- The Project Gutenberg EBook of Last Poems, by Edward Thomas
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
- almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
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- Title: Last Poems
- Author: Edward Thomas
- Release Date: September 23, 2007 [EBook #22732]
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LAST POEMS ***
- Produced by Lewis Jones
- Edward Thomas (1918) _Last Poems_
- LAST POEMS
- By
- EDWARD THOMAS
- LONDON:
- SELWYN & BLOUNT,
- 12, YORK BUILDINGS, ADELPHI, W.C. 2.
- 1918.
- CONTENTS
- I never saw that Land before
- The Dark Forest
- Celandine
- The Ash Grove
- Old Man
- The Thrush
- I built myself a House of Glass
- February Afternoon
- Digging
- Two Houses
- The Mill-water
- A Dream
- Sedge-Warblers
- Under the Woods
- What will they do?
- To-night
- A Cat
- The Unknown
- Song
- She dotes
- For These
- March the Third
- The New House
- March
- The Cuckoo
- Over the Hills
- Home
- The Hollow Wood
- Wind and Mist
- The Unknown Bird
- The Lofty Sky
- After Rain
- Digging
- But these things also
- April
- The Barn
- The Barn and the Down
- The Child on the Cliffs
- Good-night
- The Wasp Trap
- July
- A Tale
- Parting
- Lovers
- That Girl's Clear Eyes
- The Child in the Orchard
- The Source
- The Mountain Chapel
- First known when lost
- The Word
- These things that Poets said
- Home
- Aspens
- An Old Song
- There was a Time
- Ambition
- No one cares less than I
- Roads
- This is no case of petty Right or Wrong
- The Chalk-Pit
- Health
- Beauty
- Snow
- The New Year
- The Brook
- The Other
- House and Man
- The Gypsy
- Man and Dog
- A Private
- Out in the Dark
- I NEVER SAW THAT LAND BEFORE
- I NEVER saw that land before,
- And now can never see it again;
- Yet, as if by acquaintance hoar
- Endeared, by gladness and by pain,
- Great was the affection that I bore
- To the valley and the river small,
- The cattle, the grass, the bare ash trees,
- The chickens from the farmsteads, all
- Elm-hidden, and the tributaries
- Descending at equal interval;
- The blackthorns down along the brook
- With wounds yellow as crocuses
- Where yesterday the labourer's hook
- Had sliced them cleanly; and the breeze
- That hinted all and nothing spoke.
- I neither expected anything
- Nor yet remembered: but some goal
- I touched then; and if I could sing
- What would not even whisper my soul
- As I went on my journeying,
- I should use, as the trees and birds did,
- A language not to be betrayed;
- And what was hid should still be hid
- Excepting from those like me made
- Who answer when such whispers bid.
- THE DARK FOREST
- DARK is the forest and deep, and overhead
- Hang stars like seeds of light
- In vain, though not since they were sown was bred
- Anything more bright.
- And evermore mighty multitudes ride
- About, nor enter in;
- Of the other multitudes that dwell inside
- Never yet was one seen.
- The forest foxglove is purple, the marguerite
- Outside is gold and white,
- Nor can those that pluck either blossom greet
- The others, day or night.
- CELANDINE
- THINKING of her had saddened me at first,
- Until I saw the sun on the celandines lie
- Redoubled, and she stood up like a flame,
- A living thing, not what before I nursed,
- The shadow I was growing to love almost,
- The phantom, not the creature with bright eye
- That I had thought never to see, once lost.
- She found the celandines of February
- Always before us all. Her nature and name
- Were like those flowers, and now immediately
- For a short swift eternity back she came,
- Beautiful, happy, simply as when she wore
- Her brightest bloom among the winter hues
- Of all the world; and I was happy too,
- Seeing the blossoms and the maiden who
- Had seen them with me Februarys before,
- Bending to them as in and out she trod
- And laughed, with locks sweeping the mossy sod.
- But this was a dream: the flowers were not true,
- Until I stooped to pluck from the grass there
- One of five petals and I smelt the juice
- Which made me sigh, remembering she was no more,
- Gone like a never perfectly recalled air.
- THE ASH GROVE
- HALF of the grove stood dead, and those that yet
- lived made
- Little more than the dead ones made of shade.
- If they led to a house, long before they had seen
- its fall:
- But they welcomed me; I was glad without cause
- and delayed.
- Scarce a hundred paces under the trees was the
- Interval--
- Paces each sweeter than sweetest miles--but
- nothing at all,
- Not even the spirits of memory and fear with
- restless wing,
- Could climb down in to molest me over the wall
- That I passed through at either end without
- noticing.
- And now an ash grove far from those hills can bring
- The same tranquillity in which I wander a ghost
- With a ghostly gladness, as if I heard a girl sing
- The song of the Ash Grove soft as love uncrossed,
- And then in a crowd or in distance it were lost,
- But the moment unveiled something unwilling
- to die
- And I had what most I desired, without search or
- desert or cost.
- OLD MAN
- OLD Man, or Lad's-love,--in the name there's
- nothing
- To one that knows not Lad's-love, or Old Man,
- The hoar-green feathery herb, almost a tree,
- Growing with rosemary and lavender.
- Even to one that knows it well, the names
- Half decorate, half perplex, the thing it is:
- At least, what that is clings not to the names
- In spite of time. And yet I like the names.
- The herb itself I like not, but for certain
- I love it, as some day the child will love it
- Who plucks a feather from the door-side bush
- Whenever she goes in or out of the house.
- Often she waits there, snipping the tips and
- shrivelling
- The shreds at last on to the path, perhaps
- Thinking, perhaps of nothing, till she sniffs
- Her fingers and runs off. The bush is still
- But half as tall as she, though it is as old;
- So well she clips it. Not a word she says;
- And I can only wonder how much hereafter
- She will remember, with that bitter scent,
- Of garden rows, and ancient damson-trees
- Topping a hedge, a bent path to a door,
- A low thick bush beside the door, and me
- Forbidding her to pick.
- As for myself,
- Where first I met the bitter scent is lost.
- I, too, often shrivel the grey shreds,
- Sniff them and think and sniff again and try
- Once more to think what it is I am remembering,
- Always in vain. I cannot like the scent,
- Yet I would rather give up others more sweet,
- With no meaning, than this bitter one.
- I have mislaid the key. I sniff the spray
- And think of nothing; I see and I hear nothing;
- Yet seem, too, to be listening, lying in wait
- For what I should, yet never can, remember:
- No garden appears, no path, no hoar-green bush
- Of Lad's-love, or Old Man, no child beside,
- Neither father nor mother, nor any playmate;
- Only an avenue, dark, nameless, without end.
- THE THRUSH
- WHEN Winter's ahead,
- What can you read in November
- That you read in April
- When Winter's dead?
- I hear the thrush, and I see
- Him alone at the end of the lane
- Near the bare poplar's tip,
- Singing continuously.
- Is it more that you know
- Than that, even as in April,
- So in November,
- Winter is gone that must go?
- Or is all your lore
- Not to call November November,
- And April April,
- And Winter Winter--no more?
- But I know the months all,
- And their sweet names, April,
- May and June and October,
- As you call and call
- I must remember
- What died into April
- And consider what will be born
- Of a fair November;
- And April I love for what
- It was born of, and November
- For what it will die in,
- What they are and what they are not,
- While you love what is kind,
- What you can sing in
- And love and forget in
- All that's ahead and behind.
- I BUILT MYSELF A HOUSE OF GLASS.
- I BUILT myself a house of glass:
- It took me years to make it:
- And I was proud. But now, alas,
- Would God someone would break it.
- But it looks too magnificent.
- No neighbour casts a stone
- From where he dwells, in tenement
- Or palace of glass, alone.
- FEBRUARY AFTERNOON
- MEN heard this roar of parleying starlings, saw,
- A thousand years ago even as now,
- Black rooks with white gulls following the plough
- So that the first are last until a caw
- Commands that last are first again,--a law
- Which was of old when one, like me, dreamed
- how
- A thousand years might dust lie on his brow
- Yet thus would birds do between hedge and shaw.
- Time swims before me, making as a day
- A thousand years, while the broad ploughland
- oak
- Roars mill-like and men strike and bear the
- stroke
- Of war as ever, audacious or resigned,
- And God still sits aloft in the array
- That we have wrought him, stone-deaf and
- stone-blind.
- DIGGING
- WHAT matter makes my spade for tears or mirth,
- Letting down two clay pipes into the earth?
- The one I smoked, the other a soldier
- Of Blenheim, Ramillies, and Malplaquet
- Perhaps. The dead man's immortality
- Lies represented lightly with my own,
- A yard or two nearer the living air
- Than bones of ancients who, amazed to see
- Almighty God erect the mastodon,
- Once laughed, or wept, in this same light of day.
- TWO HOUSES
- BETWEEN a sunny bank and the sun
- The farmhouse smiles
- On the riverside plat:
- No other one
- So pleasant to look at
- And remember, for many miles,
- So velvet-hushed and cool under the warm tiles.
- Not far from the road it lies, yet caught
- Far out of reach
- Of the road's dust
- And the dusty thought
- Of passers-by, though each
- Stops, and turns, and must
- Look down at it like a wasp at the muslined peach.
- But another house stood there long before:
- And as if above graves
- Still the turf heaves
- Above its stones:
- Dark hangs the sycamore,
- Shadowing kennel and bones
- And the black dog that shakes his chain and moans.
- And when he barks, over the river
- Flashing fast,
- Dark echoes reply,
- And the hollow past
- Half yields the dead that never
- More than half hidden lie:
- And out they creep and back again for ever.
- THE MILL-WATER
- ONLY the sound remains
- Of the old mill;
- Gone is the wheel;
- On the prone roof and walls the nettle reigns.
- Water that toils no more
- Dangles white locks
- And, falling, mocks
- The music of the mill-wheel's busy roar.
- Pretty to see, by day
- Its sound is naught
- Compared with thought
- And talk and noise of labour and of play.
- Night makes the difference.
- In calm moonlight,
- Gloom infinite,
- The sound comes surging in upon the sense:
- Solitude, company,--
- When it is night,--
- Grief or delight
- By it must haunted or concluded be.
- Often the silentness
- Has but this one
- Companion;
- Wherever one creeps in the other is:
- Sometimes a thought is drowned
- By it, sometimes
- Out of it climbs;
- All thoughts begin or end upon this sound,
- Only the idle foam
- Of water falling
- Changelessly calling,
- Where once men had a work-place and a home.
- A DREAM
- OVER known fields with an old friend in dream
- I walked, but came sudden to a strange stream.
- Its dark waters were bursting out most bright
- From a great mountain's heart into the light.
- They ran a short course under the sun, then back
- Into a pit they plunged, once more as black
- As at their birth; and I stood thinking there
- How white, had the day shone on them, they were,
- Heaving and coiling. So by the roar and hiss
- And by the mighty motion of the abyss
- I was bemused, that I forgot my friend
- And neither saw nor sought him till the end,
- When I awoke from waters unto men
- Saying: "I shall be here some day again."
- SEDGE-WARBLERS
- THIS beauty made me dream there was a time
- Long past and irrecoverable, a clime
- Where any brook so radiant racing clear
- Through buttercup and kingcup bright as brass
- But gentle, nourishing the meadow grass
- That leans and scurries in the wind, would bear
- Another beauty, divine and feminine,
- Child to the sun, a nymph whose soul unstained
- Could love all day, and never hate or tire,
- A lover of mortal or immortal kin.
- And yet, rid of this dream, ere I had drained
- Its poison, quieted was my desire
- So that I only looked into the water,
- Clearer than any goddess or man's daughter,
- And hearkened while it combed the dark green hair
- And shook the millions of the blossoms white
- Of water-crowfoot, and curdled to one sheet
- The flowers fallen from the chestnuts in the park
- Far off. And sedge-warblers, clinging so light
- To willow twigs, sang longer than the lark,
- Quick, shrill, or grating, a song to match the heat
- Of the strong sun, nor less the water's cool,
- Gushing through narrows, swirling in the pool.
- Their song that lacks all words, all melody,
- All sweetness almost, was dearer then to me
- Than sweetest voice that sings in tune sweet words.
- This was the best of May--the small brown birds
- Wisely reiterating endlessly
- What no man learnt yet, in or out of school.
- UNDER THE WOODS
- WHEN these old woods were young
- The thrushes' ancestors
- As sweetly sung
- In the old years.
- There was no garden here,
- Apples nor mistletoe;
- No children dear
- Ran to and fro.
- New then was this thatched cot,
- But the keeper was old,
- And he had not
- Much lead or gold.
- Most silent beech and yew:
- As he went round about
- The woods to view
- Seldom he shot.
- But now that he is gone
- Out of most memories,
- Still lingers on,
- A stoat of his,
- But one, shrivelled and green,
- And with no scent at all,
- And barely seen
- On this shed wall.
- WHAT WILL THEY DO?
- What will they do when I am gone? It is plain
- That they will do without me as the rain
- Can do without the flowers and the grass
- That profit by it and must perish without.
- I have but seen them in the loud street pass;
- And I was naught to them. I turned about
- To see them disappearing carelessly.
- But what if I in them as they in me
- Nourished what has great value and no price?
- Almost I thought that rain thirsts for a draught
- Which only in the blossom's chalice lies,
- Until that one turned back and lightly laughed.
- TO-NIGHT
- HARRY, you know at night
- The larks in Castle Alley
- Sing from the attic's height
- As if the electric light
- Were the true sun above a summer valley:
- Whistle, don't knock, to-night.
- I shall come early, Kate:
- And we in Castle Alley
- Will sit close out of sight
- Alone, and ask no light
- Of lamp or sun above a summer valley:
- To-night I can stay late.
- A CAT
- She had a name among the children;
- But no one loved though someone owned
- Her, locked her out of doors at bedtime
- And had her kittens duly drowned.
- In Spring, nevertheless, this cat
- Ate blackbirds, thrushes, nightingales,
- And birds of bright voice and plume and flight,
- As well as scraps from neighbours' pails.
- I loathed and hated her for this;
- One speckle on a thrush's breast
- Was worth a million such; and yet
- She lived long, till God gave her rest.
- THE UNKNOWN
- SHE is most fair,
- And when they see her pass
- The poets' ladies
- Look no more in the glass
- But after her.
- On a bleak moor
- Running under the moon
- She lures a poet,
- Once proud or happy, soon
- Far from his door.
- Beside a train,
- Because they saw her go,
- Or failed to see her,
- Travellers and watchers know
- Another pain.
- The simple lack
- Of her is more to me
- Than others' presence,
- Whether life splendid be
- Or utter black.
- I have not seen,
- I have no news of her;
- I can tell only
- She is not here, but there
- She might have been.
- She is to be kissed
- Only perhaps by me;
- She may be seeking
- Me and no other; she
- May not exist.
- SONG
- AT poet's tears,
- Sweeter than any smiles but hers,
- She laughs; I sigh;
- And yet I could not live if she should die.
- And when in June
- Once more the cuckoo spoils his tune,
- She laughs at sighs;
- And yet she says she loves me till she dies.
- SHE DOTES
- SHE dotes on what the wild birds say
- Or hint or mock at, night and day,--
- Thrush, blackbird, all that sing in May,
- And songless plover,
- Hawk, heron, owl, and woodpecker.
- They never say a word to her
- About her lover.
- She laughs at them for childishness,
- She cries at them for carelessness
- Who see her going loverless
- Yet sing and chatter
- Just as when he was not a ghost,
- Nor ever ask her what she has lost
- Or what is the matter.
- Yet she has fancied blackbirds hide
- A secret, and that thrushes chide
- Because she thinks death can divide
- Her from her lover;
- And she has slept, trying to translate
- The word the cuckoo cries to his mate
- Over and over.
- FOR THESE
- AN acre of land between the shore and the hills,
- Upon a ledge that shows my kingdoms three,
- The lovely visible earth and sky and sea,
- Where what the curlew needs not, the farmer tills:
- A house that shall love me as I love it,
- Well-hedged, and honoured by a few ash-trees
- That linnets, greenfinches, and goldfinches
- Shall often visit and make love in and flit:
- A garden I need never go beyond,
- Broken but neat, whose sunflowers every one
- Are fit to be the sign of the Rising Sun:
- A spring, a brook's bend, or at least a pond:
- For these I ask not, but, neither too late
- Nor yet too early, for what men call content,
- And also that something may be sent
- To be contented with, I ask of fate.
- MARCH THE THIRD*
- HERE again (she said) is March the third
- And twelve hours singing for the bird
- 'Twixt dawn and dusk, from half past six
- To half past six, never unheard.
- 'Tis Sunday, and the church-bells end
- When the birds do. I think they blend
- Now better than they will when passed
- Is this unnamed, unmarked godsend.
- Or do all mark, and none dares say,
- How it may shift and long delay,
- Somewhere before the first of Spring,
- But never fails, this singing day?
- And when it falls on Sunday, bells
- Are a wild natural voice that dwells
- On hillsides; but the birds' songs have
- The holiness gone from the bells.
- This day unpromised is more dear
- Than all the named days of the year
- When seasonable sweets come in,
- Because we know how lucky we are.
- * The author's birthday.
- THE NEW HOUSE
- Now first, as I shut the door,
- I was alone
- In the new house; and the wind
- Began to moan.
- Old at once was the house,
- And I was old;
- My ears were teased with the dread
- Of what was foretold,
- Nights of storm, days of mist, without end;
- Sad days when the sun
- Shone in vain: old griefs and griefs
- Not yet begun.
- All was foretold me; naught
- Could I foresee;
- But I learned how the wind would sound
- After these things should be.
- MARCH
- Now I know that Spring will come again,
- Perhaps to-morrow: however late I've patience
- After this night following on such a day.
- While still my temples ached from the cold burning
- Of hail and wind, and still the primroses
- Torn by the hail were covered up in it,
- The sun filled earth and heaven with a great light
- And a tenderness, almost warmth, where the hail
- dripped,
- As if the mighty sun wept tears of joy.
- But 'twas too late for warmth. The sunset piled
- Mountains on mountains of snow and ice in the
- west:
- Somewhere among their folds the wind was lost,
- And yet 'twas cold, and though I knew that
- Spring
- Would come again, I knew it had not come,
- That it was lost too in those mountains chill.
- What did the thrushes know? Rain, snow, sleet,
- hail,
- Had kept them quiet as the primroses.
- They had but an hour to sing. On boughs they
- sang,
- On gates, on ground; they sang while they
- changed perches
- And while they fought, if they remembered to
- fight:
- So earnest were they to pack into that hour
- Their unwilling hoard of song before the moon
- Grew brighter than the clouds. Then 'twas
- no time
- For singing merely. So they could keep off silence
- And night, they cared not what they sang or
- screamed;
- Whether 'twas hoarse or sweet or fierce or soft;
- And to me all was sweet: they could do no wrong.
- Something they knew--I also, while they sang
- And after. Not till night had half its stars
- And never a cloud, was I aware of silence
- Stained with all that hour's songs, a silence
- Saying that Spring returns, perhaps to-morrow.
- THE CUCKOO
- THAT'S the cuckoo, you say. I cannot hear it.
- When last I heard it I cannot recall; but I know
- Too well the year when first I failed to hear it--
- It was drowned by my man groaning out to his
- sheep "Ho! Ho!"
- Ten times with an angry voice he shouted
- "Ho! Ho!" but not in anger, for that was his
- way.
- He died that Summer, and that is how I remember
- The cuckoo calling, the children listening, and me
- saying, "Nay."
- And now, as you said, "There it is," I was hearing
- Not the cuckoo at all, but my man's "Ho! Ho!"
- instead.
- And I think that even if I could lose my deafness
- The cuckoo's note would be drowned by the voice
- of my dead.
- OVER THE HILLS
- OFTEN and often it came back again
- To mind, the day I passed the horizon ridge
- To a new country, the path I had to find
- By half-gaps that were stiles once in the hedge,
- The pack of scarlet clouds running across
- The harvest evening that seemed endless then
- And after, and the inn where all were kind,
- All were strangers. I did not know my loss
- Till one day twelve months later suddenly
- I leaned upon my spade and saw it all,
- Though far beyond the sky-line. It became
- Almost a habit through the year for me
- To lean and see it and think to do the same
- Again for two days and a night. Recall
- Was vain: no more could the restless brook
- Ever turn back and climb the waterfall
- To the lake that rests and stirs not in its nook,
- As in the hollow of the collar-bone
- Under the mountain's head of rush and stone.
- HOME
- OFTEN I had gone this way before:
- But now it seemed I never could be
- And never had been anywhere else;
- 'Twas home; one nationality
- We had, I and the birds that sang,
- One memory.
- They welcomed me. I had come back
- That eve somehow from somewhere far:
- The April mist, the chill, the calm,
- Meant the same thing familiar
- And pleasant to us, and strange too,
- Yet with no bar.
- The thrush on the oaktop in the lane
- Sang his last song, or last but one;
- And as he ended, on the elm
- Another had but just begun
- His last; they knew no more than I
- The day was done.
- Then past his dark white cottage front
- A labourer went along, his tread
- Slow, half with weariness, half with ease;
- And, through the silence, from his shed
- The sound of sawing rounded all
- That silence said.
- THE HOLLOW WOOD
- OUT in the sun the goldfinch flits
- Along the thistle-tops, flits and twits
- Above the hollow wood
- Where birds swim like fish--
- Fish that laugh and shriek--
- To and fro, far below
- In the pale hollow wood.
- Lichen, ivy, and moss
- Keep evergreen the trees
- That stand half-flayed and dying,
- And the dead trees on their knees
- In dog's-mercury and moss:
- And the bright twit of the goldfinch drops
- Down there as he flits on thistle-tops.
- WIND AND MIST
- THEY met inside the gateway that gives the view,
- A hollow land as vast as heaven. "It is
- A pleasant day, sir." "A very pleasant day."
- "And what a view here. If you like angled fields
- Of grass and grain bounded by oak and thorn,
- Here is a league. Had we with Germany
- To play upon this board it could not be
- More dear than April has made it with a smile.
- The fields beyond that league close in together
- And merge, even as our days into the past,
- Into one wood that has a shining pane
- Of water. Then the hills of the horizon--
- That is how I should make hills had I to show
- One who would never see them what hills were
- like."
- "Yes. Sixty miles of South Downs at one glance.
- Sometimes a man feels proud at them, as if
- He had just created them with one mighty
- thought."
- "That house, though modern, could not be better
- planned
- For its position. I never liked a new
- House better. Could you tell me who lives in
- it?"
- "No one." "Ah--and I was peopling all
- Those windows on the south with happy eyes,
- The terrace under them with happy feet;
- Girls--" "Sir, I know. I know. I have seen
- that house
- Through mist look lovely as a castle in Spain,
- And airier. I have thought: 'Twere happy there
- To live.' And I have laughed at that
- Because I lived there then." "Extraordinary."
- "Yes, with my furniture and family
- Still in it, I, knowing every nook of it
- And loving none, and in fact hating it."
- "Dear me! How could that be? But pardon
- me."
- "No offence. Doubtless the house was not to
- blame,
- But the eye watching from those windows saw,
- Many a day, day after day, mist--mist
- Like chaos surging back--and felt itself
- Alone in all the world, marooned alone.
- We lived in clouds, on a cliff's edge almost
- (You see), and if clouds went, the visible earth
- Lay too far off beneath and like a cloud.
- I did not know it was the earth I loved
- Until I tried to live there in the clouds
- And the earth turned to cloud." "You had a
- garden
- Of flint and clay, too." "True; that was real
- enough.
- The flint was the one crop that never failed.
- The clay first broke my heart, and then my back;
- And the back heals not. There were other things
- Real, too. In that room at the gable a child
- Was born while the wind chilled a summer dawn:
- Never looked grey mind on a greyer one
- Than when the child's cry broke above the groans."
- "I hope they were both spared." "They were.
- Oh yes.
- But flint and clay and childbirth were too real
- For this cloud-castle. I had forgot the wind.
- Pray do not let me get on to the wind.
- You would not understand about the wind.
- It is my subject, and compared with me
- Those who have always lived on the firm ground
- Are quite unreal in this matter of the wind.
- There were whole days and nights when the wind
- and I
- Between us shared the world, and the wind ruled
- And I obeyed it and forgot the mist.
- My past and the past of the world were in the
- wind.
- Now you may say that though you understand
- And feel for me, and so on, you yourself
- Would find it different. You are all like that
- If once you stand here free from wind and mist:
- I might as well be talking to wind and mist.
- You would believe the house-agent's young man
- Who gives no heed to anything I say.
- Good morning. But one word. I want to admit
- That I would try the house once more, if I
- could;
- As I should like to try being young again."
- THE UNKNOWN BIRD
- THREE lovely notes he whistled, too soft to be
- heard
- If others sang; but others never sang
- In the great beech-wood all that May and June.
- No one saw him: I alone could hear him
- Though many listened. Was it but four years
- Ago? or five? He never came again.
- Oftenest when I heard him I was alone,
- Nor could I ever make another hear.
- La-la-la! he called, seeming far-off--
- As if a cock crowed past the edge of the world,
- As if the bird or I were in a dream.
- Yet that he travelled through the trees and some-
- times
- Neared me, was plain, though somehow distant
- still
- He sounded. All the proof is--I told men
- What I had heard.
- I never knew a voice,
- Man, beast, or bird, better than this. I told
- The naturalists; but neither had they heard
- Anything like the notes that did so haunt me,
- I had them clear by heart and have them still.
- Four years, or five, have made no difference.
- Then
- As now that La-la-la! was bodiless sweet:
- Sad more than joyful it was, if I must say
- That it was one or other, but if sad
- 'Twas sad only with joy too, too far off
- For me to taste it. But I cannot tell
- If truly never anything but fair
- The days were when he sang, as now they seem.
- This surely I know, that I who listened then,
- Happy sometimes, sometimes suffering
- A heavy body and a heavy heart,
- Now straightway, if I think of it, become
- Light as that bird wandering beyond my shore.
- THE LOFTY SKY
- TO-DAY I want the sky,
- The tops of the high hills,
- Above the last man's house,
- His hedges, and his cows,
- Where, if I will, I look
- Down even on sheep and rook,
- And of all things that move
- See buzzards only above:--
- Past all trees, past furze
- And thorn, where nought deters
- The desire of the eye
- For sky, nothing but sky.
- I sicken of the woods
- And all the multitudes
- Of hedge-trees. They are no more
- Than weeds upon this floor
- Of the river of air
- Leagues deep, leagues wide, where
- I am like a fish that lives
- In weeds and mud and gives
- What's above him no thought.
- I might be a tench for aught
- That I can do to-day
- Down on the wealden clay.
- Even the tench has days
- When he floats up and plays
- Among the lily leaves
- And sees the sky, or grieves
- Not if he nothing sees:
- While I, I know that trees
- Under that lofty sky
- Are weeds, fields mud, and I
- Would arise and go far
- To where the lilies are.
- AFTER RAIN
- THE rain of a night and a day and a night
- Stops at the light
- Of this pale choked day. The peering sun
- Sees what has been done.
- The road under the trees has a border new
- Of purple hue
- Inside the border of bright thin grass:
- For all that has
- Been left by November of leaves is torn
- From hazel and thorn
- And the greater trees. Throughout the copse
- No dead leaf drops
- On grey grass, green moss, burnt-orange fern,
- At the wind's return:
- The leaflets out of the ash-tree shed
- Are thinly spread
- In the road, like little black fish, inlaid,
- As if they played.
- What hangs from the myriad branches down there
- So hard and bare
- Is twelve yellow apples lovely to see
- On one crab-tree.
- And on each twig of every tree in the dell
- Uncountable
- Crystals both dark and bright of the rain
- That begins again.
- DIGGING
- TO-DAY I think
- Only with scents,--scents dead leaves yield,
- And bracken, and wild carrot's seed,
- And the square mustard field;
- Odours that rise
- When the spade wounds the root of tree,
- Rose, currant, raspberry, or goutweed,
- Rhubarb or celery;
- The smoke's smell, too,
- Flowing from where a bonfire burns
- The dead, the waste, the dangerous,
- And all to sweetness turns.
- It is enough
- To smell, to crumble the dark earth.
- While the robin sings over again
- Sad songs of Autumn mirth.
- BUT THESE THINGS ALSO
- BUT these things also are Spring's--
- On banks by the roadside the grass
- Long-dead that is greyer now
- Than all the Winter it was;
- The shell of a little snail bleached
- In the grass; chip of flint, and mite
- Of chalk; and the small birds' dung
- In splashes of purest white:
- All the white things a man mistakes
- For earliest violets
- Who seeks through Winter's ruins
- Something to pay Winter's debts,
- While the North blows, and starling flocks
- By chattering on and on
- Keep their spirits up in the mist,
- And Spring's here, Winter's not gone.
- APRIL
- THE sweetest thing, I thought
- At one time, between earth and heaven
- Was the first smile
- When mist has been forgiven
- And the sun has stolen out,
- Peered, and resolved to shine at seven
- On dabbled lengthening grasses,
- Thick primroses and early leaves uneven,
- When earth's breath, warm and humid, far sur-
- passes
- The richest oven's, and loudly rings "cuckoo"
- And sharply the nightingale's "tsoo, tsoo, tsoo,
- tsoo":
- To say "God bless it" was all that I could do.
- But now I know one sweeter
- By far since the day Emily
- Turned weeping back
- To me, still happy me,
- To ask forgiveness,--
- Yet smiled with half a certainty
- To be forgiven,--for what
- She had never done; I knew not what it might be,
- Nor could she tell me, having now forgot,
- By rapture carried with me past all care
- As to an isle in April lovelier
- Than April's self. "God bless you" I said to her.
- THE BARN
- THEY should never have built a barn there, at all--
- Drip, drip, drip!--under that elm tree,
- Though then it was young. Now it is old
- But good, not like the barn and me.
- To-morrow they cut it down. They will leave
- The barn, as I shall be left, maybe.
- What holds it up? 'Twould not pay to pull down.
- Well, this place has no other antiquity.
- No abbey or castle looks so old
- As this that Job Knight built in '54,
- Built to keep corn for rats and men.
- Now there's fowls in the roof, pigs on the floor.
- What thatch survives is dung for the grass,
- The best grass on the farm. A pity the roof
- Will not bear a mower to mow it. But
- Only fowls have foothold enough.
- Starlings used to sit there with bubbling throats
- Making a spiky beard as they chattered
- And whistled and kissed, with heads in air,
- Till they thought of something else that mattered.
- But now they cannot find a place,
- Among all those holes, for a nest any more.
- It's the turn of lesser things, I suppose.
- Once I fancied 'twas starlings they built it for.
- THE BARN AND THE DOWN
- IT stood in the sunset sky
- Like the straight-backed down,
- Many a time--the barn
- At the edge of the town,
- So huge and dark that it seemed
- It was the hill
- Till the gable's precipice proved
- It impossible.
- Then the great down in the west
- Grew into sight,
- A barn stored full to the ridge
- With black of night;
- And the barn fell to a barn
- Or even less
- Before critical eyes and its own
- Late mightiness.
- But far down and near barn and I
- Since then have smiled,
- Having seen my new cautiousness
- By itself beguiled
- To disdain what seemed the barn
- Till a few steps changed
- It past all doubt to the down;
- So the barn was avenged.
- THE CHILD ON THE CLIFFS
- MOTHER, the root of this little yellow flower
- Among the stones has the taste of quinine.
- Things are strange to-day on the cliff. The sun
- shines so bright,
- And the grasshopper works at his sewing-machine
- So hard. Here's one on my hand, mother, look;
- I lie so still. There's one on your book.
- But I have something to tell more strange. So
- leave
- Your book to the grasshopper, mother dear,--
- Like a green knight in a dazzling market-place,--
- And listen now. Can you hear what I hear
- Far out? Now and then the foam there curls
- And stretches a white arm out like a girl's.
- Fishes and gulls ring no bells. There cannot be
- A chapel or church between here and Devon,
- With fishes or gulls ringing its bell,--hark.--
- Somewhere under the sea or up in heaven.
- "It's the bell, my son, out in the bay
- On the buoy. It does sound sweet to-day."
- Sweeter I never heard, mother, no, not in all Wales.
- I should like to be lying under that foam,
- Dead, but able to hear the sound of the bell,
- And certain that you would often come
- And rest, listening happily.
- I should be happy if that could be.
- GOOD-NIGHT.
- THE skylarks are far behind that sang over the
- down;
- I can hear no more those suburb nightingales;
- Thrushes and blackbirds sing in the gardens of the
- town
- In vain: the noise of man, beast, and machine
- prevails.
- But the call of children in the unfamiliar streets
- That echo with a familiar twilight echoing,
- Sweet as the voice of nightingale or lark, completes
- A magic of strange welcome, so that I seem a king
- Among man, beast, machine, bird, child, and the
- ghost
- That in the echo lives and with the echo dies.
- The friendless town is friendly; homeless, I
- not lost;
- Though I know none of these doors, and meet but
- strangers' eyes.
- Never again, perhaps, after to-morrow, shall
- I see these homely streets, these church windows
- alight,
- Not a man or woman or child among them all:
- But it is All Friends' Night, a traveller's good
- night.
- THE WASP TRAP
- THIS moonlight makes
- The lovely lovelier
- Than ever before lakes
- And meadows were.
- And yet they are not,
- Though this their hour is, more
- Lovely than things that were not
- Lovely before.
- Nothing on earth,
- And in the heavens no star,
- For pure brightness is worth
- More than that jar,
- For wasps meant, now
- A star--long may it swing
- From the dead apple-bough,
- So glistening.
- JULY
- NAUGHT moves but clouds, and in the glassy lake
- Their doubles and the shadow of my boat.
- The boat itself stirs only when I break
- This drowse of heat and solitude afloat
- To prove if what I see be bird or mote,
- Or learn if yet the shore woods be awake.
- Long hours since dawn grew,--spread,--and passed
- on high
- And deep below,--I have watched the cool reeds
- hung
- Over images more cool in imaged sky:
- Nothing there was worth thinking of so long;
- All that the ring-doves say, far leaves among,
- Brims my mind with content thus still to lie.
- A TALE
- THERE once the walls
- Of the ruined cottage stood.
- The periwinkle crawls
- With flowers in its hair into the wood.
- In flowerless hours
- Never will the bank fail,
- With everlasting flowers
- On fragments of blue plates, to tell the tale.
- PARTING
- THE Past is a strange land, most strange.
- Wind blows not there, nor does rain fall:
- If they do, they cannot hurt at all.
- Men of all kinds as equals range
- The soundless fields and streets of it.
- Pleasure and pain there have no sting,
- The perished self not suffering
- That lacks all blood and nerve and wit,
- And is in shadow-land a shade.
- Remembered joy and misery
- Bring joy to the joyous equally;
- Both sadden the sad. So memory made
- Parting to-day a double pain:
- First because it was parting; next
- Because the ill it ended vexed
- And mocked me from the Past again,
- Not as what had been remedied
- Had I gone on,--not that, oh no!
- But as itself no longer woe;
- Sighs, angry word and look and deed
- Being faded: rather a kind of bliss,
- For there spiritualized it lay
- In the perpetual yesterday
- That naught can stir or stain like this.
- LOVERS
- THE two men in the road were taken aback.
- The lovers came out shading their eyes from the
- sun,
- And never was white so white, or black so black,
- As her cheeks and hair. "There are more things
- than one
- A man might turn into a wood for, Jack,"
- Said George; Jack whispered: "He has not got
- a gun.
- It's a bit too much of a good thing, I say.
- They are going the other road, look. And see her
- run."--
- She ran.--"What a thing it is, this picking may."
- THAT GIRL'S CLEAR EYES
- THAT girl's clear eyes utterly concealed all
- Except that there was something to reveal.
- And what did mine say in the interval?
- No more: no less. They are but as a seal
- Not to be broken till after I am dead;
- And then vainly. Every one of us
- This morning at our tasks left nothing said,
- In spite of many words. We were sealed thus,
- Like tombs. Nor until now could I admit
- That all I cared for was the pleasure and pain
- I tasted in the stony square sunlit,
- Or the dark cloisters, or shade of airy plane,
- While music blazed and children, line after line,
- Marched past, hiding the "SEVENTEEN THIRTY-
- NINE."
- THE CHILD IN THE ORCHARD
- "HE rolls in the orchard: he is stained with moss
- And with earth, the solitary old white horse.
- Where is his father and where is his mother
- Among all the brown horses? Has he a brother?
- I know the swallow, the hawk, and the hern;
- But there are two million things for me to learn.
- "Who was the lady that rode the white horse
- With rings and bells to Banbury Cross?
- Was there no other lady in England beside
- That a nursery rhyme could take for a ride?
- The swift, the swallow, the hawk, and the hern.
- There are two million things for me to learn.
- "Was there a man once who straddled across
- The back of the Westbury White Horse
- Over there on Salisbury Plain's green wall?
- Was he bound for Westbury, or had he a fall?
- The swift, the swallow, the hawk, and the hern.
- There are two million things for me to learn.
- "Out of all the white horses I know three,
- At the age of six; and it seems to me
- There is so much to learn, for men,
- That I dare not go to bed again.
- The swift, the swallow, the hawk, and the hern.
- There are millions of things for me to learn."
- THE SOURCE
- ALL day the air triumphs with its two voices
- Of wind and rain
- As loud as if in anger it rejoices,
- Drowning the sound of earth
- That gulps and gulps in choked endeavour vain
- To swallow the rain.
- Half the night, too, only the wild air speaks
- With wind and rain,
- Till forth the dumb source of the river breaks
- And drowns the rain and wind,
- Bellows like a giant bathing in mighty mirth
- The triumph of earth.
- THE MOUNTAIN CHAPEL
- CHAPEL and gravestones, old and few,
- Are shrouded by a mountain fold
- From sound and view
- Of life. The loss of the brook's voice
- Falls like a shadow. All they hear is
- The eternal noise
- Of wind whistling in grass more shrill
- Than aught as human as a sword,
- And saying still:
- "'Tis but a moment since man's birth
- And in another moment more
- Man lies in earth
- For ever; but I am the same
- Now, and shall be, even as I was
- Before he came;
- Till there is nothing I shall be."
- Yet there the sun shines after noon
- So cheerfully
- The place almost seems peopled, nor
- Lacks cottage chimney, cottage hearth:
- It is not more
- In size than is a cottage, less
- Than any other empty home
- In homeliness.
- It has a garden of wild flowers
- And finest grass and gravestones warm
- In sunshine hours
- The year through. Men behind the glass
- Stand once a week, singing, and drown
- The whistling grass
- Their ponies munch. And yet somewhere,
- Near or far off, there's a man could
- Be happy here,
- Or one of the gods perhaps, were they
- Not of inhuman stature dire,
- As poets say
- Who have not seen them clearly; if
- At sound of any wind of the world
- In grass-blades stiff
- They would not startle and shudder cold
- Under the sun. When gods were young
- This wind was old.
- FIRST KNOWN WHEN LOST
- I NEVER had noticed it until
- 'Twas gone,--the narrow copse
- Where now the woodman lops
- The last of the willows with his bill.
- It was not more than a hedge overgrown.
- One meadow's breadth away
- I passed it day by day.
- Now the soil was bare as a bone,
- And black betwixt two meadows green,
- Though fresh-cut faggot ends
- Of hazel made some amends
- With a gleam as if flowers they had been.
- Strange it could have hidden so near!
- And now I see as I look
- That the small winding brook,
- A tributary's tributary, rises there.
- THE WORD
- THERE are so many things I have forgot,
- That once were much to me, or that were not,
- All lost, as is a childless woman's child
- And its child's children, in the undefiled
- Abyss of what can never be again.
- I have forgot, too, names of the mighty men
- That fought and lost or won in the old wars,
- Of kings and fiends and gods, and most of the stars.
- Some things I have forgot that I forget.
- But lesser things there are, remembered yet,
- Than all the others. One name that I have not--
- Though 'tis an empty thingless name--forgot
- Never can die because Spring after Spring
- Some thrushes learn to say it as they sing.
- There is always one at midday saying it clear
- And tart--the name, only the name I hear.
- While perhaps I am thinking of the elder scent
- That is like food, or while I am content
- With the wild rose scent that is like memory,
- This name suddenly is cried out to me
- From somewhere in the bushes by a bird
- Over and over again, a pure thrush word.
- THESE THINGS THAT POETS SAID
- THESE things that poets said
- Of love seemed true to me
- When I loved and I fed
- On love and poetry equally.
- But now I wish I knew
- If theirs were love indeed,
- Or if mine were the true
- And theirs some other lovely weed:
- For certainly not thus,
- Then or thereafter, I
- Loved ever. Between us
- Decide, good Love, before I die.
- Only, that once I loved
- By this one argument
- Is very plainly proved:
- I, loving not, am different.
- HOME
- NOT the end: but there's nothing more.
- Sweet Summer and Winter rude
- I have loved, and friendship and love,
- The crowd and solitude:
- But I know them: I weary not;
- But all that they mean I know.
- I would go back again home
- Now. Yet how should I go?
- This is my grief. That land,
- My home, I have never seen;
- No traveller tells of it,
- However far he has been.
- Afid could I discover it,
- I fear my happiness there,
- Or my pain, might be dreams of return
- Here, to these things that were.
- Remembering ills, though slight
- Yet irremediable,
- Brings a worse, an impurer pang
- Than remembering what was well.
- No: I cannot go back,
- And would not if I could.
- Until blindness come, I must wait
- And blink at what is not good.
- ASPENS
- ALL day and night, save winter, every weather,
- Above the inn, the smithy, and the shop,
- The aspens at the cross-roads talk together
- Of rain, until their last leaves fall from the top.
- Out of the blacksmith's cavern comes the ringing
- Of hammer, shoe, and anvil; out of the inn
- The clink, the hum, the roar, the random singing--
- The sounds that for these fifty years have been.
- The whisper of the aspens is not drowned,
- And over lightless pane and footless road,
- Empty as sky, with every other sound
- Not ceasing, calls their ghosts from their abode,
- A silent smithy, a silent inn, nor fails
- In the bare moonlight or the thick-furred gloom,
- In tempest or the night of nightingales,
- To turn the cross-roads to a ghostly room.
- And it would be the same were no house near.
- Over all sorts of weather, men, and times,
- Aspens must shake their leaves and men may hear
- But need not listen, more than to my rhymes.
- Whatever wind blows, while they and I have leaves
- We cannot other than an aspen be
- That ceaselessly, unreasonably grieves,
- Or so men think who like a different tree.
- AN OLD SONG
- I WAS not apprenticed nor ever dwelt in famous
- Lincolnshire;
- I've served one master ill and well much more than
- seven year;
- And never took up to poaching as you shall quickly
- find;
- But 'tis my delight of a shiny night in the season
- of the year.
- I roamed where nobody had a right but keepers and
- squires, and there
- I sought for nests, wild flowers, oak sticks, and
- moles, both far and near.
- And had to run from farmers, and learnt the
- Lincolnshire song:
- "Oh, 'tis my delight of a shiny night in the
- season of the year."
- I took those walks years after, talking with friend
- or dear,
- Or solitary musing; but when the moon shone clear
- I had no joy or sorrow that could not be expressed
- By "'Tis my delight of a shiny night in the
- season of the year."
- Since then I've thrown away a chance to fight a
- gamekeeper;
- And I less often trespass, and what I see or hear
- Is mostly from the road or path by day: yet still
- I sing:
- "Oh, 'tis my delight of a shiny night in the
- season of the year."
- For if I am contented, at home or anywhere,
- Or if I sigh for I know not what, or my heart
- beats with some fear,
- It is a strange kind of delight to sing or whistle just:
- "Oh, 'tis my delight of a shiny night in the
- season of the year."
- And with this melody on my lips and no one by to
- care,
- Indoors, or out on shiny nights or dark in open air,
- I am for a moment made a man that sings out of
- his heart:
- "Oh, 'tis my delight of a shiny night in the
- season of the year."
- THERE WAS A TIME
- THERE was a time when this poor frame was whole
- And I had youth and never another care,
- Or none that should have troubled a strong soul.
- Yet, except sometimes in a frosty air
- When my heels hammered out a melody
- From pavements of a city left behind,
- I never would acknowledge my own glee
- Because it was less mighty than my mind
- Had dreamed of. Since I could not boast of strength
- Great as I wished, weakness was all my boast.
- I sought yet hated pity till at length
- I earned it. Oh, too heavy was the cost.
- But now that there is something I could use
- My youth and strength for, I deny the age,
- The care and weakness that I know--refuse
- To admit I am unworthy of the wage
- Paid to a man who gives up eyes and breath
- For what can neither ask nor heed his death.
- AMBITION
- UNLESS it was that day I never knew
- Ambition. After a night of frost, before
- The March sun brightened and the South-west blew,
- Jackdaws began to shout and float and soar
- Already, and one was racing straight and high
- Alone, shouting like a black warrior
- Challenges and menaces to the wide sky.
- With loud long laughter then a woodpecker
- Ridiculed the sadness of the owl's last cry.
- And through the valley where all the folk astir
- Made only plumes of pearly smoke to tower
- Over dark trees and white meadows happier
- Than was Elysium in that happy hour,
- A train that roared along raised after it
- And carried with it a motionless white bower
- Of purest cloud, from end to end close-knit,
- So fair it touched the roar with silence. Time
- Was powerless while that lasted. I could sit
- And think I had made the loveliness of prime,
- Breathed its life into it and were its lord,
- And no mind lived save this 'twixt clouds and rime.
- Omnipotent I was, nor even deplored
- That I did nothing. But the end fell like a bell:
- The bower was scattered; far off the train roared.
- But if this was ambition I cannot tell.
- What 'twas ambition for I know not well.
- NO ONE CARES LESS THAN I
- "No one cares less than I,
- Nobody knows but God,
- Whether I am destined to lie
- Under a foreign clod,"
- Were the words I made to the bugle call in the
- morning.
- But laughing, storming, scorning,
- Only the bugles know
- What the bugles say in the morning,
- And they do not care, when they blow
- The call that I heard and made words to early this
- morning.
- ROADS
- I LOVE roads:
- The goddesses that dwell
- Far along invisible
- Are my favourite gods.
- Roads go on
- While we forget, and are
- Forgotten like a star
- That shoots and is gone.
- On this earth 'tis sure
- We men have not made
- Anything that doth fade
- So soon, so long endure:
- The hill road wet with rain
- In the sun would not gleam
- Like a winding stream
- If we trod it not again.
- They are lonely
- While we sleep, lonelier
- For lack of the traveller
- Who is now a dream only.
- From dawn's twilight
- And all the clouds like sheep
- On the mountains of sleep
- They wind into the night.
- The next turn may reveal
- Heaven: upon the crest
- The close pine clump, at rest
- And black, may Hell conceal.
- Often footsore, never
- Yet of the road I weary,
- Though long and steep and dreary
- As it winds on for ever.
- Helen of the roads,
- The mountain ways of Wales
- And the Mabinogion tales,
- Is one of the true gods,
- Abiding in the trees,
- The threes and fours so wise,
- The larger companies,
- That by the roadside be,
- And beneath the rafter
- Else uninhabited
- Excepting by the dead;
- And it is her laughter
- At morn and night I hear
- When the thrush cock sings
- Bright irrelevant things,
- And when the chanticleer
- Calls back to their own night
- Troops that make loneliness
- With their light footsteps' press,
- As Helen's own are light.
- Now all roads lead to France
- And heavy is the tread
- Of the living; but the dead
- Returning lightly dance:
- Whatever the road bring
- To me or take from me,
- They keep me company
- With their pattering,
- Crowding the solitude
- Of the loops over the downs,
- Hushing the roar of towns
- And their brief multitude.
- THIS IS NO CASE OF PETTY RIGHT
- OR WRONG
- THIS is no case of petty right or wrong
- That politicians or philosophers
- Can judge. I hate not Germans, nor grow hot
- With love of Englishmen, to please newspapers.
- Beside my hate for one fat patriot
- My hatred of the Kaiser is love true:--
- A kind of god he is, banging a gong.
- But I have not to choose between the two,
- Or between justice and injustice. Dinned
- With war and argument I read no more
- Than in the storm smoking along the wind
- Athwart the wood. Two witches' cauldrons roar.
- From one the weather shall rise clear and gay;
- Out of the other an England beautiful
- And like her mother that died yesterday.
- Little I know or care if, being dull,
- I shall miss something that historians
- Can rake out of the ashes when perchance
- The phoenix broods serene above their ken.
- But with the best and meanest Englishmen
- I am one in crying, God save England, lest
- We lose what never slaves and cattle blessed.
- The ages made her that made us from the dust:
- She is all we know and live by, and we trust
- She is good and must endure, loving her so:
- And as we love ourselves we hate her foe.
- THE CHALK-PIT
- "Is this the road that climbs above and bends
- Round what was once a chalk-pit: now it is
- By accident an amphitheatre.
- Some ash-trees standing ankle-deep in brier
- And bramble act the parts, and neither speak
- Nor stir." "But see: they have fallen, every one,
- And brier and bramble have grown over them."
- "That is the place. As usual no one is here.
- Hardly can I imagine the drop of the axe,
- And the smack that is like an echo, sounding here."
- "I do not understand." "Why, what I mean is
- That I have seen the place two or three times
- At most, and that its emptiness and silence
- And stillness haunt me, as if just before
- It was not empty, silent, still, but full
- Of life of some kind, perhaps tragical.
- Has anything unusual happened here?"
- "Not that I know of. It is called the Dell.
- They have not dug chalk here for a century.
- That was the ash-trees' age. But I will ask."
- "No. Do not. I prefer to make a tale,
- Or better leave it like the end of a play,
- Actors and audience and lights all gone;
- For so it looks now. In my memory
- Again and again I see it, strangely dark,
- And vacant of a life but just withdrawn.
- We have not seen the woodman with the axe.
- Some ghost has left it now as we two came."
- "And yet you doubted if this were the road?"
- "Well, sometimes I have thought of it and failed
- To place it. No. And I am not quite sure,
- Even now, this is it. For another place,
- Real or painted, may have combined with it.
- Or I myself a long way back in time . . ."
- "Why, as to that, I used to meet a man--
- I had forgotten,--searching for birds' nests
- Along the road and in the chalk-pit too.
- The wren's hole was an eye that looked at him
- For recognition. Every nest he knew.
- He got a stiff neck, by looking this side or that,
- Spring after spring, he told me, with his laugh,--
- A sort of laugh. He was a visitor,
- A man of forty,--smoked and strolled about.
- At orts and crosses Pleasure and Pain had played
- On his brown features;--I think both had lost;--
- Mild and yet wild too. You may know the kind.
- And once or twice a woman shared his walks,
- A girl of twenty with a brown boy's face,
- And hair brown as a thrush or as a nut,
- Thick eyebrows, glinting eyes--" "You have
- said enough.
- A pair,--free thought, free love,--I know the
- breed:
- I shall not mix my fancies up with them."
- "You please yourself. I should prefer the truth
- Or nothing. Here, in fact, is nothing at all
- Except a silent place that once rang loud,
- And trees and us--imperfect friends, we men
- And trees since time began; and nevertheless
- Between us still we breed a mystery."
- HEALTH
- FOUR miles at a leap, over the dark hollow land,
- To the frosted steep of the down and its junipers
- black,
- Travels my eye with equal ease and delight:
- And scarce could my body leap four yards.
- This is the best and the worst of it--
- Never to know,
- Yet to imagine gloriously, pure health.
- To-day, had I suddenly health,
- I could not satisfy the desire of my heart
- Unless health abated it,
- So beautiful is the air in its softness and clearness,
- while Spring
- Promises all and fails in nothing as yet;
- And what blue and what white is I never knew
- Before I saw this sky blessing the land.
- For had I health I could not ride or run or fly
- So far or so rapidly over the land
- As I desire: I should reach Wiltshire tired;
- I should have changed my mind before I could be
- in Wales.
- I could not love; I could not command love.
- Beauty would still be far off
- However many hills I climbed over;
- Peace would still be farther.
- Maybe I should not count it anything
- To leap these four miles with the eye;
- And either I should not be filled almost to bursting
- with desire,
- Or with my power desire would still keep pace.
- Yet I am not satisfied
- Even with knowing I never could be satisfied.
- With health and all the power that lies
- In maiden beauty, poet and warrior,
- In Caesar, Shakespeare, Alcibiades,
- Mazeppa, Leonardo, Michelangelo,
- In any maiden whose smile is lovelier
- Than sunlight upon dew,
- I could not be as the wagtail running up and down
- The warm tiles of the roof slope, twittering
- Happily and sweetly as if the sun itself
- Extracted the song
- As the hand makes sparks from the fur of a cat:
- I could not be as the sun.
- Nor should I be content to be
- As little as the bird or as mighty as the sun.
- For the bird knows not of the sun,
- And the sun regards not the bird.
- But I am almost proud to love both bird and sun,
- Though scarce this Spring could my body leap
- four yards.
- BEAUTY
- WHAT does it mean? Tired, angry, and ill at ease,
- No man, woman, or child alive could please
- Me now. And yet I almost dare to laugh
- Because I sit and frame an epitaph--
- "Here lies all that no one loved of him
- And that loved no one." Then in a trice that
- whim
- Has wearied. But, though I am like a river
- At fall of evening while it seems that never
- Has the sun lighted it or warmed it, while
- Cross breezes cut the surface to a file,
- This heart, some fraction of me, happily
- Floats through the window even now to a tree
- Down in the misting, dim-lit, quiet vale,
- Not like a pewit that returns to wail
- For something it has lost, but like a dove
- That slants unswerving to its home and love.
- There I find my rest, and through the dusk air
- Flies what yet lives in me. Beauty is there.
- SNOW
- IN the gloom of whiteness,
- In the great silence of snow,
- A child was sighing
- And bitterly saying: "Oh,
- They have killed a white bird up there on her nest,
- The down is fluttering from her breast."
- And still it fell through that dusky brightness
- On the child crying for the bird of the snow.
- THE NEW YEAR
- HE was the one man I met up in the woods
- That stormy New Year's morning; and at first
- sight,
- Fifty yards off, I could not tell how much
- Of the strange tripod was a man. His body,
- Bowed horizontal, was supported equally
- By legs at one end, by a rake at the other:
- Thus he rested, far less like a man than
- His wheel-barrow in profile was like a pig.
- But when I saw it was an old man bent,
- At the same moment came into my mind
- The games at which boys bend thus, _High-
- Cockalorum_,
- Or _Fly-the-garter_, and _Leap-frog_. At the sound
- Of footsteps he began to straighten himself;
- His head rolled under his cape like a tortoise's;
- He took an unlit pipe out of his mouth
- Politely ere I wished him "A Happy New Year,"
- And with his head cast upward sideways
- Muttered--
- So far as I could hear through the trees' roar--
- "Happy New Year, and may it come fastish, too,"
- While I strode by and he turned to raking leaves.
- THE BROOK
- SEATED once by a brook, watching a child
- Chiefly that paddled, I was thus beguiled.
- Mellow the blackbird sang and sharp the thrush
- Not far off in the oak and hazel brush,
- Unseen. There was a scent like honeycomb
- From mugwort dull. And down upon the dome
- Of the stone the cart-horse kicks against so oft
- A butterfly alighted. From aloft
- He took the heat of the sun, and from below.
- On the hot stone he perched contented so,
- As if never a cart would pass again
- That way; as if I were the last of men
- And he the first of insects to have earth
- And sun together and to know their worth.
- I was divided between him and the gleam,
- The motion, and the voices, of the stream,
- The waters running frizzled over gravel,
- That never vanish and for ever travel.
- A grey flycatcher silent on a fence
- And I sat as if we had been there since
- The horseman and the horse lying beneath
- The fir-tree-covered barrow on the heath,
- The horseman and the horse with silver shoes,
- Galloped the downs last. All that I could lose
- I lost. And then the child's voice raised the dead.
- "No one's been here before" was what she said
- And what I felt, yet never should have found
- A word for, while I gathered sight and sound.
- THE OTHER
- THE forest ended. Glad I was
- To feel the light, and hear the hum
- Of bees, and smell the drying grass
- And the sweet mint, because I had come
- To an end of forest, and because
- Here was both road and inn, the sum
- Of what's not forest. But 'twas here
- They asked me if I did not pass
- Yesterday this way? "Not you? Queer."
- "Who then? and slept here?" I felt fear.
- I learnt his road and, ere they were
- Sure I was I, left the dark wood
- Behind, kestrel and woodpecker,
- The inn in the sun, the happy mood
- When first I tasted sunlight there.
- I travelled fast, in hopes I should
- Outrun that other. What to do
- When caught, I planned not. I pursued
- To prove the likeness, and, if true,
- To watch until myself I knew.
- I tried the inns that evening
- Of a long gabled high-street grey,
- Of courts and outskirts, travelling
- An eager but a weary way,
- In vain. He was not there. Nothing
- Told me that ever till that day
- Had one like me entered those doors,
- Save once. That time I dared: "You may
- Recall"--but never-foamless shores
- Make better friends than those dull boors.
- Many and many a day like this
- Aimed at the unseen moving goal
- And nothing found but remedies
- For all desire. These made not whole;
- They sowed a new desire, to kiss
- Desire's self beyond control,
- Desire of desire. And yet
- Life stayed on within my soul.
- One night in sheltering from the wet
- I quite forgot I could forget.
- A customer, then the landlady
- Stared at me. With a kind of smile
- They hesitated awkwardly:
- Their silence gave me time for guile.
- Had anyone called there like me,
- I asked. It was quite plain the wile
- Succeeded. For they poured out all.
- And that was naught. Less than a mile
- Beyond the inn, I could recall
- He was like me in general.
- He had pleased them, but I less.
- I was more eager than before
- To find him out and to confess,
- To bore him and to let him bore.
- I could not wait: children might guess
- I had a purpose, something more
- That made an answer indiscreet.
- One girl's caution made me sore,
- Too indignant even to greet
- That other had we chanced to meet.
- I sought then in solitude.
- The wind had fallen with the night; as still
- The roads lay as the ploughland rude,
- Dark and naked, on the hill.
- Had there been ever any feud
- 'Twixt earth and sky, a mighty will
- Closed it: the crocketed dark trees,
- A dark house, dark impossible
- Cloud-towers, one star, one lamp, one peace
- Held on an everlasting lease:
- And all was earth's, or all was sky's;
- No difference endured between
- The two. A dog barked on a hidden rise;
- A marshbird whistled high unseen;
- The latest waking blackbird's cries
- Perished upon the silence keen.
- The last light filled a narrow firth
- Among the clouds. I stood serene,
- And with a solemn quiet mirth,
- An old inhabitant of earth.
- Once the name I gave to hours
- Like this was melancholy, when
- It was not happiness and powers
- Coming like exiles home again,
- And weaknesses quitting their bowers,
- Smiled and enjoyed, far off from men,
- Moments of everlastingness.
- And fortunate my search was then
- While what I sought, nevertheless,
- That I was seeking, I did not guess.
- That time was brief: once more at inn
- And upon road I sought my man
- Till once amid a tap-room's din
- Loudly he asked for me, began
- To speak, as if it had been a sin,
- Of how I thought and dreamed and ran
- After him thus, day after day:
- He lived as one under a ban
- For this: what had I got to say?
- I said nothing, I slipped away.
- And now I dare not follow after
- Too close. I try to keep in sight,
- Dreading his frown and worse his laughter.
- I steal out of the wood to light;
- I see the swift shoot from the rafter
- By the inn door: ere I alight
- I wait and hear the starlings wheeze
- And nibble like ducks: I wait his flight.
- He goes: I follow: no release
- Until he ceases. Then I also shall cease.
- HOUSE AND MAN
- ONE hour: as dim he and his house now look
- As a reflection in a rippling brook,
- While I remember him; but first, his house.
- Empty it sounded. It was dark with forest boughs
- That brushed the walls and made the mossy tiles
- Part of the squirrels' track. In all those miles
- Of forest silence and forest murmur, only
- One house--"Lonely!" he said, "I wish it were
- lonely"--
- Which the trees looked upon from every side,
- And that was his.
- He waved good-bye to hide
- A sigh that he converted to a laugh.
- He seemed to hang rather than stand there, half
- Ghost-like, half like a beggar's rag, clean wrung
- And useless on the brier where it has hung
- Long years a-washing by sun and wind and rain.
- But why I call back man and house again
- Is that now on a beech-tree's tip I see
- As then I saw--I at the gate, and he
- In the house darkness,--a magpie veering about,
- A magpie like a weathercock in doubt.
- THE GYPSY
- A FORTNIGHT before Christmas Gypsies were every-
- where:
- Vans were drawn up on wastes, women trailed to
- the fair.
- "My gentleman," said one, "You've got a lucky
- face."
- "And you've a luckier," I thought, "if such a grace
- And impudence in rags are lucky." "Give a penny
- For the poor baby's sake." "Indeed I have not any
- Unless you can give change for a sovereign, my
- dear."
- "Then just half a pipeful of tobacco can you
- spare?"
- I gave it. With that much victory she laughed
- content.
- I should have given more, but off and away she
- went
- With her baby and her pink sham flowers to rejoin
- The rest before I could translate to its proper coin
- Gratitude for her grace. And I paid nothing then,
- As I pay nothing now with the dipping of my pen
- For her brother's music when he drummed the
- tambourine
- And stamped his feet, which made the workmen
- passing grin,
- While his mouth-organ changed to a rascally
- Bacchanal dance
- "Over the hills and far away." This and his glance
- Outlasted all the fair, farmer and auctioneer,
- Cheap-jack, balloon-man, drover with crooked
- stick, and steer,
- Pig, turkey, goose, and duck, Christmas Corpses
- to be.
- Not even the kneeling ox had eyes like the Romany.
- That night he peopled for me the hollow wooded
- land,
- More dark and wild than stormiest heavens, that I
- searched and scanned
- Like a ghost new-arrived. The gradations of the
- dark
- Were like an underworld of death, but for the spark
- In the Gypsy boy's black eyes as he played and
- stamped his tune,
- "Over the hills and far away," and a crescent moon.
- MAN AND DOG
- "'TWILL take some getting." "Sir, I think 'twill
- so."
- The old man stared up at the mistletoe
- That hung too high in the poplar's crest for plunder
- Of any climber, though not for kissing under:
- Then he went on against the north-east wind--
- Straight but lame, leaning on a staff new-skinned,
- Carrying a brolly, flag-basket, and old coat,--
- Towards Alton, ten miles off. And he had not
- Done less from Chilgrove where he pulled up docks.
- 'Twere best, if he had had "a money-box,"
- To have waited there till the sheep cleared a field
- For what a half-week's flint-picking would yield.
- His mind was running on the work he had done
- Since he left Christchurch in the New Forest, one
- Spring in the 'seventies,--navvying on dock and
- line
- From Southampton to Newcastle-on-Tyne,--
- In 'seventy-four a year of soldiering
- With the Berkshires,--hoeing and harvesting
- In half the shires where corn and couch will grow.
- His sons, three sons, were fighting, but the hoe
- And reap-hook he liked, or anything to do with
- trees.
- He fell once from a poplar tall as these:
- The Flying Man they called him in hospital.
- "If I flew now, to another world I'd fall."
- He laughed and whistled to the small brown bitch
- With spots of blue that hunted in the ditch.
- Her foxy Welsh grandfather must have paired
- Beneath him. He kept sheep in Wales and scared
- Strangers, I will warrant, with his pearl eye
- And trick of shrinking off as he were shy,
- Then following close in silence for--for what?
- "No rabbit, never fear, she ever got,
- Yet always hunts. To-day she nearly had one:
- She would and she wouldn't. 'Twas like that. The
- bad one!
- She's not much use, but still she's company,
- Though I'm not. She goes everywhere with me.
- So Alton I must reach to-night somehow:
- I'll get no shakedown with that bedfellow
- From farmers. Many a man sleeps worse to-night
- Than I shall." "In the trenches." "Yes, that's
- right.
- But they'll be out of that--I hope they be--
- This weather, marching after the enemy."
- "And so I hope. Good luck." And there I nodded
- "Good-night. You keep straight on." Stiffly he
- plodded;
- And at his heels the crisp leaves scurried fast,
- And the leaf-coloured robin watched. They
- passed,
- The robin till next day, the man for good,
- Together in the twilight of the wood.
- A PRIVATE
- THIS ploughman dead in battle slept out of doors
- Many a frozen night, and merrily
- Answered staid drinkers, good bedmen, and all
- bores:
- "At Mrs. Greenland's Hawthorn Bush," said he,
- "I slept." None knew which bush. Above the
- town,
- Beyond "The Drover," a hundred spot the down
- In Wiltshire. And where now at last he sleeps
- More sound in France--that, too, he secret keeps.
- OUT IN THE DARK
- OUT in the dark over the snow
- The fallow fawns invisible go
- With the fallow doe;
- And the winds blow
- Fast as the stars are slow.
- Stealthily the dark haunts round
- And, when a lamp goes, without sound
- At a swifter bound
- Than the swiftest hound,
- Arrives, and all else is drowned;
- And I and star and wind and deer,
- Are in the dark together,--near,
- Yet far,--and fear
- Drums on my ear
- In that sage company drear.
- How weak and little is the light,
- All the universe of sight,
- Love and delight,
- Before the might,
- If you love it not, of night.
- Printed at The Chapel River Press, Kingston, Surrey.
- End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Last Poems, by Edward Thomas
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