- The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson -
- Swanston Edition Vol. 14 (of 25), by Robert Louis Stevenson
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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- Title: The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson - Swanston Edition Vol. 14 (of 25)
- Author: Robert Louis Stevenson
- Other: Andrew Lang
- Release Date: December 12, 2009 [EBook #30659]
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WORKS OF R.L. STEVENSON V14 OF 25 ***
- Produced by Marius Masi, Jonathan Ingram and the Online
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- THE WORKS OF
- ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON
- SWANSTON EDITION
- VOLUME XIV
- _Of this SWANSTON EDITION in Twenty-five
- Volumes of the Works of ROBERT LOUIS
- STEVENSON Two Thousand and Sixty Copies
- have been printed, of which only Two Thousand
- Copies are for sale._
- _This is No._ ........
- [Illustration: ALISON CUNNINGHAM, R. L. S.'S NURSE]
- THE WORKS OF
- ROBERT LOUIS
- STEVENSON
- VOLUME FOURTEEN
- LONDON : PUBLISHED BY CHATTO AND
- WINDUS : IN ASSOCIATION WITH CASSELL
- AND COMPANY LIMITED : WILLIAM
- HEINEMANN : AND LONGMANS GREEN
- AND COMPANY MDCCCCXI
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
- CONTENTS
- A CHILD'S GARDEN OF VERSES
- PAGE
- I. BED IN SUMMER 3
- In winter I get up at night
- II. A THOUGHT 3
- It is very nice to think
- III. AT THE SEA-SIDE 4
- When I was down beside the sea
- IV. YOUNG NIGHT THOUGHT 4
- All night long, and every night
- V. WHOLE DUTY OF CHILDREN 5
- A child should always say what's true
- VI. RAIN 5
- The rain is raining all around
- VII. PIRATE STORY 5
- Three of us afloat in the meadow by the swing
- VIII. FOREIGN LANDS 6
- Up into the cherry-tree
- IX. WINDY NIGHTS 7
- Whenever the moon and stars are set
- X. TRAVEL 7
- I should like to rise and go
- XI. SINGING 9
- Of speckled eggs the birdie sings
- XII. LOOKING FORWARD 9
- When I am grown to man's estate
- XIII. A GOOD PLAY 9
- We built a ship upon the stairs
- XIV. WHERE GO THE BOATS? 10
- Dark brown is the river
- XV. AUNTIE'S SKIRTS 11
- Whenever Auntie moves around
- XVI. THE LAND OF COUNTERPANE 11
- When I was sick and lay a-bed
- XVII. THE LAND OF NOD 12
- From breakfast on all through the day
- XVIII. MY SHADOW 12
- I have a little shadow that goes in and out with me
- XIX. SYSTEM 13
- Every night my prayers I say
- XX. A GOOD BOY 14
- I woke before the morning, I was happy all the day
- XXI. ESCAPE AT BEDTIME 14
- The lights from the parlour and kitchen shone out
- XXII. MARCHING SONG 15
- Bring the comb and play upon it
- XXIII. THE COW 16
- The friendly cow, all red and white
- XXIV. HAPPY THOUGHT 16
- The world is so full of a number of things
- XXV. THE WIND 16
- I saw you toss the kites on high
- XXVI. KEEPSAKE MILL 17
- Over the borders, a sin without pardon
- XXVII. GOOD AND BAD CHILDREN 18
- Children, you are very little
- XXVIII. FOREIGN CHILDREN 19
- Little Indian, Sioux or Crow
- XXIX. THE SUN'S TRAVELS 20
- The sun is not a-bed when I
- XXX. THE LAMPLIGHTER 20
- My tea is nearly ready and the sun has left the sky
- XXXI. MY BED IS A BOAT 21
- My bed is like a little boat
- XXXII. THE MOON 22
- The moon has a face like the clock in the hall
- XXXIII. THE SWING 22
- How do you like to go up in a swing
- XXXIV. TIME TO RISE 23
- A birdie with a yellow bill
- XXXV. LOOKING-GLASS RIVER 23
- Smooth it slides upon its travel
- XXXVI. FAIRY BREAD 24
- Come up here, O dusty feet
- XXXVII. FROM A RAILWAY CARRIAGE 24
- Faster than fairies, faster than witches
- XXXVIII. WINTER-TIME 25
- Late lies the wintry sun a-bed
- XXXIX. THE HAYLOFT 26
- Through all the pleasant meadow-side
- XL. FAREWELL TO THE FARM 26
- The coach is at the door at last
- XLI. North-West Passage 27
- 1. GOOD NIGHT 27
- When the bright lamp is carried in
- 2. SHADOW MARCH 28
- All round the house is the jet-black night
- 3. IN PORT 28
- Last, to the chamber where I lie
- THE CHILD ALONE
- I. THE UNSEEN PLAYMATE 31
- When children are playing alone on the green
- II. MY SHIP AND I 32
- O it's I that am the captain of a tidy little ship
- III. MY KINGDOM 32
- Down by a shining water well
- IV. PICTURE-BOOKS IN WINTER 33
- Summer fading, winter comes
- V. MY TREASURES 34
- These nuts, that I keep in the back of the nest
- VI. BLOCK CITY 35
- What are you able to build with your blocks
- VII. THE LAND OF STORY-BOOKS 36
- At evening when the lamp is lit
- VIII. ARMIES IN THE FIRE 37
- The lamps now glitter down the street
- IX. THE LITTLE LAND 38
- When at home alone I sit
- GARDEN DAYS
- I. NIGHT AND DAY 43
- When the golden day is done
- II. NEST EGGS 44
- Birds all the sunny day
- III. THE FLOWERS 46
- All the names I know from nurse
- IV. SUMMER SUN 46
- Great is the sun, and wide he goes
- V. THE DUMB SOLDIER 47
- When the grass was closely mown
- VI. AUTUMN FIRES 49
- In the other gardens
- VII. THE GARDENER 49
- The gardener does not love to talk
- VIII. HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS 50
- Dear Uncle Jim, this garden ground
- ENVOYS
- I. TO WILLIE AND HENRIETTA 55
- If two may read aright
- II. TO MY MOTHER 55
- You too, my mother, read my rhymes
- III. TO AUNTIE 56
- _Chief of our aunts_--not only I
- IV. TO MINNIE 56
- The red room with the giant bed
- V. TO MY NAME-CHILD 58
- Some day soon this rhyming volume, if you learn
- with proper speed.
- VI. TO ANY READER 59
- As from the house your mother sees
- UNDERWOODS
- BOOK I: IN ENGLISH
- I. ENVOY 67
- Go, little book, and wish to all
- II. A SONG OF THE ROAD 67
- The gauger walked with willing foot
- III. THE CANOE SPEAKS 68
- On the great streams the ships may go
- IV. 70
- It is the season now to go
- V. THE HOUSE BEAUTIFUL 71
- _A naked house, a naked moor_
- VI. A VISIT FROM THE SEA 72
- Far from the loud sea beaches
- VII. TO A GARDENER 73
- Friend, in my mountain-side demesne
- VIII. TO MINNIE 74
- A picture-frame for you to fill
- IX. TO K. DE M. 74
- A lover of the moorland bare
- X. TO N. V. DE G. S. 75
- The unfathomable sea, and time, and tears
- XI. TO WILL. H. LOW 76
- Youth now flees on feathered foot
- XII. TO MRS. WILL. H. LOW 77
- Even in the bluest noonday of July
- XIII. TO H. F. BROWN 78
- I sit and wait a pair of oars
- XIV. TO ANDREW LANG 79
- Dear Andrew, with the brindled hair
- XV. ET TU IN ARCADIA VIXISTI (TO R. A. M. S.) 80
- In ancient tales, O friend, thy spirit dwelt
- XVI. TO W. E. HENLEY 82
- The year runs through her phases; rain and sun
- XVII. HENRY JAMES 83
- Who comes to-night? We ope the doors in vain
- XVIII. THE MIRROR SPEAKS 84
- Where the bells peal far at sea
- XIX. KATHARINE 85
- We see you as we see a face
- XX. TO F. J. S. 85
- I read, dear friend, in your dear face
- XXI. REQUIEM 86
- Under the wide and starry sky
- XXII. THE CELESTIAL SURGEON 86
- If I have faltered more or less
- XXIII. OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS 87
- Out of the sun, out of the blast
- XXIV. 89
- Not yet, my soul, these friendly fields desert
- XXV. 90
- It is not yours, O mother, to complain
- XXVI. THE SICK CHILD 92
- O mother, lay your hand on my brow
- XXVII. IN MEMORIAM F. A. S. 93
- Yet, O stricken heart, remember, O remember
- XXVIII. TO MY FATHER 93
- Peace and her huge invasion to these shores
- XXIX. IN THE STATES 94
- With half a heart I wander here
- XXX. A PORTRAIT 95
- I am a kind of farthing dip
- XXXI. 96
- Sing clearlier, Muse, or evermore be still
- XXXII. A CAMP 96
- The bed was made, the room was fit
- XXXIII. THE COUNTRY OF THE CAMISARDS 96
- We travelled in the print of olden wars
- XXXIV. SKERRYVORE 97
- For love of lovely words, and for the sake
- XXXV. SKERRYVORE: THE PARALLEL 97
- Here all is sunny, and when the truant gull
- XXXVI. 98
- _My house_, I say. But hark to the sunny doves
- XXXVII. 98
- My body which my dungeon is
- XXXVIII. 99
- Say not of me that weakly I declined
- BOOK II: IN SCOTS
- I. THE MAKER TO POSTERITY 105
- Far 'yont amang the years to be
- II. ILLE TERRARUM 106
- Frae nirly, nippin', Eas'lan' breeze
- III. 109
- When aince Aprile has fairly come
- IV. A MILE AN' A BITTOCK 110
- A mile an' a bittock, a mile or twa
- V. A LOWDEN SABBATH MORN 111
- The clinkum-clank o' Sabbath bells
- VI. THE SPAEWIFE 116
- O, I wad like to ken--to the beggar-wife says I
- VII. THE BLAST--1875 116
- It's rainin'. Weet's the gairden sod
- VIII. THE COUNTERBLAST--1886 118
- My bonny man, the warld, it's true
- IX. THE COUNTERBLAST IRONICAL 120
- It's strange that God should fash to frame
- X. THEIR LAUREATE TO AN ACADEMY CLASS DINNER CLUB 121
- Dear Thamson class, whaure'er I gang
- XI. EMBRO HIE KIRK 123
- The Lord Himsel' in former days
- XII. THE SCOTSMAN'S RETURN FROM ABROAD 125
- In mony a foreign pairt I've been
- XIII. 129
- Late In the night in bed I lay
- XIV. MY CONSCIENCE! 131
- Of a' the ills that flesh can fear
- XV. TO DR. JOHN BROWN 133
- By Lyne and Tyne, by Thames and Tees
- XVI. 135
- It's an owercome sooth for age an' youth
- BALLADS
- THE SONG OF RAHÉRO
- A LEGEND OF TAHITI
- I. THE SLAYING OF TÁMATÉA 139
- II. THE VENGING OF TÁMATÉA 148
- III. RAHÉRO 159
- THE FEAST OF FAMINE
- MARQUESAN MANNERS
- I. THE PRIEST'S VIGIL 169
- II. THE LOVERS 172
- III. THE FEAST 176
- IV. THE RAID 182
- TICONDEROGA
- A LEGEND OF THE WEST HIGHLANDS
- I. THE SAYING OF THE NAME 189
- II. THE SEEKING OF THE NAME 194
- III. THE PLACE OF THE NAME 196
- HEATHER ALE
- A GALLOWAY LEGEND
- From the bonny bells of heather 201
- CHRISTMAS AT SEA
- The sheets were frozen hard 207
- NOTES TO THE SONG OF RAHÉRO 211
- NOTES TO THE FEAST OF FAMINE 213
- NOTES TO TICONDEROGA 214
- NOTE TO HEATHER ALE 215
- SONGS OF TRAVEL
- I. THE VAGABOND 219
- Give to me the life I love
- II. YOUTH AND LOVE--I 220
- Once only by the garden gate
- III. YOUTH AND LOVE--II 221
- To the heart of youth the world is a highwayside
- IV. 221
- In dreams, unhappy, I behold you stand
- V. 222
- She rested by the Broken Brook
- VI. 222
- The infinite shining heavens
- VII. 223
- Plain as the glistering planets shine
- VIII. 224
- To you, let snow and roses
- IX. 224
- Let Beauty awake in the morn from beautiful dreams
- X. 225
- I know not how it is with you
- XI. 225
- I will make you brooches and toys for your delight
- XII. WE HAVE LOVED OF YORE 226
- Berried brake and reedy island
- XIII. MATER TRIUMPHANS 227
- Son of my woman's body, you go, to the drum and
- fife
- XIV. 227
- Bright is the ring of words
- XV. 228
- In the highlands, in the country places
- XVI. 229
- Home no more home to me, whither must I wander
- XVII. WINTER 230
- In rigorous hours, when down the iron lane
- XVIII. 230
- The stormy evening closes now in vain
- XIX. TO DR. HAKE 231
- In the beloved hour that ushers day
- XX. TO ---- 232
- I knew thee strong and quiet like the hills
- XXI. 233
- The morning drum-call on my eager ear
- XXII. 233
- I have trod the upward and the downward slope
- XXIII. 233
- He hears with gladdened heart the thunder
- XXIV. 233
- Farewell, fair day and fading light
- XXV. IF THIS WERE FAITH 234
- God, if this were enough
- XXVI. MY WIFE 235
- Trusty, dusky, vivid, true
- XXVII. TO THE MUSE 236
- Resign the rhapsody, the dream
- XXVIII. TO AN ISLAND PRINCESS 237
- Since long ago, a child at home
- XXIX. TO KALAKAUA 238
- The Silver Ship, my King--that was her name
- XXX. TO PRINCESS KAIULANI 239
- Forth from her land to mine she goes
- XXXI. TO MOTHER MARYANNE 240
- To see the infinite pity of this place
- XXXII. IN MEMORIAM E. H. 240
- I knew a silver head was bright beyond compare
- XXXIII. TO MY WIFE 241
- Long must elapse ere you behold again
- XXXIV. TO MY OLD FAMILIARS 242
- Do you remember--can we e'er forget
- XXXV. 243
- The tropics vanish, and meseems that I
- XXXVI. TO S. C. 244
- I heard the pulse of the besieging sea
- XXXVII. THE HOUSE OF TEMBINOKA 245
- _Let us, who part like brothers, part like bards_
- XXXVIII. THE WOODMAN 249
- In all the grove, nor stream nor bird
- XXXIX. TROPIC RAIN 254
- As the single pang of the blow, when the metal is
- mingled well
- XL. AN END OF TRAVEL 255
- Let now your soul in this substantial world
- XLI. 255
- We uncommiserate pass into the night
- XLII. 256
- Sing me a song of a lad that is gone
- XLIII. TO S. R. CROCKETT 257
- Blows the wind to-day, and the sun and the rain
- are flying
- XLIV. EVENSONG 257
- The embers of the day are red
- ADDITIONAL POEMS
- I. A FAMILIAR EPISTLE 261
- Blame me not that this epistle
- II. RONDELS 263
- 1. Far have you come, my lady, from the town
- 2. Nous n'irons plus au bois
- 3. Since I am sworn to live my life
- 4. Of his pitiable transformation
- III. EPISTLE TO CHARLES BAXTER 265
- Noo lyart leaves blaw ower the green
- IV. THE SUSQUEHANNAH AND THE DELAWARE 267
- Of where or how, I nothing know
- V. EPISTLE TO ALBERT DEW-SMITH 268
- Figure me to yourself, I pray
- VI. ALCAICS TO HORATIO F. BROWN 270
- Brave lads in olden musical centuries
- VII. A LYTLE JAPE OF TUSHERIE 272
- The pleasant river gushes
- VIII. TO VIRGIL AND DORA WILLIAMS 273
- Here, from the forelands of the tideless sea
- IX. BURLESQUE SONNET 273
- Thee, Mackintosh, artificer of light
- X. THE FINE PACIFIC ISLANDS 274
- The jolly English Yellowboy
- XI. AULD REEKIE 275
- When chitterin' cauld the day sall daw
- XII. THE LESSON OF THE MASTER 276
- Adela, Adela, Adela Chart
- XIII. THE CONSECRATION OF BRAILLE 276
- I was a barren tree before
- XIV. SONG 277
- Light foot and tight foot
- A CHILD'S GARDEN OF VERSES
- _TO
- ALISON CUNNINGHAM
- FROM HER BOY_
- _For the long nights you lay awake
- And watched for my unworthy sake:
- For your most comfortable hand
- That led me through the uneven land:
- For all the story-books you read:
- For all the pains you comforted:
- For all you pitied, all you bore,
- In sad and happy days of yore:--
- My second Mother, my first Wife,
- The angel of my infant life--
- From the sick child, now well and old,
- Take, nurse, the little book you hold!_
- _And grant it, Heaven, that all who read
- May find as dear a nurse at need,
- And every child who lists my rhyme,
- In the bright, fireside, nursery clime,
- May hear it in as kind a voice
- As made my childish days rejoice!_
- _R. L. S._
- A CHILD'S GARDEN OF VERSES
- I
- BED IN SUMMER
- In winter I get up at night
- And dress by yellow candle-light.
- In summer, quite the other way,--
- I have to go to bed by day.
- I have to go to bed and see
- The birds still hopping on the tree,
- Or hear the grown-up people's feet
- Still going past me in the street.
- And does it not seem hard to you,
- When all the sky is clear and blue,
- And I should like so much to play,
- To have to go to bed by day?
- II
- A THOUGHT
- It is very nice to think
- The world is full of meat and drink,
- With little children saying grace
- In every Christian kind of place.
- III
- AT THE SEA-SIDE
- When I was down beside the sea,
- A wooden spade they gave to me
- To dig the sandy shore.
- My holes were empty like a cup,
- In every hole the sea came up,
- Till it could come no more.
- IV
- YOUNG NIGHT THOUGHT
- All night long, and every night,
- When my mamma puts out the light,
- I see the people marching by,
- As plain as day, before my eye.
- Armies and emperors and kings,
- All carrying different kinds of things,
- And marching in so grand a way,
- You never saw the like by day.
- So fine a show was never seen
- At the great circus on the green;
- For every kind of beast and man
- Is marching in that caravan.
- At first they move a little slow,
- But still the faster on they go,
- And still beside them close I keep
- Until we reach the town of Sleep.
- V
- WHOLE DUTY OF CHILDREN
- A child should always say what's true,
- And speak when he is spoken to,
- And behave mannerly at table:
- At least as far as he is able.
- VI
- RAIN
- The rain is raining all around,
- It falls on field and tree,
- It rains on the umbrellas here,
- And on the ships at sea.
- VII
- PIRATE STORY
- Three of us afloat in the meadow by the swing,
- Three of us aboard in the basket on the lea.
- Winds are in the air, they are blowing in the spring,
- And waves are on the meadow like the waves there are at sea.
- Where shall we adventure, to-day that we're afloat,
- Wary of the weather, and steering by a star?
- Shall it be to Africa, a-steering of the boat,
- To Providence, or Babylon, or off to Malabar?
- Hi! but here's a squadron a-rowing on the sea--
- Cattle on the meadow a-charging with a roar!
- Quick, and we'll escape them, they're as mad as they can be,
- The wicket is the harbour and the garden is the shore.
- VIII
- FOREIGN LANDS
- Up into the cherry-tree
- Who should climb but little me?
- I held the trunk with both my hands
- And looked abroad on foreign lands.
- I saw the next-door garden lie,
- Adorned with flowers, before my eye,
- And many pleasant places more
- That I had never seen before.
- I saw the dimpling river pass
- And be the sky's blue looking-glass;
- The dusty roads go up and down
- With people tramping in to town.
- If I could find a higher tree,
- Farther and farther I should see
- To where the grown-up river slips
- Into the sea among the ships,
- To where the roads on either hand
- Lead onward into fairy-land,
- Where all the children dine at five,
- And all the playthings come alive.
- IX
- WINDY NIGHTS
- Whenever the moon and stars are set,
- Whenever the wind is high,
- All night long in the dark and wet,
- A man goes riding by.
- Late in the night when the fires are out,
- Why does he gallop and gallop about?
- Whenever the trees are crying aloud,
- And ships are tossed at sea,
- By, on the highway, low and loud,
- By at the gallop goes he.
- By at the gallop he goes, and then
- By he comes back at the gallop again.
- X
- TRAVEL
- I should like to rise and go
- Where the golden apples grow;--
- Where below another sky
- Parrot islands anchored lie,
- And, watched by cockatoos and goats,
- Lonely Crusoes building boats;--
- Where in sunshine reaching out
- Eastern cities, miles about,
- Are with mosque and minaret
- Among sandy gardens set,
- And the rich goods from near and far
- Hang for sale in the bazaar;--
- Where the Great Wall round China goes,
- And on one side the desert blows,
- And with bell and voice and drum,
- Cities on the other hum;--
- Where are forests, hot as fire,
- Wide as England, tall as a spire,
- Full of apes and cocoa-nuts
- And the negro hunters' huts;--
- Where the knotty crocodile
- Lies and blinks in the Nile,
- And the red flamingo flies
- Hunting fish before his eyes;--
- Where in jungles, near and far,
- Man-devouring tigers are,
- Lying close and giving ear
- Lest the hunt be drawing near,
- Or a comer-by be seen
- Swinging in a palanquin;--
- Where among the desert sands
- Some deserted city stands,
- All its children, sweep and prince,
- Grown to manhood ages since,
- Not a foot in street or house,
- Nor a stir of child or mouse,
- And when kindly falls the night,
- In all the town no spark of light.
- There I'll come when I'm a man
- With a camel caravan;
- Light a fire in the gloom
- Of some dusty dining-room;
- See the pictures on the walls,
- Heroes, fights, and festivals;
- And in a corner find the toys
- Of the old Egyptian boys.
- XI
- SINGING
- Of speckled eggs the birdie sings
- And nests among the trees;
- The sailor sings of ropes and things
- In ships upon the seas.
- The children sing in far Japan,
- The children sing in Spain;
- The organ with the organ man
- Is singing in the rain.
- XII
- LOOKING FORWARD
- When I am grown to man's estate
- I shall be very proud and great,
- And tell the other girls and boys
- Not to meddle with my toys.
- XIII
- A GOOD PLAY
- We built a ship upon the stairs
- All made of the back-bedroom chairs
- And filled it full of sofa pillows
- To go a-sailing on the billows.
- We took a saw and several nails,
- And water in the nursery pails;
- And Tom said, "Let us also take
- An apple and a slice of cake";--
- Which was enough for Tom and me
- To go a-sailing on, till tea.
- We sailed along for days and days,
- And had the very best of plays;
- But Tom fell out and hurt his knee,
- So there was no one left but me.
- XIV
- WHERE GO THE BOATS?
- Dark brown is the river,
- Golden is the sand.
- It flows along for ever,
- With trees on either hand.
- Green leaves a-floating,
- Castles of the foam,
- Boats of mine a-boating--
- Where will all come home?
- On goes the river,
- And out past the mill,
- Away down the valley,
- Away down the hill.
- Away down the river,
- A hundred miles or more,
- Other little children
- Shall bring my boats ashore.
- XV
- AUNTIE'S SKIRTS
- Whenever Auntie moves around,
- Her dresses make a curious sound;
- They trail behind her up the floor,
- And trundle after through the door.
- XVI
- THE LAND OF COUNTERPANE
- When I was sick and lay a-bed,
- I had two pillows at my head,
- And all my toys beside me lay
- To keep me happy all the day.
- And sometimes for an hour or so
- I watched my leaden soldiers go,
- With different uniforms and drills,
- Among the bed-clothes, through the hills;
- And sometimes sent my ships in fleets
- All up and down among the sheets;
- Or brought my trees and houses out,
- And planted cities all about.
- I was the giant great and still
- That sits upon the pillow-hill,
- And sees before him, dale and plain,
- The pleasant land of counterpane.
- XVII
- THE LAND OF NOD
- From breakfast on all through the day
- At home among my friends I stay;
- But every night I go abroad
- Afar into the land of Nod.
- All by myself I have to go,
- With none to tell me what to do--
- All alone beside the streams
- And up the mountain-sides of dreams.
- The strangest things are there for me,
- Both things to eat and things to see,
- And many frightening sights abroad
- Till morning in the land of Nod.
- Try as I like to find the way,
- I never can get back by day,
- Nor can remember plain and clear
- The curious music that I hear.
- XVIII
- MY SHADOW
- I have a little shadow that goes in and out with me,
- And what can be the use of him is more than I can see.
- He is very, very like me from the heels up to the head;
- And I see him jump before me, when I jump into my bed.
- The funniest thing about him is the way he likes to grow--
- Not at all like proper children, which is always very slow;
- For he sometimes shoots up taller like an india-rubber ball,
- And he sometimes gets so little that there's none of him at all.
- He hasn't got a notion of how children ought to play,
- And can only make a fool of me in every sort of way.
- He stays so close beside me, he's a coward you can see;
- I'd think shame to stick to nursie as that shadow sticks to me!
- One morning, very early, before the sun was up,
- I rose and found the shining dew on every buttercup;
- But my lazy little shadow, like an arrant sleepy-head,
- Had stayed at home behind me and was fast asleep in bed.
- XIX
- SYSTEM
- Every night my prayers I say,
- And get my dinner every day;
- And every day that I've been good,
- I get an orange after food.
- The child that is not clean and neat,
- With lots of toys and things to eat,
- He is a naughty child, I'm sure--
- Or else his dear papa is poor.
- XX
- A GOOD BOY
- I woke before the morning, I was happy all the day,
- I never said an ugly word, but smiled and stuck to play.
- And now at last the sun is going down behind the wood,
- And I am very happy, for I know that I've been good.
- My bed is waiting cool and fresh, with linen smooth and fair,
- And I must off to sleepsin-by, and not forget my prayer.
- I know that, till to-morrow I shall see the sun arise,
- No ugly dream shall fright my mind, no ugly sight my eyes,
- But slumber hold me tightly till I waken in the dawn,
- And hear the thrushes singing in the lilacs round the lawn.
- XXI
- ESCAPE AT BEDTIME
- The lights from the parlour and kitchen shone out
- Through the blinds and the windows and bars;
- And high overhead and all moving about,
- There were thousands of millions of stars.
- There ne'er were such thousands of leaves on a tree,
- Nor of people in church or the Park,
- As the crowds of the stars that looked down upon me,
- And that glittered and winked in the dark.
- The Dog, and the Plough, and the Hunter, and all,
- And the star of the sailor, and Mars,
- These shone in the sky, and the pail by the wall
- Would be half full of water and stars.
- They saw me at last, and they chased me with cries,
- And they soon had me packed into bed;
- But the glory kept shining and bright in my eyes,
- And the stars going round in my head.
- XXII
- MARCHING SONG
- Bring the comb and play upon it!
- Marching, here we come!
- Willie cocks his Highland bonnet,
- Johnnie beats the drum.
- Mary Jane commands the party,
- Peter leads the rear;
- Feet in time, alert and hearty,
- Each a Grenadier!
- All in the most martial manner
- Marching double-quick;
- While the napkin like a banner
- Waves upon the stick!
- Here's enough of fame and pillage,
- Great commander Jane!
- Now that we've been round the village,
- Let's go home again.
- XXIII
- THE COW
- The friendly cow, all red and white,
- I love with all my heart:
- She gives me cream with all her might,
- To eat with apple-tart.
- She wanders lowing here and there,
- And yet she cannot stray,
- All in the pleasant open air,
- The pleasant light of day;
- And blown by all the winds that pass,
- And wet with all the showers,
- She walks among the meadow grass
- And eats the meadow flowers.
- XXIV
- HAPPY THOUGHT
- The world is so full of a number of things,
- I'm sure we should all be as happy as kings.
- XXV
- THE WIND
- I saw you toss the kites on high
- And blow the birds about the sky;
- And all around I heard you pass,
- Like ladies' skirts across the grass--
- O wind, a-blowing all day long,
- O wind, that sings so loud a song!
- I saw the different things you did,
- But always you yourself you hid.
- I felt you push, I heard you call,
- I could not see yourself at all--
- O wind, a-blowing all day long,
- O wind, that sings so loud a song!
- O you that are so strong and cold,
- O blower, are you young or old?
- Are you a beast of field and tree,
- Or just a stronger child than me?
- O wind, a-blowing all day long,
- O wind, that sings so loud a song!
- XXVI
- KEEPSAKE MILL
- Over the borders, a sin without pardon,
- Breaking the branches and crawling below,
- Out through the breach in the wall of the garden,
- Down by the banks of the river, we go.
- Here is the mill with the humming of thunder,
- Here is the weir with the wonder of foam,
- Here is the sluice with the race running under--
- Marvellous places, though handy to home!
- Sounds of the village grow stiller and stiller,
- Stiller the note of the birds on the hill;
- Dusty and dim are the eyes of the miller,
- Deaf are his ears with the moil of the mill.
- Years may go by, and the wheel in the river,
- Wheel as it wheels for us, children, to-day,
- Wheel and keep roaring and foaming for ever,
- Long after all of the boys are away.
- Home from the Indies, and home from the ocean,
- Heroes and soldiers we all shall come home;
- Still we shall find the old mill-wheel in motion,
- Turning and churning that river to foam.
- You with the bean that I gave when we quarrelled,
- I with your marble of Saturday last,
- Honoured and old and all gaily apparelled,
- Here we shall meet and remember the past.
- XXVII
- GOOD AND BAD CHILDREN
- Children, you are very little,
- And your bones are very brittle;
- If you would grow great and stately,
- You must try to walk sedately.
- You must still be bright and quiet,
- And content with simple diet;
- And remain, through all bewild'ring,
- Innocent and honest children.
- Happy hearts and happy faces,
- Happy play in grassy places--
- That was how, in ancient ages,
- Children grew to kings and sages.
- But the unkind and the unruly,
- And the sort who eat unduly,
- They must never hope for glory--
- Theirs is quite a different story!
- Cruel children, crying babies,
- All grow up as geese and gabies,
- Hated, as their age increases,
- By their nephews and their nieces.
- XXVIII
- FOREIGN CHILDREN
- Little Indian, Sioux or Crow,
- Little frosty Eskimo,
- Little Turk or Japanee,
- O! don't you wish that you were me?
- You have seen the scarlet trees
- And the lions over seas;
- You have eaten ostrich eggs,
- And turned the turtles off their legs.
- Such a life is very fine,
- But it's not so nice as mine;
- You must often, as you trod,
- Have wearied _not_ to be abroad.
- You have curious things to eat,
- I am fed on proper meat;
- You must dwell beyond the foam,
- But I am safe and live at home.
- Little Indian, Sioux or Crow
- Little frosty Eskimo,
- Little Turk or Japanee,
- O! don't you wish that you were me?
- XXIX
- THE SUN'S TRAVELS
- The sun is not a-bed when I
- At night upon my pillow lie;
- Still round the earth his way he takes,
- And morning after morning makes.
- While here at home, in shining day,
- We round the sunny garden play,
- Each little Indian sleepy-head
- Is being kissed and put to bed.
- And when at eve I rise from tea,
- Day dawns beyond the Atlantic Sea,
- And all the children in the West
- Are getting up and being dressed.
- XXX
- THE LAMPLIGHTER
- My tea is nearly ready and the sun has left the sky;
- It's time to take the window to see Leerie going by;
- For every night at tea-time and before you take your seat,
- With lantern and with ladder he comes posting up the street.
- Now Tom would be a driver and Maria go to sea,
- And my papa's a banker and as rich as he can be;
- But I, when I am stronger, and can choose what I'm to do,
- O Leerie, I'll go round at night and light the lamps with you!
- For we are very lucky, with a lamp before the door,
- And Leerie stops to light it as he lights so many more;
- And O! before you hurry by with ladder and with light,
- O Leerie, see a little child and nod to him to-night!
- XXXI
- MY BED IS A BOAT
- My bed is like a little boat;
- Nurse helps me in when I embark;
- She girds me in my sailor's coat
- And starts me in the dark.
- At night, I go on board and say
- Good-night to all my friends on shore;
- I shut my eyes and sail away
- And see and hear no more.
- And sometimes things to bed I take,
- As prudent sailors have to do:
- Perhaps a slice of wedding-cake,
- Perhaps a toy or two.
- All night across the dark we steer:
- But when the day returns at last,
- Safe in my room, beside the pier,
- I find my vessel fast.
- XXXII
- THE MOON
- The moon has a face like the clock in the hall;
- She shines on thieves on the garden wall,
- On streets and fields and harbour quays,
- And birdies asleep in the forks of the trees.
- The squalling cat and the squeaking mouse,
- The howling dog by the door of the house,
- The bat that lies in bed at noon,
- All love to be out by the light of the moon.
- But all of the things that belong to the day
- Cuddle to sleep to be out of her way;
- And flowers and children close their eyes
- Till up in the morning the sun shall arise.
- XXXIII
- THE SWING
- How do you like to go up in a swing,
- Up in the air so blue?
- Oh, I do think it the pleasantest thing
- Ever a child can do!
- Up in the air and over the wall,
- Till I can see so wide,
- Rivers and trees and cattle and all
- Over the countryside--
- Till I look down on the garden green,
- Down on the roof so brown--
- Up in the air I go flying again,
- Up in the air and down!
- XXXIV
- TIME TO RISE
- A birdie with a yellow bill
- Hopped upon the window sill,
- Cocked his shining eye and said:
- "Ain't you 'shamed, you sleepy-head?"
- XXXV
- LOOKING-GLASS RIVER
- Smooth it slides upon its travel,
- Here a wimple, there a gleam--
- O the clean gravel!
- O the smooth stream!
- Sailing blossoms, silver fishes,
- Paven pools as clear as air--
- How a child wishes
- To live down there!
- We can see our coloured faces
- Floating on the shaken pool
- Down in cool places,
- Dim and very cool;
- Till a wind or water wrinkle,
- Dipping marten, plumping trout,
- Spreads in a twinkle
- And blots all out.
- See the rings pursue each other;
- All below grows black as night,
- Just as if mother
- Had blown out the light!
- Patience, children, just a minute--
- See the spreading circles die;
- The stream and all in it
- Will clear by-and-by.
- XXXVI
- FAIRY BREAD
- Come up here, O dusty feet!
- Here is fairy bread to eat.
- Here in my retiring room,
- Children, you may dine
- On the golden smell of broom
- And the shade of pine;
- And when you have eaten well,
- Fairy stories hear and tell.
- XXXVII
- FROM A RAILWAY CARRIAGE
- Faster than fairies, faster than witches,
- Bridges and houses, hedges and ditches;
- And charging along like troops in a battle,
- All through the meadows the horses and cattle:
- All of the sights of the hill and the plain
- Fly as thick as driving rain;
- And ever again, in the wink of an eye,
- Painted stations whistle by.
- Here is a child who clambers and scrambles,
- All by himself and gathering brambles;
- Here is a tramp who stands and gazes;
- And there is the green for stringing the daisies!
- Here is a cart run away in the road
- Lumping along with man and load;
- And here is a mill, and there is a river:
- Each a glimpse and gone for ever!
- XXXVIII
- WINTER-TIME
- Late lies the wintry sun a-bed,
- A frosty, fiery sleepy-head;
- Blinks but an hour or two; and then,
- A blood-red orange, sets again.
- Before the stars have left the skies,
- At morning in the dark I rise;
- And shivering in my nakedness,
- By the cold candle, bathe and dress.
- Close by the jolly fire I sit
- To warm my frozen bones a bit;
- Or with a reindeer-sled explore
- The colder countries round the door.
- When, to go out, my nurse doth wrap
- Me in my comforter and cap,
- The cold wind burns my face, and blows
- Its frosty pepper up my nose.
- Black are my steps on silver sod;
- Thick blows my frosty breath abroad;
- And tree and house, and hill and lake,
- Are frosted like a wedding-cake.
- XXXIX
- THE HAYLOFT
- Through all the pleasant meadow-side
- The grass grew shoulder-high,
- Till the shining scythes went far and wide
- And cut it down to dry.
- These green and sweetly smelling crops
- They led in waggons home;
- And they piled them here in mountain tops
- For mountaineers to roam.
- Here is Mount Clear, Mount Rusty-Nail,
- Mount Eagle and Mount High;--
- The mice that in these mountains dwell
- No happier are than I!
- O what a joy to clamber there,
- O what a place for play,
- With the sweet, the dim, the dusty air,
- The happy hills of hay.
- XL
- FAREWELL TO THE FARM
- The coach is at the door at last;
- The eager children, mounting fast
- And kissing hands, in chorus sing:
- Good-bye, good-bye, to everything!
- To house and garden, field and lawn,
- The meadow-gates we swang upon,
- To pump and stable, tree and swing,
- Good-bye, good-bye, to everything!
- And fare you well for evermore,
- O ladder at the hayloft door,
- O hayloft where the cobwebs cling,
- Good-bye, good-bye, to everything!
- Crack goes the whip, and off we go;
- The trees and houses smaller grow;
- Last, round the woody turn we swing:
- Good-bye, good-bye, to everything!
- XLI
- NORTH-WEST PASSAGE
- 1. GOOD NIGHT
- When the bright lamp is carried in,
- The sunless hours again begin;
- O'er all without, in field and lane,
- The haunted night returns again.
- Now we behold the embers flee
- About the firelit hearth; and see
- Our faces painted as we pass,
- Like pictures, on the window-glass.
- Must we to bed indeed? Well then,
- Let us arise and go like men,
- And face with an undaunted tread
- The long black passage up to bed.
- Farewell, O brother, sister, sire!
- O pleasant party round the fire!
- The songs you sing, the tales you tell,
- Till far to-morrow, fare ye well!
- 2. SHADOW MARCH
- All round the house is the jet-black night;
- It stares through the window-pane;
- It crawls in the corners, hiding from the light,
- And it moves with the moving flame.
- Now my little heart goes a-beating like a drum,
- With the breath of the Bogie in my hair;
- And all round the candle the crooked shadows come
- And go marching along up the stair.
- The shadow of the balusters, the shadow of the lamp,
- The shadow of the child that goes to bed--
- All the wicked shadows coming, tramp, tramp, tramp,
- With the black night overhead.
- 3. IN PORT
- Last, to the chamber where I lie
- My fearful footsteps patter nigh,
- And come from out the cold and gloom
- Into my warm and cheerful room.
- There, safe arrived, we turned about
- To keep the coming shadows out,
- And close the happy door at last
- On all the perils that we passed.
- Then, when mamma goes by to bed,
- She shall come in with tip-toe tread,
- And see me lying warm and fast
- And in the land of Nod at last.
- THE CHILD ALONE
- I
- THE UNSEEN PLAYMATE
- When children are playing alone on the green,
- In comes the playmate that never was seen.
- When children are happy and lonely and good,
- The Friend of the Children comes out of the wood.
- Nobody heard him and nobody saw,
- His is a picture you never could draw,
- But he's sure to be present, abroad or at home,
- When children are happy and playing alone.
- He lies in the laurels, he runs on the grass,
- He sings when you tinkle the musical glass;
- Whene'er you are happy and cannot tell why,
- The Friend of the Children is sure to be by!
- He loves to be little, he hates to be big,
- 'Tis he that inhabits the caves that you dig;
- 'Tis he when you play with your soldiers of tin
- That sides with the Frenchmen and never can win.
- 'Tis he, when at night you go off to your bed,
- Bids you go to your sleep and not trouble your head;
- For wherever they're lying, in cupboard or shelf,
- 'Tis he will take care of your playthings himself!
- II
- MY SHIP AND I
- O it's I that am the captain of a tidy little ship,
- Of a ship that goes a-sailing on the pond;
- And my ship it keeps a-turning all around and all about;
- But when I'm a little older, I shall find the secret out
- How to send my vessel sailing on beyond.
- For I mean to grow as little as the dolly at the helm,
- And the dolly I intend to come alive;
- And with him beside to help me, it's a-sailing I shall go,
- It's a-sailing on the water, when the jolly breezes blow
- And the vessel goes a divie-divie-dive.
- O it's then you'll see me sailing through the rushes and the reeds,
- And you'll hear the water singing at the prow;
- For beside the dolly sailor, I'm to voyage and explore,
- To land upon the island where no dolly was before,
- And to fire the penny cannon in the bow.
- III
- MY KINGDOM
- Down by a shining water well
- I found a very little dell,
- No higher than my head.
- The heather and the gorse about
- In summer bloom were coming out,
- Some yellow and some red.
- I called the little pool a sea;
- The little hills were big to me;
- For I am very small.
- I made a boat, I made a town,
- I searched the caverns up and down,
- And named them one and all.
- And all about was mine, I said,
- The little sparrows overhead,
- The little minnows too.
- This was the world, and I was king;
- For me the bees came by to sing,
- For me the swallows flew.
- I played there were no deeper seas,
- Nor any wider plains than these,
- Nor other kings than me.
- At last I heard my mother call
- Out from the house at even-fall,
- To call me home to tea.
- And I must rise and leave my dell,
- And leave my dimpled water well,
- And leave my heather blooms.
- Alas! and as my home I neared,
- How very big my nurse appeared,
- How great and cool the rooms!
- IV
- PICTURE-BOOKS IN WINTER
- Summer fading, winter comes--
- Frosty mornings, tingling thumbs,
- Window robins, winter rooks,
- And the picture story-books.
- Water now is turned to stone
- Nurse and I can walk upon;
- Still we find the flowing brooks
- In the picture story-books.
- All the pretty things put by
- Wait upon the children's eye,
- Sheep and shepherds, trees and crooks,
- In the picture story-books.
- We may see how all things are,
- Seas and cities, near and far,
- And the flying fairies' looks,
- In the picture story-books.
- How am I to sing your praise,
- Happy chimney-corner days,
- Sitting safe in nursery nooks,
- Reading picture story-books?
- V
- MY TREASURES
- These nuts, that I keep in the back of the nest
- Where all my lead soldiers are lying at rest,
- Were gathered in autumn by nursie and me
- In a wood with a well by the side of the sea.
- This whistle we made (and how clearly it sounds!)
- By the side of a field at the end of the grounds.
- Of a branch of a plane, with a knife of my own,
- It was nursie who made it, and nursie alone!
- The stone, with the white and the yellow and grey,
- We discovered I cannot tell _how_ far away;
- And I carried it back, although weary and cold,
- For, though father denies it, I'm sure it is gold.
- But of all of my treasures the last is the king,
- For there's very few children possess such a thing;
- And that is a chisel, both handle and blade,
- Which a man who was really a carpenter made.
- VI
- BLOCK CITY
- What are you able to build with your blocks?
- Castles and palaces, temples and docks.
- Rain may keep raining, and others go roam,
- But I can be happy and building at home.
- Let the sofa be mountains, the carpet be sea,
- There I'll establish a city for me:
- A kirk and a mill and a palace beside,
- And a harbour as well where my vessels may ride.
- Great is the palace with pillar and wall,
- A sort of a tower on the top of it all,
- And steps coming down in an orderly way
- To where my toy vessels lie safe in the bay.
- This one is sailing and that one is moored:
- Hark to the song of the sailors on board!
- And see, on the steps of my palace, the kings
- Coming and going with presents and things!
- Now I have done with it, down let it go!
- All in a moment the town is laid low.
- Block upon block lying scattered and free,
- What is there left of my town by the sea?
- Yet, as I saw it, I see it again,
- The kirk and the palace, the ships and the men,
- And as long as I live, and where'er I may be,
- I'll always remember my town by the sea.
- VII
- THE LAND OF STORY-BOOKS
- At evening when the lamp is lit,
- Around the fire my parents sit;
- They sit at home and talk and sing,
- And do not play at anything.
- Now, with my little gun, I crawl
- All in the dark along the wall,
- And follow round the forest track
- Away behind the sofa back.
- There, in the night, where none can spy,
- All in my hunter's camp I lie,
- And play at books that I have read
- Till it is time to go to bed.
- These are the hills, these are the woods,
- These are my starry solitudes;
- And there the river by whose brink
- The roaring lions come to drink.
- I see the others far away
- As if in firelit camp they lay,
- And I, like to an Indian scout,
- Around their party prowled about
- So, when my nurse comes in for me,
- Home I return across the sea,
- And go to bed with backward looks
- At my dear land of Story-books.
- VIII
- ARMIES IN THE FIRE
- The lamps now glitter down the street;
- Faintly sound the falling feet;
- And the blue even slowly falls
- About the garden trees and walls.
- Now in the falling of the gloom
- The red fire paints the empty room:
- And warmly on the roof it looks,
- And flickers on the backs of books.
- Armies march by tower and spire
- Of cities blazing, in the fire;--
- Till as I gaze with staring eyes,
- The armies fade, the lustre dies.
- Then once again the glow returns;
- Again the phantom city burns;
- And down the red-hot valley, lo!
- The phantom armies marching go!
- Blinking embers, tell me true
- Where are those armies marching to,
- And what the burning city is
- That crumbles in your furnaces!
- IX
- THE LITTLE LAND
- When at home alone I sit
- And am very tired of it,
- I have just to shut my eyes
- To go sailing through the skies--
- To go sailing far away
- To the pleasant Land of Play;
- To the fairy land afar
- Where the Little People are;
- Where the clover-tops are trees,
- And the rain-pools are the seas,
- And the leaves like little ships
- Sail about on tiny trips;
- And above the daisy tree
- Through the grasses,
- High o'erhead the Bumble Bee
- Hums and passes.
- In that forest to and fro
- I can wander, I can go;
- See the spider and the fly,
- And the ants go marching by
- Carrying parcels with their feet
- Down the green and grassy street.
- I can in the sorrel sit
- Where the ladybird alit.
- I can climb the jointed grass;
- And on high
- See the greater swallows pass
- In the sky,
- And the round sun rolling by
- Heeding no such things as I.
- Through that forest I can pass
- Till, as in a looking-glass,
- Humming fly and daisy tree
- And my tiny self I see
- Painted very clear and neat
- On the rain-pool at my feet.
- Should a leaflet come to land
- Drifting near to where I stand,
- Straight I'll board that tiny boat
- Round the rain-pool sea to float.
- Little thoughtful creatures sit
- On the grassy coasts of it;
- Little things with lovely eyes
- See me sailing with surprise.
- Some are clad in armour green--
- (These have sure to battle been!)--
- Some are pied with ev'ry hue,
- Black and crimson, gold and blue;
- Some have wings and swift are gone;--
- But they all look kindly on.
- When my eyes I once again
- Open and see all things plain;
- High bare walls, great bare floor;
- Great big knobs on drawer and door;
- Great big people perched on chairs,
- Stitching tucks and mending tears,
- Each a hill that I could climb,
- And talking nonsense all the time--
- O dear me,
- That I could be
- A sailor on the rain-pool sea,
- A climber in the clover-tree,
- And just come back, a sleepy-head,
- Late at night to go to bed.
- GARDEN DAYS
- I
- NIGHT AND DAY
- When the golden day is done,
- Through the closing portal,
- Child and garden, flower and sun,
- Vanish all things mortal.
- As the blinding shadows fall,
- As the rays diminish,
- Under evening's cloak, they all
- Roll away and vanish.
- Garden darkened, daisy shut,
- Child in bed, they slumber--
- Glow-worm in the highway rut,
- Mice among the lumber.
- In the darkness houses shine,
- Parents move with candles;
- Till on all the night divine
- Turns the bedroom handles.
- Till at last the day begins
- In the east a-breaking,
- In the hedges and the whins
- Sleeping birds a-waking.
- In the darkness shapes of things,
- Houses, trees, and hedges,
- Clearer grow; and sparrows' wings
- Beat on window ledges.
- These shall wake the yawning maid;
- She the door shall open--
- Finding dew on garden glade
- And the morning broken.
- There my garden grows again
- Green and rosy painted,
- As at eve behind the pane
- From my eyes it fainted.
- Just as it was shut away,
- Toy-like, in the even,
- Here I see it glow with day
- Under glowing heaven.
- Every path and every plot,
- Every bush of roses,
- Every blue forget-me-not
- Where the dew reposes,
- "Up!" they cry, "the day is come
- On the smiling valleys:
- We have beat the morning drum;
- Playmate, join your allies!"
- II
- NEST EGGS
- Birds all the sunny day
- Flutter and quarrel,
- Here in the arbour-like
- Tent of the laurel.
- Here in the fork
- The brown nest is seated;
- Four little blue eggs
- The mother keeps heated.
- While we stand watching her,
- Staring like gabies,
- Safe in each egg are the
- Bird's little babies.
- Soon the frail eggs they shall
- Chip, and upspringing
- Make all the April woods
- Merry with singing.
- Younger than we are,
- O children, and frailer,
- Soon in blue air they'll be,
- Singer and sailor.
- We, so much older,
- Taller and stronger,
- We shall look down on the
- Birdies no longer.
- They shall go flying
- With musical speeches
- High overhead in the
- Tops of the beeches.
- In spite of our wisdom
- And sensible talking,
- We on our feet must go
- Plodding and walking.
- III
- THE FLOWERS
- All the names I know from nurse:
- Gardener's garters, Shepherd's purse,
- Bachelor's buttons, Lady's smock,
- And the Lady Hollyhock.
- Fairy places, fairy things,
- Fairy woods where the wild bee wings,
- Tiny trees for tiny dames--
- These must all be fairy names!
- Tiny woods below whose boughs
- Shady fairies weave a house;
- Tiny tree-tops, rose or thyme,
- Where the braver fairies climb!
- Fair are grown-up people's trees,
- But the fairest woods are these;
- Where if I were not so tall,
- I should live for good and all.
- IV
- SUMMER SUN
- Great is the sun, and wide he goes
- Through empty heaven without repose;
- And in the blue and glowing days
- More thick than rain he showers his rays.
- Though closer still the blinds we pull
- To keep the shady parlour cool,
- Yet he will find a chink or two
- To slip his golden fingers through.
- The dusty attic, spider-clad,
- He, through the keyhole, maketh glad;
- And through the broken edge of tiles
- Into the laddered hayloft smiles.
- Meantime his golden face around
- He bares to all the garden ground,
- And sheds a warm and glittering look
- Among the ivy's inmost nook.
- Above the hills, along the blue,
- Round the bright air with footing true,
- To please the child, to paint the rose,
- The gardener of the World, he goes.
- V
- THE DUMB SOLDIER
- When the grass was closely mown,
- Walking on the lawn alone,
- In the turf a hole I found
- And hid a soldier underground.
- Spring and daisies came apace;
- Grasses hide my hiding-place;
- Grasses run like a green sea
- O'er the lawn up to my knee.
- Under grass alone he lies,
- Looking up with leaden eyes,
- Scarlet coat and pointed gun,
- To the stars and to the sun.
- When the grass is ripe like grain,
- When the scythe is stoned again,
- When the lawn is shaven clear,
- Then my hole shall reappear.
- I shall find him, never fear,
- I shall find my grenadier;
- But, for all that's gone and come,
- I shall find my soldier dumb.
- He has lived, a little thing,
- In the grassy woods of spring;
- Done, if he could tell me true,
- Just as I should like to do.
- He has seen the starry hours
- And the springing of the flowers;
- And the fairy things that pass
- In the forests of the grass.
- In the silence he has heard
- Talking bee and ladybird,
- And the butterfly has flown
- O'er him as he lay alone.
- Not a word will he disclose,
- Not a word of all he knows.
- I must lay him on the shelf,
- And make up the tale myself.
- VI
- AUTUMN FIRES
- In the other gardens
- And all up the vale,
- From the autumn bonfires
- See the smoke trail!
- Pleasant summer over,
- And all the summer flowers,
- The red fire blazes,
- The grey smoke towers.
- Sing a song of seasons!
- Something bright in all!
- Flowers in the summer,
- Fires in the fall!
- VII
- THE GARDENER
- The gardener does not love to talk,
- He makes me keep the gravel walk;
- And when he puts his tools away,
- He locks the door and takes the key.
- Away behind the currant row
- Where no one else but cook may go,
- Far in the plots, I see him dig,
- Old and serious, brown and big.
- He digs the flowers, green, red, and blue,
- Nor wishes to be spoken to.
- He digs the flowers and cuts the hay,
- And never seems to want to play.
- Silly gardener! summer goes,
- And winter comes with pinching toes,
- When in the garden bare and brown
- You must lay your barrow down.
- Well now, and while the summer stays,
- To profit by these garden days,
- O how much wiser you would be
- To play at Indian wars with me!
- VIII
- HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS
- Dear Uncle Jim, this garden ground,
- That now you smoke your pipe around,
- Has seen immortal actions done
- And valiant battles lost and won.
- Here we had best on tip-toe tread,
- While I for safety march ahead,
- For this is that enchanted ground
- Where all who loiter slumber sound.
- Here is the sea, here is the sand,
- Here is simple Shepherd's Land,
- Here are the fairy hollyhocks,
- And there are Ali Baba's rocks.
- But yonder, see! apart and high,
- Frozen Siberia lies; where I,
- With Robert Bruce and William Tell,
- Was bound by an enchanter's spell.
- There, then, a while in chains we lay,
- In wintry dungeons, far from day;
- But ris'n at length, with might and main,
- Our iron fetters burst in twain.
- Then all the horns were blown in town;
- And, to the ramparts clanging down,
- All the giants leaped to horse
- And charged behind us through the gorse.
- On we rode, the others and I,
- Over the mountains blue, and by
- The Silver River, the sounding sea,
- And the robber woods of Tartary.
- A thousand miles we galloped fast,
- And down the witches' lane we passed,
- And rode amain, with brandished sword,
- Up to the middle, through the ford.
- Last we drew rein--a weary three--
- Upon the lawn, in time for tea,
- And from our steeds alighted down
- Before the gates of Babylon.
- ENVOYS
- I
- TO WILLIE AND HENRIETTA
- If two may read aright
- These rhymes of old delight
- And house and garden play,
- You two, my cousins, and you only, may.
- You in a garden green
- With me were king and queen,
- Were hunter, soldier, tar,
- And all the thousand things that children are.
- Now in the elders' seat
- We rest with quiet feet,
- And from the window-bay
- We watch the children, our successors, play.
- "Time was," the golden head
- Irrevocably said;
- But time which none can bind,
- While flowing fast away, leaves love behind.
- II
- TO MY MOTHER
- You too, my mother, read my rhymes
- For love of unforgotten times,
- And you may chance to hear once more
- The little feet along the floor.
- III
- TO AUNTIE
- _Chief of our aunts_--not only I,
- But all your dozen of nurslings cry--
- _What did the other children do?
- And what were childhood, wanting you?_
- IV
- TO MINNIE
- The red room with the giant bed
- Where none but elders lay their head;
- The little room where you and I
- Did for a while together lie,
- And, simple suitor, I your hand
- In decent marriage did demand;
- The great day-nursery, best of all,
- With pictures pasted on the wall
- And leaves upon the blind--
- A pleasant room wherein to wake
- And hear the leafy garden shake
- And rustle in the wind--
- And pleasant there to lie in bed
- And see the pictures overhead--
- The wars about Sebastopol,
- The grinning guns along the wall,
- The daring escalade,
- The plunging ships, the bleating sheep,
- The happy children ankle-deep,
- And laughing as they wade:
- All these are vanished clean away,
- And the old manse is changed to-day;
- It wears an altered face
- And shields a stranger race.
- The river, on from mill to mill,
- Flows past our childhood's garden still;
- But ah! we children never more
- Shall watch it from the water-door!
- Below the yew--it still is there--
- Our phantom voices haunt the air
- As we were still at play,
- And I can hear them call and say:
- "_How far is it to Babylon?_"
- Ah, far enough, my dear,
- Far, far enough from here--
- Yet you have farther gone!
- "_Can I get there by candlelight?_"
- So goes the old refrain.
- I do not know--perchance you might--
- But only, children, hear it right,
- Ah, never to return again!
- The eternal dawn, beyond a doubt,
- Shall break on hill and plain,
- And put all stars and candles out,
- Ere we be young again.
- To you in distant India, these
- I send across the seas,
- Nor count it far across.
- For which of us forgets
- The Indian cabinets,
- The bones of antelope, the wings of albatross,
- The pied and painted birds and beans,
- The junks and bangles, beads and screens,
- The gods and sacred bells,
- And the loud-humming, twisted shells?
- The level of the parlour floor
- Was honest, homely, Scottish shore;
- But when we climbed upon a chair,
- Behold the gorgeous East was there!
- Be this a fable; and behold
- Me in the parlour as of old,
- And Minnie just above me set
- In the quaint Indian cabinet!
- Smiling and kind, you grace a shelf
- Too high for me to reach myself.
- Reach down a hand, my dear, and take
- These rhymes for old acquaintance' sake.
- V
- TO MY NAME-CHILD
- 1
- Some day soon this rhyming volume, if you learn with proper speed,
- Little Louis Sanchez, will be given you to read.
- Then shall you discover that your name was printed down
- By the English printers, long before, in London town.
- In the great and busy city where the East and West are met,
- All the little letters did the English printer set;
- While you thought of nothing, and were still too young to play,
- Foreign people thought of you in places far away.
- Ay, and while you slept, a baby, over all the English lands
- Other little children took the volume in their hands;
- Other children questioned, in their homes across the seas:
- Who was little Louis, won't you tell us, mother, please?
- 2
- Now that you have spelt your lesson, lay it down and go and play,
- Seeking shells and seaweed on the sands of Monterey,
- Watching all the mighty whalebones, lying buried by the breeze,
- Tiny sandy-pipers, and the huge Pacific seas.
- And remember in your playing, as the sea-fog rolls to you,
- Long ere you could read it, how I told you what to do;
- And that while you thought of no one, nearly half the world away
- Some one thought of Louis on the beach of Monterey!
- VI
- TO ANY READER
- As from the house your mother sees
- You playing round the garden trees,
- So you may see, if you will look
- Through the windows of this book,
- Another child, far, far away,
- And in another garden, play.
- But do not think you can at all,
- By knocking on the window, call
- That child to hear you. He intent
- Is all on his play-business bent.
- He does not hear; he will not look,
- Not yet be lured out of this book.
- For, long ago, the truth to say,
- He has grown up and gone away,
- And it is but a child of air
- That lingers in the garden there.
- UNDERWOODS
- _Of all my verse, like not a single line;
- But like my title, for it is not mine.
- That title from a better man I stole;
- Ah, how much better, had I stol'n the whole!_
- _DEDICATION_
- _There are men and classes of men that stand above the common herd: the
- soldier, the sailor, and the shepherd not unfrequently; the artist
- rarely; rarelier still, the clergyman; the physician almost as a rule.
- He is the flower (such as it is) of our civilisation; and when that
- stage of man is done with, and only remembered to be marvelled at in
- history, he will be thought to have shared as little as any in the
- defects of the period, and most notably exhibited the virtues of the
- race. Generosity he has, such as is possible to those who practise an
- art, never to those who drive a trade; discretion, tested by a hundred
- secrets; tact, tried in a thousand embarrassments; and, what are more
- important, Heraclean cheerfulness and courage. So it is that he brings
- air and cheer into the sickroom, and often enough, though not so often
- as he wishes, brings healing._
- _Gratitude is but a lame sentiment; thanks, when they are expressed, are
- often more embarrassing than welcome; and yet I must set forth mine to a
- few out of many doctors who have brought me comfort and help: to_ Dr.
- Willey _of San Francisco, whose kindness to a stranger it must be as
- grateful to him, as it is touching to me, to remember; to_ Dr. Karl
- Ruedi _of Davos, the good genius of the English in his frosty mountains;
- to_ Dr. Herbert _of Paris, whom I knew only for a week, and to_ Dr.
- Caissot _of Montpellier, whom I knew only for ten days, and who have yet
- written their names deeply in my memory; to_ Dr. Brandt _of Royat; to_
- Dr. Wakefield _of Nice; to_ Dr. Chepmell, _whose visits make it a
- pleasure to be ill; to_ Dr. Horace Dobell, _so wise in counsel; to_ Sir
- Andrew Clark, _so unwearied in kindness; and to that wise youth, my
- uncle_, Dr. Balfour.
- _I forget as many as I remember; and I ask both to pardon me, these for
- silence, those for inadequate speech. But one name I have kept on
- purpose to the last, because it is a household word with me, and because
- if I had not received favours from so many hands and in so many quarters
- of the world, it should have stood upon this page alone: that of my
- friend _Thomas Bodley Scott_ of Bournemouth. Will he accept this,
- although shared among so many, for a dedication to himself? and when
- next my ill-fortune (which has thus its pleasant side) brings him
- hurrying to me when he would fain sit down to meat or lie down to rest,
- will he care to remember that he takes this trouble for one who is not
- fool enough to be ungrateful?_
- _R. L. S._
- _Skerryvore,
- Bournemouth._
- BOOK I
- IN ENGLISH
- UNDERWOODS
- I
- ENVOY
- Go, little book, and wish to all
- Flowers in the garden, meat in the hall,
- A bin of wine, a spice of wit,
- A house with lawns enclosing it,
- A living river by the door,
- A nightingale in the sycamore!
- II
- A SONG OF THE ROAD
- The gauger walked with willing foot,
- And aye the gauger played the flute;
- And what should Master Gauger play
- But _Over the hills and far away_?
- Whene'er I buckle on my pack
- And foot it gaily in the track,
- O pleasant gauger, long since dead,
- I hear you fluting on ahead.
- You go with me the selfsame way--
- The selfsame air for me you play;
- For I do think and so do you
- It is the tune to travel to.
- For who would gravely set his face
- To go to this or t'other place?
- There's nothing under heav'n so blue
- That's fairly worth the travelling to.
- On every hand the roads begin,
- And people walk with zeal therein;
- But wheresoe'er the highways tend,
- Be sure there's nothing at the end.
- Then follow you, wherever hie
- The travelling mountains of the sky.
- Or let the streams in civil mode
- Direct your choice upon a road;
- For one and all, or high or low,
- Will lead you where you wish to go;
- And one and all go night and day
- _Over the hills and far away_!
- FOREST OF MONTARGIS, 1878.
- III
- THE CANOE SPEAKS
- On the great streams the ships may go
- About men's business to and fro.
- But I, the egg-shell pinnace, sleep
- On crystal waters ankle-deep:
- I, whose diminutive design,
- Of sweeter cedar, pithier pine,
- Is fashioned on so frail a mould,
- A hand may launch, a hand withhold:
- I, rather, with the leaping trout
- Wind, among lilies, in and out;
- I, the unnamed, inviolate,
- Green, rustic rivers navigate;
- My dipping paddle scarcely shakes
- The berry in the bramble-brakes;
- Still forth on my green way I wend
- Beside the cottage garden-end;
- And by the nested angler fare,
- And take the lovers unaware.
- By willow wood and water-wheel
- Speedily fleets my touching keel;
- By all retired and shady spots
- Where prosper dim forget-me-nots;
- By meadows where at afternoon
- The growing maidens troop in June
- To loose their girdles on the grass.
- Ah! speedier than before the glass
- The backward toilet goes; and swift
- As swallows quiver, robe and shift
- And the rough country stockings lie
- Around each young divinity.
- When, following the recondite brook,
- Sudden upon this scene I look,
- And light with unfamiliar face
- On chaste Diana's bathing-place,
- Loud ring the hills about and all
- The shallows are abandoned....
- IV
- It is the season now to go
- About the country high and low,
- Among the lilacs hand in hand,
- And two by two in fairyland.
- The brooding boy, the sighing maid,
- Wholly fain and half afraid,
- Now meet along the hazel'd brook
- To pass and linger, pause and look.
- A year ago, and blithely paired,
- Their rough-and-tumble play they shared;
- They kissed and quarrelled, laughed and cried,
- A year ago at Eastertide.
- With bursting heart, with fiery face,
- She strove against him in the race;
- He unabashed her garter saw,
- That now would touch her skirts with awe.
- Now by the stile ablaze she stops,
- And his demurer eyes he drops;
- Now they exchange averted sighs
- Or stand and marry silent eyes.
- And he to her a hero is
- And sweeter she than primroses;
- Their common silence dearer far
- Than nightingale and mavis are.
- Now when they sever wedded hands,
- Joy trembles in their bosom-strands
- And lovely laughter leaps and falls
- Upon their lips in madrigals.
- V
- THE HOUSE BEAUTIFUL
- _A naked house, a naked moor,
- A shivering pool before the door,
- A garden bare of flowers and fruit
- And poplars at the garden foot:
- Such is the place that I live in,
- Bleak without and bare within._
- Yet shall your ragged moor receive
- The incomparable pomp of eve,
- And the cold glories of the dawn
- Behind your shivering trees be drawn;
- And when the wind from place to place
- Doth the unmoored cloud-galleons chase,
- Your garden gloom and gleam again,
- With leaping sun, with glancing rain.
- Here shall the wizard moon ascend
- The heavens, in the crimson end
- Of day's declining splendour; here
- The army of the stars appear.
- The neighbour hollows, dry or wet,
- Spring shall with tender flowers beset;
- And oft the morning muser see
- Larks rising from the broomy lea,
- And every fairy wheel and thread
- Of cobweb, dew-bediamonded.
- When daisies go, shall winter-time
- Silver the simple grass with rime;
- Autumnal frosts enchant the pool
- And make the cart-ruts beautiful;
- And when snow-bright the moor expands,
- How shall your children clap their hands!
- To make this earth, our hermitage,
- A cheerful and a changeful page,
- God's bright and intricate device
- Of days and seasons doth suffice.
- VI
- A VISIT FROM THE SEA
- Far from the loud sea beaches
- Where he goes fishing and crying,
- Here in the inland garden
- Why is the sea-gull flying?
- Here are no fish to dive for;
- Here is the corn and lea;
- Here are the green trees rustling.
- Hie away home to sea!
- Fresh is the river water
- And quiet among the rushes;
- This is no home for the sea-gull,
- But for the rooks and thrushes.
- Pity the bird that has wandered!
- Pity the sailor ashore!
- Hurry him home to the ocean,
- Let him come here no more!
- High on the sea-cliff ledges
- The white gulls are trooping and crying,
- Here among rooks and roses,
- Why is the sea-gull flying?
- VII
- TO A GARDENER
- Friend, in my mountain-side demesne,
- My plain-beholding, rosy, green
- And linnet-haunted garden-ground,
- Let still the esculents abound.
- Let first the onion flourish there,
- Rose among roots, the maiden-fair,
- Wine-scented and poetic soul
- Of the capacious salad-bowl.
- Let thyme the mountaineer (to dress
- The tinier birds) and wading cress,
- The lover of the shallow brook,
- From all my plots and borders look.
- Nor crisp and ruddy radish, nor
- Pease-cods for the child's pinafore
- Be lacking; nor of salad clan
- The last and least that ever ran
- About great nature's garden-beds.
- Nor thence be missed the speary heads
- Of artichoke; nor thence the bean
- That gathered innocent and green
- Outsavours the belauded pea.
- These tend, I prithee; and for me,
- Thy most long-suffering master, bring
- In April, when the linnets sing
- And the days lengthen more and more,
- At sundown to the garden door.
- And I, being provided thus,
- Shall, with superb asparagus,
- A book, a taper, and a cup
- Of country wine, divinely sup.
- LA SOLITUDE, HYÈRES.
- VIII
- TO MINNIE
- (WITH A HAND-GLASS)
- A picture-frame for you to fill,
- A paltry setting for your face,
- A thing that has no worth until
- You lend it something of your grace,
- I send (unhappy I that sing
- Laid by a while upon the shelf)
- Because I would not send a thing
- Less charming than you are yourself.
- And happier than I, alas!
- (Dumb thing, I envy its delight)
- 'Twill wish you well, the looking-glass,
- And look you in the face to-night.
- 1869.
- IX
- TO K. DE M.
- A lover of the moorland bare
- And honest country winds you were;
- The silver-skimming rain you took;
- And love the floodings of the brook,
- Dew, frost and mountains, fire and seas,
- Tumultuary silences,
- Winds that in darkness fifed a tune,
- And the high-riding, virgin moon.
- And as the berry, pale and sharp,
- Springs on some ditch's counterscarp
- In our ungenial, native north--
- You put your frosted wildings forth,
- And on the heath, afar from man,
- A strong and bitter virgin ran.
- The berry ripened keeps the rude
- And racy flavour of the wood.
- And you that loved the empty plain
- All redolent of wind and rain,
- Around you still the curlew sings--
- The freshness of the weather clings--
- The maiden jewels of the rain
- Sit in your dabbled locks again.
- X
- TO N. V. DE G. S.
- The unfathomable sea, and time, and tears,
- The deeds of heroes and the crimes of kings
- Dispart us; and the river of events
- Has, for an age of years, to east and west
- More widely borne our cradles. Thou to me
- Art foreign, as when seamen at the dawn
- Descry a land far off, and know not which.
- So I approach uncertain; so I cruise
- Round thy mysterious islet, and behold
- Surf and great mountains and loud river-bars,
- And from the shore hear inland voices call.
- Strange is the seaman's heart; he hopes, he fears;
- Draws closer and sweeps wider from that coast;
- Last, his rent sail refits, and to the deep
- His shattered prow uncomforted puts back.
- Yet as he goes he ponders at the helm
- Of that bright island; where he feared to touch,
- His spirit re-adventures; and for years,
- Where by his wife he slumbers safe at home,
- Thoughts of that land revisit him; he sees
- The eternal mountains beckon, and awakes
- Yearning for that far home that might have been.
- XI
- TO WILL. H. LOW
- Youth now flees on feathered foot,
- Faint and fainter sounds the flute,
- Rarer songs of gods; and still
- Somewhere on the sunny hill,
- Or along the winding stream,
- Through the willows, flits a dream;
- Flits but shows a smiling face,
- Flees, but with so quaint a grace,
- None can choose to stay at home,
- All must follow, all must roam.
- This is unborn beauty: she
- Now in air floats high and free.
- Takes the sun and makes the blue;--
- Late with stooping pinion flew
- Raking hedgerow trees, and wet
- Her wing in silver streams, and set
- Shining foot on temple roof:
- Now again she flies aloof,
- Coasting mountain clouds and kiss't
- By the evening's amethyst.
- In wet wood and miry lane,
- Still we pant and pound in vain;
- Still with leaden foot we chase
- Waning pinion, fainting face;
- Still with grey hair we stumble on,
- Till, behold, the vision gone!
- Where hath fleeting beauty led?
- To the doorway of the dead.
- Life is over, life was gay:
- We have come the primrose way.
- XII
- TO MRS. WILL. H. LOW
- Even in the bluest noonday of July,
- There could not run the smallest breath of wind
- But all the quarter sounded like a wood;
- And in the chequered silence and above
- The hum of city cabs that sought the Bois,
- Suburban ashes shivered into song.
- A patter and a chatter and a chirp
- And a long dying hiss--it was as though
- Starched old brocaded dames through all the house
- Had trailed a strident skirt, or the whole sky
- Even in a wink had over-brimmed in rain.
- Hark, in these shady parlours, how it talks
- Of the near Autumn, how the smitten ash
- Trembles and augurs floods! O not too long
- In these inconstant latitudes delay,
- O not too late from the unbeloved north
- Trim your escape! For soon shall this low roof
- Resound indeed with rain, soon shall your eyes
- Search the foul garden, search the darkened rooms,
- Nor find one jewel but the blazing log.
- 12 RUE VERNIER, PARIS.
- XIII
- TO H. F. BROWN
- (WRITTEN DURING A DANGEROUS SICKNESS)
- I sit and wait a pair of oars
- On cis-Elysian river-shores.
- Where the immortal dead have sate,
- 'Tis mine to sit and meditate;
- To re-ascend life's rivulet,
- Without remorse, without regret;
- And sing my _Alma Genetrix_
- Among the willows of the Styx.
- And lo, as my serener soul
- Did these unhappy shores patrol,
- And wait with an attentive ear
- The coming of the gondolier,
- Your fire-surviving roll I took,
- Your spirited and happy book;[1]
- Whereon, despite my frowning fate,
- It did my soul so recreate
- That all my fancies fled away
- On a Venetian holiday.
- Now, thanks to your triumphant care,
- Your pages clear as April air,
- The sails, the bells, the birds, I know,
- And the far-off Friulan snow;
- The land and sea, the sun and shade,
- And the blue even lamp-inlaid.
- For this, for these, for all, O friend,
- For your whole book from end to end--
- For Paron Piero's mutton-ham--
- I your defaulting debtor am.
- Perchance, reviving, yet may I
- To your sea-paven city hie,
- And in a _felze_ some day yet
- Light at your pipe my cigarette.
- FOOTNOTE:
- [1] "Life on the Lagoons," by H. F. Brown, originally burned in the
- fire at Messrs. Kegan Paul, Trench & Co.'s.
- XIV
- TO ANDREW LANG
- Dear Andrew, with the brindled hair,
- Who glory to have thrown in air,
- High over arm, the trembling reed,
- By Ale and Kail, by Till and Tweed:
- An equal craft of hand you show
- The pen to guide, the fly to throw:
- I count you happy-starred; for God,
- When He with inkpot and with rod
- Endowed you, bade your fortune lead
- For ever by the crooks of Tweed,
- For ever by the woods of song
- And lands that to the Muse belong;
- Or if in peopled streets, or in
- The abhorred pedantic sanhedrin,
- It should be yours to wander, still
- Airs of the morn, airs of the hill,
- The plovery Forest and the seas
- That break about the Hebrides,
- Should follow over field and plain
- And find you at the window-pane;
- And you again see hill and peel,
- And the bright springs gush at your heel.
- So went the fiat forth, and so
- Garrulous like a brook you go,
- With sound of happy mirth and sheen
- Of daylight--whether by the green
- You fare that moment, or the grey;
- Whether you dwell in March or May;
- Or whether treat of reels and rods
- Or of the old unhappy gods:
- Still like a brook your page has shone,
- And your ink sings of Helicon.
- XV
- ET TU IN ARCADIA VIXISTI
- (TO R. A. M. S.)
- In ancient tales, O friend, thy spirit dwelt;
- There, from of old, thy childhood passed; and there
- High expectation, high delights and deeds,
- Thy fluttering heart with hope and terror moved.
- And thou hast heard of yore the Blatant Beast,
- And Roland's horn, and that war-scattering shout
- Of all-unarmed Achilles, ægis-crowned.
- And perilous lands thou sawest, sounding shores
- And seas and forests drear, island and dale
- And mountain dark. For thou with Tristram rod'st
- Or Bedevere, in farthest Lyonesse.
- Thou hadst a booth in Samarcand, whereat
- Side-looking Magians trafficked; thence, by night,
- An Afreet snatched thee, and with wings upbore
- Beyond the Aral Mount; or, hoping gain,
- Thou, with a jar of money, didst embark
- For Balsorah by sea. But chiefly thou
- In that clear air took'st life; in Arcady
- The haunted, land of song; and by the wells
- Where most the gods frequent. There Chiron old,
- In the Pelethronian antre, taught thee lore;
- The plants he taught, and by the shining stars
- In forests dim to steer. There hast thou seen
- Immortal Pan dance secret in a glade,
- And, dancing, roll his eyes; these, where they fell,
- Shed glee, and through the congregated oaks
- A flying horror winged; while all the earth
- To the god's pregnant footing thrilled within.
- Or whiles, beside the sobbing stream, he breathed,
- In his clutched pipe unformed and wizard strains
- Divine yet brutal; which the forest heard,
- And thou, with awe; and far upon the plain
- The unthinking ploughman started and gave ear.
- Now things there are that, upon him who sees,
- A strong vocation lay; and strains there are
- That whoso hears shall hear for evermore.
- For evermore thou hear'st immortal Pan
- And those melodious godheads, ever young
- And ever quiring, on the mountains old.
- What was this earth, child of the gods, to thee?
- Forth from thy dreamland thou, a dreamer, cam'st
- And in thine ears the olden music rang,
- And in thy mind the doings of the dead,
- And those heroic ages long forgot.
- To a so fallen earth, alas! too late,
- Alas! in evil days, thy steps return,
- To list at noon for nightingales, to grow
- A dweller on the beach till Argo come
- That came long since, a lingerer by the pool
- Where that desirèd angel bathes no more.
- As when the Indian to Dakota comes,
- Or farthest Idaho, and where he dwelt,
- He with his clan, a humming city finds;
- Thereon a while, amazed, he stares, and then
- To right and leftward, like a questing dog,
- Seeks first the ancestral altars, then the hearth
- Long cold with rains, and where old terror lodged,
- And where the dead: so thee undying Hope,
- With all her pack, hunts screaming through the years:
- Here, there, thou fleeëst; but nor here nor there
- The pleasant gods abide, the glory dwells.
- That, that was not Apollo, not the god.
- This was not Venus, though she Venus seemed
- A moment. And though fair yon river move,
- She, all the way, from disenchanted fount
- To seas unhallowed runs; the gods forsook
- Long since her trembling rushes; from her plains
- Disconsolate, long since adventure fled;
- And now although the inviting river flows,
- And every poplared cape, and every bend
- Or willowy islet, win upon thy soul
- And to thy hopeful shallop whisper speed;
- Yet hope not thou at all; hope is no more;
- And O, long since the golden groves are dead
- The faëry cities vanished from the land!
- XVI
- TO W.E. HENLEY
- The year runs through her phases; rain and sun,
- Spring-time and summer pass; winter succeeds;
- But one pale season rules the house of death.
- Cold falls the imprisoned daylight; fell disease
- By each lean pallet squats, and pain and sleep
- Toss gaping on the pillows.
- But O thou!
- Uprise and take thy pipe. Bid music flow,
- Strains by good thoughts attended, like the spring
- The swallows follow over land and sea.
- Pain sleeps at once; at once, with open eyes,
- Dozing despair awakes. The shepherd sees
- His flock come bleating home; the seaman hears
- Once more the cordage rattle. Airs of home!
- Youth, love, and roses blossom; the gaunt ward
- Dislimns and disappears, and, opening out,
- Shows brooks and forests, and the blue beyond
- Of mountains.
- Small the pipe; but O! do thou,
- Peak-faced and suffering piper, blow therein
- The dirge of heroes dead; and to these sick,
- These dying, sound the triumph over death.
- Behold! each greatly breathes; each tastes a joy
- Unknown before, in dying; for each knows
- A hero dies with him--though unfulfilled,
- Yet conquering truly--and not dies in vain.
- So is pain cheered, death comforted; the house
- Of sorrow smiles to listen. Once again--
- O thou, Orpheus and Heracles, the bard
- And the deliverer, touch the stops again!
- XVII
- HENRY JAMES
- Who comes to-night? We ope the doors in vain.
- Who comes? My bursting walls, can you contain
- The presences that now together throng
- Your narrow entry, as with flowers and song,
- As with the air of life, the breath of talk?
- Lo, how these fair immaculate women walk
- Behind their jocund maker; and we see
- Slighted _De Mauves_, and that far different she,
- _Gressie_, the trivial sphynx; and to our feast
- _Daisy_ and _Barb_ and _Chancellor_ (she not least!)
- With all their silken, all their airy kin,
- Do like unbidden angels enter in.
- But he, attended by these shining names,
- Comes (best of all) himself--our welcome James.
- XVIII
- THE MIRROR SPEAKS
- Where the bells peal far at sea
- Cunning fingers fashioned me.
- There on palace walls I hung
- While that Consuelo sung;
- But I heard, though I listened well,
- Never a note, never a trill,
- Never a beat of the chiming bell.
- There I hung and looked, and there
- In my grey face, faces fair
- Shone from under shining hair.
- Well I saw the poising head,
- But the lips moved and nothing said;
- And when lights were in the hall,
- Silent moved the dancers all.
- So a while I glowed, and then
- Fell on dusty days and men;
- Long I slumbered packed in straw,
- Long I none but dealers saw;
- Till before my silent eye
- One that sees came passing by.
- Now with an outlandish grace,
- To the sparkling fire I face
- In the blue room at Skerryvore;
- Where I wait until the door
- Open, and the Prince of Men,
- Henry James, shall come again.
- XIX
- KATHARINE
- We see you as we see a face
- That trembles in a forest place
- Upon the mirror of a pool
- For ever quiet, clear, and cool;
- And, in the wayward glass, appears
- To hover between smiles and tears,
- Elfin and human, airy and true,
- And backed by the reflected blue.
- XX
- TO F. J. S.
- I read, dear friend, in your dear face
- Your life's tale told with perfect grace;
- The river of your life I trace
- Up the sun-chequered, devious bed
- To the far-distant fountain-head.
- Not one quick beat of your warm heart,
- Nor thought that came to you apart,
- Pleasure nor pity, love nor pain
- Nor sorrow, has gone by in vain;
- But as some lone, wood-wandering child
- Brings home with him at evening mild
- The thorns and flowers of all the wild,
- From your whole life, O fair and true,
- Your flowers and thorns you bring with you!
- XXI
- REQUIEM
- Under the wide and starry sky,
- Dig the grave and let me lie.
- Glad did I live and gladly die,
- And I laid me down with a will.
- This be the verse you grave for me:
- _Here he lies where he longed to be;
- Home is the sailor, home from sea,
- And the hunter home from the hill._
- HYÈRES, _May 1884_.
- XXII
- THE CELESTIAL SURGEON
- If I have faltered more or less
- In my great task of happiness;
- If I have moved among my race
- And shown no glorious morning face;
- If beams from happy human eyes
- Have moved me not; if morning skies,
- Books, and my food, and summer rain
- Knocked on my sullen heart in vain:--
- Lord, Thy most pointed pleasure take
- And stab my spirit broad awake;
- Or, Lord, if too obdurate I,
- Choose Thou, before that spirit die,
- A piercing pain, a killing sin,
- And to my dead heart run them in!
- XXIII
- OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS
- Out of the sun, out of the blast,
- Out of the world, alone I passed
- Across the moor and through the wood
- To where the monastery stood.
- There neither lute nor breathing fife,
- Nor rumour of the world of life,
- Nor confidences low and dear,
- Shall strike the meditative ear.
- Aloof, unhelpful, and unkind,
- The prisoners of the iron mind,
- Where nothing speaks except the bell,
- The unfraternal brothers dwell.
- Poor passionate men, still clothed afresh
- With agonising folds of flesh;
- Whom the clear eyes solicit still
- To some bold output of the will,
- While fairy Fancy far before
- And musing Memory-Hold-the-door
- Now to heroic death invite
- And now uncurtain fresh delight:
- O, little boots it thus to dwell
- On the remote unneighboured hill!
- O to be up and doing, O
- Unfearing and unshamed to go
- In all the uproar and the press
- About my human business!
- My undissuaded heart I hear
- Whisper courage in my ear.
- With voiceless calls, the ancient earth
- Summons me to a daily birth.
- Thou, O my love, ye, O my friends--
- The gist of life, the end of ends--
- To laugh, to love, to live, to die,
- Ye call me by the ear and eye!
- Forth from the casemate, on the plain
- Where honour has the world to gain,
- Pour forth and bravely do your part,
- O knights of the unshielded heart!
- Forth and for ever forward!--out
- From prudent turret and redoubt,
- And in the mellay charge amain,
- To fall but yet to rise again!
- Captive? ah, still, to honour bright,
- A captive soldier of the right!
- Or free and fighting, good with ill?
- Unconquering but unconquered still!
- And ye, O brethren, what if God,
- When from Heav'n's top He spies abroad,
- And sees on this tormented stage
- The noble war of mankind rage:
- What if His vivifying eye,
- O monks, should pass your corner by?
- For still the Lord is Lord of might;
- In deeds, in deeds, He takes delight;
- The plough, the spear, the laden barks,
- The field, the founded city, marks;
- He marks the smiler of the streets,
- The singer upon garden seats;
- He sees the climber in the rocks:
- To Him, the shepherd folds his flocks.
- For those He loves that underprop
- With daily virtues Heaven's top,
- And bear the falling sky with ease,
- Unfrowning caryatides.
- Those He approves that ply the trade,
- That rock the child, that wed the maid,
- That with weak virtues, weaker hands,
- Sow gladness on the peopled lands.
- And still with laughter, song and shout,
- Spin the great wheel of earth about.
- But ye?--O ye who linger still
- Here in your fortress on the hill,
- With placid face, with tranquil breath,
- The unsought volunteers of death,
- Our cheerful General on high
- With careless looks may pass you by.
- XXIV
- Not yet, my soul, these friendly fields desert,
- Where thou with grass, and rivers, and the breeze,
- And the bright face of day, thy dalliance hadst;
- Where to thine ear first sang the enraptured birds;
- Where love and thou that lasting bargain made.
- The ship rides trimmed, and from the eternal shore
- Thou hearest airy voices; but not yet
- Depart, my soul, not yet a while depart.
- Freedom is far, rest far. Thou art with life
- Too closely woven, nerve with nerve entwined;
- Service still craving service, love for love,
- Love for dear love, still suppliant with tears.
- Alas, not yet thy human task is done!
- A bond at birth is forged; a debt doth lie
- Immortal on mortality. It grows--
- By vast rebound it grows, unceasing growth;
- Gift upon gift, alms upon alms, upreared,
- From man, from God, from nature, till the soul
- At that so huge indulgence stands amazed.
- Leave not, my soul, the unfoughten field, nor leave
- Thy debts dishonoured, nor thy place desert
- Without due service rendered. For thy life,
- Up, spirit, and defend that fort of clay,
- Thy body, now beleaguered; whether soon
- Or late she fall; whether to-day thy friends
- Bewail thee dead, or, after years, a man
- Grown old in honour and the friend of peace.
- Contend, my soul, for moments and for hours;
- Each is with service pregnant; each reclaimed
- Is as a kingdom conquered, where to reign.
- As when a captain rallies to the fight
- His scattered legions, and beats ruin back,
- He, on the field, encamps, well pleased in mind.
- Yet surely him shall fortune overtake,
- Him smite in turn, headlong his ensigns drive;
- And that dear land, now safe, to-morrow fall.
- But he, unthinking, in the present good
- Solely delights, and all the camps rejoice.
- XXV
- It is not yours, O mother, to complain,
- Not, mother, yours to weep,
- Though nevermore your son again
- Shall to your bosom creep,
- Though nevermore again you watch your baby sleep.
- Though in the greener paths of earth,
- Mother and child, no more
- We wander; and no more the birth
- Of me whom once you bore
- Seems still the brave reward that once it seemed of yore;
- Though as all passes, day and night,
- The seasons and the years,
- From you, O mother, this delight,
- This also disappears--
- Some profit yet survives of all your pangs and tears.
- The child, the seed, the grain of corn,
- The acorn on the hill,
- Each for some separate end is born
- In season fit, and still
- Each must in strength arise to work the almighty will.
- So from the hearth the children flee,
- By that almighty hand
- Austerely led; so one by sea
- Goes forth, and one by land;
- Nor aught of all man's sons escapes from that command.
- So from the sally each obeys
- The unseen almighty nod;
- So till the ending all their ways
- Blindfolded loth have trod:
- Nor knew their task at all, but were the tools of God.
- And as the fervent smith of yore
- Beat out the glowing blade,
- Nor wielded in the front of war
- The weapons that he made,
- But in the tower at home still plied his ringing trade;
- So like a sword the son shall roam
- On nobler missions sent;
- And as the smith remained at home
- In peaceful turret pent,
- So sits the while at home the mother well content.
- XXVI
- THE SICK CHILD
- CHILD
- O Mother, lay your hand on my brow!
- O mother, mother, where am I now?
- Why is the room so gaunt and great?
- Why am I lying awake so late?
- MOTHER
- Fear not at all: the night is still.
- Nothing is here that means you ill--
- Nothing but lamps the whole town through,
- And never a child awake but you.
- CHILD
- Mother, mother, speak low in my ear,
- Some of the things are so great and near,
- Some are so small and far away,
- I have a fear that I cannot say.
- What have I done, and what do I fear,
- And why are you crying, mother dear?
- MOTHER
- Out in the city, sounds begin,
- Thank the kind God, the carts come in!
- An hour or two more, and God is so kind,
- The day shall be blue in the window-blind,
- Then shall my child go sweetly asleep,
- And dream of the birds and the hills of sheep.
- XXVII
- IN MEMORIAM F.A.S.
- Yet, O stricken heart, remember, O remember
- How of human days he lived the better part.
- April came to bloom and never dim December
- Breathed its killing chills upon the head or heart.
- Doomed to know not Winter, only Spring, a being
- Trod the flowery April blithely for a while,
- Took his fill of music, joy of thought and seeing,
- Came and stayed and went, nor ever ceased to smile.
- Came and stayed and went, and now when all is finished,
- You alone have crossed the melancholy stream,
- Yours the pang, but his, O his, the undiminished
- Undecaying gladness, undeparted dream.
- All that life contains of torture, toil, and treason,
- Shame, dishonour, death, to him were but a name.
- Here, a boy, he dwelt through all the singing season,
- And ere the day of sorrow departed as he came.
- DAVOS, 1881.
- XXVIII
- TO MY FATHER
- Peace and her huge invasion to these shores
- Puts daily home; innumerable sails
- Dawn on the far horizon and draw near;
- Innumerable loves, uncounted hopes
- To our wild coasts, not darkling now, approach:
- Not now obscure, since thou and thine are there,
- And bright on the lone isle, the foundered reef,
- The long, resounding foreland, Pharos stands.
- These are thy works, O father, these thy crown;
- Whether on high the air be pure, they shine
- Along the yellowing sunset, and all night
- Among the unnumbered stars of God they shine;
- Or whether fogs arise and far and wide
- The low sea-level drown--each finds a tongue
- And all night long the tolling bell resounds:
- So shine, so toll, till night be overpast,
- Till the stars vanish, till the sun return,
- And in the haven rides the fleet secure.
- In the first hour, the seaman in his skiff
- Moves through the unmoving bay, to where the town
- Its earliest smoke into the air upbreathes,
- And the rough hazels climb along the beach.
- To the tugged oar the distant echo speaks.
- The ship lies resting, where by reef and roost
- Thou and thy lights have led her like a child.
- This hast thou done, and I--can I be base?
- I must arise, O father, and to port
- Some lost, complaining seaman pilot home.
- XXIX
- IN THE STATES
- With half a heart I wander here
- As from an age gone by
- A brother--yet though young in years,
- An elder brother, I.
- You speak another tongue than mine,
- Though both were English born.
- I towards the night of time decline
- You mount into the morn.
- Youth shall grow great and strong and free,
- But age must still decay:
- To-morrow for the States,--for me,
- England and Yesterday.
- SAN FRANCISCO.
- XXX
- A PORTRAIT
- I am a kind of farthing dip,
- Unfriendly to the nose and eyes;
- A blue-behinded ape, I skip
- Upon the trees of Paradise.
- At mankind's feast, I take my place
- In solemn, sanctimonious state,
- And have the air of saying grace
- While I defile the dinner-plate.
- I am "the smiler with the knife,"
- The battener upon garbage, I--
- Dear Heaven, with such a rancid life
- Were it not better far to die?
- Yet still, about the human pale,
- I love to scamper, love to race,
- To swing by my irreverent tail
- All over the most holy place;
- And when at length, some golden day,
- The unfailing sportsman, aiming at,
- Shall bag, me--all the world shall say:
- _Thank God, and there's an end of that!_
- XXXI
- Sing clearlier, Muse, or evermore be still,
- Sing truer or no longer sing!
- No more the voice of melancholy Jaques
- To wake a weeping echo in the hill;
- But as the boy, the pirate of the spring,
- From the green elm a living linnet takes,
- One natural verse recapture--then be still.
- XXXII
- A CAMP[1]
- The bed was made, the room was fit,
- By punctual eve the stars were lit;
- The air was still, the water ran,
- No need was there for maid or man,
- When we put up, my ass and I,
- At God's green caravanserai.
- XXXIII
- THE COUNTRY OF THE CAMISARDS[1]
- We travelled in the print of olden wars;
- Yet all the land was green;
- And love we found, and peace,
- Where fire and war had been.
- They pass and smile, the children of the sword--
- No more the sword they wield;
- And O, how deep the corn
- Along the battlefield!
- FOOTNOTE:
- [1] From "Travels with a Donkey."
- XXXIV
- SKERRYVORE
- For love of lovely words, and for the sake
- Of those, my kinsmen and my countrymen,
- Who early and late in the windy ocean toiled
- To plant a star for seamen, where was then
- The surfy haunt of seals and cormorants:
- I, on the lintel of this cot, inscribe
- The name of a strong tower.
- XXXV
- SKERRYVORE
- THE PARALLEL
- Here all is sunny, and when the truant gull
- Skims the green level of the lawn, his wing
- Dispetals roses; here the house is framed
- Of kneaded brick and the plumed mountain pine,
- Such clay as artists fashion and such wood
- As the tree-climbing urchin breaks. But there
- Eternal granite hewn from the living isle
- And dowelled with brute iron, rears a tower
- That from its wet foundation to its crown
- Of glittering glass, stands, in the sweep of winds,
- Immovable, immortal, eminent.
- XXXVI
- _My house_, I say. But hark to the sunny doves
- That make my roof the arena of their loves,
- That gyre about the gable all day long
- And fill the chimneys with their murmurous song:
- _Our house_, they say; and _mine_, the cat declares
- And spreads his golden fleece upon the chairs;
- And _mine_ the dog, and rises stiff with wrath
- If any alien foot profane the path.
- So too the buck that trimmed my terraces,
- Our whilome gardener, called the garden his;
- Who now, deposed, surveys my plain abode
- And his late kingdom, only from the road.
- XXXVII
- My body which my dungeon is,
- And yet my parks and palaces:--
- Which is so great that there I go
- All the day long to and fro,
- And when the night begins to fall
- Throw down my bed and sleep, while all
- The building hums with wakefulness--
- Even as a child of savages
- When evening takes her on her way
- (She having roamed a summer's day
- Along the mountain-sides and scalp),
- Sleeps in an antre of that alp:--
- Which is so broad and high that there,
- As in the topless fields of air,
- My fancy soars like to a kite
- And faints in the blue infinite:--
- Which is so strong, my strongest throes
- And the rough world's besieging blows
- Not break it, and so weak withal,
- Death ebbs and flows in its loose wall
- As the green sea in fishers' nets,
- And tops its topmost parapets:--
- Which is so wholly mine that I
- Can wield its whole artillery,
- And mine so little, that my soul
- Dwells in perpetual control,
- And I but think and speak and do
- As my dead fathers move me to:--
- If this born body of my bones
- The beggared soul so barely owns,
- What money passed from hand to hand,
- What creeping custom of the land,
- What deed of author or assign,
- Can make a house a thing of mine?
- XXXVIII
- Say not of me that weakly I declined
- The labours of my sires, and fled the sea,
- The towers we founded and the lamps we lit,
- To play at home with paper like a child.
- But rather say: _In the afternoon of time
- A strenuous family dusted from its hands
- The sand of granite, and beholding far
- Along the sounding coast its pyramids
- And tall memorials catch the dying sun,
- Smiled well content, and to this childish task
- Around the fire addressed its evening hours._
- BOOK II
- IN SCOTS
- NOTE TO BOOK II
- The human conscience has fled of late the troublesome domain of conduct
- for what I should have supposed to be the less congenial field of art:
- there she may now be said to rage, and with special severity in all that
- touches dialect: so that in every novel the letters of the alphabet are
- tortured, and the reader wearied, to commemorate shades of
- mispronunciation. Now, spelling is an art of great difficulty in my
- eyes, and I am inclined to lean upon the printer, even in common
- practice, rather than to venture abroad upon new quests. And the Scots
- tongue has an orthography of its own, lacking neither "authority nor
- author." Yet the temptation is great to lend a little guidance to the
- bewildered Englishman. Some simple phonetic artifice might defend your
- verses from barbarous mishandling, and yet not injure any vested
- interest. So it seems at first; but there are rocks ahead. Thus, if I
- wish the diphthong _ou_ to have its proper value, I may write _oor_
- instead of _our_; many have done so and lived, and the pillars of the
- universe remained unshaken. But if I did so, and came presently to
- _doun_, which is the classical Scots spelling of the English _down_, I
- should begin to feel uneasy; and if I went on a little further, and came
- to a classical Scots word, like _stour_ or _dour_ or _clour_, I should
- know precisely where I was--that is to say, that I was out of sight of
- land on those high seas of spelling reform in which so many strong
- swimmers have toiled vainly. To some the situation is exhilarating; as
- for me, I give one bubbling cry and sink. The compromise at which I have
- arrived is indefensible, and I have no thought of trying to defend it.
- As I have stuck for the most part to the proper spelling, I append a
- table of some common vowel sounds which no one need consult; and just to
- prove that I belong to my age and have in me the stuff of a reformer, I
- have used modification marks throughout. Thus I can tell myself, not
- without pride, that I have added a fresh stumbling-block for English
- readers, and to a page of print in my native tongue have lent a new
- uncouthness. _Sed non nobis._
- I note again, that among our new dialecticians, the local habitat of
- every dialect is given to the square mile. I could not emulate this
- nicety if I desired; for I simply wrote my Scots as well as I was able,
- not caring if it hailed from Lauderdale or Angus, from the Mearns or
- Galloway; if I had ever heard a good word, I used it without shame; and
- when Scots was lacking, or the rhyme jibbed, I was glad (like my
- betters) to fall back on English. For all that, I own to a friendly
- feeling for the tongue of Fergusson and of Sir Walter, both Edinburgh
- men; and I confess that Burns has always sounded in my ear like
- something partly foreign. And indeed I am from the Lothians myself; it
- is there I heard the language spoken about my childhood; and it is in
- the drawling Lothian voice that I repeat it to myself. Let the
- precisians call my speech that of the Lothians. And if it be not pure,
- alas! what matters it? The day draws near when this illustrious and
- malleable tongue shall be quite forgotten; and Burns's Ayrshire, and Dr.
- MacDonald's Aberdeen-awa', and Scott's brave, metropolitan utterance
- will be all equally the ghosts of speech. Till then I would love to have
- my hour as a native Maker, and be read by my own countryfolk in our own
- dying language; an ambition surely rather of the heart than of the head,
- so restricted as it is in prospect of endurance, so parochial in bounds
- of space.
- TABLE OF COMMON SCOTTISH VOWEL SOUNDS
- ae }
- ai } = open A _as in_ rare.
- a' }
- au } = AW _as in_ law.
- aw }
- ea = open E _as in_ mere, but this with exceptions, as heather =
- heather, wean = wain, lear = lair.
- ee }
- ei } = open E _as in_ mere.
- ie }
- oa = open O _as in_ more.
- ou = doubled O _as in_ poor.
- ow = OW _as in_ bower.
- u = doubled O _as in_ poor.
- ui _or_ ü before R = (say roughly) open A _as in_ rare.
- ui _or_ ü before any other consonant = (say roughly) close I _as in_
- grin.
- y = open I _as in_ kite.
- i = pretty nearly what you please, much as in English, Heaven guide the
- reader through that labyrinth! But in Scots it dodges usually
- from the short I, _as in_ grin, to the open E _as in_ mere. Find
- and blind, I may remark, are pronounced to rhyme with the
- preterite of grin.
- I
- THE MAKER TO POSTERITY
- Far 'yont amang the years to be,
- When a' we think, an' a' we see,
- An' a' we luve, 's been dung ajee
- By time's rouch shouther,
- An' what was richt and wrang for me
- Lies mangled throu'ther,
- It's possible--it's hardly mair--
- That some ane, ripin' after lear--
- Some auld professor or young heir,
- If still there's either--
- May find an' read me, an' be sair
- Perplexed, puir brither!
- "_What tongue does your auld bookie speak?_"
- He'll speir; an' I, his mou' to steik:
- "_No' bein' fit to write in Greek,
- I wrote in Lallan,
- Dear to my heart as the peat-reek,
- Auld as Tantallon._
- "_Few spak it than, an' noo there's nane.
- My puir auld sangs lie a' their lane,
- Their sense, that aince was braw an' plain,
- Tint a'thegither,
- Like runes upon a standin' stane
- Amang the heather._
- "_But think not you the brae to speel;
- You, tae, maun chow the bitter peel;
- For a' your lear, for a' your skeel,
- Ye're nane sae lucky;
- An' things are mebbe waur than weel
- For you, my buckie._
- "_The hale concern (baith hens an' eggs,
- Baith books an' writers, stars an' clegs)
- Noo stachers upon lowsent legs
- An' wears awa';
- The tack o' mankind, near the dregs,
- Rins unco law._
- "_Your book, that in some braw new tongue
- Ye wrote or prentit, preached or sung,
- Will still be just a bairn, an' young
- In fame an' years,
- Whan the hale planet's guts are dung
- About your ears;_
- "_An' you, sair gruppin' to a spar
- Or whammled wi' some bleezin' star,
- Cryin' to ken whaur deil ye are,
- Hame, France, or Flanders--
- Whang sindry like a railway car
- An' flie in danders._"
- II
- ILLE TERRARUM
- Frae nirly, nippin', Eas'lan' breeze,
- Frae Norlan' snaw, an' haar o' seas,
- Weel happit in your gairden trees,
- A bonny bit,
- Atween the muckle Pentland's knees,
- Secure ye sit.
- Beeches an' aiks entwine their theek,
- An' firs, a stench, auld-farrant clique.
- A simmer day, your chimleys reek,
- Couthy and bien;
- An' here an' there your windies keek
- Amang the green.
- A pickle plats an' paths an' posies,
- A wheen auld gillyflowers an' roses:
- A ring o' wa's the hale encloses
- Frae sheep or men:
- An' there the auld housie beeks an' dozes,
- A' by her lane.
- The gairdner crooks his weary back
- A' day in the pitaty-track,
- Or mebbe stops a while to crack
- Wi' Jane the cook,
- Or at some buss, worm-eaten-black,
- To gie a look.
- Frae the high hills the curlew ca's;
- The sheep gang baaing by the wa's;
- Or whiles a clan o' roosty craws
- Cangle thegither;
- The wild bees seek the gairden raws,
- Weariet wi' heather.
- Or in the gloamin' douce an' grey
- The sweet-throat mavis tunes her lay;
- The herd comes linkin' doun the brae;
- An' by degrees
- The muckle siller müne maks way
- Amang the trees.
- Here aft hae I, wi' sober heart,
- For meditation sat apairt,
- When orra loves or kittle art
- Perplexed my mind;
- Here socht a balm for ilka smart
- O' humankind.
- Here aft, weel neukit by my lane,
- Wi' Horace, or perhaps Montaigne,
- The mornin' hours hae come an' gane
- Abüne my heid--
- I wadna gi'en a chucky-stane
- For a' I'd read.
- But noo the auld city, street by street,
- An' winter fu' o' snaw an' sleet,
- A while shut in my gangrel feet
- An' goavin' mettle;
- Noo is the soopit ingle sweet,
- An' liltin' kettle.
- An' noo the winter winds complain;
- Cauld lies the glaur in ilka lane;
- On draigled hizzie, tautit wean
- An' drucken lads,
- In the mirk nicht, the winter rain
- Dribbles an' blads.
- Whan bugles frae the Castle rock,
- An' beaten drums wi' dowie shock,
- Wauken, at cauld-rife sax o'clock,
- My chitterin' frame,
- I mind me on the kintry cock,
- The kintry hame.
- I mind me on yon bonny bield;
- An' Fancy traivels far afield
- To gaither a' that gairdens yield
- O' sun an' Simmer:
- To hearten up a dowie chield,
- Fancy's the limmer!
- III
- When aince Aprile has fairly come,
- An' birds may bigg in winter's lum,
- An' pleesure's spreid for a' and some
- O' whatna state,
- Love, wi' her auld recruitin' drum,
- Than taks the gate.
- The heart plays dunt wi' main an' micht;
- The lasses' een are a' sae bricht,
- Their dresses are sae braw an' ticht,
- The bonny birdies!--
- Puir winter virtue at the sicht
- Gangs heels ower hurdies.
- An' aye as love frae land to land
- Tirls the drum wi' eident hand,
- A' men collect at her command,
- Toun-bred or land'art,
- An' follow in a denty band
- Her gaucy standart.
- An' I, wha sang o' rain an' snaw,
- An' weary winter weel awa',
- Noo busk me in a jacket braw,
- An' tak my place
- I' the ram-stam, harum-scarum raw,
- Wi' smilin' face.
- IV
- A MILE AN' A BITTOCK
- A mile an' a bittock, a mile or twa,
- Abüne the burn, ayont the law,
- Davie an' Donal' an' Cherlie an' a',
- An' the müne was shinin' clearly!
- Ane went hame wi' the ither, an' then
- The ither went hame wi' the ither twa men,
- An' baith wad return him the service again,
- An' the müne was shinin' clearly!
- The clocks were chappin' in house an' ha',
- Eleeven, twal an' ane an' twa;
- An' the guidman's face was turnt to the wa'
- An' the müne was shinin' clearly!
- A wind got up frae affa the sea,
- It blew the stars as clear's could be,
- It blew in the een of a' o' the three,
- An' the müne was shinin' clearly!
- Noo, Davie was first to get sleep in his head,
- "The best o' frien's maun twine," he said;
- "I'm weariet, an' here I'm awa' to my bed."
- An' the müne was shinin' clearly!
- Twa o' them walkin' an' crackin' their lane,
- The mornin' licht cam grey an' plain,
- An' the birds they yammert on stick an' stane,
- An' the müne was shinin' clearly!
- O years ayont, O years awa',
- My lads, ye'll mind whate'er befa'--
- My lads, ye'll mind on the bield o' the law,
- When the müne was shinin' clearly.
- V
- A LOWDEN SABBATH MORN
- The clinkum-clank o' Sabbath bells
- Noo to the hoastin' rookery swells,
- Noo faintin' laigh in shady dells,
- Sounds far an' near,
- An' through the simmer kintry tells
- Its tale o' cheer.
- An' noo, to that melodious play,
- A' deidly awn the quiet sway--
- A' ken their solemn holiday,
- Bestial an' human,
- The singin' lintie on the brae,
- The restin' plou'man.
- He, mair than a' the lave o' men,
- His week completit joys to ken;
- Half-dressed, he daunders out an' in,
- Perplext wi' leisure;
- An' his raxt limbs he'll rax again
- Wi' painfü' pleesure.
- The steerin' mither strang afit
- Noo shoos the bairnies but a bit;
- Noo cries them ben, their Sinday shüit
- To scart upon them,
- Or sweeties in their pooch to pit,
- Wi' blessin's on them.
- The lasses, clean frae tap to taes,
- Are busked in crunklin' underclaes;
- The gartened hose, the weel-fllled stays,
- The nakit shift,
- A' bleached on bonny greens for days,
- An' white's the drift.
- An' noo to face the kirkward mile:
- The guidman's hat o' dacent style,
- The blackit shoon we noo maun fyle
- As white's the miller:
- A waefü' peety tae, to spile
- The warth o' siller.
- Our Marg'et, aye sae keen to crack,
- Douce-stappin' in the stoury track,
- Her emeralt goun a' kiltit back
- Frae snawy coats,
- White-ankled, leads the kirkward pack
- Wi' Dauvit Groats.
- A thocht ahint, in runkled breeks,
- A' spiled wi' lyin' by for weeks,
- The guidman follows closs, an' cleiks
- The sonsie missis;
- His sarious face at aince bespeaks
- The day that this is.
- And aye an' while we nearer draw
- To whaur the kirkton lies alaw,
- Mair neebours, comin' saft an' slaw
- Frae here an' there,
- The thicker thrang the gate an' caw
- The stour in air.
- But hark! the bells frae nearer clang;
- To rowst the slaw their sides they bang;
- An' see! black coats a'ready thrang
- The green kirkyaird;
- And at the yett, the chestnuts spang
- That brocht the laird.
- The solemn elders at the plate
- Stand drinkin' deep the pride o' state:
- The practised hands as gash an' great
- As Lords o' Session;
- The later named, a wee thing blate
- In their expression.
- The prentit stanes that mark the deid,
- Wi' lengthened lip, the sarious read;
- Syne wag a moraleesin' heid,
- An' then an' there
- Their hirplin' practice an' their creed
- Try hard to square.
- It's here our Merren lang has lain,
- A wee bewast the table-stane;
- An' yon's the grave o' Sandy Blane;
- An' further ower,
- The mither's brithers, dacent men!
- Lie a' the fower.
- Here the guidman sall bide awee
- To dwall amang the deid; to see
- Auld faces clear in fancy's e'e;
- Belike to hear
- Auld voices fa'in' saft an' slee
- On fancy's ear.
- Thus, on the day o' solemn things,
- The bell that in the steeple swings
- To fauld a scaittered faim'ly rings
- Its walcome screed;
- An' just a wee thing nearer brings
- The quick an' deid.
- But noo the bell is ringin' in;
- To tak their places, folk begin;
- The minister himsel' will shüne
- Be up the gate,
- Filled fu' wi' clavers about sin
- An' man's estate.
- The tünes are up--_French_, to be shüre,
- The faithfü' _French_, an' twa-three mair;
- The auld prezentor, hoastin' sair,
- Wales out the portions,
- An' yirks the tüne into the air
- Wi' queer contortions.
- Follows the prayer, the readin' next,
- An' than the fisslin' for the text--
- The twa-three last to find it, vext
- But kind o' proud;
- An' than the peppermints are raxed,
- An' southernwood.
- For noo's the time whan pows are seen
- Nid-noddin' like a mandareen;
- When tenty mithers stap a preen
- In sleepin' weans;
- An' nearly half the parochine
- Forget their pains.
- There's just a waukrif twa or three:
- Thrawn commentautors sweer to 'gree,
- Weans glowrin' at the bumlin' bee
- On windie-glasses,
- Or lads that tak a keek a-glee
- At sonsie lasses.
- Himsel', meanwhile, frae whaur he cocks
- An' bobs belaw the soundin'-box,
- The treasures of his words unlocks
- Wi' prodigality,
- An' deals some unco dingin' knocks
- To infidality.
- Wi' sappy unction, hoo he burkes
- The hopes o' men that trust in works,
- Expounds the fau'ts o' ither kirks,
- An' shaws the best o' them
- No' muckle better than mere Turks,
- When a's confessed o' them.
- Bethankit! what a bonny creed!
- What mair would ony Christian need?--
- The braw words rummle ower his heid,
- Nor steer the sleeper;
- An' in their restin' graves, the deid
- Sleep aye the deeper.
- NOTE.--It may be guessed by some that I had a certain parish in my
- eye, and this makes it proper I should add a word of disclamation. In my
- time there have been two ministers in that parish. Of the first I have a
- special reason to speak well, even had there been any to think ill. The
- second I have often met in private and long (in the due phrase) "sat
- under" in his church, and neither here nor there have I heard an unkind
- or ugly word upon his lips. The preacher of the text had thus no
- original in that particular parish; but when I was a boy, he might have
- been observed in many others; he was then (like the schoolmaster)
- abroad; and by recent advices, it would seem he has not yet entirely
- disappeared.--[R. L. S.]
- VI
- THE SPAEWIFE
- O, I wad like to ken--to the beggar-wife says I--
- Why chops are guid to brander and nane sae guid to fry.
- An' siller, that's sae braw to keep, is brawer still to gi'e.
- --_It's gey an' easy speirin'_, says the beggar-wife to me.
- O, I wad like to ken--to the beggar-wife says I--
- Hoo a' things come to be whaur we find them when we try.
- The lassies in their claes an' the fishes in the sea.
- --_It's gey an' easy speirin'_, says the beggar-wife to me.
- O' I wad like to ken--to the beggar-wife says I--
- Why lads are a' to sell an' lasses a' to buy;
- An' naebody for dacency but barely twa or three.
- --_It's gey an' easy speirin'_, says the beggar-wife to me.
- O, I wad like to ken--to the beggar-wife says I--
- Gin death's as shüre to men as killin' is to kye,
- Why God has filled the yearth sae fu' o' tasty things to pree.
- --_It's gey an' easy speirin'_, says the beggar-wife to me.
- O, I wad like to ken--to the beggar-wife says I--
- The reason o' the cause an' the wherefore o' the why,
- Wi' mony anither riddle brings the tear into my e'e.
- --_It's gey an' easy speirin'_, says the beggar-wife to me.
- VII
- THE BLAST--1875
- It's rainin'. Weet's the gairden sod,
- Weet the lang roads whaur gangrels plod--
- A maist unceevil thing o' God
- In mid July--
- If ye'll just curse the sneckdraw, dod!
- An' sae wull I!
- He's a braw place in Heev'n, ye ken,
- An' lea's us puir, forjaskit men
- Clamjamfried in the but and ben
- He ca's the earth--
- A wee bit inconvenient den
- No muckle worth;
- An' whiles, at orra times, keeks out,
- Sees what puir mankind are about;
- An' if He can, I've little doubt,
- Upsets their plans;
- He hates a' mankind, brainch and root,
- An' a' that's man's.
- An' whiles, whan they tak' heart again,
- An' life i' the sun looks braw an' plain,
- Doun comes a jaw o' droukin' rain
- Upon their honours--
- God sends a spate out ower the plain,
- Or mebbe thun'ers.
- Lord safe us, life's an unco thing!
- Simmer and Winter, Yule an' Spring,
- The damned, dour-heartit seasons bring
- A feck o' trouble.
- I wadna try 't to be a king--
- No, nor for double.
- But since we're in it, willy-nilly,
- We maun be watchfü', wise an' skilly,
- An' no' mind ony ither billy,
- Lassie nor God.
- But drink--that's my best counsel till 'e;
- Sae tak' the nod.
- VIII
- THE COUNTERBLAST--1886
- My bonny man, the warld, it's true,
- Was made for neither me nor you;
- It's just a place to warstle through,
- As Job confessed o't;
- And aye the best that we'll can do
- Is mak' the best o't.
- There's rowth o' wrang, I'm free to say:
- The simmer brunt, the winter blae,
- The face of earth a' fyled wi' clay
- An' dour wi' chuckies,
- An' life a rough an' land'art play
- For country buckies.
- An' food's anither name for clart;
- An' beasts an' brambles bite an' scart;
- An' what would WE be like, my heart!
- If bared o' claethin'?
- --Aweel, I canna mend your cart:
- It's that or naethin'.
- A feck o' folk frae first to last
- Have through this queer experience passed;
- Twa-three, I ken, just damn an' blast
- The hale transaction;
- But twa-three ithers, east an' wast,
- Fand satisfaction.
- Whaur braid the briery muirs expand,
- A waefü' an' a weary land,
- The bumble-bees, a gowden band,
- Are blithely hingin';
- An' there the canty wanderer fand
- The laverock singin'.
- Trout in the burn grow great as herr'n';
- The simple sheep can find their fair'n';
- The winds blaws clean about the cairn
- Wi' caller air;
- The muircock an' the barefit bairn
- Are happy there.
- Sic-like the howes o' life to some:
- Green loans whaur they ne'er fash their thumb,
- But mark the muckle winds that come,
- Soopin' an' cool,
- Or hear the powrin' burnie drum
- In the shilfa's pool.
- The evil wi' the guid they tak';
- They ca' a grey thing grey, no' black;
- To a steigh brae a stubborn back
- Addressin' daily;
- An' up the rude, unbieldy track
- O' life, gang gaily.
- What you would like's a palace ha',
- Or Sinday parlour dink an' braw
- Wi' a' things ordered in a raw
- By denty leddies.
- Weel, then, ye canna hae't: that's a'
- That to be said is.
- An' since at life ye've ta'en the grue,
- An' winna blithely hirsle through,
- Ye've fund the very thing to do--
- That's to drink speerit;
- An' shüne we'll hear the last o' you--
- An' blithe to hear it!
- The shoon ye coft, the life ye lead,
- Ithers will heir when aince ye're deid;
- They'll heir your tasteless bite o' breid,
- An' find it sappy;
- They'll to your dulefü' house succeed,
- An' there be happy.
- As whan a glum an' fractious wean
- Has sat an' sullened by his lane
- Till, wi' a rowstin' skelp, he's ta'en
- An' shoo'd to bed----
- The ither bairns a' fa' to play'n',
- As gleg's a gled.
- IX
- THE COUNTERBLAST IRONICAL
- It's strange that God should fash to frame
- The yearth and lift sae hie,
- An' clean forget to explain the same
- To a gentleman like me.
- Thae gusty, donnered ither folk,
- Their weird they weel may dree;
- But why present a pig in a poke
- To a gentleman like me?
- Thae ither folk their parritch eat
- An' sup their sugared tea;
- But the mind is no' to be wyled wi' meat
- Wi' a gentleman like me.
- Thae ither folk, they court their joes
- At gloamin' on the lea;
- But they're made of a commoner clay, I suppose,
- Than a gentleman like me.
- Thae ither folk, for richt or wrang,
- They suffer, bleed, or dee;
- But a' thir things are an emp'y sang
- To a gentleman like me.
- It's a different thing that I demand,
- Tho' humble as can be--
- A statement fair in my Maker's hand
- To a gentleman like me:
- A clear account writ fair an' broad,
- An' a plain apologie;
- Or the deevil a ceevil word to God
- From a gentleman like me.
- X
- THEIR LAUREATE TO AN ACADEMY CLASS DINNER CLUB
- Dear Thamson class, whaure'er I gang
- It aye comes ower me wi' a spang:
- "_Lordsake! thae Thamson lads--(deil hang
- Or else Lord mend them!)--
- An' that wanchancy annual sang
- I ne'er can send them!_"
- Straucht, at the name, a trusty tyke,
- My conscience girrs ahint the dyke;
- Straucht on my hinderlands I fyke
- To find a rhyme t' ye;
- Pleased--although mebbe no' pleased-like--
- To gie my time t' ye.
- "_Weel_," an' says you, wi' heavin' breist,
- "_Sae far, sae guid, but what's the neist?
- Yearly we gather to the feast,
- A' hopefü' men--
- Yearly we skelloch 'Hang the beast--
- Nae sang again!'_"
- My lads, an' what am I to say?
- Ye shürely ken the Muse's way:
- Yestreen, as gleg's a tyke--the day,
- Thrawn like a cuddy:
- Her conduc', that to her's a play,
- Deith to a body.
- Aft whan I sat an' made my mane,
- Aft whan I laboured burd-alane
- Fishin' for rhymes an' findin' nane,
- Or nane were fit for ye--
- Ye judged me cauld's a chucky-stane--
- No car'n' a bit for ye!
- But saw ye ne'er some pingein' bairn
- As weak as a pitaty-par'n'--
- Less üsed wi' guidin' horse-shoe aim
- Than steerin' crowdie--
- Packed aff his lane, by moss an' cairn,
- To ca' the howdie.
- Wae's me, for the puir callant than!
- He wambles like a poke o' bran,
- An' the lowse rein, as hard's he can,
- Pu's, trem'lin' handit;
- Till, blaff! upon his hinderlan'
- Behauld him landit.
- Sic-like--I awn the weary fac'--
- Whan on my muse the gate I tak',
- An' see her gleed e'e raxin' back
- To keek ahint her;--
- To me, the brig o' Heev'n gangs black
- As blackest winter.
- "_Lordsake! we're aff_," thinks I, "_but whaur?
- On what abhorred an' whinny scaur,
- Or whammled in what sea o' glaur,
- Will she desert me?
- An' will she just disgrace? or waur--
- Will she no' hurt me?_"
- Kittle the quære! But at least
- The day I've backed the fashious beast,
- While she, wi' mony a spang an' reist,
- Flang heels ower bonnet;
- An' a' triumphant--for your feast,
- Hae! there's your sonnet!
- XI
- EMBRO HIE KIRK
- The Lord Himsel' in former days
- Waled out the proper tunes for praise
- An' named the proper kind o' claes
- For folk to preach in:
- Preceese and in the chief o' ways
- Important teachin'.
- He ordered a' things late and air';
- He ordered folk to stand at prayer
- (Although I canna just mind where
- He gave the warnin'),
- An' pit pomatum on their hair
- On Sabbath mornin'.
- The hale o' life by His commands
- Was ordered to a body's hands;
- But see! this _corpus juris_ stands
- By a' forgotten;
- An' God's religion in a' lands
- Is deid an' rotten.
- While thus the lave o' mankind's lost,
- O' Scotland still God maks His boast--
- Puir Scotland, on whase barren coast
- A score or twa
- Auld wives wi' mutches an' a hoast
- Still keep His law.
- In Scotland, a wheen canty, plain,
- Douce, kintry-leevin' folk retain
- The Truth--or did so aince--alane
- Of a' men leevin';
- An' noo just twa o' them remain--
- Just Begg an' Niven.
- For noo, unfaithfü' to the Lord,
- Auld Scotland joins the rebel horde;
- Her human hymn-books on the board
- She noo displays:
- An' Embro Hie Kirk's been restored
- In popish ways.
- O _punctum temporis_ for action
- To a' o' the reformin' faction,
- If yet, by ony act or paction,
- Thocht, word, or sermon,
- This dark an' damnable transaction
- Micht yet determine!
- For see--as Doctor Begg explains--
- Hoo easy 't's düne! a pickle weans,
- Wha in the Hie Street gaither stanes
- By his instruction,
- The uncovenantit, pentit panes
- Ding to destruction.
- Up, Niven, or ower late--an' dash
- Laigh in the glaur that carnal hash;
- Let spires and pews wi' gran' stramash
- Thegither fa';
- The rumlin' kist o' whustles smash
- In pieces sma'.
- Noo choose ye out a walie hammer;
- About the knottit buttress clam'er;
- Alang the steep roof stoyt an' stammer,
- A gate mischancy;
- On the aul' spire, the bells' hie cha'mer,
- Dance your bit dancie.
- Ding, devel, dunt, destroy, an' ruin,
- Wi' carnal stanes the square bestrewn',
- Till your loud chaps frae Kyle to Fruin,
- Frae Hell to Heeven,
- Tell the guid wark that baith are doin'--
- Baith Begg an' Niven.
- XII
- THE SCOTSMAN'S RETURN FROM ABROAD
- IN A LETTER FROM MR. THOMSON TO MR. JOHNSTONE
- In mony a foreign pairt I've been,
- An' mony an unco ferlie seen,
- Since, Mr. Johnstone, you and I,
- Last walkit upon Cocklerye.
- Wi' gleg, observant een, I pass't
- By sea an' land, through East an' Wast,
- And still in ilka age an' station
- Saw naething but abomination.
- In thir uncovenantit lands
- The gangrel Scot uplifts his hands
- At lack of a' sectarian füsh'n,
- An' cauld religious destitütion.
- He rins, puir man, frae place to place,
- Tries a' their graceless means o' grace,
- Preacher on preacher, kirk on kirk--
- This yin a stot an' thon a stirk--
- A bletherin' clan, no warth a preen.
- As bad as Smith of Aiberdeen!
- At last, across the weary faem,
- Frae far, outlandish pairts I came.
- On ilka side o' me I fand
- Fresh tokens o' my native land.
- Wi' whatna joy I hailed them a'--
- The hill-taps standin' raw by raw,
- The public-house, the Hielan' birks,
- And a' the bonny U.P. kirks!
- But maistly thee, the bluid o' Scots,
- Frae Maidenkirk to John o' Groats!
- The king o' drinks, as I conceive it,
- Talisker, Isla, or Glenlivet!
- For after years wi' a pockmantie
- Frae Zanzibar to Alicante,
- In mony a fash and sair affliction
- I gie't as my sincere conviction--
- Of a' their foreign tricks an' pliskies,
- I maist abominate their whiskies.
- Nae doot, themsel's, they ken it weel,
- An' wi' a hash o' leemon peel,
- And ice an' siccan filth, they ettle
- The stawsome kind o' goo to settle
- Sic wersh apothecary's broos wi'
- As Scotsmen scorn to fyle their moo's wi'.
- An', man, I was a blithe hame-comer
- Whan first I syndit out my rummer.
- Ye should hae seen me then, wi' care
- The less important pairts prepare;
- Syne, weel contentit wi' it a',
- Pour in the speerits wi' a jaw!
- I didna drink, I didna speak,--
- I only snowkit up the reek.
- I was sae pleased therein to paidle,
- I sat an' plowtered wi' my ladle.
- An' blithe was I, the morrow's morn,
- To daunder through the stookit corn,
- And after a' my strange mishanters
- Sit doun amang my ain dissenters
- An', man, it was a joy to me
- The pu'pit an' the pews to see,
- The pennies dirlin' in the plate,
- The elders lookin' on in state;
- An' 'mang the first, as it befell,
- Wha should I see, sir, but yoursel'!
- I was, and I will no' deny it,
- At the first gliff a hantle tryit
- To see yoursel' in sic a station--
- It seemed a doubtfü' dispensation.
- The feelin' was a mere digression;
- For shüne I understood the session,
- An' mindin' Aiken an' M'Neil,
- I wondered they had düne sae weel.
- I saw I had mysel' to blame;
- For had I but remained at hame,
- Aiblins--though no ava' deservin' 't--
- They micht hae named your humble servant.
- The kirk was filled, the door was steiked;
- Up to the pu'pit aince I keeked;
- I was mair pleased than I can tell--
- It was the minister himsel'!
- Proud, proud was I to see his face,
- After sae lang awa' frae grace.
- Pleased as I was, I'm no' denyin'
- Some maitters were not edifyin';
- For first I fand--an' here was news!--
- Mere hymn-books cockin' in the pews--
- A humanised abomination,
- Unfit for ony congregation.
- Syne, while I still was on the tenter,
- I scunnered at the new prezentor;
- I thocht him gesterin' an' cauld--
- A sair declension frae the auld.
- Syne, as though a' the faith was wreckit,
- The prayer was not what I'd exspeckit.
- Himsel', as it appeared to me,
- Was no' the man he üsed to be.
- But just as I was growin' vext
- He waled a maist judeecious text,
- An', launchin' into his prelections,
- Swoopt, wi' a skirl, on a' defections.
- O what a gale was on my speerit
- To hear the p'ints o' doctrine clearit,
- And a' the horrors o' damnation
- Set furth wi' faithfü' ministration!
- Nae shauchlin' testimony here--
- We were a' damned, an' that was clear.
- I owned, wi' gratitude an' wonder,
- He was a pleesure to sit under.
- XIII
- Late in the nicht in bed I lay,
- The winds were at their weary play,
- An' tirlin' wa's an' skirlin' wae
- Through Heev'n they battered;--
- On-ding o' hail, on-blaff o' spray,
- The tempest blattered.
- The masoned house it dinled through;
- It dung the ship, it cowped the coo;
- The rankit aiks it overthrew,
- Had braved a' weathers;
- The strang sea-gleds it took an' blew
- Awa' like feethers.
- The thrawes o' fear on a' were shed,
- An' the hair rose, an' slumber fled,
- An' lichts were lit an' prayers were said
- Through a' the kintry;
- An' the cauld terror clum in bed
- Wi' a' an' sindry.
- To hear in the pit-mirk on hie
- The brangled collieshangie flie,
- The warl', they thocht, wi' land an' sea,
- Itsel' wad cowpit;
- An' for auld airn, the smashed débris
- By God be rowpit.
- Meanwhile frae far Aldeboran
- To folks wi' talescopes in han',
- O' ships that cowpit, winds that ran,
- Nae sign was seen,
- But the wee warl' in sunshine span
- As bricht's a preen.
- I, tae, by God's especial grace,
- Dwall denty in a bieldy place,
- Wi' hosened feet, wi' shaven face,
- Wi' dacent mainners:
- A grand example to the race
- O' tautit sinners!
- The wind may blaw, the heathen rage,
- The deil may start on the rampage;--
- The sick in bed, the thief in cage--
- What's a' to me?
- Cosh in my house, a sober sage,
- I sit an' see.
- An' whiles the bluid spangs to my bree,
- To lie sae saft, to live sae free,
- While better men maun do an' die
- In unco places.
- "_Whaur's God?_" I cry, an' "_Whae is me
- To hae sic graces?_"
- I mind the fecht the sailors keep,
- But fire or can'le, rest or sleep,
- In darkness an' the muckle deep;
- An' mind beside
- The herd that on the hills o' sheep
- Has wandered wide.
- I mind me on the hoastin' weans--
- The penny joes on causey-stanes--
- The auld folk wi' the crazy banes,
- Baith auld an' puir,
- That aye maun thole the winds an' rains
- An' labour sair.
- An' whiles I'm kind o' pleased a blink,
- An' kind o' fleyed forby, to think,
- For a' my rowth o' meat an' drink
- An' waste o' crumb,
- I'll mebbe have to thole wi' skink
- In Kingdom Come.
- For God whan jowes the Judgment bell
- Wi' His ain Hand, His Leevin' Sel',
- Sall ryve the guid (as Prophets tell)
- Frae them that had it;
- And in the reamin' pat o' Hell,
- The rich be scaddit.
- O Lord, if this indeed be sae,
- Let daw' that sair an' happy day!
- Again the warl', grawn auld an' grey,
- Up wi' your aixe!
- An' let the puir enjoy their play--
- I'll thole my paiks.
- XIV
- MY CONSCIENCE!
- Of a' the ills that flesh can fear,
- The loss o' frien's, the lack o' gear,
- A yowlin' tyke, a glandered mear,
- A lassie's nonsense--
- There's just ae thing I canna bear,
- An' that's my conscience.
- Whan day (an' a' excüse) has gane,
- An' wark is düne, and duty's plain,
- An' to my chalmer a' my lane
- I creep apairt,
- My conscience! hoo the yammerin' pain
- Stends to my heart!
- A' day wi' various ends in view,
- The hairsts o' time I had to pu',
- An' made a hash wad staw a soo,
- Let be a man!--
- My conscience! whan my han's were fu',
- Whaur were ye than?
- An' there were a' the lures o' life,
- There pleesure skirlin' on the fife,
- There anger, wi' the hotchin' knife
- Ground shairp in Hell--
- My conscience!--you that's like a wife!--
- Whaur was yoursel'?
- I ken it fine: just waitin' here,
- To gar the evil waur appear,
- To clart the guid, confüse the clear,
- Misca' the great,
- My conscience! an' to raise a steer
- Whan a's ower late.
- Sic-like, some tyke grawn auld and blind,
- Whan thieves brok' through the gear to p'ind,
- Has lain his dozened length an' grinned
- At the disaster;
- An' the morn's mornin', wud's the wind,
- Yokes on his master.
- XV
- TO DOCTOR JOHN BROWN
- _Whan the dear doctor, dear to a',
- Was still among us here belaw,
- I set my pipes his praise to blaw
- Wi' a' my speerit;
- But noo, dear doctor! he's awa'
- An' ne'er can hear it._
- By Lyne and Tyne, by Thames and Tees,
- By a' the various river Dee's,
- In Mars and Manors 'yont the seas
- Or here at hame,
- Whaure'er there's kindly folk to please,
- They ken your name.
- They ken your name, they ken your tyke,
- They ken the honey from your byke;
- But mebbe after a' your fyke,
- (The trüth to tell)
- It's just your honest Rab they like,
- An' no' yoursel'.
- As at the gowff, some canny play'r
- Should tee a common ba' wi' care--
- Should flourish and deleever fair
- His souple shintie--
- An' the ba' rise into the air,
- A leevin' lintie:
- Sae in the game we writers play,
- There comes to some a bonny day,
- When a dear ferlie shall repay
- Their years o' strife,
- An' like your Rab, their things o' clay
- Spreid wings o' life.
- Ye scarce deserved it, I'm afraid--
- You that had never learned the trade,
- But just some idle mornin' strayed
- Into the schüle,
- An' picked the fiddle up an' played
- Like Neil himsel'.
- Your e'e was gleg, your fingers dink;
- Ye didna fash yoursel' to think,
- But wove, as fast as puss can link,
- Your denty wab:--
- Ye stapped your pen into the ink,
- An' there was Rab!
- Sinsyne, whaure'er your fortune lay
- By dowie den, by canty brae,
- Simmer an' winter, nicht an' day,
- Rab was aye wi' ye;
- An' a' the folk on a' the way
- Were blithe to see ye.
- O sir, the gods are kind indeed,
- An' hauld ye for an honoured heid,
- That for a wee bit clarkit screed
- Sae weel reward ye,
- An' lend--puir Rabbie bein' deid--
- His ghaist to guard ye.
- For though, whaure'er yoursel' may be,
- We've just to turn an' glisk a wee,
- An' Rab at heel we're shüre to see
- Wi' gladsome caper:--
- The bogle of a bogle, he--
- A ghaist o' paper!
- And as the auld-farrant hero sees
- In Hell a bogle Hercules,
- Pit there the lesser deid to please,
- While he himsel'
- Dwalls wi' the muckle gods at ease
- Far raised frae Hell:
- Sae the true Rabbie far has gane
- On kindlier business o' his ain
- Wi' aulder frien's; an' his breist-bane
- An' stumpie tailie,
- He birstles at a new hearth-stane
- By James and Ailie.
- XVI
- It's an owercome sooth for age an' youth,
- And it brooks wi' nae denial,
- That the dearest friends are the auldest friends,
- And the young are just on trial.
- There's a rival bauld wi' young an' auld,
- And it's him that has bereft me;
- For the sürest friends are the auldest friends,
- And the maist o' mine's hae left me.
- There are kind hearts still, for friends to fill
- And fools to take and break them;
- But the nearest friends are the auldest friends,
- And the grave's the place to seek them.
- BALLADS
- THE SONG OF RAHÉRO
- A LEGEND OF TAHITI
- _TO
- ORI A ORI_
- _Ori, my brother in the island mode,
- In every tongue and meaning much my friend,
- This story of your country and your clan,
- In your loved house, your too much honoured guest,
- I made in English. Take it, being done;
- And let me sign it with the name you gave._
- _TERIITERA._
- BALLADS
- THE SONG OF RAHÉRO
- I
- THE SLAYING OF TÁMATÉA
- It fell in the days of old, as the men of Taiárapu tell,
- A youth went forth to the fishing, and fortune favoured him well.
- Támatéa his name: gullible, simple, and kind.
- Comely of countenance, nimble of body, empty of mind,
- His mother ruled him and loved him beyond the wont of a wife,
- Serving the lad for eyes and living herself in his life.
- Alone from the sea and the fishing came Támatéa the fair,
- Urging his boat to the beach, and the mother awaited him there.
- --"Long may you live!" said she. "Your fishing has sped to a wish.
- And now let us choose for the king the fairest of all your fish.
- For fear inhabits the palace and grudging grows in the land,
- Marked is the sluggardly foot and marked the niggardly hand,
- The hours and the miles are counted, the tributes numbered and weighed,
- And woe to him that comes short, and woe to him that delayed!"
- So spoke on the beach the mother, and counselled the wiser thing.
- For Rahéro stirred in the country and secretly mined the king.
- Nor were the signals wanting of how the leaven wrought,
- In the cords of obedience loosed and the tributes grudgingly brought.
- And when last to the temple of Oro the boat with the victim sped,
- And the priest uncovered the basket and looked on the face of the dead,
- Trembling fell upon all at sight of an ominous thing,
- For there was the aito[1] dead, and he of the house of the king.
- So spake on the beach the mother, matter worthy of note,
- And wattled a basket well, and chose a fish from the boat;
- And Támatéa the pliable shouldered the basket and went,
- And travelled, and sang as he travelled, a lad that was well content.
- Still the way of his going was round by the roaring coast,
- Where the ring of the reef is broke and the trades run riot the most.
- On his left, with smoke as of battle, the billows battered the land;
- Unscalable, turreted mountains rose on the inner hand.
- And cape, and village, and river, and vale, and mountain above,
- Each had a name in the land for men to remember and love;
- And never the name of a place, but lo! a song in its praise:
- Ancient and unforgotten, songs of the earlier days
- That the elders taught to the young, and at night, in the full of the
- moon,
- Garlanded boys and maidens sang together in tune.
- Támatéa the placable went with a lingering foot;
- He sang as loud as a bird, he whistled hoarse as a flute;
- He broiled in the sun, he breathed in the grateful shadow of trees,
- In the icy stream of the rivers he waded over the knees;
- And still in his empty mind crowded, a thousand-fold,
- The deeds of the strong and the songs of the cunning heroes of old.
- And now was he come to a place Taiárapu honoured the most,
- Where a silent valley of woods debouched on the noisy coast,
- Spewing a level river. There was a haunt of Pai.[2]
- There, in his potent youth, when his parents drove him to die,
- Honoura lived like a beast, lacking the lamp and the fire,
- Washed by the rains of the trade and clotting his hair in the mire;
- And there, so mighty his hands, he bent the tree to his foot--
- So keen the spur of his hunger, he plucked it naked of fruit.
- There, as she pondered the clouds for the shadow of coming ills,
- Ahupu, the woman of song, walked on high on the hills.
- Of these was Rahéro sprung, a man of a godly race;
- And inherited cunning of spirit, and beauty of body and face.
- Of yore in his youth, as an aito, Rahéro wandered the land,
- Delighting maids with his tongue, smiting men with his hand.
- Famous he was in his youth; but before the midst of his life
- Paused, and fashioned a song of farewell to glory and strife.
- _House of mine_ (it went), _house upon the sea,
- Belov'd of all my fathers, more belov'd by me!
- Vale of the strong Honoura, deep ravine of Pai,
- Again in your woody summits I hear the trade-wind cry_.
- _House of mine, in your walls, strong sounds the sea,
- Of all sounds on earth, dearest sound to me.
- I have heard the applause of men, I have heard it arise and die:
- Sweeter now in my house I hear the trade-wind cry._
- These were the words of his singing, other the thought of his heart;
- For secret desire of glory vexed him, dwelling apart.
- Lazy and crafty he was, and loved to lie in the sun,
- And loved the cackle of talk and the true word uttered in fun;
- Lazy he was, his roof was ragged, his table was lean,
- And the fish swam safe in his sea, and he gathered the near and the
- green.
- He sat in his house and laughed, but he loathed the king of the land,
- And he uttered the grudging word under the covering hand.
- Treason spread from his door; and he looked for a day to come,
- A day of the crowding people, a day of the summoning drum,
- When the vote should be taken, the king be driven forth in disgrace,
- And Rahéro, the laughing and lazy, sit and rule in his place.
- Here Támatéa came, and beheld the house on the brook;
- And Rahéro was there by the way and covered an oven to cook.[3]
- Naked he was to the loins, but the tattoo covered the lack,
- And the sun and the shadow of palms dappled his muscular back.
- Swiftly he lifted his head at the fall of the coming feet,
- And the water sprang in his mouth with a sudden desire of meat:
- For he marked the basket carried, covered from flies and the sun;[4]
- And Rahéro buried his fire, but the meat in his house was done.
- Forth he stepped; and took, and delayed the boy, by the hand;
- And vaunted the joys of meat and the ancient ways of the land:
- --"Our sires of old in Taiárapu, they that created the race,
- Ate ever with eager hand, nor regarded season or place,
- Ate in the boat at the oar, on the way afoot; and at night
- Arose in the midst of dreams to rummage the house for a bite.
- It is good for the youth in his turn to follow the way of the sire;
- And behold how fitting the time! for here do I cover my fire."
- --"I see the fire for the cooking, but never the meat to cook,"
- Said Támatéa.--"Tut!" said Rahéro. "Here in the brook,
- And there in the tumbling sea, the fishes are thick as flies,
- Hungry like healthy men, and like pigs for savour and size:
- Crayfish crowding the river, sea-fish thronging the sea."
- --"Well, it may be," says the other, "and yet be nothing to me.
- Fain would I eat, but alas! I have needful matter in hand,
- Since I carry my tribute of fish to the jealous king of the land."
- Now at the word a light sprang in Rahéro's eyes.
- "I will gain me a dinner," thought he, "and lend the king a surprise."
- And he took the lad by the arm, as they stood by the side of the track,
- And smiled, and rallied, and flattered, and pushed him forward and back.
- It was "You that sing like a bird, I never have heard you sing,"
- And "The lads when I was a lad were none so feared of a king.
- And of what account is an hour, when the heart is empty of guile?
- But come, and sit in the house and laugh with the women awhile;
- And I will but drop my hook, and behold! the dinner made."
- So Támatéa the pliable hung up his fish in the shade
- On a tree by the side of the way; and Rahéro carried him in,
- Smiling as smiles the fowler when flutters the bird to the gin,
- And chose him a shining hook,[5] and viewed it with sedulous eye,
- And breathed and burnished it well on the brawn of his naked thigh,
- And set a mat for the gull, and bade him be merry and bide,
- Like a man concerned for his guest, and the fishing, and nothing beside.
- Now when Rahéro was forth, he paused and hearkened, and heard
- The gull jest in the house and the women laugh at his word;
- And stealthily crossed to the side of the way, to the shady place
- Where the basket hung on a mango; and craft transfigured his face.
- Deftly he opened the basket, and took of the fat of the fish,
- The cut of kings and chieftains, enough for a goodly dish.
- This he wrapped in a leaf, set on the fire to cook,
- And buried; and next the marred remains of the tribute he took,
- And doubled and packed them well, and covered the basket close.
- --"There is a buffet, my king," quoth he, "and a nauseous dose!"--
- And hung the basket again in the shade, in a cloud of flies;
- --"And there is a sauce to your dinner, king of the crafty eyes!"
- Soon as the oven was open, the fish smelt excellent good.
- In the shade, by the house of Rahéro, down they sat to their food,
- And cleared the leaves,[6] in silence, or uttered a jest and laughed
- And raising the cocoa-nut bowls, buried their faces and quaffed.
- But chiefly in silence they ate; and soon as the meal was done,
- Rahéro feigned to remember and measured the hour by the sun
- And "Támatéa," quoth he, "it is time to be jogging, my lad."
- So Támatéa arose, doing ever the thing he was bade,
- And carelessly shouldered the basket, and kindly saluted his host;
- And again the way of his going was round by the roaring coast.
- Long he went; and at length was aware of a pleasant green,
- And the stems and shadows of palms, and roofs of lodges between.
- There sate, in the door of his palace, the king on a kingly seat,
- And aitos stood armed around, and the yottowas[7] sat at his feet.
- But fear was a worm in his heart: fear darted his eyes;
- And he probed men's faces for treasons and pondered their speech for
- lies.
- To him came Támatéa, the basket slung in his hand,
- And paid him the due obeisance standing as vassals stand.
- In silence hearkened the king, and closed the eyes in his face,
- Harbouring odious thoughts and the baseless fears of the base;
- In silence accepted the gift and sent the giver away.
- So Támatéa departed, turning his back on the day.
- And lo! as the king sat brooding, a rumour rose in the crowd;
- The yottowas nudged and whispered, the commons murmured aloud;
- Tittering fell upon all at sight of the impudent thing,
- At the sight of a gift unroyal flung in the face of a king.
- And the face of the king turned white and red with anger and shame
- In their midst; and the heart in his body was water and then was flame;
- Till of a sudden, turning, he gripped an aito hard,
- A youth that stood with his ómare,[8] one of the daily guard,
- And spat in his ear a command, and pointed and uttered a name,
- And hid in the shade of the house his impotent anger and shame.
- Now Támatéa the fool was far on his homeward way,
- The rising night in his face, behind him the dying day.
- Rahéro saw him go by, and the heart of Rahéro was glad,
- Devising shame to the king and nowise harm to the lad;
- And all that dwelt by the way saw and saluted him well,
- For he had the face of a friend and the news of the town to tell;
- And pleased with the notice of folk, and pleased that his journey was
- done,
- Támatéa drew homeward, turning his back to the sun.
- And now was the hour of the bath in Taiárapu: far and near
- The lovely laughter of bathers rose and delighted his ear.
- Night massed in the valleys; the sun on the mountain coast
- Struck, end-long; and above the clouds embattled their host,
- And glowed and gloomed on the heights; and the heads of the palms were
- gems,
- And far to the rising eve extended the shade of their stems;
- And the shadow of Támatéa hovered already at home.
- And sudden the sound of one coming and running light as the foam
- Struck on his ear; and he turned, and lo! a man on his track,
- Girded and armed with an ómare, following hard at his back.
- At a bound the man was upon him;--and, or ever a word was said,
- The loaded end of the ómare fell and laid him dead.
- II
- THE VENGING OF TÁMATÉA
- Thus was Rahéro's treason; thus and no further it sped.
- The king sat safe in his place and a kindly fool was dead.
- But the mother of Támatéa arose with death in her eyes.
- All night long, and the next, Taiárapu rang with her cries.
- As when a babe in the wood turns with a chill of doubt
- And perceives nor home, nor friends, for the trees have closed her
- about,
- The mountain rings and her breast is torn with the voice of despair:
- So the lion-like woman idly wearied the air
- For a while, and pierced men's hearing in vain, and wounded their
- hearts.
- But as when the weather changes at sea, in dangerous parts,
- And sudden the hurricane wrack unrolls up the front of the sky,
- At once the ship lies idle, the sails hang silent on high,
- The breath of the wind that blew is blown out like the flame of a lamp,
- And the silent armies of death draw near with inaudible tramp:
- So sudden, the voice of her weeping ceased; in silence she rose
- And passed from the house of her sorrow, a woman clothed with repose,
- Carrying death in her breast and sharpening death in her hand.
- Hither she went and thither in all the coasts of the land.
- They tell that she feared not to slumber alone, in the dead of night,
- In accursed places; beheld, unblenched, the ribbon of light[9]
- Spin from temple to temple; guided the perilous skiff,
- Abhorred not the paths of the mountain and trod the verge of the cliff;
- From end to end of the island, thought not the distance long,
- But forth from king to king carried the tale of her wrong.
- To king after king, as they sat in the palace door, she came,
- Claiming kinship, declaiming verses, naming her name
- And the names of all of her fathers; and still, with a heart on the
- rack,
- Jested to capture a hearing and laughed when they jested back;
- So would deceive them a while, and change and return in a breath,
- And on all the men of Vaiau imprecate instant death;
- And tempt her kings--for Vaiau was a rich and prosperous land,
- And flatter--for who would attempt it but warriors mighty of hand?
- And change in a breath again and rise in a strain of song,
- Invoking the beaten drums, beholding the fall of the strong,
- Calling the fowls of the air to come and feast on the dead.
- And they held the chin in silence, and heard her, and shook the head;
- For they knew the men of Taiárapu famous in battle and feast,
- Marvellous eaters and smiters: the men of Vaiau not least.
- To the land of the Námunu-úra, to Paea,[10] at length she came,
- To men who were foes to the Tevas and hated their race and name.
- There was she well received, and spoke with Hiopa the king.[11]
- And Hiopa listened, and weighed, and wisely considered the thing.
- "Here in the back of the isle we dwell in a sheltered place,"
- Quoth he to the woman, "in quiet, a weak and peaceable race.
- But far in the teeth of the wind lofty Taiárapu lies;
- Strong blows the wind of the trade on its seaward face, and cries
- Aloud in the top of arduous mountains, and utters its song
- In green continuous forests. Strong is the wind, and strong
- And fruitful and hardy the race, famous in battle and feast,
- Marvellous eaters and smiters: the men of Vaiau not least.
- Now hearken to me, my daughter, and hear a word of the wise:
- How a strength goes linked with a weakness, two by two, like the eyes.
- They can wield the ómare well and cast the javelin far;
- Yet are they greedy and weak as the swine and the children are.
- Plant we, then, here at Paea a garden of excellent fruits;
- Plant we bananas and kava and taro, the king of roots;
- Let the pigs in Paea be tapu[12] and no man fish for a year;
- And of all the meat in Tahiti gather we threefold here.
- So shall the fame of our plenty fill the island and so,
- At last, on the tongue of rumour, go where we wish it to go.
- Then shall the pigs of Taiárapu raise their snouts in the air;
- But we sit quiet and wait, as the fowler sits by the snare,
- And tranquilly fold our hands, till the pigs come nosing the food:
- But meanwhile build us a house of Trotéa, the stubborn wood,
- Bind it with incombustible thongs, set a roof to the room,
- Too strong for the hands of a man to dissever or fire to consume;
- And there, when the pigs come trotting, there shall the feast be spread,
- There shall the eye of the morn enlighten the feasters dead.
- So be it done; for I have a heart that pities your state,
- And Nateva and Námunu-úra are fire and water for hate."
- All was done as he said, and the gardens prospered; and now
- The fame of their plenty went out, and word of it came to Vaiau.
- For the men of Námunu-úra sailed, to the windward far,
- Lay in the offing by south where the towns of the Tevas are,
- And cast overboard of their plenty; and lo! at the Tevas' feet
- The surf on all the beaches tumbled treasures of meat.
- In the salt of the sea, a harvest tossed with the refluent foam;
- And the children gleaned it in playing, and ate and carried it home;
- And the elders stared and debated, and wondered and passed the jest,
- But whenever a guest came by eagerly questioned the guest;
- And little by little, from one to another, the word went round:
- "In all the borders of Paea the victual rots on the ground,
- And swine are plenty as rats. And now, when they fare to the sea,
- The men of the Námunu-úra glean from under the tree
- And load the canoe to the gunwale with all that is toothsome to eat;
- And all day long on the sea the jaws are crushing the meat,
- The steersman eats at the helm, the rowers munch at the oar,
- And at length, when their bellies are full, overboard with the store!"
- Now was the word made true, and soon as the bait was bare,
- All the pigs of Taiárapu raised their snouts in the air.
- Songs were recited, and kinship was counted, and tales were told
- How war had severed of late but peace had cemented of old
- The clans of the island. "To war," said they, "now set we an end,
- And hie to the Námunu-úra even as a friend to a friend."
- So judged, and a day was named; and soon as the morning broke,
- Canoes were thrust in the sea, and the houses emptied of folk.
- Strong blew the wind of the south, the wind that gathers the clan;
- Along all the line of the reef the clamorous surges ran;
- And the clouds were piled on the top of the island mountain-high,
- A mountain throned on a mountain. The fleet of canoes swept by
- In the midst, on the green lagoon, with a crew released from care,
- Sailing an even water, breathing a summer air,
- Cheered by a cloudless sun; and ever to left and right,
- Bursting surge on the reef, drenching storms on the height.
- So the folk of Vaiau sailed and were glad all day,
- Coasting the palm-tree cape and crossing the populous bay
- By all the towns of the Tevas; and still as they bowled along,
- Boat would answer to boat with jest and laughter and song,
- And the people of all the towns trooped to the sides of the sea,
- And gazed from under the hand or sprang aloft on the tree
- Hailing and cheering. Time failed them for more to do;
- The holiday village careened to the wind, and was gone from view
- Swift as a passing bird; and ever as onward it bore,
- Like the cry of the passing bird, bequeathed its song to the shore--
- Desirable laughter of maids and the cry of delight of the child.
- And the gazer, left behind, stared at the wake and smiled.
- By all the towns of the Tevas they went, and Pápara last,
- The home of the chief, the place of muster in war; and passed
- The march of the lands of the clan, to the lands of an alien folk.
- And there, from the dusk of the shoreside palms, a column of smoke
- Mounted and wavered and died in the gold of the setting sun,
- "Paea!" they cried. "It is Paea." And so was the voyage done.
- In the early fall of the night Hiopa came to the shore,
- And beheld and counted the comers, and lo, they were forty score;
- The pelting feet of the babes that ran already and played,
- The clean-lipped smile of the boy, the slender breasts of the maid,
- And mighty limbs of women, stalwart mothers of men.
- The sires stood forth unabashed; but a little back from
- his ken
- Clustered the scarcely nubile, the lads and maids, in a ring,
- Fain of each other, afraid of themselves, aware of the king
- And aping behaviour, but clinging together with hands and eyes,
- With looks that were kind like kisses, and laughter tender as sighs.
- There, too, the grandsire stood, raising his silver crest,
- And the impotent hands of a suckling groped in his barren breast.
- The childhood of love, the pair well married, the innocent brood,
- The tale of the generations repeated and ever renewed--
- Hiopa beheld them together, all the ages of man,
- And a moment shook in his purpose.
- But these were the foes of his clan,
- And he trod upon pity, and came, and civilly greeted the king,
- And gravely entreated Rahéro; and for all that could fight or sing,
- And claimed a name in the land, had fitting phrases of praise:
- But with all who were well-descended he spoke of the ancient days.
- And "'Tis true," said he, "that in Paea the victual rots on the ground;
- But, friends, your number is many; and pigs must be hunted and found,
- And the lads must troop to the mountains to bring the féis down,
- And around the bowls of the kava cluster the maids of the town.
- So, for to-night, sleep here; but king, common, and priest
- To-morrow, in order due, shall sit with me in the feast."
- Sleepless the live-long night, Hiopa's followers toiled.
- The pigs screamed and were slaughtered; the spars of the guest-house
- oiled,
- The leaves spread on the floor. In many a mountain glen
- The moon drew shadows of trees on the naked bodies of men
- Plucking and bearing fruits; and in all the bounds of the town
- Red glowed the cocoa-nut fires, and were buried and trodden down.
- Thus did seven of the yottowas toil with their tale of the clan,
- But the eighth wrought with his lads, hid from the sight of man.
- In the deeps of the woods they laboured, piling the fuel high
- In fagots, the load of a man, fuel seasoned and dry,
- Thirsty to seize upon fire and apt to blurt into flame.
- And now was the day of the feast. The forests, as morning came,
- Tossed in the wind, and the peaks quaked in the blaze of the day--
- And the cocoa-nuts showered on the ground, rebounding and rolling away:
- A glorious morn for a feast, a famous wind for a fire.
- To the hall of feasting Hiopa led them, mother and sire
- And maid and babe in a tale, the whole of the holiday throng.
- Smiling they came, garlanded green, not dreaming of wrong;
- And for every three, a pig, tenderly cooked in the ground,
- Waited; and féi, the staff of life, heaped in a mound
- For each where he sat;--for each, bananas roasted and raw
- Piled with a bountiful hand, as for horses hay and straw
- Are stacked in a stable; and fish, the food of desire,[13]
- And plentiful vessels of sauce, and bread-fruit gilt in the fire;--
- And kava was common as water. Feasts have there been ere now,
- And many, but never a feast like that of the folk of Vaiau.
- All day long they ate with the resolute greed of brutes,
- And turned from the pigs to the fish, and again from the fish to the
- fruits,
- And emptied the vessels of sauce, and drank of the kava deep;
- Till the young lay stupid as stones, and the strongest nodded to sleep.
- Sleep that was mighty as death and blind as a moonless night
- Tethered them hand and foot; and their souls were drowned, and the light
- Was cloaked from their eyes. Senseless together, the old and the young,
- The fighter deadly to smite and the prater cunning of tongue,
- The woman wedded and fruitful, inured to the pangs of birth,
- And the maid that knew not of kisses, blindly sprawled on the earth.
- From the hall Hiopa the king and his chiefs came stealthily forth.
- Already the sun hung low and enlightened the peaks of the north;
- But the wind was stubborn to die and blew as it blows at morn,
- Showering the nuts in the dusk, and e'en as a banner is torn,
- High on the peaks of the island, shattered the mountain cloud.
- And now at once, at a signal, a silent, emulous crowd
- Set hands to the work of death, hurrying to and fro,
- Like ants, to furnish the fagots, building them broad and low,
- And piling them high and higher around the walls of the hall.
- Silence persisted within, for sleep lay heavy on all
- But the mother of Támatéa stood at Hiopa's side,
- And shook for terror and joy like a girl that is a bride,
- Night fell on the toilers, and first Hiopa the wise
- Made the round of the hose, visiting all with his eyes;
- And all was piled to the eaves, and fuel blockaded the door;
- And within, in the house beleaguered, slumbered the forty score.
- Then was an aito despatched and came with fire in his hand,
- And Hiopa took it.--"Within," said he, "is the life of a land;
- And behold! I breathe on the coal, I breathe on the dales of the east,
- And silence falls on forest and shore; the voice of the feast
- Is quenched, and the smoke of cooking; the roof-tree decays and falls
- On the empty lodge, and the winds subvert deserted walls."
- Therewithal, to the fuel, he laid the glowing coal;
- And the redness ran in the mass and burrowed within like a mole,
- And copious smoke was conceived. But, as when a dam is to burst,
- The water lips it and crosses in silver trickles at first,
- And then, of a sudden, whelms and bears it away forthright;
- So now, in a moment, the flame sprang and towered in the night,
- And wrestled and roared in the wind, and high over house and tree,
- Stood, like a streaming torch, enlightening land and sea.
- But the mother of Támatéa threw her arms abroad,
- "Pyre of my son," she shouted, "debited vengeance of God,
- Late, late, I behold you, yet I behold you at last,
- And glory, beholding! For now are the days of my agony past,
- The lust that famished my soul now eats and drinks its desire,
- And they that encompassed my son shrivel alive in the fire.
- Tenfold precious the vengeance that comes after lingering years!
- Ye quenched the voice of my singer?--hark, in your dying ears,
- The song of the conflagration! Ye left me a widow alone?
- --Behold, the whole of your race consumes, sinew and bone
- And torturing flesh together: man, mother, and maid
- Heaped in a common shambles; and already, borne by the trade,
- The smoke of your dissolution darkens the stars of night."
- Thus she spoke, and her stature grew in the people's sight.
- III
- RAHÉRO
- Rahéro was there in the hall asleep: beside him his wife,
- Comely, a mirthful woman, one that delighted in life;
- And a girl that was ripe for marriage, shy and sly as a mouse;
- And a boy, a climber of trees: all the hopes of his house.
- Unwary, with open hands, he slept in the midst of his folk,
- And dreamed that he heard a voice crying without, and awoke,
- Leaping blindly afoot like one from a dream that he fears.
- A hellish glow and clouds were about him;--it roared in his ears
- Like the sound of the cataract fall that plunges sudden and steep;
- And Rahéro swayed as he stood, and his reason was still asleep.
- Now the flame struck hard on the house, wind-wielded, a fracturing blow,
- And the end of the roof was burst and fell on the sleepers below;
- And the lofty hall, and the feast, and the prostrate bodies of folk,
- Shone red in his eyes a moment, and then were swallowed of smoke.
- In the mind of Rahéro clearness came; and he opened his throat;
- And as when a squall comes sudden, the straining sail of a boat
- Thunders aloud and bursts, so thundered the voice of the man.
- --"The wind and the rain!" he shouted, the mustering word of the
- clan,[14]
- And "Up!" and "To arms, men of Vaiau!" But silence replied,
- Or only the voice of the gusts of the fire, and nothing beside.
- Rahéro stooped and groped. He handled his womankind,
- But the fumes of the fire and the kava had quenched the life of their
- mind,
- And they lay like pillars prone; and his hand encountered the boy,
- And there sprang in the gloom of his soul a sudden lightning of joy.
- "Him can I save!" he thought, "if I were speedy enough."
- And he loosened the cloth from his loins, and swaddled the child in the
- stuff:
- And about the strength of his neck he knotted the burden well.
- There where the roof had fallen, it roared like the mouth of hell.
- Thither Rahéro went, stumbling on senseless folk,
- And grappled a post of the house, and began to climb in the smoke:
- The last alive of Vaiau; and the son borne by the sire.
- The post glowed in the grain with ulcers of eating fire,
- And the fire bit to the blood and mangled his hands and thighs;
- And the fumes sang in his head like wine and stung in his eyes;
- And still he climbed, and came to the top, the place of proof,
- And thrust a hand through the flame, and clambered alive on the roof.
- But even as he did so, the wind, in a garment of flames and pain,
- Wrapped him from head to heel; and the waistcloth parted in twain;
- And the living fruit of his loins dropped in the fire below.
- About the blazing feast-house clustered the eyes of the foe,
- Watching, hand upon weapon, lest ever a soul should flee,
- Shading the brow from the glare, straining the neck to see.
- Only, to leeward, the flames in the wind swept far and wide,
- And the forest sputtered on fire; and there might no man abide.
- Thither Rahéro crept, and dropped from the burning eaves,
- And crouching low to the ground, in a treble covert of leaves
- And fire and volleying smoke, ran for the life of his soul
- Unseen; and behind him under a furnace of ardent coal,
- Cairned with a wonder of flame, and blotting the night with smoke,
- Blazed and were smelted together the bones of all his folk.
- He fled unguided at first; but hearing the breakers roar,
- Thitherward shaped his way, and came at length to the shore.
- Sound-limbed he was: dry-eyed; but smarted in every part;
- And the mighty cage of his ribs heaved on his straining heart
- With sorrow and rage. And "Fools!" he cried, "fools of Vaiau,
- Heads of swine--gluttons--Alas! and where are they now?
- Those that I played with, those that nursed me, those that I nursed?
- God, and I outliving them! I, the least and the worst--
- I, that thought myself crafty, snared by this herd of swine,
- In the tortures of hell and desolate, stripped of all that was mine:
- All!--my friends and my fathers--the silver heads of yore
- That trooped to the council, the children that ran to the open door
- Crying with innocent voices and clasping a father's knees!
- And mine, my wife--my daughter--my sturdy climber of trees,
- Ah, never to climb again!"
- Thus in the dusk of the night
- (For clouds rolled in the sky and the moon was swallowed from sight),
- Pacing and gnawing his fists, Rahéro raged by the shore.
- Vengeance: that must be his. But much was to do before;
- And first a single life to be snatched from a deadly place,
- A life, the root of revenge, surviving plant of the race:
- And next the race to be raised anew, and the lands of the clan
- Repeopled. So Rahéro designed, a prudent man
- Even in wrath, and turned for the means of revenge and escape:
- A boat to be seized by stealth, a wife to be taken by rape.
- Still was the dark lagoon; beyond on the coral wall,
- He saw the breakers shine, he heard them bellow and fall.
- Alone, on the top of the reef, a man with a flaming brand
- Walked, gazing and pausing, a fish-spear poised in his hand.
- The foam boiled to his calf when the mightier breakers came,
- And the torch shed in the wind scattering tufts of flame
- Afar on the dark lagoon a canoe lay idly at wait:
- A figure dimly guiding it: surely the fisherman's mate.
- Rahéro saw and he smiled. He straightened his mighty thews:
- Naked, with never a weapon, and covered with scorch and bruise,
- He straightened his arms, he filled the void of his body with breath,
- And, strong as the wind in his manhood, doomed the fisher to death.
- Silent he entered the water, and silently swam, and came
- There where the fisher walked, holding on high the flame.
- Loud on the pier of the reef volleyed the breach of the sea;
- And hard at the back of the man, Rahéro crept to his knee
- On the coral, and suddenly sprang and seized him, the elder hand
- Clutching the joint of his throat, the other snatching the brand
- Ere it had time to fall, and holding it steady and high.
- Strong was the fisher, brave, and swift of mind and of eye--
- Strongly he threw in the clutch; but Rahéro resisted the strain,
- And jerked, and the spine of life snapped with a crack in twain,
- And the man came slack in his hands and tumbled a lump at his feet.
- One moment: and there, on the reef, where the breakers whitened and
- beat,
- Rahéro was standing alone, glowing, and scorched and bare,
- A victor unknown of any, raising the torch in the air.
- But once he drank of his breath, and instantly set him to fish
- Like a man intent upon supper at home and a savoury dish.
- For what should the woman have seen? A man with a torch--and then
- A moment's blur of the eyes--and a man with a torch again.
- And the torch had scarcely been shaken. "Ah, surely," Rahéro said,
- "She will deem it a trick of the eyes, a fancy born in the head;
- But time must be given the fool to nourish a fool's belief."
- So for a while, a sedulous fisher, he walked the reef,
- Pausing at times and gazing, striking at times with the spear:
- --Lastly, uttered the call; and even as the boat drew near,
- Like a man that was done with its use, tossed the torch in the sea.
- Lightly he leaped on the boat beside the woman; and she
- Lightly addressed him, and yielded the paddle and place to sit;
- For now the torch was extinguished the night was black as the pit.
- Rahéro set him to row, never a word he spoke,
- And the boat sang in the water urged by his vigorous stroke.
- --"What ails you?" the woman asked, "and why did you drop the brand?
- We have only to kindle another as soon as we come to land."
- Never a word Rahéro replied, but urged the canoe.
- And a chill fell on the woman.--"Atta! speak! is it you?
- Speak! Why are you silent? Why do you bend aside?
- Wherefore steer to the seaward?" thus she panted and cried.
- Never a word from the oarsman, toiling there in the dark;
- But right for a gate of the reef he silently headed the bark,
- And wielding the single paddle with passionate sweep on sweep,
- Drove her, the little fitted, forth on the open deep.
- And fear, there where she sat, froze the woman to stone:
- Not fear of the crazy boat and the weltering deep alone;
- But a keener fear of the night, the dark, and the ghostly hour,
- And the thing that drove the canoe with more than a mortal's power
- And more than a mortal's boldness. For much she knew of the dead
- That haunt and fish upon reefs, toiling, like men, for bread,
- And traffic with human fishers, or slay them and take their ware,
- Till the hour when the star of the dead[15] goes down, and the morning
- air
- Blows, and the cocks are singing on shore. And surely she knew
- The speechless thing at her side belonged to the grave.[16]
- It blew
- All night from the south; all night, Rahéro contended and kept
- The prow to the cresting sea; and, silent as though she slept,
- The woman huddled and quaked. And now was the peep of day.
- High and long on their left the mountainous island lay;
- And over the peaks of Taiárapu arrows of sunlight struck.
- On shore the birds were beginning to sing: the ghostly ruck
- Of the buried had long ago returned to the covered grave;
- And here on the sea, the woman, waxing suddenly brave,
- Turned her swiftly about and looked in the face of the man.
- And sure he was none that she knew, none of her country or clan:
- A stranger, mother-naked, and marred with the marks of fire,
- But comely and great of stature, a man to obey and admire.
- And Rahéro regarded her also, fixed, with a frowning face,
- Judging the woman's fitness to mother a warlike race.
- Broad of shoulder, ample of girdle, long in the thigh,
- Deep of bosom she was, and bravely supported his eye.
- "Woman," said he, "last night the men of your folk--
- Man, woman, and maid, smothered my race in smoke.
- It was done like cowards; and I, a mighty man of my hands,
- Escaped, a single life; and now to the empty lands
- And smokeless hearths of my people, sail, with yourself, alone.
- Before your mother was born, the die of to-day was thrown
- And you selected:--your husband, vainly striving, to fall
- Broken between these hands:--yourself to be severed from all,
- The places, the people, you love--home, kindred, and clan--
- And to dwell in a desert and bear the babes of a kinless man."
- THE FEAST OF FAMINE
- MARQUESAN MANNERS
- I
- THE PRIEST'S VIGIL
- In all the land of the tribe was neither fish nor fruit,
- And the deepest pit of popoi stood empty to the foot.[1]
- The clans upon the left and the clans upon the right
- Now oiled their carven maces and scoured their daggers bright;
- They gat them to the thicket, to the deepest of the shade,
- And lay with sleepless eyes in the deadly ambuscade.
- And oft in the starry even the song of morning rose,
- What time the oven smoked in the country of their foes;
- For oft to loving hearts, and waiting ears and sight,
- The lads that went to forage returned not with the night.
- Now first the children sickened, and then the women paled,
- And the great arms of the warrior no more for war availed.
- Hushed was the deep drum, discarded was the dance;
- And those that met the priest now glanced at him askance.
- The priest was a man of years, his eyes were ruby-red,[2]
- He neither feared the dark nor the terrors of the dead,
- He knew the songs of races, the names of ancient date;
- And the beard upon his bosom would have bought the chief's estate.
- He dwelt in a high-built lodge, hard by the roaring shore,
- Raised on a noble terrace and with tikis[3] at the door.
- Within it was full of riches, for he served his nation well,
- And full of the sound of breakers, like the hollow of a shell.
- For weeks he let them perish, gave never a helping sign,
- But sat on his oiled platform to commune with the divine,
- But sat on his high terrace, with the tikis by his side,
- And stared on the blue ocean, like a parrot, ruby-eyed.
- Dawn as yellow as sulphur leaped on the mountain height:
- Out on the round of the sea the gems of the morning light,
- Up from the round of the sea the streamers of the sun;--
- But down in the depths of the valley the day was not begun.
- In the blue of the woody twilight burned red the cocoa-husk,
- And the women and men of the clan went forth to bathe in the dusk,
- A word that began to go round, a word, a whisper, a start:
- Hope that leaped in the bosom, fear that knocked on the heart:
- "See, the priest is not risen--look, for his door is fast!
- He is going to name the victims; he is going to help us at last."
- Thrice rose the sun to noon; and ever, like one of the dead,
- The priest lay still in his house, with the roar of the sea in his head;
- There was never a foot on the floor, there was never a whisper of
- speech;
- Only the leering tikis stared on the blinding beach.
- Again were the mountains fired, again the morning broke;
- And all the houses lay still, but the house of the priest awoke.
- Close in their covering roofs lay and trembled the clan,
- But the aged, red-eyed priest ran forth like a lunatic man;
- And the village panted to see him in the jewels of death again,
- In the silver beards of the old and the hair of women slain.
- Frenzy shook in his limbs, frenzy shone in his eyes,
- And still and again as he ran, the valley rang with his cries.
- All day long in the land, by cliff and thicket and den,
- He ran his lunatic rounds, and howled for the flesh of men;
- All day long he ate not, nor ever drank of the brook;
- And all day long in their houses the people listened and shook--
- All day long in their houses they listened with bated breath,
- And never a soul went forth, for the sight of the priest was death.
- Three were the days of his running, as the gods appointed of yore,
- Two the nights of his sleeping alone in the place of gore:
- The drunken slumber of frenzy twice he drank to the lees,
- On the sacred stones of the High-place under the sacred trees;
- With a lamp at his ashen head he lay in the place of the feast,
- And the sacred leaves of the banyan rustled around the priest.
- Last, when the stated even fell upon terrace and tree,
- And the shade of the lofty island lay leagues away to sea,
- And all the valleys of verdure were heavy with manna and musk,
- The wreck of the red-eyed priest came gasping home in the dusk.
- He reeled across the village, he staggered along the shore,
- And between the leering tikis crept groping through his door.
- There went a stir through the lodges, the voice of speech awoke;
- Once more from the builded platforms arose the evening smoke.
- And those who were mighty in war, and those renowned for an art
- Sat in their stated seats and talked of the morrow apart.
- II
- THE LOVERS
- Hark! away in the woods--for the ears of love are sharp--
- Stealthily, quietly touched, the note of the one-stringed harp.[4]
- In the lighted house of her father, why should Taheia start?
- Taheia heavy of hair, Taheia tender of heart,
- Taheia the well-descended, a bountiful dealer in love,
- Nimble of foot like the deer, and kind of eye like the dove?
- Sly and shy as a cat, with never a change of face,
- Taheia slips to the door, like one that would breathe a space;
- Saunters and pauses, and looks at the stars, and lists to the seas;
- Then sudden and swift as a cat, she plunges under the trees.
- Swift as a cat she runs, with her garment gathered high,
- Leaping, nimble of foot, running, certain of eye;
- And ever to guide her way over the smooth and the sharp,
- Ever nearer and nearer the note of the one-stringed harp;
- Till at length, in a glade of the wood, with a naked mountain above,
- The sound of the harp thrown down, and she in the arms of her love.
- "Rua,"--"Taheia," they cry--"my heart, my soul, and my eyes,"
- And clasp and sunder and kiss, with lovely laughter and sighs,
- "Rua!"--"Taheia, my love,"--"Rua, star of my night,
- Clasp me, hold me, and love me, single spring of delight."
- And Rua folded her close, he folded her near and long,
- The living knit to the living, and sang the lover's song:
- _Night, night it is, night upon the palms.
- Night, night it is, the land-wind has blown.
- Starry, starry night, over deep and height;
- Love, love in the valley, love all alone._
- "Taheia, heavy of hair, a foolish thing have we done,
- To bind what gods have sundered unkindly into one.
- Why should a lowly lover have touched Taheia's skirt,
- Taheia the well-descended, and Rua child of the dirt?"
- --"On high with the haka-ikis my father sits in state,
- Ten times fifty kinsmen salute him in the gate;
- Round all his martial body, and in bands across his face,
- The marks of the tattooer proclaim his lofty place.
- I too, in the hands of the cunning, in the sacred cabin of palm,[5]
- Have shrunk like the mimosa, and bleated like the lamb;
- Round half my tender body, that none shall clasp but you,
- For a crest and a fair adornment go dainty lines of blue.
- Love, love, beloved Rua, love levels all degrees,
- And the well-tattooed Taheia clings panting to your knees."
- --"Taheia, song of the morning, how long is the longest love?
- A cry, a clasp of the hands, a star that falls from above!
- Ever at morn in the blue, and at night when all is black,
- Ever it skulks and trembles with the hunter, Death, on its track.
- Hear me, Taheia, death! For to-morrow the priest shall awake,
- And the names be named of the victims to bleed for the nation's sake;
- And first of the numbered many that shall be slain ere noon,
- Rua the child of the dirt, Rua the kinless loon.
- For him shall the drum be beat, for him be raised the song,
- For him to the sacred High-place the chanting people throng,
- For him the oven smoke as for a speechless beast,
- And the sire of my Taheia come greedy to the feast."
- "Rua, be silent, spare me. Taheia closes her ears.
- Pity my yearning heart, pity my girlish years!
- Flee from the cruel hands, flee from the knife and coal,
- Lie hid in the deeps of the woods, Rua, sire of my soul!"
- "Whither to flee, Taheia, whither in all of the land?
- The fires of the bloody kitchen are kindled on every hand;
- On every hand in the isle a hungry whetting of teeth,
- Eyes in the trees above, arms in the brush beneath.
- Patience to lie in wait, cunning to follow the sleuth,
- Abroad the foes I have fought, and at home the friends of my youth."
- "Love, love, beloved Rua, love has a clearer eye,
- Hence from the arms of love you go not forth to die.
- There, where the broken mountain drops sheer into the glen,
- There shall you find a hold from the boldest hunter of men;
- There, in the deep recess, where the sun falls only at noon,
- And only once in the night enters the light of the moon,
- Nor ever a sound but of birds, or the rain when it falls with a shout;
- For death and the fear of death beleaguer the valley about.
- Tapu it is, but the gods will surely pardon despair;
- Tapu, but what of that? If Rua can only dare.
- Tapu and tapu and tapu, I know they are every one right;
- But the god of every tapu is not always quick to smite.
- Lie secret there, my Rua, in the arms of awful gods,
- Sleep in the shade of the trees on the couch of the kindly sods,
- Sleep and dream of Taheia, Taheia will wake for you;
- And whenever the land-wind blows and the woods are heavy with dew,
- Alone through the horror of night,[6] with food for the soul of her
- love,
- Taheia the undissuaded will hurry true as the dove."
- "Taheia, the pit of the night crawls with treacherous things,
- Spirits of ultimate air and the evil souls of things;
- The souls of the dead, the stranglers, that perch in the trees of the
- wood,
- Waiters for all things human, haters of evil and good."
- "Rua, behold me, kiss me, look in my eyes and read;
- Are these the eyes of a maid that would leave her lover in need?
- Brave in the eye of day, my father ruled in the fight;
- The child of his loins, Taheia, will play the man in the night."
- So it was spoken, and so agreed, and Taheia arose
- And smiled in the stars and was gone, swift as the swallow goes;
- And Rua stood on the hill, and sighed, and followed her flight,
- And there were the lodges below, each with its door alight;
- From folk that sat on the terrace and drew out the even long
- Sudden crowings of laughter, monotonous drone of song;
- The quiet passage of souls over his head in the trees;[7]
- And from all around the haven the crumbling thunder of seas.
- "Farewell, my home," said Rua. "Farewell, O quiet seat!
- To-morrow in all your valleys the drum of death shall beat."
- III
- THE FEAST
- Dawn as yellow as sulphur leaped on the naked peak,
- And all the village was stirring, for now was the priest to speak.
- Forth on his terrace he came, and sat with the chief in talk;
- His lips were blackened with fever, his cheeks were whiter than chalk;
- Fever clutched at his hands, fever nodded his head,
- But, quiet and steady and cruel, his eyes shone ruby-red.
- In the earliest rays of the sun the chief rose up content;
- Braves were summoned, and drummers; messengers came and went;
- Braves ran to their lodges; weapons were snatched from the wall;
- The commons herded together, and fear was over them all.
- Festival dresses they wore, but the tongue was dry in their mouth,
- And the blinking eyes in their faces skirted from north to south.
- Now to the sacred enclosure gathered the greatest and least,
- And from under the shade of the banyan arose the voice of the feast,
- The frenzied roll of the drum, and a swift monotonous song.
- Higher the sun swam up; the trade-wind level and strong
- Awoke in the tops of the palms and rattled the fans aloud,
- And over the garlanded heads and shining robes of the crowd
- Tossed the spiders of shadow, scattered the jewels of sun.
- Forty the tale of the drums, and the forty throbbed like one;
- A thousand hearts in the crowd, and the even chorus of song,
- Swift as the feet of a runner, trampled a thousand strong.
- And the old men leered at the ovens and licked their lips for the food;
- And the women stared at the lads, and laughed and looked to the wood.
- As when the sweltering baker, at night, when the city is dead,
- Alone in the trough of labour treads and fashions the bread;
- So in the heat, and the reek, and the touch of woman and man,
- The naked spirit of evil kneaded the hearts of the clan.
- Now cold was at many a heart, and shaking in many a seat;
- For there were the empty baskets, but who was to furnish the meat?
- For here was the nation assembled, and there were the ovens anigh,
- And out of a thousand singers nine were numbered to die.
- Till, of a sudden, a shock, a mace in the air, a yell,
- And, struck in the edge of the crowd, the first of the victims fell.[8]
- Terror and horrible glee divided the shrinking clan,
- Terror of what was to follow, glee for a diet of man.
- Frenzy hurried the chant, frenzy rattled the drums;
- The nobles, high on the terrace, greedily mouthed their thumbs;
- And once and again and again, in the ignorant crowd below,
- Once and again and again descended the murderous blow.
- Now smoked the oven, and now, with the cutting lip of a shell,
- A butcher of ninety winters jointed the bodies well.
- Unto the carven lodge, silent, in order due,
- The grandees of the nation one after one withdrew;
- And a line of laden bearers brought to the terrace foot,
- On poles across their shoulders, the last reserve of fruit.
- The victims bled for the nobles in the old appointed way;
- The fruit was spread for the commons, for all should eat to-day.
- And now was the kava brewed, and now the cocoa ran,
- Now was the hour of the dance for child and woman and man;
- And mirth was in every heart and a garland on every head,
- And all was well with the living and well with the eight who were dead.
- Only the chiefs and the priest talked and consulted a while:
- "To-morrow," they said, and "To-morrow," and nodded and seemed to smile:
- "Rua the child of dirt, the creature of common clay,
- Rua must die to-morrow, since Rua is gone to-day."
- Out of the groves of the valley, where clear the blackbirds sang,
- Sheer from the trees of the valley the face of the mountain sprang;
- Sheer and bare it rose, unscalable barricade,
- Beaten and blown against by the generous draught of the trade.
- Dawn on its fluted brow painted rainbow light,
- Close on its pinnacled crown trembled the stars at night.
- Here and there in a cleft clustered contorted trees,
- Or the silver beard of a stream hung and swung in the breeze,
- High overhead, with a cry, the torrents leaped for the main,
- And silently sprinkled below in thin perennial rain.
- Dark in the staring noon, dark was Rua's ravine,
- Damp and cold was the air, and the face of the cliffs was green.
- Here, in the rocky pit, accursed already of old,
- On a stone in the midst of a river, Rua sat and was cold.
- "Valley of mid-day shadows, valley of silent falls,"
- Rua sang, and his voice went hollow about the walls,
- "Valley of shadow and rock, a doleful prison to me,
- What is the life you can give to a child of the sun and the sea?"
- And Rua arose and came to the open mouth of the glen,
- Whence he beheld the woods, and the sea, and houses of men.
- Wide blew the riotous trade, and smelt in his nostrils good;
- It bowed the boats on the bay, and tore and divided the wood;
- It smote and sundered the groves as Moses smote with the rod,
- And the streamers of all the trees blew like banners abroad;
- And ever and on, in a lull, the trade-wind brought him along
- A far-off patter of drums and a far-off whisper of song.
- Swift as the swallow's wings, the diligent hands on the drum
- Fluttered and hurried and throbbed. "Ah, woe that I hear you come,"
- Rua cried in his grief, "a sorrowful sound to me,
- Mounting far and faint from the resonant shore of the sea!
- Woe in the song! for the grave breathes in the singers' breath,
- And I hear in the tramp of the drums the beat of the heart of death.
- Home of my youth! no more through all the length of the years,
- No more to the place of the echoes of early laughter and tears,
- No more shall Rua return; no more as the evening ends,
- To crowded eyes of welcome, to the reaching hands of friends."
- All day long from the High-place the drums and the singing came,
- And the even fell, and the sun went down, a wheel of flame;
- And night came gleaning the shadows and hushing the sounds of the wood;
- And silence slept on all, where Rua sorrowed and stood.
- But still from the shore of the bay the sound of the festival rang,
- And still the crowd in the High-place danced and shouted and sang.
- Now over all the isle terror was breathed abroad
- Of shadowy hands from the trees and shadowy snares in the sod;
- And before the nostrils of night, the shuddering hunter of men
- Hurried, with beard on shoulder, back to his lighted den.
- "Taheia, here to my side!"--"Rua, my Rua, you!"
- And cold from the clutch of terror, cold with the damp of the dew,
- Taheia, heavy of hair, leaped through the dark to his arms;
- Taheia leaped to his clasp, and was folded in from alarms.
- "Rua, beloved, here, see what your love has brought;
- Coming--alas! returning--swift as the shuttle of thought;
- Returning, alas! for to-night, with the beaten drum and the voice,
- In the shine of many torches must the sleepless clan rejoice;
- And Taheia the well-descended, the daughter of chief and priest,
- Taheia must sit in her place in the crowded bench of the feast."
- So it was spoken; and she, girding her garment high,
- Fled and was swallowed of woods, swift as the sight of an eye.
- Night over isle and sea rolled her curtain of stars,
- Then a trouble awoke in the air, the east was banded with bars;
- Dawn as yellow as sulphur leaped on the mountain height;
- Dawn, in the deepest glen, fell a wonder of light;
- High and clear stood the palms in the eye of the brightening east,
- And lo! from the sides of the sea the broken sound of the feast!
- As, when in days of summer, through open windows, the fly
- Swift as a breeze and loud as a trump goes by,
- But when frosts in the field have pinched the wintering mouse,
- Blindly noses and buzzes and hums in the firelit house:
- So the sound of the feast gallantly trampled at night,
- So it staggered and drooped, and droned in the morning light.
- IV
- THE RAID
- It chanced that as Rua sat in the valley of silent falls
- He heard a calling of doves from high on the cliffy walls.
- Fire had fashioned of yore, and time had broken, the rocks;
- There were rooting crannies for trees and nesting-places for flocks;
- And he saw on the top of the cliffs, looking up from the pit of the
- shade,
- A flicker of wings and sunshine, and trees that swung in the trade.
- "The trees swing in the trade," quoth Rua, doubtful of words,
- "And the sun stares from the sky, but what should trouble the birds?"
- Up from the shade he gazed, where high the parapet shone,
- And he was aware of a ledge and of things that moved thereon.
- "What manner of things are these? Are they spirits abroad by day?
- Or the foes of my clan that are come, bringing death by a perilous way?"
- The valley was gouged like a vessel, and round like the vessel's lip,
- With a cape of the side of the hill thrust forth like the bows of a
- ship.
- On the top of the face of the cape a volley of sun struck fair,
- And the cape overhung like a chin a gulf of sunless air.
- "Silence, heart! What is that?--that, which flickered and shone,
- Into the sun for an instant, and in an instant gone?
- Was it a warrior's plume, a warrior's girdle of hair?
- Swung in the loop of a rope, is he making a bridge of the air?"
- Once and again Rua saw, in the trenchant edge of the sky,
- The giddy conjuring done. And then, in the blink of an eye,
- A scream caught in with the breath, a whirling packet of limbs,
- A lump that dived in the gulf, more swift than a dolphin swims;
- And there was a lump at his feet, and eyes were alive in the lump.
- Sick was the soul of Rua, ambushed close in a clump;
- Sick of soul he drew near, making his courage stout;
- And he looked in the face of the thing, and the life of the thing went
- out.
- And he gazed on the tattooed limbs, and, behold, he knew the man:
- Hoka, a chief of the Vais, the truculent foe of his clan:
- Hoka a moment since that stepped in the loop of the rope,
- Filled with the lust of war, and alive with courage and hope.
- Again to the giddy cornice Rua lifted his eyes,
- And again beheld men passing in the armpit of the skies.
- "Foes of my race!" cried Rua, "the mouth of Rua is true:
- Never a shark in the deep is nobler of soul than you.
- There was never a nobler foray, never a bolder plan;
- Never a dizzier path was trod by the children of man;
- And Rua, your evil-doer through all the days of his years,
- Counts it honour to hate you, honour to fall by your spears."
- And Rua straightened his back. "O Vais, a scheme for a scheme!"
- Cried Rua and turned and descended the turbulent stair of the stream,
- Leaping from rock to rock as the water-wagtail at home
- Flits through resonant valleys and skims by boulder and foam.
- And Rua burst from the glen and leaped on the shore of the brook,
- And straight for the roofs of the clan his vigorous way he took.
- Swift were the heels of his flight, and loud behind as he went
- Rattled the leaping stones on the line of his long descent.
- And ever he thought as he ran, and caught at his gasping breath,
- "O the fool of a Rua, Rua that runs to his death!
- But the right is the right," thought Rua, and ran like the wind on the
- foam,
- "The right is the right for ever, and home for ever home.
- For what though the oven smoke? And what though I die ere morn?
- There was I nourished and tended, and there was Taheia born."
- Noon was high on the High-place, the second noon of the feast;
- And heat and shameful slumber weighed on people and priest;
- And the heart drudged slow in bodies heavy with monstrous meals;
- And the senseless limbs were scattered abroad like spokes of wheels;
- And crapulous women sat and stared at the stones anigh
- With a bestial droop of the lip and a swinish rheum in the eye.
- As about the dome of the bees in the time for the drones to fall,
- The dead and the maimed are scattered, and lie, and stagger, and crawl;
- So on the grades of the terrace, in the ardent eye of the day,
- The half-awake and the sleepers clustered and crawled and lay;
- And loud as the dome of the bees, in the time of a swarming horde,
- A horror of many insects hung in the air and roared.
- Rua looked and wondered; he said to himself in his heart:
- "Poor are the pleasures of life, and death is the better part."
- But lo! on the higher benches a cluster of tranquil folk
- Sat by themselves, nor raised their serious eyes, nor spoke:
- Women with robes unruffled and garlands duly arranged,
- Gazing far from the feast with faces of people estranged;
- And quiet amongst the quiet, and fairer than all the fair,
- Taheia, the well-descended, Taheia, heavy of hair.
- And the soul of Rua awoke, courage enlightened his eyes
- And he uttered a summoning shout and called on the clan to rise.
- Over against him at once, in the spotted shade of the trees,
- Owlish and blinking creatures scrambled to hands and knees;
- On the grades of the sacred terrace, the driveller woke to fear,
- And the hand of the ham-drooped warrior brandished a wavering spear.
- And Rua folded his arms, and scorn discovered his teeth;
- Above the war-crowd gibbered, and Rua stood smiling beneath.
- Thick, like leaves in the autumn, faint, like April sleet,
- Missiles from tremulous hands quivered around his feet;
- And Taheia leaped from her place; and the priest, the ruby-eyed,
- Ran to the front of the terrace, and brandished his arms and cried:
- "Hold, O fools, he brings tidings!" and "Hold, 'tis the love of my
- heart!"
- Till lo! in front of the terrace, Rua pierced with a dart.
- Taheia cherished his head, and the aged priest stood by,
- And gazed with eyes of ruby at Rua's darkening eye.
- "Taheia, here is the end, I die a death for a man.
- I have given the life of my soul to save an unsavable clan.
- See them, the drooping of hams! behold me the blinking crew;
- Fifty spears they cast, and one of fifty true!
- And you, O priest, the foreteller, foretell for yourself if you can,
- Foretell the hour of the day when the Vais shall burst on your clan!
- By the head of the tapu cleft, with death and fire in their hand,
- Thick and silent like ants, the warriors swarm in the land."
- And they tell that when next the sun had climbed to the noonday skies,
- It shone on the smoke of feasting in the country of the Vais.
- TICONDEROGA
- A LEGEND OF THE WEST HIGHLANDS
- TICONDEROGA
- This is the tale of the man
- Who heard a word in the night
- In the land of the heathery hills,
- In the days of the feud and the fight.
- By the sides of the rainy sea,
- Where never a stranger came,
- On the awful lips of the dead,
- He heard the outlandish name.
- It sang in his sleeping ears,
- It hummed in his waking head:
- The name--Ticonderoga,
- The utterance of the dead.
- I
- THE SAYING OF THE NAME
- On the loch-sides of Appin,
- When the mist blew from the sea,
- A Stewart stood with a Cameron:
- An angry man was he.
- The blood beat in his ears,
- The blood ran hot to his head,
- The mist blew from the sea,
- And there was the Cameron dead.
- "O, what have I done to my friend,
- O, what have I done to mysel',
- That he should be cold and dead,
- And I in the danger of all?
- "Nothing but danger about me,
- Danger behind and before,
- Death at wait in the heather
- In Appin and Mamore,
- Hate at all of the ferries,
- And death at each of the fords,
- Camerons priming gun-locks
- And Camerons sharpening swords."
- But this was a man of counsel,
- This was a man of a score,
- There dwelt no pawkier Stewart
- In Appin or Mamore.
- He looked on the blowing mist,
- He looked on the awful dead,
- And there came a smile on his face
- And there slipped a thought in his head.
- Out over cairn and moss,
- Out over scrog and scaur,
- He ran as runs the clansman
- That bears the cross of war.
- His heart beat in his body,
- His hair clove to his face,
- When he came at last in the gloaming
- To the dead man's brother's place.
- The east was white with the moon,
- The west with the sun was red,
- And there, in the house-doorway,
- Stood the brother of the dead.
- "I have slain a man to my danger,
- I have slain a man to my death.
- I put my soul in your hands,"
- The panting Stewart saith.
- "I lay it bare in your hands,
- For I know your hands are leal;
- And be you my targe and bulwark
- From the bullet and the steel."
- Then up and spoke the Cameron,
- And gave him his hand again:
- "There shall never a man in Scotland
- Set faith in me in vain;
- And whatever man you have slaughtered,
- Of whatever name or line,
- By my sword and yonder mountain,
- I make your quarrel mine.[1]
- I bid you in to my fireside,
- I share with you house and hall;
- It stands upon my honour
- To see you safe from all."
- It fell in the time of midnight,
- When the fox barked in the den,
- And the plaids were over the faces
- In all the houses of men,
- That as the living Cameron
- Lay sleepless on his bed,
- Out of the night and the other world,
- Came in to him the dead.
- "My blood is on the heather,
- My bones are on the hill;
- There is joy in the home of ravens
- That the young shall eat their fill.
- My blood is poured in the dust,
- My soul is spilled in the air;
- And the man that has undone me
- Sleeps in my brother's care."
- "I'm wae for your death, my brother,
- But if all of my house were dead,
- I couldna withdraw the plighted hand,
- Nor break the word once said."
- "O, what shall I say to our father,
- In the place to which I fare?
- O, what shall I say to our mother,
- Who greets to see me there?
- And to all the kindly Camerons
- That have lived and died long-syne--
- Is this the word you send them,
- Fause-hearted brother mine?"
- "It's neither fear nor duty,
- It's neither quick nor dead,
- Shall gar me withdraw the plighted hand,
- Or break the word once said."
- Thrice in the time of midnight,
- When the fox barked in the den,
- And the plaids were over the faces
- In all the houses of men,
- Thrice as the living Cameron
- Lay sleepless on his bed,
- Out of the night and the other world
- Came in to him the dead,
- And cried to him for vengeance
- On the man that laid him low;
- And thrice the living Cameron
- Told the dead Cameron, no.
- "Thrice have you seen me, brother,
- But now shall see me no more,
- Till you meet your angry fathers
- Upon the farther shore.
- Thrice have I spoken, and now,
- Before the cock be heard,
- I take my leave for ever
- With the naming of a word.
- It shall sing in your sleeping ears,
- It shall hum in your waking head,
- The name--Ticonderoga,
- And the warning of the dead."
- Now when the night was over
- And the time of people's fears,
- The Cameron walked abroad,
- And the word was in his ears.
- "Many a name I know,
- But never a name like this;
- O, where shall I find a skilly man
- Shall tell me what it is?"
- With many a man he counselled
- Of high and low degree,
- With the herdsman on the mountains
- And the fishers of the sea.
- And he came and went unweary,
- And read the books of yore,
- And the runes that were written of old
- On stones upon the moor.
- And many a name he was told,
- But never the name of his fears--
- Never, in east or west,
- The name that rang in his ears:
- Names of men and of clans;
- Names for the grass and the tree,
- For the smallest tarn in the mountains,
- The smallest reef in the sea:
- Names for the high and low,
- The names of the craig and the flat;
- But in all the land of Scotland,
- Never a name like that.
- II
- THE SEEKING OF THE NAME
- And now there was speech in the south,
- And a man of the south that was wise,
- A periwig'd lord of London,[2]
- Called on the clans to rise.
- And the riders rode, and the summons
- Came to the western shore,
- To the land of the sea and the heather,
- To Appin and Mamore.
- It called on all to gather
- From every scrog and scaur,
- That loved their fathers' tartan
- And the ancient game of war.
- And down the watery valley
- And up the windy hill,
- Once more, as in the olden,
- The pipes were sounding shrill;
- Again in Highland sunshine
- The naked steel was bright;
- And the lads, once more in tartan,
- Went forth again to fight.
- "O, why should I dwell here
- With a weird upon my life,
- When the clansmen shout for battle
- And the war-swords clash in strife?
- I canna joy at feast,
- I canna sleep in bed,
- For the wonder of the word
- And the warning of the dead.
- It sings in my sleeping ears,
- It hums in my waking head,
- The name--Ticonderoga,
- The utterance of the dead.
- Then up, and with the fighting men
- To march away from here,
- Till the cry of the great war-pipe
- Shall drown it in my ear!"
- Where flew King George's ensign
- The plaided soldiers went:
- They drew the sword in Germany,
- In Flanders pitched the tent.
- The bells of foreign cities
- Rang far across the plain:
- They passed the happy Rhine,
- They drank the rapid Main.
- Through Asiatic jungles
- The Tartans filed their way,
- And the neighing of the war-pipes
- Struck terror in Cathay.[3]
- "Many a name have I heard," he thought,
- "In all the tongues of men,
- Full many a name both here and there,
- Full many both now and then.
- When I was at home in my father's house,
- In the land of the naked knee,
- Between the eagles that fly in the lift
- And the herrings that swim in the sea,
- And now that I am a captain-man
- With a braw cockade in my hat--
- Many a name have I heard," he thought,
- "But never a name like that."
- III
- THE PLACE OF THE NAME
- There fell a war in a woody place,
- Lay far across the sea,
- A war of the march in the mirk midnight
- And the shot from behind the tree,
- The shaven head and the painted face,
- The silent foot in the wood,
- In the land of a strange, outlandish tongue
- That was hard to be understood.
- It fell about the gloaming,
- The general stood with his staff,
- He stood and he looked east and west
- With little mind to laugh.
- "Far have I been, and much have I seen,
- And kennt both gain and loss,
- But here we have woods on every hand
- And a kittle water to cross.
- Far have I been, and much have I seen,
- But never the beat of this;
- And there's one must go down to that water-side
- To see how deep it is."
- It fell in the dusk of the night
- When unco things betide,
- The skilly captain, the Cameron,
- Went down to that waterside.
- Canny and soft the captain went;
- And a man of the woody land,
- With the shaven head and the painted face,
- Went down at his right hand.
- It fell in the quiet night,
- There was never a sound to ken;
- But all of the woods to the right and the left
- Lay filled with the painted men.
- "Far have I been, and much have I seen,
- Both as a man and boy,
- But never have I set forth a foot,
- On so perilous an employ."
- It fell in the dusk of the night
- When unco things betide,
- That he was aware of a captain-man
- Drew near to the water-side.
- He was aware of his coming
- Down in the gloaming alone;
- And he looked in the face of the man,
- And lo! the face was his own.
- "This is my weird," he said,
- "And now I ken the worst;
- For many shall fall the morn,
- But I shall fall with the first.
- O, you of the outland tongue,
- You of the painted face,
- This is the place of my death;
- Can you tell me the name of the place?"
- "Since the Frenchmen have been here
- They have called it Sault-Marie;
- But that is a name for priests,
- And not for you and me.
- It went by another word,"
- Quoth he of the shaven head:
- "It was called Ticonderoga
- In the days of the great dead."
- And it fell on the morrow's morning,
- In the fiercest of the fight,
- That the Cameron bit the dust
- As he foretold at night;
- And far from the hills of heather,
- Far from the isles of the sea,
- He sleeps in the place of the name
- As it was doomed to be.
- HEATHER ALE
- A GALLOWAY LEGEND
- HEATHER ALE
- From the bonny bells of heather
- They brewed a drink long-syne,
- Was sweeter far than honey,
- Was stronger far than wine.
- They brewed it and they drank it,
- And lay in a blessed swound
- For days and days together
- In their dwellings underground.
- There rose a king in Scotland,
- A fell man to his foes,
- He smote the Picts in battle,
- He hunted them like roes.
- Over miles of the red mountain
- He hunted as they fled,
- And strewed the dwarfish bodies
- Of the dying and the dead.
- Summer came in the country,
- Red was the heather bell;
- But the manner of the brewing
- Was none alive to tell.
- In the graves that were like children's
- On many a mountain head,
- The Brewsters of the Heather
- Lay numbered with the dead.
- The king in the red moorland
- Rode on a summer's day;
- And the bees hummed, and the curlews
- Cried beside the way.
- The king rode, and was angry,
- Black was his brow and pale,
- To rule in a land of heather
- And lack the Heather Ale.
- It fortuned that his vassals,
- Riding free on the heath,
- Came on a stone that was fallen
- And vermin hid beneath.
- Rudely plucked from their hiding,
- Never a word they spoke:
- A son and his aged father--
- Last of the dwarfish folk.
- The king sat high on his charger,
- He looked on the little men;
- And the dwarfish and swarthy couple
- Looked at the king again.
- Down by the shore he had them;
- And there on the giddy brink--
- "I will give you life, ye vermin,
- For the secret of the drink."
- There stood the son and father;
- And they looked high and low;
- The heather was red around them,
- The sea rumbled below.
- And up and spoke the father,
- Shrill was his voice to hear:
- "I have a word in private,
- A word for the royal ear.
- "Life is dear to the aged,
- And honour a little thing;
- I would gladly sell the secret,"
- Quoth the Pict to the king.
- His voice was small as a sparrow's,
- And shrill and wonderful clear;
- "I would gladly sell my secret,
- Only my son I fear.
- "For life is a little matter,
- And death is nought to the young;
- And I dare not sell my honour
- Under the eye of my son.
- Take _him_, O king, and bind him,
- And cast him far in the deep:
- And it's I will tell the secret,
- That I have sworn to keep."
- They took the son and bound him,
- Neck and heels in a thong,
- And a lad took him and swung him,
- And flung him far and strong,
- And the sea swallowed his body,
- Like that of a child of ten;--
- And there on the cliff stood the father,
- Last of the dwarfish men.
- "True was the word I told you:
- Only my son I feared;
- For I doubt the sapling courage
- That goes without the beard.
- But now in vain is the torture,
- Fire shall never avail;
- Here dies in my bosom
- The secret of Heather Ale."
- CHRISTMAS AT SEA
- CHRISTMAS AT SEA
- The sheets were frozen hard, and they cut the naked hand;
- The decks were like a slide, where a seaman scarce could stand;
- The wind was a nor'-wester, blowing squally off the sea;
- And cliffs and spouting breakers were the only things a-lee.
- They heard the surf a-roaring before the break of day;
- But 'twas only with the peep of light we saw how ill we lay.
- We tumbled every hand on deck instanter, with a shout,
- And we gave her the maintops'l, and stood by to go about.
- All day we tacked and tacked between the South Head and the North;
- All day we hauled the frozen sheets, and got no further forth;
- All day as cold as charity, in bitter pain and dread,
- For very life and nature we tacked from head to head.
- We gave the South a wider berth, for there the tide-race roared;
- But every tack we made we brought the North Head close aboard:
- So's we saw the cliffs and houses, and the breakers running high,
- And the coastguard in his garden, with his glass against his eye.
- The frost was on the village roofs as white as ocean foam;
- The good red fires were burning bright in every 'long-shore home;
- The windows sparkled clear, and the chimneys volleyed out;
- And I vow we sniffed the victuals as the vessel went about.
- The bells upon the church were rung with a mighty jovial cheer;
- For it's just that I should tell you how (of all days in the year)
- This day of our adversity was blessèd Christmas morn,
- And the house above the coastguard's was the house where I was born.
- O well I saw the pleasant room, the pleasant faces there,
- My mother's silver spectacles, my father's silver hair;
- And well I saw the firelight, like a flight of homely elves,
- Go dancing round the china-plates that stand upon the shelves.
- And well I knew the talk they had, the talk that was of me,
- Of the shadow on the household and the son that went to sea;
- And O the wicked fool I seemed, in every kind of way,
- To be here and hauling frozen ropes on blessèd Christmas Day.
- They lit the high sea-light, and the dark began to fall.
- "All hands to loose topgallant sails," I heard the captain call.
- "By the Lord, she'll never stand it," our first mate, Jackson, cried.
- ... "It's the one way or the other, Mr. Jackson," he replied.
- She staggered to her bearings, but the sails were new and good,
- And the ship smelt up to windward just as though she understood,
- As the winter's day was ending, in the entry of the night,
- We cleared the weary headland, and passed below the light.
- And they heaved a mighty breath, every soul on board but me,
- As they saw her nose again pointing handsome out to sea;
- But all that I could think of, in the darkness and the cold,
- Was just that I was leaving home and my folks were growing old.
- NOTES TO THE SONG OF RAHÉRO
- INTRODUCTION.--This tale, of which I have not consciously changed a
- single feature, I received from tradition. It is highly popular through
- all the country of the eight Tevas, the clan to which Rahéro belonged;
- and particularly in Taiárapu, the windward peninsula of Tahiti, where he
- lived. I have heard from end to end two versions; and as many as five
- different persons have helped me with details. There seems no reason why
- the tale should not be true.
- Note 1, page 140. "_The aito_", _quasi_ champion, or brave. One skilled
- in the use of some weapon, who wandered the country challenging
- distinguished rivals and taking part in local quarrels. It was in the
- natural course of his advancement to be at last employed by a chief, or
- king; and it would then be a part of his duties to purvey the victim for
- sacrifice. One of the doomed families was indicated; the aito took his
- weapon and went forth alone; a little behind him bearers followed with
- the sacrificial basket. Sometimes the victim showed fight, sometimes
- prevailed; more often, without doubt, he fell. But whatever body was
- found, the bearers indifferently took up.
- Note 2, page 141. "_Pai_", "_Honoura_", and "_Ahupu_". Legendary persons
- of Tahiti, all natives of Taiárapu. Of the first two I have collected
- singular although imperfect legends, which I hope soon to lay before the
- public in another place. Of Ahupu, except in snatches of song, little
- memory appears to linger. She dwelt at least about Tepari,--"the
- sea-cliffs,"--the eastern fastness of the isle; walked by paths known
- only to herself upon the mountains; was courted by dangerous suitors who
- came swimming from adjacent islands, and defended and rescued (as I
- gather) by the loyalty of native fish. My anxiety to learn more of
- "Ahupu Vehine" became (during my stay in Taiárapu) a cause of some
- diversion to that mirthful people, the inhabitants.
- Note 3, page 142. "_Covered an oven._" The cooking fire is made in a
- hole in the ground, and is then buried.
- Note 4, page 143. "_Flies._" This is perhaps an anachronism. Even
- speaking of to-day in Tahiti, the phrase would have to be understood as
- referring mainly to mosquitoes, and these only in watered valleys with
- close woods, such as I suppose to form the surroundings of Rahéro's
- homestead. A quarter of a mile away, where the air moves freely, you
- shall look in vain for one.
- Note 5, page 144. "_Hook_" of mother-of-pearl. Bright-hook fishing, and
- that with the spear, appear to be the favourite native methods.
- Note 6, page 145. "_Leaves_," the plates of Tahiti.
- Note 7, page 146. "_Yottowas_," so spelt for convenience of
- pronunciation, _quasi_ Tacksmen in the Scottish Highlands. The
- organisation of eight sub-districts and eight yottowas to a division,
- which was in use (until yesterday) among the Tevas, I have attributed
- without authority to the next clan (see page 155).
- Note 8, page 146. "_Omare_," pronounce as a dactyl. A loaded
- quarterstaff, one of the two favourite weapons of the Tahitian brave;
- the javelin, or casting spear, was the other.
- Note 9, page 148. "_The ribbon of light._" Still to be seen (and heard)
- spinning from one marae to another on Tahiti; or so I have it upon
- evidence that would rejoice the Psychical Society.
- Note 10, page 149. "_Námunu-úra._" The complete name is Námunu-úra te
- aropa. Why it should be pronounced Námunu, dactylically, I cannot see,
- but so I have always heard it. This was the clan immediately beyond the
- Tevas on the south coast of the island. At the date of the tale the clan
- organisation must have been very weak. There is no particular mention of
- Támatéa's mother going to Pápara, to the head chief of her own clan,
- which would appear her natural recourse. On the other hand, she seems to
- have visited various lesser chiefs among the Tevas, and these to have
- excused themselves solely on the danger of the enterprise. The broad
- distinction here drawn between Nateva and Námunu-úra is therefore not
- impossibly anachronistic.
- Note 11, page 149. "_Hiopa the king._" Hiopa was really the name of the
- king (chief) of Vaiau; but I could never learn that of the king of
- Paea--pronounce to rhyme with the Indian _ayah_--and I gave the name
- where it was most needed. This note must appear otiose indeed to readers
- who have never heard of either of these two gentlemen; and perhaps there
- is only one person in the world capable at once of reading my verses and
- spying the inaccuracy. For him, for Mr. Tati Salmon, hereditary high
- chief of the Tevas, the note is solely written: a small attention from a
- clansman to his chief.
- Note 12, page 150. "_Let the pigs be tapu._" It is impossible to explain
- _tapu_ in a note; we have it as an English word, taboo. Suffice it, that
- a thing which was _tapu_ must not be touched, nor a place that was
- _tapu_ visited.
- Note 13, page 155. "_Fish, the food of desire._" There is a special word
- in the Tahitian language to signify _hungering after fish_. I may remark
- that here is one of my chief difficulties about the whole story. How did
- king, commons, women, and all come to eat together at this feast? But
- it troubled none of my numerous authorities; so there must certainly be
- some natural explanation.
- Note 14, page 160. "_The mustering word of the clan._"
- _Teva te ua,
- Teva te matai!_
- Teva the wind,
- Teva the rain!
- Notes 15 and 16, page 165. "_The star of the dead._" Venus as a morning
- star. I have collected much curious evidence as to this belief. The dead
- retain their taste for a fish diet, enter into copartnery with living
- fishers, and haunt the reef and the lagoon. The conclusion attributed to
- the nameless lady of the legend would be reached to-day, under the like
- circumstances, by ninety per cent. of Polynesians: and here I probably
- under-state by one-tenth.
- NOTES TO THE FEAST OF FAMINE
- In this ballad I have strung together some of the more striking
- particularities of the Marquesas. It rests upon no authority; it is in
- no sense, like "Rahéro," a native story; but a patchwork of details of
- manners and the impressions of a traveller. It may seem strange, when
- the scene is laid upon these profligate islands, to make the story hinge
- on love. But love is not less known in the Marquesas than elsewhere; nor
- is there any cause of suicide more common in the islands.
- Note 1, page 169. "_Pit of popoi._" Where the bread-fruit was stored for
- preservation.
- Note 2, page 169. "_Ruby-red._" The priest's eyes were probably red from
- the abuse of kava. His beard (_ib._) is said to be worth an estate; for
- the beards of old men are the favourite head-adornment of the
- Marquesans, as the hair of women formed their most costly girdle. The
- former, among this generally beardless and short-lived people, fetch
- to-day considerable sums.
- Note 3, page 169. "_Tikis._" The tiki is an ugly image hewn out of wood
- or stone.
- Note 4, page 172. "_The one-stringed harp._" Usually employed for
- serenades.
- Note 5, page 173. "_The sacred cabin of palm._" Which, however, no woman
- could approach. I do not know where women were tattooed; probably in the
- common house, or in the bush, for a woman was a creature of small
- account. I must guard the reader against supposing Taheia was at all
- disfigured; the art of the Marquesan tattooer is extreme; and she would
- appear to be clothed in a web of lace, inimitably delicate, exquisite in
- pattern, and of a bluish hue that at once contrasts and harmonises with
- the warm pigment of the native skin. It would be hard to find a woman
- more becomingly adorned than "a well-tattooed" Marquesan.
- Note 6, page 175. "_The horror of night._" The Polynesian fear of ghosts
- and of the dark has been already referred to. Their life is beleaguered
- by the dead.
- Note 7, page 176. "_The quiet passage of souls._" So, I am told, the
- natives explain the sound of a little wind passing overhead unfelt.
- Note 8, page 178. "_The first of the victims fell._" Without doubt, this
- whole scene is untrue to fact. The victims were disposed of privately
- and some time before. And indeed I am far from claiming the credit of
- any high degree of accuracy for this ballad. Even in the time of famine,
- it is probable that Marquesan life went far more gaily than is here
- represented. But the melancholy of to-day lies on the writer's mind.
- NOTES TO TICONDEROGA
- INTRODUCTION.--I first heard this legend of my own country from that
- friend of men of letters, Mr. Alfred Nutt, "there in roaring London's
- central stream," and since the ballad first saw the light of day in
- _Scribner's Magazine_, Mr. Nutt and Lord Archibald Campbell have been in
- public controversy on the facts. Two clans, the Camerons and the
- Campbells, lay claim to this bracing story; and they do well: the man
- who preferred his plighted troth to the commands and menaces of the dead
- is an ancestor worth disputing. But the Campbells must rest content:
- they have the broad lands and the broad page of history; this appanage
- must be denied them; for between the name of _Cameron_ and that of
- _Campbell_ the muse will never hesitate.
- Note 1, page 191. Mr. Nutt reminds me it was "by my sword and Ben
- Cruachan" the Cameron swore.
- Note 2, page 194. "_A periwig'd lord of London._" The first Pitt.
- Note 3, page 195. "_Cathay._" There must be some omission in General
- Stewart's charming "History of the Highland Regiments," a book that
- might well be republished and continued; or it scarce appears how our
- friend could have got to China.
- NOTE TO HEATHER ALE
- Among the curiosities of human nature this legend claims a high place.
- It is needless to remind the reader that the Picts were never
- exterminated, and form to this day a large proportion of the folk of
- Scotland, occupying the eastern and the central parts, from the Firth of
- Forth, or perhaps the Lammermoors, upon the south, to the Ord of
- Caithness on the north. That the blundering guess of a dull chronicler
- should have inspired men with imaginary loathing for their own ancestors
- is already strange; that it should have begotten this wild legend seems
- incredible. Is it possible the chronicler's error was merely nominal?
- that what he told, and what the people proved themselves so ready to
- receive, about the Picts, was true or partly true of some anterior and
- perhaps Lappish savages, small of stature, black of hue, dwelling
- underground--possibly also the distillers of some forgotten spirit? See
- Mr. Campbell's "Tales of the West Highlands."
- SONGS OF TRAVEL
- AND OTHER VERSES
- SONGS OF TRAVEL
- I
- THE VAGABOND
- (TO AN AIR OF SCHUBERT)
- Give to me the life I love,
- Let the lave go by me,
- Give the jolly heaven above
- And the byway nigh me.
- Bed in the bush with stars to see,
- Bread I dip in the river--
- There's the life for a man like me,
- There's the life for ever.
- Let the blow fall soon or late,
- Let what will be o'er me;
- Give the face of earth around
- And the road before me.
- Wealth I seek not, hope nor love,
- Nor a friend to know me;
- All I seek, the heaven above
- And the road below me.
- Or let autumn fall on me
- Where afield I linger,
- Silencing the bird on tree,
- Biting the blue finger.
- White as meal the frosty field--
- Warm the fireside haven--
- Not to autumn will I yield,
- Not to winter even!
- Let the blow fall soon or late,
- Let what will be o'er me;
- Give the face of earth around,
- And the road before me.
- Wealth I ask not, hope nor love,
- Nor a friend to know me.
- All I ask, the heaven above
- And the road below me.
- II
- YOUTH AND LOVE--I
- Once only by the garden gate
- Our lips were joined and parted.
- I must fulfil an empty fate
- And travel the uncharted.
- Hail and farewell! I must arise,
- Leave here the fatted cattle,
- And paint on foreign lands and skies
- My Odyssey of battle.
- The untented Kosmos my abode,
- I pass, a wilful stranger:
- My mistress still the open road
- And the bright eyes of danger.
- Come ill or well, the cross, the crown,
- The rainbow or the thunder,
- I fling my soul and body down
- For God to plough them under.
- III
- YOUTH AND LOVE--II
- To the heart of youth the world is a highwayside.
- Passing for ever, he fares; and on either hand,
- Deep in the gardens golden pavilions hide,
- Nestle in orchard bloom, and far on the level land
- Call him with lighted lamp in the eventide.
- Thick as the stars at night when the moon is down,
- Pleasures assail him. He to his nobler fate
- Fares; and but waves a hand as he passes on,
- Cries but a wayside word to her at the garden gate,
- Sings but a boyish stave and his face is gone.
- IV
- In dreams, unhappy, I behold you stand
- As heretofore:
- The unremembered tokens in your hand
- Avail no more.
- No more the morning glow, no more the grace,
- Enshrines, endears.
- Cold beats the light of time upon your face
- And shows your tears.
- He came and went. Perchance you wept a while
- And then forgot.
- Ah, me! but he that left you with a smile
- Forgets you not.
- V
- She rested by the Broken Brook,
- She drank of Weary Well,
- She moved beyond my lingering look,
- Ah, whither none can tell!
- She came, she went. In other lands,
- Perchance in fairer skies,
- Her hands shall cling with other hands,
- Her eyes to other eyes.
- She vanished. In the sounding town,
- Will she remember too?
- Will she recall the eyes of brown
- As I recall the blue?
- VI
- The infinite shining heavens
- Rose and I saw in the night
- Uncountable angel stars
- Showering sorrow and light.
- I saw them distant as heaven,
- Dumb and shining and dead,
- And the idle stars of the night
- Were dearer to me than bread.
- Night after night in my sorrow
- The stars stood over the sea,
- Till lo! I looked in the dusk
- And a star had come down to me.
- VII
- Plain as the glistering planets shine
- When winds have cleaned the skies,
- Her love appeared, appealed for mine
- And wantoned in her eyes.
- Clear as the shining tapers burned
- On Cytherea's shrine,
- Those brimming, lustrous beauties turned,
- And called and conquered mine.
- The beacon-lamp that Hero lit
- No fairer shone on sea,
- No plainlier summoned will and wit,
- Than hers encouraged me.
- I thrilled to feel her influence near,
- I struck my flag at sight.
- Her starry silence smote my ear
- Like sudden drums at night.
- I ran as, at the cannon's roar,
- The troops the ramparts man--
- As in the holy house of yore
- The willing Eli ran.
- Here, lady, lo! that servant stands
- You picked from passing men,
- And should you need nor heart nor hands
- He bows and goes again.
- VIII
- To you, let snow and roses
- And golden locks belong.
- These are the world's enslavers,
- Let these delight the throng.
- For her of duskier lustre
- Whose favour still I wear,
- The snow be in her kirtle,
- The rose be in her hair!
- The hue of highland rivers
- Careering, full and cool,
- From sable on to golden,
- From rapid on to pool--
- The hue of heather-honey,
- The hue of honey-bees,
- Shall tinge her golden shoulder,
- Shall gild her tawny knees.
- IX
- Let Beauty awake in the morn from beautiful dreams,
- Beauty awake from rest!
- Let Beauty awake
- For Beauty's sake
- In the hour when the birds awake in the brake
- And the stars are bright in the west!
- Let Beauty awake in the eve from the slumber of day,
- Awake in the crimson eve!
- In the day's dusk end
- When the shades ascend,
- Let her wake to the kiss of a tender friend
- To render again and receive!
- X
- I know not how it is with you--
- I love the first and last,
- The whole field of the present view,
- The whole flow of the past.
- One tittle of the things that are,
- Nor you should change nor I--
- One pebble in our path--one star
- In all our heaven of sky.
- Our lives, and every day and hour,
- One symphony appear:
- One road, one garden--every flower
- And every bramble dear.
- XI
- I will make you brooches and toys for your delight
- Of bird-song at morning and star-shine at night.
- I will make a palace fit for you and me
- Of green days in forests and blue days at sea.
- I will make my kitchen, and you shall keep your room,
- Where white flows the river and bright blows the broom,
- And you shall wash your linen and keep your body white
- In rainfall at morning and dewfall at night.
- And this shall be for music when no one else is near,
- The fine song for singing, the rare song to hear!
- That only I remember, that only you admire,
- Of the broad road that stretches and the roadside fire.
- XII
- WE HAVE LOVED OF YORE
- (TO AN AIR OF DIABELLI)
- Berried brake and reedy island,
- Heaven below, and only heaven above,
- Through the sky's inverted azure
- Softly swam the boat that bore our love.
- Bright were your eyes as the day;
- Bright ran the stream,
- Bright hung the sky above.
- Days of April, airs of Eden,
- How the glory died through golden hours,
- And the shining moon arising,
- How the boat drew homeward filled with flowers!
- Bright were your eyes in the night:
- We have lived, my love--
- O, we have loved, my love.
- Frost has bound our flowing river,
- Snow has whitened all our island brake,
- And beside the winter fagot
- Joan and Darby doze and dream and wake.
- Still, in the river of dreams,
- Swims the boat of love--
- Hark! chimes the falling oar!
- And again in winter evens
- When on firelight dreaming fancy feeds,
- In those ears of agèd lovers
- Love's own river warbles in the reeds.
- Love still the past, O my love!
- We have lived of yore,
- O, we have loved of yore.
- XIII
- MATER TRIUMPHANS
- Son of my woman's body, you go, to the drum and fife,
- To taste the colour of love and the other side of life--
- From out of the dainty the rude, the strong from out of the frail,
- Eternally through the ages from the female comes the male.
- The ten fingers and toes, and the shell-like nail on each,
- The eyes blind as gems and the tongue attempting speech;
- Impotent hands in my bosom, and yet they shall wield the sword!
- Drugged with slumber and milk, you wait the day of the Lord.
- Infant bridegroom, uncrowned king, unanointed priest,
- Soldier, lover, explorer, I see you nuzzle the breast.
- You that grope in my bosom shall load the ladies with rings,
- You, that came forth through the doors, shall burst the doors of kings.
- XIV
- Bright is the ring of words
- When the right man rings them,
- Fair the fall of songs
- When the singer sings them.
- Still they are carolled and said--
- On wings they are carried--
- After the singer is dead
- And the maker buried.
- Low as the singer lies
- In the field of heather,
- Songs of his fashion bring
- The swains together.
- And when the west is red
- With the sunset embers,
- The lover lingers and sings
- And the maid remembers.
- XV
- In the highlands, in the country places,
- Where the old plain men have rosy faces,
- And the young fair maidens
- Quiet eyes;
- Where essential silence cheers and blesses,
- And for ever in the hill-recesses
- _Her_ more lovely music
- Broods and dies.
- O to mount again where erst I haunted;
- Where the old red hills are bird-enchanted,
- And the low green meadows
- Bright with sward;
- And when even dies, the million-tinted,
- And the night has come, and planets glinted,
- Lo, the valley hollow
- Lamp-bestarred!
- O to dream, O to awake and wander
- There, and with delight to take and render,
- Through the trance of silence,
- Quiet breath;
- Lo! for there, among the flowers and grasses,
- Only the mightier movement sounds and passes;
- Only winds and rivers,
- Life and death.
- XVI
- (TO THE TUNE OF WANDERING WILLIE)
- Home no more home to me, whither must I wander?
- Hunger my driver, I go where I must.
- Cold blows the winter wind over hill and heather;
- Thick drives the rain, and my roof is in the dust.
- Loved of wise men was the shade of my roof-tree,
- The true word of welcome was spoken in the door--
- Dear days of old, with the faces in the firelight,
- Kind folks of old, you come again no more.
- Home was home then, my dear, full of kindly faces,
- Home was home then, my dear, happy for the child.
- Fire and the windows bright glittered on the moorland;
- Song, tuneful song, built a palace in the wild.
- Now, when day dawns on the brow of the moorland,
- Lone stands the house, and the chimney-stone is cold.
- Lone let it stand, now the friends are all departed,
- The kind hearts, the true hearts, that loved the place of old.
- Spring shall come, come again, calling up the moor-fowl,
- Spring shall bring the sun and rain, bring the bees and flowers;
- Red shall the heather bloom over hill and valley,
- Soft flow the stream through the even-flowing hours;
- Fair the day shine as it shone on my childhood--
- Fair shine the day on the house with open door;
- Birds come and cry there and twitter in the chimney--
- But I go for ever and come again no more.
- XVII
- WINTER
- In rigorous hours, when down the iron lane
- The redbreast looks in vain
- For hips and haws,
- Lo, shining flowers upon my window-pane
- The silver pencil of the winter draws.
- When all the snowy hill
- And the bare woods are still;
- When snipes are silent in the frozen bogs,
- And all the garden garth is whelmed in mire,
- Lo, by the hearth, the laughter of the logs--
- More fair than roses, lo, the flowers of fire!
- SARANAC LAKE.
- XVIII
- The stormy evening closes now in vain,
- Loud wails the wind and beats the driving rain,
- While here in sheltered house
- With fire-ypainted walls,
- I hear the wind abroad,
- I hark the calling squalls--
- "Blow, blow," I cry, "you burst your cheeks in vain!
- Blow, blow," I cry, "my love is home again!"
- Yon ship you chase perchance but yesternight
- Bore still the precious freight of my delight,
- That here in sheltered house
- With fire-ypainted walls,
- Now hears the wind abroad,
- Now harks the calling squalls.
- "Blow, blow," I cry, "in vain you rouse the sea,
- My rescued sailor shares the fire with me!"
- XIX
- TO DR. HAKE
- (ON RECEIVING A COPY OF VERSES)
- In the belovèd hour that ushers day,
- In the pure dew, under the breaking grey,
- One bird, ere yet the woodland quires awake,
- With brief réveillé summons all the brake:
- _Chirp_, _chirp_, it goes; nor waits an answer long;
- And that small signal fills the grove with song.
- Thus on my pipe I breathed a strain or two;
- It scarce was music, but 'twas all I knew.
- It was not music, for I lacked the art,
- Yet what but frozen music filled my heart?
- _Chirp_, _chirp_, I went, nor hoped a nobler strain;
- But Heaven decreed I should not pipe in vain,
- For, lo! not far from there, in secret dale,
- All silent, sat an ancient nightingale.
- My sparrow notes he heard; thereat awoke;
- And with a tide of song his silence broke.
- XX
- TO ----
- I knew thee strong and quiet like the hills;
- I knew thee apt to pity, brave to endure,
- In peace or war a Roman full equipt;
- And just I knew thee, like the fabled kings
- Who by the loud sea-shore gave judgment forth,
- From dawn to eve, bearded and few of words.
- What, what, was I to honour thee? A child;
- A youth in ardour but a child in strength,
- Who after virtue's golden chariot-wheels
- Runs ever panting, nor attains the goal.
- So thought I, and was sorrowful at heart.
- Since then my steps have visited that flood
- Along whose shore the numerous footfalls cease,
- The voices and the tears of life expire.
- Thither the prints go down, the hero's way
- Trod large upon the sand, the trembling maid's:
- Nimrod that wound his trumpet in the wood,
- And the poor, dreaming child, hunter of flowers,
- That here his hunting closes with the great:
- So one and all go down, nor aught returns.
- For thee, for us, the sacred river waits,
- For me, the unworthy, thee, the perfect friend;
- There Blame desists, there his unfaltering dogs
- He from the chase recalls, and homeward rides;
- Yet Praise and Love pass over and go in.
- So when, beside that margin, I discard
- My more than mortal weakness, and with thee
- Through that still land unfearing I advance;
- If then at all we keep the touch of joy,
- Thou shalt rejoice to find me altered--I,
- O Felix, to behold thee still unchanged.
- XXI
- The morning drum-call on my eager ear
- Thrills unforgotten yet; the morning dew
- Lies yet undried along my field of noon.
- But now I pause at whiles in what I do,
- And count the bell, and tremble lest I hear
- (My work untrimmed) the sunset gun too soon.
- XXII
- I have trod the upward and the downward slope;
- I have endured and done in days before;
- I have longed for all, and bid farewell to hope;
- And I have lived and loved, and closed the door.
- XXIII
- He hears with gladdened heart the thunder
- Peal, and loves the falling dew;
- He knows the earth above and under--
- Sits and is content to view.
- He sits beside the dying ember,
- God for hope and man for friend,
- Content to see, glad to remember,
- Expectant of the certain end.
- XXIV
- Farewell, fair day and fading light!
- The clay-born here, with westward sight,
- Marks the huge sun now downward soar.
- Farewell. We twain shall meet no more.
- Farewell. I watch with bursting sigh
- My late contemned occasion die.
- I linger useless in my tent:
- Farewell, fair day, so foully spent!
- Farewell, fair day. If any God
- At all consider this poor clod,
- He who the fair occasion sent
- Prepared and placed the impediment.
- Let Him diviner vengeance take--
- Give me to sleep, give me to wake
- Girded and shod, and bid me play
- The hero in the coming day!
- XXV
- IF THIS WERE FAITH
- God, if this were enough,
- That I see things bare to the buff
- And up to the buttocks in mire;
- That I ask nor hope nor hire,
- Nut in the husk,
- Nor dawn beyond the dusk,
- Nor life beyond death:
- God, if this were faith?
- Having felt Thy wind in my face
- Spit sorrow and disgrace,
- Having seen Thine evil doom
- In Golgotha and Khartoum,
- And the brutes, the work of Thine hands,
- Fill with injustice lands
- And stain with blood the sea:
- If still in my veins the glee
- Of the black night and the sun
- And the lost battle, run:
- If, an adept,
- The iniquitous lists I still accept
- With joy, and joy to endure and be withstood,
- And still to battle and perish for a dream of good:
- God, if that were enough?
- If to feel in the ink of the slough,
- And the sink of the mire,
- Veins of glory and fire
- Run through and transpierce and transpire,
- And a secret purpose of glory in every part,
- And the answering glory of battle fill my heart;
- To thrill with the joy of girded men,
- To go on for ever and fail and go on again,
- And be mauled to the earth and arise,
- And contend for the shade of a word and a thing not seen with the eyes:
- With the half of a broken hope for a pillow at night
- That somehow the right is the right
- And the smooth shall bloom from the rough:
- Lord, if that were enough?
- XXVI
- MY WIFE
- Trusty, dusky, vivid, true,
- With eyes of gold and bramble-dew,
- Steel-true and blade-straight,
- The great artificer
- Made my mate.
- Honour, anger, valour, fire;
- A love that life could never tire,
- Death quench or evil stir,
- The mighty master
- Gave to her.
- Teacher, tender, comrade, wife,
- A fellow-farer true through life,
- Heart-whole and soul-free
- The august father
- Gave to me.
- XXVII
- TO THE MUSE
- Resign the rhapsody, the dream,
- To men of larger reach;
- Be ours the quest of a plain theme,
- The piety of speech.
- As monkish scribes from morning break
- Toiled till the close of light,
- Nor thought a day too long to make
- One line or letter bright:
- We also with an ardent mind,
- Time, wealth, and fame forgot,
- Our glory in our patience find
- And skim, and skim the pot:
- Till last, when round the house we hear
- The evensong of birds,
- One corner of blue heaven appear
- In our clear well of words.
- Leave, leave it then, muse of my heart!
- Sans finish and sans frame,
- Leave unadorned by needless art
- The picture as it came.
- XXVIII
- TO AN ISLAND PRINCESS
- Since long ago, a child at home,
- I read and longed to rise and roam,
- Where'er I went, whate'er I willed,
- One promised land my fancy filled.
- Hence the long roads my home I made;
- Tossed much in ships; have often laid
- Below the uncurtained sky my head,
- Rain-deluged and wind-buffeted:
- And many a thousand hills I crossed
- And corners turned--Love's labour lost,
- Till, Lady, to your isle of sun
- I came not hoping; and, like one
- Snatched out of blindness, rubbed my eyes,
- And hailed my promised land with cries.
- Yes, Lady, here I was at last;
- Here found I all I had forecast:
- The long roll of the sapphire sea
- That keeps the land's virginity;
- The stalwart giants of the wood
- Laden with toys and flowers and food;
- The precious forest pouring out
- To compass the whole town about;
- The town itself with streets of lawn,
- Loved of the moon, blessed by the dawn,
- Where the brown children all the day,
- Keep up a ceaseless noise of play,
- Play in the sun, play in the rain,
- Nor ever quarrel or complain;--
- And late at night, in the woods of fruit,
- Hark I do you hear the passing flute?
- I threw one look to either hand,
- And knew I was in Fairyland.
- And yet one point of being so
- I lacked. For, Lady (as you know),
- Whoever by his might of hand
- Won entrance into Fairyland,
- Found always with admiring eyes
- A Fairy princess kind and wise.
- It was not long I waited; soon
- Upon my threshold, in broad noon,
- Gracious and helpful, wise and good,
- The Fairy Princess Moë stood.[1]
- TANTIRA, TAHITI, _Nov. 5, 1888_.
- FOOTNOTE:
- [1] This is the same Princess Moë whose charms of person and disposition
- have been recorded by the late Lord Pembroke in "South Sea Bubbles,"
- and by M. Pierre Loti in the "Mariage de Loti."
- XXIX
- TO KALAKAUA
- (WITH A PRESENT OF A PEARL)
- The Silver Ship, my King--that was her name
- In the bright islands whence your fathers came[1]--
- The Silver Ship, at rest from winds and tides,
- Below your palace in your harbour rides:
- And the seafarers, sitting safe on shore,
- Like eager merchants count their treasures o'er.
- One gift they find, one strange and lovely thing,
- Now doubly precious since it pleased a king.
- The right, my liege, is ancient as the lyre
- For bards to give to kings what kings admire.
- 'Tis mine to offer for Apollo's sake;
- And since the gift is fitting, yours to take.
- To golden hands the golden pearl I bring:
- The ocean jewel to the island king.
- HONOLULU, _Feb. 3, 1889_.
- FOOTNOTE:
- [1] The yacht _Casco_ had been so called by the people of Fakarava in
- Tahiti.
- XXX
- TO PRINCESS KAIULANI
- [Written in April to Kaiulani in the April of her age; and at Waikiki,
- within easy walk of Kaiulani's banyan! When she comes to my land and her
- father's, and the rain beats upon the window (as I fear it will), let
- her look at this page; it will be like a weed gathered and pressed at
- home; and she will remember her own islands, and the shadow of the
- mighty tree; and she will hear the peacocks screaming in the dusk and
- the wind blowing in the palms; and she will think of her father sitting
- there alone.--R. L. S.]
- Forth from her land to mine she goes,
- The island maid, the island rose,
- Light of heart and bright of face:
- The daughter of a double race.
- Her islands here, in Southern sun,
- Shall mourn their Kaiulani gone,
- And I, in her dear banyan shade,
- Look vainly for my little maid.
- But our Scots islands far away
- Shall glitter with unwonted day,
- And cast for once their tempests by
- To smile in Kaiulani's eye.
- HONOLULU.
- XXXI
- TO MOTHER MARYANNE
- To see the infinite pity of this place,
- The mangled limb, the devastated face,
- The innocent sufferer smiling at the rod--
- A fool were tempted to deny his God.
- He sees, he shrinks. But if he gaze again,
- Lo, beauty springing from the breast of pain;
- He marks the sisters on the mournful shores;
- And even a fool is silent and adores.
- GUEST HOUSE, KALAWAO, MOLOKAI.
- XXXII
- IN MEMORIAM E.H.
- I knew a silver head was bright beyond compare,
- I knew a queen of toil with a crown of silver hair.
- Garland of valour and sorrow, of beauty and renown,
- Life, that honours the brave, crowned her himself with the crown.
- The beauties of youth are frail, but this was a jewel of age.
- Life, that delights in the brave, gave it himself for a gage.
- Fair was the crown to behold, and beauty its poorest part--
- At once the scar of the wound and the order pinned on the heart.
- The beauties of man are frail, and the silver lies in the dust,
- And the queen that we call to mind sleeps with the brave and the just;
- Sleeps with the weary at length; but, honoured and ever fair,
- Shines in the eye of the mind the crown of the silver hair.
- HONOLULU.
- XXXIII
- TO MY WIFE
- (A FRAGMENT)
- Long must elapse ere you behold again
- Green forest frame the entry of the lane--
- The wild lane with the bramble and the briar,
- The year-old cart-tracks perfect in the mire,
- The wayside smoke, perchance, the dwarfish huts,
- And ramblers' donkey drinking from the ruts:--
- Long ere you trace how deviously it leads,
- Back from man's chimneys and the bleating meads
- To the woodland shadow, to the silvan hush,
- When but the brooklet chuckles in the brush--
- Back from the sun and bustle of the vale
- To where the great voice of the nightingale
- Fills all the forest like a single room,
- And all the banks smell of the golden broom;
- So wander on until the eve descends,
- And back returning to your firelit friends,
- You see the rosy sun, despoiled of light,
- Hung, caught in thickets, like a schoolboy's kite.
- Here from the sea the unfruitful sun shall rise,
- Bathe the bare deck and blind the unshielded eyes;
- The allotted hours aloft shall wheel in vain
- And in the unpregnant ocean plunge again.
- Assault of squalls that mock the watchful guard,
- And pluck the bursting canvas from the yard,
- And senseless clamour of the calm, at night
- Must mar your slumbers. By the plunging light,
- In beetle-haunted, most unwomanly bower
- Of the wild-swerving cabin, hour by hour....
- SCHOONER _Equator_.
- XXXIV
- TO MY OLD FAMILIARS
- Do you remember--can we e'er forget?--
- How, in the coiled perplexities of youth,
- In our wild climate, in our scowling town,
- We gloomed and shivered, sorrowed, sobbed and feared?
- The belching winter wind, the missile rain,
- The rare and welcome silence of the snows,
- The laggard morn, the haggard day, the night,
- The grimy spell of the nocturnal town,
- Do you remember?--Ah, could one forget!
- As when the fevered sick that all night long
- Listed the wind intone, and hear at last
- The ever-welcome voice of chanticleer
- Sing in the bitter hour before the dawn,--
- With sudden ardour, these desire the day:
- So sang in the gloom of youth the bird of hope;
- So we, exulting, hearkened and desired.
- For lo! as in the palace porch of life
- We huddled with chimeras, from within--
- How sweet to hear!--the music swelled and fell,
- And through the breach of the revolving doors
- What dreams of splendour blinded us and fled!
- I have since then contended and rejoiced;
- Amid the glories of the house of life
- Profoundly entered, and the shrine beheld:
- Yet when the lamp from my expiring eyes
- Shall dwindle and recede, the voice of love
- Fall insignificant on my closing ears,
- What sound shall come but the old cry of the wind
- In our inclement city? what return
- But the image of the emptiness of youth,
- Filled with the sound of footsteps and that voice
- Of discontent and rapture and despair?
- So, as in darkness, from the magic lamp,
- The momentary pictures gleam and fade
- And perish, and the night resurges--these
- Shall I remember, and then all forget.
- APEMAMA.
- XXXV
- The tropics vanish, and meseems that I,
- From Halkerside, from topmost Allermuir,
- Or steep Caerketton, dreaming gaze again.
- Far set in fields and woods, the town I see
- Spring gallant from the shallows of her smoke,
- Cragged, spired, and turreted, her virgin fort
- Beflagged. About, on seaward-drooping hills,
- New folds of city glitter. Last, the Forth
- Wheels ample waters set with sacred isles,
- And populous Fife smokes with a score of towns.
- There, on the sunny frontage of a hill,
- Hard by the house of kings, repose the dead,
- My dead, the ready and the strong of word.
- Their works, the salt-encrusted, still survive;
- The sea bombards their founded towers; the night
- Thrills pierced with their strong lamps. The artificers,
- One after one, here in this grated cell,
- Where the rain erases and the rust consumes,
- Fell upon lasting silence. Continents
- And continental oceans intervene;
- A sea uncharted, on a lampless isle,
- Environs and confines their wandering child
- In vain. The voice of generations dead
- Summons me, sitting distant, to arise,
- My numerous footsteps nimbly to retrace,
- And, all mutation over, stretch me down
- In that denoted city of the dead.
- APEMAMA.
- XXXVI
- TO S. C.
- I heard the pulse of the besieging sea
- Throb far away all night. I heard the wind
- Fly crying and convulse tumultuous palms.
- I rose and strolled. The isle was all bright sand,
- And flailing fans and shadows of the palm;
- The heaven all moon and wind and the blind vault;
- The keenest planet slain, for Venus slept.
- The king, my neighbour, with his host of wives,
- Slept in the precinct of the palisade;
- Where single, in the wind, under the moon,
- Among the slumbering cabins, blazed a fire,
- Sole street-lamp and the only sentinel.
- To other lands and nights my fancy turned--
- To London first, and chiefly to your house,
- The many-pillared and the well-beloved.
- There yearning fancy lighted; there again
- In the upper room I lay, and heard far off
- The unsleeping city murmur like a shell;
- The muffled tramp of the Museum guard
- Once more went by me; I beheld again
- Lamps vainly brighten the dispeopled street;
- Again I longed for the returning morn,
- The awaking traffic, the bestirring birds,
- The consentaneous trill of tiny song
- That weaves round monumental cornices
- A passing charm of beauty. Most of all,
- For your light foot I wearied, and your knock
- That was the glad réveillé of my day.
- Lo, now, when to your task in the great house
- At morning through the portico you pass,
- One moment glance, where by the pillared wall
- Far-voyaging island gods, begrimed with smoke,
- Sit now unworshipped, the rude monument
- Of faiths forgot and races undivined;
- Sit now disconsolate, remembering well
- The priest, the victim, and the songful crowd,
- The blaze of the blue noon, and that huge voice,
- Incessant, of the breakers on the shore.
- As far as these from their ancestral shrine,
- So far, so foreign, your divided friends
- Wander, estranged in body, not in mind.
- APEMAMA.
- XXXVII
- THE HOUSE OF TEMBINOKA
- [At my departure from the island of Apemama, for which you will look in
- vain in most atlases, the King and I agreed, since we both set up to be
- in the poetical way, that we should celebrate our separation in verse.
- Whether or not his Majesty has been true to his bargain, the laggard
- posts of the Pacific may perhaps inform me in six months, perhaps not
- before a year. The following lines represent my part of the contract,
- and it is hoped, by their pictures of strange manners, they may
- entertain a civilised audience. Nothing throughout has been invented or
- exaggerated; the lady herein referred to as the author's muse has
- confined herself to stringing into rhyme facts or legends that I saw or
- heard during two months' residence upon the island.--R. L. S.]
- _ENVOI_
- _Let us, who part like brothers, part like bards;
- And you in your tongue and measure, I in mine,
- Our now division duly solemnise.
- Unlike the strains, and yet the theme is one:
- The strains unlike, and how unlike their fate!
- You to the blinding palace-yard shall call
- The prefect of the singers, and to him,
- Listening devout, your valedictory verse
- Deliver; he, his attribute fulfilled,
- To the island chorus hand your measures on,
- Wed now with harmony: so them, at last,
- Night after night, in the open hall of dance,
- Shall thirty matted men, to the clapped hand,
- Intone and bray and bark. Unfortunate!
- Paper and print alone shall honour mine._
- THE SONG
- Let now the King his ear arouse
- And toss the bosky ringlets from his brows,
- The while, our bond to implement,
- My muse relates and praises his descent.
- I
- Bride of the shark, her valour first I sing
- Who on the lone seas quickened of a King.
- She, from the shore and puny homes of men,
- Beyond the climber's sea-discerning ken,
- Swam, led by omens; and devoid of fear,
- Beheld her monstrous paramour draw near.
- She gazed; all round her to the heavenly pale,
- The simple sea was void of isle or sail--
- Sole overhead the unsparing sun was reared--
- When the deep bubbled and the brute appeared.
- But she, secure in the decrees of fate,
- Made strong her bosom and received the mate,
- And, men declare, from that marine embrace
- Conceived the virtues of a stronger race.
- II
- Her stern descendant next I praise,
- Survivor of a thousand frays:--
- In the hall of tongues who ruled the throng;
- Led and was trusted by the strong;
- And when spears were in the wood,
- Like a tower of vantage stood:--
- Whom, not till seventy years had sped,
- Unscarred of breast, erect of head,
- Still light of step, still bright of look,
- The hunter, Death, had overtook.
- III
- His sons, the brothers twain, I sing.
- Of whom the elder reigned a King.
- No Childeric he, yet much declined
- From his rude sire's imperious mind,
- Until his day came when he died,
- He lived, he reigned, he versified.
- But chiefly him I celebrate
- That was the pillar of the state,
- Ruled, wise of word and bold of mien,
- The peaceful and the warlike scene;
- And played alike the leader's part
- In lawful and unlawful art.
- His soldiers with emboldened ears
- Heard him laugh among the spears.
- He could deduce from age to age
- The web of island parentage;
- Best lay the rhyme, best lead the dance,
- For any festal circumstance:
- And fitly fashion oar and boat,
- A palace or an armour coat.
- None more availed than he to raise
- The strong, suffumigating blaze,
- Or knot the wizard leaf: none more,
- Upon the untrodden windward shore
- Of the isle, beside the beating main,
- To cure the sickly and constrain,
- With muttered words and waving rods,
- The gibbering and the whistling gods.
- But he, though thus with hand and head
- He ruled, commanded, charmed, and led,
- And thus in virtue and in might
- Towered to contemporary sight--
- Still in fraternal faith and love,
- Remained below to reach above,
- Gave and obeyed the apt command,
- Pilot and vassal of the land.
- IV
- My Tembinok' from men like these
- Inherited his palaces,
- His right to rule, his powers of mind,
- His cocoa-islands sea-enshrined.
- Stern bearer of the sword and whip,
- A master passed in mastership,
- He learned, without the spur of need,
- To write, to cipher, and to read;
- From all that touch on his prone shore
- Augments his treasury of lore,
- Eager in age as erst in youth
- To catch an art, to learn a truth,
- To paint on the internal page
- A clearer picture of the age.
- His age, you say? But ah, not so!
- In his lone isle of long ago,
- A royal Lady of Shalott,
- Sea-sundered, he beholds it not;
- He only hears it far away.
- The stress of equatorial day
- He suffers; he records the while
- The vapid annals of the isle;
- Slaves bring him praise of his renown,
- Or cackle of the palm-tree town;
- The rarer ship and the rare boat
- He marks; and only hears remote,
- Where thrones and fortunes rise and reel,
- The thunder of the turning wheel.
- V
- For the unexpected tears he shed
- At my departing, may his lion head
- Not whiten, his revolving years
- No fresh occasion minister of tears;
- At book or cards, at work or sport,
- Him may the breeze across the palace court
- For ever fan; and swelling near
- For ever the loud song divert his ear.
- SCHOONER _Equator_, AT SEA.
- XXXVIII
- THE WOODMAN
- In all the grove, nor stream nor bird
- Nor aught beside my blows was heard,
- And the woods wore their noonday dress--
- The glory of their silentness.
- From the island summit to the seas,
- Trees mounted, and trees drooped, and trees
- Groped upward in the gaps. The green
- Inarboured talus and ravine
- By fathoms. By the multitude,
- The rugged columns of the wood
- And bunches of the branches stood:
- Thick as a mob, deep as a sea,
- And silent as eternity.
- With lowered axe, with backward head,
- Late from this scene my labourer fled,
- And with a ravelled tale to tell,
- Returned. Some denizen of hell,
- Dead man or disinvested god,
- Had close behind him peered and trod,
- And triumphed when he turned to flee.
- How different fell the lines with me!
- Whose eye explored the dim arcade
- Impatient of the uncoming shade--
- Shy elf, or dryad pale and cold,
- Or mystic lingerer from of old:
- Vainly. The fair and stately things,
- Impassive as departed kings,
- All still in the wood's stillness stood,
- And dumb. The rooted multitude
- Nodded and brooded, bloomed and dreamed,
- Unmeaning, undivined. It seemed
- No other art, no hope, they knew,
- Than clutch the earth and seek the blue.
- 'Mid vegetable king and priest
- And stripling, I (the only beast)
- Was at the beast's work, killing; hewed
- The stubborn roots across, bestrewed
- The glebe with the dislustred leaves,
- And bade the saplings fall in sheaves;
- Bursting across the tangled math
- A ruin that I called a path,
- A Golgotha that, later on,
- When rains had watered, and suns shone,
- And seeds enriched the place, should bear
- And be called garden. Here and there,
- I spied and plucked by the green hair
- A foe more resolute to live,
- The toothed and killing sensitive.
- He, semi-conscious, fled the attack;
- He shrank and tucked his branches back;
- And straining by his anchor strand,
- Captured and scratched the rooting hand.
- I saw him crouch, I felt him bite;
- And straight my eyes were touched with sight.
- I saw the wood for what it was;
- The lost and the victorious cause;
- The deadly battle pitched in line,
- Saw silent weapons cross and shine:
- Silent defeat, silent assault,
- A battle and a burial vault.
- Thick round me in the teeming mud
- Briar and fern strove to the blood.
- The hooked liana in his gin
- Noosed his reluctant neighbours in:
- There the green murderer throve and spread,
- Upon his smothering victims fed,
- And wantoned on his climbing coil.
- Contending roots fought for the soil
- Like frightened demons: with despair
- Competing branches pushed for air.
- Green conquerors from overhead
- Bestrode the bodies of their dead;
- The Caesars of the silvan field,
- Unused to fail, foredoomed to yield:
- For in the groins of branches, lo!
- The cancers of the orchid grow.
- Silent as in the listed ring
- Two chartered wrestlers strain and cling,
- Dumb as by yellow Hooghly's side
- The suffocating captives died:
- So hushed the woodland warfare goes
- Unceasing; and the silent foes
- Grapple and smother, strain and clasp
- Without a cry, without a gasp.
- Here also sound Thy fans, O God,
- Here too Thy banners move abroad:
- Forest and city, sea and shore,
- And the whole earth, Thy threshing-floor!
- The drums of war, the drums of peace,
- Roll through our cities without cease,
- And all the iron halls of life
- Ring with the unremitting strife.
- The common lot we scarce perceive.
- Crowds perish, we nor mark nor grieve:
- The bugle calls--we mourn a few!
- What corporal's guard at Waterloo?
- What scanty hundreds more or less
- In the man-devouring Wilderness?
- What handful bled on Delhi ridge?
- --See, rather, London, on thy bridge
- The pale battalions trample by,
- Resolved to slay, resigned to die.
- Count, rather, all the maimed and dead
- In the unbrotherly war of bread.
- See, rather, under sultrier skies
- What vegetable Londons rise,
- And teem, and suffer without sound.
- Or in your tranquil garden ground,
- Contented, in the falling gloom,
- Saunter and see the roses bloom.
- That these might live, what thousands died!
- All day the cruel hoe was plied;
- The ambulance barrow rolled all day;
- Your wife, the tender, kind, and gay,
- Donned her long gauntlets, caught the spud
- And bathed in vegetable blood;
- And the long massacre now at end,
- See! where the lazy coils ascend,
- See, where the bonfire sputters red
- At even, for the innocent dead.
- Why prate of peace? when, warriors all,
- We clank in harness into hall,
- And ever bare upon the board
- Lies the necessary sword.
- In the green field or quiet street,
- Besieged we sleep, beleaguered eat;
- Labour by day and wake o' nights,
- In war with rival appetites.
- The rose on roses feeds; the lark
- On larks. The sedentary clerk
- All morning with a diligent pen
- Murders the babes of other men;
- And like the beasts of wood and park,
- Protects his whelps, defends his den.
- Unshamed the narrow aim I hold;
- I feed my sheep, patrol my fold;
- Breathe war on wolves and rival flocks,
- A pious outlaw on the rocks
- Of God and morning; and when time
- Shall bow, or rivals break me, climb
- Where no undubbed civilian dares,
- In my war harness, the loud stairs
- Of honour; and my conqueror
- Hail me a warrior fallen in war.
- VAILIMA.
- XXXIX
- TROPIC RAIN
- As the single pang of the blow, when the metal is mingled well,
- Rings and lives and resounds in all the bounds of the bell,
- So the thunder above spoke with a single tongue,
- So in the heart of the mountain the sound of it rumbled and clung.
- Sudden the thunder was drowned--quenched was the levin light--
- And the angel-spirit of rain laughed out loud in the night.
- Loud as the maddened river raves in the cloven glen,
- Angel of rain! you laughed and leaped on the roofs of men;
- And the sleepers sprang in their beds, and joyed and feared as you fell.
- You struck, and my cabin quailed; the roof of it roared like a bell.
- You spoke, and at once the mountain shouted and shook with brooks.
- You ceased, and the day returned, rosy, with virgin looks.
- And methought that beauty and terror are only one, not two;
- And the world has room for love, and death, and thunder, and dew;
- And all the sinews of hell slumber in summer air;
- And the face of God is a rock, but the face of the rock is fair.
- Beneficent streams of tears flow at the finger of pain;
- And out of the cloud that smites, beneficent rivers of rain.
- VAILIMA.
- XL
- AN END OF TRAVEL
- Let now your soul in this substantial world
- Some anchor strike. Be here the body moored;--
- This spectacle immutably from now
- The picture in your eye; and when time strikes,
- And the green scene goes on the instant blind--
- The ultimate helpers, where your horse to-day
- Conveyed you dreaming, bear your body dead.
- VAILIMA.
- XLI
- We uncommiserate pass into the night
- From the loud banquet, and departing leave
- A tremor in men's memories, faint and sweet
- And frail as music. Features of our face,
- The tones of the voice, the touch of the loved hand,
- Perish and vanish, one by one, from earth:
- Meanwhile, in the hall of song, the multitude
- Applauds the new performer. One, perchance,
- One ultimate survivor lingers on,
- And smiles, and to his ancient heart recalls
- The long forgotten. Ere the morrow die,
- He too, returning, through the curtain comes,
- And the new age forgets us and goes on.
- XLII
- Sing me a song of a lad that is gone,
- Say, could that lad be I?
- Merry of soul he sailed on a day
- Over the sea to Skye.
- Mull was astern, Rum on the port,
- Eigg on the starboard bow;
- Glory of youth glowed in his soul:
- Where is that glory now?
- Sing me a song of a lad that is gone,
- Say, could that lad be I?
- Merry of soul he sailed on a day
- Over the sea to Skye.
- Give me again all that was there,
- Give me the sun that shone!
- Give me the eyes, give me the soul,
- Give me the lad that's gone!
- Sing me a song of a lad that is gone,
- Say, could that lad be I?
- Merry of soul he sailed on a day
- Over the sea to Skye.
- Billow and breeze, islands and seas,
- Mountains of rain and sun,
- All that was good, all that was fair,
- All that was me is gone.
- XLIII
- TO S.R. CROCKETT
- (ON RECEIVING A DEDICATION)
- Blows the wind to-day, and the sun and the rain are flying,
- Blows the wind on the moors to-day and now,
- Where about the graves of the martyrs the whaups are crying,
- My heart remembers how!
- Grey recumbent tombs of the dead in desert places,
- Standing-stones on the vacant wine-red moor,
- Hills of sheep, and the homes of the silent vanished races,
- And winds, austere and pure:
- Be it granted me to behold you again in dying,
- Hills of home! and to hear again the call;
- Hear about the graves of the martyrs the peewees crying,
- And hear no more at all.
- VAILIMA.
- XLIV
- EVENSONG
- The embers of the day are red
- Beyond the murky hill.
- The kitchen smokes: the bed
- In the darkling house is spread:
- The great sky darkens overhead,
- And the great woods are shrill.
- So far have I been led,
- Lord, by Thy will:
- So far I have followed, Lord, and wondered still.
- The breeze from the embalmèd land
- Blows sudden toward the shore,
- And claps my cottage door.
- I hear the signal, Lord--I understand.
- The night at Thy command
- Comes. I will eat and sleep and will not question more.
- VAILIMA.
- ADDITIONAL POEMS
- ADDITIONAL POEMS
- A FAMILIAR EPISTLE
- Blame me not that this epistle
- Is the first you have from me;
- Idleness hath held me fettered;
- But at last the times are bettered,
- And once more I wet my whistle
- Here in France beside the sea.
- All the green and idle weather,
- I have had in sun and shower
- Such an easy, warm subsistence,
- Such an indolent existence,
- I should find it hard to sever
- Day from day and hour from hour.
- Many a tract-provided ranter
- May upbraid me, dark and sour,
- Many a bland Utilitarian,
- Or excited Millenarian,
- --"_Pereunt et imputantur_"--
- You must speak to every hour.
- But (the very term's deception)
- You at least, my Friend, will see
- That in sunny grassy meadows,
- Trailed across by moving shadows,
- To be actively receptive
- Is as much as man can be.
- He that all the winter grapples
- Difficulties--thrust and ward--
- Needs to cheer him thro' his duty
- Memories of sun and beauty,
- Orchards with the russet apples
- Lying scattered on the sward.
- Many such I keep in prison,
- Keep them here at heart unseen,
- Till my muse again rehearses
- Long years hence, and in my verses
- You shall meet them re-arisen,
- Ever comely, ever green.
- You know how they never perish,
- How, in time of later art,
- Memories consecrate and sweeten
- Those defaced and tempest-beaten
- Flowers of former years we cherish
- Half a life, against our heart.
- Most, those love-fruits withered greenly,
- Those frail, sickly amourettes,--
- How they brighten with the distance,
- Take new strength and new existence,
- Till we see them sitting queenly
- Crowned and courted by regrets!
- All that loveliest and best is,
- Aureole-fashion round their head,
- They that looked in life but plainly,
- How they stir our spirits vainly
- When they come to us, Alcestis--
- Like returning from the dead!
- Not the old love but another,
- Bright she comes at memory's call,
- Our forgotten vows reviving
- To a newer, livelier living,
- As the dead child to the mother
- Seems the fairest child of all.
- Thus our Goethe, sacred master,
- Travelling backward thro' his youth,
- Surely wandered wrong in trying
- To renew the old, undying
- Loves that cling in memory faster
- Than they ever lived in truth.
- BOULOGNE-SUR-MER, _September 1872_.
- II
- RONDELS
- 1
- Far have you come, my lady, from the town,
- And far from all your sorrows, if you please,
- To smell the good sea-winds and hear the seas,
- And in green meadows lay your body down.
- To find your pale face grow from pale to brown,
- Your sad eyes growing brighter by degrees;
- Far have you come, my lady, from the town,
- And far from all your sorrows, if you please.
- Here in this seaboard land of old renown,
- In meadow grass go wading to the knees;
- Bathe your whole soul a while in simple ease;
- There is no sorrow but the sea can drown;
- Far have you come, my lady, from the town.
- 2
- _Nous n'irons plus au bois_
- We'll walk the woods no more,
- But stay beside the fire,
- To weep for old desire
- And things that are no more.
- The woods are spoiled and hoar,
- The ways are full of mire;
- We'll walk the woods no more,
- But stay beside the fire.
- We loved, in days of yore,
- Love, laughter, and the lyre.
- Ah God, but death is dire,
- And death is at the door--
- We'll walk the woods no more.
- CHÂTEAU RENARD, _August 1875_.
- 3
- Since I am sworn to live my life
- And not to keep an easy heart,
- Some men may sit and drink apart,
- I bear a banner in the strife.
- Some can take quiet thought to wife,
- I am all day at _tierce_ and _carte_,
- Since I am sworn to live my life
- And not to keep an easy heart.
- I follow gaily to the fife,
- Leave Wisdom bowed above a chart,
- And Prudence brawing in the mart,
- And dare Misfortune to the knife,
- Since I am sworn to live my life.
- 4
- OF HIS PITIABLE TRANSFORMATION
- I who was young so long,
- Young and alert and gay,
- Now that my hair is grey,
- Begin to change my song.
- Now I know right from wrong,
- Now I know _pay_ and _pray_,
- I who was young so long,
- Young and alert and gay.
- Now I follow the throng,
- Walk in the beaten way,
- Hear what the elders say,
- And own that I was wrong--
- I who was young so long.
- 1876.
- III
- EPISTLE TO CHARLES BAXTER
- Noo lyart leaves blaw ower the green,
- Red are the bonny woods o' Dean,
- An' here we're back in Embro, freen',
- To pass the winter.
- Whilk noo, wi' frosts afore, draws in,
- An' snaws ahint her.
- I've seen 's hae days to fricht us a',
- The Pentlands poothered weel wi' snaw,
- The ways half-smoored wi' liquid thaw,
- An' half-congealin',
- The snell an' scowtherin' norther blaw
- Frae blae Brunteelan'.
- I've seen 's been unco sweir to sally,
- And at the door-cheeks daff an' dally,
- Seen 's daidle thus an' shilly-shally
- For near a minute--
- Sae cauld the wind blew up the valley,
- The deil was in it!--
- Syne spread the silk an' tak the gate,
- In blast an' blaudin', rain, deil hae 't!
- The hale toon glintin', stane an' slate,
- Wi' cauld an' weet,
- An' to the Court, gin we 'se be late,
- Bicker oor feet.
- And at the Court, tae, aft I saw
- Whaur Advocates by twa an' twa
- Gang gesterin' end to end the ha'
- In weeg an' goon,
- To crack o' what ye wull but Law
- The hale forenoon.
- That muckle ha', maist like a kirk,
- I've kent at braid mid-day sae mirk
- Ye'd seen white weegs an' faces lurk
- Like ghaists frae Hell,
- But whether Christian ghaists or Turk,
- Deil ane could tell.
- The three fires lunted in the gloom,
- The wind blew like the blast o' doom,
- The rain upo' the roof abune
- Played Peter Dick--
- Ye wad nae'd licht enough i' the room
- Your teeth to pick!
- But, freend, ye ken how me an' you,
- The ling-lang lanely winter through,
- Keep'd a guid speerit up, an' true
- To lore Horatian,
- We aye the ither bottle drew
- To inclination.
- Sae let us in the comin' days
- Stand sicker on our auncient ways--
- The strauchtest road in a' the maze
- Since Eve ate apples;
- An' let the winter weet our cla'es--
- We'll weet oor thrapples.
- EDINBURGH, _October 1875_.
- IV
- THE SUSQUEHANNAH AND THE DELAWARE
- Of where or how, I nothing know;
- And why, I do not care;
- Enough if, even so,
- My travelling eyes, my travelling mind can go
- By flood and field and hill, by wood and meadow fair,
- Beside the Susquehannah and along the Delaware.
- I think, I hope, I dream no more
- The dreams of otherwhere,
- The cherished thoughts of yore;
- I have been changed from what I was before;
- And drunk too deep perchance the lotus of the air,
- Beside the Susquehannah and along the Delaware.
- Unweary, God me yet shall bring
- To lands of brighter air,
- Where I, now half a king,
- Shall with enfranchised spirit loudlier sing,
- And wear a bolder front than that which now I wear
- Beside the Susquehannah and along the Delaware.
- _August 1879._
- V
- EPISTLE TO ALBERT DEW-SMITH
- Figure me to yourself, I pray--
- A man of my peculiar cut--
- Apart from dancing and deray,[1]
- Into an Alpine valley shut;
- Shut in a kind of damned Hotel,
- Discountenanced by God and man;
- The food?--Sir, you would do as well
- To cram your belly full of bran.
- The company? Alas, the day
- That I should dwell with such a crew,
- With devil anything to say,
- Nor any one to say it to!
- The place? Although they call it Platz,
- I will be bold and state my view;
- It's not a place at all--and that's
- The bottom verity, my Dew.
- There are, as I will not deny,
- Innumerable inns; a road;
- Several Alps indifferent high;
- The snow's inviolable abode;
- Eleven English parsons, all
- Entirely inoffensive; four
- True human beings--what I call
- Human--the deuce a cipher more;
- A climate of surprising worth;
- Innumerable dogs that bark;
- Some air, some weather, and some earth;
- A native race--God save the mark!--
- A race that works, yet cannot work,
- Yodels, but cannot yodel right,
- Such as, unhelp'd, with rusty dirk,
- I vow that I could wholly smite.
- A river that from morn to night
- Down all the valley plays the fool;
- Not once she pauses in her flight,
- Nor knows the comfort of a pool;
- But still keeps up, by straight or bend,
- The selfsame pace she hath begun--
- Still hurry, hurry, to the end--
- Good God, is that the way to run?
- If I a river were, I hope
- That I should better realise
- The opportunities and scope
- Of that romantic enterprise.
- I should not ape the merely strange,
- But aim besides at the divine;
- And continuity and change
- I still should labour to combine.
- Here should I gallop down the race,
- Here charge the sterling[2] like a bull;
- There, as a man might wipe his face,
- Lie, pleased and panting, in a pool.
- But what, my Dew, in idle mood,
- What prate I, minding not my debt?
- What do I talk of bad or good?
- The best is still a cigarette.
- Me whether evil fate assault,
- Or smiling providences crown--
- Whether on high the eternal vault
- Be blue, or crash with thunder down--
- I judge the best, whate'er befall,
- Is still to sit on one's behind,
- And, having duly moistened all,
- Smoke with an unperturbed mind.
- DAVOS, _November 1880_.
- FOOTNOTES:
- [1] "The whole front of the house was lighted, and there were pipes
- and fiddles, and as much dancing and deray within as used to be in
- Sir Robert's house at Pace and Yule, and such high seasons."--See
- "Wandering Willie's Tale" in "Redgauntlet," borrowed perhaps from
- "Christ's Kirk of the Green."
- [2] In architecture, a series of piles to defend the pier of a bridge.
- VI
- ALCAICS TO HORATIO F. BROWN
- Brave lads in olden musical centuries,
- Sang, night by night, adorable choruses,
- Sat late by alehouse doors in April
- Chaunting in joy as the moon was rising:
- Moon-seen and merry, under the trellises,
- Flush-faced they played with old polysyllables;
- Spring scents inspired, old wine diluted;
- Love and Apollo were there to chorus.
- Now these, the songs, remain to eternity,
- Those, only those, the bountiful choristers
- Gone--those are gone, those unremembered
- Sleep and are silent in earth for ever.
- So man himself appears and evanishes,
- So smiles and goes; as wanderers halting at
- Some green-embowered house, play their music,
- Play and are gone on the windy highway;
- Yet dwells the strain enshrined in the memory
- Long after they departed eternally,
- Forth-faring tow'rd far mountain summits,
- Cities of men on the sounding Ocean.
- Youth sang the song in years immemorial;
- Brave chanticleer, he sang and was beautiful;
- Bird-haunted, green tree-tops in springtime
- Heard and were pleased by the voice of singing;
- Youth goes, and leaves behind him a prodigy--
- Songs sent by thee afar from Venetian
- Sea-grey lagunes, sea-paven highways,
- Dear to me here in my Alpine exile.
- DAVOS, _Spring 1881_.
- VII
- A LYTLE JAPE OF TUSHERIE
- _By A. Tusher_
- The pleasant river gushes
- Among the meadows green;
- At home the author tushes;
- For him it flows unseen.
- The Birds among the Bushes
- May wanton on the spray;
- But vain for him who tushes
- The brightness of the day!
- The frog among the rushes
- Sits singing in the blue.
- By 'r la'kin! but these tushes
- Are wearisome to do!
- The task entirely crushes
- The spirit of the bard:
- God pity him who tushes--
- His task is very hard.
- The filthy gutter slushes,
- The clouds are full of rain,
- But doomed is he who tushes
- To tush and tush again.
- At morn with his hair-brushes,
- Still "tush" he says and weeps;
- At night again he tushes,
- And tushes till he sleeps.
- And when at length he pushes
- Beyond the river dark--
- 'Las, to the man who tushes,
- "Tush" shall be God's remark!
- HYÈRES, _May 1883_.
- VIII
- TO VIRGIL AND DORA WILLIAMS
- Here, from the forelands of the tideless sea,
- Behold and take my offering unadorned.
- In the Pacific air it sprang; it grew
- Among the silence of the Alpine air;
- In Scottish heather blossomed; and at last
- By that unshapen sapphire, in whose face
- Spain, Italy, France, Algiers, and Tunis view
- Their introverted mountains, came to fruit.
- Back now, my Booklet! on the diving ship,
- And posting on the rails, to home return,--
- Home, and the friends whose honouring name you bear.
- HYÈRES, 1883.
- IX
- BURLESQUE SONNET
- TO ÆNEAS WILLIAM MACKINTOSH
- Thee, Mackintosh, artificer of light,
- Thee, the lone smoker hails! the student, thee;
- Thee, oft upon the ungovernable sea,
- The seaman, conscious of approaching night;
- Thou, with industrious fingers, hast outright
- Mastered that art, of other arts the key,
- That bids thick night before the morning flee,
- And lingering day retains for mortal sight.
- O Promethean workman, thee I hail,
- Thee hallowed, thee unparalleled, thee bold
- To affront the reign of sleep and darkness old,
- Thee William, thee Æneas, thee I sing;
- Thee by the glimmering taper clear and pale,
- Of light, and light's purveyance, hail, the king.
- X
- THE FINE PACIFIC ISLANDS
- (HEARD IN A PUBLIC-HOUSE AT ROTHERHITHE)
- The jolly English Yellowboy
- Is a 'ansome coin when new,
- The Yankee Double-eagle
- Is large enough for two.
- O, these may do for seaport towns,
- For cities these may do;
- But the dibbs that takes the Hislands
- Are the dollars of Peru:
- O, the fine Pacific Hislands,
- O, the dollars of Peru!
- It's there we buy the cocoanuts
- Mast 'eaded in the blue;
- It's there we trap the lasses
- All waiting for the crew;
- It's there we buy the trader's rum
- What bores a seaman through....
- In the fine Pacific Hislands
- With the dollars of Peru:
- In the fine Pacific Hislands
- With the dollars of Peru!
- Now, messmates, when my watch is up,
- And I am quite broached to,
- I'll give a tip to 'Evving
- Of the 'ansome thing to do:
- Let 'em just refit this sailor-man
- And launch him off anew
- To cruise among the Hislands
- With the dollars of Peru:
- In the fine Pacific Hislands
- With the dollars of Peru!
- TAHITI, _August 1888_.
- XI
- AULD REEKIE
- When chitterin' cauld the day sall daw,
- Loud may your bonny bugles blaw
- And loud your drums may beat.
- Hie owre the land at evenfa'
- Your lamps may glitter raw by raw,
- Along the gowsty street.
- I gang nae mair where ance I gaed,
- By Brunston, Fairmileheid, or Braid;
- But far frae Kirk and Tron.
- O still ayont the muckle sea,
- Still are ye dear, and dear to me,
- Auld Reekie, still and on!
- XII
- THE LESSON OF THE MASTER
- TO HENRY JAMES
- Adela, Adela, Adela Chart,
- What have you done to my elderly heart?
- Of all the ladies of paper and ink
- I count you the paragon, call you the pink.
- The word of your brother depicts you in part:
- "You raving maniac!" Adela Chart;
- But in all the asylums that cumber the ground,
- So delightful a maniac was ne'er to be found.
- I pore on you, dote on you, clasp you to heart,
- I laud, love, and laugh at you, Adela Chart,
- And thank my dear maker the while I admire
- That I can be neither your husband nor sire.
- Your husband's, your sire's, were a difficult part;
- You're a byway to suicide, Adela Chart;
- But to read of, depicted by exquisite James,
- O, sure you're the flower and quintessence of dames.
- VAILIMA, _October 1891_.
- XIII
- THE CONSECRATION OF BRAILLE
- TO MRS. A. BAKER
- I was a barren tree before,
- I blew a quenchèd coal,
- I could not, on their midnight shore,
- The lonely blind console.
- A moment, lend your hand, I bring
- My sheaf for you to bind,
- And you can teach my words to sing
- In the darkness of the blind.
- VAILIMA, _December 1893_.
- XIV
- SONG
- Light foot and tight foot,
- And green grass spread,
- Early in the morning,
- But hope is on ahead.
- Brief day and bright day,
- And sunset red,
- Early in the evening,
- The stars are overhead.
- PRINTED BY
- CASSELL & CO., LIMITED, LA BELLE SAUVAGE
- LONDON, E.C.
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