme.
  • It is not attractive in being too chaste.
  • The popular tale of adventure and crime
  • Would equally sicken an overdone taste.
  • So, then, onward. Philosophy, thoughtless to soothe,
  • Lifts, if thou wilt, or there leaves thee supine.
  • Thy condition, good sooth, has no seeming of sweet;
  • It walks our first crags, it is flint for the tooth,
  • For the thirsts of our nature brine.
  • But manful has met it, manful will meet.
  • And think of thy privilege: supple with youth,
  • To have sight of the headlong swine,
  • Once fouling thee, jumping the dips!
  • As the coin of thy purse poured out:
  • An animal’s holiday past:
  • And free of them thou, to begin a new bout;
  • To start a fresh hunt on a resolute blast:
  • No more an imp-ridden to bournes of eclipse:
  • Having knowledge to spur thee, a gift to compare;
  • Rubbing shoulder to shoulder, as only the book
  • Of the world can be read, by necessity urged.
  • For witness, what blinkers are they who look
  • From the state of the prince or the millionnaire!
  • They see but the fish they attract,
  • The hungers on them converged;
  • And never the thought in the shell of the act,
  • Nor ever life’s fangless mirth.
  • But first, that the poisonous of thee be purged,
  • Go into thyself, strike Earth.
  • She is there, she is felt in a blow struck hard.
  • Thou findest a pugilist countering quick,
  • Cunning at drives where thy shutters are barred;
  • Not, after the studied professional trick,
  • Blue-sealing; she brightens the sight. Strike Earth,
  • Antaeus, young giant, whom fortune trips!
  • And thou com’st on a saving fact,
  • To nourish thy planted worth.
  • Be it clay, flint, mud, or the rubble of chips,
  • Thy roots have grasp in the stern-exact:
  • The redemption of sinners deluded! the last
  • Dry handful, that bruises and saves.
  • To the common big heart are we bound right fast,
  • When our Mother admonishing nips
  • At the nakedness bare of a clout,
  • And we crave what the commonest craves.
  • This wealth was a fortress-wall,
  • Under which grew our grim little beast-god stout;
  • Self-worshipped, the foe, in division from all;
  • With crowds of illogical Christians, no doubt;
  • Till the rescuing earthquake cracked.
  • Thus are we man made firm;
  • Made warm by the numbers compact.
  • We follow no longer a trumpet-snout,
  • At a trot where the hog is tracked,
  • Nor wriggle the way of the worm.
  • Thou wilt spare us the cynical pout
  • At humanity: sign of a nature bechurled.
  • No stenchy anathemas cast
  • Upon Providence, women, the world.
  • Distinguish thy tempers and trim thy wits.
  • The purchased are things of the mart, not classed
  • Among resonant types that have freely grown.
  • Thy knowledge of women might be surpassed:
  • As any sad dog’s of sweet flesh when he quits
  • The wayside wandering bone!
  • No revilings of comrades as ingrates: thee
  • The tempter, misleader, and criminal (screened
  • By laws yet barbarous) own.
  • If some one performed Fiend’s deputy,
  • He was for awhile the Fiend.
  • Still, nursing a passion to speak,
  • As the punch-bowl does, in the moral vein,
  • When the ladle has finished its leak,
  • And the vessel is loquent of nature’s inane,
  • Hie where the demagogues roar
  • Like a Phalaris bull, with the victim’s force:
  • Hurrah to their jolly attack
  • On a City that smokes of the Plain;
  • A city of sin’s death-dyes,
  • Holding revel of worms in a corse;
  • A city of malady sore,
  • Over-ripe for the big doom’s crack:
  • A city of hymnical snore;
  • Connubial truths and lies
  • Demanding an instant divorce,
  • Clean as the bright from the black.
  • It were well for thy system to sermonize.
  • There are giants to slay, and they call for their Jack.
  • Then up stand thou in the midst:
  • Thy good grain out of thee thresh,
  • Hand upon heart: relate
  • What things thou legally didst
  • For the Archseducer of flesh.
  • Omitting the murmurs of women and fate,
  • Confess thee an instrument armed
  • To be snare of our wanton, our weak,
  • Of all by the sensual charmed.
  • For once shall repentance be done by the tongue:
  • Speak, though execrate, speak
  • A word on grandmotherly Laws
  • Giving rivers of gold to our young,
  • In the days of their hungers impure;
  • To furnish them beak and claws,
  • And make them a banquet’s lure.
  • Thou the example, saved
  • Miraculously by this poor skin!
  • Thereat let the Purse be waved:
  • The snake-slough sick of the snaky sin:
  • A devil, if devil as devil behaved
  • Ever, thou knowest, look thou but in,
  • Where he shivers, a culprit fettered and shaved;
  • O a bird stripped of feather, a fish clipped of fin!
  • And commend for a washing the torrents of wrath,
  • Which hurl at the foe of the dearest men prize
  • Rough-rolling boulders and froth.
  • Gigantical enginery they can command,
  • For the crushing of enemies not of great size:
  • But hold to thy desperate stand.
  • Men’s right of bequeathing their all to their own
  • (With little regard for the creatures they squeezed);
  • Their mill and mill-water and nether mill-stone
  • Tied fast to their infant; lo, this is the last
  • Of their hungers, by prudent devices appeased.
  • The law they decree is their ultimate slave;
  • Wherein we perceive old Voracity glassed.
  • It works from their dust, and it reeks of their grave.
  • Point them to greener, though Journals be guns;
  • To brotherly fields under fatherly skies;
  • Where the savage still primitive learns of a debt
  • He has owed since he drummed on his belly for war;
  • And how for his giving, the more will he get;
  • For trusting his fellows, leave friends round his sons:
  • Till they see, with the gape of a startled surprise,
  • Their adored tyrant-monster a brute to abhor,
  • The sun of their system a father of flies!
  • So, for such good hope, take their scourge unashamed;
  • ’Tis the portion of them who civilize,
  • Who speak the word novel and true:
  • How the brutish antique of our springs may be tamed,
  • Without loss of the strength that should push us to flower;
  • How the God of old time will act Satan of new,
  • If we keep him not straight at the higher God aimed;
  • For whose habitation within us we scour
  • This house of our life; where our bitterest pains
  • Are those to eject the Infernal, who heaps
  • Mire on the soul. Take stripes or chains;
  • Grip at thy standard reviled.
  • And what if our body be dashed from the steeps?
  • Our spoken in protest remains.
  • A young generation reaps.
  • The young generation! ah, there is the child
  • Of our souls down the Ages! to bleed for it, proof
  • That souls we have, with our senses filed,
  • Our shuttles at thread of the woof.
  • May it be braver than ours,
  • To encounter the rattle of hostile bolts,
  • To look on the rising of Stranger Powers.
  • May it know how the mind in expansion revolts
  • From a nursery Past with dead letters aloof,
  • And the piping to stupor of Precedents shun,
  • In a field where the forefather print of the hoof
  • Is not yet overgrassed by the watering hours,
  • And should prompt us to Change, as to promise of sun,
  • Till brain-rule splendidly towers.
  • For that large light we have laboured and tramped
  • Thorough forests and bogland, still to perceive
  • Our animate morning stamped
  • With the lines of a sombre eve.
  • A timorous thing ran the innocent hind,
  • When the wolf was the hypocrite fang under hood,
  • The snake a lithe lurker up sleeve,
  • And the lion effulgently ramped.
  • Then our forefather hoof did its work in the wood,
  • By right of the better in kind.
  • But now will it breed yon bestial brood
  • Three-fold thrice over, if bent to bind,
  • As the healthy in chains with the sick,
  • Unto despot usage our issuing mind.
  • It signifies battle or death’s dull knell.
  • Precedents icily written on high
  • Challenge the Tentatives hot to rebel.
  • Our Mother, who speeds her bloomful quick
  • For the march, reads which the impediment well.
  • She smiles when of sapience is their boast.
  • O loose of the tug between blood run dry
  • And blood running flame may our offspring run!
  • May brain democratic be king of the host!
  • Less then shall the volumes of History tell
  • Of the stop in progression, the slip in relapse,
  • That counts us a sand-slack inch hard won
  • Beneath an oppressive incumbent perhaps.
  • Let the senile lords in a parchment sky,
  • And the generous turbulents drunken of morn,
  • Their battle of instincts put by,
  • A moment examine this field:
  • On a Roman street cast thoughtful eye,
  • Along to the mounts from the bog-forest weald.
  • It merits a glance at our history’s maps,
  • To see across Britain’s old shaggy unshorn,
  • Through the Parties in strife internecine, foot
  • The ruler’s close-reckoned direct to the mark.
  • From the head ran the vanquisher’s orderly route,
  • In the stride of his forts through the tangle and dark.
  • From the head runs the paved firm way for advance,
  • And we shoulder, we wrangle! The light on us shed
  • Shows dense beetle blackness in swarm, lurid Chance,
  • The Goddess of gamblers, above. From the head,
  • Then when it worked for the birth of a star
  • Fraternal with heaven’s in beauty and ray,
  • Sprang the Acropolis. Ask what crown
  • Comes of our tides of the blood at war,
  • For men to bequeath generations down!
  • And ask what thou wast when the Purse was brimmed:
  • What high-bounding ball for the Gods at play:
  • A Conservative youth! who the cream-bowl skimmed,
  • Desiring affairs to be left as they are.
  • So, thou takest Youth’s natural place in the fray,
  • As a Tentative, combating Peace,
  • Our lullaby word for decay.—
  • There will come an immediate decree
  • In thy mind for the opposite party’s decease,
  • If he bends not an instant knee.
  • Expunge it: extinguishing counts poor gain.
  • And accept a mild word of police:—
  • Be mannerly, measured; refrain
  • From the puffings of him of the bagpipe cheeks.
  • Our political, even as the merchant main,
  • A temperate gale requires
  • For the ship that haven seeks;
  • Neither God of the winds nor his bellowsy squires.
  • Then observe the antagonist, con
  • His reasons for rocking the lullaby word.
  • You stand on a different stage of the stairs.
  • He fought certain battles, yon senile lord.
  • In the strength of thee, feel his bequest to his heirs.
  • We are now on his inches of ground hard won,
  • For a perch to a flight o’er his resting fence.
  • Does it knock too hard at thy head if I say,
  • That Time is both father and son?
  • Tough lesson, when senses are floods over sense!—
  • Discern the paternal of Now
  • As the Then of thy present tense.
  • You may pull as you will either way,
  • You can never be other than one.
  • So, be filial. Giants to slay
  • Demand knowing eyes in their Jack.
  • There are those whom we push from the path with respect.
  • Bow to that elder, though seeing him bow
  • To the backward as well, for a thunderous back
  • Upon thee. In his day he was not all wrong.
  • Unto some foundered zenith he strove, and was wrecked.
  • He scrambled to shore with a worship of shore.
  • The Future he sees as the slippery murk;
  • The Past as his doctrinal library lore.
  • He stands now the rock to the wave’s wild wash.
  • Yet thy lumpish antagonist once did work
  • Heroical, one of our strong.
  • His gold to retain and his dross reject,
  • Engage him, but humour, not aiming to quash.
  • Detest the dead squat of the Turk,
  • And suffice it to move him along.
  • Drink of faith in the brains a full draught
  • Before the oration: beware
  • Lest rhetoric moonily waft
  • Whither horrid activities snare.
  • Rhetoric, juice for the mob
  • Despising more luminous grape,
  • Oft at its fount has it laughed
  • In the cataracts rolling for rape
  • Of a Reason left single to sob!
  • ’Tis known how the permanent never is writ
  • In blood of the passions: mercurial they,
  • Shifty their issue: stir not that pit
  • To the game our brutes best play.
  • But with rhetoric loose, can we check man’s brute?
  • Assemblies of men on their legs invoke
  • Excitement for wholesome diversion: there shoot
  • Electrical sparks between their dry thatch
  • And thy waved torch, more to kindle than light.
  • ’Tis instant between you: the trick of a catch
  • (To match a Batrachian croak)
  • Will thump them a frenzy or fun in their veins.
  • Then may it be rather the well-worn joke
  • Thou repeatest, to stop conflagration, and write
  • Penance for rhetoric. Strange will it seem,
  • When thou readest that form of thy homage to brains!
  • For the secret why demagogues fail,
  • Though they carry hot mobs to the red extreme,
  • And knock out or knock in the nail
  • (We will rank them as flatly sincere,
  • Devoutly detesting a wrong,
  • Engines o’ercharged with our human steam),
  • Question thee, seething amid the throng.
  • And ask, whether Wisdom is born of blood-heat;
  • Or of other than Wisdom comes victory here;—
  • Aught more than the banquet and roundelay,
  • That is closed with a terrible terminal wail,
  • A retributive black ding-dong?
  • And ask of thyself: This furious Yea
  • Of a speech I thump to repeat,
  • In the cause I would have prevail,
  • For seed of a nourishing wheat,
  • _Is it accepted of Song_?
  • Does it sound to the mind through the ear,
  • Right sober, pure sane? has it disciplined feet?
  • Thou wilt find it a test severe;
  • Unerring whatever the theme.
  • Rings it for Reason a melody clear,
  • We have bidden old Chaos retreat;
  • We have called on Creation to hear;
  • All forces that make us are one full stream.
  • Simple islander! thus may the spirit in verse,
  • Showing its practical value and weight,
  • Pipe to thee clear from the Empty Purse,
  • Lead thee aloft to that high estate.—
  • The test is conclusive, I deem:
  • It embraces or mortally bites.
  • We have then the key-note for debate:
  • A Senate that sits on the heights
  • Over discords, to shape and amend.
  • And no singer is needed to serve
  • The musical God, my friend.
  • Needs only his law on a sensible nerve:
  • A law that to Measure invites,
  • Forbidding the passions contend.
  • Is it accepted of Song?
  • And if then the blunt answer be Nay,
  • Dislink thee sharp from the ramping horde,
  • Slaves of the Goddess of hoar-old sway,
  • The Queen of delirious rites,
  • Queen of those issueless mobs, that rend
  • For frenzy the strings of a fruitful accord,
  • Pursuing insensate, seething in throng,
  • Their wild idea to its ashen end.
  • Off to their Phrygia, shriek and gong,
  • Shorn from their fellows, behold them wend!
  • But thou, should the answer ring Ay,
  • Hast warrant of seed for thy word:
  • The musical God is nigh
  • To inspirit and temper, tune it, and steer
  • Through the shoals: is it worthy of Song,
  • There are souls all woman to hear,
  • Woman to bear and renew.
  • For he is the Master of Measure, and weighs,
  • Broad as the arms of his blue,
  • Fine as the web of his rays,
  • Justice, whose voice is a melody clear,
  • The one sure life for the numbered long,
  • From him are the brutal and vain,
  • The vile, the excessive, out-thrust:
  • He points to the God on the upmost throne:
  • He is the saver of grain,
  • The sifter of spirit from dust.
  • He, Harmony, tells how to Measure pertain
  • The virilities: Measure alone
  • Has votaries rich in the male:
  • Fathers embracing no cloud,
  • Sowing no harvestless main:
  • Alike by the flesh and the spirit endowed
  • To create, to perpetuate; woo, win, wed;
  • Send progeny streaming, have earth for their own,
  • Over-run the insensates, disperse with a puff
  • Simulacra, though solid they sail,
  • And seem such imperial stuff:
  • Yes, the living divide off the dead.
  • Then thou with thy furies outgrown,
  • Not as Cybele’s beast will thy head lash tail
  • So præter-determinedly thermonous,
  • Nor thy cause be an Attis far fled.
  • Thou under stress of the strife
  • Shalt hear for sustainment supreme
  • The cry of the conscience of Life:
  • _Keep the young generations in hail_,
  • _And bequeath them no tumbled house_!
  • There hast thou the sacred theme,
  • Therein the inveterate spur,
  • Of the Innermost. See her one blink
  • In vision past eyeballs. Not thee
  • She cares for, but us. Follow her.
  • Follow her, and thou wilt not sink.
  • With thy soul the Life espouse:
  • This Life of the visible, audible, ring
  • With thy love tight about; and no death will be;
  • The name be an empty thing,
  • And woe a forgotten old trick:
  • And battle will come as a challenge to drink;
  • As a warrior’s wound each transient sting.
  • She leads to the Uppermost link by link;
  • Exacts but vision, desires not vows.
  • Above us the singular number to see;
  • The plural warm round us; ourself in the thick,
  • A dot or a stop: that is our task;
  • Her lesson in figured arithmetic,
  • For the letters of Life behind its mask;
  • Her flower-like look under fearful brows.
  • As for thy special case, O my friend, one must think
  • Massilia’s victim, who held the carouse
  • For the length of a carnival year,
  • Knew worse: but the wretch had his opening choice.
  • For thee, by our law, no alternatives were:
  • Thy fall was assured ere thou camest to a voice.
  • He cancelled the ravaging Plague,
  • With the roll of his fat off the cliff.
  • Do thou with thy lean as the weapon of ink,
  • Though they call thee an angler who fishes the vague
  • And catches the not too pink,
  • Attack one as murderous, knowing thy cause
  • Is the cause of community. Iterate,
  • Iterate, iterate, harp on the trite:
  • Our preacher to win is the supple in stiff:
  • Yet always in measure, with bearing polite:
  • The manner of one that would expiate
  • His share in grandmotherly Laws,
  • Which do the dark thing to destroy,
  • Under aspect of water so guilelessly white
  • For the general use, by the devils befouled.
  • Enough, poor prodigal boy!
  • Thou hast listened with patience; another had howled.
  • Repentance is proved, forgiveness is earned.
  • And ’tis bony: denied thee thy succulent half
  • Of the parable’s blessing, to swineherd returned:
  • A Sermon thy slice of the Scriptural calf!
  • By my faith, there is feasting to come,
  • Not the less, when our Earth we have seen
  • Beneath and on surface, her deeds and designs:
  • Who gives us the man-loving Nazarene,
  • The martyrs, the poets, the corn and the vines.
  • By my faith in the head, she has wonders in loom;
  • Revelations, delights. I can hear a faint crow
  • Of the cock of fresh mornings, far, far, yet distinct;
  • As down the new shafting of mines,
  • A cry of the metally gnome.
  • When our Earth we have seen, and have linked
  • With the home of the Spirit to whom we unfold,
  • Imprisoned humanity open will throw
  • Its fortress gates, and the rivers of gold
  • For the congregate friendliness flow.
  • Then the meaning of Earth in her children behold:
  • Glad eyes, frank hands, and a fellowship real:
  • And laughter on lips, as the birds’ outburst
  • At the flooding of light. No robbery then
  • The feast, nor a robber’s abode the home,
  • For a furnished model of our first den!
  • Nor Life as a stationed wheel;
  • Nor History written in blood or in foam,
  • For vendetta of Parties in cursing accursed.
  • The God in the conscience of multitudes feel,
  • And we feel deep to Earth at her heart,
  • We have her communion with men,
  • New ground, new skies for appeal.
  • Yield into harness thy best and thy worst;
  • Away on the trot of thy servitude start,
  • Through the rigours and joys and sustainments of air.
  • If courage should falter, ’tis wholesome to kneel.
  • Remember that well, for the secret with some,
  • Who pray for no gift, but have cleansing in prayer,
  • And free from impurities tower-like stand.
  • I promise not more, save that feasting will come
  • To a mind and a body no longer inversed:
  • The sense of large charity over the land,
  • Earth’s wheaten of wisdom dispensed in the rough,
  • And a bell ringing thanks for a sustenance meal
  • Through the active machine: lean fare,
  • But it carries a sparkle! And now enough,
  • And part we as comrades part,
  • To meet again never or some day or soon.
  • Our season of drought is reminder rude:—
  • No later than yesternoon,
  • I looked on the horse of a cart,
  • By the wayside water-trough.
  • How at every draught of his bride of thirst
  • His nostrils widened! The sight was good:
  • Food for us, food, such as first
  • Drew our thoughts to earth’s lowly for food.
  • TO THE COMIC SPIRIT
  • SWORD of Common Sense!—
  • Our surest gift: the sacred chain
  • Of man to man: firm earth for trust
  • In structures vowed to permanence:—
  • Thou guardian issue of the harvest brain!
  • Implacable perforce of just;
  • With that good treasure in defence,
  • Which is our gold crushed out of joy and pain
  • Since first men planted foot and hand was king:
  • Bright, nimble of the marrow-nerve
  • To wield thy double edge, retort
  • Or hold the deadlier reserve,
  • And through thy victim’s weapon sting:
  • Thine is the service, thine the sport
  • This shifty heart of ours to hunt
  • Across its webs and round the many a ring
  • Where fox it is, or snake, or mingled seeds
  • Occasion heats to shape, or the poor smoke
  • Struck from a puff-ball, or the troughster’s grunt;—
  • Once lion of our desert’s trodden weeds;
  • And but for thy straight finger at the yoke,
  • Again to be the lordly paw,
  • Naming his appetites his needs,
  • Behind a decorative cloak:
  • Thou, of the highest, the unwritten Law
  • We read upon that building’s architrave
  • In the mind’s firmament, by men upraised
  • With sweat of blood when they had quitted cave
  • For fellowship, and rearward looked amazed,
  • Where the prime motive gapes a lurid jaw,
  • Thou, soul of wakened heads, art armed to warn,
  • Restrain, lest we backslide on whence we sprang,
  • Scarce better than our dwarf beginning shoot,
  • Of every gathered pearl and blossom shorn;
  • Through thee, in novel wiles to win disguise,
  • Seen are the pits of the disruptor, seen
  • His rebel agitation at our root:
  • Thou hast him out of hawking eyes;
  • Nor ever morning of the clang
  • Young Echo sped on hill from horn
  • In forest blown when scent was keen
  • Off earthy dews besprinkling blades
  • Of covert grass more merrily rang
  • The yelp of chase down alleys green,
  • Forth of the headlong-pouring glades,
  • Over the dappled fallows wild away,
  • Than thy fine unaccented scorn
  • At sight of man’s old secret brute,
  • Devout for pasture on his prey,
  • Advancing, yawning to devour;
  • With step of deer, with voice of flute,
  • Haply with visage of the lily flower.
  • Let the cock crow and ruddy morn
  • His handmaiden appear! Youth claims his hour.
  • The generously ludicrous
  • Espouses it. But see we sons of day,
  • Off whom Life leans for guidance in our fight,
  • Accept the throb for lord of us;
  • For lord, for the main central light
  • That gives direction, not the eclipse;
  • Or dost thou look where niggard Age,
  • Demanding reverence for wrinkles, whips
  • A tumbled top to grind a wolf’s worn tooth;—
  • Hoar despot on our final stage,
  • In dotage of a stunted Youth;—
  • Or it may be some venerable sage,
  • Not having thee awake in him, compact
  • Of wisdom else, the breast’s old tempter trips;
  • Or see we ceremonial state,
  • Robing the gilded beast, exact
  • Abjection, while the crackskull name of Fate
  • Is used to stamp and hallow printed fact;
  • A cruel corner lengthens up thy lips;
  • These are thy game wherever men engage:
  • These and, majestic in a borrowed shape,
  • The major and the minor potentate,
  • Creative of their various ape;—
  • The tiptoe mortals triumphing to write
  • Upon a perishable page
  • An inch above their fellows’ height;—
  • The criers of foregone wisdom, who impose
  • Its slough on live conditions, much for the greed
  • Of our first hungry figure wide agape;—
  • Call up thy hounds of laughter to their run.
  • These, that would have men still of men be foes,
  • Eternal fox to prowl and pike to feed;
  • Would keep our life the whirly pool
  • Of turbid stuff dishonouring History;
  • The herd the drover’s herd, the fool the fool,
  • Ourself our slavish self’s infernal sun:
  • These are the children of the heart untaught
  • By thy quick founts to beat abroad, by thee
  • Untamed to tone its passions under thought,
  • The rich humaneness reading in thy fun.
  • Of them a world of coltish heels for school
  • We have; a world with driving wrecks bestrewn.
  • ’Tis written of the Gods of human mould,
  • Those Nectar Gods, of glorious stature hewn
  • To quicken hymns, that they did hear, incensed,
  • Satiric comments overbold,
  • From one whose part was by decree
  • The jester’s; but they boiled to feel him bite.
  • Better for them had they with Reason fenced
  • Or smiled corrected! They in the great Gods’ might
  • Their prober crushed, as fingers flea.
  • Crumbled Olympus when the sovereign sire
  • His fatal kick to Momus gave, albeit
  • Men could behold the sacred Mount aspire,
  • The Satirist pass by on limping feet.
  • Those Gods who saw the ejected laugh alight
  • Below had then their last of airy glee;
  • They in the cup sought Laughter’s drownèd sprite,
  • Fed to dire fatness off uncurbed conceit.
  • Eyes under saw them waddle on their Mount,
  • And drew them down; to flattest earth they rolled.
  • This know we veritable. O Sage of Mirth!
  • Can it be true, the story men recount
  • Of the fall’n plight of the great Gods on earth?
  • How they being deathless, though of human mould,
  • With human cravings, undecaying frames,
  • Must labour for subsistence; are a band
  • Whom a loose-cheeked, wide-lipped gay cripple leads
  • At haunts of holiday on summer sand:
  • And lightly he will hint to one that heeds
  • Names in pained designation of them, names
  • Ensphered on blue skies and on black, which twirl
  • Our hearing madly from our seeing dazed,
  • Add Bacchus unto both; and he entreats
  • (His baby dimples in maternal chaps
  • Running wild labyrinths of line and curl)
  • Compassion for his masterful Trombone,
  • Whose thunder is the brass of how he blazed
  • Of old: for him of the mountain-muscle feats,
  • Who guts a drum to fetch a snappish groan:
  • For his fierce bugler horning onset, whom
  • A truncheon-battered helmet caps . . .
  • The creature is of earnest mien
  • To plead a sorrow darker than the tomb.
  • His Harp and Triangle, in tone subdued,
  • He names; they are a rayless red and white;
  • The dawn-hued libertine, the gibbous prude.
  • And, if we recognize his Tambourine,
  • He asks; exhausted names her: she has become
  • A globe in cupolas; the blowziest queen
  • Of overflowing dome on dome;
  • Redundancy contending with the tight,
  • Leaping the dam! He fondly calls, his girl,
  • The buxom tripper with the goblet-smile,
  • Refreshful. O but now his brows are dun,
  • Bunched are his lips, as when distilling guile,
  • To drop his venomous: the Dame of dames,
  • Flower of the world, that honey one,
  • She of the earthly rose in the sea-pearl,
  • To whom the world ran ocean for her kiss;
  • He names her, as a worshipper he names,
  • And indicates with a contemptuous thumb.
  • The lady meanwhile lures the mob, alike
  • Ogles the bursters of the horn and drum.
  • Curtain her close! her open arms
  • Have suckers for beholders: she to this?
  • For that she could not, save in fury, hear
  • A sharp corrective utterance flick
  • Her idle manners, for the laugh to strike
  • Beauty so breeding beauty, without peer
  • Above the snows, among the flowers? She reaps
  • This mouldy garner of the fatal kick?
  • Gross with the sacrifice of Circe-swarms,
  • Astarte of vile sweets that slay, malign,
  • From Greek resplendent to Phoenician foul,
  • The trader in attractions sinks, all brine
  • To thoughts of taste; is ’t love?—bark, dog! hoot, owl!
  • And she is blushless: ancient worship weeps.
  • Suicide Graces dangle down the charms
  • Sprawling like gourds on outer garden-heaps.
  • She stands in her unholy oily leer
  • A statue losing feature, weather-sick
  • Mid draggled creepers of twined ivy sere.
  • The curtain cried for magnifies to see!—
  • We cannot quench our one corrupting glance:
  • The vision of the rumour will not flee.
  • Doth the Boy own such Mother?—shoot his dart
  • To bring her, countless as the crested deeps,
  • Her subjects of the uncorrected heart?
  • False is that vision, shrieks the devotee;
  • Incredible, we echo; and anew
  • Like a far growling lightning-cloud it leaps.
  • Low humourist this leader seems; perchance
  • Pitched from his University career,
  • Adept at classic fooling. Yet of mould
  • Human those Gods were: deathless too:
  • On high they not as meditatives paced:
  • Prodigiously they did the deeds of flesh:
  • Descending, they would touch the lowest here:
  • And she, that lighted form of blue and gold,
  • Whom the seas gave, all earth, all earth embraced;
  • Exulting in the great hauls of her mesh;
  • Desired and hated, desperately dear;
  • Most human of them was. No more pursue!
  • Enough that the black story can be told.
  • It preaches to the eminently placed:
  • For whom disastrous wreckage is nigh due,
  • Paints omen. Truly they our throbber had;
  • The passions plumping, passions playing leech,
  • Cunning to trick us for the day’s good cheer.
  • Our uncorrected human heart will swell
  • To notions monstrous, doings mad
  • As billows on a foam-lashed beach;
  • Borne on the tides of alternating heats,
  • Will drug the brain, will doom the soul as well;
  • Call the closed mouth of that harsh final Power
  • To speak in judgement: Nemesis, the fell:
  • Of those bright Gods assembled, offspring sour;
  • The last surviving on the upper seats;
  • As with men Reason when their hearts rebel.
  • Ah, what a fruitless breeder is this heart,
  • Full of the mingled seeds, each eating each.
  • Not wiser of our mark than at the start,
  • It surges like the wrath-faced father Sea
  • To countering winds; a force blind-eyed,
  • On endless rounds of aimless reach;
  • Emotion for the source of pride,
  • The grounds of faith in fixity
  • Above our flesh; its cravings urging speech,
  • Inspiring prayer; by turns a lump
  • Swung on a time-piece, and by turns
  • A quivering energy to jump
  • For seats angelical: it shrinks, it yearns,
  • Loves, loathes; is flame or cinders; lastly cloud
  • Capping a sullen crater: and mankind
  • We see cloud-capped, an army of the dark,
  • Because of thy straight leadership declined;
  • At heels of this or that delusive spark:
  • Now when the multitudinous races press
  • Elbow to elbow hourly more,
  • A thickened host; when now we hear aloud
  • Life for the very life implore
  • A signal of a visioned mark;
  • Light of the mind, the mind’s discourse,
  • The rational in graciousness,
  • Thee by acknowledgement enthroned,
  • To tame and lead that blind-eyed force
  • In harmony of harness with the crowd,
  • For payment of their dues; as yet disowned,
  • Save where some dutiful lone creature, vowed
  • To holy work, deems it the heart’s intent;
  • Or where a silken circle views it cowled,
  • The seeming figure of concordance, bent
  • On satiating tyrant lust
  • Or barren fits of sentiment.
  • Thou wilt not have our paths befouled
  • By simulation; are we vile to view,
  • The heavens shall see us clean of our own dust,
  • Beneath thy breezy flitting wing:
  • They make their mirror upon faces true;
  • And where they win reflection, lucid heave
  • The under tides of this hot heart seen through.
  • Beneficently wilt thou clip
  • All oversteppings of the plumed,
  • The puffed, and bid the masker strip,
  • And into the crowned windbag thrust,
  • Tearing the mortal from the vital thing,
  • A lightning o’er the half-illumed,
  • Who to base brute-dominion cleave,
  • Yet mark effects, and shun the flash,
  • Till their drowsed wits a beam conceive,
  • To spy a wound without a gash,
  • The magic in a turn of wrist,
  • And how are wedded heart and head regaled
  • When Wit o’er Folly blows the mort,
  • And their high note of union spreads
  • Wide from the timely word with conquest charged;
  • Victorious laughter, of no loud report,
  • If heard; derision as divinely veiled
  • As terrible Immortals in rose-mist,
  • Given to the vision of arrested men:
  • Whereat they feel within them weave
  • Community its closer threads,
  • And are to our fraternal state enlarged;
  • Like warm fresh blood is their enlivened ken:
  • They learn that thou art not of alien sort,
  • Speaking the tongue by vipers hissed,
  • Or of the frosty heights unsealed,
  • Or of the vain who simple speech distort,
  • Or of the vapours pointing on to nought
  • Along cold skies; though sharp and high thy pitch;
  • As when sole homeward the belated treads,
  • And hears aloft a clamour wailed,
  • That once had seemed the broomstick witch
  • Horridly violating cloud for drought:
  • He, from the rub of minds dispersing fears,
  • Hears migrants marshalling their midnight train;
  • Homeliest order in black sky appears,
  • Not less than in the lighted village steads.
  • So do those half-illumed wax clear to share
  • A cry that is our common voice; the note
  • Of fellowship upon a loftier plane,
  • Above embattled castle-wall and moat;
  • And toning drops as from pure heaven it sheds.
  • So thou for washing a phantasmal air,
  • For thy sweet singing keynote of the wise,
  • Laughter—the joy of Reason seeing fade
  • Obstruction into Earth’s renewing beds,
  • Beneath the stroke of her good servant’s blade—
  • Thenceforth art as their earth-star hailed;
  • Gain of the years, conjunction’s prize.
  • The greater heart in thy appeal to heads
  • They see, thou Captain of our civil Fort!
  • By more elusive savages assailed
  • On each ascending stage; untired
  • Both inner foe and outer to cut short,
  • And blow to chaff pretenders void of grist:
  • Showing old tiger’s claws, old crocodile’s
  • Yard-grin of eager grinders, slim to sight,
  • Like forms in running water, oft when smiles,
  • When pearly tears, when fluent lips delight:
  • But never with the slayer’s malice fired:
  • As little as informs an infant’s fist
  • Clenched at the sneeze! Thou wouldst but have us be
  • Good sons of mother soil, whereby to grow
  • Branching on fairer skies, one stately tree;
  • Broad of the tilth for flowering at the Court:
  • Which is the tree bound fast to wave its tress;
  • Of strength controlled sheer beauty to bestow.
  • Ambrosial heights of possible acquist,
  • Where souls of men with soul of man consort,
  • And all look higher to new loveliness
  • Begotten of the look: thy mark is there;
  • While on our temporal ground alive,
  • Rightly though fearfully thou wieldest sword
  • Of finer temper now a numbered learn
  • That they resisting thee themselves resist;
  • And not thy bigger joy to smite and drive,
  • Prompt the dense herd to butt, and set the snare
  • Witching them into pitfalls for hoarse shouts.
  • More now, and hourly more, and of the Lord
  • Thou lead’st to, doth this rebel heart discern,
  • When pinched ascetic and red sensualist
  • Alternately recurrent freeze or burn,
  • And of its old religions it has doubts.
  • It fears thee less when thou hast shown it bare;
  • Less hates, part understands, nor much resents,
  • When the prized objects it has raised for prayer,
  • For fitful prayer;—repentance dreading fire,
  • Impelled by aches; the blindness which repents
  • Like the poor trampled worm that writhes in mire;—
  • Are sounded by thee, and thou darest probe
  • Old institutions and establishments,
  • Once fortresses against the floods of sin,
  • For what their worth; and questioningly prod
  • For why they stand upon a racing globe,
  • Impeding blocks, less useful than the clod;
  • Their angel out of them, a demon in.
  • This half-enlightened heart, still doomed to fret,
  • To hurl at vanities, to drift in shame
  • Of gain or loss, bewailing the sure rod,
  • Shall of predestination wed thee yet.
  • Something it gathers of what things should drop
  • At entrance on new times; of how thrice broad
  • The world of minds communicative; how
  • A straggling Nature classed in school, and scored
  • With stripes admonishing, may yield to plough
  • Fruitfullest furrows, nor for waxing tame
  • Be feeble on an Earth whose gentler crop
  • Is its most living, in the mind that steers,
  • By Reason led, her way of tree and flame,
  • Beyond the genuflexions and the tears;
  • Upon an Earth that cannot stop,
  • Where upward is the visible aim,
  • And ever we espy the greater God,
  • For simple pointing at a good adored:
  • Proof of the closer neighbourhood. Head on,
  • Sword of the many, light of the few! untwist
  • Or cut our tangles till fair space is won
  • Beyond a briared wood of austere brow,
  • Believed of discord by thy timely word
  • At intervals refreshing life: for thou
  • Art verify Keeper of the Muse’s Key;
  • Thyself no vacant melodist;
  • On lower land elective even as she;
  • Holding, as she, all dissonance abhorred;
  • Advising to her measured steps in flow;
  • And teaching how for being subjected free
  • Past thought of freedom we may come to know
  • The music of the meaning of Accord.
  • YOUTH IN MEMORY
  • DAYS, when the ball of our vision
  • Had eagles that flew unabashed to sun;
  • When the grasp on the bow was decision,
  • And arrow and hand and eye were one;
  • When the Pleasures, like waves to a swimmer,
  • Came heaving for rapture ahead!—
  • Invoke them, they dwindle, they glimmer
  • As lights over mounds of the dead.
  • Behold the winged Olympus, off the mead,
  • With thunder of wide pinions, lightning speed,
  • Wafting the shepherd-boy through ether clear,
  • To bear the golden nectar-cup.
  • So flies desire at view of its delight,
  • When the young heart is tiptoe perched on sight.
  • We meanwhile who in hues of the sick year
  • The Spring-time paint to prick us for our lost,
  • Mount but the fatal half way up—
  • Whereon shut eyes! This is decreed,
  • For Age that would to youthful heavens ascend,
  • By passion for the arms’ possession tossed,
  • It falls the way of sighs and hath their end;
  • A spark gone out to more sepulchral night.
  • Good if the arrowy eagle of the height
  • Be then the little bird that hops to feed.
  • Lame falls the cry to kindle days
  • Of radiant orb and daring gaze.
  • It does but clank our mortal chain.
  • For Earth reads through her felon old
  • The many-numbered of her fold,
  • Who forward tottering backward strain,
  • And would be thieves of treasure spent,
  • With their grey season soured.
  • She could write out their history in their thirst
  • To have again the much devoured,
  • And be the bud at burst;
  • In honey fancy join the flow,
  • Where Youth swims on as once they went,
  • All choiric for spontaneous glee
  • Of active eager lungs and thews;
  • They now bared roots beside the river bent;
  • Whose privilege themselves to see;
  • Their place in yonder tideway know;
  • The current glass peruse;
  • The depths intently sound;
  • And sapped by each returning flood
  • Accept for monitory nourishment
  • Those worn roped features under crust of mud,
  • Reflected in the silvery smooth around:
  • Not less the branching and high singing tree,
  • A home of nests, a landmark and a tent,
  • Until their hour for losing hold on ground.
  • Even such good harvest of the things that flee
  • Earth offers her subjected, and they choose
  • Rather of Bacchic Youth one beam to drink,
  • And warm slow marrow with the sensual wink.
  • So block they at her source the Mother of the Muse.
  • Who cheerfully the little bird becomes,
  • Without a fall, and pipes for peck at crumbs,
  • May have her dolings to the lightest touch;
  • As where some cripple muses by his crutch,
  • Unwitting that the spirit in him sings:
  • ‘When I had legs, then had I wings,
  • As good as any born of eggs,
  • To feed on all aërial things,
  • When I had legs!’
  • And if not to embrace he sighs,
  • She gives him breath of Youth awhile,
  • Perspective of a breezy mile,
  • Companionable hedgeways, lifting skies;
  • Scenes where his nested dreams upon their hoard
  • Brooded, or up to empyrean soared:
  • Enough to link him with a dotted line.
  • But cravings for an eagle’s flight,
  • To top white peaks and serve wild wine
  • Among the rosy undecayed,
  • Bring only flash of shade
  • From her full throbbing breast of day in night.
  • By what they crave are they betrayed:
  • And cavernous is that young dragon’s jaw,
  • Crimson for all the fiery reptile saw
  • In time now coveted, for teeth to flay,
  • Once more consume, were Life recurrent May.
  • They to their moment of drawn breath,
  • Which is the life that makes the death,
  • The death that makes ethereal life would bind:
  • The death that breeds the spectre do they find.
  • Darkness is wedded and the waste regrets
  • Beating as dead leaves on a fitful gust,
  • By souls no longer dowered to climb
  • Beneath their pack of dust,
  • Whom envy of a lustrous prime,
  • Eclipsed while yet invoked, besets,
  • And dooms to sink and water sable flowers,
  • That never gladdened eye or loaded bee.
  • Strain we the arms for Memory’s hours,
  • We are the seized Persephone.
  • Responsive never to the soft desire
  • For one prized tune is this our chord of life.
  • ’Tis clipped to deadness with a wanton knife,
  • In wishes that for ecstasies aspire.
  • Yet have we glad companionship of Youth,
  • Elysian meadows for the mind,
  • Dare we to face deeds done, and in our tomb
  • Filled with the parti-coloured bloom
  • Of loved and hated, grasp all human truth
  • Sowed by us down the mazy paths behind.
  • To feel that heaven must we that hell sound through:
  • Whence comes a line of continuity,
  • That brings our middle station into view,
  • Between those poles; a novel Earth we see,
  • In likeness of us, made of banned and blest;
  • The sower’s bed, but not the reaper’s rest:
  • An Earth alive with meanings, wherein meet
  • Buried, and breathing, and to be.
  • Then of the junction of the three,
  • Even as a heart in brain, full sweet
  • May sense of soul, the sum of music, beat.
  • Only the soul can walk the dusty track
  • Where hangs our flowering under vapours black,
  • And bear to see how these pervade, obscure,
  • Quench recollection of a spacious pure.
  • They take phantasmal forms, divide, convolve,
  • Hard at each other point and gape,
  • Horrible ghosts! in agony dissolve,
  • To reappear with one they drape
  • For criminal, and, Father! shrieking name,
  • Who such distorted issue did beget.
  • Accept them, them and him, though hiss thy sweat
  • Off brow on breast, whose furnace flame
  • Has eaten, and old Self consumes.
  • Out of the purification will they leap,
  • Thee renovating while new light illumes
  • The dusky web of evil, known as pain,
  • That heavily up healthward mounts the steep;
  • Our fleshly road to beacon-fire of brain:
  • Midway the tameless oceanic brute
  • Below, whose heave is topped with foam for fruit,
  • And the fair heaven reflecting inner peace
  • On righteous warfare, that asks not to cease.
  • Forth of such passage through black fire we win
  • Clear hearing of the simple lute,
  • Whereon, and not on other, Memory plays
  • For them who can in quietness receive
  • Her restorative airs: a ditty thin
  • As note of hedgerow bird in ear of eve,
  • Or wave at ebb, the shallow catching rays
  • On a transparent sheet, where curves a glass
  • To truer heavens than when the breaker neighs
  • Loud at the plunge for bubbly wreck in roar.
  • Solidity and bulk and martial brass,
  • Once tyrants of the senses, faintly score
  • A mark on pebbled sand or fluid slime,
  • While present in the spirit, vital there,
  • Are things that seemed the phantoms of their time;
  • Eternal as the recurrent cloud, as air
  • Imperative, refreshful as dawn-dew.
  • Some evanescent hand on vapour scrawled
  • Historic of the soul, and heats anew
  • Its coloured lines where deeds of flesh stand bald.
  • True of the man, and of mankind ’tis true,
  • Did we stout battle with the Shade, Despair,
  • Our cowardice, it blooms; or haply warred
  • Against the primal beast in us, and flung;
  • Or cleaving mists of Sorrow, left it starred
  • Above self-pity slain: or it was Prayer
  • First taken for Life’s cleanser; or the tongue
  • Spake for the world against this heart; or rings
  • Old laughter, from the founts of wisdom sprung;
  • Or clap of wing of joy, that was a throb
  • From breast of Earth, and did no creature rob:
  • These quickening live. But deepest at her springs,
  • Most filial, is an eye to love her young.
  • And had we it, to see with it, alive
  • Is our lost garden, flower, bird and hive.
  • Blood of her blood, aim of her aim, are then
  • The green-robed and grey-crested sons of men:
  • She tributary to her aged restores
  • The living in the dead; she will inspire
  • Faith homelier than on the Yonder shores,
  • Abhorring these as mire,
  • Uncertain steps, in dimness gropes,
  • With mortal tremours pricking hopes,
  • And, by the final Bacchic of the lusts
  • Propelled, the Bacchic of the spirit trusts:
  • A fervour drunk from mystic hierophants;
  • Not utterly misled, though blindly led,
  • Led round fermenting eddies. Faith she plants
  • In her own firmness as our midway road:
  • Which rightly Youth has read, though blindly read;
  • Her essence reading in her toothsome goad;
  • Spur of bright dreams experience disenchants.
  • But love we well the young, her road midway
  • The darknesses runs consecrated clay.
  • Despite our feeble hold on this green home,
  • And the vast outer strangeness void of dome,
  • Shall we be with them, of them, taught to feel,
  • Up to the moment of our prostrate fall,
  • The life they deem voluptuously real
  • Is more than empty echo of a call,
  • Or shadow of a shade, or swing of tides;
  • As brooding upon age, when veins congeal,
  • Grey palsy nods to think. With us for guides,
  • Another step above the animal,
  • To views in Alpine thought are they helped on.
  • Good if so far we live in them when gone!
  • And there the arrowy eagle of the height
  • Becomes the little bird that hops to feed,
  • Glad of a crumb, for tempered appetite
  • To make it wholesome blood and fruitful seed.
  • Then Memory strikes on no slack string,
  • Nor sectional will varied Life appear:
  • Perforce of soul discerned in mind, we hear
  • Earth with her Onward chime, with Winter Spring.
  • And ours the mellow note, while sharing joys
  • No more subjecting mortals who have learnt
  • To build for happiness on equipoise,
  • The Pleasures read in sparks of substance burnt;
  • Know in our seasons an integral wheel,
  • That rolls us to a mark may yet be willed.
  • This, the truistic rubbish under heel
  • Of all the world, we peck at and are filled.
  • PENETRATION AND TRUST
  • I
  • SLEEK as a lizard at round of a stone,
  • The look of her heart slipped out and in.
  • Sweet on her lord her soft eyes shone,
  • As innocents clear of a shade of sin.
  • II
  • He laid a finger under her chin,
  • His arm for her girdle at waist was thrown:
  • Now, what will happen and who will win,
  • With me in the fight and my lady lone?
  • III
  • He clasped her, clasping a shape of stone;
  • Was fire on her eyes till they let him in.
  • Her breast to a God of the daybeams shone,
  • And never a corner for serpent sin.
  • IV
  • Tranced she stood, with a chattering chin;
  • Her shrunken form at his feet was thrown:
  • At home to the death my lord shall win,
  • When it is no tyrant who leaves me lone!
  • NIGHT OF FROST IN MAY
  • WITH splendour of a silver day,
  • A frosted night had opened May:
  • And on that plumed and armoured night,
  • As one close temple hove our wood,
  • Its border leafage virgin white.
  • Remote down air an owl hallooed.
  • The black twig dropped without a twirl;
  • The bud in jewelled grasp was nipped;
  • The brown leaf cracked a scorching curl;
  • A crystal off the green leaf slipped.
  • Across the tracks of rimy tan,
  • Some busy thread at whiles would shoot;
  • A limping minnow-rillet ran,
  • To hang upon an icy foot.
  • In this shrill hush of quietude,
  • The ear conceived a severing cry.
  • Almost it let the sound elude,
  • When chuckles three, a warble shy,
  • From hazels of the garden came,
  • Near by the crimson-windowed farm.
  • They laid the trance on breath and frame,
  • A prelude of the passion-charm.
  • Then soon was heard, not sooner heard
  • Than answered, doubled, trebled, more,
  • Voice of an Eden in the bird
  • Renewing with his pipe of four
  • The sob: a troubled Eden, rich
  • In throb of heart: unnumbered throats
  • Flung upward at a fountain’s pitch,
  • The fervour of the four long notes,
  • That on the fountain’s pool subside,
  • Exult and ruffle and upspring:
  • Endless the crossing multiplied
  • Of silver and of golden string.
  • There chimed a bubbled underbrew
  • With witch-wild spray of vocal dew.
  • It seemed a single harper swept
  • Our wild wood’s inner chords and waked
  • A spirit that for yearning ached
  • Ere men desired and joyed or wept.
  • Or now a legion ravishing
  • Musician rivals did unite
  • In love of sweetness high to sing
  • The subtle song that rivals light;
  • From breast of earth to breast of sky:
  • And they were secret, they were nigh:
  • A hand the magic might disperse;
  • The magic swung my universe.
  • Yet sharpened breath forbade to dream,
  • Where all was visionary gleam;
  • Where Seasons, as with cymbals, clashed;
  • And feelings, passing joy and woe,
  • Churned, gurgled, spouted, interflashed,
  • Nor either was the one we know:
  • Nor pregnant of the heart contained
  • In us were they, that griefless plained,
  • That plaining soared; and through the heart
  • Struck to one note the wide apart:—
  • A passion surgent from despair;
  • A paining bliss in fervid cold;
  • Off the last vital edge of air,
  • Leap heavenward of the lofty-souled,
  • For rapture of a wine of tears;
  • As had a star among the spheres
  • Caught up our earth to some mid-height
  • Of double life to ear and sight,
  • She giving voice to thought that shines
  • Keen-brilliant of her deepest mines;
  • While steely drips the rillet clinked,
  • And hoar with crust the cowslip swelled.
  • Then was the lyre of earth beheld,
  • Then heard by me: it holds me linked;
  • Across the years to dead-ebb shores
  • I stand on, my blood-thrill restores.
  • But would I conjure into me
  • Those issue notes, I must review
  • What serious breath the woodland drew;
  • The low throb of expectancy;
  • How the white mother-muteness pressed
  • On leaf and meadow-herb; how shook,
  • Nigh speech of mouth, the sparkle-crest
  • Seen spinning on the bracken-crook.
  • THE TEACHING OF THE NUDE
  • I
  • A SATYR spied a Goddess in her bath,
  • Unseen of her attendant nymphs; none knew.
  • Forthwith the creature to his fellows drew,
  • And looking backward on the curtained path,
  • He strove to tell; he could but heave a breast
  • Too full, and point to mouth, with failing leers:
  • Vainly he danced for speech, he giggled tears,
  • Made as if torn in two, as if tight pressed,
  • As if cast prone; then fetching whimpered tunes
  • For words, flung heel and set his hairy flight
  • Through forest-hollows, over rocky height.
  • The green leaves buried him three rounds of moons.
  • A senatorial Satyr named what herb
  • Had hurried him outrunning reason’s curb.
  • II
  • ’Tis told how when that hieaway unchecked
  • To dell returned, he seemed of tempered mood:
  • Even as the valley of the torrent rude,
  • The torrent now a brook, the valley wrecked.
  • In him, to hale him high or hurl aheap,
  • Goddess and Goatfoot hourly wrestled sore;
  • Hourly the immortal prevailing more:
  • Till one hot noon saw Meliboeus peep
  • From thicket-sprays to where his full-blown dame,
  • In circle by the lusty friskers gripped,
  • Laughed the showered rose-leaves while her limbs were stripped.
  • She beckoned to our Satyr, and he came.
  • Then twirled she mounds of ripeness, wreath of arms.
  • His hoof kicked up the clothing for such charms.
  • BREATH OF THE BRIAR
  • I
  • O BRIAR-SCENTS, on yon wet wing
  • Of warm South-west wind brushing by,
  • You mind me of the sweetest thing
  • That ever mingled frank and shy:
  • When she and I, by love enticed,
  • Beneath the orchard-apples met,
  • In equal halves a ripe one sliced,
  • And smelt the juices ere we ate.
  • II
  • That apple of the briar-scent,
  • Among our lost in Britain now,
  • Was green of rind, and redolent
  • Of sweetness as a milking cow.
  • The briar gives it back, well nigh
  • The damsel with her teeth on it;
  • Her twinkle between frank and shy,
  • My thirst to bite where she had bit.
  • EMPEDOCLES
  • I
  • HE leaped. With none to hinder,
  • Of Aetna’s fiery scoriae
  • In the next vomit-shower, made he
  • A more peculiar cinder.
  • And this great Doctor, can it be,
  • He left no saner recipe
  • For men at issue with despair?
  • Admiring, even his poet owns,
  • While noting his fine lyric tones,
  • The last of him was heels in air!
  • II
  • Comes Reverence, her features
  • Amazed to see high Wisdom hear,
  • With glimmer of a faunish leer,
  • One mock her pride of creatures.
  • Shall such sad incident degrade
  • A stature casting sunniest shade?
  • O Reverence! let Reason swim;
  • Each life its critic deed reveals;
  • And him reads Reason at his heels,
  • If heels in air the last of him!
  • ENGLAND BEFORE THE STORM
  • I
  • THE day that is the night of days,
  • With cannon-fire for sun ablaze
  • We spy from any billow’s lift;
  • And England still this tidal drift!
  • Would she to sainted forethought vow
  • A space before the thunders flood,
  • That martyr of its hour might now
  • Spare her the tears of blood.
  • II
  • Asleep upon her ancient deeds,
  • She hugs the vision plethora breeds,
  • And counts her manifold increase
  • Of treasure in the fruits of peace.
  • What curse on earth’s improvident,
  • When the dread trumpet shatters rest,
  • Is wreaked, she knows, yet smiles content
  • As cradle rocked from breast.
  • III
  • She, impious to the Lord of Hosts,
  • The valour of her offspring boasts,
  • Mindless that now on land and main
  • His heeded prayer is active brain.
  • No more great heart may guard the home,
  • Save eyed and armed and skilled to cleave
  • Yon swallower wave with shroud of foam,
  • We see not distant heave.
  • IV
  • They stand to be her sacrifice,
  • The sons this mother flings like dice,
  • To face the odds and brave the Fates;
  • As in those days of starry dates,
  • When cannon cannon’s counterblast
  • Awakened, muzzle muzzle bowled,
  • And high in swathe of smoke the mast
  • Its fighting rag outrolled.
  • 1891.
  • TARDY SPRING
  • NOW the North wind ceases,
  • The warm South-west awakes;
  • Swift fly the fleeces,
  • Thick the blossom-flakes.
  • Now hill to hill has made the stride,
  • And distance waves the without end:
  • Now in the breast a door flings wide;
  • Our farthest smiles, our next is friend.
  • And song of England’s rush of flowers
  • Is this full breeze with mellow stops,
  • That spins the lark for shine, for showers;
  • He drinks his hurried flight, and drops.
  • The stir in memory seem these things,
  • Which out of moistened turf and clay
  • Astrain for light push patient rings,
  • Or leap to find the waterway.
  • ’Tis equal to a wonder done,
  • Whatever simple lives renew
  • Their tricks beneath the father sun,
  • As though they caught a broken clue;
  • So hard was earth an eyewink back:
  • But now the common life has come,
  • The blotting cloud a dappled pack,
  • The grasses one vast underhum.
  • A City clothed in snow and soot,
  • With lamps for day in ghostly rows,
  • Breaks to the scene of hosts afoot,
  • The river that reflective flows:
  • And there did fog down crypts of street
  • Play spectre upon eye and mouth:—
  • Their faces are a glass to greet
  • This magic of the whirl for South.
  • A burly joy each creature swells
  • With sound of its own hungry quest;
  • Earth has to fill her empty wells,
  • And speed the service of the nest;
  • The phantom of the snow-wreath melt,
  • That haunts the farmer’s look abroad,
  • Who sees what tomb a white night built,
  • Where flocks now bleat and sprouts the clod.
  • For iron Winter held her firm;
  • Across her sky he laid his hand;
  • And bird he starved, he stiffened worm;
  • A sightless heaven, a shaven land.
  • Her shivering Spring feigned fast asleep,
  • The bitten buds dared not unfold:
  • We raced on roads and ice to keep
  • Thought of the girl we love from cold.
  • But now the North wind ceases,
  • The warm South-west awakes,
  • The heavens are out in fleeces,
  • And earth’s green banner shakes.
  • THE LABOURER
  • FOR a Heracles in his fighting ire there is never the glory that
  • follows
  • When ashen he lies and the poets arise to sing of the work he has
  • done.
  • But to vision alive under shallows of sight, lo, the Labourer’s crown
  • is Apollo’s,
  • While stands he yet in his grime and sweat—to wrestle for fruits of
  • the Sun.
  • Can an enemy wither his cheer? Not you, ye fair yellow-flowering
  • ladies,
  • Who join with your lords to jar the chords of a bosom heroic, and
  • clog.
  • ’Tis the faltering friend, an inanimate land, may drag a great soul to
  • their Hades,
  • And plunge him far from a beam of star till he hears the deep bay
  • of the Dog.
  • Apparition is then of a monster-task, in a policy carving new
  • fashions:
  • The winninger course than the rule of force, and the springs lured
  • to run in a stream:
  • He would bend tough oak, he would stiffen the reed, point Reason to
  • swallow the passions,
  • Bid Britons awake two steps to take where one is a trouble extreme!
  • Not the less is he nerved with the Labourer’s resolute hope: that by
  • him shall be written,
  • To honour his race, this deed of grace, for the weak from the
  • strong made just:
  • That her sons over seas in a rally of praise may behold a thrice
  • vitalised Britain,
  • Ashine with the light of the doing of right: at the gates of the
  • Future in trust.
  • FORESIGHT AND PATIENCE
  • SPRUNG of the father blood, the mother brain,
  • Are they who point our pathway and sustain.
  • They rarely meet; one soars, one walks retired.
  • When they do meet, it is our earth inspired.
  • To see Life’s formless offspring and subdue
  • Desire of times unripe, we have these two,
  • Whose union is right reason: join they hands,
  • The world shall know itself and where it stands;
  • What cowering angel and what upright beast
  • Make man, behold, nor count the low the least,
  • Nor less the stars have round it than its flowers.
  • When these two meet, a point of time is ours.
  • As in a land of waterfalls, that flow
  • Smooth for the leap on their great voice below,
  • Some eddies near the brink borne swift along
  • Will capture hearing with the liquid song,
  • So, while the headlong world’s imperious force
  • Resounded under, heard I these discourse.
  • First words, where down my woodland walk she led,
  • To her blind sister Patience, Foresight said:
  • —Your faith in me appals, to shake my own,
  • When still I find you in this mire alone.
  • —The few steps taken at a funeral pace
  • By men had slain me but for those you trace.
  • —Look I once back, a broken pinion I:
  • Black as the rebel angels rained from sky!
  • —Needs must you drink of me while here you live,
  • And make me rich in feeling I can give.
  • —A brave To-be is dawn upon my brow:
  • Yet must I read my sister for the How.
  • My daisy better knows her God of beams
  • Than doth an eagle that to mount him seems.
  • She hath the secret never fieriest reach
  • Of wing shall master till men hear her teach.
  • —Liker the clod flaked by the driving plough,
  • My semblance when I have you not as now.
  • The quiet creatures who escape mishap
  • Bear likeness to pure growths of the green sap:
  • A picture of the settled peace desired
  • By cowards shunning strife or strivers tired.
  • I listen at their breasts: is there no jar
  • Of wrestlings and of stranglings, dead they are,
  • And such a picture as the piercing mind
  • Ranks beneath vegetation. Not resigned
  • Are my true pupils while the world is brute.
  • What edict of the stronger keeps me mute,
  • Stronger impels the motion of my heart.
  • I am not Resignation’s counterpart.
  • If that I teach, ’tis little the dry word,
  • Content, but how to savour hope deferred.
  • We come of earth, and rich of earth may be;
  • Soon carrion if very earth are we!
  • The coursing veins, the constant breath, the use
  • Of sleep, declare that strife allows short truce;
  • Unless we clasp decay, accept defeat,
  • And pass despised; ‘a-cold for lack of heat,’
  • Like other corpses, but without death’s plea.
  • —My sister calls for battle; is it she?
  • —Rather a world of pressing men in arms,
  • Than stagnant, where the sensual piper charms
  • Each drowsy malady and coiling vice
  • With dreams of ease whereof the soul pays price!
  • No home is here for peace while evil breeds,
  • While error governs, none; and must the seeds
  • You sow, you that for long have reaped disdain,
  • Lie barren at the doorway of the brain,
  • Let stout contention drive deep furrows, blood
  • Moisten, and make new channels of its flood!
  • —My sober little maid, when we meet first,
  • Drinks of me ever with an eager thirst.
  • So can I not of her till circumstance
  • Drugs cravings. Here we see how men advance
  • A doubtful foot, but circle if much stirred,
  • Like dead weeds on whipped waters. Shout the word
  • Prompting their hungers, and they grandly march,
  • As to band-music under Victory’s arch.
  • Thus was it, and thus is it; save that then
  • The beauty of frank animals had men.
  • —Observe them, and down rearward for a term,
  • Gaze to the primal twistings of the worm.
  • Thence look this way, across the fields that show
  • Men’s early form of speech for Yes and No.
  • My sister a bruised infant’s utterance had;
  • And issuing stronger, to mankind ’twas mad.
  • I knew my home where I had choice to feel
  • The toad beneath a harrow or a heel.
  • —Speak of this Age.
  • —When you it shall discern
  • Bright as you are, to me the Age will turn.
  • —For neither of us has it any care;
  • Its learning is through Science to despair.
  • —Despair lies down and grovels, grapples not
  • With evil, casts the burden of its lot.
  • This Age climbs earth.
  • —To challenge heaven.
  • —Not less
  • The lower deeps. It laughs at Happiness!
  • That know I, though the echoes of it wail,
  • For one step upward on the crags you scale.
  • Brave is the Age wherein the word will rust,
  • Which means our soul asleep or body’s lust,
  • Until from warmth of many breasts, that beat
  • A temperate common music, sunlike heat
  • The happiness not predatory sheds!
  • —But your fierce Yes and No of butting heads
  • Now rages to outdo a horny Past.
  • Shades of a wild Destroyer on the vast
  • Are thrown by every novel light upraised.
  • The world’s whole round smokes ominously, amazed
  • And trembling as its pregnant Aetna swells.
  • Combustibles on hot combustibles
  • Run piling, for one spark to roll in fire
  • The mountain-torrent of infernal ire
  • And leave the track of devils where men built.
  • Perceptive of a doom, the sinner’s guilt
  • Confesses in a cry for help shrill loud,
  • If drops the chillness of a passing cloud,
  • To conscience, reason, human love; in vain:
  • None save they but the souls which them contain.
  • No extramural God, the God within
  • Alone gives aid to city charged with sin.
  • A world that for the spur of fool and knave
  • Sweats in its laboratory what shall save?
  • But men who ply their wits in such a school
  • Must pray the mercy of the knave and fool.
  • —Much have I studied hard Necessity!
  • To know her Wisdom’s mother, and that we
  • May deem the harshness of her later cries
  • In labour a sure goad to prick the wise,
  • If men among the warnings which convulse
  • Can gravely dread without the craven’s pulse.
  • Long ere the rising of this age of ours,
  • The knave and fool were stamped as monstrous Powers.
  • Of human lusts and lassitudes they spring,
  • And are as lasting as the parent thing.
  • Yet numbering locust hosts, bent they to drill,
  • They might o’ermatch and have mankind at will.
  • Behold such army gathering; ours the spur,
  • No scattered foe to face, but Lucifer.
  • Not fool or knave is now the enemy
  • O’ershadowing men, ’tis Folly, Knavery!
  • A sea; nor stays that sea the bastioned beach.
  • Now must the brother soul alive in each
  • His traitorous individual devildom
  • Hold subject lest the grand destruction come.
  • Dimly men see it menacing apace
  • To overthrow, perchance uproot, the race.
  • Within, without, they are a field of tares:
  • Fruitfuller for them when the contest squares,
  • And wherefore warrior service they must yield,
  • Shines visible as life on either field.
  • That is my comfort, following shock on shock,
  • Which sets faith quaking on their firmest rock.
  • Since with his weapons, all the arms of Night,
  • Frail men have challenged Lucifer to fight,
  • Have matched in hostile ranks, enrolled, erect,
  • The human and Satanic intellect,
  • Determined for their uses to control
  • What forces on the earth and under roll,
  • Their granite rock runs igneous; now they stand
  • Pledged to the heavens for safety of their land.
  • They cannot learn save grossly, gross that are:
  • Through fear they learn whose aid is good in war.
  • —My sister, as I read them in my glass,
  • Their field of tares they take for pasture grass.
  • How waken them that have not any bent
  • Save browsing—the concrete indifferent!
  • Friend Lucifer supplies them solid stuff:
  • They fear not for the race when full the trough.
  • They have much fear of giving up the ghost;
  • And these are of mankind the unnumbered host.
  • —If I could see with you, and did not faint
  • In beating wing, the future I would paint.
  • Those massed indifferents will learn to quake:
  • Now meanwhile is another mass awake,
  • Once denser than the grunters of the sty.
  • If I could see with you! Could I but fly!
  • —The length of days that you with them have housed,
  • An outcast else, approves their cause espoused.
  • —O true, they have a cause, and woe for us,
  • While still they have a cause too piteous!
  • Yet, happy for us when, their cause defined,
  • They walk no longer with a stumbler blind,
  • And quicken in the virtue of their cause,
  • To think me a poor mouther of old saws!
  • I wait the issue of a battling Age;
  • The toilers with your ‘troughsters’ now engage;
  • Instructing them, through their acutest sense,
  • How close the dangers of indifference!
  • Already have my people shown their worth,
  • More love they light, which folds the love of Earth.
  • That love to love of labour leads: thence love
  • Of humankind—earth’s incense flung above.
  • —Admit some other features: Faithless, mean;
  • Encased in matter; vowed to Gods obscene;
  • Contemptuous of the impalpable, it swells
  • On Doubt; for pastime swallows miracles;
  • And if I bid it face what _I_ observe,
  • Declares me hoodwinked by my optic nerve!
  • —Oft has your prophet, for reward of toil,
  • Seen nests of seeming cockatrices coil:
  • Disowned them as the unholiest of Time,
  • Which were his offspring, born of flame on slime.
  • Nor him, their sire, have known the filial fry:
  • As little as Time’s earliest knew the sky.
  • Perchance among them shoots a lustrous flame
  • At intervals, in proof of whom they came.
  • To strengthen our foundations is the task
  • Of this tough Age; not in your beams to bask,
  • Though, lighted by your beams, down mining caves
  • The rock it blasts, the hoarded foulness braves.
  • My sister sees no round beyond her mood;
  • To hawk this Age has dressed her head in hood.
  • Out of the course of ancient ruts and grooves,
  • It moves: O much for me to say it moves!
  • About his Æthiop Highlands Nile is Nile,
  • Though not the stream of the paternal smile:
  • And where his tide of nourishment he drives,
  • An Abyssinian wantonness revives.
  • Calm as his lotus-leaf to-day he swims;
  • He is the yellow crops, the rounded limbs,
  • The Past yet flowing, the fair time that fills;
  • Breath of all mouths and grist of many mills.
  • To-morrow, warning none with tempest-showers,
  • He is the vast Insensate who devours
  • His golden promise over leagues of seed,
  • Then sits in a smooth lake upon the deed.
  • The races which on barbarous force begin
  • Inherit onward of their origin,
  • And cancelled blessings will the current length
  • Reveal till they know need of shaping strength.
  • ’Tis not in men to recognize the need
  • Before they clash in hosts, in hosts they bleed.
  • Then may sharp suffering their nature grind;
  • Of rabble passions grow the chieftain Mind.
  • Yet mark where still broad Nile boasts thousands fed,
  • For tens up the safe mountains at his head.
  • Few would be fed, not far his course prolong,
  • Save for the troublous blood which makes him strong.
  • —That rings of truth! More do your people thrive;
  • Your Many are more merrily alive
  • Than erewhile when I gloried in the page
  • Of radiant singer and anointed sage.
  • Greece was my lamp: burnt out for lack of oil;
  • Rome, Python Rome, prey of its robber spoil!
  • All structures built upon a narrow space
  • Must fall, from having not your hosts for base.
  • O thrice must one be you, to see them shift
  • Along their desert flats, here dash, there drift;
  • With faith, that of privations and spilt blood,
  • Comes Reason armed to clear or bank the flood!
  • And thrice must one be you, to wait release
  • From duress in the swamp of their increase.
  • At which oppressive scene, beyond arrest,
  • A darkness not with stars of heaven dressed
  • Philosophers behold; desponding view
  • Your Many nourished, starved my brilliant few;
  • Then flinging heels, as charioteers the reins,
  • Dive down the fumy Ætna of their brains.
  • Belated vessels on a rising sea,
  • They seem: they pass!
  • —But not Philosophy!
  • —Ay, be we faithful to ourselves: despise
  • Nought but the coward in us! That way lies
  • The wisdom making passage through our slough.
  • Am I not heard, my head to Earth shall bow;
  • Like her, shall wait to see, and seeing wait.
  • Philosophy is Life’s one match for Fate.
  • That photosphere of our high fountain One,
  • Our spirit’s Lord and Reason’s fostering sun,
  • Philosophy, shall light us in the shade,
  • Warm in the frost, make Good our aim and aid.
  • Companioned by the sweetest, ay renewed,
  • Unconquerable, whose aim for aid is Good!
  • Advantage to the Many: that we name
  • God’s voice; have there the surety in our aim.
  • This thought unto my sister do I owe,
  • And irony and satire off me throw.
  • They crack a childish whip, drive puny herds,
  • Where numbers crave their sustenance in words.
  • Now let the perils thicken: clearer seen,
  • Your Chieftain Mind mounts over them serene.
  • Who never yet of scattered lamps was born
  • To speed a world, a marching world to warn,
  • But sunward from the vivid Many springs,
  • Counts conquest but a step, and through disaster sings.
  • THE WARNING
  • WE have seen mighty men ballooning high,
  • And in another moment bump the ground.
  • He falls; and in his measurement is found
  • To count some inches o’er the common fry.
  • ’Twas not enough to send him climbing sky,
  • Yet ’twas enough above his fellows crowned,
  • Had he less panted. Let his faithful hound
  • Bark at detractors. He may walk or lie.
  • Concerns it most ourselves, who with our gas—
  • This little Isle’s insatiable greed
  • For Continents—filled to inflation burst.
  • So do ripe nations into squalor pass,
  • When, driven as herds by their old private thirst,
  • They scorn the brain’s wild search for virtuous light.
  • OUTSIDE THE CROWD
  • TO sit on History in an easy chair,
  • Still rivalling the wild hordes by whom ’twas writ!
  • Sure, this beseems a race of laggard wit,
  • Unwarned by those plain letters scrawled on air.
  • If more than hands’ and armsful be our share,
  • Snatch we for substance we see vapours flit.
  • Have we not heard derision infinite
  • When old men play the youth to chase the snare?
  • Let us be belted athletes, matched for foes,
  • Or stand aloof, the great Benevolent,
  • The Lord of Lands no Robber-birds annex,
  • Where Justice holds the scales with pure intent;
  • Armed to support her sword;—lest we compose
  • That Chapter for the historic word on Wrecks.
  • TRAFALGAR DAY
  • HE leads: we hear our Seaman’s call
  • In the roll of battles won;
  • For he is Britain’s Admiral
  • Till setting of her sun.
  • When Britain’s life was in her ships,
  • He kept the sea as his own right;
  • And saved us from more fell eclipse
  • Than drops on day from blackest night.
  • Again his battle spat the flame!
  • Again his victory flag men saw!
  • At sound of Nelson’s chieftain name,
  • A deeper breath did Freedom draw.
  • Each trusty captain knew his part:
  • They served as men, not marshalled kine:
  • The pulses they of his great heart,
  • With heads to work his main design.
  • Their Nelson’s word, to beat the foe,
  • And spare the fall’n, before them shone.
  • Good was the hour of blow for blow,
  • And clear their course while they fought on.
  • Behold the Envied vanward sweep!—
  • A day in mourning weeds adored!
  • Then Victory was wrought to weep;
  • Then sorrow crowned with laurel soared.
  • A breezeless flag above a shroud
  • All Britain was when wind and wave,
  • To make her, passing human, proud,
  • Brought his last gift from o’er the grave!
  • Uprose the soul of him a star
  • On that brave day of Ocean days:
  • It rolled the smoke from Trafalgár
  • To darken Austerlitz ablaze.
  • Are we the men of old, its light
  • Will point us under every sky
  • The path he took; and must we fight,
  • Our Nelson be our battle-cry!
  • He leads: we hear our Seaman’s call
  • In the roll of battles won;
  • For he is Britain’s Admiral
  • Till setting of her sun.
  • ODES IN CONTRIBUTION TO THE SONG OF FRENCH HISTORY
  • THE REVOLUTION
  • I
  • NOT yet had History’s Aetna smoked the skies,
  • And low the Gallic Giantess lay enchained,
  • While overhead in ordered set and rise
  • Her kingly crowns immutably defiled;
  • Effulgent on funereal piled
  • Across the vacant heavens, and distrained
  • Her body, mutely, even as earth, to bear;
  • Despoiled the tomb of hope, her mouth of air.
  • II
  • Through marching scores of winters racked she lay,
  • Beneath a hoar-frost’s brilliant crust,
  • Whereon the jewelled flies that drained
  • Her breasts disported in a glistering spray;
  • She, the land’s fount of fruits, enclosed with dust;
  • By good and evil angels fed, sustained
  • In part to curse, in part to pray,
  • Sucking the dubious rumours, till men saw
  • The throbs of her charged heart before the Just,
  • So worn the harrowed surface had become:
  • And still they deemed the dance above was Law,
  • Amort all passion in a rebel dumb.
  • III
  • Then, on the unanticipated day,
  • Earth heaved, and rose a veinous mound
  • To roar of the underfloods; and off it sprang,
  • Ravishing as red wine in woman’s form,
  • A splendid Maenad, she of the delirious laugh,
  • Her body twisted flames with the smoke-cap crowned;
  • She of the Bacchic foot; the challenger to the fray,
  • Bewitchment for the embrace; who sang, who sang
  • Intoxication to her swarm,
  • Revolved them, hair, voice, feet, in her carmagnole,
  • As with a stroke she snapped the Royal staff,
  • Dealt the awaited blow on gilt decay
  • (O ripeness of the time! O Retribution sure,
  • If but our vital lamp illume us to endure!)
  • And, like a glad releasing of her soul,
  • Sent the word Liberty up to meet the midway blue,
  • Her bridegroom in descent to her; and they joined,
  • In the face of men they joined: attest it true,
  • The million witnesses, that she,
  • For ages lying beside the mole,
  • Was on the unanticipated miracle day
  • Upraised to midway heaven and, as to her goal,
  • Enfolded, ere the Immaculate knew
  • What Lucifer of the Mint had coined
  • His bride’s adulterate currency
  • Of burning love corrupt of an infuriate hate;
  • She worthy, she unworthy; that one day his mate:
  • His mate for that one day of the unwritten deed.
  • Read backward on the hoar-frost’s brilliant crust;
  • Beneath it read.
  • Athirst to kiss, athirst to slay, she stood,
  • A radiance fringed with grim affright;
  • For them that hungered, she was nourishing food,
  • For those who sparkled, Night.
  • Read in her heart, and how before the Just
  • Her doings, her misdoings, plead.
  • IV
  • Down on her leap for him the young Angelical broke
  • To husband a resurgent France:
  • From whom, with her dethroning stroke,
  • Dishonour passed; the dalliance,
  • That is occasion’s yea or nay,
  • In issues for the soul to pay,
  • Discarded; and the cleft ’twixt deed and word,
  • The sinuous lie which warbles the sweet bird,
  • Wherein we see old Darkness peer,
  • Cold Dissolution beck, she had flung hence;
  • And hence the talons and the beak of prey;
  • Hence all the lures to silken swine
  • Thronging the troughs of indolence;
  • With every sleek convolvement serpentine;
  • The pride in elfin arts to veil an evil leer,
  • And bid a goatfoot trip it like a fay.
  • He clasped in this revived, uprisen France,
  • A valorous dame, of countenance
  • The lightning’s upon cloud: unlit as yet
  • On brows and lips the lurid shine
  • Of seas in the night-wind’s whirl; unstirred
  • Her pouch of the centuries’ injuries compressed;
  • The shriek that tore the world as yet unheard:
  • Earth’s animate full flower she looked, intense
  • For worship, wholly given him, fair
  • Adoring or desiring; in her bright jet,
  • Earth’s crystal spring to sky: Earth’s warrior Best
  • To win Heaven’s Pure up that midway
  • We vision for new ground, where sense
  • And spirit are one for the further flight; breast-bare,
  • Bare-limbed; nor graceless gleamed her disarray
  • In scorn of the seductive insincere,
  • But martially nude for hot Bellona’s play,
  • And amorous of the loftiest in her view.
  • V
  • She sprang from dust to drink of earth’s cool dew,
  • The breath of swaying grasses share,
  • Mankind embrace, their weaklings rear,
  • At wrestle with the tyrannic strong;
  • Her forehead clear to her mate, virgin anew,
  • As immortals may be in the mortal sphere.
  • Read through her launching heart, who had lain long
  • With Earth and heard till it became her own
  • Our good Great Mother’s eve and matin song:
  • The humming burden of Earth’s toil to feed
  • Her creatures all, her task to speed their growth,
  • Her aim to lead them up her pathways, shown
  • Between the Pains and Pleasures; warned of both,
  • Of either aided on their hard ascent.
  • Now when she looked, with love’s benign delight
  • After great ecstasy, along the plains,
  • What foulest impregnation of her sight
  • Transformed the scene to multitudinous troops
  • Of human sketches, quaver-figures, bent,
  • As were they winter sedges, broken hoops,
  • Dry udder, vineless poles, worm-eaten posts,
  • With features like the flowers defaced by deluge rains?
  • Recked she that some perverting devil had limned
  • Earth’s proudest to spout scorn of the Maker’s hand,
  • Who could a day behold these deathly hosts,
  • And see, decked, graced, and delicately trimmed,
  • A ribanded and gemmed elected few,
  • Sanctioned, of milk and honey starve the land:—
  • Like melody in flesh, its pleasant game
  • Olympianwise perform, cloak but the shame:
  • Beautiful statures; hideous,
  • By Christian contrast; pranked with golden chains,
  • And flexile where is manhood straight;
  • Mortuaries where warm should beat
  • The brotherhood that keeps blood sweet:
  • Who dared in cantique impious
  • Proclaim the Just, to whom was due
  • Cathedral gratitude in the pomp of state,
  • For that on those lean outcasts hung the sucker Pains,
  • On these elect the swelling Pleasures grew.
  • Surely a devil’s land when that meant death for each!
  • Fresh from the breast of Earth, not thus,
  • With all the body’s life to plump the leech,
  • Is Nature’s way, she knew. The abominable scene
  • Spat at the skies; and through her veins,
  • To cloud celestially sown,
  • Ran venom of what nourishment
  • Her dark sustainer subterrene
  • Supplied her, stretched supine on the rack,
  • Alive in the shrewd nerves, the seething brains,
  • Under derisive revels, prone
  • As one clamped fast, with the interminable senseless blent.
  • VI
  • Now was her face white waves in the tempest’s sharp flame-blink;
  • Her skies shot black.
  • Now was it visioned infamy to drink
  • Of earth’s cool dew, and through the vines
  • Frolic in pearly laughter with her young,
  • Watching the healthful, natural, happy signs
  • Where hands of lads and maids like tendrils clung,
  • After their sly shy ventures from the leaf,
  • And promised bunches. Now it seemed
  • The world was one malarious mire,
  • Crying for purification: chief
  • This land of France. It seemed
  • A duteous desire
  • To drink of life’s hot flood, and the crimson streamed.
  • VII
  • She drank what makes man demon at the draught.
  • Her skies lowered black,
  • Her lover flew,
  • There swept a shudder over men.
  • Her heavenly lover fled her, and she laughed,
  • For laughter was her spirit’s weapon then.
  • The Infernal rose uncalled, he with his crew.
  • VIII
  • As mighty thews burst manacles, she went mad:
  • Her heart a flaring torch usurped her wits.
  • Such enemies of her next-drawn breath she had!
  • To tread her down in her live grave beneath
  • Their dancing floor sunned blind by the Royal wreath,
  • They ringed her steps with crafty prison pits.
  • Without they girdled her, made nest within.
  • There ramped the lion, here entrailed the snake.
  • They forced the cup to her lips when she drank blood;
  • Believing it, in the mother’s mind at strain,
  • In the mother’s fears, and in young Liberty’s wail
  • Alarmed, for her encompassed children’s sake,
  • The sole sure way to save her priceless bud.
  • Wherewith, when power had gifted her to prevail,
  • Vengeance appeared as logically akin.
  • Insanely rational they; she rationally insane;
  • And in compute of sin, was hers the appealing sin.
  • IX
  • Amid the plash of scarlet mud
  • Stained at the mouth, drunk with our common air,
  • Not lack of love was her defect;
  • The Fury mourned and raged and bled for France
  • Breathing from exultation to despair
  • At every wild-winged hope struck by mischance
  • Soaring at each faint gleam o’er her abyss.
  • Heard still, to be heard while France shall stand erect,
  • The frontier march she piped her sons, for where
  • Her crouching outer enemy camped,
  • Attendant on the deadlier inner’s hiss.
  • She piped her sons the frontier march, the wine
  • Of martial music, History’s cherished tune;
  • And they, the saintliest labourers that aye
  • Dropped sweat on soil for bread, took arms and tramped;
  • High-breasted to match men or elements,
  • Or Fortune, harsh schoolmistress with the undrilled:
  • War’s ragged pupils; many a wavering line,
  • Torn from the dear fat soil of champaigns hopefully tilled,
  • Torn from the motherly bowl, the homely spoon,
  • To jest at famine, ply
  • The novel scythe, and stand to it on the field;
  • Lie in the furrows, rain-clouds for their tents;
  • Fronting the red artillery straighten spine;
  • Buckle the shiver at sight of comrades strewn;
  • Over an empty platter affect the merrily filled;
  • Die, if the multiple hazards around said die;
  • Downward measure a foeman mightily sized;
  • Laugh at the legs that would run for a life despised;
  • Lyrical on into death’s red roaring jaw-gape, steeled
  • Gaily to take of the foe his lesson, and give reply.
  • Cheerful apprentices, they shall be masters soon!
  • X
  • Lo, where hurricane flocks of the North-wind rattle their thunder
  • Loud through a night, and at dawn comes change to the great
  • South-west,
  • Hounds are the hounded in clouds, waves, forests, inverted the race:
  • Lo, in the day’s young beams the colossal invading pursuers
  • Burst upon rocks and were foam;
  • Ridged up a torrent crest;
  • Crumbled to ruin, still gazing a glacial wonder;
  • Turned shamed feet toe to heel on their track at a panic pace.
  • Yesterday’s clarion cock scudded hen of the invalid comb;
  • They, the triumphant tonant towering upper, were under;
  • They, violators of home, dared hope an inviolate home;
  • They that had stood for the stroke were the vigorous hewers;
  • Quick as the trick of the wrist with the rapier, they the pursuers.
  • Heavens and men amazed heard the arrogant crying for grace;
  • Saw the once hearth-reek rabble the scourge of an army dispieced;
  • Saw such a shift of the hunt as when Titan Olympus clomb.
  • Fly! was the sportsman’s word; and the note of the quarry rang, Chase!
  • XI
  • Banners from South, from East,
  • Sheaves of pale banners drooping hole and shred;
  • The captive brides of valour, Sabine Wives
  • Plucked from the foeman’s blushful bed,
  • For glorious muted battle-tongues
  • Of deeds along the horizon’s red,
  • At cost of unreluctant lives;
  • Her toilful heroes homeward poured,
  • To give their fevered mother air of the lungs.
  • She breathed, and in the breathing craved.
  • Environed as she was, at bay,
  • Safety she kissed on her drawn sword,
  • And waved for victory, for fresh victory waved:
  • She craved for victory as her daily bread;
  • For victory as her daily banquet raved.
  • XII
  • Now had her glut of vengeance left her grey
  • Of blood, who in her entrails fiercely tore
  • To clutch and squeeze her snakes; herself the more
  • Devitalizing: red washer Auroral ray;
  • Desired if but to paint her pallid hue.
  • The passion for that young horizon red,
  • Which dowered her with the flags, the blazing fame,
  • Like dotage of the past-meridian dame
  • For some bright Sungod adolescent, swelled
  • Insatiate, to the voracious grew,
  • The glutton’s inward raveners bred;
  • Till she, mankind’s most dreaded, most abhorred,
  • Witless in her demands on Fortune, asked,
  • As by the weaving Fates impelled,
  • To have the thing most loathed, the iron lord,
  • Controller and chastiser, under Victory masked.
  • XIII
  • Banners from East, from South,
  • She hugged him in them, feared the scourge they meant,
  • Yet blindly hugged, and hungering built his throne.
  • So may you see the village innocent,
  • With curtsey of shut lids and open mouth,
  • In act to beg for sweets expect a loathly stone:
  • See furthermore the Just in his measures weigh
  • Her sufferings and her sins, dispense her meed.
  • False to her bridegroom lord of the miracle day,
  • She fell: from his ethereal home observed
  • Through love, grown alien love, not moved to plead
  • Against the season’s fruit for deadly Seed,
  • But marking how she had aimed, and where she swerved,
  • Why suffered, with a sad consenting thought.
  • Nor would he shun her sullen look, nor monstrous hold
  • The doer of the monstrous; she aroused,
  • She, the long tortured, suddenly freed, distraught,
  • More strongly the divine in him than when
  • Joy of her as she sprang from mould
  • Drew him the midway heavens adown
  • To clasp her in his arms espoused
  • Before the sight of wondering men,
  • And put upon the day a deathless crown.
  • The veins and arteries of her, fold in fold,
  • His alien love laid open, to divide
  • The martyred creature from her crimes; he knew
  • What cowardice in her valour could reside;
  • What strength her weakness covered; what abased
  • Sublimity so illumining, and what raised
  • This wallower in old slime to noblest heights,
  • Up to the union on the midway blue:—
  • Day that the celestial grave Recorder hangs
  • Among dark History’s nocturnal lights,
  • With vivid beams indicative to the quick
  • Of all who have felt the vaulted body’s pangs
  • Beneath a mind in hopeless soaring sick.
  • She had forgot how, long enslaved, she yearned
  • To the one helping hand above;
  • Forgot her faith in the Great Undiscerned,
  • Whereof she sprang aloft to her Angelical love
  • That day: and he, the bright day’s husband, still with love,
  • Though alien, though to an upper seat retired,
  • Behold a wrangling heart, as ’twere her soul
  • On eddies of wild waters cast;
  • In wilderness division; fired
  • For domination, freedom, lust,
  • The Pleasures; lo, a witch’s snaky bowl
  • Set at her lips; the blood-drinker’s madness fast
  • Upon her; and therewith mistrust,
  • Most of herself: a mouth of guile.
  • Compassionately could he smile,
  • To hear the mouth disclaiming God,
  • And clamouring for the Just!
  • Her thousand impulses, like torches, coursed
  • City and field; and pushed abroad
  • O’er hungry waves to thirsty sands,
  • Flaring at further; she had grown to be
  • The headless with the fearful hands;
  • To slaughter, else to suicide, enforced.
  • But he, remembering how his love began,
  • And of what creature, pitied when was plain
  • Another measure of captivity:
  • The need for strap and rod;
  • The penitential prayers again;
  • Again the bitter bowing down to dust;
  • The burden on the flesh for who disclaims the God,
  • The answer when is call upon the Just.
  • Whence her lost virtue had found refuge strode
  • Her master, saying, ‘I only; I who can!’
  • And echoed round her army, now her chain.
  • So learns the nation, closing Anarch’s reign,
  • That she had been in travail of a Man.
  • NAPOLÉON
  • I
  • CANNON his name,
  • Cannon his voice, he came.
  • Who heard of him heard shaken hills,
  • An earth at quake, to quiet stamped;
  • Who looked on him beheld the will of wills,
  • The driver of wild flocks where lions ramped:
  • Beheld War’s liveries flee him, like lumped grass
  • Nid-nod to ground beneath the cuffing storm;
  • While laurelled over his Imperial form,
  • Forth from her bearded tube of lacquey brass,
  • Reverberant notes and long blew volant Fame.
  • Incarnate Victory, Power manifest,
  • Infernal or God-given to mankind,
  • On the quenched volcano’s cusp did he take stand,
  • A conquering army’s height above the land,
  • Which calls that army offspring of its breast,
  • And sees it mid the starry camps enshrined;
  • His eye the cannon’s flame,
  • The cannon’s cave his mind.
  • II
  • To weld the nation in a name of dread,
  • And scatter carrion flies off wounds unhealed,
  • The Necessitated came, as comes from out
  • Electric ebon lightning’s javelin-head,
  • Threatening agitation in the revealed
  • Founts of our being; terrible with doubt,
  • With radiance restorative. At one stride
  • Athwart the Law he stood for sovereign sway.
  • That Soliform made featureless beside
  • His brilliancy who neighboured: vapour they;
  • Vapour what postured statues barred his tread.
  • On high in amphitheatre field on field,
  • Italian, Egyptian, Austrian,
  • Far heard and of the carnage discord clear,
  • Bells of his escalading triumphs pealed
  • In crashes on a choral chant severe,
  • Heraldic of the authentic Charlemagne,
  • Globe, sceptre, sword, to enfold, to rule, to smite,
  • Make unity of the mass,
  • Coherent or refractory, by his might.
  • Forth from her bearded tube of lacquey brass,
  • Fame blew, and tuned the jangles, bent the knees
  • Rebellious or submissive; his decrees
  • Were thunder in those heavens and compelled:
  • Such as disordered earth, eclipsed of stars,
  • Endures for sign of Order’s calm return,
  • Whereunto she is vowed; and his wreckage-spars,
  • His harried ships, old riotous Ocean lifts alight,
  • Subdued to splendour in his delirant churn.
  • Glory suffused the accordant, quelled,
  • By magic of high sovereignty, revolt:
  • And he, the reader of men, himself unread;
  • The name of hope, the name of dread;
  • Bloom of the coming years or blight;
  • An arm to hurl the bolt
  • With aim Olympian; bore
  • Likeness to Godhead. Whither his flashes hied
  • Hosts fell; what he constructed held rock-fast.
  • So did earth’s abjects deem of him that built and clove.
  • Torch on imagination, beams he cast,
  • Whereat they hailed him deified:
  • If less than an eagle-speeding Jove, than Vulcan more.
  • Or it might be a Vulcan-Jove,
  • Europe for smithy, Europe’s floor
  • Lurid with sparks in evanescent showers,
  • Loud echo-clap of hammers at all hours,
  • Our skies the reflex of its furnace blast.
  • III
  • On him the long enchained, released
  • For bride of the miracle day up the midway blue;
  • She from her heavenly lover fallen to serve for feast
  • Of rancours and raw hungers; she, the untrue,
  • Yet pitiable, not despicable, gazed.
  • Fawning, her body bent, she gazed
  • With eyes the moonstone portals to her heart:
  • Eyes magnifying through hysteric tears
  • This apparition, ghostly for belief;
  • Demoniac or divine, but sole
  • Over earth’s mightiest written Chief;
  • Earth’s chosen, crowned, unchallengeable upstart:
  • The trumpet word to awake, transform, renew;
  • The arbiter of circumstance;
  • High above limitations, as the spheres.
  • Nor ever had heroical Romance,
  • Never ensanguined History’s lengthened scroll,
  • Shown fulminant to shoot the levin dart
  • Terrific as this man, by whom upraised,
  • Aggrandized and begemmed, she outstripped her peers;
  • Like midnight’s levying brazier-beacon blazed
  • Defiant to the world, a rally for her sons,
  • Day of the darkness; this man’s mate; by him,
  • Cannon his name,
  • Rescued from vivisectionist and knave,
  • Her body’s dominators and her shame;
  • By him with the rivers of ranked battalions, brave
  • Past mortal, girt: a march of swords and guns
  • Incessant; his proved warriors; loaded dice
  • He flung on the crested board, where chilly Fears
  • Behold the Reaper’s ground, Death sitting grim,
  • Awatch for his predestined ones,
  • Mid shrieks and torrent-hooves; but these,
  • Inebriate of his inevitable device,
  • Hail it their hero’s wood of lustrous laurel-trees,
  • Blossom and fruit of fresh Hesperides,
  • The boiling life-blood in their cheers.
  • Unequalled since the world was man they pour
  • A spiky girdle round her; these, her sons,
  • His cataracts at smooth holiday, soon to roar
  • Obstruction shattered at his will or whim:
  • Kind to her ear as quiring Cherubim,
  • And trampling earth like scornful mastodons.
  • IV
  • The flood that swept her to be slave
  • Adoring, under thought of being his mate,
  • These were, and unto the visibly unexcelled,
  • As much of heart as abjects can she gave,
  • Or what of heart the body bears for freight
  • When Majesty apparent overawes;
  • By the flash of his ascending deeds upheld,
  • Which let not feminine pride in him have pause
  • To question where the nobler pride rebelled.
  • She read the hieroglyphic on his brow,
  • Felt his firm hand to wield the giant’s mace;
  • Herself whirled upward in an eagle’s claws,
  • Past recollection of her earthly place;
  • And if cold Reason pressed her, called him Fate;
  • Offering abashed the servile woman’s vow.
  • Delirium was her virtue when the look
  • At fettered wrists and violated laws
  • Faith in a rectitude Supernal shook,
  • Till worship of him shone as her last rational state,
  • The slave’s apology for gemmed disgrace.
  • Far in her mind that leap from earth to the ghost
  • Midway on high; or felt as a troubled pool;
  • Or as a broken sleep that hunts a dream half lost,
  • Arrested and rebuked by the common school
  • Of daily things for truancy. She could rejoice
  • To know with wakeful eyeballs Violence
  • Her crowned possessor, and, on every sense
  • Incumbent, Fact, Imperial Fact, her choice,
  • In scorn of barren visions, aims at a glassy void.
  • Who sprang for Liberty once, found slavery sweet;
  • And Tyranny, on alert subservience buoyed,
  • Spurred a blood-mare immeasureably fleet
  • To shoot the transient leagues in a passing wink,
  • Prompt for the glorious bound at the fanged abyss’s brink.
  • Scarce felt she that she bled when battle scored
  • On riddled flags the further conjured line;
  • From off the meteor gleam of his waved sword
  • Reflected bright in permanence: she bled
  • As the Bacchante spills her challengeing wine
  • With whirl o’ the cup before the kiss to lip;
  • And bade drudge History in his footprints tread,
  • For pride of sword-strokes o’er slow penmanship:
  • Each step of his a volume: his sharp word
  • The shower of steel and lead
  • Or pastoral sunshine.
  • V
  • Persistent through the brazen chorus round
  • His thunderous footsteps on the foeman’s ground,
  • A broken carol of wild notes was heard,
  • As when an ailing infant wails a dream.
  • Strange in familiarity it rang:
  • And now along the dark blue vault might seem
  • Winged migratories having but heaven for home,
  • Now the lone sea-bird’s cry down shocks of foam,
  • Beneath a ruthless paw the captive’s pang.
  • It sang the gift that comes from God
  • To mind of man as air to lung.
  • So through her days of under sod
  • Her faith unto her heart had sung,
  • Like bedded seed by frozen clod,
  • With view of wide-armed heaven and buds at burst,
  • And midway up, Earth’s fluttering little lyre.
  • Even for a glimpse, for even a hope in chained desire
  • The vision of it watered thirst.
  • VI
  • But whom those errant moans accused
  • As Liberty’s murderous mother, cried accursed,
  • France blew to deafness: for a space she mused;
  • She smoothed a startled look, and sought,
  • From treasuries of the adoring slave,
  • Her surest way to strangle thought;
  • Picturing her dread lord decree advance
  • Into the enemy’s land; artillery, bayonet, lance;
  • His ordering fingers point the dial’s to time their ranks:
  • Himself the black storm-cloud, the tempest’s bayonet-glaive.
  • Like foam-heads of a loosened freshet bursting banks,
  • By mount and fort they thread to swamp the sluggard plains.
  • Shines his gold-laurel sun, or cloak connivent rains.
  • They press to where the hosts in line and square throng mute;
  • He watchful of their form, the Audacious, the Astute;
  • Eagle to grip the field; to work his craftiest, fox.
  • From his brief signal, straight the stroke of the leveller falls;
  • From him those opal puffs, those arcs with the clouded balls:
  • He waves and the voluble scene is a quagmire shifting blocks;
  • They clash, they are knotted, and now ’tis the deed of the axe on the
  • log;
  • Here away moves a spiky woodland, and yon away sweep
  • Rivers of horse torrent-mad to the shock, and the heap over heap
  • Right through the troughed black lines turned to bunches or shreds, or
  • a fog
  • Rolling off sunlight’s arrows. Not mightier Phoebus in ire,
  • Nor deadlier Jove’s avengeing right hand, than he of the brain
  • Keen at an enemy’s mind to encircle and pierce and constrain,
  • Muffling his own for a fate-charged blow very Gods may admire.
  • Sure to behold are his eagles on high where the conflict raged.
  • Rightly, then, should France worship, and deafen the disaccord
  • Of those who dare withstand an irresistible sword
  • To thwart his predestined subjection of Europe. Let them submit!
  • She said it aloud, and heard in her breast, as a singer caged,
  • With the beat of wings at bars, Earth’s fluttering little lyre.
  • No more at midway heaven, but liker midway to the pit:
  • Not singing the spirally upward of rapture, the downward of pain
  • Rather, the drop sheer downward from pressure of merciless weight.
  • Her strangled thought got breath, with her worship held debate;
  • To yield and sink, yet eye askant the mark she had missed.
  • Over the black-blue rollers of that broad Westerly main,
  • Steady to sky, the light of Liberty glowed
  • In a flaming pillar, that cast on the troubled waters a road
  • For Europe to cross, and see the thing lost subsist.
  • For there ’twas a shepherd led his people, no butcher of sheep;
  • Firmly there the banner he first upreared
  • Stands to rally; and nourishing grain do his children reap
  • From a father beloved in life, in his death revered.
  • Contemplating him and his work, shall a skyward glance
  • Clearer sight of our dreamed and abandoned obtain;
  • Nay, but as if seen in station above the Republic, France
  • Had view of her one-day’s heavenly lover again;
  • Saw him amid the bright host looking down on her; knew she had erred,
  • Knew him her judge, knew yonder the spirit preferred;
  • Yonder the base of the summit she strove that day to ascend,
  • Ere cannon mastered her soul, and all dreams had end.
  • VII
  • Soon felt she in her shivered frame
  • A bodeful drain of blood illume
  • Her wits with frosty fire to read
  • The dazzling wizard who would have her bleed
  • On fruitless marsh and snows of spectral gloom
  • For victory that was victory scarce in name.
  • Husky his clarions laboured, and her sighs
  • O’er slaughtered sons were heavier than the prize;
  • Recalling how he stood by Frederic’s tomb,
  • With Frederic’s country underfoot and spurned:
  • There meditated; till her hope might guess,
  • Albeit his constant star prescribe success,
  • The savage strife would sink, the civil aim
  • To head a mannered world breathe zephyrous
  • Of morning after storm; whereunto she yearned;
  • And Labour’s lovely peace, and Beauty’s courtly bloom,
  • The mind in strenuous tasks hilarious.
  • At such great height, where hero hero topped,
  • Right sanely should the Grand Ascendant think
  • No further leaps at the fanged abyss’s brink
  • True Genius takes: be battle’s dice-box dropped!
  • She watched his desert features, hung to hear
  • The honey words desired, and veiled her face;
  • Hearing the Seaman’s name recur
  • Wrathfully, thick with a meaning worse
  • Than call to the march: for that inveterate Purse
  • Could kindle the extinct, inform a vacant place,
  • Conjure a heart into the trebly felled.
  • It squeezed the globe, insufferably swelled
  • To feed insurgent Europe: rear and van
  • Were haunted by the amphibious curse;
  • Here flesh, there phantom, livelier after rout:
  • The Seaman piping aye to the rightabout,
  • Distracted Europe’s Master, puffed remote
  • Those Indies of the swift Macedonian,
  • Whereon would Europe’s Master somewhiles doat,
  • In dreamings on a docile universe
  • Beneath an immarcessible Charlemagne.
  • Nor marvel France should veil a seer’s face,
  • And call on darkness as a blest retreat.
  • Magnanimously could her iron Emperor
  • Confront submission: hostile stirred to heat
  • All his vast enginery, allowed no halt
  • Up withered avenues of waste-blood war,
  • To the pitiless red mounts of fire afume,
  • As ’twere the world’s arteries opened! Woe the race!
  • Ask wherefore Fortune’s vile caprice should balk
  • His panther spring across the foaming salt,
  • From martial sands to the cliffs of pallid chalk!
  • There is no answer: seed of black defeat
  • She then did sow, and France nigh unto death foredoom.
  • See since that Seaman’s epicycle sprite
  • Engirdle, lure and goad him to the chase
  • Along drear leagues of crimson spotting white
  • With mother’s tears of France, that he may meet
  • Behind suborned battalions, ranked as wheat
  • Where peeps the weedy poppy, him of the sea;
  • Earth’s power to baffle Ocean’s power resume;
  • Victorious army crown o’er Victory’s fleet;
  • And bearing low that Seaman upon knee,
  • Stay the vexed question of supremacy,
  • Obnoxious in the vault by Frederic’s tomb.
  • VIII
  • Poured streams of Europe’s veins the flood
  • Full Rhine or Danube rolls off morning-tide
  • Through shadowed reaches into crimson-dyed:
  • And Rhine and Danube knew her gush of blood
  • Down the plucked roots the deepest in her breast.
  • He tossed her cordials, from his laurels pressed.
  • She drank for dryness thirstily, praised his gifts.
  • The blooded frame a powerful draught uplifts
  • Writhed the devotedness her voice rang wide
  • In cries ecstatic, as of the martyr-Blest,
  • Their spirits issuing forth of bodies racked,
  • And crazy chuckles, with life’s tears at feud;
  • While near her heart the sunken sentinel
  • Called Critic marked, and dumb in awe reviewed
  • This torture, this anointed, this untracked
  • To mortal source, this alien of his kind;
  • Creator, slayer, conjuror, Solon-Mars,
  • The cataract of the abyss, the star of stars;
  • Whose arts to lay the senses under spell
  • Aroused an insurrectionary mind.
  • IX
  • He, did he love her? France was his weapon, shrewd
  • At edge, a wind in onset: he loved well
  • His tempered weapon, with the which he hewed
  • Clean to the ground impediments, or hacked,
  • Sure of the blade that served the great man-miracle.
  • He raised her, robed her, gemmed her for his bride,
  • Did but her blood in blindness given exact.
  • Her blood she gave, was blind to him as guide:
  • She quivered at his word, and at his touch
  • Was hound or steed for any mark he espied.
  • He loved her more than little, less than much.
  • The fair subservient of Imperial Fact
  • Next to his consanguineous was placed
  • In ranked esteem; above the diurnal meal,
  • Vexatious carnal appetites above,
  • Above his hoards, while she Imperial Fact embraced,
  • And rose but at command from under heel.
  • The love devolvent, the ascension love,
  • Receptive or profuse, were fires he lacked,
  • Whose marrow had expelled their wasteful sparks;
  • Whose mind, the vast machine of endless haste,
  • Took up but solids for its glowing seal.
  • The hungry love, that fish-like creatures feel,
  • Impelled for prize of hooks, for prey of sharks,
  • His night’s first quarter sicklied to distaste,
  • In warm enjoyment barely might distract.
  • A head that held an Europe half devoured
  • Taste in the blood’s conceit of pleasure soured.
  • Nought save his rounding aim, the means he plied,
  • Death for his cause, to him could point appeal.
  • His mistress was the thing of uses tried.
  • Frigid the netting smile on whom he wooed,
  • But on his Policy his eye was lewd.
  • That sharp long zig-zag into distance brooked
  • No foot across; a shade his ire provoked.
  • The blunder or the cruelty of a deed
  • His Policy imperative could plead.
  • He deemed nought other precious, nor knew he
  • Legitimate outside his Policy.
  • Men’s lives and works were due, from their birth’s date,
  • To the State’s shield and sword, himself the State.
  • He thought for them in mass, as Titan may;
  • For their pronounced well-being bade obey;
  • O’er each obstructive thicket thunderclapped,
  • And straight their easy road to market mapped.
  • Watched Argus to survey the huge preserves
  • He held or coveted; Mars was armed alert
  • At sign of motion; yet his brows were murk,
  • His gorge would surge, to see the butcher’s work,
  • The Reaper’s field; a sensitive in nerves.
  • He rode not over men to do them hurt.
  • As one who claimed to have for paramour
  • Earth’s fairest form, he dealt the cancelling blow;
  • Impassioned, still impersonal; to ensure
  • Possession; free of rivals, not their foe.
  • The common Tyrant’s frenzies, rancour, spites,
  • He knew as little as men’s claim on rights.
  • A kindness for old servants, early friends,
  • Was constant in him while they served his ends;
  • And if irascible, ’twas the moment’s reek
  • From fires diverted by some gusty freak.
  • His Policy the act which breeds the act
  • Prevised, in issues accurately summed
  • From reckonings of men’s tempers, terrors, needs:—
  • That universal army, which he leads
  • Who builds Imperial on Imperious Fact.
  • Within his hot brain’s hammering workshop hummed
  • A thousand furious wheels at whirr, untired
  • As Nature in her reproductive throes;
  • And did they grate, he spake, and cannon fired:
  • The cause being aye the incendiary foes
  • Proved by prostration culpable. His dispense
  • Of Justice made his active conscience;
  • His passive was of ceaseless labour formed.
  • So found this Tyrant sanction and repose;
  • Humanly just, inhumanly unwarmed.
  • Preventive fencings with the foul intent
  • Occult, by him observed and foiled betimes,
  • Let fool historians chronicle as crimes.
  • His blows were dealt to clear the way he went:
  • Too busy sword and mind for needless blows.
  • The mighty bird of sky minutest grains
  • On ground perceived; in heaven but rays or rains;
  • In humankind diversities of masks,
  • For rule of men the choice of bait or goads.
  • The statesman steered the despot to large tasks;
  • The despot drove the statesman on short roads.
  • For Order’s cause he laboured, as inclined
  • A soldier’s training and his Euclid mind.
  • His army unto men he could present
  • As model of the perfect instrument.
  • That creature, woman, was the sofa soft,
  • When warriors their dusty armour doffed,
  • And read their manuals for the making truce
  • With rosy frailties framed to reproduce.
  • He farmed his land, distillingly alive
  • For the utmost extract he might have and hive,
  • Wherewith to marshal force; and in like scheme,
  • Benign shone Hymen’s torch on young love’s dream.
  • Thus to be strong was he beneficent;
  • A fount of earth, likewise a firmament.
  • The disputant in words his eye dismayed:
  • Opinions blocked his passage. Rent
  • Were Councils with a gesture; brayed
  • By hoarse camp-phrase what argument
  • Dared interpose to waken spleen
  • In him whose vision grasped the unseen,
  • Whose counsellor was the ready blade,
  • Whose argument the cannonade.
  • He loathed his land’s divergent parties, loth
  • To grant them speech, they were such idle troops;
  • The friable and the grumous, dizzards both.
  • Men were good sticks his mastery wrought from hoops;
  • Some serviceable, none credible on oath.
  • The silly preference they nursed to die
  • In beds he scorned, and led where they should lie.
  • If magic made them pliable for his use,
  • Magician he could be by planned surprise.
  • For do they see the deuce in human guise,
  • As men’s acknowledged head appears the deuce,
  • And they will toil with devilish craft and zeal.
  • Among them certain vagrant wits that had
  • Ideas buzzed; they were the feebly mad;
  • Pursuers of a film they hailed ideal;
  • But could be dangerous fire-flies for a brain
  • Subdued by fact, still amorous of the inane.
  • With a breath he blew them out, to beat their wings
  • The way of such transfeminated things,
  • And France had sense of vacancy in Light.
  • That is the soul’s dead darkness, making clutch
  • Wild hands for aid at muscles within touch;
  • Adding to slavery’s chain the stringent twist;
  • Even when it brings close surety that aright
  • She reads her Tyrant through his golden mist;
  • Perceives him fast to a harsher Tyrant bound;
  • Self-ridden, self-hunted, captive of his aim;
  • Material grandeur’s ape, the Infernal’s hound;
  • Enormous, with no infinite around;
  • No starred deep sky, no Muse, or lame
  • The dusty pattering pinions,
  • The voice as through the brazen tube of Fame.
  • X
  • Hugest of engines, a much limited man,
  • She saw the Lustrous, her great lord, appear
  • Through that smoked glass her last privation brought
  • To point her critic eye and spur her thought:
  • A heart but to propel Leviathan;
  • A spirit that breathed but in earth’s atmosphere.
  • Amid the plumed and sceptred ones
  • Irradiatingly Jovian,
  • The mountain tower capped by the floating cloud;
  • A nursery screamer where dialectics ruled:
  • Mannerless, graceless, laughterless, unlike
  • Herself in all, yet with such power to strike,
  • That she the various features she could scan
  • Dared not to sum, though seeing: and befooled
  • By power which beamed omnipotent, she bowed,
  • Subservient as roused echo round his guns.
  • Invulnerable Prince of Myrmidons,
  • He sparkled, by no sage Athene schooled.
  • Partly she read her riddle, stricken and pained;
  • But irony, her spirit’s tongue, restrained.
  • The Critic, last of vital in the proud
  • Enslaved, when most detectively endowed,
  • Admired how irony’s venom off him ran,
  • Like rain-drops down a statue cast in bronze:
  • Whereby of her keen rapier disarmed,
  • Again her chant of eulogy began,
  • Protesting, but with slavish senses charmed.
  • Her warrior, chief among the valorous great
  • In arms he was, dispelling shades of blame,
  • With radiance palpable in fruit and weight.
  • Heard she reproach, his victories blared response;
  • His victories bent the Critic to acclaim,
  • As with fresh blows upon a ringing sconce.
  • Or heard she from scarred ranks of jolly growls
  • His veterans dwarf their reverence and, like owls,
  • Laugh in the pitch of discord, to exalt
  • Their idol for some genial trick or fault,
  • She, too, became his marching veteran.
  • Again she took her breath from them who bore
  • His eagles through the tawny roar,
  • And murmured at a peaceful state,
  • That bred the title charlatan,
  • As missile from the mouth of hate,
  • For one the daemon fierily filled and hurled,
  • Cannon his name,
  • Shattering against a barrier world;
  • Her supreme player of man’s primaeval game.
  • The daemon filled him, and he filled her sons;
  • Strung them to stature over human height,
  • As march the standards down the smoky fight;
  • Her cherubim, her towering mastodons!
  • Directed vault or breach, break through
  • Earth’s toughest, seasons, elements, tame;
  • Dash at the bulk the sharpened few;
  • Count death the smallest of their debts:
  • Show that the will to do
  • Is masculine and begets!
  • These princes unto him the mother owed;
  • These jewels of manhood that rich hand bestowed.
  • What wonder, though with wits awake
  • To read her riddle, for these her offspring’s sake;—
  • And she, before high heaven adulteress,
  • The lost to honour, in his glory clothed,
  • Else naked, shamed in sight of men, self-loathed;—
  • That she should quench her thought, nor worship less
  • Than ere she bled on sands or snows and knew
  • The slave’s alternative, to worship or to rue!
  • XI
  • Bright from the shell of that much limited man,
  • Her hero, like the falchion out of sheath,
  • Like soul that quits the tumbled body, soared:
  • And France, impulsive, nuptial with his plan,
  • Albeit the Critic fretting her, adored
  • Once more. Exultingly her heart went forth,
  • Submissive to his mind and mood,
  • The way of those pent-eyebrows North;
  • For now was he to win the wreath
  • Surpassing sunniest in camp or Court;
  • Next, as the blessed harvest after years of blight,
  • Sit, the Great Emperor, to be known the Good!
  • Now had the Seaman’s volvent sprite,
  • Lean from the chase that barked his contraband,
  • A beggared applicant at every port,
  • To strew the profitless deeps and rot beneath,
  • Slung northward, for a hunted beast’s retort
  • On sovereign power; there his final stand,
  • Among the perjured Scythian’s shaggy horde,
  • The hydrocephalic aërolite
  • Had taken; flashing thence repellent teeth,
  • Though Europe’s Master Europe’s Rebel banned
  • To be earth’s outcast, ocean’s lord and sport.
  • Unmoved might seem the Master’s taunted sword.
  • Northward his dusky legions nightly slipped,
  • As on the map of that all-provident head;
  • He luting Peace the while, like morning’s cock
  • The quiet day to round the hours for bed;
  • No pastoral shepherd sweeter to his flock.
  • Then Europe first beheld her Titan stripped.
  • To what vast length of limb and mounds of thews,
  • How trained to scale the eminences, pluck
  • The hazards for new footing, how compel
  • Those timely incidents by men named luck,
  • Through forethought that defied the Fates to choose,
  • Her grovelling admiration had not yet
  • Imagined of the great man-miracle;
  • And France recounted with her comic smile
  • Duplicities of Court and Cabinet,
  • The silky female of his male in guile,
  • Wherewith her two-faced Master could amuse
  • A dupe he charmed in sunny beams to bask,
  • Before his feint for camisado struck
  • The lightning moment of the cast-off mask.
  • Splendours of earth repeating heaven’s at set
  • Of sun down mountain cloud in masses arched;
  • Since Asia upon Europe marched,
  • Unmatched the copious multitudes; unknown
  • To Gallia’s over-runner, Rome’s inveterate foe,
  • Such hosts; all one machine for overthrow,
  • Coruscant from the Master’s hand, compact
  • As reasoned thoughts in the Master’s head; were shown
  • Yon lightning moment when his acme might
  • Blazed o’er the stream that cuts the sandy tract
  • Borussian from Sarmatia’s famished flat;
  • The century’s flower; and off its pinnacled throne,
  • Rayed servitude on Europe’s ball of sight.
  • XII
  • Behind the Northern curtain-folds he passed.
  • There heard hushed France her muffled heart beat fast
  • Against the hollow ear-drum, where she sat
  • In expectation’s darkness, until cracked
  • The straining curtain-seams: a scaly light
  • Was ghost above an army under shroud.
  • Imperious on Imperial Fact
  • Incestuously the incredible begat.
  • His veterans and auxiliaries,
  • The trained, the trustful, sanguine, proud,
  • Princely, scarce numerable to recite,—
  • Titanic of all Titan tragedies!—
  • That Northern curtain took them, as the seas
  • Gulp the great ships to give back shipmen white.
  • Alive in marble, she conceived in soul,
  • With barren eyes and mouth, the mother’s loss;
  • The bolt from her abandoned heaven sped;
  • The snowy army rolling knoll on knoll
  • Beyond horizon, under no blest Cross:
  • By the vulture dotted and engarlanded.
  • Was it a necromancer lured
  • To weave his tense betraying spell?
  • A Titan whom our God endured
  • Till he of his foul hungers fell,
  • By all his craft and labour scourged?
  • A deluge Europe’s liberated wave,
  • Pæan to sky, leapt over that vast grave.
  • Its shadow-points against her sacred land converged.
  • And him, her yoke-fellow, her black lord, her fate,
  • In doubt, in fevered hope, in chills of hate,
  • That tore her old credulity to strips,
  • Then pressed the auspicious relics on her lips,
  • His withered slave for foregone miracles urged.
  • And he, whom now his ominous halo’s round,
  • A three parts blank decrescent sickle, crowned,
  • Prodigious in catastrophe, could wear
  • The realm of Darkness with its Prince’s air;
  • Assume in mien the resolute pretence
  • To satiate an hungered confidence,
  • Proved criminal by the sceptic seen to cower
  • Beside the generous face of that frail flower.
  • XIII
  • Desire and terror then had each of each:
  • His crown and sword were staked on the magic stroke;
  • Her blood she gave as one who loved her leech;
  • And both did barter under union’s cloak.
  • An union in hot fever and fierce need
  • Of either’s aid, distrust in trust did breed.
  • Their traffic instincts hooded their live wits
  • To issues. Never human fortune throve
  • On such alliance. Viewed by fits,
  • From Vulcan’s forge a hovering Jove
  • Evolved. The slave he dragged the Tyrant drove.
  • Her awe of him his dread of her invoked:
  • His nature with her shivering faith ran yoked.
  • What wisdom counselled, Policy declined;
  • All perils dared he save the step behind.
  • Ahead his grand initiative becked:
  • One spark of radiance blurred, his orb was wrecked.
  • Stripped to the despot upstart, for success
  • He raged to clothe a perilous nakedness.
  • He would not fall, while falling; would not be taught,
  • While learning; would not relax his grasp on aught
  • He held in hand, while losing it; pressed advance,
  • Pricked for her lees the veins of wasted France;
  • Who, had he stayed to husband her, had spun
  • The strength he taxed unripened for his throw,
  • In vengeful casts calamitous,
  • On fields where palsying Pyrrhic laurels grow,
  • The luminous the ruinous.
  • An incalescent scorpion,
  • And fierier for the mounded cirque
  • That narrowed at him thick and murk,
  • This gambler with his genius
  • Flung lives in angry volleys, bloody lightnings, flung
  • His fortunes to the hosts he stung,
  • With victories clipped his eagle’s wings.
  • By the hands that built him up was he undone:
  • By the star aloft, which was his ram’s-head will
  • Within; by the toppling throne the soldier won;
  • By the yeasty ferment of what once had been,
  • To cloud a rational mind for present things;
  • By his own force, the suicide in his mill.
  • Needs never God of Vengeance intervene
  • When giants their last lesson have to learn.
  • Fighting against an end he could discern,
  • The chivalry whereof he had none
  • He called from his worn slave’s abundant springs:
  • Not deigning spousally entreat
  • That ever blinded by his martial skill,
  • But harsh to have her worship counted out
  • In human coin, her vital rivers drained,
  • Her infant forests felled, commanded die
  • The decade thousand deaths for his Imperial seat,
  • Where throning he her faith in him maintained;
  • Bound Reason to believe delayed defeat
  • Was triumph; and what strength in her remained
  • To head against the ultimate foreseen rout,
  • Insensate taxed; of his impenitent will,
  • Servant and sycophant: without ally,
  • In Python’s coils, the Master Craftsman still;
  • The smiter, panther springer, trapper sly,
  • The deadly wrestler at the crucial bout,
  • The penetrant, the tonant, tower of towers,
  • Striking from black disaster starry showers.
  • Her supreme player of man’s primaeval game,
  • He won his harnessed victim’s rapturous shout,
  • When every move was mortal to her frame,
  • Her prayer to life that stricken he might lie,
  • She to exchange his laurels for earth’s flowers.
  • The innumerable whelmed him, and he fell:
  • A vessel in mid-ocean under storm.
  • Ere ceased the lullaby of his passing bell,
  • He sprang to sight, in human form
  • Revealed, from no celestial aids:
  • The shades enclosed him, and he fired the shades.
  • Cannon his name,
  • Cannon his voice, he came.
  • The fount of miracles from drought-dust arose,
  • Amazing even on his Imperial stage,
  • Where marvels lightened through the alternate hours
  • And winged o’er human earth’s heroical shone.
  • Into the press of cumulative foes,
  • Across the friendly fields of smoke and rage,
  • A broken structure bore his furious powers;
  • The man no more, the Warrior Chief the same;
  • Match for all rivals; in himself but flame
  • Of an outworn lamp, to illumine nought anon.
  • Yet loud as when he first showed War’s effete
  • Their Schoolman off his eagre mounted high,
  • And summoned to subject who dared compete,
  • The cannon in the name Napoleon
  • Discoursed of sulphur earth to curtained sky.
  • So through a tropic day a regnant sun,
  • Where armies of assailant vapours thronged,
  • His glory’s trappings laid on them: comes night,
  • Enwraps him in a bosom quick of heat
  • From his anterior splendours, and shall seem
  • Day instant, Day’s own lord in the furnace gleam,
  • The virulent quiver on ravished eyes prolonged,
  • When severed darkness, all flaminical bright,
  • Slips vivid eagles linked in rapid flight;
  • Which bring at whiles the lionly far roar,
  • As wrestled he with manacles and gags,
  • To speed across a cowering world once more,
  • Superb in ordered floods, his lordly flags.
  • His name on silence thundered, on the obscure
  • Lightened; it haunted morn and even-song:
  • Earth of her prodigy’s extinction long,
  • With shudderings and with thrillings, hung unsure.
  • Snapped was the chord that made the resonant bow,
  • In France, abased and like a shrunken corse;
  • Amid the weakest weak, the lowest low,
  • From the highest fallen, stagnant off her source;
  • Condemned to hear the nations’ hostile mirth;
  • See curtained heavens, and smell a sulphurous earth;
  • Which told how evermore shall tyrant Force
  • Beget the greater for its overthrow.
  • The song of Liberty in her hearing spoke
  • A foreign tongue; Earth’s fluttering little lyre
  • Unlike, but like the raven’s ravening croak.
  • Not till her breath of being could aspire
  • Anew, this loved and scourged of Angels found
  • Our common brotherhood in sight and sound:
  • When mellow rang the name Napoleon,
  • And dim aloft her young Angelical waved.
  • Between ethereal and gross to choose,
  • She swung; her soul desired, her senses craved.
  • They pricked her dreams, while oft her skies were dun
  • Behind o’ershadowing foemen: on a tide
  • They drew the nature having need of pride
  • Among her fellows for its vital dues:
  • He seen like some rare treasure-galleon,
  • Hull down, with masts against the Western hues.
  • FRANCE
  • DECEMBER 1870 {140}
  • I
  • WE look for her that sunlike stood
  • Upon the forehead of our day,
  • An orb of nations, radiating food
  • For body and for mind alway.
  • Where is the Shape of glad array;
  • The nervous hands, the front of steel,
  • The clarion tongue? Where is the bold proud face?
  • We see a vacant place;
  • We hear an iron heel.
  • II
  • O she that made the brave appeal
  • For manhood when our time was dark,
  • And from our fetters drove the spark
  • Which was as lightning to reveal
  • New seasons, with the swifter play
  • Of pulses, and benigner day;
  • She that divinely shook the dead
  • From living man; that stretched ahead
  • Her resolute forefinger straight,
  • And marched toward the gloomy gate
  • Of earth’s Untried, gave note, and in
  • The good name of Humanity
  • Called forth the daring vision! she,
  • She likewise half corrupt of sin,
  • Angel and Wanton! can it be?
  • Her star has foundered in eclipse,
  • The shriek of madness on her lips;
  • Shreds of her, and no more, we see.
  • There is horrible convulsion, smothered din,
  • As of one that in a grave-cloth struggles to be free.
  • III
  • Look not for spreading boughs
  • On the riven forest tree.
  • Look down where deep in blood and mire
  • Black thunder plants his feet and ploughs
  • The soil for ruin: that is France:
  • Still thrilling like a lyre,
  • Amazed to shivering discord from a fall
  • Sudden as that the lurid hosts recall
  • Who met in heaven the irreparable mischance.
  • O that is France!
  • The brilliant eyes to kindle bliss,
  • The shrewd quick lips to laugh and kiss,
  • Breasts that a sighing world inspire,
  • And laughter-dimpled countenance
  • Where soul and senses caught desire!
  • IV
  • Ever invoking fire from heaven, the fire
  • Has grasped her, unconsumable, but framed
  • For all the ecstasies of suffering dire.
  • Mother of Pride, her sanctuary shamed:
  • Mother of Delicacy, and made a mark
  • For outrage: Mother of Luxury, stripped stark:
  • Mother of Heroes, bondsmen: thro’ the rains,
  • Across her boundaries, lo the league-long chains!
  • Fond Mother of her martial youth; they pass,
  • Are spectres in her sight, are mown as grass!
  • Mother of Honour, and dishonoured: Mother
  • Of Glory, she condemned to crown with bays
  • Her victor, and be fountain of his praise.
  • Is there another curse? There is another:
  • Compassionate her madness: is she not
  • Mother of Reason? she that sees them mown
  • Like grass, her young ones! Yea, in the low groan
  • And under the fixed thunder of this hour
  • Which holds the animate world in one foul blot
  • Tranced circumambient while relentless Power
  • Beaks at her heart and claws her limbs down-thrown,
  • She, with the plungeing lightnings overshot,
  • With madness for an armour against pain,
  • With milkless breasts for little ones athirst,
  • And round her all her noblest dying in vain,
  • Mother of Reason is she, trebly cursed,
  • To feel, to see, to justify the blow;
  • Chamber to chamber of her sequent brain
  • Gives answer of the cause of her great woe,
  • Inexorably echoing thro’ the vaults,
  • ‘’Tis thus they reap in blood, in blood who sow:
  • ‘This is the sum of self-absolvëd faults.’
  • Doubt not that thro’ her grief, with sight supreme,
  • Thro’ her delirium and despair’s last dream,
  • Thro’ pride, thro’ bright illusion and the brood
  • Bewildering of her various Motherhood,
  • The high strong light within her, tho’ she bleeds,
  • Traces the letters of returned misdeeds.
  • She sees what seed long sown, ripened of late,
  • Bears this fierce crop; and she discerns her fate
  • From origin to agony, and on
  • As far as the wave washes long and wan
  • Off one disastrous impulse: for of waves
  • Our life is, and our deeds are pregnant graves
  • Blown rolling to the sunset from the dawn.
  • V
  • Ah, what a dawn of splendour, when her sowers
  • Went forth and bent the necks of populations
  • And of their terrors and humiliations
  • Wove her the starry wreath that earthward lowers
  • Now in the figure of a burning yoke!
  • Her legions traversed North and South and East,
  • Of triumph they enjoyed the glutton’s feast:
  • They grafted the green sprig, they lopped the oak.
  • They caught by the beard the tempests, by the scalp
  • The icy precipices, and clove sheer through
  • The heart of horror of the pinnacled Alp,
  • Emerging not as men whom mortals knew.
  • They were the earthquake and the hurricane,
  • The lightnings and the locusts, plagues of blight,
  • Plagues of the revel: they were Deluge rain,
  • And dreaded Conflagration; lawless Might.
  • Death writes a reeling line along the snows,
  • Where under frozen mists they may be tracked,
  • Who men and elements provoked to foes,
  • And Gods: they were of god and beast compact:
  • Abhorred of all. Yet, how they sucked the teats
  • Of Carnage, thirsty issue of their dam,
  • Whose eagles, angrier than their oriflamme,
  • Flushed the vext earth with blood, green earth forgets.
  • The gay young generations mask her grief;
  • Where bled her children hangs the loaded sheaf.
  • Forgetful is green earth; the Gods alone
  • Remember everlastingly: they strike
  • Remorselessly, and ever like for like.
  • By their great memories the Gods are known.
  • VI
  • They are with her now, and in her ears, and known.
  • ’Tis they that cast her to the dust for Strength,
  • Their slave, to feed on her fair body’s length,
  • That once the sweetest and the proudest shone;
  • Scoring for hideous dismemberment
  • Her limbs, as were the anguish-taking breath
  • Gone out of her in the insufferable descent
  • From her high chieftainship; as were she death,
  • Who hears a voice of justice, feels the knife
  • Of torture, drinks all ignominy of life.
  • They are with her, and the painful Gods might weep,
  • If ever rain of tears came out of heaven
  • To flatter Weakness and bid conscience sleep,
  • Viewing the woe of this Immortal, driven
  • For the soul’s life to drain the maddening cup
  • Of her own children’s blood implacably:
  • Unsparing even as they to furrow up
  • The yellow land to likeness of a sea:
  • The bountiful fair land of vine and grain,
  • Of wit and grace and ardour, and strong roots,
  • Fruits perishable, imperishable fruits;
  • Furrowed to likeness of the dim grey main
  • Behind the black obliterating cyclone.
  • VII
  • Behold, the Gods are with her, and are known.
  • Whom they abandon misery persecutes
  • No more: them half-eyed apathy may loan
  • The happiness of pitiable brutes.
  • Whom the just Gods abandon have no light,
  • No ruthless light of introspective eyes
  • That in the midst of misery scrutinize
  • The heart and its iniquities outright.
  • They rest, they smile and rest; have earned perchance
  • Of ancient service quiet for a term;
  • Quiet of old men dropping to the worm;
  • And so goes out the soul. But not of France.
  • She cries for grief, and to the Gods she cries,
  • For fearfully their loosened hands chastize,
  • And icily they watch the rod’s caress
  • Ravage her flesh from scourges merciless,
  • But she, inveterate of brain, discerns
  • That Pity has as little place as Joy
  • Among their roll of gifts; for Strength she yearns.
  • For Strength, her idol once, too long her toy.
  • Lo, Strength is of the plain root-Virtues born:
  • Strength shall ye gain by service, prove in scorn,
  • Train by endurance, by devotion shape.
  • Strength is not won by miracle or rape.
  • It is the offspring of the modest years,
  • The gift of sire to son, thro’ those firm laws
  • Which we name Gods; which are the righteous cause,
  • The cause of man, and manhood’s ministers.
  • Could France accept the fables of her priests,
  • Who blest her banners in this game of beasts,
  • And now bid hope that heaven will intercede
  • To violate its laws in her sore need,
  • She would find comfort in their opiates:
  • Mother of Reason! can she cheat the Fates?
  • Would she, the champion of the open mind,
  • The Omnipotent’s prime gift—the gift of growth—
  • Consent even for a night-time to be blind,
  • And sink her soul on the delusive sloth,
  • For fruits ethereal and material, both,
  • In peril of her place among mankind?
  • The Mother of the many Laughters might
  • Call one poor shade of laughter in the light
  • Of her unwavering lamp to mark what things
  • The world puts faith in, careless of the truth:
  • What silly puppet-bodies danced on strings,
  • Attached by credence, we appear in sooth,
  • Demanding intercession, direct aid,
  • When the whole tragic tale hangs on a broken blade!
  • She swung the sword for centuries; in a day
  • It slipped her, like a stream cut off from source.
  • She struck a feeble hand, and tried to pray,
  • Clamoured of treachery, and had recourse
  • To drunken outcries in her dream that Force
  • Needed but hear her shouting to obey.
  • Was she not formed to conquer? The bright plumes
  • Of crested vanity shed graceful nods:
  • Transcendent in her foundries, Arts and looms,
  • Had France to fear the vengeance of the Gods?
  • Her faith was on her battle-roll of names
  • Sheathed in the records of old war; with dance
  • And song she thrilled her warriors and her dames,
  • Embracing her Dishonour: gave him France
  • From head to foot, France present and to come,
  • So she might hear the trumpet and the drum—
  • Bellona and Bacchante! rushing forth
  • On yon stout marching Schoolmen of the North.
  • Inveterate of brain, well knows she why
  • Strength failed her, faithful to himself the first:
  • Her dream is done, and she can read the sky,
  • And she can take into her heart the worst
  • Calamity to drug the shameful thought
  • Of days that made her as the man she served
  • A name of terror, but a thing unnerved:
  • Buying the trickster, by the trickster bought,
  • She for dominion, he to patch a throne.
  • VIII
  • Henceforth of her the Gods are known,
  • Open to them her breast is laid.
  • Inveterate of brain, heart-valiant,
  • Never did fairer creature pant
  • Before the altar and the blade!
  • IX
  • Swift fall the blows, and men upbraid,
  • And friends give echo blunt and cold,
  • The echo of the forest to the axe.
  • Within her are the fires that wax
  • For resurrection from the mould.
  • X
  • She snatched at heaven’s flame of old,
  • And kindled nations: she was weak:
  • Frail sister of her heroic prototype,
  • The Man; for sacrifice unripe,
  • She too must fill a Vulture’s beak.
  • Deride the vanquished, and acclaim
  • The conqueror, who stains her fame,
  • Still the Gods love her, for that of high aim
  • Is this good France, the bleeding thing they stripe.
  • XI
  • She shall rise worthier of her prototype
  • Thro’ her abasement deep; the pain that runs
  • From nerve to nerve some victory achieves.
  • They lie like circle-strewn soaked Autumn-leaves
  • Which stain the forest scarlet, her fair sons!
  • And of their death her life is: of their blood
  • From many streams now urging to a flood,
  • No more divided, France shall rise afresh.
  • Of them she learns the lesson of the flesh:—
  • The lesson writ in red since first Time ran,
  • A hunter hunting down the beast in man:
  • That till the chasing out of its last vice,
  • The flesh was fashioned but for sacrifice.
  • Immortal Mother of a mortal host!
  • Thou suffering of the wounds that will not slay,
  • Wounds that bring death but take not life away!—
  • Stand fast and hearken while thy victors boast:
  • Hearken, and loathe that music evermore.
  • Slip loose thy garments woven of pride and shame:
  • The torture lurks in them, with them the blame
  • Shall pass to leave thee purer than before.
  • Undo thy jewels, thinking whence they came,
  • For what, and of the abominable name
  • Of her who in imperial beauty wore.
  • O Mother of a fated fleeting host
  • Conceived in the past days of sin, and born
  • Heirs of disease and arrogance and scorn,
  • Surrender, yield the weight of thy great ghost,
  • Like wings on air, to what the heavens proclaim
  • With trumpets from the multitudinous mounds
  • Where peace has filled the hearing of thy sons:
  • Albeit a pang of dissolution rounds
  • Each new discernment of the undying ones,
  • Do thou stoop to these graves here scattered wide
  • Along thy fields, as sunless billows roll;
  • These ashes have the lesson for the soul.
  • ‘Die to thy Vanity, and strain thy Pride,
  • Strip off thy Luxury: that thou may’st live,
  • Die to thyself,’ they say, ‘as we have died
  • From dear existence and the foe forgive,
  • Nor pray for aught save in our little space
  • To warn good seed to greet the fair earth’s face.’
  • O Mother! take their counsel, and so shall
  • The broader world breathe in on this thy home,
  • Light clear for thee the counter-changing dome,
  • Strength give thee, like an ocean’s vast expanse
  • Off mountain cliffs, the generations all,
  • Not whirling in their narrow rings of foam,
  • But as a river forward. Soaring France!
  • Now is Humanity on trial in thee:
  • Now may’st thou gather humankind in fee:
  • Now prove that Reason is a quenchless scroll;
  • Make of calamity thine aureole,
  • And bleeding head us thro’ the troubles of the sea.
  • ALSACE-LORRAINE
  • I
  • THE sister Hours in circles linked,
  • Daughters of men, of men the mates,
  • Are gone on flow with the day that winked,
  • With the night that spanned at golden gates.
  • Mothers, they leave us, quickening seed;
  • They bear us grain or flower or weed,
  • As we have sown; is nought extinct
  • For them we fill to be our Fates.
  • Life of the breath is but the loan;
  • Passing death what we have sown.
  • Pearly are they till the pale inherited stain
  • Deepens in us, and the mirrors they form on their flow
  • Darken to feature and nature: a volumed chain,
  • Sequent of issue, in various eddies they show.
  • Theirs is the Book of the River of Life, to read
  • Leaf by leaf by reapers of long-sown seed:
  • There doth our shoot up to light from a spiriting sane
  • Stand as a tree whereon numberless clusters grow:
  • Legible there how the heart, with its one false move
  • Cast Eurydice pallor on all we love.
  • Our fervid heart has filled that Book in chief;
  • Our fitful heart a wild reflection views;
  • Our craving heart of passion suckling grief
  • Disowns the author’s work it must peruse;
  • Inconscient in its leap to wreak the deed,
  • A round of harvests red from crimson seed,
  • It marks the current Hours show leaf by leaf,
  • And rails at Destiny; nor traces clues;
  • Though sometimes it may think what novel light
  • Will strike their faces when the mind shall write.
  • II
  • Succourful daughters of men are the rosed and starred
  • Revolving Twelves in their fluent germinal rings,
  • Despite the burden to chasten, abase, depose.
  • Fallen on France, as the sweep of scythe over sward,
  • They breathed in her ear their voice of the crystal springs,
  • That run from a twilight rise, from a twilight close,
  • Through alternate beams and glooms, rejoicingly young.
  • Only to Earth’s best loved, at the breathless turns
  • Where Life in fold of the Shadow reclines unstrung,
  • And a ghostly lamp of their moment’s union burns,
  • Will such pure notes from the fountain-head be sung.
  • Voice of Earth’s very soul to the soul she would see renewed:
  • A song that sought no tears, that laid not a touch on the breast
  • Sobbing aswoon and, like last foxgloves’ bells upon ferns
  • In sandy alleys of woodland silence, shedding to bare.
  • Daughters of Earth and men, they piped of her natural brood;
  • Her patient helpful four-feet; wings on the flit or in nest;
  • Paws at our old-world task to scoop a defensive lair;
  • Snouts at hunt through the scented grasses; enhavened scuts
  • Flashing escape under show of a laugh nigh the mossed burrow-mouth.
  • Sack-like droop bronze pears on the nailed branch-frontage of huts,
  • To greet those wedded toilers from acres where sweat is a shower.
  • Snake, cicada, lizard, on lavender slopes up South,
  • Pant for joy of a sunlight driving the fielders to bower.
  • Sharpened in silver by one chance breeze is the olive’s grey;
  • A royal-mantle floats, a red fritillary hies;
  • The bee, for whom no flower of garden or wild has nay,
  • Noises, heard if but named, so hot is the trade he plies.
  • Processions beneath green arches of herbage, the long colonnades;
  • Laboured mounds that a foot or a wanton stick may subvert;
  • Homely are they for a lowly look on bedewed grass-blades,
  • On citied fir-droppings, on twisted wreaths of the worm in dirt.
  • Does nought so loosen our sight from the despot heart, to receive
  • Balm of a sound Earth’s primary heart at its active beat:
  • The motive, yet servant, of energy; simple as morn and eve;
  • Treasureless, fetterless; free of the bonds of a great conceit:
  • Unwounded even by cruel blows on a body that writhes;
  • Nor whimpering under misfortune; elusive of obstacles; prompt
  • To quit any threatened familiar domain seen doomed by the scythes;
  • Its day’s hard business done, the score to the good accompt.
  • Creatures of forest and mead, Earth’s essays in being, all kinds
  • Bound by the navel-knot to the Mother, never astray,
  • They in the ear upon ground will pour their intuitive minds,
  • Cut man’s tangles for Earth’s first broad rectilinear way:
  • Admonishing loftier reaches, the rich adventurous shoots,
  • Pushes of tentative curves, embryonic upwreathings in air;
  • Not always the sprouts of Earth’s root-Laws preserving her brutes;
  • Oft but our primitive hungers licentious in fine and fair.
  • Yet the like aërial growths may chance be the delicate sprays,
  • Infant of Earth’s most urgent in sap, her fierier zeal
  • For entry on Life’s upper fields: and soul thus flourishing pays
  • The martyr’s penance, mark for brutish in man to heel.
  • Her, from a nerveless well among stagnant pools of the dry,
  • Through her good aim at divine, shall commune with Earth remake;
  • Fraternal unto sororial, her, where abashed she may lie,
  • Divinest of man shall clasp; a world out of darkness awake,
  • As it were with the Resurrection’s eyelids uplifted, to see
  • Honour in shame, in substance the spirit, in that dry fount
  • Jets of the songful ascending silvery-bright water-tree
  • Spout, with our Earth’s unbaffled resurgent desire for the mount,
  • Though broken at intervals, clipped, and barren in seeming it be.
  • For this at our nature arises rejuvenescent from Earth,
  • However respersive the blow and nigh on infernal the fall,
  • The chastisement drawn down on us merited: are we of worth
  • Amid our satanic excrescences, this, for the less than a call,
  • Will Earth reprime, man cherish; the God who is in us and round,
  • Consenting, the God there seen. Impiety speaks despair;
  • Religion the virtue of serving as things of the furrowy ground,
  • Debtors for breath while breath with our fellows in service we share.
  • Not such of the crowned discrowned
  • Can Earth or humanity spare;
  • Such not the God let die.
  • III
  • Eastward of Paris morn is high;
  • And darkness on that Eastward side
  • The heart of France beholds: a thorn
  • Is in her frame where shines the morn:
  • A rigid wave usurps her sky,
  • With eagle crest and eagle-eyed
  • To scan what wormy wrinkles hint
  • Her forces gathering: she the thrown
  • From station, lopped of an arm, astounded, lone,
  • Reading late History as a foul misprint:
  • Imperial, Angelical,
  • At strife commingled in her frame convulsed;
  • Shame of her broken sword, a ravening gall;
  • Pain of the limb where once her warm blood pulsed;
  • These tortures to distract her underneath
  • Her whelmed Aurora’s shade. But in that space
  • When lay she dumb beside her trampled wreath,
  • Like an unburied body mid the tombs,
  • Feeling against her heart life’s bitter probe
  • For life, she saw how children of her race,
  • The many sober sons and daughters, plied,
  • By cottage lamplight through the water-globe,
  • By simmering stew-pots, by the serious looms,
  • Afield, in factories, with the birds astir,
  • Their nimble feet and fingers; not denied
  • Refreshful chatter, laughter, galliard songs.
  • So like Earth’s indestructible they were,
  • That wrestling with its anguish rose her pride,
  • To feel where in each breast the thought of her,
  • On whom the circle Hours laid leaded thongs,
  • Was constant; spoken sometimes in low tone
  • At lip or in a fluttered look,
  • A shortened breath: and they were her loved own;
  • Nor ever did they waste their strength with tears,
  • For pity of the weeper, nor rebuke,
  • Though mainly they were charged to pay her debt,
  • The Mother having conscience in arrears;
  • Ready to gush the flood of vain regret,
  • Else hearken to her weaponed children’s moan
  • Of stifled rage invoking vengeance: hell’s,
  • If heaven should fail the counter-wave that swells
  • In blood and brain for retribution swift.
  • Those helped not: wings to her soul were these who yet
  • Could welcome day for labour, night for rest,
  • Enrich her treasury, built of cheerful thrift,
  • Of honest heart, beyond all miracles;
  • And likened to Earth’s humblest were Earth’s best.
  • IV
  • Brooding on her deep fall, the many strings
  • Which formed her nature set a thought on Kings,
  • As aids that might the low-laid cripple lift;
  • And one among them hummed devoutly leal,
  • While passed the sighing breeze along her breast.
  • Of Kings by the festive vanquishers rammed down
  • Her gorge since fell the Chief, she knew their crown;
  • Upon her through long seasons was its grasp,
  • For neither soul’s nor body’s weal;
  • As much bestows the robber wasp,
  • That in the hanging apple makes a meal,
  • And carves a face of abscess where was fruit
  • Ripe ruddy. They would blot
  • Her radiant leap above the slopes acute,
  • Of summit to celestial; impute
  • The wanton’s aim to her divinest shot;
  • Bid her walk History backward over gaps;
  • Abhor the day of Phrygian caps;
  • Abjure her guerdon, execrate herself;
  • The Hapsburg, Hohenzollern, Guelph,
  • Admire repentant; reverently prostrate
  • Her person unto the belly-god; of whom
  • Is inward plenty and external bloom;
  • Enough of pomp and state
  • And carnival to quench
  • The breast’s desires of an intemperate wench,
  • The head’s ideas beyond legitimate.
  • She flung them: she was France: nor with far frown
  • Her lover from the embrace of her refrained:
  • But in her voice an interwoven wire,
  • The exultation of her gross renown,
  • Struck deafness at her heavens, and they waned
  • Over a look ill-gifted to aspire.
  • Wherefore, as an abandonment, irate,
  • The intemperate summoned up her trumpet days,
  • Her treasure-galleon’s wondrous freight.
  • The cannon-name she sang and shrieked; transferred
  • Her soul’s allegiance; o’er the Tyrant slurred,
  • Tranced with the zeal of her first fawning gaze,
  • To clasp his trophy flags and hail him Saint.
  • V
  • She hailed him Saint:
  • And her Jeanne unsainted, foully sung!
  • The virgin who conceived a France when funeral glooms
  • Across a land aquake with sharp disseverance hung:
  • Conceived, and under stress of battle brought her forth;
  • Crowned her in purification of feud and foeman’s taint;
  • Taught her to feel her blood her being, know her worth,
  • Have joy of unity: the Jeanne bescreeched, bescoffed,
  • Who flamed to ashes, flew up wreaths of faggot fumes;
  • Through centuries a star in vapour-folds aloft.
  • For her people to hail her Saint,
  • Were no lifting of her, Earth’s gem,
  • Earth’s chosen, Earth’s throb on divine:
  • In the ranks of the starred she is one,
  • While man has thought on our line:
  • No lifting of her, but for them,
  • Breath of the mountain, beam of the sun
  • Through mist, out of swamp-fires’ lures release,
  • Youth on the forehead, the rough right way
  • Seen to be footed: for them the heart’s peace,
  • By the mind’s war won for a permanent miracle day.
  • Her arms below her sword-hilt crossed,
  • The heart of that high-hallowed Jeanne
  • Into the furnace-pit she tossed
  • Before her body knew the flame,
  • And sucked its essence: warmth for righteous work,
  • An undivided power to speed her aim.
  • She had no self but France: the sainted man
  • No France but self. Him warrior and clerk,
  • Free of his iron clutch; and him her young,
  • In whirled imagination mastodonized;
  • And him her penmen, him her poets; all
  • For the visioned treasure-galleon astrain;
  • Sent zenithward on bass and treble tongue,
  • Till solely through his glory France was prized.
  • She who had her Jeanne;
  • The child of her industrious;
  • Earth’s truest, earth’s pure fount from the main;
  • And she who had her one day’s mate,
  • In the soul’s view illustrious
  • Past blazonry, her Immaculate,
  • Those hours of slavish Empire would recall;
  • Thrill to the rattling anchor-chain
  • She heard upon a day in ‘I who can’;
  • Start to the softened, tremulous bugle-blare
  • Of that Caesarean Italian
  • Across the storied fields of trampled grain,
  • As to a Vercingetorix of old Gaul
  • Blowing the rally against a Caesar’s reign.
  • Her soul’s protesting sobs she drowned to swear
  • Fidelity unto the sainted man,
  • Whose nimbus was her crown; and be again
  • The foreigner in Europe, known of none,
  • None knowing; sight to dazzle, voice to stun.
  • Rearward she stepped, with thirst for Europe’s van;
  • The dream she nursed a snare,
  • The flag she bore a pall.
  • VI
  • In Nature is no rearward step allowed.
  • Hard on the rock Reality do we dash
  • To be shattered, if the material dream propels.
  • The worship to departed splendour vowed
  • Conjured a simulacrum, wove her lash,
  • For the slow measure timed her peal of bells.
  • Thereof was the cannon-name a mockery round her hills;
  • For the will of wills,
  • Its flaccid ape,
  • Weak as the final echo off a giant’s bawl:
  • Napoleon for disdain,
  • His banner steeped in crape.
  • Thereof the barrier of Alsace-Lorraine;
  • The frozen billow crested to its fall;
  • Dismemberment; disfigurement;
  • Her history blotted; her proud mantle rent;
  • And ever that one word to reperuse,
  • With eyes behind a veil of fiery dews;
  • Knelling the spot where Gallic soil defiled
  • Showed her sons’ valour as a frenzied child
  • In arms of the mailed man.
  • Word that her mind must bear, her heart put under ban,
  • Lest burst it: unto her eyes a ghost,
  • Incredible though manifest: a scene
  • Stamped with her new Saint’s name: and all his host
  • A wattled flock the foeman’s dogs between!
  • VII
  • Mark where a credible ghost pulls bridle to view that bare
  • Corpse of a field still reddening cloud, and alive in its throes
  • Beneath her Purgatorial Saint’s evocative stare:
  • Brand on his name, the gulf of his glory, his Legend’s close.
  • A lustreless Phosphor heading for daybeam Night’s dead-born,
  • His underworld eyeballs grip the cast of the land for a fray
  • Expugnant; swift up the heights, with the Victor’s instinctive scorn
  • Of the trapped below, he rides; he beholds, and a two-fold grey,
  • Even as the misty sun growing moon that a frost enrings,
  • Is shroud on the shrouded; he knows him there in the helmeted ranks.
  • The golden eagles flap lame wings,
  • The black double-headed are round their flanks.
  • He is there in midst of the pupils he harried to brains awake, trod
  • into union; lo,
  • These are his Epic’s tutored Dardans, yon that Rhapsode’s Achaeans to
  • know.
  • Nor is aught of an equipollent conflict seen, nor the weaker’s flashed
  • device;
  • Headless is offered a breast to beaks deliberate, formal, assured,
  • precise.
  • Ruled by the mathematician’s hand, they solve their problem, as on a
  • slate.
  • This is the ground foremarked, and the day; their leader modestly
  • hazarded date.
  • His helmeted ranks might be draggers of pools or reapers of plains for
  • the warrior’s guile
  • Displayed; they haul, they rend, as in some orderly office mercantile.
  • And a timed artillery speaks full-mouthed on a stuttering feeble
  • reduced to nought.
  • Can it be France, an army of France, tricked, netted, convulsive, all
  • writhen caught?
  • Arterial blood of an army’s heart outpoured the Grey Observer sees:
  • A forest of France in thunder comes, like a landslide hurled off her
  • Pyrenees.
  • Torrent and forest ramp, roll, sling on for a charge against iron,
  • reason, Fate;
  • It is gapped through the mass midway, bare ribs and dust ere the
  • helmeted feel its weight.
  • So the blue billow white-plumed is plunged upon shingle to screaming
  • withdrawal, but snatched,
  • Waved is the laurel eternal yielded by Death o’er the waste of brave
  • men outmatched.
  • The France of the fury was there, the thing he had wielded, whose
  • honour was dearer than life;
  • The Prussia despised, the harried, the trodden, was here; his pupil,
  • the scholar in strife.
  • He hated to heel, in a spasm of will,
  • From sleep or debate, a mannikin squire
  • With head of a merlin hawk and quill
  • Acrow on an ear. At him rained fire
  • From a blast of eyeballs hotter than speech,
  • To say what a deadly poison stuffed
  • The France here laid in her bloody ditch,
  • Through the Legend passing human puffed.
  • Credible ghost of the field which from him descends,
  • Each dark anniversary day will its father return,
  • Haling his shadow to spy where the Legend ends,
  • That penman trumpeter’s part in the wreck discern.
  • There, with the cup it presents at her lips, she stands,
  • France, with her future staked on the word it may pledge.
  • The vengeance urged of desire a reserve countermands;
  • The patience clasped totters hard on the precipice edge.
  • Lopped of an arm, mother love for her own springs quick,
  • To curdle the milk in her breasts for the young they feed,
  • At thought of her single hand, and the lost so nigh.
  • Mother love for her own, who raised her when she lay sick
  • Nigh death, and would in like fountains fruitlessly bleed,
  • Withholds the fling of her heart on the further die.
  • Of love is wisdom. Is it great love, then wise
  • Will our wild heart be, though whipped unto madness more
  • By its mentor’s counselling voice than thoughtfully reined.
  • Desire of the wave for the shore,
  • Passion for one last agony under skies,
  • To make her heavens remorseful, she restrained
  • VIII
  • On her lost arm love bade her look;
  • On her one hand to meditate;
  • The tumult of her blood abate;
  • Disaster face, derision brook:
  • Forbade the page of her Historic Muse,
  • Until her demon his last hold forsook,
  • And smoothly, with no countenance of hate,
  • Her conqueror she could scan to measure. Thence
  • The strange new Winter stream of ruling sense,
  • Cold, comfortless, but braced to disabuse,
  • Ran through the mind of this most lowly laid;
  • From the top billow of victorious War,
  • Down in the flagless troughs at ebb and flow;
  • A wreck; her past, her future, both in shade.
  • She read the things that are;
  • Reality unaccepted read
  • For sign of the distraught, and took her blow
  • To brain; herself read through;
  • Wherefore her predatory Glory paid
  • Napoleon ransom knew.
  • Her nature’s many strings hot gusts did jar
  • Against the note of reason uttered low,
  • Ere passionate with duty she might wed,
  • Compel the bride’s embrace of her stern groom,
  • Joined at an altar liker to the tomb,
  • Nest of the Furies their first nuptial bed,
  • They not the less were mated and proclaimed
  • The rational their issue. Then she rose.
  • See how the rush of southern Springtide glows
  • Oceanic in the chariot-wheel’s ascent,
  • Illuminated with one breath. The maimed,
  • Tom, tortured, winter-visaged, suddenly
  • Had stature; to the world’s wonderment,
  • Fair features, grace of mien, nor least
  • The comic dimples round her April mouth,
  • Sprung of her intimate humanity.
  • She stood before mankind the very South
  • Rapt out of frost to flowery drapery;
  • Unshadowed save when somewhiles she looked East.
  • IX
  • Let but the rational prevail,
  • Our footing is on ground though all else fail:
  • Our kiss of Earth is then a plight
  • To walk within her Laws and have her light.
  • Choice of the life or death lies in ourselves;
  • There is no fate but when unreason lours.
  • This Land the cheerful toiler delves,
  • The thinker brightens with fine wit,
  • The lovelier grace as lyric flowers,
  • Those rosed and starred revolving Twelves
  • Shall nurse for effort infinite
  • While leashed to brain the heart of France the Fair
  • Beats tempered music and its lead subserves.
  • Washed from her eyes the Napoleonic glare,
  • Divinely raised by that in her divine,
  • Not the clear sight of Earth’s blunt actual swerves
  • When her lost look, as on a wave of wine,
  • Rolls Eastward, and the mother-flag descries
  • Caress with folds and curves
  • The fortress over Rhine,
  • Beneath the one tall spire.
  • Despite her brooding thought, her nightlong sighs,
  • Her anguish in desire,
  • She sees, above the brutish paw
  • Alert on her still quivering limb—
  • As little in past time she saw,
  • Nor when dispieced as prey,
  • As victrix when abhorred—
  • A Grand Germania, stout on soil;
  • Audacious up the ethereal dim;
  • The forest’s Infant; the strong hand for toil;
  • The patient brain in twilights when astray;
  • Shrewdest of heads to foil and counterfoil;
  • The sceptic and devout; the potent sword;
  • With will and armed to help in hewing way
  • For Europe’s march; and of the most golden chord
  • Of the Heliconian lyre
  • Excellent mistress. Yea, she sees, and can admire;
  • Still seeing in what walks the Gallia leads;
  • And with what shield upon Alsace-Lorraine
  • Her wary sister’s doubtful look misreads
  • A mother’s throbs for her lost: so loved: so near:
  • Magnetic. Hard the course for her to steer,
  • The leap against the sharpened spikes restrain.
  • For the belted Overshadower hard the course,
  • On whom devolves the spirit’s touchstone, Force:
  • Which is the strenuous arm, to strike inclined,
  • That too much adamantine makes the mind;
  • Forgets it coin of Nature’s rich Exchange;
  • Contracts horizons within present sight:
  • Amalekite to-day, across its range
  • Indisputable; to-morrow Simeonite.
  • X
  • The mother who gave birth to Jeanne;
  • Who to her young Angelical sprang;
  • Who lay with Earth and heard the notes she sang,
  • And heard her truest sing them; she may reach
  • Heights yet unknown of nations; haply teach
  • A thirsting world to learn ’tis ‘she who can.’
  • She that in History’s Heliaea pleads
  • The nation flowering conscience o’er the beast;
  • With heart expurged of rancour, tame of greeds;
  • With the winged mind from fang and claw released;—
  • Will such a land be seen? It will be seen;—
  • Shall stand adjudged our foremost and Earth’s Queen.
  • Acknowledgement that she of God proceeds
  • The invisible makes visible, as his priest,
  • To her is yielded by a world reclaimed.
  • And stands she mutilated, fancy-shamed,
  • Yet strong in arms, yet strong in self-control,
  • Known valiant, her maternal throbs repressed,
  • Discarding vengeance, Giant with a soul;—
  • My faith in her when she lay low
  • Was fountain; now as wave at flow
  • Beneath the lights, my faith in God is best;—
  • On France has come the test
  • Of what she holds within
  • Responsive to Life’s deeper springs.
  • She above the nations blest
  • In fruitful and in liveliest,
  • In all that servant earth to heavenly bidding brings,
  • The devotee of Glory, she may win
  • Glory despoiling none, enrich her kind,
  • Illume her land, and take the royal seat
  • Unto the strong self-conqueror assigned.
  • But ah, when speaks a loaded breath the double name,
  • Humanity’s old Foeman winks agrin.
  • Her constant Angel eyes her heart’s quick beat,
  • The thrill of shadow coursing through her frame.
  • Like wind among the ranks of amber wheat.
  • Our Europe, vowed to unity or torn,
  • Observes her face, as shepherds note the morn,
  • And in a ruddy beacon mark an end
  • That for the flock in their grave hearing rings.
  • Specked overhead the imminent vulture wings
  • At poise, one fatal movement indiscreet,
  • Sprung from the Aetna passions’ mad revolts,
  • Draws down; the midnight hovers to descend;
  • And dire as Indian noons of ulcer heat
  • Anticipating tempest and the bolts,
  • Hangs curtained terrors round her next day’s door,
  • Death’s emblems for the breast of Europe flings;
  • The breast that waits a spark to fire her store.
  • Shall, then, the great vitality, France,
  • Signal the backward step once more;
  • Again a Goddess Fortune trace
  • Amid the Deities, and pledge to chance
  • One whom we never could replace?
  • Now may she tune her nature’s many strings
  • To noble harmony, be seen, be known.
  • It was the foreign France, the unruly, feared;
  • Little for all her witcheries endeared;
  • Theatrical of arrogance, a sprite
  • With gaseous vapours overblown,
  • In her conceit of power ensphered,
  • Foredoomed to violate and atone;
  • Her the grim conqueror’s iron might
  • Avengeing clutched, distrusting rent;
  • Not that sharp intellect with fire endowed
  • To cleave our webs, run lightnings through our cloud;
  • Not virtual France, the France benevolent,
  • The chivalrous, the many-stringed, sublime
  • At intervals, and oft in sweetest chime;
  • Though perilously instrument,
  • A breast for any having godlike gleam.
  • This France could no antagonist disesteem,
  • To spurn at heel and confiscate her brood.
  • Albeit a waverer between heart and mind,
  • And laurels won from sky or plucked from blood,
  • Which wither all the wreath when intertwined,
  • This cherishable France she may redeem.
  • Beloved of Earth, her heart should feel at length
  • How much unto Earth’s offspring it doth owe.
  • Obstructions are for levelling, have we strength;
  • ’Tis poverty of soul conceived a foe.
  • Rejected be the wrath that keeps unhealed
  • Her panting wound; to higher Courts appealed
  • The wrongs discerned of higher: Europe waits:
  • She chooses God or gambles with the Fates.
  • Shines the new Helen in Alsace-Lorraine,
  • A darker river severs Rhine and Rhone,
  • Is heard a deadlier Epic of the twain;
  • We see a Paris burn
  • Or France Napoleon.
  • For yet he breathes whom less her heart forswears
  • While trembles its desire to thwart her mind:
  • The Tyrant lives in Victory’s return.
  • What figure with recurrent footstep fares
  • Around those memoried tracks of scarlet mud,
  • To sow her future from an ashen urn
  • By lantern-light, as dragons’ teeth are sown?
  • Of bleeding pride the piercing seër is blind.
  • But, cleared her eyes of that ensanguined scud
  • Distorting her true features, to be shown
  • Benignly luminous, one who bears
  • Humanity at breast, and she might learn
  • How surely the excelling generous find
  • Renouncement is possession. Sure
  • As light enkindles light when heavenly earthly mates,
  • The flame of pure immits the flame of pure,
  • Magnanimous magnanimous creates.
  • So to majestic beauty stricken rears
  • Hard-visaged rock against the risen glow;
  • And men are in the secret with the spheres,
  • Whose glory is celestially to bestow.
  • Now nation looks to nation, that may live
  • Their common nurseling, like the torrent’s flower,
  • Shaken by foul Destruction’s fast-piled heap.
  • On France is laid the proud initiative
  • Of sacrifice in one self-mastering hour,
  • Whereby more than her lost one will she reap;
  • Perchance the very lost regain,
  • To count it less than her superb reward.
  • Our Europe, where is debtor each to each,
  • Pass measure of excess, and war is Cain,
  • Fraternal from the Seaman’s beach,
  • From answering Rhine in grand accord,
  • From Neva beneath Northern cloud,
  • And from our Transatlantic Europe loud,
  • Will hail the rare example for their theme;
  • Give response, as rich foliage to the breeze;
  • In their entrusted nurseling know them one:
  • Like a brave vessel under press of steam,
  • Abreast the winds and tides, on angry seas,
  • Plucked by the heavens forlorn of present sun,
  • Will drive through darkness, and, with faith supreme,
  • Have sight of haven and the crowded quays.
  • THE CAGEING OF ARES
  • ILIAD, v. 385
  • [DEDICATED TO THE COUNCIL AT THE HAGUE, 1899]
  • HOW big of breast our Mother Gaea laughed
  • At sight of her boy Giants on the leap
  • Each over other as they neighboured home,
  • Fronting the day’s descent across green slopes,
  • And up fired mountain crags their shadows danced.
  • Close with them in their fun, she scarce could guess,
  • Though these two billowy urchins reeked of craft,
  • It signalled some adventurous master-trick
  • To set Olympians buzzing in debate,
  • Lest it might be their godhead undermined,
  • The Tyranny menaced. Ephialtes high
  • On shoulders of his brother Otos waved
  • For the bull-bellowings given to grand good news,
  • Compact, complexioned in his gleeful roar
  • While Otos aped the prisoner’s wrists and knees,
  • With doleful sniffs between recurrent howls;
  • Till Gaea’s lap receiving them, they stretched,
  • And both upon her bosom shaken to speech,
  • Burst the hot story out of throats of both,
  • Like rocky head-founts, baffling in their glut
  • The hurried spout. And as when drifting storm
  • Disburdened loses clasp of here and yon
  • A peak, a forest mound, a valley’s gleam
  • Of grass and the river’s crooks and snaky coils,
  • Signification marvellous she caught,
  • Through gurglings of triumphant jollity,
  • Which now engulphed and now gave eye; at last
  • Subsided, and the serious naked deed,
  • With mountain-cloud of laughter banked around,
  • Stood in her sight confirmed: she could believe
  • That these, her sprouts of promise, her most prized,
  • These two made up of lion, bear and fox,
  • Her sportive, suckling mammoths, her young joy,
  • Still by the reckoning infants among men,
  • Had done the deed to strike the Titan host
  • In envy dumb, in envious heart elate:
  • These two combining strength and craft had snared,
  • Enmeshed, bound fast with thongs, discreetly caged
  • The blood-shedder, the terrible Lord of War;
  • Destroyer, ravager, superb in plumes;
  • The barren furrower of anointed fields;
  • The scarlet heel in towns, foul smoke to sky,
  • Her hated enemy, too long her scourge:
  • Great Ares. And they gagged his trumpet mouth
  • When they had seized on his implacable spear,
  • Hugged him to reedy helplessness despite
  • His godlike fury startled from amaze.
  • For he had eyed them nearing him in play,
  • The giant cubs, who gambolled and who snarled,
  • Unheeding his fell presence, by the mount
  • Ossa, beside a brushwood cavern; there
  • On Earth’s original fisticuffs they called
  • For ease of sharp dispute: whereat the God,
  • Approving, deemed that sometime trained to arms,
  • Good servitors of Ares they would be,
  • And ply the pointed spear to dominate
  • Their rebel restless fellows, villain brood
  • Vowed to defy Immortals. So it chanced
  • Amusedly he watched them, and as one
  • The lusty twain were on him and they had him.
  • Breath to us, Powers of air, for laughter loud!
  • Cock of Olympus he, superb in plumes!
  • Bound like a wheaten sheaf by those two babes!
  • Because they knew our Mother Gaea loathed him,
  • Knew him the famine, pestilence and waste;
  • A desolating fire to blind the sight
  • With splendour built of fruitful things in ashes;
  • The gory chariot-wheel on cries for justice;
  • Her deepest planted and her liveliest voice,
  • Heard from the babe as from the broken crone.
  • Behold him in his vessel of bronze encased,
  • And tumbled down the cave. But rather look—
  • Ah, that the woman tattler had not sought,
  • Of all the Gods to let her secret fly,
  • Hermes, after the thirteen songful months!
  • Prompting the Dexterous to work his arts,
  • And shatter earth’s delirious holiday,
  • Then first, as where the fountain runs a stream,
  • Resolving to composure on its throbs.
  • But see her in the Seasons through that year;
  • That one glad year and the fair opening month.
  • Had never our Great Mother such sweet face!
  • War with her, gentle war with her, each day
  • Her sons and daughters urged; at eve were flung,
  • On the morrow stood to challenge; in their strength
  • Renewed, indomitable; whereof they won,
  • From hourly wrestlings up to shut of lids,
  • Her ready secret: the abounding life
  • Returned for valiant labour: she and they
  • Defeated and victorious turn by turn;
  • By loss enriched, by overthrow restored.
  • Exchange of powers of this conflict came;
  • Defacement none, nor ever squandered force.
  • Is battle nature’s mandate, here it reigned,
  • As music unto the hand that smote the strings;
  • And she the rosier from their showery brows,
  • They fruitful from her ploughed and harrowed breast.
  • Back to the primal rational of those
  • Who suck the teats of milky earth, and clasp
  • Stability in hatred of the insane,
  • Man stepped; with wits less fearful to pronounce
  • The mortal mind’s concept of earth’s divorced
  • Above; those beautiful, those masterful,
  • Those lawless. High they sit, and if descend,
  • Descend to reap, not sowing. Is it just?
  • Earth in her happy children asked that word,
  • Whereto within their breast was her reply.
  • Those beautiful, those masterful, those lawless,
  • Enjoy the life prolonged, outleap the years;
  • Yet they (’twas the Great Mother’s voice inspired
  • The audacious thought), they, glorious over dust,
  • Outleap not her; disrooted from her soar,
  • To meet the certain fate of earth’s divorced,
  • And clap lame wings across a wintry haze,
  • Up to the farthest bourne: immortal still,
  • Thenceforth innocuous; lovelier than when ruled
  • The Tyranny. This her voice within them told,
  • When softly the Great Mother chid her sons
  • Not of the giant brood, who did create
  • Those lawless Gods, first offspring of our brain
  • Set moving by an abject blood, that waked
  • To wanton under elements more benign,
  • And planted aliens on Olympian heights;—
  • Imagination’s cradle poesy
  • Become a monstrous pressure upon men;—
  • Foes of good Gaea; until dispossessed
  • By light from her, born of the love of her,
  • Their lordship the illumined brain rejects
  • For earth’s beneficent, the sons of Law,
  • Her other name. So spake she in their heart,
  • Among the wheat-blades proud of stalk; beneath
  • Young vine-leaves pushing timid fingers forth,
  • Confidently to cling. And when brown corn
  • Swayed armied ranks with softened cricket song,
  • With gold necks bent for any zephyr’s kiss;
  • When vine-roots daily down a rubble soil
  • Drank fire of heaven athirst to swell the grape;
  • When swelled the grape, and in it held a ray,
  • Rich issue of the embrace of heaven and earth;
  • The very eye of passion drowsed by excess,
  • And yet a burning lion for the spring;
  • Then in that time of general cherishment,
  • Sweet breathing balm and flutes by cool wood-side,
  • He the harsh rouser of ire being absent, caged,
  • Then did good Gaea’s children gratefully
  • Lift hymns to Gods they judged, but praised for peace,
  • Delightful Peace, that answers Reason’s call
  • Harmoniously and images her Law;
  • Reflects, and though short-lived as then, revives,
  • In memories made present on the brain
  • By natural yearnings, all the happy scenes;
  • The picture of an earth allied to heaven;
  • Between them the known smile behind black masks;
  • Rightly their various moods interpreted;
  • And frolic because toilful children borne
  • With larger comprehension of Earth’s aim
  • At loftier, clearer, sweeter, by their aid.
  • THE NIGHT-WALK
  • AWAKES for me and leaps from shroud
  • All radiantly the moon’s own night
  • Of folded showers in streamer cloud;
  • Our shadows down the highway white
  • Or deep in woodland woven-boughed,
  • With yon and yon a stem alight.
  • I see marauder runagates
  • Across us shoot their dusky wink;
  • I hear the parliament of chats
  • In haws beside the river’s brink;
  • And drops the vole off alder-banks,
  • To push his arrow through the stream.
  • These busy people had our thanks
  • For tickling sight and sound, but theme
  • They were not more than breath we drew
  • Delighted with our world’s embrace:
  • The moss-root smell where beeches grew,
  • And watered grass in breezy space;
  • The silken heights, of ghostly bloom
  • Among their folds, by distance draped.
  • ’Twas Youth, rapacious to consume,
  • That cried to have its chaos shaped:
  • Absorbing, little noting, still
  • Enriched, and thinking it bestowed;
  • With wistful looks on each far hill
  • For something hidden, something owed.
  • Unto his mantled sister, Day
  • Had given the secret things we sought
  • And she was grave and saintly gay;
  • At times she fluttered, spoke her thought;
  • She flew on it, then folded wings,
  • In meditation passing lone,
  • To breathe around the secret things,
  • Which have no word, and yet are known;
  • Of thirst for them are known, as air
  • Is health in blood: we gained enough
  • By this to feel it honest fare;
  • Impalpable, not barren, stuff.
  • A pride of legs in motion kept
  • Our spirits to their task meanwhile,
  • And what was deepest dreaming slept:
  • The posts that named the swallowed mile;
  • Beside the straight canal the hut
  • Abandoned; near the river’s source
  • Its infant chirp; the shortest cut;
  • The roadway missed; were our discourse;
  • At times dear poets, whom some view
  • Transcendent or subdued evoked
  • To speak the memorable, the true,
  • The luminous as a moon uncloaked;
  • For proof that there, among earth’s dumb,
  • A soul had passed and said our best.
  • Or it might be we chimed on some
  • Historic favourite’s astral crest,
  • With part to reverence in its gleam,
  • And part to rivalry the shout:
  • So royal, unuttered, is youth’s dream
  • Of power within to strike without.
  • But most the silences were sweet,
  • Like mothers’ breasts, to bid it feel
  • It lived in such divine conceit
  • As envies aught we stamp for real.
  • To either then an untold tale
  • Was Life, and author, hero, we.
  • The chapters holding peaks to scale,
  • Or depths to fathom, made our glee;
  • For we were armed of inner fires,
  • Unbled in us the ripe desires;
  • And passion rolled a quiet sea,
  • Whereon was Love the phantom sail.
  • AT THE CLOSE
  • TO Thee, dear God of Mercy, both appeal,
  • Who straightway sound the call to arms. Thou know’st;
  • And that black spot in each embattled host,
  • Spring of the blood-stream, later wilt reveal.
  • Now is it red artillery and white steel;
  • Till on a day will ring the victor’s boast,
  • That ’tis Thy chosen towers uppermost,
  • Where Thy rejected grovels under heel.
  • So in all times of man’s descent insane
  • To brute, did strength and craft combining strike,
  • Even as a God of Armies, his fell blow.
  • But at the close he entered Thy domain,
  • Dear God of Mercy, and if lion-like
  • He tore the fall’n, the Eternal was his Foe.
  • A GARDEN IDYL
  • WITH sagest craft Arachne worked
  • Her web, and at a corner lurked,
  • Awaiting what should plump her soon,
  • To case it in the death-cocoon.
  • Sagaciously her home she chose
  • For visits that would never close;
  • Inside my chalet-porch her feast
  • Plucked all the winds but chill North-east.
  • The finished structure, bar on bar,
  • Had snatched from light to form a star,
  • And struck on sight, when quick with dews,
  • Like music of the very Muse.
  • Great artists pass our single sense;
  • We hear in seeing, strung to tense;
  • Then haply marvel, groan mayhap,
  • To think such beauty means a trap.
  • But Nature’s genius, even man’s
  • At best, is practical in plans;
  • Subservient to the needy thought,
  • However rare the weapon wrought.
  • As long as Nature holds it good
  • To urge her creatures’ quest for food
  • Will beauty stamp the just intent
  • Of weapons upon service bent.
  • For beauty is a flower of roots
  • Embedded lower than our boots;
  • Out of the primal strata springs,
  • And shows for crown of useful things.
  • Arachne’s dream of prey to size
  • Aspired; so she could nigh despise
  • The puny specks the breezes round
  • Supplied, and let them shake unwound;
  • Assured of her fat fly to come;
  • Perhaps a blue, the spider’s plum;
  • Who takes the fatal odds in fight,
  • And gives repast an appetite,
  • By plunging, whizzing, till his wings
  • Are webbed, and in the lists he swings,
  • A shrouded lump, for her to see
  • Her banquet in her victory.
  • This matron of the unnumbered threads,
  • One day of dandelions’ heads
  • Distributing their gray perruques
  • Up every gust, I watched with looks
  • Discreet beside the chalet-door;
  • And gracefully a light wind bore,
  • Direct upon my webster’s wall,
  • A monster in the form of ball;
  • The mildest captive ever snared,
  • That neither struggled nor despaired,
  • On half the net invading hung,
  • And plain as in her mother tongue,
  • While low the weaver cursed her lures,
  • Remarked, “You have me; I am yours.”
  • Thrice magnified, in phantom shape,
  • Her dream of size she saw, agape.
  • Midway the vast round-raying beard
  • A desiccated midge appeared;
  • Whose body pricked the name of meal,
  • Whose hair had growth in earth’s unreal;
  • Provocative of dread and wrath,
  • Contempt and horror, in one froth,
  • Inextricable, insensible,
  • His poison presence there would dwell,
  • Declaring him her dream fulfilled,
  • A catch to compliment the skilled;
  • And she reduced to beaky skin,
  • Disgraceful among kith and kin
  • Against her corner, humped and aged,
  • Arachne wrinkled, past enraged,
  • Beyond disgust or hope in guile.
  • Ridiculously volatile
  • He seemed to her last spark of mind;
  • And that in pallid ash declined
  • Beneath the blow by knowledge dealt,
  • Wherein throughout her frame she felt
  • That he, the light wind’s libertine,
  • Without a scoff, without a grin,
  • And mannered like the courtly few,
  • Who merely danced when light winds blew,
  • Impervious to beak and claws,
  • Tradition’s ruinous Whitebeard was;
  • Of whom, as actors in old scenes,
  • Had grannam weavers warned their weans,
  • With word, that less than feather-weight,
  • He smote the web like bolt of Fate.
  • This muted drama, hour by hour,
  • I watched amid a world in flower,
  • Ere yet Autumnal threads had laid
  • Their gray-blue o’er the grass’s blade,
  • And still along the garden-run
  • The blindworm stretched him, drunk of sun.
  • Arachne crouched unmoved; perchance
  • Her visitor performed a dance;
  • She puckered thinner; he the same
  • As when on that light wind he came.
  • Next day was told what deeds of night
  • Were done; the web had vanished quite;
  • With it the strange opposing pair;
  • And listless waved on vacant air,
  • For her adieu to heart’s content,
  • A solitary filament.
  • A READING OF LIFE
  • THE VITAL CHOICE
  • I
  • OR shall we run with Artemis
  • Or yield the breast to Aphrodite?
  • Both are mighty;
  • Both give bliss;
  • Each can torture if divided;
  • Each claims worship undivided,
  • In her wake would have us wallow.
  • II
  • Youth must offer on bent knees
  • Homage unto one or other;
  • Earth, the mother,
  • This decrees;
  • And unto the pallid Scyther
  • Either points us shun we either
  • Shun or too devoutly follow.
  • WITH THE HUNTRESS
  • THROUGH the water-eye of night,
  • Midway between eve and dawn,
  • See the chase, the rout, the flight
  • In deep forest; oread, faun,
  • Goat-foot, antlers laid on neck;
  • Ravenous all the line for speed.
  • See yon wavy sparkle beck
  • Sign of the Virgin Lady’s lead.
  • Down her course a serpent star
  • Coils and shatters at her heels;
  • Peals the horn exulting, peals
  • Plaintive, is it near or far.
  • Huntress, arrowy to pursue,
  • In and out of woody glen,
  • Under cliffs that tear the blue,
  • Over torrent, over fen,
  • She and forest, where she skims
  • Feathery, darken and relume:
  • Those are her white-lightning limbs
  • Cleaving loads of leafy gloom.
  • Mountains hear her and call back,
  • Shrewd with night: a frosty wail
  • Distant: her the emerald vale
  • Folds, and wonders in her track.
  • Now her retinue is lean,
  • Many rearward; streams the chase
  • Eager forth of covert; seen
  • One hot tide the rapturous race.
  • Quiver-charged and crescent-crowned,
  • Up on a flash the lighted mound
  • Leaps she, bow to shoulder, shaft
  • Strung to barb with archer’s craft,
  • Legs like plaited lyre-chords, feet
  • Songs to see, past pitch of sweet.
  • Fearful swiftness they outrun,
  • Shaggy wildness, grey or dun,
  • Challenge, charge of tusks elude:
  • Theirs the dance to tame the rude;
  • Beast, and beast in manhood tame,
  • Follow we their silver flame.
  • Pride of flesh from bondage free,
  • Reaping vigour of its waste,
  • Marks her servitors, and she
  • Sanctifies the unembraced.
  • Nought of perilous she reeks;
  • Valour clothes her open breast;
  • Sweet beyond the thrill of sex;
  • Hallowed by the sex confessed.
  • Huntress arrowy to pursue,
  • Colder she than sunless dew,
  • She, that breath of upper air;
  • Ay, but never lyrist sang,
  • Draught of Bacchus never sprang
  • Blood the bliss of Gods to share,
  • High o’er sweep of eagle wings,
  • Like the run with her, when rings
  • Clear her rally, and her dart,
  • In the forest’s cavern heart,
  • Tells of her victorious aim.
  • Then is pause and chatter, cheer,
  • Laughter at some satyr lame,
  • Looks upon the fallen deer,
  • Measuring his noble crest;
  • Here a favourite in her train,
  • Foremost mid her nymphs, caressed;
  • All applauded. Shall she reign
  • Worshipped? O to be with her there!
  • She, that breath of nimble air,
  • Lifts the breast to giant power.
  • Maid and man, and man and maid,
  • Who each other would devour
  • Elsewhere, by the chase betrayed,
  • There are comrades, led by her,
  • Maid-preserver, man-maker.
  • WITH THE PERSUADER
  • WHO murmurs, hither, hither: who
  • Where nought is audible so fills the ear?
  • Where nought is visible can make appear
  • A veil with eyes that waver through,
  • Like twilight’s pledge of blessed night to come,
  • Or day most golden? All unseen and dumb,
  • She breathes, she moves, inviting flees,
  • Is lost, and leaves the thrilled desire
  • To clasp and strike a slackened lyre,
  • Till over smiles of hyacinth seas,
  • Flame in a crystal vessel sails
  • Beneath a dome of jewelled spray,
  • For land that drops the rosy day
  • On nights of throbbing nightingales.
  • Landward did the wonder flit,
  • Or heart’s desire of her, all earth in it.
  • We saw the heavens fling down their rose;
  • On rapturous waves we saw her glide;
  • The pearly sea-shell half enclose;
  • The shoal of sea-nymphs flush the tide;
  • And we, afire to kiss her feet, no more
  • Behold than tracks along a startled shore,
  • With brightened edges of dark leaves that feign
  • An ambush hoped, as heartless night remain.
  • More closely, warmly: hither, hither! she,
  • The very she called forth by ripened blood
  • For its next breath of being, murmurs; she,
  • Allurement; she, fulfilment; she,
  • The stream within us urged to flood;
  • Man’s cry, earth’s answer, heaven’s consent; O she,
  • Maid, woman and divinity;
  • Our over-earthly, inner-earthly mate
  • Unmated; she, our hunger and our fruit
  • Untasted; she our written fate
  • Unread; Life’s flowering, Life’s root:
  • Unread, divined; unseen, beheld;
  • The evanescent, ever-present she,
  • Great Nature’s stern necessity
  • In radiance clothed, to softness quelled;
  • With a sword’s edge of sweetness keen to take
  • Our breath for bliss, our hearts for fulness break.
  • The murmur hushes down, the veil is rent.
  • Man’s cry, earth’s answer, heaven’s consent,
  • Her form is given to pardoned sight,
  • And lets our mortal eyes receive
  • The sovereign loveliness of celestial white;
  • Adored by them who solitarily pace,
  • In dusk of the underworld’s perpetual eve,
  • The paths among the meadow asphodel,
  • Remembering. Never there her face
  • Is planetary; reddens to shore sea-shell
  • Around such whiteness the enamoured air
  • Of noon that clothes her, never there.
  • Daughter of light, the joyful light,
  • She stands unveiled to nuptial sight,
  • Sweet in her disregard of aid
  • Divine to conquer or persuade.
  • A fountain jets from moss; a flower
  • Bends gently where her sunset tresses shower.
  • By guerdon of her brilliance may be seen
  • With eyelids unabashed the passion’s Queen.
  • Shorn of attendant Graces she can use
  • Her natural snares to make her will supreme.
  • A simple nymph it is, inclined to muse
  • Before the leader foot shall dip in stream:
  • One arm at curve along a rounded thigh;
  • Her firm new breasts each pointing its own way
  • A knee half bent to shade its fellow shy,
  • Where innocence, not nature, signals nay.
  • The bud of fresh virginity awaits
  • The wooer, and all roseate will she burst:
  • She touches on the hour of happy mates;
  • Still is she unaware she wakens thirst.
  • And while commanding blissful sight believe
  • It holds her as a body strained to breast,
  • Down on the underworld’s perpetual eve
  • She plunges the possessor dispossessed;
  • And bids believe that image, heaving warm,
  • Is lost to float like torch-smoke after flame;
  • The phantom any breeze blows out of form;
  • A thirst’s delusion, a defeated aim.
  • The rapture shed the torture weaves;
  • The direst blow on human heart she deals:
  • The pain to know the seen deceives;
  • Nought true but what insufferably feels.
  • And stabs of her delicious note,
  • That is as heavenly light to hearing, heard
  • Through shelter leaves, the laughter from her throat,
  • We answer as the midnight’s morning’s bird.
  • She laughs, she wakens gleeful cries;
  • In her delicious laughter part revealed;
  • Yet mother is she more of moans and sighs,
  • For longings unappeased and wounds unhealed.
  • Yet would she bless, it is her task to bless:
  • Yon folded couples, passing under shade,
  • Are her rich harvest; bidden caress, caress,
  • Consume the fruit in bloom; not disobeyed.
  • We dolorous complainers had a dream,
  • Wrought on the vacant air from inner fire,
  • We saw stand bare of her celestial beam
  • The glorious Goddess, and we dared desire.
  • Thereat are shown reproachful eyes, and lips
  • Of upward curl to meanings half obscure;
  • And glancing where a wood-nymph lightly skips
  • She nods: at once that creature wears her lure.
  • Blush of our being between birth and death:
  • Sob of our ripened blood for its next breath:
  • Her wily semblance nought of her denies;
  • Seems it the Goddess runs, the Goddess hies,
  • The generous Goddess yields. And she can arm
  • Her dwarfed and twisted with her secret charm;
  • Benevolent as Earth to feed her own.
  • Fully shall they be fed, if they beseech.
  • But scorn she has for them that walk alone;
  • Blanched men, starved women, whom no arts can pleach.
  • The men as chief of criminals she disdains,
  • And holds the reason in perceptive thought.
  • More pitiable, like rivers lacking rains,
  • Kissing cold stones, the women shrink for drought.
  • Those faceless discords, out of nature strayed,
  • Rank of the putrefaction ere decayed,
  • In impious singles bear the thorny wreaths:
  • Their lives are where harmonious Pleasure breathes
  • For couples crowned with flowers that burn in dew.
  • Comes there a tremor of night’s forest horn
  • Across her garden from the insaner crew,
  • She darkens to malignity of scorn.
  • A shiver courses through her garden-grounds:
  • Grunt of the tusky boar, the baying hounds,
  • The hunter’s shouts, are heard afar, and bring
  • Dead on her heart her crimsoned flower of Spring.
  • These, the irreverent of Life’s design,
  • Division between natural and divine
  • Would cast; these vaunting barrenness for best,
  • In veins of gathered strength Life’s tide arrest;
  • And these because the roses flood their cheeks,
  • Vow them in nature wise as when Love speaks.
  • With them is war; and well the Goddess knows
  • What undermines the race who mount the rose;
  • How the ripe moment, lodged in slumberous hours,
  • Enkindled by persuasion overpowers:
  • Why weak as are her frailer trailing weeds,
  • The strong when Beauty gleams o’er Nature’s needs,
  • And timely guile unguarded finds them lie.
  • They who her sway withstand a sea defy,
  • At every point of juncture must be proof;
  • Nor look for mercy from the incessant surge
  • Her forces mixed of craft and passion urge
  • For the one whelming wave to spring aloof.
  • She, tenderness, is pitiless to them
  • Resisting in her godhead nature’s truth.
  • No flower their face shall be, but writhen stem;
  • Their youth a frost, their age the dirge for youth.
  • These miserably disinclined,
  • The lamentably unembraced,
  • Insult the Pleasures Earth designed
  • To people and beflower the waste.
  • Wherefore the Pleasures pass them by:
  • For death they live, in life they die.
  • Her head the Goddess from them turns,
  • As from grey mounds of ashes in bronze urns.
  • She views her quivering couples unconsoled,
  • And of her beauty mirror they become,
  • Like orchard blossoms, apple, pear and plum,
  • Free of the cloud, beneath the flood of gold.
  • Crowned with wreaths that burn in dew,
  • Her couples whirl, sun-satiated,
  • Athirst for shade, they sigh, they wed,
  • They play the music made of two:
  • Oldest of earth, earth’s youngest till earth’s end:
  • Cunninger than the numbered strings,
  • For melodies, for harmonies,
  • For mastered discords, and the things
  • Not vocable, whose mysteries
  • Are inmost Love’s, Life’s reach of Life extend.
  • Is it an anguish overflowing shame
  • And the tongue’s pudency confides to her,
  • With eyes of embers, breath of incense myrrh,
  • The woman’s marrow in some dear youth’s name,
  • Then is the Goddess tenderness
  • Maternal, and she has a sister’s tones
  • Benign to soothe intemperate distress,
  • Divide despair from hope, and sighs from moans.
  • Her gentleness imparts exhaling ease
  • To those of her milk-bearer votaries
  • As warm of bosom-earth as she; of the source
  • Direct; erratic but in heart’s excess;
  • Being mortal and ill-matched for Love’s great force;
  • Like green leaves caught with flames by his impress.
  • And pray they under skies less overcast,
  • That swiftly may her star of eve descend,
  • Her lustrous morning star fly not too fast,
  • To lengthen blissful night will she befriend.
  • Unfailing her reply to woman’s voice
  • In supplication instant. Is it man’s,
  • She hears, approves his words, her garden scans,
  • And him: the flowers are various, he has choice.
  • Perchance his wound is deep; she listens long;
  • Enjoys what music fills the plaintive song;
  • And marks how he, who would be hawk at poise
  • Above the bird, his plaintive song enjoys.
  • She reads him when his humbled manhood weeps
  • To her invoked: distraction is implored.
  • A smile, and he is up on godlike leaps
  • Above, with his bright Goddess owned the adored.
  • His tales of her declare she condescends;
  • Can share his fires, not always goads and rends:
  • Moreover, quits a throne, and must enclose
  • A queenlier gem than woman’s wayside rose.
  • She bends, he quickens; she breathes low, he springs
  • Enraptured; low she laughs, his woes disperse;
  • Aloud she laughs and sweeps his varied strings.
  • ’Tis taught him how for touch of mournful verse
  • Rarely the music made of two ascends,
  • And Beauty’s Queen some other way is won.
  • Or it may solve the riddle, that she lends
  • Herself to all, and yields herself to none,
  • Save heavenliest: though claims by men are raised
  • In hot assurance under shade of doubt:
  • And numerous are the images bepraised
  • As Beauty’s Queen, should passion head the rout.
  • Be sure the ruddy hue is Love’s: to woo
  • Love’s Fountain we must mount the ruddy hue.
  • That is her garden’s precept, seen where shines
  • Her blood-flower, and its unsought neighbour pines.
  • Daughter of light, the joyful light,
  • She bids her couples face full East,
  • Reflecting radiance, even when from her feast
  • Their outstretched arms brown deserts disunite,
  • The lion-haunted thickets hold apart.
  • In love the ruddy hue declares great heart;
  • High confidence in her whose aid is lent
  • To lovers lifting the tuned instrument,
  • Not one of rippled strings and funeral tone.
  • And doth the man pursue a tightened zone,
  • Then be it as the Laurel God he runs,
  • Confirmed to win, with countenance the Sun’s.
  • Should pity bless the tremulous voice of woe
  • He lifts for pity, limp his offspring show.
  • For him requiring woman’s arts to please
  • Infantile tastes with babe reluctances,
  • No race of giants! In the woman’s veins
  • Persuasion ripely runs, through hers the pains.
  • Her choice of him, should kind occasion nod,
  • Aspiring blends the Titan with the God;
  • Yet unto dwarf and mortal, she, submiss
  • In her high Lady’s mandate, yields the kiss;
  • And is it needed that Love’s daintier brute
  • Be snared as hunter, she will tempt pursuit.
  • She is great Nature’s ever intimate
  • In breast, and doth as ready handmaid wait,
  • Until perverted by her senseless male,
  • She plays the winding snake, the shrinking snail,
  • The flying deer, all tricks of evil fame,
  • Elusive to allure, since he grew tame.
  • Hence has the Goddess, Nature’s earliest Power,
  • And greatest and most present, with her dower
  • Of the transcendent beauty, gained repute
  • For meditated guile. She laughs to hear
  • A charge her garden’s labyrinths scarce confute,
  • Her garden’s histories tell of to all near.
  • Let it be said, But less upon her guile
  • Doth she rely for her immortal smile.
  • Still let the rumour spread, and terror screens
  • To push her conquests by the simplest means.
  • While man abjures not lustihead, nor swerves
  • From earth’s good labours, Beauty’s Queen he serves.
  • Her spacious garden and her garden’s grant
  • She offers in reward for handsome cheer:
  • Choice of the nymphs whose looks will slant
  • The secret down a dewy leer
  • Of corner eyelids into haze:
  • Many a fair Aphrosyne
  • Like flower-bell to honey-bee:
  • And here they flicker round the maze
  • Bewildering him in heart and head:
  • And here they wear the close demure,
  • With subtle peeps to reassure:
  • Others parade where love has bled,
  • And of its crimson weave their mesh:
  • Others to snap of fingers leap,
  • As bearing breast with love asleep.
  • These are her laughters in the flesh.
  • Or would she fit a warrior mood,
  • She lights her seeming unsubdued,
  • And indicates the fortress-key.
  • Or is it heart for heart that craves,
  • She flecks along a run of waves
  • The one to promise deeper sea.
  • Bands of her limpid primitives,
  • Or patterned in the curious braid,
  • Are the blest man’s; and whatsoever he gives,
  • For what he gives is he repaid.
  • Good is it if by him ’tis held
  • He wins the fairest ever welled
  • From Nature’s founts: she whispers it: Even I
  • Not fairer! and forbids him to deny,
  • Else little is he lover. Those he clasps,
  • Intent as tempest, worshipful as prayer,—
  • And be they doves or be they asps,—
  • Must seem to him the sovereignty fair;
  • Else counts he soon among life’s wholly tamed.
  • Him whom from utter savage she reclaimed,
  • Half savage must he stay, would he be crowned
  • The lover. Else, past ripeness, deathward bound,
  • He reasons; and the totterer Earth detests,
  • Love shuns, grim logic screws in grasp, is he.
  • Doth man divide divine Necessity
  • From Joy, between the Queen of Beauty’s breasts
  • A sword is driven; for those most glorious twain
  • Present her; armed to bless and to constrain.
  • Of this he perishes; not she, the throned
  • On rocks that spout their springs to the sacred mounts.
  • A loftier Reason out of deeper founts
  • Earth’s chosen Goddess bears: by none disowned
  • While red blood runs to swell the pulse, she boasts,
  • And Beauty, like her star, descends the sky;
  • Earth’s answer, heaven’s consent unto man’s cry,
  • Uplifted by the innumerable hosts.
  • Quickened of Nature’s eye and ear,
  • When the wild sap at high tide smites
  • Within us; or benignly clear
  • To vision; or as the iris lights
  • On fluctuant waters; she is ours
  • Till set of man: the dreamed, the seen;
  • Flushing the world with odorous flowers:
  • A soft compulsion on terrene
  • By heavenly: and the world is hers
  • While hunger after Beauty spurs.
  • So is it sung in any space
  • She fills, with laugh at shallow laws
  • Forbidding love’s devised embrace,
  • The music Beauty from it draws.
  • THE TEST OF MANHOOD
  • LIKE a flood river whirled at rocky banks,
  • An army issues out of wilderness,
  • With battle plucking round its ragged flanks;
  • Obstruction in the van; insane excess
  • Oft at the heart; yet hard the onward stress
  • Unto more spacious, where move ordered ranks,
  • And rise hushed temples built of shapely stone,
  • The work of hands not pledged to grind or slay.
  • They gave our earth a dress of flesh on bone;
  • A tongue to speak with answering heaven gave they.
  • Then was the gracious birth of man’s new day;
  • Divided from the haunted night it shone.
  • That quiet dawn was Reverence; whereof sprang
  • Ethereal Beauty in full morningtide.
  • Another sun had risen to clasp his bride:
  • It was another earth unto him sang.
  • Came Reverence from the Huntress on her heights?
  • From the Persuader came it, in those vales
  • Whereunto she melodiously invites,
  • Her troops of eager servitors regales?
  • Not far those two great Powers of Nature speed
  • Disciple steps on earth when sole they lead;
  • Nor either points for us the way of flame.
  • From him predestined mightier it came;
  • His task to hold them both in breast, and yield
  • Their dues to each, and of their war be field.
  • The foes that in repulsion never ceased,
  • Must he, who once has been the goodly beast
  • Of one or other, at whose beck he ran,
  • Constrain to make him serviceable man;
  • Offending neither, nor the natural claim
  • Each pressed, denying, for his true man’s name.
  • Ah, what a sweat of anguish in that strife
  • To hold them fast conjoined within him still;
  • Submissive to his will
  • Along the road of life!
  • And marvel not he wavered if at whiles
  • The forward step met frowns, the backward smiles.
  • For Pleasure witched him her sweet cup to drain;
  • Repentance offered ecstasy in pain.
  • Delicious licence called it Nature’s cry;
  • Ascetic rigours crushed the fleshly sigh;
  • A tread on shingle timed his lame advance
  • Flung as the die of Bacchanalian Chance,
  • He of the troubled marching army leaned
  • On godhead visible, on godhead screened;
  • The radiant roseate, the curtained white;
  • Yet sharp his battle strained through day, through night.
  • He drank of fictions, till celestial aid
  • Might seem accorded when he fawned and prayed;
  • Sagely the generous Giver circumspect,
  • To choose for grants the egregious, his elect;
  • And ever that imagined succour slew
  • The soul of brotherhood whence Reverence drew.
  • In fellowship religion has its founts:
  • The solitary his own God reveres:
  • Ascend no sacred Mounts
  • Our hungers or our fears.
  • As only for the numbers Nature’s care
  • Is shown, and she the personal nothing heeds,
  • So to Divinity the spring of prayer
  • From brotherhood the one way upward leads.
  • Like the sustaining air
  • Are both for flowers and weeds.
  • But he who claims in spirit to be flower,
  • Will find them both an air that doth devour.
  • Whereby he smelt his treason, who implored
  • External gifts bestowed but on the sword;
  • Beheld himself, with less and less disguise,
  • Through those blood-cataracts which dimmed his eyes,
  • His army’s foe, condemned to strive and fail;
  • See a black adversary’s ghost prevail;
  • Never, though triumphs hailed him, hope to win
  • While still the conflict tore his breast within.
  • Out of that agony, misread for those
  • Imprisoned Powers warring unappeased,
  • The ghost of his black adversary rose,
  • To smother light, shut heaven, show earth diseased.
  • And long with him was wrestling ere emerged
  • A mind to read in him the reflex shade
  • Of its fierce torment; this way, that way urged;
  • By craven compromises hourly swayed.
  • Crouched as a nestling, still its wings untried,
  • The man’s mind opened under weight of cloud.
  • To penetrate the dark was it endowed;
  • Stood day before a vision shooting wide.
  • Whereat the spectral enemy lost form;
  • The traversed wilderness exposed its track.
  • He felt the far advance in looking back;
  • Thence trust in his foot forward through the storm.
  • Under the low-browed tempest’s eye of ire,
  • That ere it lightened smote a coward heart,
  • Earth nerved her chastened son to hail athwart
  • All ventures perilous his shrouded Sire;
  • A stranger still, religiously divined;
  • Not yet with understanding read aright.
  • But when the mind, the cherishable mind,
  • The multitude’s grave shepherd, took full flight,
  • Himself as mirror raised among his kind,
  • He saw, and first of brotherhood had sight:
  • Knew that his force to fly, his will to see,
  • His heart enlarged beyond its ribbed domain,
  • Had come of many a grip in mastery,
  • Which held conjoined the hostile rival twain,
  • And of his bosom made him lord, to keep
  • The starry roof of his unruffled frame
  • Awake to earth, to heaven, and plumb the deep
  • Below, above, aye with a wistful aim.
  • The mastering mind in him, by tempests blown,
  • By traitor inmates baited, upward burned;
  • Perforce of growth, the Master mind discerned,
  • The Great Unseen, nowise the Dark Unknown.
  • To whom unwittingly did he aspire
  • In wilderness, where bitter was his need:
  • To whom in blindness, as an earthy seed
  • For light and air, he struck through crimson mire.
  • But not ere he upheld a forehead lamp,
  • And viewed an army, once the seeming doomed,
  • All choral in its fruitful garden camp,
  • The spiritual the palpable illumed.
  • This gift of penetration and embrace,
  • His prize from tidal battles lost or won,
  • Reveals the scheme to animate his race:
  • How that it is a warfare but begun;
  • Unending; with no Power to interpose;
  • No prayer, save for strength to keep his ground,
  • Heard of the Highest; never battle’s close,
  • The victory complete and victor crowned:
  • Nor solace in defeat, save from that sense
  • Of strength well spent, which is the strength renewed.
  • In manhood must he find his competence;
  • In his clear mind the spiritual food:
  • God being there while he his fight maintains;
  • Throughout his mind the Master Mind being there,
  • While he rejects the suicide despair;
  • Accepts the spur of explicable pains;
  • Obedient to Nature, not her slave:
  • Her lord, if to her rigid laws he bows;
  • Her dust, if with his conscience he plays knave,
  • And bids the Passions on the Pleasures browse:—
  • Whence Evil in a world unread before;
  • That mystery to simple springs resolved.
  • His God the Known, diviner to adore,
  • Shows Nature’s savage riddles kindly solved.
  • Inconscient, insensitive, she reigns
  • In iron laws, though rapturous fair her face.
  • Back to the primal brute shall he retrace
  • His path, doth he permit to force her chains
  • A soft Persuader coursing through his veins,
  • An icy Huntress stringing to the chase:
  • What one the flash disdains;
  • What one so gives it grace.
  • But is he rightly manful in her eyes,
  • A splendid bloodless knight to gain the skies,
  • A blood-hot son of Earth by all her signs,
  • Desireing and desireable he shines;
  • As peaches, that have caught the sun’s uprise
  • And kissed warm gold till noonday, even as vines.
  • Earth fills him with her juices, without fear
  • That she will cast him drunken down the steeps.
  • All woman is she to this man most dear;
  • He sows for bread, and she in spirit reaps:
  • She conscient, she sensitive, in him;
  • With him enwound, his brave ambition hers:
  • By him humaner made; by his keen spurs
  • Pricked to race past the pride in giant limb,
  • Her crazy adoration of big thews,
  • Proud in her primal sons, when crags they hurled,
  • Were thunder spitting lightnings on the world
  • In daily deeds, and she their evening Muse.
  • This man, this hero, works not to destroy;
  • This godlike—as the rock in ocean stands;—
  • He of the myriad eyes, the myriad hands
  • Creative; in his edifice has joy.
  • How strength may serve for purity is shown
  • When he himself can scourge to make it clean.
  • Withal his pitch of pride would not disown
  • A sober world that walks the balanced mean
  • Between its tempters, rarely overthrown:
  • And such at times his army’s march has been.
  • Near is he to great Nature in the thought
  • Each changing Season intimately saith,
  • That nought save apparition knows the death;
  • To the God-lighted mind of man ’tis nought.
  • She counts not loss a word of any weight;
  • It may befal his passions and his greeds
  • To lose their treasures, like the vein that bleeds,
  • But life gone breathless will she reinstate.
  • Close on the heart of Earth his bosom beats,
  • When he the mandate lodged in it obeys,
  • Alive to breast a future wrapped in haze,
  • Strike camp, and onward, like the wind’s cloud-fleets.
  • Unresting she, unresting he, from change
  • To change, as rain of cloud, as fruit of rain;
  • She feels her blood-tree throbbing in her grain,
  • Yet skyward branched, with loftier mark and range.
  • No miracle the sprout of wheat from clod,
  • She knows, nor growth of man in grisly brute;
  • But he, the flower at head and soil at root,
  • Is miracle, guides he the brute to God.
  • And that way seems he bound; that way the road,
  • With his dark-lantern mind, unled, alone,
  • Wearifully through forest-tracts unsown,
  • He travels, urged by some internal goad.
  • Dares he behold the thing he is, what thing
  • He would become is in his mind its child;
  • Astir, demanding birth to light and wing;
  • For battle prompt, by pleasure unbeguiled.
  • So moves he forth in faith, if he has made
  • His mind God’s temple, dedicate to truth.
  • Earth’s nourishing delights, no more gainsaid,
  • He tastes, as doth the bridegroom rich in youth.
  • Then knows he Love, that beckons and controls;
  • The star of sky upon his footway cast;
  • Then match in him who holds his tempters fast,
  • The body’s love and mind’s, whereof the soul’s.
  • Then Earth her man for woman finds at last,
  • To speed the pair unto her goal of goals.
  • Or is’t the widowed’s dream of her new mate?
  • Seen has she virulent days of heat in flood;
  • The sly Persuader snaky in his blood;
  • With her the barren Huntress alternate;
  • His rough refractory off on kicking heels
  • To rear; the man dragged rearward, shamed, amazed;
  • And as a torrent stream where cattle grazed,
  • His tumbled world. What, then, the faith she feels?
  • May not his aspect, like her own so fair
  • Reflexively, the central force belie,
  • And he, the once wild ocean storming sky,
  • Be rebel at the core? What hope is there?
  • ’Tis that in each recovery he preserves,
  • Between his upper and his nether wit,
  • Sense of his march ahead, more brightly lit;
  • He less the shaken thing of lusts and nerves;
  • With such a grasp upon his brute as tells
  • Of wisdom from that vile relapsing spun.
  • A Sun goes down in wasted fire, a Sun
  • Resplendent springs, to faith refreshed compels.
  • THE HUELESS LOVE
  • UNTO that love must we through fire attain,
  • Which those two held as breath of common air;
  • The hands of whom were given in bond elsewhere;
  • Whom Honour was untroubled to restrain.
  • Midway the road of our life’s term they met,
  • And one another knew without surprise;
  • Nor cared that beauty stood in mutual eyes;
  • Nor at their tardy meeting nursed regret.
  • To them it was revealed how they had found
  • The kindred nature and the needed mind;
  • The mate by long conspiracy designed;
  • The flower to plant in sanctuary ground.
  • Avowed in vigilant solicitude
  • For either, what most lived within each breast
  • They let be seen: yet every human test
  • Demanding righteousness approved them good.
  • She leaned on a strong arm, and little feared
  • Abandonment to help if heaved or sank
  • Her heart at intervals while Love looked blank,
  • Life rosier were she but less revered.
  • An arm that never shook did not obscure
  • Her woman’s intuition of the bliss—
  • Their tempter’s moment o’er the black abyss,
  • Across the narrow plank—he could abjure.
  • Then came a day that clipped for him the thread,
  • And their first touch of lips, as he lay cold,
  • Was all of earthly in their love untold,
  • Beyond all earthly known to them who wed.
  • So has there come the gust at South-west flung
  • By sudden volt on eves of freezing mist,
  • When sister snowflake sister snowdrop kissed,
  • And one passed out, and one the bell-head hung.
  • UNION IN DISSEVERANCE
  • SUNSET worn to its last vermilion he;
  • She that star overhead in slow descent:
  • That white star with the front of angel she;
  • He undone in his rays of glory spent
  • Halo, fair as the bow-shot at his rise,
  • He casts round her, and knows his hour of rest
  • Incomplete, were the light for which he dies,
  • Less like joy of the dove that wings to nest.
  • Lustrous momently, near on earth she sinks;
  • Life’s full throb over breathless and abased:
  • Yet stand they, though impalpable the links,
  • One, more one than the bridally embraced.
  • SONG IN THE SONGLESS
  • THEY have no song, the sedges dry,
  • And still they sing.
  • It is within my breast they sing,
  • As I pass by.
  • Within my breast they touch a string,
  • They wake a sigh.
  • There is but sound of sedges dry;
  • In me they sing.
  • THE BURDEN OF STRENGTH
  • IF that thou hast the gift of strength, then know
  • Thy part is to uplift the trodden low;
  • Else in a giant’s grasp until the end
  • A hopeless wrestler shall thy soul contend.
  • THE MAIN REGRET
  • WRITTEN FOR THE CHARING CROSS ALBUM
  • I
  • SEEN, too clear and historic within us, our sins of omission
  • Frown when the Autumn days strike us all ruthlessly bare.
  • They of our mortal diseases find never healing physician;
  • Errors they of the soul, past the one hope to repair.
  • II
  • Sunshine might we have been unto seed under soil, or have scattered
  • Seed to ascendant suns brighter than any that shone.
  • Even the limp-legged beggar a sick desperado has flattered
  • Back to a half-sloughed life cheered by the mere human tone.
  • ALTERNATION
  • BETWEEN the fountain and the rill
  • I passed, and saw the mighty will
  • To leap at sky; the careless run,
  • As earth would lead her little son.
  • Beneath them throbs an urgent well,
  • That here is play, and there is war.
  • I know not which had most to tell
  • Of whence we spring and what we are.
  • FOREST HISTORY
  • I
  • BENEATH the vans of doom did men pass in.
  • Heroic who came out; for round them hung
  • A wavering phantom’s red volcano tongue,
  • With league-long lizard tail and fishy fin:
  • II
  • Old Earth’s original Dragon; there retired
  • To his last fastness; overthrown by few.
  • Him a laborious thrust of roadway slew.
  • Then man to play devorant straight was fired.
  • III
  • More intimate became the forest fear
  • While pillared darkness hatched malicious life
  • At either elbow, wolf or gnome or knife
  • And wary slid the glance from ear to ear.
  • IV
  • In chillness, like a clouded lantern-ray,
  • The forest’s heart of fog on mossed morass,
  • On purple pool and silky cotton-grass,
  • Revealed where lured the swallower byway.
  • V
  • Dead outlook, flattened back with hard rebound
  • Off walls of distance, left each mounted height.
  • It seemed a giant hag-fiend, churning spite
  • Of humble human being, held the ground.
  • VI
  • Through friendless wastes, through treacherous woodland, slow
  • The feet sustained by track of feet pursued
  • Pained steps, and found the common brotherhood
  • By sign of Heaven indifferent, Nature foe.
  • VII
  • Anon a mason’s work amazed the sight,
  • And long-frocked men, called Brothers, there abode.
  • They pointed up, bowed head, and dug and sowed;
  • Whereof was shelter, loaf, and warm firelight.
  • VIII
  • What words they taught were nails to scratch the head.
  • Benignant works explained the chanting brood.
  • Their monastery lit black solitude,
  • As one might think a star that heavenward led.
  • IX
  • Uprose a fairer nest for weary feet,
  • Like some gold flower nightly inward curled,
  • Where gentle maidens fled a roaring world,
  • Or played with it, and had their white retreat.
  • X
  • Into big books of metal clasps they pored.
  • They governed, even as men; they welcomed lays.
  • The treasures women are whose aim is praise,
  • Was shown in them: the Garden half restored.
  • XI
  • A deluge billow scoured the land off seas,
  • With widened jaws, and slaughter was its foam.
  • For food, for clothing, ambush, refuge, home,
  • The lesser savage offered bogs and trees.
  • XII
  • Whence reverence round grey-haired story grew:
  • And inmost spots of ancient horror shone
  • As temples under beams of trials bygone;
  • For in them sang brave times with God in view.
  • XIII
  • Till now trim homesteads bordered spaces green,
  • Like night’s first little stars through clearing showers.
  • Was rumoured how a castle’s falcon towers
  • The wilderness commanded with fierce mien.
  • XIV
  • Therein a serious Baron stuck his lance;
  • For minstrel songs a beauteous Dame would pout.
  • Gay knights and sombre, felon or devout,
  • Pricked onward, bound for their unsung romance.
  • XV
  • It might be that two errant lords across
  • The block of each came edged, and at sharp cry
  • They charged forthwith, the better man to try.
  • One rode his way, one couched on quiet moss.
  • XVI
  • Perchance a lady sweet, whose lord lay slain,
  • The robbers into gruesome durance drew.
  • Swift should her hero come, like lightning’s blue!
  • She prayed for him, as crackling drought for rain.
  • XVII
  • As we, that ere the worst her hero haps,
  • Of Angels guided, nigh that loathly den:
  • A toady cave beside an ague fen,
  • Where long forlorn the lone dog whines and yaps.
  • XVIII
  • By daylight now the forest fear could read
  • Itself, and at new wonders chuckling went.
  • Straight for the roebuck’s neck the bowman spent
  • A dart that laughed at distance and at speed.
  • XIX
  • Right loud the bugle’s hallali elate
  • Rang forth of merry dingles round the tors;
  • And deftest hand was he from foreign wars,
  • But soon he hailed the home-bred yeoman mate.
  • XX
  • Before the blackbird pecked the turf they woke;
  • At dawn the deer’s wet nostrils blew their last.
  • To forest, haunt of runs and prime repast,
  • With paying blows, the yokel strained his yoke.
  • XXI
  • The city urchin mooned on forest air,
  • On grassy sweeps and flying arrows, thick
  • As swallows o’er smooth streams, and sighed him sick
  • For thinking that his dearer home was there.
  • XXII
  • Familiar, still unseized, the forest sprang
  • An old-world echo, like no mortal thing.
  • The hunter’s horn might wind a jocund ring,
  • But held in ear it had a chilly clang.
  • XXIII
  • Some shadow lurked aloof of ancient time;
  • Some warning haunted any sound prolonged,
  • As though the leagues of woodland held them wronged
  • To hear an axe and see a township climb.
  • XXIV
  • The forest’s erewhile emperor at eve
  • Had voice when lowered heavens drummed for gales.
  • At midnight a small people danced the dales,
  • So thin that they might dwindle through a sieve
  • XXV
  • Ringed mushrooms told of them, and in their throats,
  • Old wives that gathered herbs and knew too much.
  • The pensioned forester beside his crutch,
  • Struck showers from embers at those bodeful notes.
  • XXVI
  • Came then the one, all ear, all eye, all heart;
  • Devourer, and insensibly devoured;
  • In whom the city over forest flowered,
  • The forest wreathed the city’s drama-mart.
  • XXVII
  • There found he in new form that Dragon old,
  • From tangled solitudes expelled; and taught
  • How blindly each its antidote besought;
  • For either’s breath the needs of either told.
  • XXVIII
  • Now deep in woods, with song no sermon’s drone,
  • He showed what charm the human concourse works:
  • Amid the press of men, what virtue lurks
  • Where bubble sacred wells of wildness lone.
  • XXIX
  • Our conquest these: if haply we retain
  • The reverence that ne’er will overrun
  • Due boundaries of realms from Nature won,
  • Nor let the poet’s awe in rapture wane.
  • FRAGMENTS OF THE ILIAD IN ENGLISH HEXAMETER VERSE
  • ILIAD, i. 149
  • THE INVECTIVE OF ACHILLES
  • “HEIGH me! brazen of front, thou glutton for plunder, how can one,
  • Servant here to thy mandates, heed thee among our Achaians,
  • Either the mission hie on or stoutly do fight with the foemen?
  • I, not hither I fared on account of the spear-armèd Trojans,
  • Pledged to the combat; they unto me have in nowise a harm done;
  • Never have they, of a truth, come lifting my horses or oxen;
  • Never in deep-soiled Phthia, the nurser of heroes, my harvests
  • Ravaged, they; for between us is numbered full many a darksome
  • Mountain, ay, therewith too the stretch of the windy sea-waters.
  • O hugely shameless! thee did we follow to hearten thee, justice
  • Pluck from the Dardans for him, Menelaos, thee too, thou dog-eyed!
  • Whereof little thy thought is, nought whatever thou reckest.
  • Worse, it is thou whose threat ’tis to ravish my prize from me,
  • portion
  • Won with much labour, the which my gift from the sons of Achaia.
  • Never, in sooth, have I known my prize equal thine when Achaians
  • Gave some flourishing populous Trojan town up to pillage.
  • Nay, sure, mine were the hands did most in the storm of the combat,
  • Yet when came peradventure share of the booty amongst us,
  • Bigger to thee went the prize, while I some small blessèd thing bore
  • Off to the ships, my share of reward for my toil in the bloodshed!
  • So now go I to Phthia, for better by much it beseems me
  • Homeward go with my beaked ships now, and I hold not in prospect,
  • I being outraged, thou mayst gather here plunder and wealth-store.”
  • Iliad, i. 225
  • “BIBBER besotted, with scowl of a cur, having heart of a deer, thou!
  • Never to join to thy warriors armed for the press of the conflict,
  • Never for ambush forth with the princeliest sons of Achaia
  • Dared thy soul, for to thee that thing would have looked as a
  • death-stroke.
  • Sooth, more easy it seems, down the lengthened array of Achaians,
  • Snatch at the prize of the one whose voice has been lifted against
  • thee.
  • Ravening king of the folk, for that thou hast thy rule over abjects;
  • Else, son of Atreus, now were this outrage on me thy last one.
  • Nay, but I tell thee, and I do swear a big oath on it likewise:
  • Yea, by the sceptre here, and it surely bears branches and leaf-buds
  • Never again, since first it was lopped from its trunk on the
  • mountains,
  • No more sprouting; for round it all clean has the sharp metal clipped
  • off
  • Leaves and the bark; ay, verify now do the sons of Achaia,
  • Guardian hands of the counsels of Zeus, pronouncing the judgement,
  • Hold it aloft; so now unto thee shall the oath have its portent;
  • Loud will the cry for Achilles burst from the sons of Achaia
  • Throughout the army, and thou chafe powerless, though in an anguish,
  • How to give succour when vast crops down under man-slaying Hector
  • Tumble expiring; and thou deep in thee shalt tear at thy
  • heart-strings,
  • Rage-wrung, thou, that in nought thou didst honour the flower of
  • Achaians.”
  • ILIAD, ii 455
  • MARSHALLING OF THE ACHAIANS
  • LIKE as a terrible fire feeds fast on a forest enormous,
  • Up on a mountain height, and the blaze of it radiates round far,
  • So on the bright blest arms of the host in their march did the
  • splendour
  • Gleam wide round through the circle of air right up to the sky-vault.
  • They, now, as when swarm thick in the air multitudinous winged flocks,
  • Be it of geese or of cranes or the long-necked troops of the
  • wild-swans,
  • Off that Asian mead, by the flow of the waters of Kaïstros;
  • Hither and yon fly they, and rejoicing in pride of their pinions,
  • Clamour, shaped to their ranks, and the mead all about them
  • resoundeth;
  • So those numerous tribes from their ships and their shelterings poured
  • forth
  • On that plain of Scamander, and horrible rumbled beneath them
  • Earth to the quick-paced feet of the men and the tramp of the
  • horse-hooves.
  • Stopped they then on the fair-flower’d field of Scamander, their
  • thousands
  • Many as leaves and the blossoms born of the flowerful season.
  • Even as countless hot-pressed flies in their multitudes traverse,
  • Clouds of them, under some herdsman’s wonning, where then are the
  • milk-pails
  • Also, full of their milk, in the bountiful season of spring-time;
  • Even so thickly the long-haired sons of Achaia the plain held,
  • Prompt for the dash at the Trojan host, with the passion to crush
  • them.
  • Those, likewise, as the goatherds, eyeing their vast flocks of goats,
  • know
  • Easily one from the other when all get mixed o’er the pasture,
  • So did the chieftains rank them here there in their places for
  • onslaught,
  • Hard on the push of the fray; and among them King Agamemnon,
  • He, for his eyes and his head, as when Zeus glows glad in his thunder,
  • He with the girdle of Ares, he with the breast of Poseidon.
  • ILIAD, xi, 148
  • AGAMEMNON IN THE FIGHT
  • THESE, then, he left, and away where ranks were now clashing the
  • thickest,
  • Onward rushed, and with him rushed all of the bright-greaved Achaians.
  • Foot then footmen slew, that were flying from direful compulsion,
  • Horse at the horsemen (up from off under them mounted the dust-cloud,
  • Up off the plain, raised up cloud-thick by the thundering
  • horse-hooves)
  • Hewed with the sword’s sharp edge; and so meanwhile Lord Agamemnon
  • Followed, chasing and slaughtering aye, on-urgeing the Argives.
  • Now, as when fire voracious catches the unclippèd wood-land,
  • This way bears it and that the great whirl of the wind, and the
  • scrubwood
  • Stretches uptorn, flung forward alength by the fire’s fury rageing,
  • So beneath Atreides Agamemnon heads of the scattered
  • Trojans fell; and in numbers amany the horses, neck-stiffened,
  • Rattled their vacant cars down the roadway gaps of the war-field,
  • Missing the blameless charioteers, but, for these, they were
  • outstretched
  • Flat upon earth, far dearer to vultures than to their home-mates.
  • ILIAD, xi, 378
  • PARIS AND DIOMEDES
  • SO he, with a clear shout of laughter,
  • Forth of his ambush leapt, and he vaunted him, uttering thiswise:
  • “Hit thou art! not in vain flew the shaft; how by rights it had
  • pierced thee
  • Into the undermost gut, therewith to have rived thee of life-breath!
  • Following that had the Trojans plucked a new breath from their direst,
  • They all frighted of thee, as the goats bleat in flight from a lion.”
  • Then unto him untroubled made answer stout Diomedes:
  • “Bow-puller, jiber, thy bow for thy glorying, spyer at virgins!
  • If that thou dared’st face me here out in the open with weapons,
  • Nothing then would avail thee thy bow and thy thick shot of arrows.
  • Now thou plumest thee vainly because of a graze of my footsole;
  • Reck I as were that stroke from a woman or some pettish infant.
  • Aye flies blunted the dart of the man that’s emasculate, noughtworth!
  • Otherwise hits, forth flying from me, and but strikes it the
  • slightest,
  • My keen shaft, and it numbers a man of the dead fallen straightway.
  • Torn, troth, then are the cheeks of the wife of that man fallen
  • slaughtered,
  • Orphans his babes, full surely he reddens the earth with his
  • blood-drops,
  • Rotting, round him the birds, more numerous they than the women.”
  • ILIAD, xiv, 283
  • HYPNOS ON IDA
  • THEY then to fountain-abundant Ida, mother of wild beasts,
  • Came, and they first left ocean to fare over mainland at Lektos,
  • Where underneath of their feet waved loftiest growths of the woodland.
  • There hung Hypnos fast, ere the vision of Zeus was observant,
  • Mounted upon a tall pine-tree, tallest of pines that on Ida
  • Lustily spring off soil for the shoot up aloft into aether.
  • There did he sit well-cloaked by the wide-branched pine for
  • concealment,
  • That loud bird, in his form like, that perched high up in the
  • mountains,
  • Chalkis is named by the Gods, but of mortals known as Kymindis.
  • ILIAD, xvii, 426
  • CLASH IN ARMS OF THE ACHAIANS AND TROJANS
  • NOT the sea-wave so bellows abroad when it bursts upon shingle,
  • Whipped from the sea’s deeps up by the terrible blast of the
  • Northwind;
  • Nay, nor is ever the roar of the fierce fire’s rush so arousing,
  • Down along mountain-glades, when it surges to kindle a woodland;
  • Nay, nor so tonant thunders the stress of the gale in the oak-trees’
  • Foliage-tresses high, when it rages to raveing its utmost;
  • As rose then stupendous the Trojan’s cry and Achaians’,
  • Dread upshouting as one when together they clashed in the conflict.
  • ILIAD, xvii, 426
  • THE HORSES OF ACHILLES
  • SO now the horses of Aiakides, off wide of the war-ground,
  • Wept, since first they were ware of their charioteer overthrown there,
  • Cast down low in the whirl of the dust under man-slaying Hector.
  • Sooth, meanwhile, then did Automedon, brave son of Diores,
  • Oft, on the one hand, urge them with flicks of the swift whip, and
  • oft, too,
  • Coax entreatingly, hurriedly; whiles did he angrily threaten.
  • Vainly, for these would not to the ships, to the Hellespont spacious,
  • Backward turn, nor be whipped to the battle among the Achaians.
  • Nay, as a pillar remains immovable, fixed on the tombstone,
  • Haply, of some dead man or it may be a woman there-under;
  • Even like hard stood they there attached to the glorious war-car,
  • Earthward bowed with their heads; and of them so lamenting incessant
  • Ran the hot teardrops downward on to the earth from their eyelids,
  • Mourning their charioteer; all their lustrous manes dusty-clotted,
  • Right side and left of the yoke-ring tossed, to the breadth of the
  • yoke-bow.
  • Now when the issue of Kronos beheld that sorrow, his head shook
  • Pitying them for their grief, these words then he spake in his bosom;
  • “Why, ye hapless, gave we to Peleus you, to a mortal
  • Master; ye that are ageless both, ye both of you deathless!
  • Was it that ye among men most wretched should come to have
  • heart-grief?
  • ’Tis most true, than the race of these men is there wretcheder nowhere
  • Aught over earth’s range found that is gifted with breath and has
  • movement.”
  • THE MARES OF THE CAMARGUE
  • FROM THE ‘MIRÈIO’ OF MISTRAL
  • A HUNDRED mares, all white! their manes
  • Like mace-reed of the marshy plains
  • Thick-tufted, wavy, free o’ the shears:
  • And when the fiery squadron rears
  • Bursting at speed, each mane appears
  • Even as the white scarf of a fay
  • Floating upon their necks along the heavens away.
  • O race of humankind, take shame!
  • For never yet a hand could tame,
  • Nor bitter spur that rips the flanks subdue
  • The mares of the Camargue. I have known,
  • By treason snared, some captives shown;
  • Expatriate from their native Rhone,
  • Led off, their saline pastures far from view:
  • And on a day, with prompt rebound,
  • They have flung their riders to the ground,
  • And at a single gallop, scouring free,
  • Wide-nostril’d to the wind, twice ten
  • Of long marsh-leagues devour’d, and then,
  • Back to the Vacarés again,
  • After ten years of slavery just to breathe salt sea
  • For of this savage race unbent,
  • The ocean is the element.
  • Of old escaped from Neptune’s car, full sure,
  • Still with the white foam fleck’d are they,
  • And when the sea puffs black from grey,
  • And ships part cables, loudly neigh
  • The stallions of Camargue, all joyful in the roar;
  • And keen as a whip they lash and crack
  • Their tails that drag the dust, and back
  • Scratch up the earth, and feel, entering their flesh, where he,
  • The God, drives deep his trident teeth,
  • Who in one horror, above, beneath,
  • Bids storm and watery deluge seethe,
  • And shatters to their depths the abysses of the sea.
  • _Cant._ iv.
  • ‘ATKINS’
  • YONDER’S the man with his life in his hand,
  • Legs on the march for whatever the land,
  • Or to the slaughter, or to the maiming,
  • Getting the dole of a dog for pay.
  • Laurels he clasps in the words ‘duty done,’
  • England his heart under every sun:—
  • Exquisite humour! that gives him a naming
  • Base to the ear as an ass’s bray.
  • THE VOYAGE OF THE ‘OPHIR’
  • MEN of our race, we send you one
  • Round whom Victoria’s holy name
  • Is halo from the sunken sun
  • Of her grand Summer’s day aflame.
  • The heart of your loved Motherland,
  • To them she loves as her own blood,
  • This Flower of Ocean bears in hand,
  • Assured of gift as good.
  • Forth for our Southern shores the fleet
  • Which crowns a nation’s wisdom steams,
  • That there may Briton Briton greet,
  • And stamp as fact Imperial dreams.
  • Across the globe, from sea to sea,
  • The long smoke-pennon trails above,
  • Writes over sky how wise will be
  • The Power that trusts to love.
  • A love that springs from heart and brain
  • In union gives for ripest fruit
  • The concord Kings and States in vain
  • Have sought, who played the lofty brute,
  • And fondly deeming they possessed,
  • On force relied, and found it break:
  • That truth once scored on Britain’s breast
  • Now keeps her mind awake.
  • Australian, Canadian,
  • To tone old veins with streams of youth,
  • Our trust be on the best in man
  • Henceforth, and we shall prove that truth.
  • Prove to a world of brows down-bent
  • That in the Britain thus endowed,
  • Imperial means beneficent,
  • And strength to service vowed.
  • THE CRISIS
  • SPIRIT of Russia, now has come
  • The day when thou canst not be dumb.
  • Around thee foams the torrent tide,
  • Above thee its fell fountain, Pride.
  • The senseless rock awaits thy word
  • To crumble; shall it be unheard?
  • Already, like a tempest-sun,
  • That shoots the flare and shuts to dun,
  • Thy land ’twixt flame and darkness heaves,
  • Showing the blade wherewith Fate cleaves,
  • If mortals in high courage fail
  • At the one breath before the gale.
  • Those rulers in all forms of lust,
  • Who trod thy children down to dust
  • On the red Sunday, know right well
  • What word for them thy voice would spell,
  • What quick perdition for them weave,
  • Did they in such a voice believe.
  • Not thine to raise the avenger’s shriek,
  • Nor turn to them a Tolstoi cheek;
  • Nor menace him, the waverer still,
  • Man of much heart and little will,
  • The criminal of his high seat,
  • Whose plea of Guiltless judges it.
  • For him thy voice shall bring to hand
  • Salvation, and to thy torn land,
  • Seen on the breakers. Now has come
  • The day when thou canst not be dumb,
  • Spirit of Russia:—those who bind
  • Thy limbs and iron-cap thy mind,
  • Take thee for quaking flesh, misdoubt
  • That thou art of the rabble rout
  • Which cries and flees, with whimpering lip,
  • From reckless gun and brutal whip;
  • But he who has at heart the deeds
  • Of thy heroic offspring reads
  • In them a soul; not given to shrink
  • From peril on the abyss’s brink;
  • With never dread of murderous power;
  • With view beyond the crimson hour;
  • Neither an instinct-driven might,
  • Nor visionary erudite;
  • A soul; that art thou. It remains
  • For thee to stay thy children’s veins,
  • The countertides of hate arrest,
  • Give to thy sons a breathing breast,
  • And Him resembling, in His sight,
  • Say to thy land, Let there be Light.
  • OCTOBER 21, 1905
  • THE hundred years have passed, and he
  • Whose name appeased a nation’s fears,
  • As with a hand laid over sea;
  • To thunder through the foeman’s ears
  • Defeat before his blast of fire;
  • Lives in the immortality
  • That poets dream and noblest souls desire.
  • Never did nation’s need evoke
  • Hero like him for aid, the while
  • A Continent was cannon-smoke
  • Or peace in slavery: this one Isle
  • Reflecting Nature: this one man
  • Her sea-hound and her mortal stroke,
  • With war-worn body aye in battle’s van.
  • And do we love him well, as well
  • As he his country, we may greet,
  • With hand on steel, our passing bell
  • Nigh on the swing, for prelude sweet
  • To the music heard when his last breath
  • Hung on its ebb beside the knell,
  • And VICTORY in his ear sang gracious Death.
  • Ah, day of glory! day of tears!
  • Day of a people bowed as one!
  • Behold across those hundred years
  • The lion flash of gun at gun:
  • Our bitter pride; our love bereaved;
  • What pall of cloud o’ercame our sun
  • That day, to bear his wreath, the end achieved.
  • Joy that no more with murder’s frown
  • The ancient rivals bark apart.
  • Now Nelson to brave France is shown
  • A hero after her own heart:
  • And he now scanning that quick race,
  • To whom through life his glove was thrown,
  • Would know a sister spirit to embrace.
  • THE CENTENARY OF GARIBALDI
  • WE who have seen Italia in the throes,
  • Half risen but to be hurled to ground, and now
  • Like a ripe field of wheat where once drove plough
  • All bounteous as she is fair, we think of those
  • Who blew the breath of life into her frame:
  • Cavour, Mazzini, Garibaldi: Three:
  • Her Brain, her Soul, her Sword; and set her free
  • From ruinous discords, with one lustrous aim.
  • That aim, albeit they were of minds diverse,
  • Conjoined them, not to strive without surcease;
  • For them could be no babblement of peace
  • While lay their country under Slavery’s curse.
  • The set of torn Italia’s glorious day
  • Was ever sunrise in each filial breast.
  • Of eagle beaks by righteousness unblest
  • They felt her pulsing body made the prey.
  • Wherefore they struck, and had to count their dead.
  • With bitter smile of resolution nerved
  • To try new issues, holding faith unswerved,
  • Promise they gathered from the rich blood shed.
  • In them Italia, visible to us then
  • As living, rose; for proof that huge brute Force
  • Has never being from celestial source,
  • And is the lord of cravens, not of men.
  • Now breaking up the crust of temporal strife,
  • Who reads their acts enshrined in History, sees
  • That Tyrants were the Revolutionaries,
  • The Rebels men heart-vowed to hallowed life.
  • Pure as the Archangel’s cleaving Darkness thro’,
  • The Sword he sees, the keen unwearied Sword,
  • A single blade against a circling horde,
  • And aye for Freedom and the trampled few.
  • The cry of Liberty from dungeon cell,
  • From exile, was his God’s command to smite,
  • As for a swim in sea he joined the fight,
  • With radiant face, full sure that he did well.
  • Behold a warrior dealing mortal strokes,
  • Whose nature was a child’s: amid his foes
  • A wary trickster: at the battle’s close,
  • No gentler friend this leopard dashed with fox.
  • Down the long roll of History will run
  • The story of these deeds, and speed his race
  • Beneath defeat more hotly to embrace
  • The noble cause and trust to another sun.
  • And lo, that sun is in Italia’s skies
  • This day, by grace of his good sword in part.
  • It beckons her to keep a warrior heart
  • For guard of beauty, all too sweet a prize.
  • Earth gave him: blessèd be the Earth that gave.
  • Earth’s Master crowned his honest work on earth:
  • Proudly Italia names his place of birth:
  • The bosom of Humanity his grave.
  • THE WILD ROSE
  • HIGH climbs June’s wild rose,
  • Her bush all blooms in a swarm;
  • And swift from the bud she blows,
  • In a day when the wooer is warm;
  • Frank to receive and give,
  • Her bosom is open to bee and sun:
  • Pride she has none,
  • Nor shame she knows;
  • Happy to live.
  • Unlike those of the garden nigh,
  • Her queenly sisters enthroned by art;
  • Loosening petals one by one
  • To the fiery Passion’s dart
  • Superbly shy.
  • For them in some glory of hair,
  • Or nest of the heaving mounds to lie,
  • Or path of the bride bestrew.
  • Ever are they the theme for song.
  • But nought of that is her share.
  • Hardly from wayfarers tramping along,
  • A glance they care not to renew.
  • And she at a word of the claims of kin
  • Shrinks to the level of roads and meads:
  • She is only a plain princess of the weeds,
  • As an outcast witless of sin:
  • Much disregarded, save by the few
  • Who love her, that has not a spot of deceit,
  • No promise of sweet beyond sweet,
  • Often descending to sour.
  • On any fair breast she would die in an hour.
  • Praises she scarce could bear,
  • Were any wild poet to praise.
  • Her aim is to rise into light and air.
  • One of the darlings of Earth, no more,
  • And little it seems in the dusty ways,
  • Unless to the grasses nodding beneath;
  • The bird clapping wings to soar,
  • The clouds of an evetide’s wreath.
  • THE CALL
  • UNDER what spell are we debased
  • By fears for our inviolate Isle,
  • Whose record is of dangers faced
  • And flung to heel with even smile?
  • Is it a vaster force, a subtler guile?
  • They say Exercitus designs
  • To match the famed Salsipotent
  • Where on her sceptre she reclines;
  • Awake: but were a slumber sent
  • By guilty gods, more fell his foul intent.
  • The subtler web, the vaster foe,
  • Well may we meet when drilled for deeds:
  • But in these days of wealth at flow,
  • A word of breezy warning breeds
  • The pained responses seen in lakeside reeds.
  • We fain would stand contemplative,
  • All innocent as meadow grass;
  • In human goodness fain believe,
  • Believe a cloud is formed to pass;
  • Its shadows chase with draughts of hippocras.
  • Others have gone; the way they went
  • Sweet sunny now, and safe our nest.
  • Humanity, enlightenment,
  • Against the warning hum protest:
  • Let the world hear that we know what is best.
  • So do the beatific speak;
  • Yet have they ears, and eyes as well;
  • And if not with a paler cheek,
  • They feel the shivers in them dwell,
  • That something of a dubious future tell.
  • For huge possessions render slack
  • The power we need to hold them fast;
  • Save when a quickened heart shall make
  • Our people one, to meet what blast
  • May blow from temporal heavens overcast.
  • Our people one! Nor they with strength
  • Dependent on a single arm:
  • Alert, and braced the whole land’s length,
  • Rejoicing in their manhood’s charm
  • For friend or foe; to succour, not to harm.
  • Has ever weakness won esteem?
  • Or counts it as a prized ally?
  • They who have read in History deem
  • It ranks among the slavish fry,
  • Whose claim to live justiciary Fates deny.
  • It can not be declared we are
  • A nation till from end to end
  • The land can show such front to war
  • As bids a crouching foe expend
  • His ire in air, and preferably be friend.
  • We dreading him, we do him wrong;
  • For fears discolour, fears invite.
  • Like him, our task is to be strong;
  • Unlike him, claiming not by might
  • To snatch an envied treasure as a right.
  • So may a stouter brotherhood
  • At home be signalled over sea
  • For righteous, and be understood,
  • Nay, welcomed, when ’tis shown that we
  • All duties have embraced in being free.
  • This Britain slumbering, she is rich;
  • Lies placid as a cradled child;
  • At times with an uneasy twitch,
  • That tells of dreams unduly wild.
  • Shall she be with a foreign drug defiled?
  • The grandeur of her deeds recall;
  • Look on her face so kindly fair:
  • This Britain! and were she to fall,
  • Mankind would breathe a harsher air,
  • The nations miss a light of leading rare.
  • ON COMO
  • A RAINLESS darkness drew o’er the lake
  • As we lay in our boat with oars unshipped.
  • It seemed neither cloud nor water awake,
  • And forth of the low black curtain slipped
  • Thunderless lightning. Scoff no more
  • At angels imagined in downward flight
  • For the daughters of earth as fabled of yore:
  • Here was beauty might well invite
  • Dark heavens to gleam with the fire of a sun
  • Resurgent; here the exchanged embrace
  • Worthy of heaven and earth made one.
  • And witness it, ye of the privileged space,
  • Said the flash; and the mountains, as from an abyss
  • For quivering seconds leaped up to attest
  • That given, received, renewed was the kiss;
  • The lips to lips and the breast to breast;
  • All in a glory of ecstasy, swift
  • As an eagle at prey, and pure as the prayer
  • Of an infant bidden joined hands uplift
  • To be guarded through darkness by spirits of air,
  • Ere setting the sails of sleep till day.
  • Slowly the low cloud swung, and far
  • It panted along its mirrored way;
  • Above loose threads one sanctioning star,
  • The wonder of what had been witnessed, sealed,
  • And with me still as in crystal glassed
  • Are the depths alight, the heavens revealed,
  • Where on to the Alps the muteness passed.
  • MILTON
  • DECEMBER 9, 1608: DECEMBER 9, 1908
  • WHAT splendour of imperial station man,
  • The Tree of Life, may reach when, rooted fast,
  • His branching stem points way to upper air
  • And skyward still aspires, we see in him
  • Who sang for us the Archangelical host,
  • Made Morning, by old Darkness urged to the abyss;
  • A voice that down three centuries onward rolls;
  • Onward will roll while lives our English tongue,
  • In the devout of music unsurpassed
  • Since Piety won Heaven’s ear on Israel’s harp.
  • The face of Earth, the soul of Earth, her charm,
  • Her dread austerity; the quavering fate
  • Of mortals with blind hope by passion swayed,
  • His mind embraced, the while on trodden soil,
  • Defender of the Commonwealth, he joined
  • Our temporal fray, whereof is vital fruit,
  • And, choosing armoury of the Scholar, stood
  • Beside his peers to raise the voice for Freedom:
  • Nor has fair Liberty a champion armed
  • To meet on heights or plains the Sophister
  • Throughout the ages, equal to this man,
  • Whose spirit breathed high Heaven, and drew thence
  • The ethereal sword to smite.
  • Were England sunk
  • Beneath the shifting tides, her heart, her brain,
  • The smile she wears, the faith she holds, her best,
  • Would live full-toned in the grand delivery
  • Of his cathedral speech: an utterance
  • Almost divine, and such as Hellespont,
  • Crashing its breakers under Ida’s frown,
  • Inspired: yet worthier he, whose instrument
  • Was by comparison the coarse reed-pipe;
  • Whereof have come the marvellous harmonies,
  • Which, with his lofty theme, of infinite range,
  • Abash, entrance, exalt.
  • We need him now,
  • This latest Age in repetition cries:
  • For Belial, the adroit, is in our midst;
  • Mammon, more swoln to squeeze the slavish sweat
  • From hopeless toil: and overshadowingly
  • (Aggrandized, monstrous in his grinning mask
  • Of hypocritical Peace,) inveterate Moloch
  • Remains the great example.
  • Homage to him
  • His debtor band, innumerable as waves
  • Running all golden from an eastern sun,
  • Joyfully render, in deep reverence
  • Subscribe, and as they speak their Milton’s name,
  • Rays of his glory on their foreheads bear.
  • IRELAND
  • FIRE in her ashes Ireland feels
  • And in her veins a glow of heat.
  • To her the lost old time, appeals
  • For resurrection, good to greet:
  • Not as a shape with spectral eyes,
  • But humanly maternal, young
  • In all that quickens pride, and wise
  • To speak the best her bards have sung.
  • You read her as a land distraught,
  • Where bitterest rebel passions seethe.
  • Look with a core of heart in thought,
  • For so is known the truth beneath.
  • She came to you a loathing bride,
  • And it has been no happy bed.
  • Believe in her as friend, allied
  • By bonds as close as those who wed.
  • Her speech is held for hatred’s cry;
  • Her silence tells of treason hid:
  • Were it her aim to burst the tie,
  • She sees what iron laws forbid.
  • Excess of heart obscures from view
  • A head as keen as yours to count.
  • Trust her, that she may prove her true
  • In links whereof is love the fount.
  • May she not call herself her own?
  • That is her cry, and thence her spits
  • Of fury, thence her graceless tone
  • At justice given in bits and bits.
  • The limbs once raw with gnawing chains
  • Will fret at silken when God’s beams
  • Of Freedom beckon o’er the plains
  • From mounts that show it more than dreams.
  • She, generous, craves your generous dole;
  • That will not rouse the crack of doom.
  • It ends the blundering past control
  • Simply to give her elbow-room.
  • Her offspring feels they are a race,
  • To be a nation is their claim;
  • Yet stronger bound in your embrace
  • Than when the tie was but a name.
  • A nation she, and formed to charm,
  • With heart for heart and hands all round.
  • No longer England’s broken arm,
  • Would England know where strength is found.
  • And strength to-day is England’s need;
  • To-morrow it may be for both
  • Salvation: heed the portents, heed
  • The warnings; free the mind from sloth.
  • Too long the pair have danced in mud,
  • With no advance from sun to sun.
  • Ah, what a bounding course of blood
  • Has England with an Ireland one!
  • Behold yon shadow cross the downs,
  • And off away to yeasty seas.
  • Lightly will fly old rancour’s frowns
  • When solid with high heart stand these.
  • THE YEARS HAD WORN THEIR SEASONS’ BELT
  • THE years had worn their seasons’ belt,
  • From bud to rosy prime,
  • Since Nellie by the larch-pole knelt
  • And helped the hop to climb.
  • Most diligent of teachers then,
  • But now with all to learn,
  • She breathed beyond a thought of men,
  • Though formed to make men burn.
  • She dwelt where ’twixt low-beaten thorns
  • Two mill-blades, like a snail,
  • Enormous, with inquiring horns,
  • Looked down on half the vale.
  • You know the grey of dew on grass
  • Ere with the young sun fired,
  • And you know well the thirst one has
  • For the coming and desired.
  • Quick in our ring she leapt, and gave
  • Her hand to left, to right.
  • No claim on her had any, save
  • To feed the joy of sight.
  • For man and maid a laughing word
  • She tossed, in notes as clear
  • As when the February bird
  • Sings out that Spring is near.
  • Of what befell behind that scone,
  • Let none who knows reveal.
  • In ballad days she might have been
  • A heroine rousing steel.
  • On us did she bestow the hour,
  • And fixed it firm in thought;
  • Her spirit like a meadow flower
  • That gives, and asks for nought.
  • She seemed to make the sunlight stay
  • And show her in its pride.
  • O she was fair as a beech in May
  • With the sun on the yonder side.
  • There was more life than breath can give,
  • In the looks in her fair form;
  • For little can we say we live
  • Until the heart is warm.
  • FRAGMENTS
  • OPEN horizons round,
  • O mounting mind, to scenes unsung,
  • Wherein shall walk a lusty Time:
  • Our Earth is young;
  • Of measure without bound;
  • Infinite are the heights to climb,
  • The depths to sound.
  • * * * * *
  • A WILDING little stubble flower
  • The sickle scorned which cut for wheat,
  • Such was our hope in that dark hour
  • When nought save uses held the street,
  • And daily pleasures, daily needs,
  • With barren vision, looked ahead.
  • And still the same result of seeds
  • Gave likeness ’twixt the live and dead.
  • * * * * *
  • FROM labours through the night, outworn,
  • Above the hills the front of morn
  • We see, whose eyes to heights are raised,
  • And the world’s wise may deem us crazed.
  • While yet her lord lies under seas,
  • She takes us as the wind the trees’
  • Delighted leafage; all in song
  • We mount to her, to her belong.
  • * * * * *
  • THIS love of nature, that allures to take
  • Irregularity for harmony
  • Of larger scope than our hard measures make,
  • Cherish it as thy school for when on thee
  • The ills of life descend.
  • IL Y A CENT ANS
  • THAT march of the funereal Past behold;
  • How Glory sat on Bondage for its throne;
  • How men, like dazzled insects, through the mould
  • Still worked their way, and bled to keep their own.
  • We know them, as they strove and wrought and yearned;
  • Their hopes, their fears; what page of Life they wist:
  • At whiles their vision upon us was turned,
  • Baffled by shapes limmed loosely on thick mist.
  • Beneath the fortress bulk of Power they bent
  • Blunt heads, adoring or in shackled hate,
  • All save the rebel hymned him; and it meant
  • A world submitting to incarnate Fate.
  • From this he drew fresh appetite for sway,
  • And of it fell: whereat was chorus raised,
  • How surely shall a mad ambition pay
  • Dues to Humanity, erewhile amazed.
  • ’Twas dreamed by some the deluge would ensue,
  • So trembling was the tension long constrained;
  • A spirit of faith was in the chosen few,
  • That steps to the millennium had been gained.
  • But mainly the rich business of the hour,
  • Their sight, made blind by urgency of blood,
  • Embraced; and facts, the passing sweet or sour,
  • To them were solid things that nought withstood.
  • Their facts are going headlong on the tides,
  • Like commas on a line of History’s page;
  • Nor that which once they took for Truth abides,
  • Save in the form of youth enlarged from age.
  • Meantime give ear to woodland notes around,
  • Look on our Earth full-breasted to our sun:
  • So was it when their poets heard the sound,
  • Beheld the scene: in them our days are one.
  • What figures will be shown the century hence?
  • What lands intact? We do but know that Power
  • From piety divorced, though seen immense,
  • Shall sink on envy of the humblest flower.
  • Our cry for cradled Peace, while men are still
  • The three-parts brute which smothers the divine,
  • Heaven answers: Guard it with forethoughtful will,
  • Or buy it; all your gains from War resign.
  • A land, not indefensibly alarmed,
  • May see, unwarned by hint of friendly gods,
  • Between a hermit crab at all points armed,
  • And one without a shell, decisive odds.
  • YOUTH IN AGE
  • ONCE I was part of the music I heard
  • On the boughs or sweet between earth and sky,
  • For joy of the beating of wings on high
  • My heart shot into the breast of the bird.
  • I hear it now and I see it fly,
  • And a life in wrinkles again is stirred,
  • My heart shoots into the breast of the bird,
  • As it will for sheer love till the last long sigh.
  • EPITAPHS
  • TO A FRIEND LOST
  • (TOM TAYLOR)
  • WHEN I remember, friend, whom lost I call,
  • Because a man beloved is taken hence,
  • The tender humour and the fire of sense
  • In your good eyes; how full of heart for all,
  • And chiefly for the weaker by the wall,
  • You bore that lamp of sane benevolence;
  • Then see I round you Death his shadows dense
  • Divide, and at your feet his emblems fall.
  • For surely are you one with the white host,
  • Spirits, whose memory is our vital air,
  • Through the great love of Earth they had: lo, these,
  • Like beams that throw the path on tossing seas,
  • Can bid us feel we keep them in the ghost,
  • Partakers of a strife they joyed to share.
  • M. M.
  • WHO call her Mother and who calls her Wife
  • Look on her grave and see not Death but Life.
  • THE LADY C. M.
  • TO them that knew her, there is vital flame
  • In these the simple letters of her name.
  • To them that knew her not, be it but said,
  • So strong a spirit is not of the dead.
  • ON THE TOMBSTONE OF
  • JAMES CHRISTOPHER WILSON
  • (d. APRIL 11, 1884)
  • IN HEADLEY CHURCHYARD, SURREY
  • THOU our beloved and light of Earth hast crossed
  • The sea of darkness to the yonder shore.
  • There dost thou shine a light transferred, not lost,
  • Through love to kindle in our souls the more.
  • GORDON OF KHARTOUM
  • OF men he would have raised to light he fell:
  • In soul he conquered with those nerveless hands.
  • His country’s pride and her abasement knell
  • The Man of England circled by the sands.
  • J. C. M.
  • A FOUNTAIN of our sweetest, quick to spring
  • In fellowship abounding, here subsides:
  • And never passage of a cloud on wing
  • To gladden blue forgets him; near he hides.
  • THE EMPEROR FREDERICK OF OUR TIME
  • WITH Alfred and St. Louis he doth win
  • Grander than crowned head’s mortuary dome:
  • His gentle heroic manhood enters in
  • The ever-flowering common heart for home.
  • ISLET THE DACHS
  • OUR Islet out of Helgoland, dismissed
  • From his quaint tenement, quits hates and loves.
  • There lived with us a wagging humourist
  • In that hound’s arch dwarf-legged on boxing-gloves.
  • ON HEARING THE NEWS FROM VENICE
  • (THE DEATH OF ROBERT BROWNING)
  • NOW dumb is he who waked the world to speak,
  • And voiceless hangs the world beside his bier.
  • Our words are sobs, our cry of praise a tear:
  • We are the smitten mortal, we the weak.
  • We see a spirit on Earth’s loftiest peak
  • Shine, and wing hence the way he makes more clear:
  • See a great Tree of Life that never sere
  • Dropped leaf for aught that age or storms might wreak.
  • Such ending is not Death: such living shows
  • What wide illumination brightness sheds
  • From one big heart, to conquer man’s old foes:
  • The coward, and the tyrant, and the force
  • Of all those weedy monsters raising heads
  • When Song is murk from springs of turbid source.
  • _December_ 13, 1889.
  • HAWARDEN
  • WHEN comes the lighted day for men to read
  • Life’s meaning, with the work before their hands
  • Till this good gift of breath from debt is freed,
  • Earth will not hear her children’s wailful bands
  • Deplore the chieftain fall’n in sob and dirge;
  • Nor they look where is darkness, but on high.
  • The sun that dropped down our horizon’s verge
  • Illumes his labours through the travelled sky,
  • Now seen in sum, most glorious; and ’tis known
  • By what our warrior wrought we hold him fast.
  • A splendid image built of man has flown;
  • His deeds inspired of God outstep a Past.
  • Ours the great privilege to have had one
  • Among us who celestial tasks has done.
  • AT THE FUNERAL
  • FEBRUARY 2, 1901
  • HER sacred body bear: the tenement
  • Of that strong soul now ranked with God’s Elect
  • Her heart upon her people’s heart she spent;
  • Hence is she Royalty’s lodestar to direct.
  • The peace is hers, of whom all lands have praised
  • Majestic virtues ere her day unseen.
  • Aloft the name of Womanhood she raised,
  • And gave new readings to the Title, Queen.
  • ANGELA BURDETT-COUTTS
  • LONG with us, now she leaves us; she has rest
  • Beneath our sacred sod:
  • A woman vowed to Good, whom all attest,
  • The daylight gift of God.
  • THE YEAR’S SHEDDINGS
  • THE varied colours are a fitful heap:
  • They pass in constant service though they sleep;
  • The self gone out of them, therewith the pain:
  • Read that, who still to spell our earth remain.
  • FOOTNOTES
  • {140} Written in December 1870, printed in the ‘Fortnightly Review,’ and
  • published in the volume ‘Ballads and Poems.’
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