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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of Goblin Market, The Prince's Progress, and
  • Other Poems, by Christina Rossetti
  • This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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  • Title: Goblin Market, The Prince's Progress, and Other Poems
  • Author: Christina Rossetti
  • Release Date: October 26, 2005 [EBook #16950]
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GOBLIN MARKET ***
  • Produced by Andrew Sly.
  • The World's Classics
  • CLXXXIV
  • Goblin Market
  • The Prince's Progress
  • And other poems
  • By
  • Christina Rossetti
  • Humphrey Milford
  • Oxford University Press
  • London, Edinburgh, Glasgow
  • New York, Toronto, Melbourne & Bombay
  • Christina Georgina Rossetti
  • Born, 38 Charlotte Street, Portland Place, London, December 5, 1830
  • Died, 30 Torrington Square, London, December 29, 1894
  • 'Goblin Market and other Poems' was first published in 1862,
  • 'The Prince's Progress and other Poems' was first published in 1866.
  • In 'The World's Classics' the contents of these two books, together
  • with other poems, were first published in one volume in 1913.
  • To
  • MY MOTHER
  • In all reverence and love
  • I inscribe this book
  • CONTENTS
  • GOBLIN MARKET, AND OTHER POEMS, 1862
  • Goblin Market
  • In the Round Tower at Jhansi, June 8, 1857
  • Dream Land
  • At Home
  • A Triad
  • Love from the North
  • Winter Rain
  • Cousin Kate
  • Noble Sisters
  • Spring
  • The Lambs of Grasmere, 1860
  • A Birthday
  • Remember
  • After Death
  • An End
  • My Dream
  • Song ('Oh roses for the flush of youth')
  • The Hour and the Ghost
  • A Summer Wish
  • An Apple Gathering
  • Song ('Two doves upon the selfsame branch')
  • Maude Clare
  • Echo
  • My Secret
  • Another Spring
  • A Peal of Bells
  • Fata Morgana
  • 'No, Thank you, John'
  • May
  • A Pause of Thought
  • Twilight Calm
  • Wife to Husband
  • Three Seasons
  • Mirage
  • Shut out
  • Sound Sleep
  • Song ('She sat and sang alway')
  • Song ('When I am dead, my dearest')
  • Dead before Death
  • Bitter for Sweet
  • Sister Maude
  • Rest
  • The First Spring Day
  • The Convent Threshold
  • Up-hill
  • DEVOTIONAL PIECES
  • 'The Love of Christ which passeth Knowledge'
  • 'A Bruised Reed shall He not Break'
  • A Better Resurrection
  • Advent
  • The Three Enemies
  • The One Certainty
  • Christian and Jew
  • Sweet Death
  • Symbols
  • 'Consider the Lilies of the Field'
  • The World
  • A Testimony
  • Sleep at Sea
  • From House to Home
  • Old and New Year Ditties: No. I
  • No. II
  • No. III
  • Amen
  • THE PRINCE'S PROGRESS, AND OTHER POEMS, 1866
  • The Prince's Progress
  • Maiden-Song
  • Jessie Cameron
  • Spring Quiet
  • The Poor Ghost
  • A Portrait
  • Dream-Love
  • Twice
  • Songs in a Cornfield
  • A Year's Windfalls
  • The Queen of Hearts
  • One Day
  • A Bird's-Eye View
  • Light Love
  • A Dream
  • A Ring Posy
  • Beauty is Vain
  • Lady Maggie
  • What would I give?
  • The Bourne
  • Summer
  • Autumn
  • The Ghost's Petition
  • Memory
  • A Royal Princess
  • Shall I Forget?
  • Vanity of Vanities
  • L. E. L.
  • Life and Death
  • Bird or Beast?
  • Eve
  • Grown and Flown
  • A Farm Walk
  • Somewhere or Other
  • A Chill
  • Child's Talk in April
  • Gone for Ever
  • Under the Rose
  • DEVOTIONAL PIECES
  • Despised and Rejected
  • Long Barren
  • If only
  • Dost thou not Care?
  • Weary in Well-doing
  • Martyrs' Song
  • After this the Judgement
  • Good Friday
  • The Lowest Place
  • MISCELLANEOUS POEMS, 1848-69
  • Death's Chill Between
  • Heart's Chill Between
  • Repining
  • Sit Down in the Lowest Room
  • My Friend
  • Last Night
  • Consider
  • Helen Grey
  • 'By the Waters of Babylon'
  • Seasons
  • Mother Country
  • A Smile and a Sigh
  • Dead Hope
  • Autumn Violets
  • 'They Desire a Better Country'
  • The Offering of the New Law
  • Conference between Christ, the Saints, and the Soul
  • 'Come unto Me'
  • 'Jesus, do I Love Thee?'
  • 'I know you not'
  • 'Before the Paling of the Stars'
  • Easter Even
  • Paradise: in a Dream
  • Within the Veil
  • Paradise: in a Symbol
  • Amor Mundi
  • Who shall deliver Me?
  • If
  • Twilight Night
  • GOBLIN MARKET, AND OTHER POEMS, 1862
  • GOBLIN MARKET
  • Morning and evening
  • Maids heard the goblins cry:
  • 'Come buy our orchard fruits,
  • Come buy, come buy:
  • Apples and quinces,
  • Lemons and oranges,
  • Plump unpecked cherries,
  • Melons and raspberries,
  • Bloom-down-cheeked peaches,
  • Swart-headed mulberries, 10
  • Wild free-born cranberries,
  • Crab-apples, dewberries,
  • Pine-apples, blackberries,
  • Apricots, strawberries;--
  • All ripe together
  • In summer weather,--
  • Morns that pass by,
  • Fair eves that fly;
  • Come buy, come buy:
  • Our grapes fresh from the vine, 20
  • Pomegranates full and fine,
  • Dates and sharp bullaces,
  • Rare pears and greengages,
  • Damsons and bilberries,
  • Taste them and try:
  • Currants and gooseberries,
  • Bright-fire-like barberries,
  • Figs to fill your mouth,
  • Citrons from the South,
  • Sweet to tongue and sound to eye; 30
  • Come buy, come buy.'
  • Evening by evening
  • Among the brookside rushes,
  • Laura bowed her head to hear,
  • Lizzie veiled her blushes:
  • Crouching close together
  • In the cooling weather,
  • With clasping arms and cautioning lips,
  • With tingling cheeks and finger tips.
  • 'Lie close,' Laura said, 40
  • Pricking up her golden head:
  • 'We must not look at goblin men,
  • We must not buy their fruits:
  • Who knows upon what soil they fed
  • Their hungry thirsty roots?'
  • 'Come buy,' call the goblins
  • Hobbling down the glen.
  • 'Oh,' cried Lizzie, 'Laura, Laura,
  • You should not peep at goblin men.'
  • Lizzie covered up her eyes, 50
  • Covered close lest they should look;
  • Laura reared her glossy head,
  • And whispered like the restless brook:
  • 'Look, Lizzie, look, Lizzie,
  • Down the glen tramp little men.
  • One hauls a basket,
  • One bears a plate,
  • One lugs a golden dish
  • Of many pounds weight.
  • How fair the vine must grow 60
  • Whose grapes are so luscious;
  • How warm the wind must blow
  • Through those fruit bushes.'
  • 'No,' said Lizzie, 'No, no, no;
  • Their offers should not charm us,
  • Their evil gifts would harm us.'
  • She thrust a dimpled finger
  • In each ear, shut eyes and ran:
  • Curious Laura chose to linger
  • Wondering at each merchant man. 70
  • One had a cat's face,
  • One whisked a tail,
  • One tramped at a rat's pace,
  • One crawled like a snail,
  • One like a wombat prowled obtuse and furry,
  • One like a ratel tumbled hurry skurry.
  • She heard a voice like voice of doves
  • Cooing all together:
  • They sounded kind and full of loves
  • In the pleasant weather. 80
  • Laura stretched her gleaming neck
  • Like a rush-imbedded swan,
  • Like a lily from the beck,
  • Like a moonlit poplar branch,
  • Like a vessel at the launch
  • When its last restraint is gone.
  • Backwards up the mossy glen
  • Turned and trooped the goblin men,
  • With their shrill repeated cry,
  • 'Come buy, come buy.' 90
  • When they reached where Laura was
  • They stood stock still upon the moss,
  • Leering at each other,
  • Brother with queer brother;
  • Signalling each other,
  • Brother with sly brother.
  • One set his basket down,
  • One reared his plate;
  • One began to weave a crown
  • Of tendrils, leaves, and rough nuts brown 100
  • (Men sell not such in any town);
  • One heaved the golden weight
  • Of dish and fruit to offer her:
  • 'Come buy, come buy,' was still their cry.
  • Laura stared but did not stir,
  • Longed but had no money:
  • The whisk-tailed merchant bade her taste
  • In tones as smooth as honey,
  • The cat-faced purr'd,
  • The rat-faced spoke a word 110
  • Of welcome, and the snail-paced even was heard;
  • One parrot-voiced and jolly
  • Cried 'Pretty Goblin' still for 'Pretty Polly;'--
  • One whistled like a bird.
  • But sweet-tooth Laura spoke in haste:
  • 'Good folk, I have no coin;
  • To take were to purloin:
  • I have no copper in my purse,
  • I have no silver either,
  • And all my gold is on the furze 120
  • That shakes in windy weather
  • Above the rusty heather.'
  • 'You have much gold upon your head,'
  • They answered all together:
  • 'Buy from us with a golden curl.'
  • She clipped a precious golden lock,
  • She dropped a tear more rare than pearl,
  • Then sucked their fruit globes fair or red:
  • Sweeter than honey from the rock,
  • Stronger than man-rejoicing wine, 130
  • Clearer than water flowed that juice;
  • She never tasted such before,
  • How should it cloy with length of use?
  • She sucked and sucked and sucked the more
  • Fruits which that unknown orchard bore;
  • She sucked until her lips were sore;
  • Then flung the emptied rinds away
  • But gathered up one kernel stone,
  • And knew not was it night or day
  • As she turned home alone. 140
  • Lizzie met her at the gate
  • Full of wise upbraidings:
  • 'Dear, you should not stay so late,
  • Twilight is not good for maidens;
  • Should not loiter in the glen
  • In the haunts of goblin men.
  • Do you not remember Jeanie,
  • How she met them in the moonlight,
  • Took their gifts both choice and many,
  • Ate their fruits and wore their flowers 150
  • Plucked from bowers
  • Where summer ripens at all hours?
  • But ever in the noonlight
  • She pined and pined away;
  • Sought them by night and day,
  • Found them no more, but dwindled and grew grey;
  • Then fell with the first snow,
  • While to this day no grass will grow
  • Where she lies low:
  • I planted daisies there a year ago 160
  • That never blow.
  • You should not loiter so.'
  • 'Nay, hush,' said Laura:
  • 'Nay, hush, my sister:
  • I ate and ate my fill,
  • Yet my mouth waters still;
  • To-morrow night I will
  • Buy more:' and kissed her:
  • 'Have done with sorrow;
  • I'll bring you plums to-morrow 170
  • Fresh on their mother twigs,
  • Cherries worth getting;
  • You cannot think what figs
  • My teeth have met in,
  • What melons icy-cold
  • Piled on a dish of gold
  • Too huge for me to hold,
  • What peaches with a velvet nap,
  • Pellucid grapes without one seed:
  • Odorous indeed must be the mead 180
  • Whereon they grow, and pure the wave they drink
  • With lilies at the brink,
  • And sugar-sweet their sap.'
  • Golden head by golden head,
  • Like two pigeons in one nest
  • Folded in each other's wings,
  • They lay down in their curtained bed:
  • Like two blossoms on one stem,
  • Like two flakes of new-fall'n snow,
  • Like two wands of ivory 190
  • Tipped with gold for awful kings.
  • Moon and stars gazed in at them,
  • Wind sang to them lullaby,
  • Lumbering owls forbore to fly,
  • Not a bat flapped to and fro
  • Round their rest:
  • Cheek to cheek and breast to breast
  • Locked together in one nest.
  • Early in the morning
  • When the first cock crowed his warning, 200
  • Neat like bees, as sweet and busy,
  • Laura rose with Lizzie:
  • Fetched in honey, milked the cows,
  • Aired and set to rights the house,
  • Kneaded cakes of whitest wheat,
  • Cakes for dainty mouths to eat,
  • Next churned butter, whipped up cream,
  • Fed their poultry, sat and sewed;
  • Talked as modest maidens should:
  • Lizzie with an open heart, 210
  • Laura in an absent dream,
  • One content, one sick in part;
  • One warbling for the mere bright day's delight,
  • One longing for the night.
  • At length slow evening came:
  • They went with pitchers to the reedy brook;
  • Lizzie most placid in her look,
  • Laura most like a leaping flame.
  • They drew the gurgling water from its deep;
  • Lizzie plucked purple and rich golden flags, 220
  • Then turning homeward said: 'The sunset flushes
  • Those furthest loftiest crags;
  • Come, Laura, not another maiden lags,
  • No wilful squirrel wags,
  • The beasts and birds are fast asleep.'
  • But Laura loitered still among the rushes
  • And said the bank was steep.
  • And said the hour was early still
  • The dew not fall'n, the wind not chill:
  • Listening ever, but not catching 230
  • The customary cry,
  • 'Come buy, come buy,'
  • With its iterated jingle
  • Of sugar-baited words:
  • Not for all her watching
  • Once discerning even one goblin
  • Racing, whisking, tumbling, hobbling;
  • Let alone the herds
  • That used to tramp along the glen,
  • In groups or single, 240
  • Of brisk fruit-merchant men.
  • Till Lizzie urged, 'O Laura, come;
  • I hear the fruit-call but I dare not look:
  • You should not loiter longer at this brook:
  • Come with me home.
  • The stars rise, the moon bends her arc,
  • Each glowworm winks her spark,
  • Let us get home before the night grows dark:
  • For clouds may gather
  • Though this is summer weather, 250
  • Put out the lights and drench us through;
  • Then if we lost our way what should we do?'
  • Laura turned cold as stone
  • To find her sister heard that cry alone,
  • That goblin cry,
  • 'Come buy our fruits, come buy.'
  • Must she then buy no more such dainty fruit?
  • Must she no more such succous pasture find,
  • Gone deaf and blind?
  • Her tree of life drooped from the root: 260
  • She said not one word in her heart's sore ache;
  • But peering thro' the dimness, nought discerning,
  • Trudged home, her pitcher dripping all the way;
  • So crept to bed, and lay
  • Silent till Lizzie slept;
  • Then sat up in a passionate yearning,
  • And gnashed her teeth for baulked desire, and wept
  • As if her heart would break.
  • Day after day, night after night,
  • Laura kept watch in vain 270
  • In sullen silence of exceeding pain.
  • She never caught again the goblin cry:
  • 'Come buy, come buy;'--
  • She never spied the goblin men
  • Hawking their fruits along the glen:
  • But when the noon waxed bright
  • Her hair grew thin and grey;
  • She dwindled, as the fair full moon doth turn
  • To swift decay and burn
  • Her fire away. 280
  • One day remembering her kernel-stone
  • She set it by a wall that faced the south;
  • Dewed it with tears, hoped for a root,
  • Watched for a waxing shoot,
  • But there came none;
  • It never saw the sun,
  • It never felt the trickling moisture run:
  • While with sunk eyes and faded mouth
  • She dreamed of melons, as a traveller sees
  • False waves in desert drouth 290
  • With shade of leaf-crowned trees,
  • And burns the thirstier in the sandful breeze.
  • She no more swept the house,
  • Tended the fowls or cows,
  • Fetched honey, kneaded cakes of wheat,
  • Brought water from the brook:
  • But sat down listless in the chimney-nook
  • And would not eat.
  • Tender Lizzie could not bear
  • To watch her sister's cankerous care 300
  • Yet not to share.
  • She night and morning
  • Caught the goblins' cry:
  • 'Come buy our orchard fruits,
  • Come buy, come buy:'--
  • Beside the brook, along the glen,
  • She heard the tramp of goblin men,
  • The voice and stir
  • Poor Laura could not hear;
  • Longed to buy fruit to comfort her, 310
  • But feared to pay too dear.
  • She thought of Jeanie in her grave,
  • Who should have been a bride;
  • But who for joys brides hope to have
  • Fell sick and died
  • In her gay prime,
  • In earliest Winter time
  • With the first glazing rime,
  • With the first snow-fall of crisp Winter time.
  • Till Laura dwindling 320
  • Seemed knocking at Death's door:
  • Then Lizzie weighed no more
  • Better and worse;
  • But put a silver penny in her purse,
  • Kissed Laura, crossed the heath with clumps of furze
  • At twilight, halted by the brook:
  • And for the first time in her life
  • Began to listen and look.
  • Laughed every goblin
  • When they spied her peeping: 330
  • Came towards her hobbling,
  • Flying, running, leaping,
  • Puffing and blowing,
  • Chuckling, clapping, crowing,
  • Clucking and gobbling,
  • Mopping and mowing,
  • Full of airs and graces,
  • Pulling wry faces,
  • Demure grimaces,
  • Cat-like and rat-like, 340
  • Ratel- and wombat-like,
  • Snail-paced in a hurry,
  • Parrot-voiced and whistler,
  • Helter skelter, hurry skurry,
  • Chattering like magpies,
  • Fluttering like pigeons,
  • Gliding like fishes,--
  • Hugged her and kissed her:
  • Squeezed and caressed her:
  • Stretched up their dishes, 350
  • Panniers, and plates:
  • 'Look at our apples
  • Russet and dun,
  • Bob at our cherries,
  • Bite at our peaches,
  • Citrons and dates,
  • Grapes for the asking,
  • Pears red with basking
  • Out in the sun,
  • Plums on their twigs; 360
  • Pluck them and suck them,
  • Pomegranates, figs.'--
  • 'Good folk,' said Lizzie,
  • Mindful of Jeanie:
  • 'Give me much and many:'--
  • Held out her apron,
  • Tossed them her penny.
  • 'Nay, take a seat with us,
  • Honour and eat with us,'
  • They answered grinning: 370
  • 'Our feast is but beginning.
  • Night yet is early,
  • Warm and dew-pearly,
  • Wakeful and starry:
  • Such fruits as these
  • No man can carry;
  • Half their bloom would fly,
  • Half their dew would dry,
  • Half their flavour would pass by.
  • Sit down and feast with us, 380
  • Be welcome guest with us,
  • Cheer you and rest with us.'--
  • 'Thank you,' said Lizzie: 'But one waits
  • At home alone for me:
  • So without further parleying,
  • If you will not sell me any
  • Of your fruits though much and many,
  • Give me back my silver penny
  • I tossed you for a fee.'--
  • They began to scratch their pates, 390
  • No longer wagging, purring,
  • But visibly demurring,
  • Grunting and snarling.
  • One called her proud,
  • Cross-grained, uncivil;
  • Their tones waxed loud,
  • Their looks were evil.
  • Lashing their tails
  • They trod and hustled her,
  • Elbowed and jostled her, 400
  • Clawed with their nails,
  • Barking, mewing, hissing, mocking,
  • Tore her gown and soiled her stocking,
  • Twitched her hair out by the roots,
  • Stamped upon her tender feet,
  • Held her hands and squeezed their fruits
  • Against her mouth to make her eat.
  • White and golden Lizzie stood,
  • Like a lily in a flood,--
  • Like a rock of blue-veined stone 410
  • Lashed by tides obstreperously,--
  • Like a beacon left alone
  • In a hoary roaring sea,
  • Sending up a golden fire,--
  • Like a fruit-crowned orange-tree
  • White with blossoms honey-sweet
  • Sore beset by wasp and bee,--
  • Like a royal virgin town
  • Topped with gilded dome and spire
  • Close beleaguered by a fleet 420
  • Mad to tug her standard down.
  • One may lead a horse to water,
  • Twenty cannot make him drink.
  • Though the goblins cuffed and caught her,
  • Coaxed and fought her,
  • Bullied and besought her,
  • Scratched her, pinched her black as ink,
  • Kicked and knocked her,
  • Mauled and mocked her,
  • Lizzie uttered not a word; 430
  • Would not open lip from lip
  • Lest they should cram a mouthful in:
  • But laughed in heart to feel the drip
  • Of juice that syrupped all her face,
  • And lodged in dimples of her chin,
  • And streaked her neck which quaked like curd.
  • At last the evil people,
  • Worn out by her resistance,
  • Flung back her penny, kicked their fruit
  • Along whichever road they took, 440
  • Not leaving root or stone or shoot;
  • Some writhed into the ground,
  • Some dived into the brook
  • With ring and ripple,
  • Some scudded on the gale without a sound,
  • Some vanished in the distance.
  • In a smart, ache, tingle,
  • Lizzie went her way;
  • Knew not was it night or day;
  • Sprang up the bank, tore thro' the furze, 450
  • Threaded copse and dingle,
  • And heard her penny jingle
  • Bouncing in her purse,--
  • Its bounce was music to her ear.
  • She ran and ran
  • As if she feared some goblin man
  • Dogged her with gibe or curse
  • Or something worse:
  • But not one goblin skurried after,
  • Nor was she pricked by fear; 460
  • The kind heart made her windy-paced
  • That urged her home quite out of breath with haste
  • And inward laughter.
  • She cried 'Laura,' up the garden,
  • 'Did you miss me?
  • Come and kiss me.
  • Never mind my bruises,
  • Hug me, kiss me, suck my juices
  • Squeezed from goblin fruits for you,
  • Goblin pulp and goblin dew. 470
  • Eat me, drink me, love me;
  • Laura, make much of me:
  • For your sake I have braved the glen
  • And had to do with goblin merchant men.'
  • Laura started from her chair,
  • Flung her arms up in the air,
  • Clutched her hair:
  • 'Lizzie, Lizzie, have you tasted
  • For my sake the fruit forbidden?
  • Must your light like mine be hidden, 480
  • Your young life like mine be wasted,
  • Undone in mine undoing,
  • And ruined in my ruin,
  • Thirsty, cankered, goblin-ridden?'--
  • She clung about her sister,
  • Kissed and kissed and kissed her:
  • Tears once again
  • Refreshed her shrunken eyes,
  • Dropping like rain
  • After long sultry drouth; 490
  • Shaking with aguish fear, and pain,
  • She kissed and kissed her with a hungry mouth.
  • Her lips began to scorch,
  • That juice was wormwood to her tongue,
  • She loathed the feast:
  • Writhing as one possessed she leaped and sung,
  • Rent all her robe, and wrung
  • Her hands in lamentable haste,
  • And beat her breast.
  • Her locks streamed like the torch 500
  • Borne by a racer at full speed,
  • Or like the mane of horses in their flight,
  • Or like an eagle when she stems the light
  • Straight toward the sun,
  • Or like a caged thing freed,
  • Or like a flying flag when armies run.
  • Swift fire spread through her veins, knocked at her heart,
  • Met the fire smouldering there
  • And overbore its lesser flame;
  • She gorged on bitterness without a name: 510
  • Ah! fool, to choose such part
  • Of soul-consuming care!
  • Sense failed in the mortal strife:
  • Like the watch-tower of a town
  • Which an earthquake shatters down,
  • Like a lightning-stricken mast,
  • Like a wind-uprooted tree
  • Spun about,
  • Like a foam-topped waterspout
  • Cast down headlong in the sea, 520
  • She fell at last;
  • Pleasure past and anguish past,
  • Is it death or is it life?
  • Life out of death.
  • That night long Lizzie watched by her,
  • Counted her pulse's flagging stir,
  • Felt for her breath,
  • Held water to her lips, and cooled her face
  • With tears and fanning leaves:
  • But when the first birds chirped about their eaves, 530
  • And early reapers plodded to the place
  • Of golden sheaves,
  • And dew-wet grass
  • Bowed in the morning winds so brisk to pass,
  • And new buds with new day
  • Opened of cup-like lilies on the stream,
  • Laura awoke as from a dream,
  • Laughed in the innocent old way,
  • Hugged Lizzie but not twice or thrice;
  • Her gleaming locks showed not one thread of grey, 540
  • Her breath was sweet as May
  • And light danced in her eyes.
  • Days, weeks, months, years
  • Afterwards, when both were wives
  • With children of their own;
  • Their mother-hearts beset with fears,
  • Their lives bound up in tender lives;
  • Laura would call the little ones
  • And tell them of her early prime,
  • Those pleasant days long gone 550
  • Of not-returning time:
  • Would talk about the haunted glen,
  • The wicked, quaint fruit-merchant men,
  • Their fruits like honey to the throat
  • But poison in the blood;
  • (Men sell not such in any town:)
  • Would tell them how her sister stood
  • In deadly peril to do her good,
  • And win the fiery antidote:
  • Then joining hands to little hands 560
  • Would bid them cling together,
  • 'For there is no friend like a sister
  • In calm or stormy weather;
  • To cheer one on the tedious way,
  • To fetch one if one goes astray,
  • To lift one if one totters down,
  • To strengthen whilst one stands.'
  • IN THE ROUND TOWER AT JHANSI
  • June 8, 1857
  • A hundred, a thousand to one; even so;
  • Not a hope in the world remained:
  • The swarming howling wretches below
  • Gained and gained and gained.
  • Skene looked at his pale young wife:--
  • 'Is the time come?'--'The time is come!'--
  • Young, strong, and so full of life:
  • The agony struck them dumb.
  • Close his arm about her now,
  • Close her cheek to his, 10
  • Close the pistol to her brow--
  • God forgive them this!
  • 'Will it hurt much?'--'No, mine own:
  • I wish I could bear the pang for both.'
  • 'I wish I could bear the pang alone:
  • Courage, dear, I am not loth.'
  • Kiss and kiss: 'It is not pain
  • Thus to kiss and die.
  • One kiss more.'--'And yet one again.'--
  • 'Good-bye.'--'Good-bye.' 20
  • DREAM LAND
  • Where sunless rivers weep
  • Their waves into the deep,
  • She sleeps a charmèd sleep:
  • Awake her not.
  • Led by a single star,
  • She came from very far
  • To seek where shadows are
  • Her pleasant lot.
  • She left the rosy morn,
  • She left the fields of corn, 10
  • For twilight cold and lorn
  • And water springs.
  • Through sleep, as through a veil,
  • She sees the sky look pale,
  • And hears the nightingale
  • That sadly sings.
  • Rest, rest, a perfect rest
  • Shed over brow and breast;
  • Her face is toward the west,
  • The purple land. 20
  • She cannot see the grain
  • Ripening on hill and plain;
  • She cannot feel the rain
  • Upon her hand.
  • Rest, rest, for evermore
  • Upon a mossy shore;
  • Rest, rest at the heart's core
  • Till time shall cease:
  • Sleep that no pain shall wake;
  • Night that no morn shall break 30
  • Till joy shall overtake
  • Her perfect peace.
  • AT HOME
  • When I was dead, my spirit turned
  • To seek the much-frequented house:
  • I passed the door, and saw my friends
  • Feasting beneath green orange boughs;
  • From hand to hand they pushed the wine,
  • They sucked the pulp of plum and peach;
  • They sang, they jested, and they laughed,
  • For each was loved of each.
  • I listened to their honest chat:
  • Said one: 'To-morrow we shall be 10
  • Plod plod along the featureless sands,
  • And coasting miles and miles of sea.'
  • Said one: 'Before the turn of tide
  • We will achieve the eyrie-seat.'
  • Said one: 'To-morrow shall be like
  • To-day, but much more sweet.'
  • 'To-morrow,' said they, strong with hope,
  • And dwelt upon the pleasant way:
  • 'To-morrow,' cried they, one and all,
  • While no one spoke of yesterday. 20
  • Their life stood full at blessed noon;
  • I, only I, had passed away:
  • 'To-morrow and to-day,' they cried;
  • I was of yesterday.
  • I shivered comfortless, but cast
  • No chill across the tablecloth;
  • I, all-forgotten, shivered, sad
  • To stay, and yet to part how loth:
  • I passed from the familiar room,
  • I who from love had passed away, 30
  • Like the remembrance of a guest
  • That tarrieth but a day.
  • A TRIAD
  • Sonnet
  • Three sang of love together: one with lips
  • Crimson, with cheeks and bosom in a glow,
  • Flushed to the yellow hair and finger-tips;
  • And one there sang who soft and smooth as snow
  • Bloomed like a tinted hyacinth at a show;
  • And one was blue with famine after love,
  • Who like a harpstring snapped rang harsh and low
  • The burden of what those were singing of.
  • One shamed herself in love; one temperately
  • Grew gross in soulless love, a sluggish wife;
  • One famished died for love. Thus two of three
  • Took death for love and won him after strife;
  • One droned in sweetness like a fattened bee:
  • All on the threshold, yet all short of life.
  • LOVE FROM THE NORTH
  • I had a love in soft south land,
  • Beloved through April far in May;
  • He waited on my lightest breath,
  • And never dared to say me nay.
  • He saddened if my cheer was sad,
  • But gay he grew if I was gay;
  • We never differed on a hair,
  • My yes his yes, my nay his nay.
  • The wedding hour was come, the aisles
  • Were flushed with sun and flowers that day; 10
  • I pacing balanced in my thoughts:
  • 'It's quite too late to think of nay.'--
  • My bridegroom answered in his turn,
  • Myself had almost answered 'yea:'
  • When through the flashing nave I heard
  • A struggle and resounding 'nay.'
  • Bridemaids and bridegroom shrank in fear,
  • But I stood high who stood at bay:
  • 'And if I answer yea, fair Sir,
  • What man art thou to bar with nay?' 20
  • He was a strong man from the north,
  • Light-locked, with eyes of dangerous grey:
  • 'Put yea by for another time
  • In which I will not say thee nay.'
  • He took me in his strong white arms,
  • He bore me on his horse away
  • O'er crag, morass, and hairbreadth pass,
  • But never asked me yea or nay.
  • He made me fast with book and bell,
  • With links of love he makes me stay; 30
  • Till now I've neither heart nor power
  • Nor will nor wish to say him nay.
  • WINTER RAIN
  • Every valley drinks,
  • Every dell and hollow:
  • Where the kind rain sinks and sinks,
  • Green of Spring will follow.
  • Yet a lapse of weeks
  • Buds will burst their edges,
  • Strip their wool-coats, glue-coats, streaks,
  • In the woods and hedges;
  • Weave a bower of love
  • For birds to meet each other, 10
  • Weave a canopy above
  • Nest and egg and mother.
  • But for fattening rain
  • We should have no flowers,
  • Never a bud or leaf again
  • But for soaking showers;
  • Never a mated bird
  • In the rocking tree-tops,
  • Never indeed a flock or herd
  • To graze upon the lea-crops. 20
  • Lambs so woolly white,
  • Sheep the sun-bright leas on,
  • They could have no grass to bite
  • But for rain in season.
  • We should find no moss
  • In the shadiest places,
  • Find no waving meadow grass
  • Pied with broad-eyed daisies:
  • But miles of barren sand,
  • With never a son or daughter, 30
  • Not a lily on the land,
  • Or lily on the water.
  • COUSIN KATE
  • I was a cottage maiden
  • Hardened by sun and air,
  • Contented with my cottage mates,
  • Not mindful I was fair.
  • Why did a great lord find me out,
  • And praise my flaxen hair?
  • Why did a great lord find me out
  • To fill my heart with care?
  • He lured me to his palace home--
  • Woe's me for joy thereof-- 10
  • To lead a shameless shameful life,
  • His plaything and his love.
  • He wore me like a silken knot,
  • He changed me like a glove;
  • So now I moan, an unclean thing,
  • Who might have been a dove.
  • O Lady Kate, my cousin Kate,
  • You grew more fair than I:
  • He saw you at your father's gate,
  • Chose you, and cast me by. 20
  • He watched your steps along the lane,
  • Your work among the rye;
  • He lifted you from mean estate
  • To sit with him on high.
  • Because you were so good and pure
  • He bound you with his ring:
  • The neighbours call you good and pure,
  • Call me an outcast thing.
  • Even so I sit and howl in dust,
  • You sit in gold and sing: 30
  • Now which of us has tenderer heart?
  • You had the stronger wing.
  • O cousin Kate, my love was true,
  • Your love was writ in sand:
  • If he had fooled not me but you,
  • If you stood where I stand,
  • He'd not have won me with his love
  • Nor bought me with his land;
  • I would have spit into his face
  • And not have taken his hand. 40
  • Yet I've a gift you have not got,
  • And seem not like to get:
  • For all your clothes and wedding-ring
  • I've little doubt you fret.
  • My fair-haired son, my shame, my pride,
  • Cling closer, closer yet:
  • Your father would give lands for one
  • To wear his coronet.
  • NOBLE SISTERS
  • 'Now did you mark a falcon,
  • Sister dear, sister dear,
  • Flying toward my window
  • In the morning cool and clear?
  • With jingling bells about her neck,
  • But what beneath her wing?
  • It may have been a ribbon,
  • Or it may have been a ring.'--
  • 'I marked a falcon swooping
  • At the break of day; 10
  • And for your love, my sister dove,
  • I 'frayed the thief away.'--
  • 'Or did you spy a ruddy hound,
  • Sister fair and tall,
  • Went snuffing round my garden bound,
  • Or crouched by my bower wall?
  • With a silken leash about his neck;
  • But in his mouth may be
  • A chain of gold and silver links,
  • Or a letter writ to me.'-- 20
  • 'I heard a hound, highborn sister,
  • Stood baying at the moon;
  • I rose and drove him from your wall
  • Lest you should wake too soon.'--
  • 'Or did you meet a pretty page
  • Sat swinging on the gate;
  • Sat whistling whistling like a bird,
  • Or may be slept too late;
  • With eaglets broidered on his cap,
  • And eaglets on his glove? 30
  • If you had turned his pockets out,
  • You had found some pledge of love.'--
  • 'I met him at this daybreak,
  • Scarce the east was red:
  • Lest the creaking gate should anger you,
  • I packed him home to bed.'--
  • 'Oh patience, sister. Did you see
  • A young man tall and strong,
  • Swift-footed to uphold the right
  • And to uproot the wrong, 40
  • Come home across the desolate sea
  • To woo me for his wife?
  • And in his heart my heart is locked,
  • And in his life my life.'--
  • 'I met a nameless man, sister,
  • Hard by your chamber door:
  • I said: Her husband loves her much.
  • And yet she loves him more.'--
  • 'Fie, sister, fie, a wicked lie,
  • A lie, a wicked lie, 50
  • I have none other love but him,
  • Nor will have till I die.
  • And you have turned him from our door,
  • And stabbed him with a lie:
  • I will go seek him thro' the world
  • In sorrow till I die.'--
  • 'Go seek in sorrow, sister,
  • And find in sorrow too:
  • If thus you shame our father's name
  • My curse go forth with you.' 60
  • SPRING
  • Frost-locked all the winter,
  • Seeds, and roots, and stones of fruits,
  • What shall make their sap ascend
  • That they may put forth shoots?
  • Tips of tender green,
  • Leaf, or blade, or sheath;
  • Telling of the hidden life
  • That breaks forth underneath,
  • Life nursed in its grave by Death.
  • Blows the thaw-wind pleasantly, 10
  • Drips the soaking rain,
  • By fits looks down the waking sun:
  • Young grass springs on the plain;
  • Young leaves clothe early hedgerow trees;
  • Seeds, and roots, and stones of fruits,
  • Swollen with sap put forth their shoots;
  • Curled-headed ferns sprout in the lane;
  • Birds sing and pair again.
  • There is no time like Spring,
  • When life's alive in everything, 20
  • Before new nestlings sing,
  • Before cleft swallows speed their journey back
  • Along the trackless track--
  • God guides their wing,
  • He spreads their table that they nothing lack,--
  • Before the daisy grows a common flower,
  • Before the sun has power
  • To scorch the world up in his noontide hour.
  • There is no time like Spring,
  • Like Spring that passes by; 30
  • There is no life like Spring-life born to die,--
  • Piercing the sod,
  • Clothing the uncouth clod,
  • Hatched in the nest,
  • Fledged on the windy bough,
  • Strong on the wing:
  • There is no time like Spring that passes by,
  • Now newly born, and now
  • Hastening to die.
  • THE LAMBS OF GRASMERE, 1860
  • The upland flocks grew starved and thinned:
  • Their shepherds scarce could feed the lambs
  • Whose milkless mothers butted them,
  • Or who were orphaned of their dams.
  • The lambs athirst for mother's milk
  • Filled all the place with piteous sounds:
  • Their mothers' bones made white for miles
  • The pastureless wet pasture grounds.
  • Day after day, night after night,
  • From lamb to lamb the shepherds went, 10
  • With teapots for the bleating mouths
  • Instead of nature's nourishment.
  • The little shivering gaping things
  • Soon knew the step that brought them aid,
  • And fondled the protecting hand,
  • And rubbed it with a woolly head.
  • Then, as the days waxed on to weeks,
  • It was a pretty sight to see
  • These lambs with frisky heads and tails
  • Skipping and leaping on the lea, 20
  • Bleating in tender, trustful tones,
  • Resting on rocky crag or mound.
  • And following the beloved feet
  • That once had sought for them and found.
  • These very shepherds of their flocks,
  • These loving lambs so meek to please,
  • Are worthy of recording words
  • And honour in their due degrees:
  • So I might live a hundred years,
  • And roam from strand to foreign strand, 30
  • Yet not forget this flooded spring
  • And scarce-saved lambs of Westmoreland.
  • A BIRTHDAY
  • My heart is like a singing bird
  • Whose nest is in a watered shoot;
  • My heart is like an apple-tree
  • Whose boughs are bent with thickset fruit;
  • My heart is like a rainbow shell
  • That paddles in a halcyon sea;
  • My heart is gladder than all these
  • Because my love is come to me.
  • Raise me a dais of silk and down;
  • Hang it with vair and purple dyes; 10
  • Carve it in doves, and pomegranates,
  • And peacocks with a hundred eyes;
  • Work it in gold and silver grapes,
  • In leaves, and silver fleurs-de-lys;
  • Because the birthday of my life
  • Is come, my love is come to me.
  • REMEMBER
  • Sonnet
  • Remember me when I am gone away,
  • Gone far away into the silent land;
  • When you can no more hold me by the hand,
  • Nor I half turn to go yet turning stay.
  • Remember me when no more day by day
  • You tell me of our future that you planned:
  • Only remember me; you understand
  • It will be late to counsel then or pray.
  • Yet if you should forget me for a while
  • And afterwards remember, do not grieve:
  • For if the darkness and corruption leave
  • A vestige of the thoughts that once I had,
  • Better by far you should forget and smile
  • Than that you should remember and be sad.
  • AFTER DEATH
  • Sonnet
  • The curtains were half drawn, the floor was swept
  • And strewn with rushes, rosemary and may
  • Lay thick upon the bed on which I lay,
  • Where through the lattice ivy-shadows crept.
  • He leaned above me, thinking that I slept
  • And could not hear him; but I heard him say:
  • 'Poor child, poor child:' and as he turned away
  • Came a deep silence, and I knew he wept.
  • He did not touch the shroud, or raise the fold
  • That hid my face, or take my hand in his,
  • Or ruffle the smooth pillows for my head:
  • He did not love me living; but once dead
  • He pitied me; and very sweet it is
  • To know he still is warm though I am cold.
  • AN END
  • Love, strong as Death, is dead.
  • Come, let us make his bed
  • Among the dying flowers:
  • A green turf at his head;
  • And a stone at his feet,
  • Whereon we may sit
  • In the quiet evening hours.
  • He was born in the Spring,
  • And died before the harvesting:
  • On the last warm summer day 10
  • He left us; he would not stay
  • For Autumn twilight cold and grey.
  • Sit we by his grave, and sing
  • He is gone away.
  • To few chords and sad and low
  • Sing we so:
  • Be our eyes fixed on the grass
  • Shadow-veiled as the years pass
  • While we think of all that was
  • In the long ago. 20
  • MY DREAM
  • Hear now a curious dream I dreamed last night
  • Each word whereof is weighed and sifted truth.
  • I stood beside Euphrates while it swelled
  • Like overflowing Jordan in its youth:
  • It waxed and coloured sensibly to sight;
  • Till out of myriad pregnant waves there welled
  • Young crocodiles, a gaunt blunt-featured crew,
  • Fresh-hatched perhaps and daubed with birthday dew.
  • The rest if I should tell, I fear my friend
  • My closest friend would deem the facts untrue; 10
  • And therefore it were wisely left untold;
  • Yet if you will, why, hear it to the end.
  • Each crocodile was girt with massive gold
  • And polished stones that with their wearers grew:
  • But one there was who waxed beyond the rest,
  • Wore kinglier girdle and a kingly crown,
  • Whilst crowns and orbs and sceptres starred his breast.
  • All gleamed compact and green with scale on scale,
  • But special burnishment adorned his mail
  • And special terror weighed upon his frown; 20
  • His punier brethren quaked before his tail,
  • Broad as a rafter, potent as a flail.
  • So he grew lord and master of his kin:
  • But who shall tell the tale of all their woes?
  • An execrable appetite arose,
  • He battened on them, crunched, and sucked them in.
  • He knew no law, he feared no binding law,
  • But ground them with inexorable jaw:
  • The luscious fat distilled upon his chin,
  • Exuded from his nostrils and his eyes, 30
  • While still like hungry death he fed his maw;
  • Till every minor crocodile being dead
  • And buried too, himself gorged to the full,
  • He slept with breath oppressed and unstrung claw.
  • Oh marvel passing strange which next I saw:
  • In sleep he dwindled to the common size,
  • And all the empire faded from his coat.
  • Then from far off a wingèd vessel came,
  • Swift as a swallow, subtle as a flame:
  • I know not what it bore of freight or host, 40
  • But white it was as an avenging ghost.
  • It levelled strong Euphrates in its course;
  • Supreme yet weightless as an idle mote
  • It seemed to tame the waters without force
  • Till not a murmur swelled or billow beat:
  • Lo, as the purple shadow swept the sands,
  • The prudent crocodile rose on his feet
  • And shed appropriate tears and wrung his hands.
  • What can it mean? you ask. I answer not
  • For meaning, but myself must echo, What? 50
  • And tell it as I saw it on the spot.
  • SONG
  • Oh roses for the flush of youth,
  • And laurel for the perfect prime;
  • But pluck an ivy branch for me
  • Grown old before my time.
  • Oh violets for the grave of youth,
  • And bay for those dead in their prime;
  • Give me the withered leaves I chose
  • Before in the old time.
  • THE HOUR AND THE GHOST
  • BRIDE
  • O love, love, hold me fast,
  • He draws me away from thee;
  • I cannot stem the blast,
  • Nor the cold strong sea:
  • Far away a light shines
  • Beyond the hills and pines;
  • It is lit for me.
  • BRIDEGROOM
  • I have thee close, my dear,
  • No terror can come near;
  • Only far off the northern light shines clear. 10
  • GHOST
  • Come with me, fair and false,
  • To our home, come home.
  • It is my voice that calls:
  • Once thou wast not afraid
  • When I woo'd, and said,
  • 'Come, our nest is newly made'--
  • Now cross the tossing foam.
  • BRIDE
  • Hold me one moment longer,
  • He taunts me with the past,
  • His clutch is waxing stronger, 20
  • Hold me fast, hold me fast.
  • He draws me from thy heart,
  • And I cannot withhold:
  • He bids my spirit depart
  • With him into the cold:--
  • Oh bitter vows of old!
  • BRIDEGROOM
  • Lean on me, hide thine eyes:
  • Only ourselves, earth and skies,
  • Are present here: be wise.
  • GHOST
  • Lean on me, come away, 30
  • I will guide and steady:
  • Come, for I will not stay:
  • Come, for house and bed are ready.
  • Ah, sure bed and house,
  • For better and worse, for life and death:
  • Goal won with shortened breath:
  • Come, crown our vows.
  • BRIDE
  • One moment, one more word,
  • While my heart beats still,
  • While my breath is stirred 40
  • By my fainting will.
  • O friend forsake me not,
  • Forget not as I forgot:
  • But keep thy heart for me,
  • Keep thy faith true and bright;
  • Through the lone cold winter night
  • Perhaps I may come to thee.
  • BRIDEGROOM
  • Nay peace, my darling, peace:
  • Let these dreams and terrors cease:
  • Who spoke of death or change or aught but ease? 50
  • GHOST
  • O fair frail sin,
  • O poor harvest gathered in!
  • Thou shalt visit him again
  • To watch his heart grow cold;
  • To know the gnawing pain
  • I knew of old;
  • To see one much more fair
  • Fill up the vacant chair,
  • Fill his heart, his children bear:--
  • While thou and I together 60
  • In the outcast weather
  • Toss and howl and spin.
  • A SUMMER WISH
  • Live all thy sweet life thro',
  • Sweet Rose, dew-sprent,
  • Drop down thine evening dew
  • To gather it anew
  • When day is bright:
  • I fancy thou wast meant
  • Chiefly to give delight.
  • Sing in the silent sky,
  • Glad soaring bird;
  • Sing out thy notes on high 10
  • To sunbeam straying by
  • Or passing cloud;
  • Heedless if thou art heard
  • Sing thy full song aloud.
  • Oh that it were with me
  • As with the flower;
  • Blooming on its own tree
  • For butterfly and bee
  • Its summer morns:
  • That I might bloom mine hour 20
  • A rose in spite of thorns.
  • Oh that my work were done
  • As birds' that soar
  • Rejoicing in the sun:
  • That when my time is run
  • And daylight too,
  • I so might rest once more
  • Cool with refreshing dew.
  • AN APPLE GATHERING
  • I plucked pink blossoms from mine apple-tree
  • And wore them all that evening in my hair:
  • Then in due season when I went to see
  • I found no apples there.
  • With dangling basket all along the grass
  • As I had come I went the selfsame track:
  • My neighbours mocked me while they saw me pass
  • So empty-handed back.
  • Lilian and Lilias smiled in trudging by,
  • Their heaped-up basket teased me like a jeer; 10
  • Sweet-voiced they sang beneath the sunset sky,
  • Their mother's home was near.
  • Plump Gertrude passed me with her basket full,
  • A stronger hand than hers helped it along;
  • A voice talked with her through the shadows cool
  • More sweet to me than song.
  • Ah Willie, Willie, was my love less worth
  • Than apples with their green leaves piled above?
  • I counted rosiest apples on the earth
  • Of far less worth than love. 20
  • So once it was with me you stooped to talk
  • Laughing and listening in this very lane:
  • To think that by this way we used to walk
  • We shall not walk again!
  • I let my neighbours pass me, ones and twos
  • And groups; the latest said the night grew chill,
  • And hastened: but I loitered, while the dews
  • Fell fast I loitered still.
  • SONG
  • Two doves upon the selfsame branch,
  • Two lilies on a single stem,
  • Two butterflies upon one flower:--
  • Oh happy they who look on them.
  • Who look upon them hand in hand
  • Flushed in the rosy summer light;
  • Who look upon them hand in hand
  • And never give a thought to night.
  • MAUDE CLARE
  • Out of the church she followed them
  • With a lofty step and mien:
  • His bride was like a village maid,
  • Maude Clare was like a queen.
  • 'Son Thomas,' his lady mother said,
  • With smiles, almost with tears:
  • 'May Nell and you but live as true
  • As we have done for years;
  • 'Your father thirty years ago
  • Had just your tale to tell; 10
  • But he was not so pale as you,
  • Nor I so pale as Nell.'
  • My lord was pale with inward strife,
  • And Nell was pale with pride;
  • My lord gazed long on pale Maude Clare
  • Or ever he kissed the bride.
  • 'Lo, I have brought my gift, my lord,
  • Have brought my gift,' she said:
  • 'To bless the hearth, to bless the board,
  • To bless the marriage-bed. 20
  • 'Here's my half of the golden chain
  • You wore about your neck,
  • That day we waded ankle-deep
  • For lilies in the beck:
  • 'Here's my half of the faded leaves
  • We plucked from budding bough,
  • With feet amongst the lily leaves,--
  • The lilies are budding now.'
  • He strove to match her scorn with scorn,
  • He faltered in his place: 30
  • 'Lady,' he said,--'Maude Clare,' he said,--
  • 'Maude Clare:'--and hid his face.
  • She turn'd to Nell: 'My Lady Nell,
  • I have a gift for you;
  • Though, were it fruit, the bloom were gone,
  • Or, were it flowers, the dew.
  • 'Take my share of a fickle heart,
  • Mine of a paltry love:
  • Take it or leave it as you will,
  • I wash my hands thereof.' 40
  • 'And what you leave,' said Nell, 'I'll take,
  • And what you spurn, I'll wear;
  • For he's my lord for better and worse,
  • And him I love, Maude Clare.
  • 'Yea, though you're taller by the head,
  • More wise, and much more fair;
  • I'll love him till he loves me best,
  • Me best of all, Maude Clare.'
  • ECHO
  • Come to me in the silence of the night;
  • Come in the speaking silence of a dream;
  • Come with soft rounded cheeks and eyes as bright
  • As sunlight on a stream;
  • Come back in tears,
  • O memory, hope, love of finished years.
  • Oh dream how sweet, too sweet, too bitter sweet,
  • Whose wakening should have been in Paradise,
  • Where souls brimfull of love abide and meet;
  • Where thirsting longing eyes 10
  • Watch the slow door
  • That opening, letting in, lets out no more.
  • Yet come to me in dreams, that I may live
  • My very life again though cold in death:
  • Come back to me in dreams, that I may give
  • Pulse for pulse, breath for breath:
  • Speak low, lean low,
  • As long ago, my love, how long ago!
  • MY SECRET
  • I tell my secret? No indeed, not I:
  • Perhaps some day, who knows?
  • But not to-day; it froze, and blows, and snows,
  • And you're too curious: fie!
  • You want to hear it? well:
  • Only, my secret's mine, and I won't tell.
  • Or, after all, perhaps there's none:
  • Suppose there is no secret after all,
  • But only just my fun.
  • To-day's a nipping day, a biting day; 10
  • In which one wants a shawl,
  • A veil, a cloak, and other wraps:
  • I cannot ope to every one who taps,
  • And let the draughts come whistling through my hall;
  • Come bounding and surrounding me,
  • Come buffeting, astounding me,
  • Nipping and clipping through my wraps and all.
  • I wear my mask for warmth: who ever shows
  • His nose to Russian snows
  • To be pecked at by every wind that blows? 20
  • You would not peck? I thank you for good will,
  • Believe, but leave that truth untested still.
  • Spring's an expansive time: yet I don't trust
  • March with its peck of dust,
  • Nor April with its rainbow-crowned brief showers,
  • Nor even May, whose flowers
  • One frost may wither through the sunless hours.
  • Perhaps some languid summer day,
  • When drowsy birds sing less and less,
  • And golden fruit is ripening to excess, 30
  • If there's not too much sun nor too much cloud,
  • And the warm wind is neither still nor loud,
  • Perhaps my secret I may say,
  • Or you may guess.
  • ANOTHER SPRING
  • If I might see another Spring
  • I'd not plant summer flowers and wait:
  • I'd have my crocuses at once,
  • My leafless pink mezereons,
  • My chill-veined snowdrops, choicer yet
  • My white or azure violet,
  • Leaf-nested primrose; anything
  • To blow at once, not late.
  • If I might see another Spring
  • I'd listen to the daylight birds 10
  • That build their nests and pair and sing,
  • Nor wait for mateless nightingale;
  • I'd listen to the lusty herds,
  • The ewes with lambs as white as snow,
  • I'd find out music in the hail
  • And all the winds that blow.
  • If I might see another Spring--
  • Oh stinging comment on my past
  • That all my past results in 'if'--
  • If I might see another Spring 20
  • I'd laugh to-day, to-day is brief;
  • I would not wait for anything:
  • I'd use to-day that cannot last,
  • Be glad to-day and sing.
  • A PEAL OF BELLS
  • Strike the bells wantonly,
  • Tinkle tinkle well;
  • Bring me wine, bring me flowers,
  • Ring the silver bell.
  • All my lamps burn scented oil,
  • Hung on laden orange-trees,
  • Whose shadowed foliage is the foil
  • To golden lamps and oranges.
  • Heap my golden plates with fruit,
  • Golden fruit, fresh-plucked and ripe; 10
  • Strike the bells and breathe the pipe;
  • Shut out showers from summer hours--
  • Silence that complaining lute--
  • Shut out thinking, shut out pain,
  • From hours that cannot come again.
  • Strike the bells solemnly,
  • Ding dong deep:
  • My friend is passing to his bed,
  • Fast asleep;
  • There's plaited linen round his head, 20
  • While foremost go his feet--
  • His feet that cannot carry him.
  • My feast's a show, my lights are dim;
  • Be still, your music is not sweet,--
  • There is no music more for him:
  • His lights are out, his feast is done;
  • His bowl that sparkled to the brim
  • Is drained, is broken, cannot hold;
  • My blood is chill, his blood is cold;
  • His death is full, and mine begun. 30
  • FATA MORGANA
  • A blue-eyed phantom far before
  • Is laughing, leaping toward the sun:
  • Like lead I chase it evermore,
  • I pant and run.
  • It breaks the sunlight bound on bound:
  • Goes singing as it leaps along
  • To sheep-bells with a dreamy sound
  • A dreamy song.
  • I laugh, it is so brisk and gay;
  • It is so far before, I weep: 10
  • I hope I shall lie down some day,
  • Lie down and sleep.
  • 'NO, THANK YOU, JOHN'
  • I never said I loved you, John:
  • Why will you tease me day by day,
  • And wax a weariness to think upon
  • With always 'do' and 'pray'?
  • You know I never loved you, John;
  • No fault of mine made me your toast:
  • Why will you haunt me with a face as wan
  • As shows an hour-old ghost?
  • I dare say Meg or Moll would take
  • Pity upon you, if you'd ask: 10
  • And pray don't remain single for my sake
  • Who can't perform that task.
  • I have no heart?--Perhaps I have not;
  • But then you're mad to take offence
  • That I don't give you what I have not got:
  • Use your own common sense.
  • Let bygones be bygones:
  • Don't call me false, who owed not to be true:
  • I'd rather answer 'No' to fifty Johns
  • Than answer 'Yes' to you. 20
  • Let's mar our pleasant days no more,
  • Song-birds of passage, days of youth:
  • Catch at to-day, forget the days before:
  • I'll wink at your untruth.
  • Let us strike hands as hearty friends;
  • No more, no less; and friendship's good:
  • Only don't keep in view ulterior ends,
  • And points not understood
  • In open treaty. Rise above
  • Quibbles and shuffling off and on: 30
  • Here's friendship for you if you like; but love,--
  • No, thank you, John.
  • MAY
  • I cannot tell you how it was;
  • But this I know: it came to pass
  • Upon a bright and breezy day
  • When May was young; ah, pleasant May!
  • As yet the poppies were not born
  • Between the blades of tender corn;
  • The last eggs had not hatched as yet,
  • Nor any bird forgone its mate.
  • I cannot tell you what it was;
  • But this I know: it did but pass. 10
  • It passed away with sunny May,
  • With all sweet things it passed away,
  • And left me old, and cold, and grey.
  • A PAUSE OF THOUGHT
  • I looked for that which is not, nor can be,
  • And hope deferred made my heart sick in truth:
  • But years must pass before a hope of youth
  • Is resigned utterly.
  • I watched and waited with a steadfast will:
  • And though the object seemed to flee away
  • That I so longed for, ever day by day
  • I watched and waited still.
  • Sometimes I said: This thing shall be no more;
  • My expectation wearies and shall cease; 10
  • I will resign it now and be at peace:
  • Yet never gave it o'er.
  • Sometimes I said: It is an empty name
  • I long for; to a name why should I give
  • The peace of all the days I have to live?--
  • Yet gave it all the same.
  • Alas, thou foolish one! alike unfit
  • For healthy joy and salutary pain:
  • Thou knowest the chase useless, and again
  • Turnest to follow it. 20
  • TWILIGHT CALM
  • Oh, pleasant eventide!
  • Clouds on the western side
  • Grow grey and greyer hiding the warm sun:
  • The bees and birds, their happy labours done,
  • Seek their close nests and bide.
  • Screened in the leafy wood
  • The stock-doves sit and brood:
  • The very squirrel leaps from bough to bough
  • But lazily; pauses; and settles now
  • Where once he stored his food. 10
  • One by one the flowers close,
  • Lily and dewy rose
  • Shutting their tender petals from the moon:
  • The grasshoppers are still; but not so soon
  • Are still the noisy crows.
  • The dormouse squats and eats
  • Choice little dainty bits
  • Beneath the spreading roots of a broad lime;
  • Nibbling his fill he stops from time to time
  • And listens where he sits. 20
  • From far the lowings come
  • Of cattle driven home:
  • From farther still the wind brings fitfully
  • The vast continual murmur of the sea,
  • Now loud, now almost dumb.
  • The gnats whirl in the air,
  • The evening gnats; and there
  • The owl opes broad his eyes and wings to sail
  • For prey; the bat wakes; and the shell-less snail
  • Comes forth, clammy and bare. 30
  • Hark! that's the nightingale,
  • Telling the selfsame tale
  • Her song told when this ancient earth was young:
  • So echoes answered when her song was sung
  • In the first wooded vale.
  • We call it love and pain
  • The passion of her strain;
  • And yet we little understand or know:
  • Why should it not be rather joy that so
  • Throbs in each throbbing vein? 40
  • In separate herds the deer
  • Lie; here the bucks, and here
  • The does, and by its mother sleeps the fawn:
  • Through all the hours of night until the dawn
  • They sleep, forgetting fear.
  • The hare sleeps where it lies,
  • With wary half-closed eyes;
  • The cock has ceased to crow, the hen to cluck:
  • Only the fox is out, some heedless duck
  • Or chicken to surprise. 50
  • Remote, each single star
  • Comes out, till there they are
  • All shining brightly: how the dews fall damp!
  • While close at hand the glow-worm lights her lamp
  • Or twinkles from afar.
  • But evening now is done
  • As much as if the sun
  • Day-giving had arisen in the East:
  • For night has come; and the great calm has ceased,
  • The quiet sands have run. 60
  • WIFE TO HUSBAND
  • Pardon the faults in me,
  • For the love of years ago:
  • Good-bye.
  • I must drift across the sea,
  • I must sink into the snow,
  • I must die.
  • You can bask in this sun,
  • You can drink wine, and eat:
  • Good-bye.
  • I must gird myself and run, 10
  • Though with unready feet:
  • I must die.
  • Blank sea to sail upon,
  • Cold bed to sleep in:
  • Good-bye.
  • While you clasp, I must be gone
  • For all your weeping:
  • I must die.
  • A kiss for one friend,
  • And a word for two,-- 20
  • Good-bye:--
  • A lock that you must send,
  • A kindness you must do:
  • I must die.
  • Not a word for you,
  • Not a lock or kiss,
  • Good-bye.
  • We, one, must part in two;
  • Verily death is this:
  • I must die. 30
  • THREE SEASONS
  • 'A cup for hope!' she said,
  • In springtime ere the bloom was old:
  • The crimson wine was poor and cold
  • By her mouth's richer red.
  • 'A cup for love!' how low,
  • How soft the words; and all the while
  • Her blush was rippling with a smile
  • Like summer after snow.
  • 'A cup for memory!'
  • Cold cup that one must drain alone: 10
  • While autumn winds are up and moan
  • Across the barren sea.
  • Hope, memory, love:
  • Hope for fair morn, and love for day,
  • And memory for the evening grey
  • And solitary dove.
  • MIRAGE
  • The hope I dreamed of was a dream,
  • Was but a dream; and now I wake,
  • Exceeding comfortless, and worn, and old,
  • For a dream's sake.
  • I hang my harp upon a tree,
  • A weeping willow in a lake;
  • I hang my silent harp there, wrung and snapt
  • For a dream's sake.
  • Lie still, lie still, my breaking heart;
  • My silent heart, lie still and break: 10
  • Life, and the world, and mine own self, are changed
  • For a dream's sake.
  • SHUT OUT
  • The door was shut. I looked between
  • Its iron bars; and saw it lie,
  • My garden, mine, beneath the sky,
  • Pied with all flowers bedewed and green:
  • From bough to bough the song-birds crossed,
  • From flower to flower the moths and bees;
  • With all its nests and stately trees
  • It had been mine, and it was lost.
  • A shadowless spirit kept the gate,
  • Blank and unchanging like the grave. 10
  • I peering through said: 'Let me have
  • Some buds to cheer my outcast state.'
  • He answered not. 'Or give me, then,
  • But one small twig from shrub or tree;
  • And bid my home remember me
  • Until I come to it again.'
  • The spirit was silent; but he took
  • Mortar and stone to build a wall;
  • He left no loophole great or small
  • Through which my straining eyes might look: 20
  • So now I sit here quite alone
  • Blinded with tears; nor grieve for that,
  • For nought is left worth looking at
  • Since my delightful land is gone.
  • A violet bed is budding near,
  • Wherein a lark has made her nest:
  • And good they are, but not the best;
  • And dear they are, but not so dear.
  • SOUND SLEEP
  • Some are laughing, some are weeping;
  • She is sleeping, only sleeping.
  • Round her rest wild flowers are creeping;
  • There the wind is heaping, heaping
  • Sweetest sweets of Summer's keeping.
  • By the corn-fields ripe for reaping.
  • There are lilies, and there blushes
  • The deep rose, and there the thrushes
  • Sing till latest sunlight flushes
  • In the west; a fresh wind brushes 10
  • Through the leaves while evening hushes.
  • There by day the lark is singing
  • And the grass and weeds are springing;
  • There by night the bat is winging;
  • There for ever winds are bringing
  • Far-off chimes of church-bells ringing.
  • Night and morning, noon and even,
  • Their sound fills her dreams with Heaven:
  • The long strife at lent is striven:
  • Till her grave-bands shall be riven 20
  • Such is the good portion given
  • To her soul at rest and shriven.
  • SONG
  • She sat and sang alway
  • By the green margin of a stream,
  • Watching the fishes leap and play
  • Beneath the glad sunbeam.
  • I sat and wept alway
  • Beneath the moon's most shadowy beam,
  • Watching the blossoms of the May
  • Weep leaves into the stream.
  • I wept for memory;
  • She sang for hope that is so fair: 10
  • My tears were swallowed by the sea;
  • Her songs died on the air.
  • SONG
  • When I am dead, my dearest,
  • Sing no sad songs for me;
  • Plant thou no roses at my head,
  • Nor shady cypress tree:
  • Be the green grass above me
  • With showers and dewdrops wet;
  • And if thou wilt, remember,
  • And if thou wilt, forget.
  • I shall not see the shadows,
  • I shall not feel the rain; 10
  • I shall not hear the nightingale
  • Sing on, as if in pain:
  • And dreaming through the twilight
  • That doth not rise nor set,
  • Haply I may remember,
  • And haply may forget.
  • DEAD BEFORE DEATH
  • Sonnet
  • Ah! changed and cold, how changed and very cold,
  • With stiffened smiling lips and cold calm eyes:
  • Changed, yet the same; much knowing, little wise;
  • _This_ was the promise of the days of old!
  • Grown hard and stubborn in the ancient mould,
  • Grown rigid in the sham of lifelong lies:
  • We hoped for better things as years would rise,
  • But it is over as a tale once told.
  • All fallen the blossom that no fruitage bore,
  • All lost the present and the future time,
  • All lost, all lost, the lapse that went before:
  • So lost till death shut-to the opened door,
  • So lost from chime to everlasting chime,
  • So cold and lost for ever evermore.
  • BITTER FOR SWEET
  • Summer is gone with all its roses,
  • Its sun and perfumes and sweet flowers,
  • Its warm air and refreshing showers:
  • And even Autumn closes.
  • Yea, Autumn's chilly self is going,
  • And winter comes which is yet colder;
  • Each day the hoar-frost waxes bolder,
  • And the last buds cease blowing.
  • SISTER MAUDE
  • Who told my mother of my shame,
  • Who told my father of my dear?
  • Oh who but Maude, my sister Maude,
  • Who lurked to spy and peer.
  • Cold he lies, as cold as stone,
  • With his clotted curls about his face:
  • The comeliest corpse in all the world
  • And worthy of a queen's embrace.
  • You might have spared his soul, sister,
  • Have spared my soul, your own soul too: 10
  • Though I had not been born at all,
  • He'd never have looked at you.
  • My father may sleep in Paradise,
  • My mother at Heaven-gate:
  • But sister Maude shall get no sleep
  • Either early or late.
  • My father may wear a golden gown,
  • My mother a crown may win;
  • If my dear and I knocked at Heaven-gate
  • Perhaps they'd let us in: 20
  • But sister Maude, oh sister Maude,
  • Bide _you_ with death and sin.
  • REST
  • Sonnet
  • O Earth, lie heavily upon her eyes;
  • Seal her sweet eyes weary of watching, Earth;
  • Lie close around her; leave no room for mirth
  • With its harsh laughter, nor for sound of sighs.
  • She hath no questions, she hath no replies,
  • Hushed in and curtained with a blessèd dearth
  • Of all that irked her from the hour of birth;
  • With stillness that is almost Paradise.
  • Darkness more clear than noon-day holdeth her,
  • Silence more musical than any song;
  • Even her very heart has ceased to stir:
  • Until the morning of Eternity
  • Her rest shall not begin nor end, but be;
  • And when she wakes she will not think it long.
  • THE FIRST SPRING DAY
  • I wonder if the sap is stirring yet,
  • If wintry birds are dreaming of a mate,
  • If frozen snowdrops feel as yet the sun
  • And crocus fires are kindling one by one:
  • Sing, robin, sing;
  • I still am sore in doubt concerning Spring.
  • I wonder if the springtide of this year
  • Will bring another Spring both lost and dear;
  • If heart and spirit will find out their Spring,
  • Or if the world alone will bud and sing: 10
  • Sing, hope, to me;
  • Sweet notes, my hope, soft notes for memory.
  • The sap will surely quicken soon or late,
  • The tardiest bird will twitter to a mate;
  • So Spring must dawn again with warmth and bloom,
  • Or in this world, or in the world to come:
  • Sing, voice of Spring,
  • Till I too blossom and rejoice and sing.
  • THE CONVENT THRESHOLD
  • There's blood between us, love, my love,
  • There's father's blood, there's brother's blood;
  • And blood's a bar I cannot pass:
  • I choose the stairs that mount above,
  • Stair after golden skyward stair,
  • To city and to sea of glass.
  • My lily feet are soiled with mud,
  • With scarlet mud which tells a tale
  • Of hope that was, of guilt that was,
  • Of love that shall not yet avail; 10
  • Alas, my heart, if I could bare
  • My heart, this selfsame stain is there:
  • I seek the sea of glass and fire
  • To wash the spot, to burn the snare;
  • Lo, stairs are meant to lift us higher:
  • Mount with me, mount the kindled stair.
  • Your eyes look earthward, mine look up.
  • I see the far-off city grand,
  • Beyond the hills a watered land,
  • Beyond the gulf a gleaming strand 20
  • Of mansions where the righteous sup;
  • Who sleep at ease among their trees,
  • Or wake to sing a cadenced hymn
  • With Cherubim and Seraphim;
  • They bore the Cross, they drained the cup,
  • Racked, roasted, crushed, wrenched limb from limb,
  • They the offscouring of the world:
  • The heaven of starry heavens unfurled,
  • The sun before their face is dim.
  • You looking earthward what see you? 30
  • Milk-white wine-flushed among the vines,
  • Up and down leaping, to and fro,
  • Most glad, most full, made strong with wines,
  • Blooming as peaches pearled with dew,
  • Their golden windy hair afloat,
  • Love-music warbling in their throat,
  • Young men and women come and go.
  • You linger, yet the time is short:
  • Flee for your life, gird up your strength
  • To flee; the shadows stretched at length 40
  • Show that day wanes, that night draws nigh;
  • Flee to the mountain, tarry not.
  • Is this a time for smile and sigh,
  • For songs among the secret trees
  • Where sudden blue birds nest and sport?
  • The time is short and yet you stay:
  • To-day while it is called to-day
  • Kneel, wrestle, knock, do violence, pray;
  • To-day is short, to-morrow nigh:
  • Why will you die? why will you die? 50
  • You sinned with me a pleasant sin:
  • Repent with me, for I repent.
  • Woe's me the lore I must unlearn!
  • Woe's me that easy way we went,
  • So rugged when I would return!
  • How long until my sleep begin,
  • How long shall stretch these nights and days?
  • Surely, clean Angels cry, she prays;
  • She laves her soul with tedious tears:
  • How long must stretch these years and years? 60
  • I turn from you my cheeks and eyes,
  • My hair which you shall see no more--
  • Alas for joy that went before,
  • For joy that dies, for love that dies.
  • Only my lips still turn to you,
  • My livid lips that cry, Repent.
  • Oh weary life, oh weary Lent,
  • Oh weary time whose stars are few.
  • How should I rest in Paradise,
  • Or sit on steps of heaven alone? 70
  • If Saints and Angels spoke of love
  • Should I not answer from my throne:
  • Have pity upon me, ye my friends,
  • For I have heard the sound thereof:
  • Should I not turn with yearning eyes,
  • Turn earthwards with a pitiful pang?
  • Oh save me from a pang in heaven.
  • By all the gifts we took and gave,
  • Repent, repent, and be forgiven:
  • This life is long, but yet it ends; 80
  • Repent and purge your soul and save:
  • No gladder song the morning stars
  • Upon their birthday morning sang
  • Than Angels sing when one repents.
  • I tell you what I dreamed last night:
  • A spirit with transfigured face
  • Fire-footed clomb an infinite space.
  • I heard his hundred pinions clang,
  • Heaven-bells rejoicing rang and rang,
  • Heaven-air was thrilled with subtle scents, 90
  • Worlds spun upon their rushing cars:
  • He mounted shrieking: 'Give me light.'
  • Still light was poured on him, more light;
  • Angels, Archangels he outstripped
  • Exultant in exceeding might,
  • And trod the skirts of Cherubim.
  • Still 'Give me light,' he shrieked; and dipped
  • His thirsty face, and drank a sea,
  • Athirst with thirst it could not slake.
  • I saw him, drunk with knowledge, take 100
  • From aching brows the aureole crown--
  • His locks writhed like a cloven snake--
  • He left his throne to grovel down
  • And lick the dust of Seraphs' feet:
  • For what is knowledge duly weighed?
  • Knowledge is strong, but love is sweet;
  • Yea all the progress he had made
  • Was but to learn that all is small
  • Save love, for love is all in all.
  • I tell you what I dreamed last night: 110
  • It was not dark, it was not light,
  • Cold dews had drenched my plenteous hair
  • Through clay; you came to seek me there.
  • And 'Do you dream of me?' you said.
  • My heart was dust that used to leap
  • To you; I answered half asleep:
  • 'My pillow is damp, my sheets are red,
  • There's a leaden tester to my bed:
  • Find you a warmer playfellow,
  • A warmer pillow for your head, 120
  • A kinder love to love than mine.'
  • You wrung your hands; while I like lead
  • Crushed downwards through the sodden earth:
  • You smote your hands but not in mirth,
  • And reeled but were not drunk with wine.
  • For all night long I dreamed of you:
  • I woke and prayed against my will,
  • Then slept to dream of you again.
  • At length I rose and knelt and prayed:
  • I cannot write the words I said, 130
  • My words were slow, my tears were few;
  • But through the dark my silence spoke
  • Like thunder. When this morning broke,
  • My face was pinched, my hair was grey,
  • And frozen blood was on the sill
  • Where stifling in my struggle I lay.
  • If now you saw me you would say:
  • Where is the face I used to love?
  • And I would answer: Gone before;
  • It tarries veiled in paradise. 140
  • When once the morning star shall rise,
  • When earth with shadow flees away
  • And we stand safe within the door,
  • Then you shall lift the veil thereof.
  • Look up, rise up: for far above
  • Our palms are grown, our place is set;
  • There we shall meet as once we met
  • And love with old familiar love.
  • UP-HILL
  • Does the road wind up-hill all the way?
  • Yes, to the very end.
  • Will the day's journey take the whole long day?
  • From morn to night, my friend.
  • But is there for the night a resting-place?
  • A roof for when the slow dark hours begin.
  • May not the darkness hide it from my face?
  • You cannot miss that inn.
  • Shall I meet other wayfarers at night?
  • Those who have gone before. 10
  • Then must I knock, or call when just in sight?
  • They will not keep you standing at that door.
  • Shall I find comfort, travel-sore and weak?
  • Of labour you shall find the sum.
  • Will there be beds for me and all who seek?
  • Yea, beds for all who come.
  • DEVOTIONAL PIECES
  • 'THE LOVE OF CHRIST WHICH PASSETH KNOWLEDGE'
  • I bore with thee long weary days and nights,
  • Through many pangs of heart, through many tears;
  • I bore with thee, thy hardness, coldness, slights,
  • For three and thirty years.
  • Who else had dared for thee what I have dared?
  • I plunged the depth most deep from bliss above;
  • I not My flesh, I not My spirit spared:
  • Give thou Me love for love.
  • For thee I thirsted in the daily drouth,
  • For thee I trembled in the nightly frost: 10
  • Much sweeter thou than honey to My mouth:
  • Why wilt thou still be lost?
  • I bore thee on My shoulders and rejoiced:
  • Men only marked upon My shoulders borne
  • The branding cross; and shouted hungry-voiced,
  • Or wagged their heads in scorn.
  • Thee did nails grave upon My hands, thy name
  • Did thorns for frontlets stamp between Mine eyes:
  • I, Holy One, put on thy guilt and shame;
  • I, God, Priest, Sacrifice. 20
  • A thief upon My right hand and My left;
  • Six hours alone, athirst, in misery:
  • At length in death one smote My heart and cleft
  • A hiding-place for thee.
  • Nailed to the racking cross, than bed of down
  • More dear, whereon to stretch Myself and sleep:
  • So did I win a kingdom,--share my crown;
  • A harvest,--come and reap.
  • 'A BRUISED REED SHALL HE NOT BREAK'
  • I will accept thy will to do and be,
  • Thy hatred and intolerance of sin,
  • Thy will at least to love, that burns within
  • And thirsteth after Me:
  • So will I render fruitful, blessing still,
  • The germs and small beginnings in thy heart,
  • Because thy will cleaves to the better part.--
  • Alas, I cannot will.
  • Dost not thou will, poor soul? Yet I receive
  • The inner unseen longings of the soul, 10
  • I guide them turning towards Me; I control
  • And charm hearts till they grieve:
  • If thou desire, it yet shall come to pass,
  • Though thou but wish indeed to choose My love;
  • For I have power in earth and heaven above.--
  • I cannot wish, alas!
  • What, neither choose nor wish to choose? and yet
  • I still must strive to win thee and constrain:
  • For thee I hung upon the cross in pain,
  • How then can I forget? 20
  • If thou as yet dost neither love, nor hate,
  • Nor choose, nor wish,--resign thyself, be still
  • Till I infuse love, hatred, longing, will.--
  • I do not deprecate.
  • A BETTER RESURRECTION
  • I have no wit, no words, no tears;
  • My heart within me like a stone
  • Is numbed too much for hopes or fears.
  • Look right, look left, I dwell alone;
  • I lift mine eyes, but dimmed with grief
  • No everlasting hills I see;
  • My life is in the falling leaf:
  • O Jesus, quicken me.
  • My life is like a faded leaf,
  • My harvest dwindled to a husk; 10
  • Truly my life is void and brief
  • And tedious in the barren dusk;
  • My life is like a frozen thing,
  • No bud nor greenness can I see:
  • Yet rise it shall--the sap of Spring;
  • O Jesus, rise in me.
  • My life is like a broken bowl,
  • A broken bowl that cannot hold
  • One drop of water for my soul
  • Or cordial in the searching cold 20
  • Cast in the fire the perished thing,
  • Melt and remould it, till it be
  • A royal cup for Him my King:
  • O Jesus, drink of me.
  • ADVENT
  • This Advent moon shines cold and clear,
  • These Advent nights are long;
  • Our lamps have burned year after year
  • And still their flame is strong.
  • 'Watchman, what of the night?' we cry,
  • Heart-sick with hope deferred:
  • 'No speaking signs are in the sky,'
  • Is still the watchman's word.
  • The Porter watches at the gate,
  • The servants watch within; 10
  • The watch is long betimes and late,
  • The prize is slow to win.
  • 'Watchman, what of the night?' But still
  • His answer sounds the same:
  • 'No daybreak tops the utmost hill,
  • Nor pale our lamps of flame.'
  • One to another hear them speak
  • The patient virgins wise:
  • 'Surely He is not far to seek'--
  • 'All night we watch and rise.' 20
  • 'The days are evil looking back,
  • The coming days are dim;
  • Yet count we not His promise slack,
  • But watch and wait for Him.'
  • One with another, soul with soul,
  • They kindle fire from fire:
  • 'Friends watch us who have touched the goal.'
  • 'They urge us, come up higher.'
  • 'With them shall rest our waysore feet,
  • With them is built our home, 30
  • With Christ.'--'They sweet, but He most sweet,
  • Sweeter than honeycomb.'
  • There no more parting, no more pain,
  • The distant ones brought near,
  • The lost so long are found again,
  • Long lost but longer dear:
  • Eye hath not seen, ear hath not heard,
  • Nor heart conceived that rest,
  • With them our good things long deferred,
  • With Jesus Christ our Best. 40
  • We weep because the night is long,
  • We laugh for day shall rise,
  • We sing a slow contented song
  • And knock at Paradise.
  • Weeping we hold Him fast, Who wept
  • For us, we hold Him fast;
  • And will not let Him go except
  • He bless us first or last.
  • Weeping we hold Him fast to-night;
  • We will not let Him go 50
  • Till daybreak smite our wearied sight
  • And summer smite the snow:
  • Then figs shall bud, and dove with dove
  • Shall coo the livelong day;
  • Then He shall say, 'Arise, My love,
  • My fair one, come away.'
  • THE THREE ENEMIES
  • THE FLESH
  • 'Sweet, thou art pale.'
  • 'More pale to see,
  • Christ hung upon the cruel tree
  • And bore His Father's wrath for me.'
  • 'Sweet, thou art sad.'
  • 'Beneath a rod
  • More heavy, Christ for my sake trod
  • The winepress of the wrath of God.'
  • 'Sweet, thou art weary.'
  • 'Not so Christ:
  • Whose mighty love of me sufficed
  • For Strength, Salvation, Eucharist.'
  • 'Sweet, thou art footsore.'
  • 'If I bleed, 10
  • His feet have bled; yea in my need
  • His Heart once bled for mine indeed.'
  • THE WORLD
  • 'Sweet, thou art young.'
  • 'So He was young
  • Who for my sake in silence hung
  • Upon the Cross with Passion wrung.'
  • 'Look, thou art fair.'
  • 'He was more fair
  • Than men, Who deigned for me to wear
  • A visage marred beyond compare.'
  • 'And thou hast riches.'
  • 'Daily bread:
  • All else is His: Who, living, dead, 20
  • For me lacked where to lay His Head.'
  • 'And life is sweet.'
  • 'It was not so
  • To Him, Whose Cup did overflow
  • With mine unutterable woe.'
  • THE DEVIL
  • 'Thou drinkest deep.'
  • 'When Christ would sup
  • He drained the dregs from out my cup:
  • So how should I be lifted up?'
  • 'Thou shalt win Glory.'
  • 'In the skies,
  • Lord Jesus, cover up mine eyes
  • Lest they should look on vanities.' 30
  • 'Thou shalt have Knowledge.'
  • 'Helpless dust!
  • In Thee, O Lord, I put my trust:
  • Answer Thou for me, Wise and Just.'
  • 'And Might.'--
  • 'Get thee behind me. Lord,
  • Who hast redeemed and not abhorred
  • My soul, oh keep it by Thy Word.'
  • THE ONE CERTAINTY
  • Sonnet
  • Vanity of vanities, the Preacher saith,
  • All things are vanity. The eye and ear
  • Cannot be filled with what they see and hear.
  • Like early dew, or like the sudden breath
  • Of wind, or like the grass that withereth,
  • Is man, tossed to and fro by hope and fear:
  • So little joy hath he, so little cheer,
  • Till all things end in the long dust of death.
  • To-day is still the same as yesterday,
  • To-morrow also even as one of them;
  • And there is nothing new under the sun:
  • Until the ancient race of Time be run,
  • The old thorns shall grow out of the old stem,
  • And morning shall be cold and twilight grey.
  • CHRISTIAN AND JEW
  • A DIALOGUE
  • 'Oh happy happy land!
  • Angels like rushes stand
  • About the wells of light.'--
  • 'Alas, I have not eyes for this fair sight:
  • Hold fast my hand.'--
  • 'As in a soft wind, they
  • Bend all one blessed way,
  • Each bowed in his own glory, star with star.'--
  • 'I cannot see so far,
  • Here shadows are.'-- 10
  • 'White-winged the cherubim,
  • Yet whiter seraphim,
  • Glow white with intense fire of love.'--
  • 'Mine eyes are dim:
  • I look in vain above,
  • And miss their hymn.'--
  • 'Angels, Archangels cry
  • One to other ceaselessly
  • (I hear them sing)
  • One "Holy, Holy, Holy" to their King.'-- 20
  • 'I do not hear them, I.'--
  • 'At one side Paradise
  • Is curtained from the rest,
  • Made green for wearied eyes;
  • Much softer than the breast
  • Of mother-dove clad in a rainbow's dyes.
  • 'All precious souls are there
  • Most safe, elect by grace,
  • All tears are wiped for ever from their face:
  • Untired in prayer 30
  • They wait and praise
  • Hidden for a little space.
  • 'Boughs of the Living Vine
  • They spread in summer shine
  • Green leaf with leaf:
  • Sap of the Royal Vine it stirs like wine
  • In all both less and chief.
  • 'Sing to the Lord,
  • All spirits of all flesh, sing;
  • For He hath not abhorred 40
  • Our low estate nor scorn'd our offering:
  • Shout to our King.'--
  • 'But Zion said:
  • My Lord forgetteth me.
  • Lo, she hath made her bed
  • In dust; forsaken weepeth she
  • Where alien rivers swell the sea.
  • 'She laid her body as the ground,
  • Her tender body as the ground to those
  • Who passed; her harpstrings cannot sound 50
  • In a strange land; discrowned
  • She sits, and drunk with woes.'--
  • 'O drunken not with wine,
  • Whose sins and sorrows have fulfilled the sum,--
  • Be not afraid, arise, be no more dumb;
  • Arise, shine,
  • For thy light is come.'--
  • 'Can these bones live?'--
  • 'God knows:
  • The prophet saw such clothed with flesh and skin;
  • A wind blew on them and life entered in; 60
  • They shook and rose.
  • Hasten the time, O Lord, blot out their sin,
  • Let life begin.'
  • SWEET DEATH
  • The sweetest blossoms die.
  • And so it was that, going day by day
  • Unto the church to praise and pray,
  • And crossing the green churchyard thoughtfully,
  • I saw how on the graves the flowers
  • Shed their fresh leaves in showers,
  • And how their perfume rose up to the sky
  • Before it passed away.
  • The youngest blossoms die.
  • They die, and fall and nourish the rich earth 10
  • From which they lately had their birth;
  • Sweet life, but sweeter death that passeth by
  • And is as though it had not been:--
  • All colors turn to green:
  • The bright hues vanish, and the odours fly,
  • The grass hath lasting worth.
  • And youth and beauty die.
  • So be it, O my God, Thou God of truth:
  • Better than beauty and than youth
  • Are Saints and Angels, a glad company; 20
  • And Thou, O lord, our Rest and Ease,
  • Are better far than these.
  • Why should we shrink from our full harvest? why
  • Prefer to glean with Ruth?
  • SYMBOLS
  • I watched a rosebud very long
  • Brought on by dew and sun and shower,
  • Waiting to see the perfect flower:
  • Then, when I thought it should be strong,
  • It opened at the matin hour
  • And fell at evensong.
  • I watched a nest from day to day,
  • A green nest full of pleasant shade,
  • Wherein three speckled eggs were laid:
  • But when they should have hatched in May, 10
  • The two old birds had grown afraid
  • Or tired, and flew away.
  • Then in my wrath I broke the bough
  • That I had tended so with care,
  • Hoping its scent should fill the air;
  • I crushed the eggs, not heeding how
  • Their ancient promise had been fair:
  • I would have vengeance now.
  • But the dead branch spoke from the sod,
  • And the eggs answered me again: 20
  • Because we failed dost thou complain?
  • Is thy wrath just? And what if God,
  • Who waiteth for thy fruits in vain,
  • Should also take the rod?
  • 'CONSIDER THE LILIES OF THE FIELD'
  • Flowers preach to us if we will hear:--
  • The rose saith in the dewy morn:
  • I am most fair;
  • Yet all my loveliness is born
  • Upon a thorn.
  • The poppy saith amid the corn:
  • Let but my scarlet head appear
  • And I am held in scorn;
  • Yet juice of subtle virtue lies
  • Within my cup of curious dyes. 10
  • The lilies say: Behold how we
  • Preach without words of purity.
  • The violets whisper from the shade
  • Which their own leaves have made:
  • Men scent our fragrance on the air,
  • Yet take no heed
  • Of humble lessons we would read.
  • But not alone the fairest flowers:
  • The merest grass
  • Along the roadside where we pass, 20
  • Lichen and moss and sturdy weed,
  • Tell of His love who sends the dew,
  • The rain and sunshine too,
  • To nourish one small seed.
  • THE WORLD
  • Sonnet
  • By day she woos me, soft, exceeding fair:
  • But all night as the moon so changeth she;
  • Loathsome and foul with hideous leprosy
  • And subtle serpents gliding in her hair.
  • By day she woos me to the outer air,
  • Ripe fruits, sweet flowers, and full satiety:
  • But through the night, a beast she grins at me,
  • A very monster void of love and prayer.
  • By day she stands a lie: by night she stands
  • In all the naked horror of the truth
  • With pushing horns and clawed and clutching hands.
  • Is this a friend indeed; that I should sell
  • My soul to her, give her my life and youth,
  • Till my feet, cloven too, take hold on hell?
  • A TESTIMONY
  • I said of laughter: it is vain.
  • Of mirth I said: what profits it?
  • Therefore I found a book, and writ
  • Therein how ease and also pain,
  • How health and sickness, every one
  • Is vanity beneath the sun.
  • Man walks in a vain shadow; he
  • Disquieteth himself in vain.
  • The things that were shall be again;
  • The rivers do not fill the sea, 10
  • But turn back to their secret source;
  • The winds too turn upon their course.
  • Our treasures moth and rust corrupt,
  • Or thieves break through and steal, or they
  • Make themselves wings and fly away.
  • One man made merry as he supped,
  • Nor guessed how when that night grew dim,
  • His soul would be required of him.
  • We build our houses on the sand
  • Comely withoutside and within; 20
  • But when the winds and rains begin
  • To beat on them, they cannot stand;
  • They perish, quickly overthrown,
  • Loose from the very basement stone.
  • All things are vanity, I said:
  • Yea vanity of vanities.
  • The rich man dies; and the poor dies:
  • The worm feeds sweetly on the dead.
  • Whate'er thou lackest, keep this trust:
  • All in the end shall have but dust. 30
  • The one inheritance, which best
  • And worst alike shall find and share:
  • The wicked cease from troubling there,
  • And there the weary are at rest;
  • There all the wisdom of the wise
  • Is vanity of vanities.
  • Man flourishes as a green leaf,
  • And as a leaf doth pass away;
  • Or as a shade that cannot stay,
  • And leaves no track, his course is brief: 40
  • Yet doth man hope and fear and plan
  • Till he is dead:--oh foolish man!
  • Our eyes cannot be satisfied
  • With seeing, nor our ears be filled
  • With hearing: yet we plant and build
  • And buy and make our borders wide;
  • We gather wealth, we gather care,
  • But know not who shall be our heir.
  • Why should we hasten to arise
  • So early, and so late take rest? 50
  • Our labour is not good; our best
  • Hopes fade; our heart is stayed on lies:
  • Verily, we sow wind; and we
  • Shall reap the whirlwind, verily.
  • He who hath little shall not lack;
  • He who hath plenty shall decay:
  • Our fathers went; we pass away;
  • Our children follow on our track:
  • So generations fail, and so
  • They are renewed, and come and go. 60
  • The earth is fattened with our dead;
  • She swallows more and doth not cease:
  • Therefore her wine and oil increase
  • And her sheaves are not numberèd;
  • Therefore her plants are green, and all
  • Her pleasant trees lusty and tall.
  • Therefore the maidens cease to sing,
  • And the young men are very sad;
  • Therefore the sowing is not glad,
  • And mournful is the harvesting. 70
  • Of high and low, of great and small,
  • Vanity is the lot of all.
  • A King dwelt in Jerusalem;
  • He was the wisest man on earth;
  • He had all riches from his birth,
  • And pleasures till he tired of them;
  • Then, having tested all things, he
  • Witnessed that all are vanity.
  • SLEEP AT SEA
  • Sound the deep waters:--
  • Who shall sound that deep?--
  • Too short the plummet,
  • And the watchmen sleep.
  • Some dream of effort
  • Up a toilsome steep;
  • Some dream of pasture grounds
  • For harmless sheep.
  • White shapes flit to and fro
  • From mast to mast; 10
  • They feel the distant tempest
  • That nears them fast:
  • Great rocks are straight ahead,
  • Great shoals not past;
  • They shout to one another
  • Upon the blast.
  • Oh, soft the streams drop music
  • Between the hills,
  • And musical the birds' nests
  • Beside those rills: 20
  • The nests are types of home
  • Love-hidden from ills,
  • The nests are types of spirits
  • Love-music fills.
  • So dream the sleepers,
  • Each man in his place;
  • The lightning shows the smile
  • Upon each face:
  • The ship is driving, driving,
  • It drives apace: 30
  • And sleepers smile, and spirits
  • Bewail their case.
  • The lightning glares and reddens
  • Across the skies;
  • It seems but sunset
  • To those sleeping eyes.
  • When did the sun go down
  • On such a wise?
  • From such a sunset
  • When shall day arise? 40
  • 'Wake,' call the spirits:
  • But to heedless ears:
  • They have forgotten sorrows
  • And hopes and fears;
  • They have forgotten perils
  • And smiles and tears;
  • Their dream has held them long,
  • Long years and years.
  • 'Wake,' call the spirits again:
  • But it would take 50
  • A louder summons
  • To bid them awake.
  • Some dream of pleasure
  • For another's sake;
  • Some dream, forgetful
  • Of a lifelong ache.
  • One by one slowly,
  • Ah, how sad and slow!
  • Wailing and praying
  • The spirits rise and go: 60
  • Clear stainless spirits
  • White as white as snow;
  • Pale spirits, wailing
  • For an overthrow.
  • One by one flitting,
  • Like a mournful bird
  • Whose song is tired at last
  • For no mate is heard.
  • The loving voice is silent,
  • The useless word; 70
  • One by one flitting
  • Sick with hope deferred.
  • Driving and driving,
  • The ship drives amain:
  • While swift from mast to mast
  • Shapes flit again,
  • Flit silent as the silence
  • Where men lie slain;
  • Their shadow cast upon the sails
  • Is like a stain. 80
  • No voice to call the sleepers,
  • No hand to raise:
  • They sleep to death in dreaming,
  • Of length of days.
  • Vanity of vanities,
  • The Preacher says:
  • Vanity is the end
  • Of all their ways.
  • FROM HOUSE TO HOME
  • The first was like a dream through summer heat,
  • The second like a tedious numbing swoon,
  • While the half-frozen pulses lagged to beat
  • Beneath a winter moon.
  • 'But,' says my friend, 'what was this thing and where?'
  • It was a pleasure-place within my soul;
  • An earthly paradise supremely fair
  • That lured me from the goal.
  • The first part was a tissue of hugged lies;
  • The second was its ruin fraught with pain: 10
  • Why raise the fair delusion to the skies
  • But to be dashed again?
  • My castle stood of white transparent glass
  • Glittering and frail with many a fretted spire,
  • But when the summer sunset came to pass
  • It kindled into fire.
  • My pleasaunce was an undulating green,
  • Stately with trees whose shadows slept below,
  • With glimpses of smooth garden-beds between
  • Like flame or sky or snow. 20
  • Swift squirrels on the pastures took their ease,
  • With leaping lambs safe from the unfeared knife;
  • All singing-birds rejoicing in those trees
  • Fulfilled their careless life.
  • Woodpigeons cooed there, stockdoves nestled there;
  • My trees were full of songs and flowers and fruit,
  • Their branches spread a city to the air
  • And mice lodged in their root.
  • My heath lay farther off, where lizards lived
  • In strange metallic mail, just spied and gone; 30
  • Like darted lightnings here and there perceived
  • But nowhere dwelt upon.
  • Frogs and fat toads were there to hop or plod
  • And propagate in peace, an uncouth crew,
  • Where velvet-headed rushes rustling nod
  • And spill the morning dew.
  • All caterpillars throve beneath my rule,
  • With snails and slugs in corners out of sight;
  • I never marred the curious sudden stool
  • That perfects in a night. 40
  • Safe in his excavated gallery
  • The burrowing mole groped on from year to year;
  • No harmless hedgehog curled because of me
  • His prickly back for fear.
  • Oft times one like an angel walked with me,
  • With spirit-discerning eyes like flames of fire,
  • But deep as the unfathomed endless sea,
  • Fulfilling my desire:
  • And sometimes like a snowdrift he was fair,
  • And sometimes like a sunset glorious red, 50
  • And sometimes he had wings to scale the air
  • With aureole round his head.
  • We sang our songs together by the way,
  • Calls and recalls and echoes of delight;
  • So communed we together all the day,
  • And so in dreams by night.
  • I have no words to tell what way we walked.
  • What unforgotten path now closed and sealed;
  • I have no words to tell all things we talked,
  • All things that he revealed: 60
  • This only can I tell: that hour by hour
  • I waxed more feastful, lifted up and glad;
  • I felt no thorn-prick when I plucked a flower,
  • Felt not my friend was sad.
  • 'To-morrow,' once I said to him with smiles:
  • 'To-night,' he answered gravely and was dumb,
  • But pointed out the stones that numbered miles
  • And miles to come.
  • 'Not so,' I said: 'to-morrow shall be sweet;
  • To-night is not so sweet as coming days.' 70
  • Then first I saw that he had turned his feet,
  • Had turned from me his face:
  • Running and flying miles and miles he went,
  • But once looked back to beckon with his hand
  • And cry: 'Come home, O love, from banishment:
  • Come to the distant land.'
  • That night destroyed me like an avalanche;
  • One night turned all my summer back to snow:
  • Next morning not a bird upon my branch,
  • Not a lamb woke below,-- 80
  • No bird, no lamb, no living breathing thing;
  • No squirrel scampered on my breezy lawn,
  • No mouse lodged by his hoard: all joys took wing
  • And fled before that dawn.
  • Azure and sun were starved from heaven above,
  • No dew had fallen, but biting frost lay hoar:
  • O love, I knew that I should meet my love,
  • Should find my love no more.
  • 'My love no more,' I muttered stunned with pain:
  • I shed no tear, I wrung no passionate hand, 90
  • Till something whispered: 'You shall meet again,
  • Meet in a distant land.'
  • Then with a cry like famine I arose,
  • I lit my candle, searched from room to room,
  • Searched up and down; a war of winds that froze
  • Swept through the blank of gloom.
  • I searched day after day, night after night;
  • Scant change there came to me of night or day:
  • 'No more,' I wailed, 'no more:' and trimmed my light,
  • And gnashed but did not pray, 100
  • Until my heart broke and my spirit broke:
  • Upon the frost-bound floor I stumbled, fell,
  • And moaned: 'It is enough: withhold the stroke.
  • Farewell, O love, farewell.'
  • Then life swooned from me. And I heard the song
  • Of spheres and spirits rejoicing over me:
  • One cried: 'Our sister, she hath suffered long.'--
  • One answered: 'Make her see.'--
  • One cried: 'Oh blessèd she who no more pain,
  • Who no more disappointment shall receive.'-- 110
  • One answered: 'Not so: she must live again;
  • Strengthen thou her to live.'
  • So while I lay entranced a curtain seemed
  • To shrivel with crackling from before my face;
  • Across mine eyes a waxing radiance beamed
  • And showed a certain place.
  • I saw a vision of a woman, where
  • Night and new morning strive for domination;
  • Incomparably pale, and almost fair,
  • And sad beyond expression. 120
  • Her eyes were like some fire-enshrining gem,
  • Were stately like the stars, and yet were tender;
  • Her figure charmed me like a windy stem
  • Quivering and drooped and slender.
  • I stood upon the outer barren ground,
  • She stood on inner ground that budded flowers;
  • While circling in their never-slackening round
  • Danced by the mystic hours.
  • But every flower was lifted on a thorn,
  • And every thorn shot upright from its sands 130
  • To gall her feet; hoarse laughter pealed in scorn
  • With cruel clapping hands.
  • She bled and wept, yet did not shrink; her strength
  • Was strung up until daybreak of delight:
  • She measured measureless sorrow toward its length,
  • And breadth, and depth, and height.
  • Then marked I how a chain sustained her form,
  • A chain of living links not made nor riven:
  • It stretched sheer up through lighting, wind, and storm,
  • And anchored fast in heaven. 140
  • One cried: 'How long? yet founded on the Rock
  • She shall do battle, suffer, and attain.'--
  • One answered: 'Faith quakes in the tempest shock:
  • Strengthen her soul again.'
  • I saw a cup sent down and come to her
  • Brimfull of loathing and of bitterness:
  • She drank with livid lips that seemed to stir
  • The depth, not make it less.
  • But as she drank I spied a hand distil
  • New wine and virgin honey; making it 150
  • First bitter-sweet, then sweet indeed, until
  • She tasted only sweet.
  • Her lips and cheeks waxed rosy-fresh and young;
  • Drinking she sang: 'My soul shall nothing want;'
  • And drank anew: while soft a song was sung,
  • A mystical slow chant.
  • One cried: 'The wounds are faithful of a friend:
  • The wilderness shall blossom as a rose.'--
  • One answered: 'Rend the veil, declare the end,
  • Strengthen her ere she goes.' 160
  • Then earth and heaven were rolled up like a scroll;
  • Time and space, change and death, had passed away;
  • Weight, number, measure, each had reached its whole;
  • The day had come, that day.
  • Multitudes--multitudes--stood up in bliss,
  • Made equal to the angels, glorious, fair;
  • With harps, palms, wedding-garments, kiss of peace
  • And crowned and haloed hair.
  • They sang a song, a new song in the height,
  • Harping with harps to Him Who is Strong and True: 170
  • They drank new wine, their eyes saw with new light,
  • Lo, all things were made new.
  • Tier beyond tier they rose and rose and rose
  • So high that it was dreadful, flames with flames:
  • No man could number them, no tongue disclose
  • Their secret sacred names.
  • As though one pulse stirred all, one rush of blood
  • Fed all, one breath swept through them myriad-voiced,
  • They struck their harps, cast down their crowns, they stood
  • And worshipped and rejoiced. 180
  • Each face looked one way like a moon new-lit,
  • Each face looked one way towards its Sun of Love;
  • Drank love and bathed in love and mirrored it
  • And knew no end thereof.
  • Glory touched glory on each blessèd head,
  • Hands locked dear hands never to sunder more:
  • These were the new-begotten from the dead
  • Whom the great birthday bore.
  • Heart answered heart, soul answered soul at rest,
  • Double against each other, filled, sufficed: 190
  • All loving, loved of all; but loving best
  • And best beloved of Christ.
  • I saw that one who lost her love in pain,
  • Who trod on thorns, who drank the loathsome cup;
  • The lost in night, in day was found again;
  • The fallen was lifted up.
  • They stood together in the blessèd noon,
  • They sang together through the length of days;
  • Each loving face bent Sunwards like a moon
  • New-lit with love and praise. 200
  • Therefore, O friend, I would not if I might
  • Rebuild my house of lies, wherein I joyed
  • One time to dwell: my soul shall walk in white,
  • Cast down but not destroyed.
  • Therefore in patience I possess my soul;
  • Yea, therefore as a flint I set my face,
  • To pluck down, to build up again the whole--
  • But in a distant place.
  • These thorns are sharp, yet I can tread on them;
  • This cup is loathsome, yet He makes it sweet: 210
  • My face is steadfast toward Jerusalem,
  • My heart remembers it.
  • I lift the hanging hands, the feeble knees--
  • I, precious more than seven times molten gold--
  • Until the day when from his storehouses
  • God shall bring new and old;
  • Beauty for ashes, oil of joy for grief,
  • Garment of praise for spirit of heaviness:
  • Although to-day I fade as doth a leaf,
  • I languish and grow less. 220
  • Although to-day He prunes my twigs with pain,
  • Yet doth His blood nourish and warm my root:
  • To-morrow I shall put forth buds again
  • And clothe myself with fruit.
  • Although to-day I walk in tedious ways,
  • To-day His staff is turned into a rod,
  • Yet will I wait for Him the appointed days
  • And stay upon my God.
  • OLD AND NEW YEAR DITTIES
  • 1
  • New Year met me somewhat sad:
  • Old Year leaves me tired,
  • Stripped of favourite things I had
  • Baulked of much desired:
  • Yet farther on my road to-day
  • God willing, farther on my way.
  • New Year coming on apace
  • What have you to give me?
  • Bring you scathe, or bring you grace,
  • Face me with an honest face; 10
  • You shall not deceive me:
  • Be it good or ill, be it what you will,
  • It needs shall help me on my road,
  • My rugged way to heaven, please God.
  • 2
  • Watch with me, men, women, and children dear,
  • You whom I love, for whom I hope and fear,
  • Watch with me this last vigil of the year.
  • Some hug their business, some their pleasure-scheme;
  • Some seize the vacant hour to sleep or dream;
  • Heart locked in heart some kneel and watch apart.
  • Watch with me blessèd spirits, who delight
  • All through the holy night to walk in white,
  • Or take your ease after the long-drawn fight.
  • I know not if they watch with me: I know 10
  • They count this eve of resurrection slow,
  • And cry, 'How long?' with urgent utterance strong.
  • Watch with me Jesus, in my loneliness:
  • Though others say me nay, yet say Thou yes;
  • Though others pass me by, stop Thou to bless.
  • Yea, Thou dost stop with me this vigil night;
  • To-night of pain, to-morrow of delight:
  • I, Love, am Thine; Thou, Lord my God, art mine.
  • 3
  • Passing away, saith the World, passing away:
  • Chances, beauty and youth sapped day by day:
  • Thy life never continueth in one stay.
  • Is the eye waxen dim, is the dark hair changing to grey
  • That hath won neither laurel nor bay?
  • I shall clothe myself in Spring and bud in May:
  • Thou, root-stricken, shalt not rebuild thy decay
  • On my bosom for aye.
  • Then I answered: Yea.
  • Passing away, saith my Soul, passing away: 10
  • With its burden of fear and hope, of labour and play;
  • Hearken what the past doth witness and say:
  • Rust in thy gold, a moth is in thine array,
  • A canker is in thy bud, thy leaf must decay.
  • At midnight, at cockcrow, at morning, one certain day
  • Lo, the Bridegroom shall come and shall not delay:
  • Watch thou and pray.
  • Then I answered: Yea.
  • Passing away, saith my God, passing away:
  • Winter passeth after the long delay: 20
  • New grapes on the vine, new figs on the tender spray,
  • Turtle calleth turtle in Heaven's May.
  • Though I tarry wait for Me, trust Me, watch and pray:
  • Arise, come away, night is past and lo it is day,
  • My love, My sister, My spouse, thou shalt hear Me say.
  • Then I answered: Yea.
  • AMEN
  • It is over. What is over?
  • Nay, now much is over truly!--
  • Harvest days we toiled to sow for;
  • Now the sheaves are gathered newly,
  • Now the wheat is garnered duly.
  • It is finished. What is finished?
  • Much is finished known or unknown:
  • Lives are finished; time diminished;
  • Was the fallow field left unsown?
  • Will these buds be always unblown? 10
  • It suffices. What suffices?
  • All suffices reckoned rightly:
  • Spring shall bloom where now the ice is,
  • Roses make the bramble sightly,
  • And the quickening sun shine brightly,
  • And the latter wind blow lightly,
  • And my garden teem with spices.
  • THE PRINCE'S PROGRESS, AND OTHER POEMS, 1866
  • THE PRINCE'S PROGRESS
  • Till all sweet gums and juices flow,
  • Till the blossom of blossoms blow,
  • The long hours go and come and go,
  • The bride she sleepeth, waketh, sleepeth,
  • Waiting for one whose coming is slow:--
  • Hark! the bride weepeth.
  • 'How long shall I wait, come heat come rime?'--
  • 'Till the strong Prince comes, who must come in time'
  • (Her women say), 'there's a mountain to climb,
  • A river to ford. Sleep, dream and sleep; 10
  • Sleep' (they say): 'we've muffled the chime,
  • Better dream than weep.'
  • In his world-end palace the strong Prince sat,
  • Taking his ease on cushion and mat,
  • Close at hand lay his staff and his hat.
  • 'When wilt thou start? the bride waits, O youth.'--
  • 'Now the moon's at full; I tarried for that,
  • Now I start in truth.
  • 'But tell me first, true voice of my doom,
  • Of my veiled bride in her maiden bloom; 20
  • Keeps she watch through glare and through gloom,
  • Watch for me asleep and awake?'--
  • 'Spell-bound she watches in one white room,
  • And is patient for thy sake.
  • 'By her head lilies and rosebuds grow;
  • The lilies droop, will the rosebuds blow?
  • The silver slim lilies hang the head low;
  • Their stream is scanty, their sunshine rare:
  • Let the sun blaze out, and let the stream flow,
  • They will blossom and wax fair. 30
  • 'Red and white poppies grow at her feet,
  • The blood-red wait for sweet summer heat,
  • Wrapped in bud-coats hairy and neat;
  • But the white buds swell, one day they will burst,
  • Will open their death-cups drowsy and sweet--
  • Which will open the first?'
  • Then a hundred sad voices lifted a wail,
  • And a hundred glad voices piped on the gale:
  • 'Time is short, life is short,' they took up the tale:
  • 'Life is sweet, love is sweet, use to-day while you may; 40
  • Love is sweet, and to-morrow may fail;
  • Love is sweet, use to-day.'
  • While the song swept by, beseeching and meek,
  • Up rose the Prince with a flush on his cheek,
  • Up he rose to stir and to seek,
  • Going forth in the joy of his strength;
  • Strong of limb if of purpose weak,
  • Starting at length.
  • Forth he set in the breezy morn,
  • Crossing green fields of nodding corn, 50
  • As goodly a Prince as ever was born;
  • Carolling with the carolling lark;--
  • Sure his bride will be won and worn,
  • Ere fall of the dark.
  • So light his step, so merry his smile,
  • A milkmaid loitered beside a stile,
  • Set down her pail and rested awhile,
  • A wave-haired milkmaid, rosy and white;
  • The Prince, who had journeyed at least a mile,
  • Grew athirst at the sight. 60
  • 'Will you give me a morning draught?'--
  • 'You're kindly welcome,' she said, and laughed.
  • He lifted the pail, new milk he quaffed;
  • Then wiping his curly black beard like silk:
  • 'Whitest cow that ever was calved
  • Surely gave you this milk.'
  • Was it milk now, or was it cream?
  • Was she a maid, or an evil dream?
  • Here eyes began to glitter and gleam;
  • He would have gone, but he stayed instead; 70
  • Green they gleamed as he looked in them:
  • 'Give me my fee,' she said.--
  • 'I will give you a jewel of gold.'--
  • 'Not so; gold is heavy and cold.'--
  • 'I will give you a velvet fold
  • Of foreign work your beauty to deck.'--
  • 'Better I like my kerchief rolled
  • Light and white round my neck.'--
  • 'Nay,' cried he, 'but fix your own fee.'--
  • She laughed, 'You may give the full moon to me; 80
  • Or else sit under this apple-tree
  • Here for one idle day by my side;
  • After that I'll let you go free,
  • And the world is wide.'
  • Loth to stay, but to leave her slack,
  • He half turned away, then he quite turned back:
  • For courtesy's sake he could not lack
  • To redeem his own royal pledge;
  • Ahead too the windy heaven lowered black
  • With a fire-cloven edge. 90
  • So he stretched his length in the apple-tree shade,
  • Lay and laughed and talked to the maid,
  • Who twisted her hair in a cunning braid
  • And writhed it shining in serpent-coils,
  • And held him a day and night fast laid
  • In her subtle toils.
  • At the death of night and the birth of day,
  • When the owl left off his sober play,
  • And the bat hung himself out of the way,
  • Woke the song of mavis and merle, 100
  • And heaven put off its hodden grey
  • For mother-o'-pearl.
  • Peeped up daisies here and there,
  • Here, there, and everywhere;
  • Rose a hopeful lark in the air,
  • Spreading out towards the sun his breast;
  • While the moon set solemn and fair
  • Away in the West.
  • 'Up, up, up,' called the watchman lark,
  • In his clear réveillée: 'Hearken, oh hark! 110
  • Press to the high goal, fly to the mark.
  • Up, O sluggard, new morn is born;
  • If still asleep when the night falls dark,
  • Thou must wait a second morn.'
  • 'Up, up, up,' sad glad voices swelled:
  • 'So the tree falls and lies as it's felled.
  • Be thy bands loosed, O sleeper, long held
  • In sweet sleep whose end is not sweet.
  • Be the slackness girt and the softness quelled
  • And the slowness fleet.' 120
  • Off he set. The grass grew rare,
  • A blight lurked in the darkening air,
  • The very moss grew hueless and spare,
  • The last daisy stood all astunt;
  • Behind his back the soil lay bare,
  • But barer in front.
  • A land of chasm and rent, a land
  • Of rugged blackness on either hand:
  • If water trickled its track was tanned
  • With an edge of rust to the chink; 130
  • If one stamped on stone or on sand
  • It returned a clink.
  • A lifeless land, a loveless land,
  • Without lair or nest on either hand:
  • Only scorpions jerked in the sand,
  • Black as black iron, or dusty pale;
  • From point to point sheer rock was manned
  • By scorpions in mail.
  • A land of neither life nor death,
  • Where no man buildeth or fashioneth, 140
  • Where none draws living or dying breath;
  • No man cometh or goeth there,
  • No man doeth, seeketh, saith,
  • In the stagnant air.
  • Some old volcanic upset must
  • Have rent the crust and blackened the crust;
  • Wrenched and ribbed it beneath its dust
  • Above earth's molten centre at seethe,
  • Heaved and heaped it by huge upthrust
  • Of fire beneath. 150
  • Untrodden before, untrodden since:
  • Tedious land for a social Prince;
  • Halting, he scanned the outs and ins,
  • Endless, labyrinthine, grim,
  • Of the solitude that made him wince,
  • Laying wait for him.
  • By bulging rock and gaping cleft,
  • Even of half mere daylight reft,
  • Rueful he peered to right and left,
  • Muttering in his altered mood: 160
  • 'The fate is hard that weaves my weft,
  • Though my lot be good.'
  • Dim the changes of day to night,
  • Of night scarce dark to day not bright.
  • Still his road wound towards the right,
  • Still he went, and still he went,
  • Till one night he espied a light,
  • In his discontent.
  • Out it flashed from a yawn-mouthed cave,
  • Like a red-hot eye from a grave. 170
  • No man stood there of whom to crave
  • Rest for wayfarer plodding by:
  • Though the tenant were churl or knave
  • The Prince might try.
  • In he passed and tarried not,
  • Groping his way from spot to spot,
  • Towards where the cavern flare glowed hot:--
  • An old, old mortal, cramped and double,
  • Was peering into a seething-pot,
  • In a world of trouble. 180
  • The veriest atomy he looked,
  • With grimy fingers clutching and crooked,
  • Tight skin, a nose all bony and hooked,
  • And a shaking, sharp, suspicious way;
  • His blinking eyes had scarcely brooked
  • The light of day.
  • Stared the Prince, for the sight was new;
  • Stared, but asked without more ado:
  • 'My a weary traveller lodge with you,
  • Old father, here in your lair? 190
  • In your country the inns seem few,
  • And scanty the fare.'
  • The head turned not to hear him speak;
  • The old voice whistled as through a leak
  • (Out it came in a quavering squeak):
  • 'Work for wage is a bargain fit:
  • If there's aught of mine that you seek
  • You must work for it.
  • 'Buried alive from light and air
  • This year is the hundredth year, 200
  • I feed my fire with a sleepless care,
  • Watching my potion wane or wax:
  • Elixir of Life is simmering there,
  • And but one thing lacks.
  • 'If you're fain to lodge here with me,
  • Take that pair of bellows you see--
  • Too heavy for my old hands they be--
  • Take the bellows and puff and puff:
  • When the steam curls rosy and free
  • The broth's boiled enough. 210
  • 'Then take your choice of all I have;
  • I will give you life if you crave.
  • Already I'm mildewed for the grave,
  • So first myself I must drink my fill:
  • But all the rest may be yours, to save
  • Whomever you will.'
  • 'Done,' quoth the Prince, and the bargain stood,
  • First he piled on resinous wood,
  • Next plied the bellows in hopeful mood;
  • Thinking, 'My love and I will live. 220
  • If I tarry, why life is good,
  • And she may forgive.'
  • The pot began to bubble and boil;
  • The old man cast in essence and oil,
  • He stirred all up with a triple coil
  • Of gold and silver and iron wire,
  • Dredged in a pinch of virgin soil,
  • And fed the fire.
  • But still the steam curled watery white;
  • Night turned to day and day to night; 230
  • One thing lacked, by his feeble sight
  • Unseen, unguessed by his feeble mind:
  • Life might miss him, but Death the blight
  • Was sure to find.
  • So when the hundredth year was full
  • The thread was cut and finished the school.
  • Death snapped the old worn-out tool,
  • Snapped him short while he stood and stirred
  • (Though stiff he stood as a stiff-necked mule)
  • With never a word. 240
  • Thus at length the old crab was nipped.
  • The dead hand slipped, the dead finger dipped
  • In the broth as the dead man slipped,--
  • That same instant, a rosy red
  • Flushed the steam, and quivered and clipped
  • Round the dead old head.
  • The last ingredient was supplied
  • (Unless the dead man mistook or lied).
  • Up started the Prince, he cast aside
  • The bellows plied through the tedious trial, 250
  • Made sure that his host had died,
  • And filled a phial.
  • 'One night's rest,' though the Prince: 'This done,
  • Forth I start with the rising sun:
  • With the morrow I rise and run,
  • Come what will of wind or of weather.
  • This draught of Life when my Bride is won
  • We'll drink together.'
  • Thus the dead man stayed in his grave,
  • Self-chosen, the dead man in his cave; 260
  • There he stayed, were he fool or knave,
  • Or honest seeker who had not found:
  • While the Prince outside was prompt to crave
  • Sleep on the ground.
  • 'If she watches, go bid her sleep;
  • Bit her sleep, for the road is steep:
  • He can sleep who holdeth her cheap,
  • Sleep and wake and sleep again.
  • Let him sow, one day he shall reap,
  • Let him sow the grain. 270
  • 'When there blows a sweet garden rose,
  • Let it bloom and wither if no man knows:
  • But if one knows when the sweet thing blows,
  • Knows, and lets it open and drop,
  • If but a nettle his garden grows
  • He hath earned the crop.'
  • Through his sleep the summons rang,
  • Into his ears it sobbed and it sang.
  • Slow he woke with a drowsy pang,
  • Shook himself without much debate, 280
  • Turned where he saw green branches hang,
  • Started though late.
  • For the black land was travelled o'er,
  • He should see the grim land no more.
  • A flowering country stretched before
  • His face when the lovely day came back:
  • He hugged the phial of Life he bore,
  • And resumed his track.
  • By willow courses he took his path,
  • Spied what a nest the kingfisher hath, 290
  • Marked the fields green to aftermath,
  • Marked where the red-brown field-mouse ran,
  • Loitered a while for a deep-stream bath,
  • Yawned for a fellow-man.
  • Up on the hills not a soul in view,
  • In a vale not many nor few;
  • Leaves, still leaves, and nothing new.
  • It's oh for a second maiden, at least,
  • To bear the flagon, and taste it too,
  • And flavour the feast. 300
  • Lagging he moved, and apt to swerve;
  • Lazy of limb, but quick of nerve.
  • At length the water-bed took a curve,
  • The deep river swept its bankside bare;
  • Waters streamed from the hill-reserve--
  • Waters here, waters there.
  • High above, and deep below,
  • Bursting, bubbling, swelling the flow,
  • Like hill torrents after the snow,--
  • Bubbling, gurgling, in whirling strife, 310
  • Swaying, sweeping, to and fro,--
  • He must swim for his life.
  • Which way?--which way?--his eyes grew dim
  • With the dizzying whirl--which way to swim?
  • The thunderous downshoot deafened him;
  • Half he choked in the lashing spray:
  • Life is sweet, and the grave is grim--
  • Which way?--which way?
  • A flash of light, a shout from the strand:
  • 'This way--this way; here lies the land!' 320
  • His phial clutched in one drowning hand;
  • He catches--misses--catches a rope;
  • His feet slip on the slipping sand:
  • Is there life?--is there hope?
  • Just saved, without pulse or breath,--
  • Scarcely saved from the gulp of death;
  • Laid where a willow shadoweth--
  • Laid where a swelling turf is smooth.
  • (O Bride! but the Bridegroom lingereth
  • For all thy sweet youth.) 330
  • Kind hands do and undo,
  • Kind voices whisper and coo:
  • 'I will chafe his hands'--'And I'--'And you
  • Raise his head, put his hair aside.'
  • (If many laugh, one well may rue:
  • Sleep on, thou Bride.)
  • So the Prince was tended with care:
  • One wrung foul ooze from his clustered hair;
  • Two chafed his hands, and did not spare;
  • But one held his drooping head breast-high, 340
  • Till his eyes oped, and at unaware
  • They met eye to eye.
  • Oh, a moon face in a shadowy place,
  • And a light touch and a winsome grace,
  • And a thrilling tender voice that says:
  • 'Safe from waters that seek the sea--
  • Cold waters by rugged ways--
  • Safe with me.'
  • While overhead bird whistles to bird,
  • And round about plays a gamesome herd: 350
  • 'Safe with us'--some take up the word--
  • 'Safe with us, dear lord and friend:
  • All the sweeter if long deferred
  • Is rest in the end.'
  • Had he stayed to weigh and to scan,
  • He had been more or less than a man:
  • He did what a young man can,
  • Spoke of toil and an arduous way--
  • Toil to-morrow, while golden ran
  • The sands of to-day. 360
  • Slip past, slip fast,
  • Uncounted hours from first to last,
  • Many hours till the last is past,
  • Many hours dwindling to one--
  • One hour whose die is cast,
  • One last hour gone.
  • Come, gone--gone for ever--
  • Gone as an unreturning river--
  • Gone as to death the merriest liver--
  • Gone as the year at the dying fall-- 370
  • To-morrow, to-day, yesterday, never--
  • Gone once for all.
  • Came at length the starting-day,
  • With last words, and last words to say,
  • With bodiless cries from far away--
  • Chiding wailing voices that rang
  • Like a trumpet-call to the tug and fray;
  • And thus they sang:
  • 'Is there life?--the lamp burns low;
  • Is there hope?--the coming is slow: 380
  • The promise promised so long ago,
  • The long promise, has not been kept.
  • Does she live?--does she die?--she slumbers so
  • Who so oft has wept.
  • 'Does she live?--does she die?--she languisheth
  • As a lily drooping to death,
  • As a drought-worn bird with failing breath,
  • As a lovely vine without a stay,
  • As a tree whereof the owner saith,
  • "Hew it down to-day."' 390
  • Stung by that word the Prince was fain
  • To start on his tedious road again.
  • He crossed the stream where a ford was plain,
  • He clomb the opposite bank though steep,
  • And swore to himself to strain and attain
  • Ere he tasted sleep.
  • Huge before him a mountain frowned
  • With foot of rock on the valley ground,
  • And head with snows incessant crowned,
  • And a cloud mantle about its strength, 400
  • And a path which the wild goat hath not found
  • In its breadth and length.
  • But he was strong to do and dare:
  • If a host had withstood him there,
  • He had braved a host with little care
  • In his lusty youth and his pride,
  • Tough to grapple though weak to snare.
  • He comes, O Bride.
  • Up he went where the goat scarce clings,
  • Up where the eagle folds her wings, 410
  • Past the green line of living things,
  • Where the sun cannot warm the cold,--
  • Up he went as a flame enrings
  • Where there seems no hold.
  • Up a fissure barren and black,
  • Till the eagles tired upon his track,
  • And the clouds were left behind his back,
  • Up till the utmost peak was past,
  • Then he gasped for breath and his strength fell slack;
  • He paused at last. 420
  • Before his face a valley spread
  • Where fatness laughed, wine, oil, and bread,
  • Where all fruit-trees their sweetness shed,
  • Where all birds made love to their kind,
  • Where jewels twinkled, and gold lay red
  • And not hard to find.
  • Midway down the mountain side
  • (On its green slope the path was wide)
  • Stood a house for a royal bride,
  • Built all of changing opal stone, 430
  • The royal palace, till now descried
  • In his dreams alone.
  • Less bold than in days of yore,
  • Doubting now though never before,
  • Doubting he goes and lags the more:
  • Is the time late? does the day grow dim?
  • Rose, will she open the crimson core
  • Of her heart to him?
  • Take heart of grace! the potion of Life
  • May go far to woo him a wife: 440
  • If she frown, yet a lover's strife
  • Lightly raised can be laid again:
  • A hasty word is never the knife
  • To cut love in twain.
  • Far away stretched the royal land,
  • Fed by dew, by a spice-wind fanned:
  • Light labour more, and his foot would stand
  • On the threshold, all labour done;
  • Easy pleasure laid at his hand,
  • And the dear Bride won. 450
  • His slackening steps pause at the gate--
  • Does she wake or sleep?--the time is late--
  • Does she sleep now, or watch and wait?
  • She has watched, she has waited long,
  • Watching athwart the golden grate
  • With a patient song.
  • Fling the golden portals wide,
  • The Bridegroom comes to his promised Bride;
  • Draw the gold-stiff curtains aside,
  • Let them look on each other's face, 460
  • She in her meekness, he in his pride--
  • Day wears apace.
  • Day is over, the day that wore.
  • What is this that comes through the door,
  • The face covered, the feet before?
  • This that coming takes his breath;
  • The Bride not seen, to be seen no more
  • Save of Bridegroom Death?
  • Veiled figures carrying her
  • Sweep by yet make no stir; 470
  • There is a smell of spice and myrrh,
  • A bride-chant burdened with one name;
  • The bride-song rises steadier
  • Than the torches' flame:
  • 'Too late for love, too late for joy,
  • Too late, too late!
  • You loitered on the road too long,
  • You trifled at the gate:
  • The enchanted dove upon her branch
  • Died without a mate; 480
  • The enchanted princess in her tower
  • Slept, died, behind the grate;
  • Her heart was starving all this while
  • You made it wait.
  • 'Ten years ago, five years ago,
  • One year ago,
  • Even then you had arrived in time,
  • Though somewhat slow;
  • Then you had known her living face
  • Which now you cannot know: 490
  • The frozen fountain would have leaped,
  • The buds gone on to blow,
  • The warm south wind would have awaked
  • To melt the snow.
  • 'Is she fair now as she lies?
  • Once she was fair;
  • Meet queen for any kingly king,
  • With gold-dust on her hair.
  • Now these are poppies in her locks,
  • White poppies she must wear; 500
  • Must wear a veil to shroud her face
  • And the want graven there:
  • Or is the hunger fed at length,
  • Cast off the care?
  • 'We never saw her with a smile
  • Or with a frown;
  • Her bed seemed never soft to her,
  • Though tossed of down;
  • She little heeded what she wore,
  • Kirtle, or wreath, or gown; 510
  • We think her white brows often ached
  • Beneath her crown,
  • Till silvery hairs showed in her locks
  • That used to be so brown.
  • 'We never heard her speak in haste;
  • Her tones were sweet,
  • And modulated just so much
  • As it was meet:
  • Her heart sat silent through the noise
  • And concourse of the street. 520
  • There was no hurry in her hands,
  • No hurry in her feet;
  • There was no bliss drew nigh to her,
  • That she might run to greet.
  • 'You should have wept her yesterday,
  • Wasting upon her bed:
  • But wherefore should you weep to-day
  • That she is dead?
  • Lo, we who love weep not to-day,
  • But crown her royal head. 530
  • Let be these poppies that we strew,
  • Your roses are too red:
  • Let be these poppies, not for you
  • Cut down and spread.'
  • MAIDEN-SONG
  • Long ago and long ago,
  • And long ago still,
  • There dwelt three merry maidens
  • Upon a distant hill.
  • One was tall Meggan,
  • And one was dainty May,
  • But one was fair Margaret,
  • More fair than I can say,
  • Long ago and long ago.
  • When Meggan plucked the thorny rose, 10
  • And when May pulled the brier,
  • Half the birds would swoop to see,
  • Half the beasts draw nigher;
  • Half the fishes of the streams
  • Would dart up to admire:
  • But when Margaret plucked a flag-flower,
  • Or poppy hot aflame,
  • All the beasts and all the birds
  • And all the fishes came
  • To her hand more soft than snow. 20
  • Strawberry leaves and May-dew
  • In brisk morning air,
  • Strawberry leaves and May-dew
  • Make maidens fair.
  • 'I go for strawberry leaves,'
  • Meggan said one day:
  • 'Fair Margaret can bide at home,
  • But you come with me, May;
  • Up the hill and down the hill,
  • Along the winding way 30
  • You and I are used to go.'
  • So these two fair sisters
  • Went with innocent will
  • Up the hill and down again,
  • And round the homestead hill:
  • While the fairest sat at home,
  • Margaret like a queen,
  • Like a blush-rose, like the moon
  • In her heavenly sheen,
  • Fragrant-breathed as milky cow 40
  • Or field of blossoming bean,
  • Graceful as an ivy bough
  • Born to cling and lean;
  • Thus she sat to sing and sew.
  • When she raised her lustrous eyes
  • A beast peeped at the door;
  • When she downward cast her eyes
  • A fish gasped on the floor;
  • When she turned away her eyes
  • A bird perched on the sill, 50
  • Warbling out its heart of love,
  • Warbling warbling still,
  • With pathetic pleadings low.
  • Light-foot May with Meggan
  • Sought the choicest spot,
  • Clothed with thyme-alternate grass:
  • Then, while day waxed hot,
  • Sat at ease to play and rest,
  • A gracious rest and play;
  • The loveliest maidens near or far, 60
  • When Margaret was away,
  • Who sat at home to sing and sew.
  • Sun-glow flushed their comely cheeks,
  • Wind-play tossed their hair,
  • Creeping things among the grass
  • Stroked them here and there;
  • Meggan piped a merry note,
  • A fitful wayward lay,
  • While shrill as bird on topmost twig
  • Piped merry May; 70
  • Honey-smooth the double flow.
  • Sped a herdsman from the vale,
  • Mounting like a flame,
  • All on fire to hear and see,
  • With floating locks he came.
  • Looked neither north nor south,
  • Neither east nor west,
  • But sat him down at Meggan's feet
  • As love-bird on his nest,
  • And wooed her with a silent awe, 80
  • With trouble not expressed;
  • She sang the tears into his eyes,
  • The heart out of his breast:
  • So he loved her, listening so.
  • She sang the heart out of his breast,
  • The words out of his tongue;
  • Hand and foot and pulse he paused
  • Till her song was sung.
  • Then he spoke up from his place
  • Simple words and true: 90
  • 'Scanty goods have I to give,
  • Scanty skill to woo;
  • But I have a will to work,
  • And a heart for you:
  • Bid me stay or bid me go.'
  • Then Meggan mused within herself:
  • 'Better be first with him,
  • Than dwell where fairer Margaret sits,
  • Who shines my brightness dim,
  • For ever second where she sits, 100
  • However fair I be:
  • I will be lady of his love,
  • And he shall worship me;
  • I will be lady of his herds
  • And stoop to his degree,
  • At home where kids and fatlings grow.'
  • Sped a shepherd from the height
  • Headlong down to look,
  • (White lambs followed, lured by love
  • Of their shepherd's crook): 110
  • He turned neither east nor west,
  • Neither north nor south,
  • But knelt right down to May, for love
  • Of her sweet-singing mouth;
  • Forgot his flocks, his panting flocks
  • In parching hill-side drouth;
  • Forgot himself for weal or woe.
  • Trilled her song and swelled her song
  • With maiden coy caprice
  • In a labyrinth of throbs, 120
  • Pauses, cadences;
  • Clear-noted as a dropping brook,
  • Soft-noted like the bees,
  • Wild-noted as the shivering wind
  • Forlorn through forest trees:
  • Love-noted like the wood-pigeon
  • Who hides herself for love,
  • Yet cannot keep her secret safe,
  • But coos and coos thereof:
  • Thus the notes rang loud or low. 130
  • He hung breathless on her breath;
  • Speechless, who listened well;
  • Could not speak or think or wish
  • Till silence broke the spell.
  • Then he spoke, and spread his hands,
  • Pointing here and there:
  • 'See my sheep and see the lambs,
  • Twin lambs which they bare.
  • All myself I offer you,
  • All my flocks and care, 140
  • Your sweet song hath moved me so.'
  • In her fluttered heart young May
  • Mused a dubious while:
  • 'If he loves me as he says'--
  • Her lips curved with a smile:
  • 'Where Margaret shines like the sun
  • I shine but like a moon;
  • If sister Meggan makes her choice
  • I can make mine as soon;
  • At cockcrow we were sister-maids, 150
  • We may be brides at noon.'
  • Said Meggan, 'Yes;' May said not 'No.'
  • Fair Margaret stayed alone at home,
  • Awhile she sang her song,
  • Awhile sat silent, then she thought:
  • 'My sisters loiter long.'
  • That sultry noon had waned away,
  • Shadows had waxen great:
  • 'Surely,' she thought within herself,
  • 'My sisters loiter late.' 160
  • She rose, and peered out at the door,
  • With patient heart to wait,
  • And heard a distant nightingale
  • Complaining of its mate;
  • Then down the garden slope she walked,
  • Down to the garden gate,
  • Leaned on the rail and waited so.
  • The slope was lightened by her eyes
  • Like summer lightning fair,
  • Like rising of the haloed moon 170
  • Lightened her glimmering hair,
  • While her face lightened like the sun
  • Whose dawn is rosy white.
  • Thus crowned with maiden majesty
  • She peered into the night,
  • Looked up the hill and down the hill,
  • To left hand and to right,
  • Flashing like fire-flies to and fro.
  • Waiting thus in weariness
  • She marked the nightingale 180
  • Telling, if any one would heed,
  • Its old complaining tale.
  • Then lifted she her voice and sang,
  • Answering the bird:
  • Then lifted she her voice and sang,
  • Such notes were never heard
  • From any bird when Spring's in blow.
  • The king of all that country
  • Coursing far, coursing near,
  • Curbed his amber-bitted steed, 190
  • Coursed amain to hear;
  • All his princes in his train,
  • Squire, and knight, and peer,
  • With his crown upon his head,
  • His sceptre in his hand,
  • Down he fell at Margaret's knees
  • Lord king of all that land,
  • To her highness bending low.
  • Every beast and bird and fish
  • Came mustering to the sound, 200
  • Every man and every maid
  • From miles of country round:
  • Meggan on her herdsman's arm,
  • With her shepherd May,
  • Flocks and herds trooped at their heels
  • Along the hill-side way;
  • No foot too feeble for the ascent,
  • Not any head too grey;
  • Some were swift and none were slow.
  • So Margaret sang her sisters home 210
  • In their marriage mirth;
  • Sang free birds out of the sky,
  • Beasts along the earth,
  • Sang up fishes of the deep--
  • All breathing things that move
  • Sang from far and sang from near
  • To her lovely love;
  • Sang together friend and foe;
  • Sang a golden-bearded king
  • Straightway to her feet, 220
  • Sang him silent where he knelt
  • In eager anguish sweet.
  • But when the clear voice died away,
  • When longest echoes died,
  • He stood up like a royal man
  • And claimed her for his bride.
  • So three maids were wooed and won
  • In a brief May-tide,
  • Long ago and long ago.
  • JESSIE CAMERON
  • 'Jessie, Jessie Cameron,
  • Hear me but this once,' quoth he.
  • 'Good luck go with you, neighbor's son,
  • But I'm no mate for you,' quoth she.
  • Day was verging toward the night
  • There beside the moaning sea,
  • Dimness overtook the light
  • There where the breakers be.
  • 'O Jessie, Jessie Cameron,
  • I have loved you long and true.'-- 10
  • 'Good luck go with you, neighbor's son,
  • But I'm no mate for you.'
  • She was a careless, fearless girl,
  • And made her answer plain,
  • Outspoken she to earl or churl,
  • Kindhearted in the main,
  • But somewhat heedless with her tongue,
  • And apt at causing pain;
  • A mirthful maiden she and young,
  • Most fair for bliss or bane. 20
  • 'Oh, long ago I told you so,
  • I tell you so to-day:
  • Go you your way, and let me go
  • Just my own free way.'
  • The sea swept in with moan and foam,
  • Quickening the stretch of sand;
  • They stood almost in sight of home;
  • He strove to take her hand.
  • 'Oh, can't you take your answer then,
  • And won't you understand? 30
  • For me you're not the man of men,
  • I've other plans are planned.
  • You're good for Madge, or good for Cis,
  • Or good for Kate, may be:
  • But what's to me the good of this
  • While you're not good for me?'
  • They stood together on the beach,
  • They two alone,
  • And louder waxed his urgent speech,
  • His patience almost gone: 40
  • 'Oh, say but one kind word to me,
  • Jessie, Jessie Cameron.'--
  • 'I'd be too proud to beg,' quoth she,
  • And pride was in her tone.
  • And pride was in her lifted head,
  • And in her angry eye
  • And in her foot, which might have fled,
  • But would not fly.
  • Some say that he had gipsy blood;
  • That in his heart was guile: 50
  • Yet he had gone through fire and flood
  • Only to win her smile.
  • Some say his grandam was a witch,
  • A black witch from beyond the Nile,
  • Who kept an image in a niche
  • And talked with it the while.
  • And by her hut far down the lane
  • Some say they would not pass at night,
  • Lest they should hear an unked strain
  • Or see an unked sight. 60
  • Alas, for Jessie Cameron!--
  • The sea crept moaning, moaning nigher:
  • She should have hastened to begone,--
  • The sea swept higher, breaking by her:
  • She should have hastened to her home
  • While yet the west was flushed with fire,
  • But now her feet are in the foam,
  • The sea-foam, sweeping higher.
  • O mother, linger at your door,
  • And light your lamp to make it plain, 70
  • But Jessie she comes home no more,
  • No more again.
  • They stood together on the strand,
  • They only, each by each;
  • Home, her home, was close at hand,
  • Utterly out of reach.
  • Her mother in the chimney nook
  • Heard a startled sea-gull screech,
  • But never turned her head to look
  • Towards the darkening beach: 80
  • Neighbours here and neighbours there
  • Heard one scream, as if a bird
  • Shrilly screaming cleft the air:--
  • That was all they heard.
  • Jessie she comes home no more,
  • Comes home never;
  • Her lover's step sounds at his door
  • No more forever.
  • And boats may search upon the sea
  • And search along the river, 90
  • But none know where the bodies be:
  • Sea-winds that shiver,
  • Sea-birds that breast the blast,
  • Sea-waves swelling,
  • Keep the secret first and last
  • Of their dwelling.
  • Whether the tide so hemmed them round
  • With its pitiless flow,
  • That when they would have gone they found
  • No way to go; 100
  • Whether she scorned him to the last
  • With words flung to and fro,
  • Or clung to him when hope was past,
  • None will ever know:
  • Whether he helped or hindered her,
  • Threw up his life or lost it well,
  • The troubled sea, for all its stir
  • Finds no voice to tell.
  • Only watchers by the dying
  • Have thought they heard one pray 110
  • Wordless, urgent; and replying
  • One seem to say him nay:
  • And watchers by the dead have heard
  • A windy swell from miles away,
  • With sobs and screams, but not a word
  • Distinct for them to say:
  • And watchers out at sea have caught
  • Glimpse of a pale gleam here or there,
  • Come and gone as quick as thought,
  • Which might be hand or hair. 120
  • SPRING QUIET
  • Gone were but the Winter,
  • Come were but the Spring,
  • I would go to a covert
  • Where the birds sing;
  • Where in the whitethorn
  • Singeth a thrush,
  • And a robin sings
  • In the holly-bush.
  • Full of fresh scents
  • Are the budding boughs 10
  • Arching high over
  • A cool green house:
  • Full of sweet scents,
  • And whispering air
  • Which sayeth softly:
  • 'We spread no snare;
  • 'Here dwell in safety,
  • Here dwell alone,
  • With a clear stream
  • And a mossy stone. 20
  • 'Here the sun shineth
  • Most shadily;
  • Here is heard an echo
  • Of the far sea,
  • Though far off it be.'
  • THE POOR GHOST
  • 'Oh whence do you come, my dear friend, to me,
  • With your golden hair all fallen below your knee,
  • And your face as white as snowdrops on the lea,
  • And your voice as hollow as the hollow sea?'
  • 'From the other world I come back to you,
  • My locks are uncurled with dripping drenching dew.
  • You know the old, whilst I know the new:
  • But to-morrow you shall know this too.'
  • 'Oh not to-morrow into the dark, I pray;
  • Oh not to-morrow, too soon to go away: 10
  • Here I feel warm and well-content and gay:
  • Give me another year, another day.'
  • 'Am I so changed in a day and a night
  • That mine own only love shrinks from me with fright,
  • Is fain to turn away to left or right
  • And cover up his eyes from the sight?'
  • 'Indeed I loved you, my chosen friend,
  • I loved you for life, but life has an end;
  • Through sickness I was ready to tend:
  • But death mars all, which we cannot mend. 20
  • 'Indeed I loved you; I love you yet,
  • If you will stay where your bed is set,
  • Where I have planted a violet,
  • Which the wind waves, which the dew makes wet.'
  • 'Life is gone, then love too is gone,
  • It was a reed that I leant upon:
  • Never doubt I will leave you alone
  • And not wake you rattling bone with bone.
  • 'I go home alone to my bed,
  • Dug deep at the foot and deep at the head, 30
  • Roofed in with a load of lead,
  • Warm enough for the forgotten dead.
  • 'But why did your tears soak through the clay,
  • And why did your sobs wake me where I lay?
  • I was away, far enough away:
  • Let me sleep now till the Judgment Day.'
  • A PORTRAIT
  • I
  • She gave up beauty in her tender youth,
  • Gave all her hope and joy and pleasant ways;
  • She covered up her eyes lest they should gaze
  • On vanity, and chose the bitter truth.
  • Harsh towards herself, towards others full of ruth,
  • Servant of servants, little known to praise,
  • Long prayers and fasts trenched on her nights and days:
  • She schooled herself to sights and sounds uncouth
  • That with the poor and stricken she might make
  • A home, until the least of all sufficed 10
  • Her wants; her own self learned she to forsake,
  • Counting all earthly gain but hurt and loss.
  • So with calm will she chose and bore the cross
  • And hated all for love of Jesus Christ.
  • II
  • They knelt in silent anguish by her bed,
  • And could not weep; but calmly there she lay.
  • All pain had left her; and the sun's last ray
  • Shone through upon her, warming into red
  • The shady curtains. In her heart she said:
  • 'Heaven opens; I leave these and go away; 20
  • The Bridegroom calls,--shall the Bride seek to stay?'
  • Then low upon her breast she bowed her head.
  • O lily flower, O gem of priceless worth,
  • O dove with patient voice and patient eyes,
  • O fruitful vine amid a land of dearth,
  • O maid replete with loving purities,
  • Thou bowedst down thy head with friends on earth
  • To raise it with the saints in Paradise.
  • DREAM-LOVE
  • Young Love lies sleeping
  • In May-time of the year,
  • Among the lilies,
  • Lapped in the tender light:
  • White lambs come grazing,
  • White doves come building there:
  • And round about him
  • The May-bushes are white.
  • Soft moss the pillow
  • For oh, a softer cheek; 10
  • Broad leaves cast shadow
  • Upon the heavy eyes:
  • There winds and waters
  • Grow lulled and scarcely speak;
  • There twilight lingers
  • The longest in the skies.
  • Young Love lies dreaming;
  • But who shall tell the dream?
  • A perfect sunlight
  • On rustling forest tips; 20
  • Or perfect moonlight
  • Upon a rippling stream;
  • Or perfect silence,
  • Or song of cherished lips.
  • Burn odours round him
  • To fill the drowsy air;
  • Weave silent dances
  • Around him to and fro;
  • For oh, in waking
  • The sights are not so fair, 30
  • And song and silence
  • Are not like these below.
  • Young Love lies dreaming
  • Till summer days are gone,--
  • Dreaming and drowsing
  • Away to perfect sleep:
  • He sees the beauty
  • Sun hath not looked upon,
  • And tastes the fountain
  • Unutterably deep. 40
  • Him perfect music
  • Doth hush unto his rest,
  • And through the pauses
  • The perfect silence calms:
  • Oh, poor the voices
  • Of earth from east to west,
  • And poor earth's stillness
  • Between her stately palms.
  • Young Love lies drowsing
  • Away to poppied death; 50
  • Cool shadows deepen
  • Across the sleeping face:
  • So fails the summer
  • With warm, delicious breath;
  • And what hath autumn
  • To give us in its place?
  • Draw close the curtains
  • Of branched evergreen;
  • Change cannot touch them
  • With fading fingers sere: 60
  • Here the first violets
  • Perhaps will bud unseen,
  • And a dove, may be,
  • Return to nestle here.
  • TWICE
  • I took my heart in my hand
  • (O my love, O my love),
  • I said: Let me fall or stand,
  • Let me live or die,
  • But this once hear me speak--
  • (O my love, O my love)--
  • Yet a woman's words are weak;
  • You should speak, not I.
  • You took my heart in your hand
  • With a friendly smile, 10
  • With a critical eye you scanned,
  • Then set it down,
  • And said: It is still unripe,
  • Better wait awhile;
  • Wait while the skylarks pipe,
  • Till the corn grows brown.
  • As you set it down it broke--
  • Broke, but I did not wince;
  • I smiled at the speech you spoke,
  • At your judgement that I heard: 20
  • But I have not often smiled
  • Since then, nor questioned since,
  • Nor cared for corn-flowers wild,
  • Nor sung with the singing bird.
  • I take my heart in my hand,
  • O my God, O my God,
  • My broken heart in my hand:
  • Thou hast seen, judge Thou.
  • My hope was written on sand,
  • O my God, O my God: 30
  • Now let thy judgement stand--
  • Yea, judge me now.
  • This contemned of a man,
  • This marred one heedless day,
  • This heart take Thou to scan
  • Both within and without:
  • Refine with fire its gold,
  • Purge thou its dross away--
  • Yea, hold it in Thy hold,
  • Whence none can pluck it out. 40
  • I take my heart in my hand--
  • I shall not die, but live--
  • Before Thy face I stand;
  • I, for Thou callest such:
  • All that I have I bring,
  • All that I am I give,
  • Smile Thou and I shall sing,
  • But shall not question much.
  • SONGS IN A CORNFIELD
  • A song in a cornfield
  • Where corn begins to fall,
  • Where reapers are reaping,
  • Reaping one, reaping all.
  • Sing pretty Lettice,
  • Sing Rachel, sing May;
  • Only Marian cannot sing
  • While her sweetheart's away.
  • Where is he gone to
  • And why does he stay? 10
  • He came across the green sea
  • But for a day,
  • Across the deep green sea
  • To help with the hay.
  • His hair was curly yellow
  • And his eyes were grey,
  • He laughed a merry laugh
  • And said a sweet say.
  • Where is he gone to
  • That he comes not home? 20
  • To-day or to-morrow
  • He surely will come.
  • Let him haste to joy
  • Lest he lag for sorrow,
  • For one weeps to-day
  • Who'll not weep to-morrow:
  • To-day she must weep
  • For gnawing sorrow,
  • To-night she may sleep
  • And not wake to-morrow. 30
  • May sang with Rachel
  • In the waxing warm weather,
  • Lettice sang with them,
  • They sang all together:--
  • 'Take the wheat in your arm
  • Whilst day is broad above,
  • Take the wheat to your bosom,
  • But not a false love.
  • Out in the fields
  • Summer heat gloweth, 40
  • Out in the fields
  • Summer wind bloweth,
  • Out in the fields
  • Summer friend showeth,
  • Out in the fields
  • Summer wheat groweth;
  • But in the winter
  • When summer heat is dead
  • And summer wind has veered
  • And summer friend has fled, 50
  • Only summer wheat remaineth,
  • White cakes and bread.
  • Take the wheat, clasp the wheat
  • That's food for maid and dove;
  • Take the wheat to your bosom,
  • But not a false false love.'
  • A silence of full noontide heat
  • Grew on them at their toil:
  • The farmer's dog woke up from sleep,
  • The green snake hid her coil. 60
  • Where grass stood thickest, bird and beast
  • Sought shadows as they could,
  • The reaping men and women paused
  • And sat down where they stood;
  • They ate and drank and were refreshed,
  • For rest from toil is good.
  • While the reapers took their ease,
  • Their sickles lying by,
  • Rachel sang a second strain,
  • And singing seemed to sigh:-- 70
  • 'There goes the swallow--
  • Could we but follow!
  • Hasty swallow stay,
  • Point us out the way;
  • Look back swallow, turn back swallow, stop swallow.
  • 'There went the swallow--
  • Too late to follow:
  • Lost our note of way,
  • Lost our chance to-day;
  • Good bye swallow, sunny swallow, wise swallow. 80
  • 'After the swallow
  • All sweet things follow:
  • All things go their way,
  • Only we must stay,
  • Must not follow; good bye swallow, good swallow.'
  • Then listless Marian raised her head
  • Among the nodding sheaves;
  • Her voice was sweeter than that voice;
  • She sang like one who grieves:
  • Her voice was sweeter than its wont 90
  • Among the nodding sheaves;
  • All wondered while they heard her sing
  • Like one who hopes and grieves:--
  • 'Deeper than the hail can smite,
  • Deeper than the frost can bite,
  • Deep asleep through day and night,
  • Our delight.
  • 'Now thy sleep no pang can break,
  • No to-morrow bid thee wake,
  • Not our sobs who sit and ache 100
  • For thy sake.
  • 'Is it dark or light below?
  • Oh, but is it cold like snow?
  • Dost thou feel the green things grow
  • Fast or slow?
  • 'Is it warm or cold beneath,
  • Oh, but is it cold like death?
  • Cold like death, without a breath,
  • Cold like death?'
  • If he comes to-day 110
  • He will find her weeping;
  • If he comes to-morrow
  • He will find her sleeping;
  • If he comes the next day
  • He'll not find her at all,
  • He may tear his curling hair,
  • Beat his breast and call.
  • A YEAR'S WINDFALLS
  • On the wind of January
  • Down flits the snow,
  • Travelling from the frozen North
  • As cold as it can blow.
  • Poor robin redbreast,
  • Look where he comes;
  • Let him in to feel your fire,
  • And toss him of your crumbs.
  • On the wind in February
  • Snowflakes float still, 10
  • Half inclined to turn to rain,
  • Nipping, dripping, chill.
  • Then the thaws swell the streams,
  • And swollen rivers swell the sea:--
  • If the winter ever ends
  • How pleasant it will be!
  • In the wind of windy March
  • The catkins drop down,
  • Curly, caterpillar-like,
  • Curious green and brown. 20
  • With concourse of nest-building birds
  • And leaf-buds by the way,
  • We begin to think of flowers
  • And life and nuts some day.
  • With the gusts of April
  • Rich fruit-tree blossoms fall,
  • On the hedged-in orchard-green,
  • From the southern wall.
  • Apple-trees and pear-trees
  • Shed petals white or pink, 30
  • Plum-trees and peach-trees;
  • While sharp showers sink and sink.
  • Little brings the May breeze
  • Beside pure scent of flowers,
  • While all things wax and nothing wanes
  • In lengthening daylight hours.
  • Across the hyacinth beds
  • The wind lags warm and sweet,
  • Across the hawthorn tops,
  • Across the blades of wheat. 40
  • In the wind of sunny June
  • Thrives the red rose crop,
  • Every day fresh blossoms blow
  • While the first leaves drop;
  • White rose and yellow rose
  • And moss-rose choice to find,
  • And the cottage cabbage-rose
  • Not one whit behind.
  • On the blast of scorched July
  • Drives the pelting hail, 50
  • From thunderous lightning-clouds, that blot
  • Blue heaven grown lurid-pale.
  • Weedy waves are tossed ashore,
  • Sea-things strange to sight
  • Gasp upon the barren shore
  • And fade away in light.
  • In the parching August wind
  • Corn-fields bow the head,
  • Sheltered in round valley depths,
  • On low hills outspread. 60
  • Early leaves drop loitering down
  • Weightless on the breeze,
  • First fruits of the year's decay
  • From the withering trees.
  • In brisk wind of September
  • The heavy-headed fruits
  • Shake upon their bending boughs
  • And drop from the shoots;
  • Some glow golden in the sun,
  • Some show green and streaked, 70
  • Some set forth a purple bloom,
  • Some blush rosy-cheeked.
  • In strong blast of October
  • At the equinox,
  • Stirred up in his hollow bed
  • Broad ocean rocks;
  • Plunge the ships on his bosom,
  • Leaps and plunges the foam,--
  • It's oh! for mothers' sons at sea,
  • That they were safe at home. 80
  • In slack wind of November
  • The fog forms and shifts;
  • All the world comes out again
  • When the fog lifts.
  • Loosened from their sapless twigs
  • Leaves drop with every gust;
  • Drifting, rustling, out of sight
  • In the damp or dust.
  • Last of all, December,
  • The year's sands nearly run, 90
  • Speeds on the shortest day,
  • Curtails the sun;
  • With its bleak raw wind
  • Lays the last leaves low,
  • Brings back the nightly frosts,
  • Brings back the snow.
  • THE QUEEN OF HEARTS
  • How comes it, Flora, that, whenever we
  • Play cards together, you invariably,
  • However the pack parts,
  • Still hold the Queen of Hearts?
  • I've scanned you with a scrutinizing gaze,
  • Resolved to fathom these your secret ways:
  • But, sift them as I will,
  • Your ways are secret still.
  • I cut and shuffle; shuffle, cut, again;
  • But all my cutting, shuffling, proves in vain: 10
  • Vain hope, vain forethought too;
  • The Queen still falls to you.
  • I dropped her once, prepense; but, ere the deal
  • Was dealt, your instinct seemed her loss to feel:
  • 'There should be one card more,'
  • You said, and searched the floor.
  • I cheated once; I made a private notch
  • In Heart-Queen's back, and kept a lynx-eyed watch;
  • Yet such another back
  • Deceived me in the pack: 20
  • The Queen of Clubs assumed by arts unknown
  • An imitative dint that seemed my own;
  • This notch, not of my doing,
  • Misled me to my ruin.
  • It baffles me to puzzle out the clue,
  • Which must be skill, or craft, or luck in you:
  • Unless, indeed, it be
  • Natural affinity.
  • ONE DAY
  • I will tell you when they met:
  • In the limpid days of Spring;
  • Elder boughs were budding yet,
  • Oaken boughs looked wintry still,
  • But primrose and veined violet
  • In the mossful turf were set,
  • While meeting birds made haste to sing
  • And build with right good will.
  • I will tell you when they parted:
  • When plenteous Autumn sheaves were brown, 10
  • Then they parted heavy-hearted;
  • The full rejoicing sun looked down
  • As grand as in the days before;
  • Only they had lost a crown;
  • Only to them those days of yore
  • Could come back nevermore.
  • When shall they meet? I cannot tell,
  • Indeed, when they shall meet again,
  • Except some day in Paradise:
  • For this they wait, one waits in pain. 20
  • Beyond the sea of death love lies
  • For ever, yesterday, to-day;
  • Angels shall ask them, 'Is it well?'
  • And they shall answer, 'Yea.'
  • A BIRD'S-EYE VIEW
  • 'Croak, croak, croak,'
  • Thus the Raven spoke,
  • Perched on his crooked tree
  • As hoarse as hoarse could be.
  • Shun him and fear him,
  • Lest the Bridegroom hear him;
  • Scout him and rout him
  • With his ominous eye about him.
  • Yet, 'Croak, croak, croak,'
  • Still tolled from the oak; 10
  • From that fatal black bird,
  • Whether heard or unheard:
  • 'O ship upon the high seas,
  • Freighted with lives and spices,
  • Sink, O ship,' croaked the Raven:
  • 'Let the Bride mount to heaven.'
  • In a far foreign land,
  • Upon the wave-edged sand,
  • Some friends gaze wistfully
  • Across the glittering sea. 20
  • 'If we could clasp our sister,'
  • Three say, 'now we have missed her!'
  • 'If we could kiss our daughter!'
  • Two sigh across the water.
  • Oh, the ship sails fast
  • With silken flags at the mast,
  • And the home-wind blows soft;
  • But a Raven sits aloft,
  • Chuckling and choking,
  • Croaking, croaking, croaking:-- 30
  • Let the beacon-fire blaze higher;
  • Bridegroom, watch; the Bride draws nigher.
  • On a sloped sandy beach,
  • Which the spring-tide billows reach,
  • Stand a watchful throng
  • Who have hoped and waited long:
  • 'Fie on this ship, that tarries
  • With the priceless freight it carries.
  • The time seems long and longer:
  • O languid wind, wax stronger;'-- 40
  • Whilst the Raven perched at ease
  • Still croaks and does not cease,
  • One monotonous note
  • Tolled from his iron throat:
  • 'No father, no mother,
  • But I have a sable brother:
  • He sees where ocean flows to,
  • And he knows what he knows, too.'
  • A day and a night
  • They kept watch worn and white; 50
  • A night and a day
  • For the swift ship on its way:
  • For the Bride and her maidens
  • --Clear chimes the bridal cadence--
  • For the tall ship that never
  • Hove in sight for ever.
  • On either shore, some
  • Stand in grief loud or dumb
  • As the dreadful dread
  • Grows certain though unsaid. 60
  • For laughter there is weeping,
  • And waking instead of sleeping,
  • And a desperate sorrow
  • Morrow after morrow.
  • Oh, who knows the truth,
  • How she perished in her youth,
  • And like a queen went down
  • Pale in her royal crown:
  • How she went up to glory
  • From the sea-foam chill and hoary, 70
  • From the sea-depth black and riven
  • To the calm that is in Heaven?
  • They went down, all the crew,
  • The silks and spices too,
  • The great ones and the small,
  • One and all, one and all.
  • Was it through stress of weather,
  • Quicksands, rocks, or all together?
  • Only the Raven knows this,
  • And he will not disclose this.-- 80
  • After a day and year
  • The bridal bells chime clear;
  • After a year and a day
  • The Bridegroom is brave and gay:
  • Love is sound, faith is rotten;
  • The old Bride is forgotten:--
  • Two ominous Ravens only
  • Remember, black and lonely.
  • LIGHT LOVE
  • 'Oh, sad thy lot before I came,
  • But sadder when I go;
  • My presence but a flash of flame,
  • A transitory glow
  • Between two barren wastes like snow.
  • What wilt thou do when I am gone,
  • Where wilt thou rest, my dear?
  • For cold thy bed to rest upon,
  • And cold the falling year
  • Whose withered leaves are lost and sere.' 10
  • She hushed the baby at her breast,
  • She rocked it on her knee:
  • 'And I will rest my lonely rest,
  • Warmed with the thought of thee,
  • Rest lulled to rest by memory.'
  • She hushed the baby with her kiss,
  • She hushed it with her breast:
  • 'Is death so sadder much than this--
  • Sure death that builds a nest
  • For those who elsewhere cannot rest?' 20
  • 'Oh, sad thy note, my mateless dove,
  • With tender nestling cold;
  • But hast thou ne'er another love
  • Left from the days of old,
  • To build thy nest of silk and gold,
  • To warm thy paleness to a blush
  • When I am far away--
  • To warm thy coldness to a flush,
  • And turn thee back to May,
  • And turn thy twilight back to day?' 30
  • She did not answer him again,
  • But leaned her face aside,
  • Weary with the pang of shame and pain,
  • And sore with wounded pride:
  • He knew his very soul had lied.
  • She strained his baby in her arms,
  • His baby to her heart:
  • 'Even let it go, the love that harms:
  • We twain will never part;
  • Mine own, his own, how dear thou art.' 40
  • 'Now never teaze me, tender-eyed,
  • Sigh-voiced,' he said in scorn:
  • 'For nigh at hand there blooms a bride,
  • My bride before the morn;
  • Ripe-blooming she, as thou forlorn.
  • Ripe-blooming she, my rose, my peach;
  • She woos me day and night:
  • I watch her tremble in my reach;
  • She reddens, my delight,
  • She ripens, reddens in my sight.' 50
  • 'And is she like a sunlit rose?
  • Am I like withered leaves?
  • Haste where thy spicèd garden blows:
  • But in bare Autumn eves
  • Wilt thou have store of harvest sheaves?
  • Thou leavest love, true love behind,
  • To seek a love as true;
  • Go, seek in haste: but wilt thou find?
  • Change new again for new;
  • Pluck up, enjoy--yea, trample too. 60
  • 'Alas for her, poor faded rose,
  • Alas for her her, like me,
  • Cast down and trampled in the snows.'
  • 'Like thee? nay, not like thee:
  • She leans, but from a guarded tree.
  • Farewell, and dream as long ago,
  • Before we ever met:
  • Farewell; my swift-paced horse seems slow.'
  • She raised her eyes, not wet
  • But hard, to Heaven: 'Does God forget?' 70
  • A DREAM
  • Sonnet
  • Once in a dream (for once I dreamed of you)
  • We stood together in an open field;
  • Above our heads two swift-winged pigeons wheeled,
  • Sporting at ease and courting full in view.
  • When loftier still a broadening darkness flew,
  • Down-swooping, and a ravenous hawk revealed;
  • Too weak to fight, too fond to fly, they yield;
  • So farewell life and love and pleasures new.
  • Then as their plumes fell fluttering to the ground,
  • Their snow-white plumage flecked with crimson drops,
  • I wept, and thought I turned towards you to weep:
  • But you were gone; while rustling hedgerow tops
  • Bent in a wind which bore to me a sound
  • Of far-off piteous bleat of lambs and sheep.
  • A RING POSY
  • Jess and Jill are pretty girls,
  • Plump and well to do,
  • In a cloud of windy curls:
  • Yet I know who
  • Loves me more than curls or pearls.
  • I'm not pretty, not a bit--
  • Thin and sallow-pale;
  • When I trudge along the street
  • I don't need a veil:
  • Yet I have one fancy hit. 10
  • Jess and Jill can trill and sing
  • With a flute-like voice,
  • Dance as light as bird on wing,
  • Laugh for careless joys:
  • Yet it's I who wear the ring.
  • Jess and Jill will mate some day,
  • Surely, surely:
  • Ripen on to June through May,
  • While the sun shines make their hay,
  • Slacken steps demurely: 20
  • Yet even there I lead the way.
  • BEAUTY IS VAIN
  • While roses are so red,
  • While lilies are so white,
  • Shall a woman exalt her face
  • Because it gives delight?
  • She's not so sweet as a rose,
  • A lily's straighter than she,
  • And if she were as red or white
  • She'd be but one of three.
  • Whether she flush in love's summer
  • Or in its winter grow pale, 10
  • Whether she flaunt her beauty
  • Or hide it away in a veil,
  • Be she red or white,
  • And stand she erect or bowed,
  • Time will win the race he runs with her
  • And hide her away in a shroud.
  • LADY MAGGIE
  • You must not call me Maggie, you must not call me Dear,
  • For I'm Lady of the Manor now stately to see;
  • And if there comes a babe, as there may some happy year,
  • 'Twill be little lord or lady at my knee.
  • Oh, but what ails you, my sailor cousin Phil,
  • That you shake and turn white like a cockcrow ghost?
  • You're as white as I turned once down by the mill,
  • When one told me you and ship and crew were lost:
  • Philip my playfellow, when we were boy and girl
  • (It was the Miller's Nancy told it to me), 10
  • Philip with the merry life in lip and curl,
  • Philip my playfellow drowned in the sea!
  • I thought I should have fainted, but I did not faint;
  • I stood stunned at the moment, scarcely sad,
  • Till I raised my wail of desolate complaint
  • For you, my cousin, brother, all I had.
  • They said I looked so pale--some say so fair--
  • My lord stopped in passing to soothe me back to life:
  • I know I missed a ringlet from my hair
  • Next morning; and now I am his wife. 20
  • Look at my gown, Philip, and look at my ring,
  • I'm all crimson and gold from top to toe:
  • All day long I sit in the sun and sing,
  • Where in the sun red roses blush and blow.
  • And I'm the rose of roses says my lord;
  • And to him I'm more than the sun in the sky,
  • While I hold him fast with the golden cord
  • Of a curl, with the eyelash of an eye.
  • His mother said 'fie,' and his sisters cried 'shame,'
  • His highborn ladies cried 'shame' from their place: 30
  • They said 'fie' when they only heard my name,
  • But fell silent when they saw my face.
  • Am I so fair, Philip? Philip, did you think
  • I was so fair when we played boy and girl,
  • Where blue forget-me-nots bloomed on the brink
  • Of our stream which the mill-wheel sent a whirl?
  • If I was fair then sure I'm fairer now,
  • Sitting where a score of servants stand,
  • With a coronet on high days for my brow
  • And almost a sceptre for my hand. 40
  • You're but a sailor, Philip, weatherbeaten brown,
  • A stranger on land and at home on the sea,
  • Coasting as best you may from town to town:
  • Coasting along do you often think of me?
  • I'm a great lady in a sheltered bower,
  • With hands grown white through having nought to do:
  • Yet sometimes I think of you hour after hour
  • Till I nigh wish myself a child with you.
  • WHAT WOULD I GIVE?
  • What would I give for a heart of flesh to warm me through,
  • Instead of this heart of stone ice-cold whatever I do;
  • Hard and cold and small, of all hearts the worst of all.
  • What would I give for words, if only words would come;
  • But now in its misery my spirit has fallen dumb:
  • Oh, merry friends, go your own way, I have never a word to say.
  • What would I give for tears, not smiles but scalding tears,
  • To wash the black mark clean, and to thaw the frost of years,
  • To wash the stain ingrain and to make me clean again.
  • THE BOURNE
  • Underneath the growing grass,
  • Underneath the living flowers,
  • Deeper than the sound of showers:
  • There we shall not count the hours
  • By the shadows as they pass.
  • Youth and health will be but vain,
  • Beauty reckoned of no worth:
  • There a very little girth
  • Can hold round what once the earth
  • Seemed too narrow to contain.
  • SUMMER
  • Winter is cold-hearted
  • Spring is yea and nay,
  • Autumn is a weather-cock
  • Blown every way:
  • Summer days for me
  • When every leaf is on its tree;
  • When Robin's not a beggar,
  • And Jenny Wren's a bride,
  • And larks hang singing, singing, singing,
  • Over the wheat-fields wide, 10
  • And anchored lilies ride,
  • And the pendulum spider
  • Swings from side to side,
  • And blue-black beetles transact business,
  • And gnats fly in a host,
  • And furry caterpillars hasten
  • That no time be lost,
  • And moths grow fat and thrive,
  • And ladybirds arrive.
  • Before green apples blush, 20
  • Before green nuts embrown,
  • Why, one day in the country
  • Is worth a month in town;
  • Is worth a day and a year
  • Of the dusty, musty, lag-last fashion
  • That days drone elsewhere.
  • AUTUMN
  • I dwell alone--I dwell alone, alone,
  • Whilst full my river flows down to the sea,
  • Gilded with flashing boats
  • That bring no friend to me:
  • O love-songs, gurgling from a hundred throats,
  • O love-pangs, let me be.
  • Fair fall the freighted boats which gold and stone
  • And spices bear to sea:
  • Slim, gleaming maidens swell their mellow notes,
  • Love-promising, entreating-- 10
  • Ah! sweet, but fleeting--
  • Beneath the shivering, snow-white sails.
  • Hush! the wind flags and fails--
  • Hush! they will lie becalmed in sight of strand--
  • Sight of my strand, where I do dwell alone;
  • Their songs wake singing echoes in my land--
  • They cannot hear me moan.
  • One latest, solitary swallow flies
  • Across the sea, rough autumn-tempest tossed,
  • Poor bird, shall it be lost? 20
  • Dropped down into this uncongenial sea,
  • With no kind eyes
  • To watch it while it dies,
  • Unguessed, uncared for, free:
  • Set free at last,
  • The short pang past,
  • In sleep, in death, in dreamless sleep locked fast.
  • Mine avenue is all a growth of oaks,
  • Some rent by thunder strokes,
  • Some rustling leaves and acorns in the breeze; 30
  • Fair fall my fertile trees,
  • That rear their goodly heads, and live at ease.
  • A spider's web blocks all mine avenue;
  • He catches down and foolish painted flies
  • That spider wary and wise.
  • Each morn it hangs a rainbow strung with dew
  • Betwixt boughs green with sap,
  • So fair, few creatures guess it is a trap:
  • I will not mar the web,
  • Though sad I am to see the small lives ebb. 40
  • It shakes--my trees shake--for a wind is roused
  • In cavern where it housed:
  • Each white and quivering sail,
  • Of boats among the water leaves
  • Hollows and strains in the full-throated gale:
  • Each maiden sings again--
  • Each languid maiden, whom the calm
  • Had lulled to sleep with rest and spice and balm
  • Miles down my river to the sea
  • They float and wane, 50
  • Long miles away from me.
  • Perhaps they say: 'She grieves,
  • Uplifted, like a beacon, on her tower.'
  • Perhaps they say: 'One hour
  • More, and we dance among the golden sheaves.'
  • Perhaps they say: 'One hour
  • More, and we stand,
  • Face to face, hand in hand;
  • Make haste, O slack gale, to the looked-for land!'
  • My trees are not in flower, 60
  • I have no bower,
  • And gusty creaks my tower,
  • And lonesome, very lonesome, is my strand.
  • THE GHOST'S PETITION
  • 'There's a footstep coming: look out and see,'
  • 'The leaves are falling, the wind is calling;
  • No one cometh across the lea.'--
  • 'There's a footstep coming; O sister, look.'--
  • 'The ripple flashes, the white foam dashes;
  • No one cometh across the brook.'--
  • 'But he promised that he would come:
  • To-night, to-morrow, in joy or sorrow,
  • He must keep his word, and must come home.
  • 'For he promised that he would come: 10
  • His word was given; from earth or heaven,
  • He must keep his word, and must come home.
  • 'Go to sleep, my sweet sister Jane;
  • You can slumber, who need not number
  • Hour after hour, in doubt and pain.
  • 'I shall sit here awhile, and watch;
  • Listening, hoping, for one hand groping
  • In deep shadow to find the latch.'
  • After the dark, and before the light,
  • One lay sleeping; and one sat weeping, 20
  • Who had watched and wept the weary night.
  • After the night, and before the day,
  • One lay sleeping; and one sat weeping--
  • Watching, weeping for one away.
  • There came a footstep climbing the stair;
  • Some one standing out on the landing
  • Shook the door like a puff of air--
  • Shook the door, and in he passed.
  • Did he enter? In the room centre
  • Stood her husband: the door shut fast. 30
  • 'O Robin, but you are cold--
  • Chilled with the night-dew: so lily-white you
  • Look like a stray lamb from our fold.
  • 'O Robin, but you are late:
  • Come and sit near me--sit here and cheer me.'--
  • (Blue the flame burnt in the grate.)
  • 'Lay not down your head on my breast:
  • I cannot hold you, kind wife, nor fold you
  • In the shelter that you love best.
  • 'Feel not after my clasping hand: 40
  • I am but a shadow, come from the meadow
  • Where many lie, but no tree can stand.
  • 'We are trees which have shed their leaves:
  • Our heads lie low there, but no tears flow there;
  • Only I grieve for my wife who grieves.
  • 'I could rest if you would not moan
  • Hour after hour; I have no power
  • To shut my ears where I lie alone.
  • 'I could rest if you would not cry;
  • But there's no sleeping while you sit weeping-- 50
  • Watching, weeping so bitterly.'--
  • 'Woe's me! woe's me! for this I have heard.
  • Oh night of sorrow!--oh black to-morrow!
  • Is it thus that you keep your word?
  • 'O you who used so to shelter me
  • Warm from the least wind--why, now the east wind
  • Is warmer than you, whom I quake to see.
  • 'O my husband of flesh and blood,
  • For whom my mother I left, and brother,
  • And all I had, accounting it good, 60
  • 'What do you do there, underground,
  • In the dark hollow? I'm fain to follow.
  • What do you do there?--what have you found?'--
  • 'What I do there I must not tell:
  • But I have plenty: kind wife, content ye:
  • It is well with us--it is well.
  • 'Tender hand hath made our nest;
  • Our fear is ended, our hope is blended
  • With present pleasure, and we have rest.'--
  • 'Oh, but Robin, I'm fain to come, 70
  • If your present days are so pleasant;
  • For my days are so wearisome.
  • 'Yet I'll dry my tears for your sake:
  • Why should I tease you, who cannot please you
  • Any more with the pains I take?'
  • MEMORY
  • I
  • I nursed it in my bosom while it lived,
  • I hid it in my heart when it was dead;
  • In joy I sat alone, even so I grieved
  • Alone and nothing said.
  • I shut the door to face the naked truth,
  • I stood alone--I faced the truth alone,
  • Stripped bare of self-regard or forms or ruth
  • Till first and last were shown.
  • I took the perfect balances and weighed;
  • No shaking of my hand disturbed the poise; 10
  • Weighed, found it wanting: not a word I said,
  • But silent made my choice.
  • None know the choice I made; I make it still.
  • None know the choice I made and broke my heart,
  • Breaking mine idol: I have braced my will
  • Once, chosen for once my part.
  • I broke it at a blow, I laid it cold,
  • Crushed in my deep heart where it used to live.
  • My heart dies inch by inch; the time grows old,
  • Grows old in which I grieve. 20
  • II
  • I have a room whereinto no one enters
  • Save I myself alone:
  • There sits a blessed memory on a throne,
  • There my life centres.
  • While winter comes and goes--oh tedious comer!--
  • And while its nip-wind blows;
  • While bloom the bloodless lily and warm rose
  • Of lavish summer.
  • If any should force entrance he might see there
  • One buried yet not dead, 30
  • Before whose face I no more bow my head
  • Or bend my knee there;
  • But often in my worn life's autumn weather
  • I watch there with clear eyes,
  • And think how it will be in Paradise
  • When we're together.
  • A ROYAL PRINCESS
  • I, a princess, king-descended, decked with jewels, gilded, drest,
  • Would rather be a peasant with her baby at her breast,
  • For all I shine so like the sun, and am purple like the west.
  • Two and two my guards behind, two and two before,
  • Two and two on either hand, they guard me evermore;
  • Me, poor dove, that must not coo--eagle that must not soar.
  • All my fountains cast up perfumes, all my gardens grow
  • Scented woods and foreign spices, with all flowers in blow
  • That are costly, out of season as the seasons go.
  • All my walls are lost in mirrors, whereupon I trace 10
  • Self to right hand, self to left hand, self in every place,
  • Self-same solitary figure, self-same seeking face.
  • Then I have an ivory chair high to sit upon,
  • Almost like my father's chair, which is an ivory throne;
  • There I sit uplift and upright, there I sit alone.
  • Alone by day, alone by night, alone days without end;
  • My father and my mother give me treasures, search and spend--
  • O my father! O my mother! have you ne'er a friend?
  • As I am a lofty princess, so my father is
  • A lofty king, accomplished in all kingly subtilties, 20
  • Holding in his strong right hand world-kingdoms' balances.
  • He has quarrelled with his neighbours, he has scourged his foes;
  • Vassal counts and princes follow where his pennon goes,
  • Long-descended valiant lords whom the vulture knows,
  • On whose track the vulture swoops, when they ride in state
  • To break the strength of armies and topple down the great:
  • Each of these my courteous servant, none of these my mate.
  • My father counting up his strength sets down with equal pen
  • So many head of cattle, head of horses, head of men;
  • These for slaughter, these for breeding, with the how and when. 30
  • Some to work on roads, canals; some to man his ships;
  • Some to smart in mines beneath sharp overseers' whips;
  • Some to trap fur-beasts in lands where utmost winter nips.
  • Once it came into my heart, and whelmed me like a flood,
  • That these too are men and women, human flesh and blood;
  • Men with hearts and men with souls, though trodden down like mud.
  • Our feasting was not glad that night, our music was not gay:
  • On my mother's graceful head I marked a thread of grey,
  • My father frowning at the fare seemed every dish to weigh.
  • I sat beside them sole princess in my exalted place, 40
  • My ladies and my gentlemen stood by me on the dais:
  • A mirror showed me I look old and haggard in the face;
  • It showed me that my ladies all are fair to gaze upon,
  • Plump, plenteous-haired, to every one love's secret lore is known,
  • They laugh by day, they sleep by night; ah me, what is a throne?
  • The singing men and women sang that night as usual,
  • The dancers danced in pairs and sets, but music had a fall,
  • A melancholy windy fall as at a funeral.
  • Amid the toss of torches to my chamber back we swept;
  • My ladies loosed my golden chain; meantime I could have wept 50
  • To think of some in galling chains whether they waked or slept.
  • I took my bath of scented milk, delicately waited on,
  • They burned sweet things for my delight, cedar and cinnamon,
  • They lit my shaded silver lamp, and left me there alone.
  • A day went by, a week went by. One day I heard it said:
  • 'Men are clamouring, women, children, clamouring to be fed;
  • Men like famished dogs are howling in the streets for bread.'
  • So two whispered by my door, not thinking I could hear,
  • Vulgar naked truth, ungarnished for a royal ear;
  • Fit for cooping in the background, not to stalk so near. 60
  • But I strained my utmost sense to catch this truth, and mark:
  • 'There are families out grazing like cattle in the park.'
  • 'A pair of peasants must be saved even if we build an ark.'
  • A merry jest, a merry laugh, each strolled upon his way;
  • One was my page, a lad I reared and bore with day by day;
  • One was my youngest maid as sweet and white as cream in May.
  • Other footsteps followed softly with a weightier tramp;
  • Voices said: 'Picked soldiers have been summoned from the camp
  • To quell these base-born ruffians who make free to howl and stamp.'
  • 'Howl and stamp?' one answered: 'They made free to hurl a stone 70
  • At the minister's state coach, well aimed and stoutly thrown.'
  • 'There's work then for the soldiers, for this rank crop must be mown.'
  • 'One I saw, a poor old fool with ashes on his head,
  • Whimpering because a girl had snatched his crust of bread:
  • Then he dropped; when some one raised him, it turned out he was dead.'
  • 'After us the deluge,' was retorted with a laugh:
  • 'If bread's the staff of life, they must walk without a staff.'
  • 'While I've a loaf they're welcome to my blessing and the chaff.'
  • These passed. The king: stand up. Said my father with a smile:
  • 'Daughter mine, your mother comes to sit with you awhile, 80
  • She's sad to-day, and who but you her sadness can beguile?'
  • He too left me. Shall I touch my harp now while I wait,--
  • (I hear them doubling guard below before our palace gate--)
  • Or shall I work the last gold stitch into my veil of state;
  • Or shall my woman stand and read some unimpassioned scene,
  • There's music of a lulling sort in words that pause between;
  • Or shall she merely fan me while I wait here for the queen?
  • Again I caught my father's voice in sharp word of command:
  • 'Charge!' a clash of steel: 'Charge again, the rebels stand.
  • Smite and spare not, hand to hand; smite and spare not, hand to hand.'
  • There swelled a tumult at the gate, high voices waxing higher; 91
  • A flash of red reflected light lit the cathedral spire;
  • I heard a cry for faggots, then I heard a yell for fire.
  • 'Sit and roast there with your meat, sit and bake there with your bread,
  • You who sat to see us starve,' one shrieking woman said:
  • 'Sit on your throne and roast with your crown upon your head.'
  • Nay, this thing will I do, while my mother tarrieth,
  • I will take my fine spun gold, but not to sew therewith,
  • I will take my gold and gems, and rainbow fan and wreath;
  • With a ransom in my lap, a king's ransom in my hand, 100
  • I will go down to this people, will stand face to face, will stand
  • Where they curse king, queen, and princess of this cursed land.
  • They shall take all to buy them bread, take all I have to give;
  • I, if I perish, perish; they to-day shall eat and live;
  • I, if I perish, perish; that's the goal I half conceive:
  • Once to speak before the world, rend bare my heart and show
  • The lesson I have learned which is death, is life, to know.
  • I, if I perish, perish; in the name of God I go.
  • SHALL I FORGET?
  • Shall I forget on this side of the grave?
  • I promise nothing: you must wait and see
  • Patient and brave.
  • (O my soul, watch with him and he with me.)
  • Shall I forget in peace of Paradise?
  • I promise nothing: follow, friend, and see
  • Faithful and wise.
  • (O my soul, lead the way he walks with me.)
  • VANITY OF VANITIES
  • Sonnet
  • Ah, woe is me for pleasure that is vain,
  • Ah, woe is me for glory that is past:
  • Pleasure that bringeth sorrow at the last,
  • Glory that at the last bringeth no gain!
  • So saith the sinking heart; and so again
  • It shall say till the mighty angel-blast
  • Is blown, making the sun and moon aghast
  • And showering down the stars like sudden rain.
  • And evermore men shall go fearfully
  • Bending beneath their weight of heaviness;
  • And ancient men shall lie down wearily,
  • And strong men shall rise up in weariness;
  • Yea, even the young shall answer sighingly
  • Saying one to another: How vain it is!
  • L. E. L.
  • 'Whose heart was breaking for a little love.'
  • Downstairs I laugh, I sport and jest with all;
  • But in my solitary room above
  • I turn my face in silence to the wall;
  • My heart is breaking for a little love.
  • Though winter frosts are done,
  • And birds pair every one,
  • And leaves peep out, for springtide is begun.
  • I feel no spring, while spring is wellnigh blown,
  • I find no nest, while nests are in the grove:
  • Woe's me for mine own heart that dwells alone, 10
  • My heart that breaketh for a little love.
  • While golden in the sun
  • Rivulets rise and run,
  • While lilies bud, for springtide is begun.
  • All love, are loved, save only I; their hearts
  • Beat warm with love and joy, beat full thereof:
  • They cannot guess, who play the pleasant parts,
  • My heart is breaking for a little love.
  • While beehives wake and whirr,
  • And rabbit thins his fur, 20
  • In living spring that sets the world astir.
  • I deck myself with skills and jewelry,
  • I plume myself like any mated dove:
  • They praise my rustling show, and never see
  • My heart is breaking for a little love.
  • While sprouts green lavender
  • With rosemary and myrrh,
  • For in quick spring the sap is all astir.
  • Perhaps some saints in glory guess the truth,
  • Perhaps some angels read it as they move, 30
  • And cry one to another full of ruth,
  • 'Her heart is breaking for a little love.'
  • Though other things have birth,
  • And leap and sing for mirth,
  • When springtime wakes and clothes and feeds the earth.
  • Yet saith a saint: 'Take patience for thy scathe;'
  • Yet saith an angel: 'Wait, for thou shalt prove
  • True best is last, true life is born of death,
  • O thou, heart-broken for a little love.
  • Then love shall fill they girth, 40
  • And love make fat thy dearth,
  • When new spring builds new heaven and clean new earth.'
  • LIFE AND DEATH
  • Life is not sweet. One day it will be sweet
  • To shut our eyes and die:
  • Nor feel the wild flowers blow, nor birds dart by
  • With flitting butterfly,
  • Nor grass grow long above our heads and feet,
  • Nor hear the happy lark that soars sky high,
  • Nor sigh that spring is fleet and summer fleet,
  • Nor mark the waxing wheat,
  • Nor know who sits in our accustomed seat.
  • Life is not good. One day it will be good 10
  • To die, then live again;
  • To sleep meanwhile: so not to feel the wane
  • Of shrunk leaves dropping in the wood,
  • Nor hear the foamy lashing of the main,
  • Nor mark the blackened bean-fields, nor where stood
  • Rich ranks of golden grain
  • Only dead refuse stubble clothe the plain:
  • Asleep from risk, asleep from pain.
  • BIRD OR BEAST?
  • Did any bird come flying
  • After Adam and Eve,
  • When the door was shut against them
  • And they sat down to grieve?
  • I think not Eve's peacock
  • Splendid to see,
  • And I think not Adam's eagle;
  • But a dove may be.
  • Did any beast come pushing
  • Through the thorny hedge 10
  • Into the thorny thistly world,
  • Out from Eden's edge?
  • I think not a lion,
  • Though his strength is such;
  • But an innocent loving lamb
  • May have done as much.
  • If the dove preached from her bough
  • and the lamb from his sod,
  • The lamb and dove
  • Were preachers sent from God. 20
  • EVE
  • 'While I sit at the door
  • Sick to gaze within
  • Mine eye weepeth sore
  • For sorrow and sin:
  • As a tree my sin stands
  • To darken all lands;
  • Death is the fruit it bore.
  • 'How have Eden bowers grown
  • Without Adam to bend them!
  • How have Eden flowers blown 10
  • Squandering their sweet breath
  • Without me to tend them!
  • The Tree of Life was ours,
  • Tree twelvefold-fruited,
  • Most lofty tree that flowers,
  • Most deeply rooted:
  • I chose the tree of death.
  • 'Hadst thou but said me nay,
  • Adam, my brother,
  • I might have pined away; 20
  • I, but none other:
  • God might have let thee stay
  • Safe in our garden,
  • By putting me away
  • Beyond all pardon.
  • 'I, Eve, sad mother
  • Of all who must live,
  • I, not another
  • Plucked bitterest fruit to give
  • My friend, husband, lover-- 30
  • O wanton eyes, run over;
  • Who but I should grieve?--
  • Cain hath slain his brother:
  • Of all who must die mother,
  • Miserable Eve!'
  • Thus she sat weeping,
  • Thus Eve our mother,
  • Where one lay sleeping
  • Slain by his brother.
  • Greatest and least 40
  • Each piteous beast
  • To hear her voice
  • Forgot his joys
  • And set aside his feast.
  • The mouse paused in his walk
  • And dropped his wheaten stalk;
  • Grave cattle wagged their heads
  • In rumination;
  • The eagle gave a cry
  • From his cloud station; 50
  • Larks on thyme beds
  • Forbore to mount or sing;
  • Bees drooped upon the wing;
  • The raven perched on high
  • Forgot his ration;
  • The conies in their rock,
  • A feeble nation,
  • Quaked sympathetical;
  • The mocking-bird left off to mock;
  • Huge camels knelt as if 60
  • In deprecation;
  • The kind hart's tears were falling;
  • Chattered the wistful stork;
  • Dove-voices with a dying fall
  • Cooed desolation
  • Answering grief by grief.
  • Only the serpent in the dust
  • Wriggling and crawling,
  • Grinned an evil grin and thrust
  • His tongue out with its fork. 70
  • GROWN AND FLOWN
  • I loved my love from green of Spring
  • Until sere Autumn's fall;
  • But now that leaves are withering
  • How should one love at all?
  • One heart's too small
  • For hunger, cold, love, everything.
  • I loved my love on sunny days
  • Until late Summer's wane;
  • But now that frost begins to glaze
  • How should one love again? 10
  • Nay, love and pain
  • Walk wide apart in diverse ways.
  • I loved my love--alas to see
  • That this should be, alas!
  • I thought that this could scarcely be,
  • Yet has it come to pass:
  • Sweet sweet love was,
  • Now bitter bitter grown to me.
  • A FARM WALK
  • The year stood at its equinox
  • And bluff the North was blowing,
  • A bleat of lambs came from the flocks,
  • Green hardy things were growing;
  • I met a maid with shining locks
  • Where milky kine were lowing.
  • She wore a kerchief on her neck,
  • Her bare arm showed its dimple,
  • Her apron spread without a speck,
  • Her air was frank and simple. 10
  • She milked into a wooden pail
  • And sang a country ditty,
  • An innocent fond lovers' tale,
  • That was not wise nor witty,
  • Pathetically rustical,
  • Too pointless for the city.
  • She kept in time without a beat
  • As true as church-bell ringers,
  • Unless she tapped time with her feet,
  • Or squeezed it with her fingers; 20
  • Her clear unstudied notes were sweet
  • As many a practised singer's.
  • I stood a minute out of sight,
  • Stood silent for a minute
  • To eye the pail, and creamy white
  • The frothing milk within it;
  • To eye the comely milking maid
  • Herself so fresh and creamy:
  • 'Good day to you,' at last I said;
  • She turned her head to see me: 30
  • 'Good day,' she said with lifted head;
  • Her eyes looked soft and dreamy,
  • And all the while she milked and milked
  • The grave cow heavy-laden:
  • I've seen grand ladies plumed and silked,
  • But not a sweeter maiden;
  • But not a sweeter fresher maid
  • Than this in homely cotton,
  • Whose pleasant face and silky braid
  • I have not yet forgotten. 40
  • Seven springs have passed since then, as I
  • Count with a sober sorrow;
  • Seven springs have come and passed me by,
  • And spring sets in to-morrow.
  • I've half a mind to shake myself
  • Free just for once from London,
  • To set my work upon the shelf
  • And leave it done or undone;
  • To run down by the early train,
  • Whirl down with shriek and whistle, 50
  • And feel the bluff North blow again,
  • And mark the sprouting thistle
  • Set up on waste patch of the lane
  • Its green and tender bristle.
  • And spy the scarce-blown violet banks,
  • Crisp primrose leaves and others,
  • And watch the lambs leap at their pranks
  • And butt their patient mothers.
  • Alas, one point in all my plan
  • My serious thoughts demur to: 60
  • Seven years have passed for maid and man,
  • Seven years have passed for her too;
  • Perhaps my rose is overblown,
  • Not rosy or too rosy;
  • Perhaps in farmhouse of her own
  • Some husband keeps her cosy,
  • Where I should show a face unknown.
  • Good-bye, my wayside posy.
  • SOMEWHERE OR OTHER
  • Somewhere or other there must surely be
  • The face not seen, the voice not heard,
  • The heart that not yet--never yet--ah me!
  • Made answer to my word.
  • Somewhere or other, may be near or far;
  • Past land and sea, clean out of sight;
  • Beyond the wandering moon, beyond the star
  • That tracks her night by night.
  • Somewhere or other, may be far or near;
  • With just a wall, a hedge, between; 10
  • With just the last leaves of the dying year
  • Fallen on a turf grown green.
  • A CHILL
  • What can lambkins do
  • All the keen night through?
  • Nestle by their woolly mother
  • The careful ewe.
  • What can nestlings do
  • In the nightly dew?
  • Sleep beneath their mother's wing
  • Till day breaks anew.
  • If in a field or tree
  • There might only be 10
  • Such a warm soft sleeping-place
  • Found for me!
  • CHILD'S TALK IN APRIL
  • I wish you were a pleasant wren,
  • And I your small accepted mate;
  • How we'd look down on toilsome men!
  • We'd rise and go to bed at eight
  • Or it may be not quite so late.
  • Then you should see the nest I'd build,
  • The wondrous nest for you and me;
  • The outside rough perhaps, but filled
  • With wool and down; ah, you should see
  • The cosy nest that it would be. 10
  • We'd have our change of hope and fear,
  • Small quarrels, reconcilements sweet:
  • I'd perch by you to chirp and cheer,
  • Or hop about on active feet,
  • And fetch you dainty bits to eat.
  • We'd be so happy by the day,
  • So safe and happy through the night,
  • We both should feel, and I should say,
  • It's all one season of delight,
  • And we'll make merry whilst we may. 20
  • Perhaps some day there'd be an egg
  • When spring had blossomed from the snow:
  • I'd stand triumphant on one leg;
  • Like chanticleer I'd almost crow
  • To let our little neighbours know.
  • Next you should sit and I would sing
  • Through lengthening days of sunny spring;
  • Till, if you wearied of the task,
  • I'd sit; and you should spread your wing
  • From bough to bough; I'd sit and bask. 30
  • Fancy the breaking of the shell,
  • The chirp, the chickens wet and bare,
  • The untried proud paternal swell;
  • And you with housewife-matron air
  • Enacting choicer bills of fare.
  • Fancy the embryo coats of down,
  • The gradual feathers soft and sleek;
  • Till clothed and strong from tail to crown,
  • With virgin warblings in their beak,
  • They too go forth to soar and seek. 40
  • So would it last an April through
  • And early summer fresh with dew:
  • Then should we part and live as twain,
  • Love-time would bring me back to you
  • And build our happy nest again.
  • GONE FOR EVER
  • O happy rose-bud blooming
  • Upon thy parent tree,
  • Nay, thou art too presuming;
  • For soon the earth entombing
  • Thy faded charms shall be,
  • And the chill damp consuming.
  • O happy skylark springing
  • Up to the broad blue sky,
  • Too fearless in thy winging,
  • Too gladsome in thy singing, 10
  • Thou also soon shalt lie
  • Where no sweet notes are ringing.
  • And through life's shine and shower
  • We shall have joy and pain;
  • But in the summer bower,
  • And at the morning hour,
  • We still shall look in vain
  • For the same bird and flower.
  • UNDER THE ROSE
  • 'The iniquity of the fathers upon the children.'
  • Oh the rose of keenest thorn!
  • One hidden summer morn
  • Under the rose I was born.
  • I do not guess his name
  • Who wrought my Mother's shame,
  • And gave me life forlorn,
  • But my Mother, Mother, Mother,
  • I know her from all other.
  • My Mother pale and mild,
  • Fair as ever was seen, 10
  • She was but scarce sixteen,
  • Little more than a child,
  • When I was born
  • To work her scorn.
  • With secret bitter throes,
  • In a passion of secret woes,
  • She bore me under the rose.
  • One who my Mother nursed
  • Took me from the first:--
  • 'O nurse, let me look upon 20
  • This babe that costs so dear;
  • To-morrow she will be gone:
  • Other mothers may keep
  • Their babes awake and asleep,
  • But I must not keep her here.'--
  • Whether I know or guess,
  • I know this not the less.
  • So I was sent away
  • That none might spy the truth:
  • And my childhood waxed to youth 30
  • And I left off childish play.
  • I never cared to play
  • With the village boys and girls;
  • And I think they thought me proud,
  • I found so little to say
  • And kept so from the crowd:
  • But I had the longest curls
  • And I had the largest eyes
  • And my teeth were small like pearls;
  • The girls might flout and scout me, 40
  • But the boys would hang about me
  • In sheepish mooning wise.
  • Our one-street village stood
  • A long mile from the town,
  • A mile of windy down
  • And bleak one-sided wood,
  • With not a single house.
  • Our town itself was small,
  • With just the common shops,
  • And throve in its small way. 50
  • Our neighbouring gentry reared
  • The good old-fashioned crops,
  • And made old-fashioned boasts
  • Of what John Bull would do
  • If Frenchman Frog appeared,
  • And drank old-fashioned toasts,
  • And made old-fashioned bows
  • To my Lady at the Hall.
  • My Lady at the Hall
  • Is grander than they all: 60
  • Hers is the oldest name
  • In all the neighbourhood;
  • But the race must die with her
  • Though she's a lofty dame,
  • For she's unmarried still.
  • Poor people say she's good
  • And has an open hand
  • As any in the land,
  • And she's the comforter
  • Of many sick and sad; 70
  • My nurse once said to me
  • That everything she had
  • Came of my Lady's bounty:
  • 'Though she's greatest in the county
  • She's humble to the poor,
  • No beggar seeks her door
  • But finds help presently.
  • I pray both night and day
  • For her, and you must pray:
  • But she'll never feel distress 80
  • If needy folk can bless.'
  • I was a little maid
  • When here we came to live
  • From somewhere by the sea.
  • Men spoke a foreign tongue
  • There where we used to be
  • When I was merry and young,
  • Too young to feel afraid;
  • The fisher folk would give
  • A kind strange word to me, 90
  • There by the foreign sea:
  • I don't know where it was,
  • But I remember still
  • Our cottage on a hill,
  • And fields of flowering grass
  • On that fair foreign shore.
  • I liked my old home best,
  • But this was pleasant too:
  • So here we made our nest
  • And here I grew. 100
  • And now and then my Lady
  • In riding past our door
  • Would nod to Nurse and speak,
  • Or stoop and pat my cheek;
  • And I was always ready
  • To hold the field-gate wide
  • For my Lady to go through;
  • My Lady in her veil
  • So seldom put aside,
  • My Lady grave and pale. 110
  • I often sat to wonder
  • Who might my parents be,
  • For I knew of something under
  • My simple-seeming state.
  • Nurse never talked to me
  • Of mother or of father,
  • But watched me early and late
  • With kind suspicious cares:
  • Or not suspicious, rather
  • Anxious, as if she knew 120
  • Some secret I might gather
  • And smart for unawares.
  • Thus I grew.
  • But Nurse waxed old and grey,
  • Bent and weak with years.
  • There came a certain day
  • That she lay upon her bed
  • Shaking her palsied head,
  • With words she gasped to say
  • Which had to stay unsaid. 130
  • Then with a jerking hand
  • Held out so piteously
  • She gave a ring to me
  • Of gold wrought curiously,
  • A ring which she had worn
  • Since the day I was born,
  • She once had said to me:
  • I slipped it on my finger;
  • Her eyes were keen to linger
  • On my hand that slipped it on; 140
  • Then she sighed one rattling sigh
  • And stared on with sightless eye:--
  • The one who loved me was gone.
  • How long I stayed alone
  • With the corpse I never knew,
  • For I fainted dead as stone:
  • When I came to life once more
  • I was down upon the floor,
  • With neighbours making ado
  • To bring me back to life. 150
  • I heard the sexton's wife
  • Say: 'Up, my lad, and run
  • To tell it at the Hall;
  • She was my Lady's nurse,
  • And done can't be undone.
  • I'll watch by this poor lamb.
  • I guess my Lady's purse
  • Is always open to such:
  • I'd run up on my crutch
  • A cripple as I am,' 160
  • (For cramps had vexed her much)
  • 'Rather than this dear heart
  • Lack one to take her part.'
  • For days day after day
  • On my weary bed I lay
  • Wishing the time would pass;
  • Oh, so wishing that I was
  • Likely to pass away:
  • For the one friend whom I knew
  • Was dead, I knew no other, 170
  • Neither father nor mother;
  • And I, what should I do?
  • One day the sexton's wife
  • Said: 'Rouse yourself, my dear:
  • My Lady has driven down
  • From the Hall into the town,
  • And we think she's coming here.
  • Cheer up, for life is life.'
  • But I would not look or speak,
  • Would not cheer up at all. 180
  • My tears were like to fall,
  • So I turned round to the wall
  • And hid my hollow cheek
  • Making as if I slept,
  • As silent as a stone,
  • And no one knew I wept.
  • What was my Lady to me,
  • The grand lady from the Hall?
  • She might come, or stay away,
  • I was sick at heart that day: 190
  • The whole world seemed to be
  • Nothing, just nothing to me,
  • For aught that I could see.
  • Yet I listened where I lay:
  • A bustle came below,
  • A clear voice said: 'I know;
  • I will see her first alone,
  • It may be less of a shock
  • If she's so weak to-day:'--
  • A light hand turned the lock, 200
  • A light step crossed the floor,
  • One sat beside my bed:
  • But never a word she said.
  • For me, my shyness grew
  • Each moment more and more:
  • So I said never a word
  • And neither looked nor stirred;
  • I think she must have heard
  • My heart go pit-a-pat:
  • Thus I lay, my Lady sat, 210
  • More than a mortal hour--
  • (I counted one and two
  • By the house-clock while I lay):
  • I seemed to have no power
  • To think of a thing to say,
  • Or do what I ought to do,
  • Or rouse myself to a choice.
  • At last she said: 'Margaret,
  • Won't you even look at me?'
  • A something in her voice 220
  • Forced my tears to fall at last,
  • Forced sobs from me thick and fast;
  • Something not of the past,
  • Yet stirring memory;
  • A something new, and yet
  • Not new, too sweet to last,
  • Which I never can forget.
  • I turned and stared at her:
  • Her cheek showed hollow-pale;
  • Her hair like mine was fair, 230
  • A wonderful fall of hair
  • That screened her like a veil;
  • But her height was statelier,
  • Her eyes had depth more deep;
  • I think they must have had
  • Always a something sad,
  • Unless they were asleep.
  • While I stared, my Lady took
  • My hand in her spare hand
  • Jewelled and soft and grand, 240
  • And looked with a long long look
  • Of hunger in my face;
  • As if she tried to trace
  • Features she ought to know,
  • And half hoped, half feared, to find.
  • Whatever was in her mind
  • She heaved a sigh at last,
  • And began to talk to me.
  • 'Your nurse was my dear nurse,
  • And her nursling's dear,' said she: 250
  • 'I never knew that she was worse
  • Till her poor life was past'
  • (Here my Lady's tears dropped fast):
  • 'I might have been with her,
  • But she had no comforter.
  • She might have told me much
  • Which now I shall never know,
  • Never never shall know.'
  • She sat by me sobbing so,
  • And seemed so woe-begone, 260
  • That I laid one hand upon
  • Hers with a timid touch,
  • Scarce thinking what I did,
  • Not knowing what to say:
  • That moment her face was hid
  • In the pillow close by mine,
  • Her arm was flung over me,
  • She hugged me, sobbing so
  • As if her heart would break,
  • And kissed me where I lay. 270
  • After this she often came
  • To bring me fruit or wine,
  • Or sometimes hothouse flowers.
  • And at nights I lay awake
  • Often and often thinking
  • What to do for her sake.
  • Wet or dry it was the same:
  • She would come in at all hours,
  • Set me eating and drinking
  • And say I must grow strong; 280
  • At last the day seemed long
  • And home seemed scarcely home
  • If she did not come.
  • Well, I grew strong again:
  • In time of primroses,
  • I went to pluck them in the lane;
  • In time of nestling birds,
  • I heard them chirping round the house;
  • And all the herds
  • Were out at grass when I grew strong, 290
  • And days were waxen long,
  • And there was work for bees
  • Among the May-bush boughs,
  • And I had shot up tall,
  • And life felt after all
  • Pleasant, and not so long
  • When I grew strong.
  • I was going to the Hall
  • To be my Lady's maid:
  • 'Her little friend,' she said to me, 300
  • 'Almost her child,'
  • She said and smiled
  • Sighing painfully;
  • Blushing, with a second flush
  • As if she blushed to blush.
  • Friend, servant, child: just this
  • My standing at the Hall;
  • The other servants call me 'Miss,'
  • My Lady calls me 'Margaret,'
  • With her clear voice musical. 310
  • She never chides when I forget
  • This or that; she never chides.
  • Except when people come to stay,
  • (And that's not often) at the Hall,
  • I sit with her all day
  • And ride out when she rides.
  • She sings to me and makes me sing;
  • Sometimes I read to her,
  • Sometimes we merely sit and talk.
  • She noticed once my ring 320
  • And made me tell its history:
  • That evening in our garden walk
  • She said she should infer
  • The ring had been my father's first,
  • Then my mother's, given for me
  • To the nurse who nursed
  • My mother in her misery,
  • That so quite certainly
  • Some one might know me, who...
  • Then she was silent, and I too. 330
  • I hate when people come:
  • The women speak and stare
  • And mean to be so civil.
  • This one will stroke my hair,
  • That one will pat my cheek
  • And praise my Lady's kindness,
  • Expecting me to speak;
  • I like the proud ones best
  • Who sit as struck with blindness,
  • As if I wasn't there. 340
  • But if any gentleman
  • Is staying at the Hall
  • (Though few come prying here),
  • My Lady seems to fear
  • Some downright dreadful evil,
  • And makes me keep my room
  • As closely as she can:
  • So I hate when people come,
  • It is so troublesome.
  • In spite of all her care, 350
  • Sometimes to keep alive
  • I sometimes do contrive
  • To get out in the grounds
  • For a whiff of wholesome air,
  • Under the rose you know:
  • It's charming to break bounds,
  • Stolen waters are sweet,
  • And what's the good of feet
  • If for days they mustn't go?
  • Give me a longer tether, 360
  • Or I may break from it.
  • Now I have eyes and ears
  • And just some little wit:
  • 'Almost my Lady's child;'
  • I recollect she smiled,
  • Sighed and blushed together;
  • Then her story of the ring
  • Sounds not improbable,
  • She told it me so well
  • It seemed the actual thing:-- 370
  • Oh, keep your counsel close,
  • But I guess under the rose,
  • In long past summer weather
  • When the world was blossoming,
  • And the rose upon its thorn:
  • I guess not who he was
  • Flawed honour like a glass,
  • And made my life forlorn,
  • But my Mother, Mother, Mother,
  • Oh, I know her from all other. 380
  • My Lady, you might trust
  • Your daughter with your fame.
  • Trust me, I would not shame
  • Our honourable name,
  • For I have noble blood
  • Though I was bred in dust
  • And brought up in the mud.
  • I will not press my claim,
  • Just leave me where you will:
  • But you might trust your daughter, 390
  • For blood is thicker than water
  • And you're my mother still.
  • So my Lady holds her own
  • With condescending grace,
  • and fills her lofty place
  • With an untroubled face
  • As a queen may fill a throne.
  • While I could hint a tale--
  • (But then I am her child)--
  • Would make her quail; 400
  • Would set her in the dust,
  • Lorn with no comforter,
  • Her glorious hair defiled
  • And ashes on her cheek:
  • The decent world would thrust
  • Its finger out at her,
  • Not much displeased I think
  • To make a nine days' stir;
  • The decent world would sink
  • Its voice to speak of her. 410
  • Now this is what I mean
  • To do, no more, no less:
  • Never to speak, or show
  • Bare sign of what I know.
  • Let the blot pass unseen;
  • Yea, let her never guess
  • I hold the tangled clue
  • She huddles out of view.
  • Friend, servant, almost child,
  • So be it and nothing more 420
  • On this side of the grave.
  • Mother, in Paradise,
  • You'll see with clearer eyes;
  • Perhaps in this world even
  • When you are like to die
  • And face to face with Heaven
  • You'll drop for once the lie:
  • But you must drop the mask, not I.
  • My Lady promises
  • Two hundred pounds with me 430
  • Whenever I may wed
  • A man she can approve:
  • And since besides her bounty
  • I'm fairest in the county
  • (For so I've heard it said,
  • Though I don't vouch for this),
  • Her promised pounds may move
  • Some honest man to see
  • My virtues and my beauties;
  • Perhaps the rising grazier, 440
  • Or temperance publican,
  • May claim my wifely duties.
  • Meanwhile I wait their leisure
  • And grace-bestowing pleasure,
  • I wait the happy man;
  • But if I hold my head
  • And pitch my expectations
  • Just higher than their level,
  • They must fall back on patience:
  • I may not mean to wed, 450
  • Yet I'll be civil.
  • Now sometimes in a dream
  • My heart goes out of me
  • To build and scheme,
  • Till I sob after things that seem
  • So pleasant in a dream:
  • A home such as I see
  • My blessed neighbours live in
  • With father and with mother,
  • All proud of one another, 460
  • Named by one common name
  • From baby in the bud
  • To full-blown workman father;
  • It's little short of Heaven.
  • I'd give my gentle blood
  • To wash my special shame
  • And drown my private grudge;
  • I'd toil and moil much rather
  • The dingiest cottage drudge
  • Whose mother need not blush, 470
  • Than live here like a lady
  • And see my Mother flush
  • And hear her voice unsteady
  • Sometimes, yet never dare
  • Ask to share her care.
  • Of course the servants sneer
  • Behind my back at me;
  • Of course the village girls,
  • Who envy me my curls
  • And gowns and idleness, 480
  • Take comfort in a jeer;
  • Of course the ladies guess
  • Just so much of my history
  • As points the emphatic stress
  • With which they laud my Lady;
  • The gentlemen who catch
  • A casual glimpse of me
  • And turn again to see,
  • Their valets on the watch
  • To speak a word with me, 490
  • All know and sting me wild;
  • Till I am almost ready
  • To wish that I were dead,
  • No faces more to see,
  • No more words to be said,
  • My Mother safe at last
  • Disburdened of her child,
  • And the past past.
  • 'All equal before God'--
  • Our Rector has it so, 500
  • And sundry sleepers nod:
  • It may be so; I know
  • All are not equal here,
  • And when the sleepers wake
  • They make a difference.
  • 'All equal in the grave'--
  • That shows an obvious sense:
  • Yet something which I crave
  • Not death itself brings near;
  • Now should death half atone 510
  • For all my past; or make
  • The name I bear my own?
  • I love my dear old Nurse
  • Who loved me without gains;
  • I love my mistress even,
  • Friend, Mother, what you will:
  • But I could almost curse
  • My Father for his pains;
  • And sometimes at my prayer
  • Kneeling in sight of Heaven 520
  • I almost curse him still:
  • Why did he set his snare
  • To catch at unaware
  • My Mother's foolish youth;
  • Load me with shame that's hers,
  • And her with something worse,
  • A lifelong lie for truth?
  • I think my mind is fixed
  • On one point and made up:
  • To accept my lot unmixed; 530
  • Never to drug the cup
  • But drink it by myself.
  • I'll not be wooed for pelf;
  • I'll not blot out my shame
  • With any man's good name;
  • But nameless as I stand,
  • My hand is my own hand,
  • And nameless as I came
  • I go to the dark land.
  • 'All equal in the grave'-- 540
  • I bide my time till then:
  • 'All equal before God'--
  • To-day I feel His rod,
  • To-morrow He may save:
  • Amen.
  • DEVOTIONAL PIECES
  • DESPISED AND REJECTED
  • My sun has set, I dwell
  • In darkness as a dead man out of sight;
  • And none remains, not one, that I should tell
  • To him mine evil plight
  • This bitter night.
  • I will make fast my door
  • That hollow friends may trouble me no more.
  • 'Friend, open to Me.'--Who is this that calls?
  • Nay, I am deaf as are my walls:
  • Cease crying, for I will not hear 10
  • Thy cry of hope or fear.
  • Others were dear,
  • Others forsook me: what art thou indeed
  • That I should heed
  • Thy lamentable need?
  • Hungry should feed,
  • Or stranger lodge thee here?
  • 'Friend, My Feet bleed.
  • Open thy door to Me and comfort Me.'
  • I will not open, trouble me no more. 20
  • Go on thy way footsore,
  • I will not rise and open unto thee.
  • 'Then is it nothing to thee? Open, see
  • Who stands to plead with thee.
  • Open, lest I should pass thee by, and thou
  • One day entreat My Face
  • And howl for grace,
  • And I be deaf as thou art now.
  • Open to Me.'
  • Then I cried out upon him: Cease, 30
  • Leave me in peace:
  • Fear not that I should crave
  • Aught thou mayst have.
  • Leave me in peace, yea trouble me no more,
  • Lest I arise and chase thee from my door.
  • What, shall I not be let
  • Alone, that thou dost vex me yet?
  • But all night long that voice spake urgently:
  • 'Open to Me.'
  • Still harping in mine ears: 40
  • 'Rise, let Me in.'
  • Pleading with tears:
  • 'Open to Me that I may come to thee.'
  • While the dew dropped, while the dark hours were cold:
  • 'My Feet bleed, see My Face,
  • See My Hands bleed that bring thee grace,
  • My Heart doth bleed for thee,
  • Open to Me.'
  • So till the break of day:
  • Then died away 50
  • That voice, in silence as of sorrow;
  • Then footsteps echoing like a sigh
  • Passed me by,
  • Lingering footsteps slow to pass.
  • On the morrow
  • I saw upon the grass
  • Each footprint marked in blood, and on my door
  • The mark of blood for evermore.
  • LONG BARREN
  • Thou who didst hang upon a barren tree,
  • My God, for me;
  • Though I till now be barren, now at length
  • Lord, give me strength
  • To bring forth fruit to Thee.
  • Thou who didst bear for me the crown of thorn,
  • Spitting and scorn;
  • Though I till now have put forth thorns, yet now
  • Strengthen me Thou
  • That better fruit be borne. 10
  • Thou Rose of Sharon, Cedar of broad roots,
  • Vine of sweet fruits,
  • Thou Lily of the vale with fadeless leaf,
  • Of thousands Chief,
  • Feed Thou my feeble shoots.
  • IF ONLY
  • If I might only love my God and die!
  • But now He bids me love Him and live on,
  • Now when the bloom of all my life is gone,
  • The pleasant half of life has quite gone by.
  • My tree of hope is lopped that spread so high,
  • And I forget how summer glowed and shone,
  • While autumn grips me with its fingers wan
  • And frets me with its fitful windy sigh.
  • When autumn passes then must winter numb,
  • And winter may not pass a weary while, 10
  • But when it passes spring shall flower again;
  • And in that spring who weepeth now shall smile,
  • Yea, they shall wax who now are on the wane,
  • Yea, they shall sing for love when Christ shall come.
  • DOST THOU NOT CARE?
  • I love and love not: Lord, it breaks my heart
  • To love and not to love.
  • Thou veiled within Thy glory, gone apart
  • Into Thy shrine, which is above,
  • Dost Thou not love me, Lord, or care
  • For this mine ill?--
  • _I love thee here or there,
  • I will accept thy broken heart, lie still._
  • Lord, it was well with me in time gone by
  • That cometh not again, 10
  • When I was fresh and cheerful, who but I?
  • I fresh, I cheerful: worn with pain
  • Now, out of sight and out of heart;
  • O Lord, how long?--
  • _I watch thee as thou art,
  • I will accept thy fainting heart, be strong._
  • 'Lie still,' 'be strong,' to-day; but, Lord, to-morrow,
  • What of to-morrow, Lord?
  • Shall there be rest from toil, be truce from sorrow,
  • Be living green upon the sward 20
  • Now but a barren grave to me,
  • Be joy for sorrow?--
  • _Did I not die for thee?
  • Did I not live for thee? Leave Me to-morrow._
  • WEARY IN WELL-DOING
  • I would have gone; God bade me stay:
  • I would have worked; God bade me rest.
  • He broke my will from day to day,
  • He read my yearnings unexpressed
  • And said them nay.
  • Now I would stay; God bids me go:
  • Now I would rest; God bids me work.
  • He breaks my heart tossed to and fro,
  • My soul is wrung with doubts that lurk
  • And vex it so. 10
  • I go, Lord, where Thou sendest me;
  • Day after day I plod and moil:
  • But, Christ my God, when will it be
  • That I may let alone my toil
  • And rest with Thee?
  • MARTYRS' SONG
  • We meet in joy, though we part in sorrow;
  • We part to-night, but we meet to-morrow.
  • Be it flood or blood the path that's trod,
  • All the same it leads home to God:
  • Be it furnace-fire voluminous,
  • One like God's Son will walk with us.
  • What are these that glow from afar,
  • These that lean over the golden bar,
  • Strong as the lion, pure as the dove,
  • With open arms and hearts of love? 10
  • They the blessed ones gone before,
  • They the blessed for evermore.
  • Out of great tribulation they went
  • Home to their home of Heaven-content;
  • Through flood, or blood, or furnace-fire,
  • To the rest that fulfils desire.
  • What are these that fly as a cloud,
  • With flashing heads and faces bowed,
  • In their mouths a victorious psalm,
  • In their hands a robe and palm? 20
  • Welcoming angels these that shine,
  • Your own angel, and yours, and mine;
  • Who have hedged us, both day and night
  • On the left hand and the right,
  • Who have watched us both night and day
  • Because the devil keeps watch to slay.
  • Light above light, and Bliss beyond bliss,
  • Whom words cannot utter, lo, Who is This?
  • As a King with many crowns He stands,
  • And our names are graven upon His hands; 30
  • As a Priest, with God-uplifted eyes,
  • He offers for us His sacrifice;
  • As the Lamb of God for sinners slain,
  • That we too may live He lives again;
  • As our Champion behold Him stand,
  • Strong to save us, at God's Right Hand.
  • God the Father give us grace
  • To walk in the light of Jesus' Face.
  • God the Son give us a part
  • In the hiding-place of Jesus' Heart: 40
  • God the Spirit so hold us up
  • That we may drink of Jesus' cup;
  • Death is short and life is long;
  • Satan is strong, but Christ more strong.
  • At His Word, Who hath led us hither.
  • The Red Sea must part hither and thither.
  • As His Word, Who goes before us too,
  • Jordan must cleave to let us through.
  • Yet one pang searching and sore,
  • And then Heaven for evermore; 50
  • Yet one moment awful and dark,
  • Then safety within the Veil and the Ark;
  • Yet one effort by Christ His grace,
  • Then Christ for ever face to face.
  • God the Father we will adore,
  • In Jesus' Name, now and evermore:
  • God the Son we will love and thank
  • In this flood and on the further bank:
  • God the Holy Ghost we will praise
  • In Jesus' Name, through endless days: 60
  • God Almighty, God Three in One,
  • God Almighty, God alone.
  • AFTER THIS THE JUDGEMENT
  • As eager homebound traveller to the goal,
  • Or steadfast seeker on an unsearched main,
  • Or martyr panting for an aureole,
  • My fellow-pilgrims pass me, and attain
  • That hidden mansion of perpetual peace
  • Where keen desire and hope dwell free from pain:
  • That gate stands open of perennial ease;
  • I view the glory till I partly long,
  • Yet lack the fire of love which quickens these.
  • O passing Angel, speed me with a song, 10
  • A melody of heaven to reach my heart
  • And rouse me to the race and make me strong;
  • Till in such music I take up my part
  • Swelling those Hallelujahs full of rest,
  • One, tenfold, hundredfold, with heavenly art,
  • Fulfilling north and south and east and west,
  • Thousand, ten thousandfold, innumerable,
  • All blent in one yet each one manifest;
  • Each one distinguished and beloved as well
  • As if no second voice in earth or heaven 20
  • Were lifted up the Love of God to tell.
  • Ah, Love of God, which Thine own Self hast given
  • To me most poor, and made me rich in love,
  • Love that dost pass the tenfold seven times seven,
  • Draw Thou mine eyes, draw Thou my heart above,
  • My treasure ad my heart store Thou in Thee,
  • Brood over me with yearnings of a dove;
  • Be Husband, Brother, closest Friend to me;
  • Love me as very mother loves her son,
  • Her sucking firstborn fondled on her knee: 30
  • Yea, more than mother loves her little one;
  • For, earthly, even a mother may forget
  • And feel no pity for its piteous moan;
  • But thou, O Love of God, remember yet,
  • Through the dry desert, through the waterflood
  • (Life, death) until the Great White Throne is set.
  • If now I am sick in chewing the bitter cud
  • Of sweet past sin, though solaced by Thy grace
  • And ofttimes strengthened by Thy Flesh and Blood,
  • How shall I then stand up before Thy face 40
  • When from Thine eyes repentance shall be hid
  • And utmost Justice stand in Mercy's place:
  • When every sin I thought or spoke or did
  • Shall meet me at the inexorable bar,
  • And there be no man standing in the mid
  • To plead for me; while star fallen after star
  • With heaven and earth are like a ripened shock,
  • And all time's mighty works and wonders are
  • Consumed as in a moment; when no rock
  • Remains to fall on me, no tree to hide, 50
  • But I stand all creation's gazing-stock
  • Exposed and comfortless on every side,
  • Placed trembling in the final balances
  • Whose poise this hour, this moment, must be tried?--
  • Ah Love of God, if greater love than this
  • Hath no man, that a man die for his friend,
  • And if such love of love Thine Own Love is,
  • Plead with Thyself, with me, before the end;
  • Redeem me from the irrevocable past;
  • Pitch Thou Thy Presence round me to defend; 60
  • Yea seek with piercèd feet, yea hold me fast
  • With piercèd hands whose wounds were made by love;
  • Not what I am, remember what Thou wast
  • When darkness hid from Thee Thy heavens above,
  • And sin Thy Father's Face, while thou didst drink
  • The bitter cup of death, didst taste thereof
  • For every man; while Thou wast nigh to sink
  • Beneath the intense intolerable rod,
  • Grown sick of love; not what I am, but think
  • Thy Life then ransomed mine, my God, my God. 70
  • GOOD FRIDAY
  • Am I a stone and not a sheep
  • That I can stand, O Christ, beneath Thy Cross,
  • To number drop by drop Thy Blood's slow loss,
  • And yet not weep?
  • Not so those women loved
  • Who with exceeding grief lamented Thee;
  • Not so fallen Peter weeping bitterly;
  • Not so the thief was moved;
  • Not so the Sun and Moon
  • Which hid their faces in a starless sky, 10
  • A horror of great darkness at broad noon--
  • I, only I.
  • Yet give not o'er,
  • But seek Thy sheep, true Shepherd of the flock;
  • Greater than Moses, turn and look once more
  • And smite a rock.
  • THE LOWEST PLACE
  • Give me the lowest place: not that I dare
  • Ask for that lowest place, but Thou hast died
  • That I might live and share
  • Thy glory by Thy side.
  • Give me the lowest place: or if for me
  • That lowest place too high, make one more low
  • Where I may sit and see
  • My God and love Thee so.
  • MISCELLANEOUS POEMS, 1848-69
  • DEATH'S CHILL BETWEEN
  • (_Athenaeum_, October 14, 1848)
  • Chide not; let me breathe a little,
  • For I shall not mourn him long;
  • Though the life-cord was so brittle,
  • The love-cord was very strong.
  • I would wake a little space
  • Till I find a sleeping-place.
  • You can go,--I shall not weep;
  • You can go unto your rest.
  • My heart-ache is all too deep,
  • And too sore my throbbing breast. 10
  • Can sobs be, or angry tears,
  • Where are neither hopes nor fears?
  • Though with you I am alone
  • And must be so everywhere,
  • I will make no useless moan,--
  • None shall say 'She could not bear:'
  • While life lasts I will be strong,--
  • But I shall not struggle long.
  • Listen, listen! Everywhere
  • A low voice is calling me, 20
  • And a step is on the stair,
  • And one comes ye do not see,
  • Listen, listen! Evermore
  • A dim hand knocks at the door.
  • Hear me; he is come again,--
  • My own dearest is come back.
  • Bring him in from the cold rain;
  • Bring wine, and let nothing lack.
  • Thou and I will rest together,
  • Love, until the sunny weather. 30
  • I will shelter thee from harm,--
  • Hide thee from all heaviness.
  • Come to me, and keep thee warm
  • By my side in quietness.
  • I will lull thee to thy sleep
  • With sweet songs:--we will not weep.
  • Who hath talked of weeping?--Yet
  • There is something at my heart,
  • Gnawing, I would fain forget,
  • And an aching and a smart. 40
  • --Ah! my mother, 'tis in vain,
  • For he is _not_ come again.
  • HEART'S CHILL BETWEEN
  • (_Athenaeum_, October 21, 1848)
  • I did not chide him, though I knew
  • That he was false to me.
  • Chide the exhaling of the dew,
  • The ebbing of the sea,
  • The fading of a rosy hue,--
  • But not inconstancy.
  • Why strive for love when love is o'er?
  • Why bind a restive heart?--
  • He never knew the pain I bore
  • In saying: 'We must part; 10
  • Let us be friends and nothing more.'
  • --Oh, woman's shallow art!
  • But it is over, it is done,--
  • I hardly heed it now;
  • So many weary years have run
  • Since then, I think not how
  • Things might have been,--but greet each one
  • With an unruffled brow.
  • What time I am where others be,
  • My heart seems very calm-- 20
  • Stone calm; but if all go from me,
  • There comes a vague alarm,
  • A shrinking in the memory
  • From some forgotten harm.
  • And often through the long, long night,
  • Waking when none are near,
  • I feel my heart beat fast with fright,
  • Yet know not what I fear.
  • Oh how I long to see the light,
  • And the sweet birds to hear! 30
  • To have the sun upon my face,
  • To look up through the trees,
  • To walk forth in the open space
  • And listen to the breeze,--
  • And not to dream the burial-place
  • Is clogging my weak knees.
  • Sometimes I can nor weep nor pray,
  • But am half stupefied:
  • And then all those who see me say
  • Mine eyes are opened wide 40
  • And that my wits seem gone away--
  • Ah, would that I had died!
  • Would I could die and be at peace,
  • Or living could forget!
  • My grief nor grows nor doth decrease,
  • But ever is:--and yet
  • Methinks, now, that all this shall cease
  • Before the sun shall set.
  • REPINING
  • (_Art and Poetry_ [_The Germ_, No. 3], March 1850)
  • She sat alway thro' the long day
  • Spinning the weary thread away;
  • And ever said in undertone:
  • 'Come, that I be no more alone.'
  • From early dawn to set of sun
  • Working, her task was still undone;
  • And the long thread seemed to increase
  • Even while she spun and did not cease.
  • She heard the gentle turtle-dove
  • Tell to its mate a tale of love; 10
  • She saw the glancing swallows fly,
  • Ever a social company;
  • She knew each bird upon its nest
  • Had cheering songs to bring it rest;
  • None lived alone save only she;--
  • The wheel went round more wearily;
  • She wept and said in undertone:
  • 'Come, that I be no more alone.'
  • Day followed day, and still she sighed
  • For love, and was not satisfied; 20
  • Until one night, when the moonlight
  • Turned all the trees to silver white,
  • She heard, what ne'er she heard before,
  • A steady hand undo the door.
  • The nightingale since set of sun
  • Her throbbing music had not done,
  • And she had listened silently;
  • But now the wind had changed, and she
  • Heard the sweet song no more, but heard
  • Beside her bed a whispered word: 30
  • 'Damsel, rise up; be not afraid;
  • For I am come at last,' it said.
  • She trembled, tho' the voice was mild;
  • She trembled like a frightened child;--
  • Till she looked up, and then she saw
  • The unknown speaker without awe.
  • He seemed a fair young man, his eyes
  • Beaming with serious charities;
  • His cheek was white but hardly pale;
  • And a dim glory like a veil 40
  • Hovered about his head, and shone
  • Thro' the whole room till night was gone.
  • So her fear fled; and then she said,
  • Leaning upon her quiet bed:
  • 'Now thou art come, I prithee stay,
  • That I may see thee in the day,
  • And learn to know thy voice, and hear
  • It evermore calling me near.'
  • He answered: 'Rise, and follow me.'
  • But she looked upwards wonderingly: 50
  • 'And whither would'st thou go, friend? stay
  • Until the dawning of the day.'
  • But he said: 'The wind ceaseth, Maid;
  • Of chill nor damp be thou afraid.'
  • She bound her hair up from the floor,
  • And passed in silence from the door.
  • So they went forth together, he
  • Helping her forward tenderly.
  • The hedges bowed beneath his hand;
  • Forth from the streams came the dry land 60
  • As they passed over; evermore
  • The pallid moonbeams shone before;
  • And the wind hushed, and nothing stirred;
  • Not even a solitary bird,
  • Scared by their footsteps, fluttered by
  • Where aspen-trees stood steadily.
  • As they went on, at length a sound
  • Came trembling on the air around;
  • The undistinguishable hum
  • Of life, voices that go and come 70
  • Of busy men, and the child's sweet
  • High laugh, and noise of trampling feet.
  • Then he said: 'Wilt thou go and see?'
  • And she made answer joyfully:
  • 'The noise of life, of human life,
  • Of dear communion without strife,
  • Of converse held 'twixt friend and friend;
  • Is it not here our path shall end?'
  • He led her on a little way
  • Until they reached a hillock: 'Stay.' 80
  • It was a village in a plain.
  • High mountains screened it from the rain
  • And stormy wind; and nigh at hand
  • A bubbling streamlet flowed, o'er sand
  • Pebbly and fine, and sent life up
  • Green succous stalk and flower-cup.
  • Gradually, day's harbinger,
  • A chilly wind began to stir.
  • It seemed a gentle powerless breeze
  • That scarcely rustled thro' the trees; 90
  • And yet it touched the mountain's head
  • And the paths man might never tread.
  • But hearken: in the quiet weather
  • Do all the streams flow down together?--
  • No, 'tis a sound more terrible
  • Than tho' a thousand rivers fell.
  • The everlasting ice and snow
  • Were loosened then, but not to flow;--
  • With a loud crash like solid thunder
  • The avalanche came, burying under 100
  • The village; turning life and breath
  • And rest and joy and plans to death.
  • 'Oh! let us fly, for pity fly;
  • Let us go hence, friend, thou and I.
  • There must be many regions yet
  • Where these things make not desolate.'
  • He looked upon her seriously;
  • Then said: 'Arise and follow me.'
  • The path that lay before them was
  • Nigh covered over with long grass; 110
  • And many slimy things and slow
  • Trailed on between the roots below.
  • The moon looked dimmer than before;
  • And shadowy cloudlets floating o'er
  • Its face sometimes quite hid its light,
  • And filled the skies with deeper night.
  • At last, as they went on, the noise
  • Was heard of the sea's mighty voice;
  • And soon the ocean could be seen
  • In its long restlessness serene. 120
  • Upon its breast a vessel rode
  • That drowsily appeared to nod
  • As the great billows rose and fell,
  • And swelled to sink, and sank to swell.
  • Meanwhile the strong wind had come forth
  • From the chill regions of the North,
  • The mighty wind invisible.
  • And the low waves began to swell;
  • And the sky darkened overhead;
  • And the moon once looked forth, then fled 130
  • Behind dark clouds; while here and there
  • The lightning shone out in the air;
  • And the approaching thunder rolled
  • With angry pealings manifold.
  • How many vows were made, and prayers
  • That in safe times were cold and scarce.
  • Still all availed not; and at length
  • The waves arose in all their strength,
  • And fought against the ship, and filled
  • The ship. Then were the clouds unsealed, 140
  • And the rain hurried forth, and beat
  • On every side and over it.
  • Some clung together, and some kept
  • A long stern silence, and some wept.
  • Many half-crazed looked on in wonder
  • As the strong timbers rent asunder;
  • Friends forgot friends, foes fled to foes;--
  • And still the water rose and rose.
  • 'Ah woe is me! Whom I have seen
  • Are now as tho' they had not been. 150
  • In the earth there is room for birth,
  • And there are graves enough in earth;
  • Why should the cold sea, tempest-torn,
  • Bury those whom it hath not borne?'
  • He answered not, and they went on.
  • The glory of the heavens was gone;
  • The moon gleamed not nor any star;
  • Cold winds were rustling near and far,
  • And from the trees the dry leaves fell
  • With a sad sound unspeakable. 160
  • The air was cold; till from the South
  • A gust blew hot, like sudden drouth,
  • Into their faces; and a light
  • Glowing and red, shone thro' the night.
  • A mighty city full of flame
  • And death and sounds without a name.
  • Amid the black and blinding smoke,
  • The people, as one man, awoke.
  • Oh! happy they who yesterday
  • On the long journey went away; 170
  • Whose pallid lips, smiling and chill,
  • While the flames scorch them smile on still;
  • Who murmur not; who tremble not
  • When the bier crackles fiery hot;
  • Who, dying, said in love's increase:
  • 'Lord, let thy servant part in peace.'
  • Those in the town could see and hear
  • A shaded river flowing near;
  • The broad deep bed could hardly hold
  • Its plenteous waters calm and cold. 180
  • Was flame-wrapped all the city wall,
  • The city gates were flame-wrapped all.
  • What was man's strength, what puissance then?
  • Women were mighty as strong men.
  • Some knelt in prayer, believing still,
  • Resigned unto a righteous will,
  • Bowing beneath the chastening rod,
  • Lost to the world, but found of God.
  • Some prayed for friend, for child, for wife;
  • Some prayed for faith; some prayed for life; 190
  • While some, proud even in death, hope gone,
  • Steadfast and still, stood looking on.
  • 'Death--death--oh! let us fly from death;
  • Where'er we go it followeth;
  • All these are dead; and we alone
  • Remain to weep for what is gone.
  • What is this thing? thus hurriedly
  • To pass into eternity;
  • To leave the earth so full of mirth;
  • To lose the profit of our birth; 200
  • To die and be no more; to cease,
  • Having numbness that is not peace.
  • Let us go hence; and, even if thus
  • Death everywhere must go with us,
  • Let us not see the change, but see
  • Those who have been or still shall be.'
  • He sighed and they went on together;
  • Beneath their feet did the grass wither;
  • Across the heaven high overhead
  • Dark misty clouds floated and fled; 210
  • And in their bosom was the thunder,
  • And angry lightnings flashed out under,
  • Forked and red and menacing;
  • Far off the wind was muttering;
  • It seemed to tell, not understood,
  • Strange secrets to the listening wood.
  • Upon its wings it bore the scent
  • Of blood of a great armament:
  • Then saw they how on either side
  • Fields were down-trodden far and wide. 220
  • That morning at the break of day
  • Two nations had gone forth to slay.
  • As a man soweth so he reaps.
  • The field was full of bleeding heaps;
  • Ghastly corpses of men and horses
  • That met death at a thousand sources;
  • Cold limbs and putrifying flesh;
  • Long love-locks clotted to a mesh
  • That stifled; stiffened mouths beneath
  • Staring eyes that had looked on death. 230
  • But these were dead: these felt no more
  • The anguish of the wounds they bore.
  • Behold, they shall not sigh again,
  • Nor justly fear, nor hope in vain.
  • What if none wept above them?--is
  • The sleeper less at rest for this?
  • Is not the young child's slumber sweet
  • When no man watcheth over it?
  • These had deep calm; but all around
  • There was a deadly smothered sound, 240
  • The choking cry of agony
  • From wounded men who could not die;
  • Who watched the black wing of the raven
  • Rise like a cloud 'twixt them and heaven,
  • And in the distance flying fast
  • Beheld the eagle come at last.
  • She knelt down in her agony:
  • 'O Lord, it is enough,' said she:
  • 'My heart's prayer putteth me to shame;
  • Let me return to whence I came. 250
  • Thou for who love's sake didst reprove,
  • Forgive me for the sake of love.'
  • SIT DOWN IN THE LOWEST ROOM
  • (_Macmillan's Magazine_, March 1864.)
  • Like flowers sequestered from the sun
  • And wind of summer, day by day
  • I dwindled paler, whilst my hair
  • Showed the first tinge of grey.
  • 'Oh what is life, that we should live?
  • Or what is death, that we must die?
  • A bursting bubble is our life:
  • I also, what am I?'
  • 'What is your grief? now tell me, sweet,
  • That I may grieve,' my sister said; 10
  • And stayed a white embroidering hand
  • And raised a golden head:
  • Her tresses showed a richer mass,
  • Her eyes looked softer than my own,
  • Her figure had a statelier height,
  • Her voice a tenderer tone.
  • 'Some must be second and not first;
  • All cannot be the first of all:
  • Is not this, too, but vanity?
  • I stumble like to fall. 20
  • 'So yesterday I read the acts
  • Of Hector and each clangorous king
  • With wrathful great Aeacides:--
  • Old Homer leaves a sting.'
  • The comely face looked up again,
  • The deft hand lingered on the thread:
  • 'Sweet, tell me what is Homer's sting,
  • Old Homer's sting?' she said.
  • 'He stirs my sluggish pulse like wine,
  • He melts me like the wind of spice, 30
  • Strong as strong Ajax' red right hand,
  • And grand like Juno's eyes.
  • 'I cannot melt the sons of men,
  • I cannot fire and tempest-toss:--
  • Besides, those days were golden days,
  • Whilst these are days of dross.'
  • She laughed a feminine low laugh,
  • Yet did not stay her dexterous hand:
  • 'Now tell me of those days,' she said,
  • 'When time ran golden sand.' 40
  • 'Then men were men of might and right,
  • Sheer might, at least, and weighty swords;
  • Then men in open blood and fire,
  • Bore witness to their words,
  • 'Crest-rearing kings with whistling spears;
  • But if these shivered in the shock
  • They wrenched up hundred-rooted trees,
  • Or hurled the effacing rock.
  • 'Then hand to hand, then foot to foot,
  • Stern to the death-grip grappling then, 50
  • Who ever thought of gunpowder
  • Amongst these men of men?
  • 'They knew whose hand struck home the death,
  • They knew who broke but would not bend,
  • Could venerate an equal foe
  • And scorn a laggard friend.
  • 'Calm in the utmost stress of doom,
  • Devout toward adverse powers above,
  • They hated with intenser hate
  • And loved with fuller love. 60
  • 'Then heavenly beauty could allay
  • As heavenly beauty stirred the strife:
  • By them a slave was worshipped more
  • Than is by us a wife.'
  • She laughed again, my sister laughed,
  • Made answer o'er the laboured cloth:
  • 'I would rather be one of us
  • Than wife, or slave, or both.'
  • 'Oh better then be slave or wife
  • Than fritter now blank life away: 70
  • Then night had holiness of night,
  • And day was sacred day.
  • 'The princess laboured at her loom,
  • Mistress and handmaiden alike;
  • Beneath their needles grew the field
  • With warriors armed to strike.
  • 'Or, look again, dim Dian's face
  • Gleamed perfect through the attendant night;
  • Were such not better than those holes
  • Amid that waste of white? 80
  • 'A shame it is, our aimless life:
  • I rather from my heart would feed
  • From silver dish in gilded stall
  • With wheat and wine the steed--
  • 'The faithful steed that bore my lord
  • In safety through the hostile land,
  • The faithful steed that arched his neck
  • To fondle with my hand.'
  • Her needle erred; a moment's pause,
  • A moment's patience, all was well. 90
  • Then she: 'But just suppose the horse,
  • Suppose the rider fell?
  • 'Then captive in an alien house,
  • Hungering on exile's bitter bread,--
  • They happy, they who won the lot
  • Of sacrifice,' she said.
  • Speaking she faltered, while her look
  • Showed forth her passion like a glass:
  • With hand suspended, kindling eye,
  • Flushed cheek, how fair she was! 100
  • 'Ah well, be those the days of dross;
  • This, if you will, the age of gold:
  • Yet had those days a spark of warmth,
  • While these are somewhat cold--
  • 'Are somewhat mean and cold and slow,
  • Are stunted from heroic growth:
  • We gain but little when we prove
  • The worthlessness of both.'
  • 'But life is in our hands,' she said:
  • 'In our own hands for gain or loss: 110
  • Shall not the Sevenfold Sacred Fire
  • Suffice to purge our dross?
  • 'Too short a century of dreams,
  • One day of work sufficient length:
  • Why should not you, why should not I
  • Attain heroic strength?
  • 'Our life is given us as a blank;
  • Ourselves must make it blest or curst:
  • Who dooms me I shall only be
  • The second, not the first? 120
  • 'Learn from old Homer, if you will,
  • Such wisdom as his books have said:
  • In one the acts of Ajax shine,
  • In one of Diomed.
  • 'Honoured all heroes whose high deeds
  • Thro' life, till death, enlarge their span:
  • Only Achilles in his rage
  • And sloth is less than man.'
  • 'Achilles only less than man?
  • He less than man who, half a god, 130
  • Discomfited all Greece with rest,
  • Cowed Ilion with a nod?
  • 'He offered vengeance, lifelong grief
  • To one dear ghost, uncounted price:
  • Beasts, Trojans, adverse gods, himself,
  • Heaped up the sacrifice.
  • 'Self-immolated to his friend,
  • Shrined in world's wonder, Homer's page,
  • Is this the man, the less than men,
  • Of this degenerate age?' 140
  • 'Gross from his acorns, tusky boar
  • Does memorable acts like his;
  • So for her snared offended young
  • Bleeds the swart lioness.'
  • But here she paused; our eyes had met,
  • And I was whitening with the jeer;
  • She rose: 'I went too far,' she said;
  • Spoke low: 'Forgive me, dear.
  • 'To me our days seem pleasant days,
  • Our home a haven of pure content; 150
  • Forgive me if I said too much,
  • So much more than I meant.
  • 'Homer, tho' greater than his gods,
  • With rough-hewn virtues was sufficed
  • And rough-hewn men: but what are such
  • To us who learn of Christ?'
  • The much-moved pathos of her voice,
  • Her almost tearful eyes, her cheek
  • Grown pale, confessed the strength of love
  • Which only made her speak: 160
  • For mild she was, of few soft words,
  • Most gentle, easy to be led,
  • Content to listen when I spoke
  • And reverence what I said;
  • I elder sister by six years;
  • Not half so glad, or wise, or good:
  • Her words rebuked my secret self
  • And shamed me where I stood.
  • She never guessed her words reproved
  • A silent envy nursed within, 170
  • A selfish, souring discontent
  • Pride-born, the devil's sin.
  • I smiled, half bitter, half in jest:
  • 'The wisest man of all the wise
  • Left for his summary of life
  • "Vanity of vanities."
  • 'Beneath the sun there's nothing new:
  • Men flow, men ebb, mankind flows on:
  • If I am wearied of my life,
  • Why so was Solomon. 180
  • 'Vanity of vanities he preached
  • Of all he found, of all he sought:
  • Vanity of vanities, the gist
  • Of all the words he taught.
  • 'This in the wisdom of the world,
  • In Homer's page, in all, we find:
  • As the sea is not filled, so yearns
  • Man's universal mind.
  • 'This Homer felt, who gave his men
  • With glory but a transient state: 190
  • His very Jove could not reverse
  • Irrevocable fate.
  • 'Uncertain all their lot save this--
  • Who wins must lose, who lives must die:
  • All trodden out into the dark
  • Alike, all vanity.'
  • She scarcely answered when I paused,
  • But rather to herself said: 'One
  • Is here,' low-voiced and loving, 'Yea,
  • Greater than Solomon.' 200
  • So both were silent, she and I:
  • She laid her work aside, and went
  • Into the garden-walks, like spring,
  • All gracious with content,
  • A little graver than her wont,
  • Because her words had fretted me;
  • Not warbling quite her merriest tune
  • Bird-like from tree to tree.
  • I chose a book to read and dream:
  • Yet half the while with furtive eyes 210
  • Marked how she made her choice of flowers
  • Intuitively wise,
  • And ranged them with instinctive taste
  • Which all my books had failed to teach;
  • Fresh rose herself, and daintier
  • Than blossom of the peach.
  • By birthright higher than myself,
  • Tho' nestling of the self-same nest:
  • No fault of hers, no fault of mine,
  • But stubborn to digest. 220
  • I watched her, till my book unmarked
  • Slid noiseless to the velvet floor;
  • Till all the opulent summer-world
  • Looked poorer than before.
  • Just then her busy fingers ceased,
  • Her fluttered colour went and came;
  • I knew whose step was on the walk,
  • Whose voice would name her name.
  • * * * * * * *
  • Well, twenty years have passed since then:
  • My sister now, a stately wife 230
  • Still fair, looks back in peace and sees
  • The longer half of life--
  • The longer half of prosperous life,
  • With little grief, or fear, or fret:
  • She loved, and, loving long ago,
  • Is loved and loving yet.
  • A husband honourable, brave,
  • Is her main wealth in all the world:
  • And next to him one like herself,
  • One daughter golden-curled; 240
  • Fair image of her own fair youth,
  • As beautiful and as serene,
  • With almost such another love
  • As her own love has been.
  • Yet, tho' of world-wide charity,
  • And in her home most tender dove,
  • Her treasure and her heart are stored
  • In the home-land of love:
  • She thrives, God's blessed husbandry;
  • She like a vine is full of fruit; 250
  • Her passion-flower climbs up toward heaven
  • Tho' earth still binds its root.
  • I sit and watch my sister's face:
  • How little altered since the hours
  • When she, a kind, light-hearted girl,
  • Gathered her garden flowers;
  • Her song just mellowed by regret
  • For having teased me with her talk;
  • Then all-forgetful as she heard
  • One step upon the walk. 260
  • While I? I sat alone and watched
  • My lot in life, to live alone,
  • In mine own world of interests,
  • Much felt but little shown.
  • Not to be first: how hard to learn
  • That lifelong lesson of the past;
  • Line graven on line and stroke on stroke;
  • But, thank God, learned at last.
  • So now in patience I possess
  • My soul year after tedious year, 270
  • Content to take the lowest place,
  • The place assigned me here.
  • Yet sometimes, when I feel my strength
  • Most weak, and life most burdensome,
  • I lift mine eyes up to the hills
  • From whence my help shall come:
  • Yea, sometimes still I lift my heart
  • To the Archangelic trumpet-burst,
  • When all deep secrets shall be shown,
  • And many last be first. 280
  • MY FRIEND
  • (_Macmillan's Magazine_, Dec. 1864.)
  • Two days ago with dancing glancing hair,
  • With living lips and eyes:
  • Now pale, dumb, blind, she lies;
  • So pale, yet still so fair.
  • We have not left her yet, not yet alone;
  • But soon must leave her where
  • She will not miss our care,
  • Bone of our bone.
  • Weep not; O friends, we should not weep:
  • Our friend of friends lies full of rest; 10
  • No sorrow rankles in her breast,
  • Fallen fast asleep.
  • She sleeps below,
  • She wakes and laughs above:
  • To-day, as she walked, let us walk in love;
  • To-morrow follow so.
  • LAST NIGHT
  • (_Macmillan's Magazine_, May 1865.)
  • Where were you last night? I watched at the gate;
  • I went down early, I stayed down late.
  • Were you snug at home, I should like to know,
  • Or were you in the coppice wheedling Kate?
  • She's a fine girl, with a fine clear skin;
  • Easy to woo, perhaps not hard to win.
  • Speak up like a man and tell me the truth:
  • I'm not one to grow downhearted and thin.
  • If you love her best speak up like a man;
  • It's not I will stand in the light of your plan: 10
  • Some girls might cry and scold you a bit,
  • And say they couldn't bear it; but I can.
  • Love was pleasant enough, and the days went fast;
  • Pleasant while it lasted, but it needn't last;
  • Awhile on the wax and awhile on the wane,
  • Now dropped away into the past.
  • Was it pleasant to you? To me it was;
  • Now clean gone as an image from glass,
  • As a goodly rainbow that fades away,
  • As dew that steams upward from the grass, 20
  • As the first spring day, or the last summer day,
  • As the sunset flush that leaves heaven grey,
  • As a flame burnt out for lack of oil,
  • Which no pains relight or ever may.
  • Good luck to Kate and good luck to you:
  • I guess she'll be kind when you come to woo.
  • I wish her a pretty face that will last,
  • I wish her a husband steady and true.
  • Hate you? not I, my very good friend;
  • All things begin and all have an end. 30
  • But let broken be broken; I put no faith
  • In quacks who set up to patch and mend.
  • Just my love and one word to Kate:
  • Not to let time slip if she means to mate;--
  • For even such a thing has been known
  • As to miss the chance while we weigh and wait.
  • CONSIDER
  • (_Macmillan's Magazine_, Jan. 1866.)
  • Consider
  • The lilies of the field whose bloom is brief:--
  • We are as they;
  • Like them we fade away,
  • As doth a leaf.
  • Consider
  • The sparrows of the air of small account:
  • Our God doth view
  • Whether they fall or mount,--
  • He guards us too. 10
  • Consider
  • The lilies that do neither spin nor toil,
  • Yet are most fair:--
  • What profits all this care
  • And all this coil?
  • Consider
  • The birds that have no barn nor harvest-weeks;
  • God gives them food:--
  • Much more our Father seeks
  • To do us good. 20
  • HELEN GREY
  • (_Macmillan's Magazine_, March 1866.)
  • Because one loves you, Helen Grey,
  • Is that a reason you should pout,
  • And like a March wind veer about,
  • And frown, and say your shrewish say?
  • Don't strain the cord until it snaps,
  • Don't split the sound heart with your wedge,
  • Don't cut your fingers with the edge
  • Of your keen wit; you may, perhaps.
  • Because you're handsome, Helen Grey,
  • Is that a reason to be proud? 10
  • Your eyes are bold, your laugh is loud,
  • Your steps go mincing on their way;
  • But so you miss that modest charm
  • Which is the surest charm of all:
  • Take heed, you yet may trip and fall,
  • And no man care to stretch his arm.
  • Stoop from your cold height, Helen Grey,
  • Come down, and take a lowlier place;
  • Come down, to fill it now with grace;
  • Come down you must perforce some day: 20
  • For years cannot be kept at bay,
  • And fading years will make you old;
  • Then in their turn will men seem cold,
  • When you yourself are nipped and grey.
  • BY THE WATERS OF BABYLON
  • B.C. 570
  • (_Macmillan's Magazine_, October 1866.)
  • Here where I dwell I waste to skin and bone;
  • The curse is come upon me, and I waste
  • In penal torment powerless to atone.
  • The curse is come on me, which makes no haste
  • And doth not tarry, crushing both the proud
  • Hard man and him the sinner double-faced.
  • Look not upon me, for my soul is bowed
  • Within me, as my body in this mire;
  • My soul crawls dumb-struck, sore-bested and cowed.
  • As Sodom and Gomorrah scourged by fire, 10
  • As Jericho before God's trumpet-peal,
  • So we the elect ones perish in His ire.
  • Vainly we gird on sackcloth, vainly kneel
  • With famished faces toward Jerusalem:
  • His heart is shut against us not to feel,
  • His ears against our cry He shutteth them,
  • His hand He shorteneth that He will not save,
  • His law is loud against us to condemn:
  • And we, as unclean bodies in the grave
  • Inheriting corruption and the dark, 20
  • Are outcast from His presence which we crave.
  • Our Mercy hath departed from His Ark,
  • Our Glory hath departed from His rest,
  • Our Shield hath left us naked as a mark
  • Unto all pitiless eyes made manifest.
  • Our very Father hath forsaken us,
  • Our God hath cast us from Him: we oppressed
  • Unto our foes are even marvellous,
  • A hissing and a butt for pointing hands,
  • Whilst God Almighty hunts and grinds us thus; 30
  • For He hath scattered us in alien lands,
  • Our priests, our princes, our anointed king,
  • And bound us hand and foot with brazen bands.
  • Here while I sit my painful heart takes wing
  • Home to the home-land I must see no more,
  • Where milk and honey flow, where waters spring
  • And fail not, where I dwelt in days of yore
  • Under my fig-tree and my fruitful vine,
  • There where my parents dwelt at ease before:
  • Now strangers press the olives that are mine, 40
  • Reap all the corners of my harvest-field,
  • And make their fat hearts wanton with my wine;
  • To them my trees, to them my garden yield
  • Their sweets and spices and their tender green,
  • O'er them in noontide heat outspread their shield.
  • Yet these are they whose fathers had not been
  • Housed with my dogs, whom hip and thigh we smote
  • And with their blood washed their pollutions clean,
  • Purging the land which spewed them from its throat;
  • Their daughters took we for a pleasant prey, 50
  • Choice tender ones on whom the fathers doat.
  • Now they in turn have led our own away;
  • Our daughters and our sisters and our wives
  • Sore weeping as they weep who curse the day,
  • To live, remote from help, dishonoured lives,
  • Soothing their drunken masters with a song,
  • Or dancing in their golden tinkling gyves:
  • Accurst if they remember through the long
  • Estrangement of their exile, twice accursed
  • If they forget and join the accursèd throng. 60
  • How doth my heart that is so wrung not burst
  • When I remember that my way was plain,
  • And that God's candle lit me at the first,
  • Whilst now I grope in darkness, grope in vain,
  • Desiring but to find Him Who is lost,
  • To find Him once again, but once again.
  • His wrath came on us to the uttermost,
  • His covenanted and most righteous wrath:
  • Yet this is He of Whom we made our boast,
  • Who lit the Fiery Pillar in our path, 70
  • Who swept the Red Sea dry before our feet,
  • Who in His jealousy smote kings, and hath
  • Sworn once to David: One shall fill thy seat
  • Born of thy body, as the sun and moon
  • 'Stablished for aye in sovereignty complete.
  • O Lord, remember David, and that soon.
  • The Glory hath departed, Ichabod!
  • Yet now, before our sun grow dark at noon,
  • Before we come to nought beneath Thy rod,
  • Before we go down quick into the pit, 80
  • Remember us for good, O God, our God:--
  • Thy Name will I remember, praising it,
  • Though Thou forget me, though Thou hide Thy face,
  • And blot me from the Book which Thou hast writ;
  • Thy Name will I remember in my praise
  • And call to mind Thy faithfulness of old,
  • Though as a weaver Thou cut off my days,
  • And end me as a tale ends that is told.
  • SEASONS
  • (_Macmillan's Magazine_, Dec. 1866.)
  • Oh the cheerful Budding-time!
  • When thorn-hedges turn to green,
  • When new leaves of elm and lime
  • Cleave and shed their winter screen;
  • Tender lambs are born and 'baa,'
  • North wind finds no snow to bring,
  • Vigorous Nature laughs 'Ha, ha,'
  • In the miracle of spring.
  • Oh the gorgeous Blossom-days!
  • When broad flag-flowers drink and blow, 10
  • In and out in summer-blaze
  • Dragon-flies flash to and fro;
  • Ashen branches hang out keys,
  • Oaks put forth the rosy shoot,
  • Wandering herds wax sleek at ease,
  • Lovely blossoms end in fruit.
  • Oh the shouting Harvest-weeks!
  • Mother earth grown fat with sheaves
  • Thrifty gleaner finds who seeks;
  • Russet-golden pomp of leaves 20
  • Crowns the woods, to fall at length;
  • Bracing winds are felt to stir,
  • Ocean gathers up her strength,
  • Beasts renew their dwindled fur.
  • Oh the starving Winter-lapse!
  • Ice-bound, hunger-pinched and dim;
  • Dormant roots recall their saps,
  • Empty nests show black and grim,
  • Short-lived sunshine gives no heat,
  • Undue buds are nipped by frost, 30
  • Snow sets forth a winding-sheet,
  • And all hope of life seems lost.
  • MOTHER COUNTRY
  • (_Macmillan's Magazine_, March 1868.)
  • Oh what is that country
  • And where can it be,
  • Not mine own country,
  • But dearer far to me?
  • Yet mine own country,
  • If I one day may see
  • Its spices and cedars,
  • Its gold and ivory.
  • As I lie dreaming
  • It rises, that land: 10
  • There rises before me
  • Its green golden strand,
  • With its bowing cedars
  • And its shining sand;
  • It sparkles and flashes
  • Like a shaken brand.
  • Do angels lean nearer
  • While I lie and long?
  • I see their soft plumage
  • And catch their windy song, 20
  • Like the rise of a high tide
  • Sweeping full and strong;
  • I mark the outskirts
  • Of their reverend throng.
  • Oh what is a king here,
  • Or what is a boor?
  • Here all starve together,
  • All dwarfed and poor;
  • Here Death's hand knocketh
  • At door after door, 30
  • He thins the dancers
  • From the festal floor.
  • Oh what is a handmaid,
  • Or what is a queen?
  • All must lie down together
  • Where the turf is green,
  • The foulest face hidden,
  • The fairest not seen;
  • Gone as if never,
  • They had breathed or been. 40
  • Gone from sweet sunshine
  • Underneath the sod,
  • Turned from warm flesh and blood
  • To senseless clod,
  • Gone as if never
  • They had toiled or trod,
  • Gone out of sight of all
  • Except our God.
  • Shut into silence
  • From the accustomed song, 50
  • Shut into solitude
  • From all earth's throng,
  • Run down tho' swift of foot,
  • Thrust down tho' strong;
  • Life made an end of
  • Seemed it short or long.
  • Life made an end of,
  • Life but just begun,
  • Life finished yesterday,
  • Its last sand run; 60
  • Life new-born with the morrow,
  • Fresh as the sun:
  • While done is done for ever;
  • Undone, undone.
  • And if that life is life,
  • This is but a breath,
  • The passage of a dream
  • And the shadow of death;
  • But a vain shadow
  • If one considereth; 70
  • Vanity of vanities,
  • As the Preacher saith.
  • A SMILE AND A SIGH
  • (_Macmillan's Magazine_, May 1868.)
  • A smile because the nights are short!
  • And every morning brings such pleasure
  • Of sweet love-making, harmless sport:
  • Love, that makes and finds its treasure;
  • Love, treasure without measure.
  • A sigh because the days are long!
  • Long long these days that pass in sighing,
  • A burden saddens every song:
  • While time lags who should be flying,
  • We live who would be dying.
  • DEAD HOPE
  • (_Macmillan's Magazine_, May 1868.)
  • Hope new born one pleasant morn
  • Died at even;
  • Hope dead lives nevermore.
  • No, not in heaven.
  • If his shroud were but a cloud
  • To weep itself away;
  • Or were he buried underground
  • To sprout some day!
  • But dead and gone is dead and gone
  • Vainly wept upon. 10
  • Nought we place above his face
  • To mark the spot,
  • But it shows a barren place
  • In our lot.
  • Hope has birth no more on earth
  • Morn or even;
  • Hope dead lives nevermore,
  • No, not in heaven.
  • AUTUMN VIOLETS
  • (_Macmillan's Magazine_, November 1868.)
  • Keep love for youth, and violets for the spring:
  • Of if these bloom when worn-out autumn grieves,
  • Let them lie hid in double shade of leaves,
  • Their own, and others dropped down withering;
  • For violets suit when home birds build and sing,
  • Not when the outbound bird a passage cleaves;
  • Not with dry stubble of mown harvest sheaves,
  • But when the green world buds to blossoming.
  • Keep violets for the spring, and love for youth,
  • Love that should dwell with beauty, mirth, and hope:
  • Or if a later sadder love be born,
  • Let this not look for grace beyond its scope,
  • But give itself, nor plead for answering truth--
  • A grateful Ruth tho' gleaning scanty corn.
  • 'THEY DESIRE A BETTER COUNTRY'
  • (_Macmillan's Magazine_, March 1869.)
  • I
  • I would not if I could undo my past,
  • Tho' for its sake my future is a blank;
  • My past, for which I have myself to thank,
  • For all its faults and follies first and last.
  • I would not cast anew the lot once cast,
  • Or launch a second ship for one that sank,
  • Or drug with sweets the bitterness I drank,
  • Or break by feasting my perpetual fast.
  • I would not if I could: for much more dear
  • Is one remembrance than a hundred joys, 10
  • More than a thousand hopes in jubilee;
  • Dearer the music of one tearful voice
  • That unforgotten calls and calls to me,
  • 'Follow me here, rise up, and follow here.'
  • II
  • What seekest thou far in the unknown land?
  • In hope I follow joy gone on before,
  • In hope and fear persistent more and more,
  • As the dry desert lengthens out its sand.
  • Whilst day and night I carry in my hand
  • The golden key to ope the golden door 20
  • Of golden home; yet mine eye weepeth sore
  • For the long journey that must make no stand.
  • And who is this that veiled doth walk with thee?
  • Lo, this is Love that walketh at my right;
  • One exile holds us both, and we are bound
  • To selfsame home-joys in the land of light.
  • Weeping thou walkest with him; weepeth he?--
  • Some sobbing weep, some weep and make no sound.
  • III
  • A dimness of a glory glimmers here
  • Thro' veils and distance from the space remote, 30
  • A faintest far vibration of a note
  • Reaches to us and seems to bring us near,
  • Causing our face to glow with braver cheer,
  • Making the serried mist to stand afloat,
  • Subduing langour with an antidote,
  • And strengthening love almost to cast out fear,
  • Till for one moment golden city walls
  • Rise looming on us, golden walls of home,
  • Light of our eyes until the darkness falls;
  • Then thro' the outer darkness burdensome 40
  • I hear again the tender voice that calls,
  • 'Follow me hither, follow, rise, and come.'
  • THE OFFERING OF THE NEW LAW, THE ONE OBLATION ONCE OFFERED
  • (_Lyra Eucharistica_, 1863.)
  • Once I thought to sit so high
  • In the Palace of the sky;
  • Now, I thank God for His Grace,
  • If I may fill the lowest place.
  • Once I thought to scale so soon
  • Heights above the changing moon;
  • Now, I thank God for delay--
  • To-day, it yet is called to-day.
  • While I stumble, halt and blind,
  • Lo! He waiteth to be kind; 10
  • Bless me soon, or bless me slow,
  • Except He bless, I let not go.
  • Once for earth I laid my plan,
  • Once I leaned on strength of man,
  • When my hope was swept aside,
  • I stayed my broken heart on pride:
  • Broken reed hath pierced my hand;
  • Fell my house I built on sand;
  • Roofless, wounded, maimed by sin,
  • Fightings without and fears within: 20
  • Yet, a tree, He feeds my root;
  • Yet, a branch, He prunes for fruit;
  • Yet, a sheep, these eves and morns,
  • He seeks for me among the thorns.
  • With Thine Image stamped of old,
  • Find Thy coin more choice than gold;
  • Known to Thee by name, recall
  • To Thee Thy home-sick prodigal.
  • Sacrifice and Offering
  • None there is that I can bring, 30
  • None, save what is Thine alone:
  • I bring Thee, Lord, but of Thine Own--
  • Broken Body, Blood Outpoured,
  • These I bring, my God, my Lord;
  • Wine of Life, and Living Bread,
  • With these for me Thy Board is spread.
  • CONFERENCE BETWEEN CHRIST, THE SAINTS, AND THE SOUL
  • (_Lyra Eucharistica_, 1863.)
  • I am pale with sick desire,
  • For my heart is far away
  • From this world's fitful fire
  • And this world's waning day;
  • In a dream it overleaps
  • A world of tedious ills
  • To where the sunshine sleeps
  • On th' everlasting hills.
  • Say the Saints--There Angels ease us
  • Glorified and white. 10
  • They say--We rest in Jesus,
  • Where is not day nor night.
  • My Soul saith--I have sought
  • For a home that is not gained,
  • I have spent yet nothing bought,
  • Have laboured but not attained;
  • My pride strove to rise and grow,
  • And hath but dwindled down;
  • My love sought love, and lo!
  • Hath not attained its crown. 20
  • Say the Saints--Fresh Souls increase us,
  • None languish nor recede.
  • They say--We love our Jesus,
  • And He loves us indeed.
  • I cannot rise above,
  • I cannot rest beneath,
  • I cannot find out Love,
  • Nor escape from Death;
  • Dear hopes and joys gone by
  • Still mock me with a name; 30
  • My best belovèd die
  • And I cannot die with them.
  • Say the Saints--No deaths decrease us,
  • Where our rest is glorious.
  • They say--We live in Jesus,
  • Who once dièd for us.
  • Oh, my Soul, she beats her wings
  • And pants to fly away
  • Up to immortal Things
  • In the Heavenly day: 40
  • Yet she flags and almost faints;
  • Can such be meant for me?
  • Come and see--say the Saints.
  • Saith Jesus--Come and see.
  • Say the Saints--His Pleasures please us
  • Before God and the Lamb.
  • Come and taste My Sweets--saith Jesus--
  • Be with Me where I am.
  • COME UNTO ME
  • (_Lyra Eucharistica_, second edition, 1864.)
  • Oh, for the time gone by, when thought of Christ
  • Made His Yoke easy and His Burden light;
  • When my heart stirred within me at the sight
  • Of Altar spread for awful Eucharist;
  • When all my hopes His promises sufficed,
  • When my Soul watched for Him by day, by night,
  • When my lamp lightened and my robe was white,
  • And all seemed loss, except the Pearl unpriced.
  • Yet, since He calls me still with tender Call,
  • Since He remembers Whom I half forgot,
  • I even will run my race and bear my lot:
  • For Faith the walls of Jericho cast down,
  • And Hope to whoso runs holds forth a Crown,
  • And Love is Christ, and Christ is All in all.
  • JESUS, DO I LOVE THEE?
  • (_Lyra Eucharistica_, second edition, 1864.)
  • Jesus, do I love Thee?
  • Thou art far above me,
  • Seated out of sight
  • Hid in Heavenly Light
  • Of most highest height.
  • Martyred hosts implore Thee,
  • Seraphs fall before Thee,
  • Angels and Archangels,
  • Cherub throngs adore Thee;
  • Blessed She that bore Thee! 10
  • All the Saints approve Thee,
  • All the Virgins love Thee.
  • I show as a blot
  • Blood hath cleansed not,
  • As a barren spot
  • In Thy fruitful lot.
  • I, fig-tree fruit-unbearing;
  • Thou, righteous Judge unsparing:
  • What canst Thou do more to me
  • That shall not more undo me? 20
  • Thy Justice hath a sound--
  • Why cumbereth it the ground?
  • Thy Love with stirrings stronger
  • Pleads--Give it one year longer.
  • Thou giv'st me time: but who
  • Save Thou shall give me dew;
  • Shall feed my root with Blood,
  • And stir my sap for good?
  • Oh, by Thy Gifts that shame me,
  • Give more lest they condemn me: 30
  • Good Lord, I ask much of Thee,
  • But most I ask to love Thee;
  • Kind Lord, be mindful of me,
  • Love me, and make me love Thee.
  • I KNOW YOU NOT
  • (_Lyra Messianica_, 1864.)
  • O Christ, the Vine with living Fruit,
  • The twelvefold-fruited Tree of Life,
  • The Balm in Gilead after strife,
  • The valley Lily and the Rose;
  • Stronger than Lebanon, Thou Root;
  • Sweeter than clustered grapes, Thou Vine;
  • O Best, Thou Vineyard of red wine,
  • Keeping thy best wine till the close.
  • Pearl of great price Thyself alone,
  • And ruddier than the ruby Thou; 10
  • Most precious lightning Jasper stone,
  • Head of the corner spurned before:
  • Fair Gate of pearl, Thyself the Door;
  • Clear golden Street, Thyself the Way;
  • By Thee we journey toward Thee now,
  • Through Thee shall enter Heaven one day.
  • I thirst for Thee, full fount and flood;
  • My heart calls Thine, as deep to deep:
  • Dost Thou forget Thy sweat and pain,
  • They provocation on the Cross? 20
  • Heart-pierced for me, vouchsafe to keep
  • The purchase of Thy lavished Blood:
  • The gain is Thine, Lord, if I gain;
  • Or if I lose, Thine own the loss.
  • At midnight (saith the Parable)
  • A cry was made, the Bridegroom came;
  • Those who were ready entered in:
  • The rest, shut out in death and shame,
  • Strove all too late that Feast to win,
  • Their die was cast, and fixed their lot; 30
  • A gulf divided Heaven from Hell;
  • The Bridegroom said--I know you not.
  • But Who is this that shuts the door,
  • And saith--I know you not--to them?
  • I see the wounded hands and side,
  • The brow thorn-tortured long ago:
  • Yea; This Who grieved and bled and died,
  • This same is He Who must condemn;
  • He called, but they refused to know;
  • So now He hears their cry no more. 40
  • 'BEFORE THE PALING OF THE STARS'
  • (_Lyra Messianica_, 1864.)
  • Before the paling of the stars,
  • Before the winter morn,
  • Before the earliest cockcrow
  • Jesus Christ was born:
  • Born in a stable,
  • Cradled in a manger,
  • In the world His hands had made
  • Born a stranger.
  • Priest and king lay fast asleep
  • In Jerusalem, 10
  • Young and old lay fast asleep
  • In crowded Bethlehem:
  • Saint and Angel, ox and ass,
  • Kept a watch together,
  • Before the Christmas daybreak
  • In the winter weather.
  • Jesus on His Mother's breast
  • In the stable cold,
  • Spotless Lamb of God was He,
  • Shepherd of the fold: 20
  • Let us kneel with Mary maid,
  • With Joseph bent and hoary,
  • With Saint and Angel, ox and ass,
  • To hail the King of Glory.
  • EASTER EVEN
  • (_Lyra Messianica_, 1864.)
  • There is nothing more that they can do
  • For all their rage and boast;
  • Caiaphas with his blaspheming crew,
  • Herod with his host,
  • Pontius Pilate in his Judgement-hall
  • Judging their Judge and his,
  • Or he who led them all and passed them all,
  • Arch-Judas with his kiss.
  • The sepulchre made sure with ponderous Stone,
  • Seal that same stone, O Priest; 10
  • It may be thou shalt block the holy One
  • From rising in the east:
  • Set a watch about the sepulchre
  • To watch on pain of death;
  • They must hold fast the stone if One should stir
  • And shake it from beneath.
  • God Almighty, He can break a seal
  • And roll away a Stone,
  • Can grind the proud in dust who would not kneel,
  • And crush the mighty one. 20
  • * * * * * * *
  • There is nothing more that they can do
  • For all their passionate care,
  • Those who sit in dust, the blessed few,
  • And weep and rend their hair:
  • Peter, Thomas, Mary Magdalene,
  • The Virgin unreproved,
  • Joseph, with Nicodemus, foremost men,
  • And John the Well-beloved,
  • Bring your finest linen and your spice,
  • Swathe the sacred Dead, 30
  • Bind with careful hands and piteous eyes
  • The napkin round His head;
  • Lay Him in the garden-rock to rest;
  • Rest you the Sabbath length:
  • The Sun that went down crimson in the west
  • Shall rise renewed in strength.
  • God Almighty shall give joy for pain,
  • Shall comfort him who grieves:
  • Lo! He with joy shall doubtless come again,
  • And with Him bring His sheaves. 40
  • PARADISE: IN A DREAM
  • (_Lyra Messianica_, second edition, 1865.)
  • Once in a dream I saw the flowers
  • That bud and bloom in Paradise;
  • More fair they are than waking eyes
  • Have seen in all this world of ours.
  • And faint the perfume-bearing rose,
  • And faint the lily on its stem,
  • And faint the perfect violet
  • Compared with them.
  • I heard the songs of Paradise:
  • Each bird sat singing in his place; 10
  • A tender song so full of grace
  • It soared like incense to the skies.
  • Each bird sat singing to his mate
  • Soft cooing notes among the trees:
  • The nightingale herself were cold
  • To such as these.
  • I saw the fourfold River flow,
  • And deep it was, with golden sand;
  • It flowed between a mossy land
  • With murmured music grave and low. 20
  • It hath refreshment for all thirst,
  • For fainting spirits strength and rest:
  • Earth holds not such a draught as this
  • From east to west.
  • The Tree of Life stood budding there,
  • Abundant with its twelvefold fruits;
  • Eternal sap sustains its roots,
  • Its shadowing branches fill the air.
  • Its leaves are healing for the world,
  • Its fruit the hungry world can feed, 30
  • Sweeter than honey to the taste
  • And balm indeed.
  • I saw the gate called Beautiful;
  • And looked, but scarce could look, within;
  • I saw the golden streets begin,
  • And outskirts of the glassy pool.
  • Oh harps, oh crowns of plenteous stars,
  • Oh green palm-branches many-leaved--
  • Eye hath not seen, nor ear hath heard,
  • Nor heart conceived. 40
  • I hope to see these things again,
  • But not as once in dreams by night;
  • To see them with my very sight,
  • And touch, and handle, and attain:
  • To have all Heaven beneath my feet
  • For narrow way that once they trod;
  • To have my part with all the saints,
  • And with my God.
  • WITHIN THE VEIL
  • (_Lyra Eucharistica_, second edition, 1865.)
  • She holds a lily in her hand,
  • Where long ranks of Angels stand,
  • A silver lily for her wand.
  • All her hair falls sweeping down;
  • Her hair that is a golden brown,
  • A crown beneath her golden crown.
  • Blooms a rose-bush at her knee,
  • Good to smell and good to see:
  • It bears a rose for her, for me;
  • Her rose a blossom richly grown, 10
  • My rose a bud not fully blown,
  • But sure one day to be mine own.
  • PARADISE: IN A SYMBOL
  • (_Lyra Eucharistica_, second edition, 1865.)
  • Golden-winged, silver-winged,
  • Winged with flashing flame,
  • Such a flight of birds I saw,
  • Birds without a name:
  • Singing songs in their own tongue
  • (Song of songs) they came.
  • One to another calling,
  • Each answering each,
  • One to another calling
  • In their proper speech: 10
  • High above my head they wheeled,
  • Far out of reach.
  • On wings of flame they went and came
  • With a cadenced clang,
  • Their silver wings tinkled,
  • Their golden wings rang,
  • The wind it whistled through their wings
  • Where in Heaven they sang.
  • They flashed and they darted
  • Awhile before mine eyes, 20
  • Mounting, mounting, mounting still
  • In haste to scale the skies--
  • Birds without a nest on earth,
  • Birds of Paradise.
  • Where the moon riseth not,
  • Nor sun seeks the west,
  • There to sing their glory
  • Which they sing at rest,
  • There to sing their love-song
  • When they sing their best: 30
  • Not in any garden
  • That mortal foot hath trod,
  • Not in any flowering tree
  • That springs from earthly sod,
  • But in the garden where they dwell,
  • The Paradise of God.
  • AMOR MUNDI
  • (_The Shilling Magazine_, 1865.)
  • 'Oh, where are you going with your love-locks flowing
  • On the west wind blowing along this valley track?'
  • 'The downhill path is easy, come with me an' it please ye,
  • We shall escape the uphill by never turning back.'
  • So they two went together in glowing August weather,
  • The honey-breathing heather lay to their left and right;
  • And dear she was to doat on, her swift feet seemed to float on
  • The air like soft twin pigeons too sportive to alight.
  • 'Oh, what is that in heaven where grey cloud-flakes are seven,
  • Where blackest clouds hang riven just at the rainy skirt?' 10
  • 'Oh, that's a meteor sent us, a message dumb, portentous,--
  • An undeciphered solemn signal of help or hurt.'
  • 'Oh, what is that glides quickly where velvet flowers grow thickly,
  • Their scent comes rich and sickly?'--'A scaled and hooded worm.'
  • 'Oh, what's that in the hollow, so pale I quake to follow?'
  • 'Oh, that's a thin dead body which waits th' eternal term.'
  • 'Turn again, O my sweetest,--turn again, false and fleetest:
  • This way whereof thou weetest I fear is hell's own track.'
  • 'Nay, too steep for hill-mounting,--nay, too late for cost-counting:
  • This downhill path is easy, but there's no turning back.' 20
  • WHO SHALL DELIVER ME?
  • (_The Argosy_, Feb. 1866.)
  • God strengthen me to bear myself;
  • That heaviest weight of all to bear,
  • Inalienable weight of care.
  • All others are outside myself,
  • I lock my door and bar them out
  • The turmoil, tedium, gad-about.
  • I lock my door upon myself,
  • And bar them out; but who shall wall
  • Self from myself, most loathed of all?
  • If I could once lay down myself, 10
  • And start self-purged upon the race
  • That all must run! Death runs apace.
  • If I could set aside myself,
  • And start with lightened heart upon
  • The road by all men overgone!
  • God harden me against myself,
  • This coward with pathetic voice
  • Who craves for ease, and rest, and joys:
  • Myself, arch-traitor to myself;
  • My hollowest friend, my deadliest foe, 20
  • My clog whatever road I go.
  • Yet One there is can curb myself,
  • Can roll the strangling load from me,
  • Break off the yoke and set me free.
  • IF
  • (_The Argosy_, March 1866.)
  • If he would come to-day, to-day, to-day,
  • O, what a day to-day would be!
  • But now he's away, miles and miles away
  • From me across the sea.
  • O little bird, flying, flying, flying
  • To your nest in the warm west,
  • Tell him as you pass that I am dying,
  • As you pass home to your nest.
  • I have a sister, I have a brother,
  • A faithful hound, a tame white dove; 10
  • But I had another, once I had another,
  • And I miss him, my love, my love!
  • In this weary world it is so cold, so cold,
  • While I sit here all alone;
  • I would not like to wait and to grow old,
  • But just to be dead and gone.
  • Make me fair when I lie dead on my bed,
  • Fair where I am lying:
  • Perhaps he may come and look upon me dead--
  • He for whom I am dying. 20
  • Dig my grave for two, with a stone to show it,
  • And on the stone write my name;
  • If he never comes, I shall never know it,
  • But sleep on all the same.
  • TWILIGHT NIGHT
  • (_The Argosy_, March 1866.)
  • I
  • We met, hand to hand,
  • We clasped hands close and fast,
  • As close as oak and ivy stand;
  • But it is past:
  • Come day, come night, day comes at last.
  • We loosed hand from hand,
  • We parted face from face;
  • Each went his way to his own land.
  • At his own pace,
  • Each went to fill his separate place. 10
  • If we should meet one day,
  • If both should not forget,
  • We shall clasp hands the accustomed way,
  • As when we met
  • So long ago, as I remember yet.
  • II
  • Where my heart is (wherever that may be)
  • Might I but follow!
  • If you fly thither over heath and lea,
  • O honey-seeking bee,
  • O careless swallow, 20
  • Bid some for whom I watch keep watch for me.
  • Alas! that we must dwell, my heart and I,
  • So far asunder.
  • Hours wax to days, and days and days creep by;
  • I watch with wistful eye,
  • I wait and wonder:
  • When will that day draw nigh--that hour draw nigh?
  • Not yesterday, and not, I think, to-day;
  • Perhaps to-morrow.
  • Day after day 'to-morrow' thus I say: 30
  • I watched so yesterday
  • In hope and sorrow,
  • Again to-day I watch the accustomed way.
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  • and Other Poems, by Christina Rossetti
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